The University Daily Pro football loss George Halas dead at 88 Sports, p. 10 KANSAN WARM Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas Vol. 94, No. 52 (USPS 650-640) High, 70. Low, 50. Details on p. 2. Tuesday morning, November 1, 1983 Grenadian repercussions linger U.S. warplanes killed civilians unintentionally By United Press International BRIDGETOWN. Barbados — American authorities said yesterday that U.S. warplanes had killed a number of civilians on Grenada last week in an accidental attack on a hospital but that stories reporting 50 deaths were exaggerated. In Washington, the Pentagon said that the U.S. military death toll since last week's invasion of Grenada rose to 18, with 86 wounded and one listed as missing The previous official figures, released Sunday, listed 16 dead, 72 wounded and three missing. In Barbados, U.S. Navy Lt. Cmdr. Dale Smith reported that "the Marines are going out today and the 82nd Airborne will stay." But later in the day he said he had not meant to suggest that the entire Marine contingent on Grenada was being pulled out. IN HIS CLARIFICATION, Smith said that "a few" of the Marines were leaving yesterday. Marines account for 700 of the 5,200 American troops in Grenada. In Washington, officials said that U.S. troops on Grenada have found secret treaties under which Grenadian armed forces would leave the island for military training in the Soviet Union and Cubans would be integrated into Grenada's armed forces. State Department spokesman John Hughes refused to elaborate, but another official said. that the treaties were between the Marxist government of Grenadian Prime Minister Maurice Bishop, killed Oct. 19 in a military coup, and the Soviet Union. Cuba and North Korea. Smith, in his briefing at the press center at Barbados' Grantley Adams International airport, said he did not know if the Marines being withdrawn from Grenada would go to Lebanon or return to the United States. Neither Smith nor the U.S. Embassy amplified a sketchy report by the Pentagon that confirmed American fliers mistakenly hit a mental hospital north of the Grenadian capital of St. George's a THE NEW YORK POST quoted medical officials in Grenada as saying as many as 50 patients were killed and 14 others burned. They said, remain buried under tons of brick and rubble. In Toronto, Maclean's magazine reported that 47 patients in a mental hospital in Grenada were killed when U.S. Navy shells accidentally hit the building. The Toronto Star quoted a nurse at the hospital as saying that 12 dead were found and 35 were butt, that "no one knows exactly humper." THE PENTAGON ACKNOWLEDDED that an attack on a hospital in the Fort Frederick military complex occurred but said that no injuries were reported. The toll was substantially less than reported. "Preliminary reports . . . indicate that some civilian casualties may have occurred in a civilian hospital which was housed in the Fort Ripley military complex," a Pentagon statement said. It said that the raid was launched to silence artillery fire being directed at the residence of the Governor-General, Sir Paul Scoon, the Grenadian serving as Queen Elizabeth II's See GRENADA, p. 5, col. 2 Establishment of government is new priority By United Press International WASHINGTON — U.S. diplomats and Grenada's governor-general are discussing creation of a provisional government and a peacekeeping force that will allow U.S. troops to leave the island, a White House spokesman said yesterday. “Our goal is to get out as quickly as we can and turn it over to some sort of peacekeeping force,” White House spokeswoman Larry Speakes told reporters. “We are also predicting when the troops might be able to leave. WITH THE FIGHTING described as all but over, Speakes said the U.S. priority in Grenada had shifted from military to political objectives. But Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., told reporters at the White House that U.S. troops in Grenada had fulfilled their only justifiable purpose — the mission to combat ISIS and "should be withdrawn immediately." "Todav?" he was asked. "Westerday, the day before," Hatfield replied. Speakes said U.S. diplomats were working with Paul Scoon, the governor-general of Grenada, on the formation of a provisional government and a peacekeeping force "that will allow U.S. forces to leave as soon as possible." "WE WANT TO raise the possibility, or at معرفة ابن محمد بن عبدالرحمن بن محمد ابن محمد بن عبدالرحمن بن محمد ابن محمد بن عبدالرحمن بن محمد See REAGAN, p. 5, col. 1 United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon - French paratroopers resumed their patrol of Beirut yesterday for the first time since the Oct. 23 bombing of one of their buildings that killed more than 50 soldiers. See story p. 2. Freezing weather delays rescue of quake victims in Turkey By United Press International ERZURUM, Turkey — The death toll from Turkey's weekend earthquake rose above 1,200 yesterday as freezing weather hampered rescue efforts and threatened the lives of many among more than 20,000 people made homeless in the disaster. Landslides triggered by the quake and by snowstorms, icy rains and gale-force winds left 40 mountain villages in the stricken area and killed at least 15 people. He also grounded some helicopter rescue flights. Officials in Erzurum, the capital of the province bearing the same name, said that by late yesterday rescue workers had recovered the body of a man who was struck by a quake, which struck shortly after 7 a.m. Monday. Officials said that 33 villages were destroyed and 11 others so badly damaged that "they can no longer survive." Most of the dead were from the townships of Horasan, Narman, Pasinler and Sarikamis. "EVERYTHING WENT MAD," said Mirhail Ceylanlu, a survivor from Horasan. "Everywhere started to shake terribly with a sound of explosion." Rescue workers in the region. Turkey's poorest, feared as many as 1,500 people might still be buried in the rubble. Switzerland flew in mountain-rescue dogs to locate survivors buried under snow-scovered rubble. Aid also came from the United States, Germany, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Pakistan. Officials said that at least 20,000 people were left homeless after the quake toppled their mud-and-straw brick homes. In a large rescue operation, 3,000 tents were airlifted from other regions of Turkey and prefabricated buildings were being trucked in by hastily organized convoys. NONETHEILESS, THREE OR four families were being sheltered in tents designed for one household, rescue workers said. The onset of winter threatened the contained the lives of many survivors, they said. "Erzurum is on a high plateau and at this time of year someone who cannot find shelter before nightfall will freeze to death before morning," the league of Red Cross Societies said in Geneva in an appeal for money for tents, blankets and sleeping bags. By late yesterday, officials said, 1,046 people have been treated for injuries at Erzurum hospitals. But Suleyman Sirin, a physician at the State Hospital in Erzurum, said that the weather was keeping many of the injured away from hospitals although others preferred to wait for treatment at home, "which causes an increase in the deaths." CHILDREN AND OLD people still asleep appeared to have borne the brunt of the quake. Working-age adults already up in the fields when the quake struck survived. President Kenan Evenfle to the disaster area, 350 miles east of Ankara. He visited survivors hospitalized in Erzurum and later traveled to Narman. DEATH TOLL MOUNTS IN TURKISH QUAKE Black Sea SOVIET UNION Narman Sarakamis ERZURUM PROVINCE KARS PROVINCE Erzurum Horasan Pasinler IRAN TURKEY Lake Van IRAQ SYRIA 100 miles United Press International A John Long, right, Facilities Operations labor supervisor for landscaping, loads leaves into a truck after Lynn Landkamer, left, and other workers rake them up. Long said that yesterday's truckload, along with about 200 others, would be taken to West Campus this fall, later to be dug up for mulch. © The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Judge orders new trial in Craft case says jury was swayed by publicity By Staff and Wire Reports A federal judge ruled yesterday that a jury swayed by "pervasive publicity" wrongly awarded $500,000 to former Kansas City television anchorwoman Christine Craft in her U. S. District Judge Joseph Stevens Jr., who presided over the highly publicized two-week trial ordered a new trial with different lury procedures to avoid more problems with publicity The trial was set for Jan. 4 in U.S. employer. Metromedia Inc FRENCH COUNTRY FOREIGN MUSEUM Craft STEVENS ALSO RULED that no evidence substantiated sexual discrimination toward District Court in Joplin, Mo. Croft Craft when she was demoted to a reporter at KMBTC Channel 9, in 1981. Denis Egan, an attorney for Craft, said that the order for a new trial would be appealed. Craft, who was in Milwaukee for a speaking engagement, said. "I 'wasn't unprepared for today's ruling. I wasn't the most assert and anguish of the judge who made sense to conservative appointee of President Reagan." In granting the new trial, Stevens said, "The court is firmly convinced that this verdict is excessive and is the result of passion, prejudice, confusion or mistake on the part of the jury." In the summer trial, Craft, 38, said that she had been demoted from her anchor position at KMBC, then owned by Metromedia, because station management considered her "too old, too unattractive and not deferential enough to men." Stevens in his ruling yesterday said that that See CRAFT, p. 5, col. 3 No Halloween pranks in Lawrence, police, firefighters and hospital say The trick has gone out of Halloween, at least in Lawrence. By Staff and Wire Reports Mike Garcia, Lawrence Police Department, said late last night that he had received no reports of any Halloween-type tricks. And the dispatcher for the KU Police Department said that she hadn't received reports of Halloween pranks. "It's pretty quiet for some reason," said firefighter Mark Wilson late last night. "We haven't had anything tonight and it would be nice if we didn't." No one had an explanation for the quiet night. But last year, dreading copycat poisonings, about 50 towns nationwide canceled trick-or-treating on Halloween, which came a month before. Tucson area residents died from cyanide-laced Tylenol capsules. The cases remain unsolved. TO PREVENT SOMETHING like that from happening again, the candy industry instituted wrappers that would show whether someone had tampered with the contents, spent $400,000 on announcements and safety brochures and set up a toll-free hotline system for 14,000 police departments nationwide. And hospitals across the country offered to X-ray treats for hidden razor blades and metallic dangers, warning parents to inspect candy even if the X-rays showed nothing. a nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital said that no Halloween-related injuries had been reported. A nurse at the Suburban Medical Center, Overland Park, said that from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. yesterday about 80 people came by to have food X-rayed. But this was fewer than last year, she said, when about 700 people came by to have their treats checked for any tricks. See HALLOWEEN, p. 5, col. 3 "But you never know," she said. "The rowdy ones get out later." State government is part of Harder's lifestyle, interests Carlin appoints professor at KU to fill state post By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter Gov. John Carlin yesterday named Mike Harder, a KU professor and former aide to the late Gov. Robert Docking, to replace Patrick Hurley as secretary of the department of administration. Hurley announced his resignation yesterday morning at a press conference in Topeka. He had served as administration secretary since January 1979, when Carlin took office. Hurley said he was leaving state government to accept a job with the Kansas Association for Economic Growth, a lobbying group for large banks that plans in the next session to campaign in favor of legislation to allow multi-bank holding companies. HARDER, A PROFESSOR of political science, said he was very suprised by the appointment, which will take effect Nov. 15. He said Carlin asked him Friday to lead the department, which oversees management budgets, planning, research and purchasing. *marder* is director of KU's Capital Complex Center, which was established in 1974 in the Statehouse primarily to provide an opponent's defense. He also holds a master's degree in public administration "I lived my professional life with one foot in the governmental arena and one on the campus," Harder said. "That's been my lifestyle; state government has been my area of interest." The center usually has about 80 students, most of them state employees, and about five professors in a variety of subjects. Harder said. The center also conducts an institute for freshman legislators on the legislative and a professional management seminar. NEXT SEMESTER, HARDER will teach a course one afternoon a week in the center with James Bibb, former state budget official. The course will be on managing state government. "ranger said he planned to return to teaching when his appointment was over. The secretary serves "at the pleasure of the governor," rather than for a fixed term. When Harder takes office, he will have several problems facing him, including the issues of merit pay, the state telephone and computer systems and health insurance (or "I LEARNED ABOUT all those today," Harder said. "I think if I have known about these I would have been even more reluctant. But somebody has to try to tackle these problems and make sense out of them, and I guess that's what I'll try to do." Harder's qualifications on the political side of the fence came in the Docking administration, where he was the governor's special assistant for education from 1967 to 1974. He also helped prepare Docking's legislative proposals in that time. Information for this story was also supplied by United Press International. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 1. 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Marcos selects successor; pick draws opposition fire MANILA, Philippines — President Ferdinand Marcos yesterday picked Prime Minister Cesar Virata as his successor in an apparent attempt to placate critics and prevent a power struggle if his one-man rule should be cut short. Opposition leaders reacted to the surprise announcement with skepticism and outright disbelief. Virata would replace Marcos so the Salvador Lopez, a former foreign minister, said. "Merely because President Marcos says so doesn't mean it's going to happen. It should be in the law." Other opposition leaders said the move was simply a play to placate bankers and government critics. "That's an old story that no one believes," said former senator Jose Diokno. Carters gather to mourn 'Miss Lillian' PLAINS, Ga. — Former President Jimmy Carter and his family gathered at the "Pond House" yesterday to await the funeral of "Miss Lillian" Carter, the family's kindly but outspoken matriarch, who died of cancer at age 85. "Miss Lillian," as she liked to be called, died of bone cancer at the Americus-Sumter County Hospital at 4:05 p.m. CST Sunday. Carter canceled a lecture at his church Sunday night, but took his soul sunrise jog yesterday. He left the Pains and he said that his meeting with Mr. Brown was pressed on foot. White House spokesman C. Anson Franklin said President Reagan called Carter shortly after 9 a.m. yesterday "to offer his condolences on behalf of him and Mrs. Reagan." The call lasted "several minutes." Franklin said. Environmental groups oppose Clark WASHINGTON - Two big environmental groups yesterday intensified their campaign against the nomination of William Clark to succeed Interior Secretary James Watt, blasting his record on the California Supreme Court. The stepped-up opposition came on the eve of confirmation hearings during which Clark, who stepped down as President Reagan's national security adviser to take the new job, will spend as many as three days this week testifying before the Senate Energy Committee. The 350,000-member Sierra Club and the Wilderness Club have both announced their opposition to Clark, with the Sierra Club citing his judicial votes and failure to promise a change of Watt's policies. Press aide auits over Grenada policv WASHINGTON — Presidential press aide Les Janka has resigned, saying that his "personal credibility" was severely damaged by White House handling of information about the U.S. invasion of Grenada, administration officials disclosed yesterday. One official said the deputy press secretary was fired for telling the Washington Post that chief spokesman Larry Speakes had considered resigning because he was given misleading answers to inquiries before the invasion. But Speakes the Post report inaccurate and said he made no such threat. Janka denied telling reporters anything about a possible Close associates of Janka, who was appointed Aug. 5, said he quit of his own accord "on principle and to maintain his integrity." Teams search area hit by Idaho auake CHALLIS, Idaho - Search teams combed the remote central Idaho back country yesterday for hunters who may have been trapped by a violent earthquake that occurred Friday. Joy Roark, a county sheriff's dispatcher, said. "We have Fish and Game people and the Forest Service and anyone who's out there on the alert to look for hunters and advise them to call home." Meanwhile, Custer County residents buried one of two children crushed to death by a stone wall during the unake. The graveside funeral was conducted at the Challis Cemetery for Travis Franck, 6, who died Friday when a 90-year-old concrete storefront collapsed on him and 7-year-old Tara Leaton. Flynt fails to yield De Lorean tape LOS ANGELES — Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flayt was held in contempt of court yesterday for failing to produce a tape he said was a key government informant threatening John De Lorean's life for triving to back out of a cocaine deal. U. S. District Judge Robert Takasagi issued an arrest warrant for Flynt, who said through his attorney that he feared for his life if he left his heavily guarded Bel Air mansion. Takasagi said he would vacate the arrest warrant if Flynt complied with an order to appear in court today. Flynt's attorneys said yesterday that they would file an appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court in an attempt to quash the subpoena of the U.S. Supreme Court in an attempt to quash the subpoena AUGUSTA, Maine — A group known as SMOOSA for "Save Maine's Only Official State Animal" will leave it to the voters Nov. 8 to decide whether to ban the state's annual moose hunt. The proposal's backers say that the state's estimated 20,000 moose are not fair game for the 1,000 hunters chosen by lottery to shoot one moose each. “There’s no sport in killing a hoose,” said John Cole, founder of SMOOSA “This is a big dumb animal and it’s embarrassing to kill it.” Cole and his supporters, who collected more than 40,000 signatures to form a nationwide vote on the issue, are spending $20,000 to advertise their views. WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST 10 7 PM EST. 11-1-83 29.77 30.00 30.24 SEATTLE COOL MINNEAPOLIS FAIR BOSTON COLD NEW YORK HIGH SAN FRANCISCO DENVER CHICAGO FAIR ATLANTA LOS ANGELES WARM DALLAS HIGHEST TEMPERATURES NEW ORLEANS MIAMI LEGEND RAIN SNOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST Today will be mostly fair across the nation with showers expected in parts of the Pacific coast and the Mississippi Valley. Locally, today will be mostly cloudy with a high around 70, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tonight will be cloudy with a 30 percent chance of showers and a low around 50. Tomorrow will be cloudy with a high around 70. Congressmen visit Beirut, doubt Marines' safety measures after the Oct. 23 attack, congressmen said that U.S. Marines in the multinational peacekeeping force in Lebanon are still susceptible to sniper and terrorist attacks on their camp at the airport. WASHINGTON — Congressmen return from a weekend trip to Lebanon, where at least 229 Marines were killed in a suicide bomb attack, expressed fears yesterday about the killing of Beirut's keeper stations stationed at Beirut's airport. "It's a bad location, where the Marines are, almost indefensible," said Rep G.V. Montgomery, D-Miss., who led 10 congressmen on a tour of Beirut in July and now is in Iraq, where efforts are continuing to identify those killed in the bomb blast. By United Press International Rep. Larry Hopkins, R-Ky., said that he will introduce a resolution calling for the immediate removal of U.S. forces in Afghanistan and that troops are taken promptly to tighten security. DESPITE STEPPED-UP security Hopkins, a former Marine, said that he warned after a trip to the Marine compound in Beirut in September that he had been asked to go into the body bag business. UNLESS A SOLUTION to Lebanon's political strife can be worked out soon in talks in Geneva, Rep. William Richardson, D-N.M., said, he favors moving the Marines from the airport compound to U.S. ships waiting off "Now that I see how vulnerable the Marines are, I don't think any further bloodshed should be shed to achieve diplomatic goals," Rich鹭son said. Montgomery, chairman of the House Veterans' Affairs Committee, also said that moving the Marines to ships offshore should be considered in view of the Marines' congested position with civilians less than 200 yards away. Ike Skelton, D-Mo., after the 4½- hour visit to Beirut, said, "If the administration insists upon keeping Marines in Beirut, which I oppose, there must be some changes. "FIRST, WE NEED better intelligence, particularly about terrorist groups. Second, we must allow the Marines to defend themselves and to be in a better position, that is to take the high ground." But Rep Paul Hammersmidt R-Rark, was less dissatisfied. I think they need to re-think through it if it's possible to overcome a suicide crime he said, but added he still thinks the Marines need to be in Lebanon. Election defeat surprises Argentina's Peronists By United Press International BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Leaders of the Peronist party were stunned yesterday over their first national election defeat — a blow that placed the future of their once all-powerful movement in doubt. Raul Aflonsin, basing his campaign on human rights and a promise to keep the military out of 52 percent majority in Sunday landslide by Argentine standards that surprised even his own Radical Civic Union party. Alfonsin The Peronist candidate -- Italo Argentino Luder -- won only 40 percent of the vote. The party had never lost a national election since the late Juan Domingo Peron captured the presidency in 1946. "I WANT YOU to understand that we are beginning a new era in Argentina — a long period of peace and prosperity and respect for the dignity of man in Argentina." Allison said in a victory speech. The balcony of his party headquarters. He said he would press for his scheduled Jan. 30 inauguration to be moved up to "the first days of December." In Washington, a State Department statement said, "The U.S. government and the American people extend our heartiest congratulations to the Argentine people, their political parties and their government for this successful step in the process of return to democratic and constitutional rule." The general election, ending 71% yᵢ a r r 71% military rule, was the first test for the Peronists since Peron's death in 1974. "SOMETHING WENT WRONG," said Carlen Miles, governor-elect of La Rioja province, one of 10 provinces recently won by Peronist candidates. The Radical party won governorships in nine provinces, as well as the local University of Kansas Department of Music Presents Menahem Pressler Pianist in a special Scholarship Benefit Concert Menahem Pressler SCHOLARSHIP BENEFIT CONCERT 8p.m. Tuesday, November 8.1983 Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved Public: $8 & $6; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $7 & $5; KU Students with ID: $4 & $3 For reservations call 913-864-3982 All proceeds benefit the Music Scholarship Fund M TUESDAY FREE DRINKS $2.50 COVER 8-11 P.M. HAPPY HOUR 11-CLOSE GAMMONS SNOWS 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 GAMMONS SNOWMEN 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 GAMONS SNOW administrations in the territory of Tierra del Fuego and the Federal Capital. Independent parties won three governorships. The most stunning provincial victory for the Radical Civic Union — a center-left party with a middle-class base founded in 1890 — came in Buenos Aires province, a one-time bastion of the Peronists. GRANADA TELEPHONE 800-5190 SEAN CONNERY JAMES BOND NEVER SAY NEVER AGAIN GRAN Eve VARSITY BOOK ONE TELLEGRAPH MEDIA tom cruise All The Right Moves Eve. 7:30-9:25 Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:15 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN 843-5768 SEAN CONNERY JAMES BOND NEVER SAY NEVER AGAIN Eve. 7:15-9:40 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN 843-5768 TOM CRUISER All The Right Moves Eve. 7:30-9:25 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 1 STATE AND IOWA Stephen King's THE DEAD ZONE Eve. 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 2 STATE AND IOWA Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 NEW RELEASE HERE and now HILLCREST 3 STATE AND IOWA United States Central America THE FIRST CANNOT OF WAR IS THE TRUTH UNDER FIRE Eve. 7:25-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 CINEMA 1 STATE AND IOWA 843-5768 The Wicked Lady Eve. 7:40-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00 CINEMA 2 STATE AND IOWA 843-5768 The eight star actors deserve one big Oscar, (on this funny and ferociously smart movie, THE BIG CIRCLE) HILLCREST 1 TIME ADDRESS Stephen King's THE DEAD ZONE Eve. 7:30-8:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 R HILLCREST 2 911-404-7004 (818) 356-8200 ALL NEW Eve. 7:00 - 9:35 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2/19 Here and now R HILL CREST 3 12 NOON & 5 PM THE DARKNESS OF THE 'FIRST CASES OF CRIME' THE TRUTH. UNDER FIRE Rye Eve - 7:25-8:00 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 CINEMA 1 JUST AND TOUCH 847-250-3600 The Wicked Lady Eve. 7:40. 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00 The eight star attraction deserves big Oscar (this fun and fictoriously smart movie, THE BIG CHILL BIG CHILL Eve 7:30 Mat Sat Sun 2:00 W 15th Street The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358. SUA FILMS Presents Another Walter Bernstein Movie: 1 Director: Sidney Lumet Screenwriter: Walter Bernstein with Henry Fonda Walter Matthau A grim examination of a "Dr. Strangelove" type. Topic: A U.S. plane is accidentally sent on a bombing mission to the U.S.S.R. Woodruff Aud. 8 p.m. FREE Movies by Walter Bernstein 4. Fall Safe Tuesday, November 1 at 8 p.m. 1 The Inpert Wednesday, November 2 at 7:30 p.m. Question and Answer Period by Walter Bernstein Introduction by Robert Day All Items Shown in Wallett Everything is free. University Daily Kansan, November 1, 1983 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Attorney accuses Missouri of segregating KC schools KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Missouri government mandated a dual, or segregated, education system for blacks and whites, and the state should help pay for integrating Kansas City schools, an attorney said yesterday in federal court. Other defendants include nine suburban districts, the state of Missouri and the federal government. Opening statements were presented to U.S. District Judge Russell G. Clark on behalf of two of 11 suburban school districts, the Kansas City School District and the plaintiffs — seven black and white school children — in the 6-year-old case. The lawsuit, filed in 1977, seeks reassignment of students between the Kansas City School District and 11 suburban districts in Missouri. Also named as defendants were the U.S. Departments of Education, of Housing and Urban Development and of Transportation. Attorneys expect the trial, which may involve up to 500 witnesses, to last through the end of the year. KU athlete faces trial on assault charge Charge C. Heeney, a KU baseball player, will he tried on an assault charge on Dec. 23, Lawrence Municipal Court. Heeney, Lenexa junior, will be charged in District of Columbia. Sgt. Don Dalquest of the Lawrence Police Department said that at about 9:15 p.m. Oct. 19, Heeney went to Pladium Plus, 901 Mississippi St., to try to see an employee there. When Heeney tried to enter, Dalquest said, the doorman refused to let him in unless he showed identification or a ticket. The men got into a scuffle and the doorman said he was kicked in the thigh. Heeney told police that he was choked during the scuffle. An assault charge is a Class C misdemeanor. Conviction of the charge carries a sentence of not more than one month in jail and a fine of not more than $500. Local man dies from stairway fall A 31-year-old Lawrence man died Sunday from injuries he suffered 15 days before when he apparently fell down a flight of stairs. Larry D. Rayles, 111 Pawnee Ave., died at 10:50 p.m. Sunday at the University of Kansas Medical Center. He was treated at the center after he was found about 2:30 a.m. Oct. 15 at the bottom of a flight of stairs at an apartment complex, police said. A woman walked into the apartment and saw Rayles lying on the floor with his head pointed toward a north exit and his feet on the stairs, police said. She later called an ambulance. He was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and then was transported to the Med Center. Firm to do county renovation work A Lawrence construction firm next week will begin the remodeling of a Douglas County ambulance service building. Douglas County commissioners yesterday signed a contract with the B.A. Green Construction Company, 1207 Iowa St., for the renovation of the ambulance building at 1839 Massachusetts St. The commission selected the firm last week for the project. According to the contract, B.A. Green will finish the work in February 1984. The entire renovation will cost $75,355. B.A. Green's base bid was $61,500, with the cost of four alternate items such as new windows and wider ambulance entrances making up the difference. Accident victim listed as improved A 29-year-old Lawrence woman was in serious condition last night at the University of Kansas Medical Center where she was being treated for injuries suffered after she was hit by a car Friday. She had originally been listed in critical condition. Police said Eleda Bryant, 133 Pawnee Ave., was crossing 23rd Street near Haskell Avenue when she was hit at 11:47 p.m. by a car driven by Roger Walter, 36, 742 Ohio St. Police have not cited a citation. ON THE RECORD THEVES REMOVED a steering wheel from one car, an Army fatigue uniform from another and three fishing rods from a third car sometime between 3 and 11 p.m. Sunday while the vehicles were in the parking lot of TRF, 2400 Packer Road, police said. Two of the cars were unlocked and burglar entered the other by breaking a vent. Other items, including a wrench set and chains for a chain saw, were taken from the cars. The value of the stolen items was about $450. There are no suspects, police said. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 864-4810 The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. PAC-MAN PIZZA & VIDEO Any Large, Two Topping Pizza Bring in this coupon Expires Fri., Nov. 4 $2 Off GAME TOKENS Bring in this coupon 50 for $5.00 No other coupons accepted with these offers. THE NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS Judge says Bell's confession can be used in trial By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Bryan Keith Bell's statements to police officers will be admissible as evidence during his second-degree murder trial for the death of Frank Suerer Sr., Douglas County Associate Judice Judge Mike Elwell said yesterday. Ewell made the ruling after hearing more than an hour of testimony from four officers who spoke to Bell several times before he was arrested on Aug. 15. officer, had testified at a preliminary hearing in September that Bell had told Harmon that he had stabbed Seurer two or three times. Seurer's body was found on the morning of Aug. 2 on the kitchen floor of the restaurant he owned, Pop's Bar-B-Q, 2214 Yale Road. Kevin Harmon, a Lawrence police During yesterday's hearing, Harmon said that another officer called Bell about 2:30 p.m. on Aug. 17 at Pop's Bar-B-Q and asked him whether they could interview him. Bell worked at the restaurant until he was fired in late June, and worked there after Seurer's death. BELL GOES ON trial Nov. 7. Besides the charge of second-degree murder, Bell is also charged with aggravated rape and has pleaded not guilty to both charges. Harmon said that Bell was wanted for questioning because his fingerprints were on two envelopes that were found near Seurer's body. Harmon said that the interview began at 3:17 p.m., that the Miranda rights were read to him and that Bell signed a written waiver of those rights. He said Bell read the written waiver for about three minutes before signing it. A CONFESSION WAS taken from Bell about 7 p.m., Harmon said, and a court reporter was called in about 8:20 and Bell was jailed at 9:46 p.m. Harmon said that he had spoken to Bell the day of the murder at Pop's Bar-B-Q, because Bell had come to the restaurant. Three other officers also testified that they had spoken to Bell. They all said that they did not read Bell the situation and the situation did not require it. Department, said that while he and another officer were conducting surveillance of Pop's Bar-B-Q on Aug. 3, Bell walked by the area two times. The second time he spoke to Kern for about 20 minutes. He said that Beli initiated the conversation and that they talked about the operation of Pop's Bar-B-Q Randy Kern, of the KU Police Mark Riner, also of the KU Police Department, testified that he interviewed Bell on Aug 8 to learn information about the operation of Pop's Bar B-Q, about members of the police and about one of the employees. Mike Hall of the Lawrence Police Department said that he talked to Bell on Aug. 12 at the Lawrence Police Department and also spoke to him by telephone on Aug. 13 about Bell's decision not to take a lie detector test. Son's return from Grenada relieves local family By GINA K. THORNBURG Staff Reporter Good news came Saturday night to Mr. and Mrs. James Swanson when their son, Army Pfc. Gregory Swanson, died on Tuesday from four days of fighting in Grenada. Gregory, 22, a 1979 Lawrence High School graduate, is a member of the 2nd Battalion Rangers unit, which was in active initial phase of last Tuexday's invasion. Saturday night, Gregory telephoned his parents, who live at 3136 Campfire Dr., from Hunter Army Airfield near Savannah, Ga. "We're the lucky ones," Evelyn Swanson said. "Our hearts still go out to the ones who weren't as fortunate as we were." AFTER LEARNING THAT her son was in Grenada, Evelyn Swanson said, she and her husband watched the game Tuesday for news about the invasion. Calls from relatives and friends throughout the week helped the Swansons cope with the stress of waiting to hear from their son, she said. When they did hear from him, "He sounded very tired," she said. However, Gregory telephoned after being transferred to Fort Lewis, Wash., she said, and sounded better. Her son assumes his military duties at Fort Lewis. "They go back right into what they always do." Evelyn Swanson said. "They're Rangers and that's what is expected of them." Lt. Col. Edward Eidson, KU professor of Army ROTC, said that the Rangers were a special part of the United States military guerrilla tactics and airborne training Evelyn Swanson said that all of the Rangers had several weeks of airborne training. Because the Rangers parachute into combat zones, she said, they take only as many provisions and weapons as they can carry. "They go into a place like that only with provisions they take for five to 10 days." TRAINING FOR THE Rangers is rigorous, said Capt. Joseph Soltas, assistant professor of Army ROTC. The Rangers' training, which is divided into three phases, emphasizes counter-raquilla tacas. Solsas said The nine weeks of training takes the young soldiers into the mountains of Georgia to learn mountainering and rappelling. Florida to learn jungle warfare, he said. "They try to get a unit where the people are very well trained to fight in just about any environment they would find themselves in," he said. "It's all volunteer. The morale is very high there." Soltas, who graduated from a Rangers class to years ago, said he thought that the training was more effective in training for other battalions in the Army. "They put you under as much stress as possible to see how far you can go," he said. RACQUETBALL Racquetball Singles Entries Due: Wed., Nov. 2 208 Robinson by 5 p.m. **Entry:** $1 and an unopened can of racquetballs Levels of Play: Novice-Intermediate-Advanced Men/Women/Faculty-Staff & Students Tournament begins Sun., Nov. 6 at 1:30 p.m. COUNTRY LIVING in the heart of the city - Spacious studios, 1, 2. & 3BR apartments and 2 & 3BR townhouse meadowbrook 19TH AT CRESTLINE 8424200 A University Symposium UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THE SCREENWRITER'S ARTS OCTOBER 30th - NOVEMBER 2nd WALTER BERNSTEIN, SCREENWRITER Movies by Walter Bernstein 1 The Molly Maguires Sunday, October 30 at 4 p.m. Double Billing 2 & 3 Yanks and Semi-Tough Monday, October 31 at 7 p.m. 4 Fall Safe Tuesday, November 1 at 8 p.m. 5 The Front Wednesday, November 2 at 7:30 p.m. Question and Answer Period by Walter Bernstein introduction by Robert Day Colloquy All Films Shown in Woodruff Everything is free. Movies: A Writers Genre Tuesday, November 1 Burdett Loomis, Pol. Sci. David katzman, History Clifford Ketzel, Pol. Sci. Charles Krider, Business Charles Berg, Radio/TV/Film 4 p.m. 4 p.m. Javawk Room Kansas Union BERNSTE Sponsored by the SUA and the departments of Political Science, English, Center For Humanistic Studies, Radio/TV/Film, Business and Theatre, Academic Affairs. OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 1, 1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daykan Kissan (USPS 60-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Sauffer Flint Hall, U.S.A., during the regular school year and twice weekly during the summer semester. Saturday, July 21, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the University Daykan Kissan; Sunday, bobby hall, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at $15 for six months or $7 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $4 semester paid through the student account fee. POSTMATH: Send address changes to the U.S. Postal Service, Box 2860, Washington, DC 20006. MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Editor ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager DON KNOX Campus Editor PAUL JESS DAVE WANAMAKER MARK MEARS Bereal Sales National Sales Manager PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser Fritz and Jesse The Kansas National Education Association board of directors voted Saturday to endorse Walter Mondale for the presidency. By its 19-2 vote, it became the ninth state chapter of the National Education Association to endorse the former vice president. A K-NEA official said yesterday that the board had endorsed Mondale because of his long-standing support of education. John Lloyd, K-NEA's executive director, said that as a senator, Mondale had backed federal programs that provided funds for bilingual education and for special educational programs for handicapped and low-income students. The decision by the K-NEA to endorse Mondale should come as no surprise, especially because the NEA endorsed him in September. More surprising — and interesting is Lloyd's prediction that Mondale would select Jesse Jackson, the black civil rights leader from Chicago, as his running mate. The choice would make sense for both Mondale and Jackson, who announced on Sunday's "60 Minutes" broadcast that he would declare his own presidential candidacy this week. In a sense Jackson has been running for political office already, having traveled around the country giving speeches that have galvanized voter registration drives among blacks. The drive has made politicians realize that the black vote is going to carry some clout this election. And beating Reagan is the name of the game for blacks, who have suffered inordinately under the Reagan administration's sharp budget cuts. The Jackson campaign would probably not make it past the Democratic convention, and unless Jackson decided to run as a third party candidate, it would not pose too much of a threat to the Democrats' hopes. Together, Jackson and Mondale, with their diverse constituencies, have a better chance than most for defeating Reagan and the kind of policies that have been so devastating to these groups' lives. A sane Halloween It appears that, at least in Lawrence, children are still safe to walk the streets on Halloween, unmolested by muggers, robbers or child molesters, and without being subjected to candy contaminated by drugs or razor blades. people, said that they, too, found no harmful items inserted in candy or other treats. Lawrence and KU police and hospital officials reported, as of 11:30 p.m., no Halloween pranks or problems of any kind. In Kansas City, Kan., the Poison Control center at the University of Kansas Medical Center also reported no problems, and a nurse at Suburban Medical Center in Johnson County, which X-rayed the candy of about 700 Such news is a blessing, to be sure. If Halloween is still to survive as a holiday, and indeed we hope it shall, then kindness, not madness and perversion, must open the door to receive our children and the children of others. It is sad to say, but perhaps the reason for the lack of problems last night was that fewer children were roaming the streets, choosing to stay home because of fear. Or perhaps, truly, our society is getting Kinder, and saner. Let's pray it's the latter reason. 'Miss Lillian' Lillian Carter died from cancer yesterday at the age of 85 after living a full and varied life that included a stint as a Peace Corps nurse in India at the "youthful" age of 67. The mother of former President Jimmy Carter was a strong-minded and strong-willed individual who withstood the pressures of her small town in Georgia to concern herself about the problems of blacks. Trained as a nurse, she healed white and black children alike, at a time 50 years ago when most of her white friends "wouldn't even touch a black baby." "Miss Lillian," as she was affectionately called by family and press alike, did not like being in the limelight. She avoided the White House during her son's four-year term as president, insisting that she was "a small-town person." "This is where I am happiest," she once said. "And this is where I find peace — peace of mind and peace of body." A chilling reminder An observation of a U.S. Marine sniper in Beirut the other day was a chilling reminder of what war can do to the mind, even a mind educated in the most civilized nation on Earth: crosshairs are on them and you know you are going to blow them away. But then, after a while, you see your buddies getting killed and it doesn't make any difference to you any more." "It is strange at first. You see them through your scope and the The Hartford (Conn.) Courant The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty office of the Kansan alsoInvites individuals and groups to submit guest columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. LETTERS POLICY THE OREGONIAN GROW BY THE TEXTILE COMPANY ...MEN. THIS IS A CRISIS. GRENADA ? ...MEN, THIS IS A CRISIS. ...WE'VE GOTTA MOVE IN, TAKE CHARGE, & SHOW SOME GUTS. CALL IT MACHO IF YOU WANT TO... ...ARE WE MICE OR MEN? WE SHALL MANFULLY FORGE AHEAD...LIKE REAL MEN DO...LIKE... ...MAGGIE THATCHER IN THE FALKLANDS. J ...WEVE GOTTA MOVE IN, TAKE CHARGE, & SHOW SOME GUTS. CALL IT MACHO, IF YOU WANT TO... ARE WE MICE OR MEN? WE SHALL MANFULLY FORGE AHEAD...LIKE REAL MEN DO...LIKE... ARE WE MICE OR MEN? WE SHALL MANFULLY FORGE AHEAD...LIKE REAL MEN DO...LIKE... ...MAGGIE THATCHER IN THE FALKLANDS. ...MAGGIE THATCHER IN THE FALKLANDS. Marines sink deeper into Mideast conflict BEIIRUT, Lebanon — Marine forces in Beirut gradually became more involved in Lebanon's internal warfare in the past 14 months — leading to last week's suicide bombing that killed at least 229 American soldiers. The attack on the military headquarters of the 1,500-man American unit of the multinational peace-keeping force in the Lebanon capital was the blackout war for the Marines since two Jamaica. "Now we realize that there are a lot of people in Lebanon who SCOTT MACLEOD For most of their first year in Lebanon, the Marines mainly kept out of trouble. don't like us very much," said one Marine officer. United Press International And as the suicide raid makes clear, provocateurs and terror groups are stalking the Americans. But on Aug. 28, U.S. troops fought a 90-minute firetight with Muslim militiamen after being shot at in south Beirut, thus moving from peace-keeping duty to combat. Two key opposition groups, the National Salvation Front and the Shite Amal militia, appear to be moving toward a pact on the multinational force. The Marine Rules of Engagement allow the peace-keeping troops to return fire if under attack. So it is plain battles U.S. troops and multia bands in Lebanon could proliferate. President Reagan sent the force to Lebanon on Aug. 25, 1982, to oversee the withdrawal of Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation organization guerrillas, who were exiled expelled by an Israeli siege. The Marines left as planned after 18 days but returned soon to protect the Lebanese and Palestinians civilians of west Beirut and to bolster the Lebanese army's attempt to get a hold on the city, Israel's commander and chants massacre of Palestinians by rightist Christians. Rather than operating a garrisoned compound as they do now, the Marines went out on patrol through the Muslim slums to help residents feel that stability had returned. The Marine base was positioned at the Beirut International Airport for a good reason: It was the buffer between the Israeli army to the south and the Lebanese controlled districts to the north. With the Marines already drawn into combat in August, their role as peace-keeping troops was made riskier in September with the withdrawal of Israeli forces to a new occupation line about 20 miles south. This ended the buffer role and put the Marine compound squarely in the center between Lebanon's warring factions. The U.S. forces thus took on the job, rather than just cushioning against the Israelis, of directly aiding the Lebanese army under attack by Drusen Muslim and Shiite militias. At one point, U.S. warships unleashed an offensive — a 338-shell barrage at Syriain-backed anti-government troops — because the Lebanese army and the government of President Amin Gemayel appeared on the verge of collapse. Looking back on the bloody chain of events over 14 months, U.S. diplomats in Beirut acknowledge the Marines have been deeper into quicksand — an involvement that no one expected. Mondale does OK in Florida voting WASHINGTON — When Florida Democrats gathered for their state convention last month, the smart money was on former Gov. Rubin Askew to walk away with the president, who wrote party officials had scheduled. Straw votes are a political gimmick exploited this year by state and local politics to provoke interest in their conventions and other events. In terms of the 1984 elections, they have no official status, but they do seem to increase attendance at party functions. They also have some meaning for the candidates. Sen. Alan Cranston, ARNOLD SAWISLAK United Press International D-Calif., wanted to demonstrate last summer that he had appeal outside his own state and so he went all out to beat former Vice President Walter Mondale in the Wisconsin Democratic convention straw vote. Mondale was the favorite because he, like Humbert Humprey before him, comes from neighborring Minnesota and was identified with the strong populist liberal tradition that dominates the Democratic parties of both states. But Mondale didn't put in his best efforts in Wisconsin and got a nasty shock when the Californian won the straw vote. In Florida, Mondale was trying to pull off a variation of the Craston't feat in Wisconsin. He didn't have to — or want to — win, because that might have mortality offended Askew loyalists, who constitute the establishment of the Florida Demo. In 2014, he finished a strong second and to leave Sen John Glenn, D-Ohio, in the dust. He did both, getting more than 800 votes compared to Askew's 1,053 and Glenn's 400-plus. In the process some interesting facts of political life in 1983 were revealed. First, Mondale got far more mileage out of his alliance with organized labor than anyone had thought possible in a right-to-work state in the South. Florida is not known as a state where labor has had major political influence, so it was assumed that, at the convention, Mondale would get little out of his endorsements by the AFL-CIO and the National Teachers Association. Wrong. Especially in the big city counties, such as Miami's Dade, union activists — teachers as well as blue collar types — arrived well-organized and delivered some large blocks of votes to Mondale. As someone pointed out, there might not be unionized steelworkers or automakers in many states, but they all have teachers and government employees, many of whom are union members. A second fact was pointed out by Askew himself. He estimated after the vote that 3 million people had moved into Florida since he left the governor's seat in the mid 1970s. The people who remembered him as governor were intensely loyal, but there were plenty of delegates to the convention who knew Askew only by reputation. His hold on them was only through state party officials who worked hard on behalf of the state's favorite son. When the straw vote was taken, every county but Dade was reported, and it took an hour to complete its canvass. Some people thought the Mondale supporters in the delegation were trying to switch enough votes so he could beat Askew, but there also was the suggestion that the delay was caused by an effort to make sure that enough Dade votes were cast for Askew to avoid humiliating the former governor, making state party leaders look bad and creating a lot of ill-feeling toward Mondale in the state. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR President Reagan now showing true colors To the editor: On election night 1980, I sat in my lab grading papers while I watched the returns of the election. I was frightened. I had thought the American public saw through the flimsy charade that Reagan presented. This was the same man that had supported the Vietnam War to the very end. The same man that had created the enormous personal property tax burden in California that sparked the Proposition 13 Tax withdrawn that built, with tax dollars, the governor's mansion in Sacramento. Now we have U.S. troops committed to combat in Grenada and Lebanon. We have military advisers in El Salvador to prop up a dictatorial government. The CIA is running a covert military operation in Nicaragua aimed at the violent removal of the existing government. The president has cut social services back so far that they are now only a token gesture toward the middle class. The House on Civil Rights is following the Human Rights Commission into extinction. All the progress that has been fought for over the past twenty years, and bought with the blood of civil rights activists, has led to a surge in troops in Southeast Asia, seems to have been in vain. Ronald Reagan seems not to be a student of history. An introductory course in Western civilization would teach him that the course of human history has been toward promoting the rights of the individual. From the Magna Charity he was moved to ensure the rights of the individual to a decent life, free of political, spiritual and economic tyranny. I believe the American people now see Ronald Reagan's true colors. He can no longer hide behind his acting skills. This is a critical time in our history. With national elections just beginning, it is essential that we examine the answers that our candidates present us, and cast our votes for the candidates that we believe to have Gary W. Mc Cullough. Lawrence graduate student Not Christian the best solutions. For if we do not find answers to the problems that confront us today, there may not be a day after. Not Christian Gary W. Mc Cullough 19) . Second, the God of Christianity is a single God. To the editor: The Kansan reported in a story Thursday that Haitian Voodoo is similar to Christianity. Nothing can be further form the truth. This is a contradiction within itself. First, it is these Greco-Roman gods that the Apostle Paul preached against in Athens (Acts 17) and was nearly killed for preaching against in Ephesus (Acts In the article, Bryant Freeman, professor of French, asserts that "Voodoo is not far away from Catholicism" and that it "is not that different than Christianity." He claims that "the gods are the same as those in Greco-Roman mythology. Voodoo has one great god, Bondie, and other special gods to help him out." Freeman then states that the people worship "the god Papa Lebga who is roughly the equivalent of St. Peter." I — a Protestant — know that Catholics do not worship St. Peter. That is a direct contradiction of monotheism and is therefore idolatry. Freeman then speaks of an annual cleansing ceremony, in which "you mix the blood (of a pig) with rum and water and then clean yourself with the mixture." The Christian believes that Jesus Christ's blood was the final, perfect sacrifice necessary to cleanse us from our sin (Hebrews 10:12. 28; I Peter 2:24; J John 2:26; Ephrem 7:17; 6:9; Jesus cleansing sacrifice not be received in a ceremony, it can only be received by asking by faith through prayer for Jesus Christ to forgive you and to come into your life as your personal savior. Douglas Hensley Kansas City, Mo., sophomore 1 7 University Daily Kansan, November 1. 1983 Page 5 Reagan continued from p. 1 least discuss the governor-general's ideas for bringing in a peacekeeping force, whether it's (British) commonwealth or a Caribbean force," Speakes said. He said the United States regarded Scoon, who was appointed by Queen Elizabeth II, as "the only legitimate" governing authority in the British colony. The administration rejected the prime for recognition by Eric Gairy, the island's first prime minister, who now lives in Washington. The administration backed away from its earlier statement that the invasion force had found almost twice as many Cubans on the island as had been expected. Speakes brought the estimate back down from 1,100 to between 700 and 800. But the State Department said U.S. troops had uncovered secret treaties under which Grenada armed forces would be trained in the Soviet army and NATO integrated into the island's military forces. WITH ABOUT 650 Cubans already in custody, U.S. troops appeared to face only scattered resistance from snipers and stragglers who had fled into the nearby hills. U. S. officials will not predict how long elements of the American invasion force, which has grown to 5,900 troops, will remain on the ground until the end of the safety of Scoon and the new government. Hatfield, however, complained. "I don't think that should be our mission." "I think our mission was to secure the safety of Americans. Period," he said. Sen. Lowell Weicker Jr., R-Conn, blamed the administration for the bloody incarnation in Grenada and the invasion that followed because it rebuffed Grenadian Prime Minister Maurice Bishop earlier this year when he came toington seeking closer ties to the United States. Bishop, a Marxist, was killed in the coup by radical military leaders. Grenada representative in the British Commonwealth country. continued from p.1 There was still no word on whether U.S. forces had captured Gen. Hudson Austin, head of the military council established after Bishop's killing. A PENTAGON SPOKESMAN said Sunday that U.S. forces captured a man fitting Austin's description, claiming to be Austin and carrying papers identifying him as the general. There also was no word on the whereabouts of Deputy Prime Minister Bernard Coard, believed to be involved in the attack. Coard was captured by the Marines Saturday along with Revolutionary Military Council member Lt. Col. Liam James. Mobilization and detention of Coundy's family, Coady's wife Phyllis and two unidentified men. Barbarian government sources said that they thought Coard was being questioned on one of the five U.S. Navy ships anchored off St. George's harbor. Amid the continuing confusion over the situation in Grenada, a top official at the Cable and Wireless said that the British-owned company cannot understand why communications to it from Grenada, cut at the time of its坠落 formation of the Caribbean island, remain severed. CABLE AND WIRELESS handles telexes in Grenada and provides satellite relays for the Grenadian telephone company. The official, who is responsible for knowing when communications would be restored. Mortician Alfred Bailey of the Atway Funeral Home in St. George's said that his firm had removed 16 bodies from the rubble, and another funeral home had removed a body from the wrecked wing of the Richmond Mental hospital, which had 182 patients. Clement Gabriel, administrator of the hospital, said that he thought at least eight more bodies would be found in the rubble and that 30 patients were wounded. "Many of our patients escaped during the fire." Gabriel said. claim was invalid because "this court has concluded as a matter of fact" that the station manager said "no such thing." Craft continued from p. 1 METROMEDIA ATTORNEYS HAD said that the demotion was based on performance, not on class-based sex-stereotyping. Craft's charge that Metromedia used unequal pay practices was rejected by the jury, and Stevens upheld its opinion. On Aug. 8, a jury awarded $375,000 in actual damages and $125,000 in punitive damages to Craft for fraud and issued an advisory verdict claiming sexual discrimination. Regarding the sex-discrimination issue, Stevens said that Metromedia's actions toward Craft "during her employment at KMBC were not based on her sex." The only exception to that, Stevens said, was that Craft would not have been hired, regardless of his performance. Stevens said that Metromedia's treatment of Craft had been the result of factors other than sex. Her salary was less than that of co-anchor Scott Feldman — not because she was a woman. THE JUDGE SAID that Metromedia had reassigned Craft from co-anchor to reporter "because properly conducted audience research demonstrated unprecedented negative viewer response toward her. She was not constructively discharged; rather, she voluntarily left KMBC rather than abide by the terms of her contract which she signed but never carefully reviewed." but because her education and experience were not commensurate with his, he said. The judge also admitted that he might have made mistakes in his instructions to the jury that were not in line with the law. TO SHIELD THE 12 new jurers from publicity, Stevens said, they will be sequestered throughout the proceedings. In Craft's earlier trial, he admitted he was sequestered even after testimony and during deliberation. Lindsay McFerrin, a Kansas City, Mo., attorney and chairman of the Kansas City Bar-Media Committee, 'said yesterday that Craft's case had drawn a lot of attention from her committee, and that she had served as an unpaid, impartial legal observer for KMBC. "More attention was focused by the media on the media rather than on the law," McFerrin said of the trial coverage. "There is a delicate balance to be struck." He can only hope that a jury won't be influenced." McFerrin said that the steps taken by Stevens to shield the jury from publicity in the new trial had been "a wise move." She would not comment on the outcome of the case, she said, because her committee, a panel of the Kansas Bar Association, wanted to remain impartial. Denny also said he was not suprised that Stevens ordered a new trial because the damage to his motor vehicle had been paid. LARRY DENNY, general counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union in Kansas City, Mo., said that if the jurors had read newspapers or watched television reports about the case, they had violated direct orders usually given by judges. Following the original verdict, Craft briefly returned to her job as co-anchor at KEYT-TV in Santa Barbara, Calif., but left it for a series of speaking tours. Halloween Reports from some cities indicate that some of the rwdy ones got out earlier than usual. POLICE IN DES MOINES, Iowa, reported two unconfirmed cases of needles in candy over the weekend, and Cudahy. Wis., police said a man found a needle in a trick-or-treat candy bar. In Bossier City, La., police were awaiting the results of lab tests to identify a substance that soaked several packets of SweeTarts candy given to six trick-or-treaters. Some people played trick-or-treat on other trick-or-treaters. In another incident in Louisiana, a 12-year-old boy was stuck in the roof of the mouth with a straight pin when he hit it into a piece of Halloween candy Saturday night. A Ruston, La., woman was attacked by a piece of candy Saturday. The pin became lodged in her throat, but she also was not seriously injured. Maryland police searched for a duo — costumed as a cowboy and scarecrow — who tried to rob Jack Simpson, 32, of Summer Hill Trailer Park. In Indianapolis, three gunwielding teen-age boys stole Halloween candy from four children. MORE THAN 150,000 costumed marchers and spectators were expected last night at the 10th annual Halloween parade in New York's citywide stage, the nation's largest Halloween observance. Afterward, an unofficial annual parade on Christopher Street was expected to continue into the evening. streets of Georgetown, where a traditional three nights of costumed bar-hopping and parading in the city were held. The Youth International Party planned an unorthodox holiday — the 13th annual "smoke-in" in Washington Square Park, with free marijuana. Some people used Halloween for puposes other than to trick-or-treat. Washington, D.C., police planned to block off VISITORS TO JERRY Falwell's Halloween house in Lynchburg, Va., for example, were shown plenty of gore and death — in hopes of "scaring people into heaven." For $3.50, visitors passed through a mock newspaper newsroom filled with dead reporters, a home into which an airplane had crashed, a police officer shot and killed a murderer and the scene of a bloody car crash. MARKETING YOURSELF A WORKSHOP DESIGNED TO IMPROVE AND ENHANCE INTERVIEWING SKILLS AND RESUME WRITING TECHNIQUES Wednesday, November 2,1983 2:30-4:30 p.m. Regionalist Room, Kansas Union FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER. 864-3522 Tuesday Special ce USDA Choice club steak includes choice of potato and roll SIRLOIN STOCKADE® 100% ORIGINAL Lawrence. M $199 all for only Not valid with any other offer. ke. E&CE 143 Personal Computers and Applications An introductory course on using microcomputers for personal needs. Applications in research, word processing, and accounting are included. ME 296 Science of Materials — This is an introductory course on materials with an emphasis on the relationship of microscopic structure to the behavior and properties of metallic, ceramic, plastic, and composite materials. E&CE 140 Introduction to Digital Logic — This course teaches the design of simple digital systems. Students will learn to solve problems using digital logic, manipulate Boolean equations, draw logic diagrams, and document their designs. Did You Know That . . . TUESDAY at THE SANCTUARY You Can Now Buy $20 Worth Of Cover Charges For Only $10. ??? THAT'S DIME DRAWS NIGHT! (Reg. Tues. Night Cover $1) Purchase your card on Tues. Night or during office hours only 1401 W. 7th (bet. Michigan & Florida) 843-9703 SANCTUARY CE 477 Environmental Pollution Control — A basic course in protection of the natural environment. Problems and solutions regarding air and water pollution, hazardous waste, and environmental legislation are discussed. HIGH TECHNOLOGY COURSE OFFERINGS for Non-Engineers Many high-technology courses offered by the School of Engineering are open to ALL KU students. Listed below are several engineering courses with no prerequisites. Students of all disciplines are invited to enroll and become a part of the challenging future of high technology. C&PE 184 Introduction to Computers in Engineering — This is a FORTRAN programming class with many problem solving applications. Students will learn programming and use of the KU time sharing system. AE 242 Private Flight Aeronautics. — This course is designed as an integrated ground school and flight program leading to licensing as a private pilot. Topics covered include aircraft nomenclature, theory of flight, navigation, meteorology, and Federal Air Regulations. AE 245 Introduction to Aerospace Engineering — This course introduces students to the basic principles of aerodynamics, guidance and propulsion systems, aircraft performance, structures, and safety. Examples emphasize general aviation. AE 291 Aerospace Colloquim — Topics of importance and new developments in the field of aerospace are discussed by industry and government representatives and instructors from related fields of science and engineering disciplines. A forum for student activities at all levels. No text required. KU BOOKSTORES' TRADE-IN DAYS October 31-November 4 --- MONDAY T-SHIRTS Bring in any old T-Shirt and receive $1.00 off the purchase of any new shirt. TUESDAY CALCULATORS Bring in your old calculator and receive $1.00 off for every $10 value of the new calculator. Example: New calculator price $10 or more $1 off, New calculator price $20 or more $2 off—$40 calculator $4 off. THURSDAY PAPERBACK BOOKS Trade in your old, well-read paperbacks and receive 50* toward the purchase of any new paperback. In the Oread Bookshop Level 3 of the Kansas Union. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 - + = * / ^ # $ % * / % WILL WEDNESDAY BACK PACKS Trade in that dirty, old, grungy back pack and receive $2 towards the purchase of a new one. Maybe your friends will start talking to you again! FRIDAY SWEAT SHIRTS Is that an old sweat shirt or are you just a slob? Trade in that old, ugly sweat shirt of any type and receive $2 off any new sweat shirt. GO TEAM KU KUBookstores Trade-in prices apply to regular selling price only. One trade-in per item. Sale Oct. 31-Nov. 4. CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 1, 1983 TKE barrel roll raises money for St. Jude's By BRUCE F. HONOMICHL Staff Reporter Representatives from Tau Kappa Epsilon's national chapter are rolling the barrel from Minneapolis to New Orleans for St. Jude's Children's Hospital. Temporarily, though, the Kansas Highway Patrol flattened their suids. The TKEs are rolling an aluminum beer keg as a symbol to promote the fraternity's efforts in the Midwest to raise money for St. Jude's in Memphis, Tenn. The TKE representatives drive slowly, on the shoulders of the road, to call attention to their crusade. St. Jude's conducts basic and clinical research in children's diseases. The group began at the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis to raise money for research at the hospital. OUTSIDE TOPEKA yesterday, the TKE van was traveling on Interstate Highway 70 at about five miles per hour, with one of the group pushing the keg ahead of the van on a 4-foot metal axle. But a Kansas highway patrolman appeared in the rear-view mirror. The keg wasn't open and they weren't getting a speeding ticket, either. "They told us that even though we were on the shoulder we had to either drive at a normal speed or stop," said Mark Wood, a senior from Central Baptist University. "Okay, Driving to Lawrence, the key rollers had to load up the keg. "It was weird," Wood said. "I've never been stopped for going too slowly before. We had to actually normal speed from Topeka to Lawrence." 1ms is the fifth annual "TKE Keg Roll." The fraternity representatives rolled the keg from New Orleans to Milwaukee last year. This year's tour set 12 and will visit more than 80 TKE chapters throughout the Midwest. ASIDE FROM THE incident in Kansas, Wood said, the group has experienced little trouble in its 655-mile journey. The group will have visited six of the Big Eight universities and it reaches New Orleans on Dec. 28. The group of TKE members, from various schools around the United States, and their keg visited the KU chapter of the fraternity yesterday. Their van is splashed with advertisements for a national brewery. "We wanted to take the negative image of the beer keg away," said Scott Krall, a senior from Gannon University at Pittsburgh. "Danny Thomas, the comedian who has given so much time and money to St. Jude's, came to our national headquarters in Indianapolis and sold it as our beer money." Mr. Mire gave us $2,000 to underwrite the trio," he said. The Miller Brewing Co. is paying the group's expenses in exchange for promotion. THE KU TKE chapter, 1911 Stewart Ave., raised $500 for St. Jude's by selling "I Hate K-State" hats during the week of the KU/Kansas State football game earlier this month. The KU chapter also threw a party at Bottoms Up, 715 Massachusetts St., last night. Half of the $1 cover charge will be given to St. Jude's. The fraternity hopes to raise $150,000 by rolling the keg. But not all of the donations have come from TKE events. "We had one lady who stopped us in Marysville. She gave us $20 in memory of her son, who died of heart disease. He had been treated at St. Jude's." The runners were selected partly on athletic ability. The keg weighs 38 pounds. "Thank God we don't have to drive over to push the thing," Wood said. TKA Representatives from Tau Kappa Epsilon's national chapter roll a beer keg through the KU TKE house parking lot. They are rolling it from Minneapolis to New Orleans to raise funds for St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital. The people pictured are, left to right, Jay Burleson, University of Indiana; Scott Krall, Gannon University in Pennsylvania; Tom Doll, University of Akron in Ohio; John Murphy, University of Georgia; and Mark Wood, Central State University in Oklahoma. !!GRADUATE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ELECTIONS!! November 16 & 17 Nominations due in GSC Office, Kansas Union By Friday, 12 pm November 4, 1983 (STUDENT SENATE-FUNDED AD) College of Liberal Arts & Science wants UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Graduate Office 210-1 Strong Hall. —Self-nominations are required. —Filing deadline—4:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 11. Election will be held Nov. 16-17 with Student Senate Election. All LA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. INTRODUCING ISLAM TO NON-MUSLIMS The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents its fourth colloquy in an introductory seminar series about Islam "A CLOSER LOOK AT THE QURAN" Place: International Room, Kansas Union Time: 7:30 p.m. Tues., Nov. 1, 1983 Come Visit With Us Let Us Get Acquainted! FREE REFRESHMENTS ARE PROVIDED THE WINNERS OF THE CRAZY PICTURE CONTEST 1st PLACE 2E GSP GSP 2E IN THE RAW! CONGRATULATIONS THANKS FOR THE GREAT TIME! UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY Phone: 843-5279 BUSTENNESS 2nd 4W GSP 3rd 2W GSP DOMINO'S PIZZA University Daily Kansan, November 1. 1983 Page 7 CAMPUS AND AREA Cornfield site retains appeal for mall plans By the Kansan StaIt Plans for a "cornfield shopping mall" in Lawrence are still on the drawer board and haven't been discarded, the discussion has not solved in the discussions said yesterday. Joanne Grisham, part owner of property along Kansas Highway 59 that be considered as the building site, said she and her were still interested in the property. Gritsham, Shawnee, and her brother, Richard Armstrong, Baldwin, own 61 acres south of Armstrong Road where developers want to build the mall. Grisham said that several developers had been in contact with her recently and were interested in buying the land. She was also the one who said that plans were all tentative. But if those plans materialize, she said, the mall would be large enough to draw people living between Kansas City and Topeka. The mall is not a new idea, she said. Developers have been interested in the land for several years, and two years ago the project was proposed to the Lawrence City Commission. A Cleveland developer — Jacobs, Vissonsi, Jacobs — asked the commission to rezone the property. "It would be a major mall situation," Grisham said. "Those are the kind of people we have been talking to." However, the plans were stalled in March when the commission refused to change the zoning to permit commercial use. Plans for a possible mall along Highway 59 are of interest to city officials because of the downtown redevelopment issue, she said. ON CAMPUS JERRY BAILEY, assistant dean in the School of Education, will answer questions on the five-year program at 7 p.m. in 3 Bailey Hall. "EDUCATION IN JAPAN," a speech by Hidetoshi.Ki, professor of Gakushu University in Tokyo, and Mr. Yamaguchi, a Council Room of the Kansas Union. TODAY ROBERT TOMASEK, professor of political science, will speak on "Deterioration of Relations between Costa Rica and the Sandinsistas and the impact of the United States" at therm. in the Council Room of the Union. CAMPUS CHRISTIAN Fellowship will meet at 7:30 p.m. at 1116 Indiana St. CAMPUS CRUSADE for Christ will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union. KU SWORD and Shield will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union. TAU SIGMA Dance Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Dance Studio 242 in Robinson Center. CHAMPIONS! will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. THE JAYHAWK Singers will present 'A Salute to American Music' at 7:30 p.m. in Hashinger Hall Theatre. ECKANKER WILL discuss "The Most Ancient Religious Teaching" at 7:30 p.m. in the Governors Room of the Union. "MARKETING YOURSELF," a workshop by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, will be held on Thursday at the Regionalist Room of the Union. PRE-PHYSICAL Therapy Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Watkins hall with the Wilson will discuss academic requirements in physical therapy. KU INDIA CLUB presents diwali nite ENTERTAINMENT AND EXOTIC INDIAN FOODS lll Cordley School Hall 19th & Vermont Sat., Nov. 5, 7 p.m. $6/4,50 members at door $7/5 tickets-SUA office or call 749.353207050 & Foreign Student Office. Strong Hall 60 40 30 --- SUPER SALE SPECIAL Complete Pair of Lenses & Frames 59. 95 Reg. $65-$130 Save up to 53% when you purchase a complete pair of single-vision lenses, any frame (excluding boutique frames), any prescription, glass or plastic, for $59.95. Multifocal, photocromatics, tints, and oversize additional. - Zsa Zsa Gabor - Jordache - Mary McFadden - Oleg Cassin and more - Arnold Palmer Please no special order frames Offer good through Nov. 5 By LAURE JONES Staff Reporter Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 HUTTON OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Cadaver fumes force students to use masks in lab ing assistant for one of the labs. "I've been involved at various governance levels of the University, and I have never been so impressed with the cooperation and support we have received." "I don't like the situation at all. It is annoying," said Teresa Watkins. Topeka junior, "it is hard to breathe with an on and they are uncomfortable. Although the masks were given to students free this semester, Watkins is concerned that future students might have to pay for the masks. LAST FALL, THE Med Center increased the potency of its embalming fluid to kill mold that has been present in the room. The cadavers during the last two years. "The fumes make my eyes water and my throat burn. After I leave the lab, I vomit." "The course is already so expensive as it is," she said. "I've paid $20 for two atlasses, $11 for a dissection kit and $15 for the mask he could cost an additional $20." Students seen walking around campus lately with gas masks in hands are not preparing for an air pollution alert because the campus is going to a human anatomy lab instead. Now the Med Center might be forced to resume the old, weaker preservation method because the fall shipment of cadavers for anatomy classes at Snow Hall contains levels of chemicals that are known to irritate the skin, sore throats and headaches. Cadavers for anatomy classes are shipped from the university of Kansas to various U.S. locations. In the past few weeks, some students and teachers' assistants in Anatomy 101 have resorted to wearing half-mask respirators to filter out chemical fluids produced by embalming fluids that are used to preserve cadavers. The embalming fluid contains three times more formaldehyde and phenol than it has in years past. Doris Belote, a professor of biological sciences, said last week. "We'll just have to return to the old method of embalming and see what happens." Belote said. "You get rid of the problem and you have another one." REACTION AMONG STUDENTS who work in the lab is varied. the reported health symptoms." Porter said, "I could not determine the eight-hour, time-weighted average exposure in the lab." "Students appreciate the possible danger and the actions the University is taking," said Rebecca Pyles, a teach In the meantime, the department is working with Facilities Operations to improve the ventilation system in the lab. A complete remodeling is not necessary, because the division of biological sciences is scheduled to move in July 1985. Although students and TAs are not under any apparent danger, the division of biological sciences decided that it needed to respond to safety concerns. Experts were notified to analyze lab air concentration samples at Snow Hall, said Gunther Schlagen, chairman of the division of biological sciences. INSUFFICIENT DATA makes the evaluation "like applying apples to oneself." IN ANALYZING CHEMICAL concentrations in 605 Snow Hall, Randy LAURA BURNS, Prairie Village junior, said that the fumes from the embalming fluids were not irritating her in the lab. 'Until more is known about the long-term effects of exposure to both low and high concentrations of formaldehyde, I would advise any facility to work in as low concentrations as possible," he said. Michael Parhomek, environmental engineer for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment in Topeka, conducted additional analyses. The University expects to receive his report in the next two weeks. "I have not ever worn the mask," she said. "I can't say if they are uncomfortable. 'The fumes make my eyes water and my throat burn. After I leave the lab, my nose runs for an hour afterwards.' — Teresa Watkins, Topeka junior "Though I did find a measurable content in the atmosphere that causes Porter said his analysis was incomplete because the recommended allowable exposure by OSHA is calculated over an eight-hour working day. A grab sample measures just one particular sample for a 15-minute exposure, which then must be averaged over an eight-hour day. Porter, industrial hygienist and assistant director of safety at the Med Center, use a MiraTan-1A portable gas air conditioner to obtain samples of air volumes. The "grab-analyzer" isolates the sample of air, and the contents are then compared to standards set by the safety and Health Administration. "I might expect some problems when we open the abdominal region. You can expect some problems anytime you go in." The answer is going to be much stronger." Lief Crystal Kelly Warns ❤️ Have us monogram this lasting work of beauty for someone special McQueen JEWELERS INC 809 Massachusetts 843. 5432 WORLD CLASS AUDIO 23 Years Within The Industry. 106 Lines of Quality Audio. Every Line Of Quality Audio Available. Specialists In Custom Design. Guaranteed Shipments. Complete Consultation Available. INTERNATIONAL SALES CONSULTATION THE GRAMOPHONE SHOP 2100 A West 25th Street Lawrence, Kansas 60044 — (913) 842-0191 EDUCATION IN JAPAN a public lecture by Hidetoshi Kato Professor of Sociology, Gukushuin University, Tokyo Tues., Nov. 1 7:30 p.m. Council Room, Kansas Union Admission Free Professor Kato is one of Japan's foremost sociologists, and is in the U.S.as a Japan Foundation special lecturer. Sponsored by the Center for East Asian Studies How to have class between classes. GENERAL Foods INTERNATIONAL COFFEES Cafe Vienna AUSTRIAN STYLE INSTANT COFFEE BEVERAGE Indulge yourself in a warm cup of Cafe Vienna. It's a light and cinnamony touch of color. And just one of six deliciously different flavors from General Foods' International Coffees. GENERAL FOODS* INTERNATIONAL COFFEES AS MUCH A FEELING AS A FLAVOR Available at: Kansas Union Bookstore KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union 1 NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 1. 1983 Page 8 Senators avoid MX financing issue Committee deletes nerve gas funds By United Press International WASHINGTON — The Senate Appropriations Committee dealt the Reagan administration a setback yesterday by voting 14-12 to delete all production funds for two controversial new nerve gas weapons. The amendment, offered by committee Chairman Mark Haffield, R-Ore., cost $124 million from the $252 billion military spending bill for 1984. The committee declined to vote on another major issue, that being whether to appropriate funds for producing the first 21 MX missiles. Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Akr., who sponsored an amendment to cut $2.1 billion in production funds, withdrew his amendment on the advice of Hattfield, another MXoe (he, who suggested it did not have sufficient committee support and could be more substantially debated on the House floor. THE NERVE GAS vote was a significant defeat for program backers, who were depending on the Senate committee to act, and could mean that the program is dead in Congress this year. The House Appropriations committee cut all nerve gas production funds Oct. 20 and backers had decided not to bring the issue to the full House, which had soundly rejected the program earlier this year. In every budget he has presented to Congress since his inauguration, President Reagan has been seeking to resume chemical weapons production for the first time since 1969. The Pentagon wants the money to produce 155mm binary artillery shells and the "Bieney" binary bomb. In binary weapons, two non-lethal chemicals are kept separate until they are mixed in the shell or bomb, producing a lethal gas. They are considered safer than older, single-chambered weapons which may leak. CONGRESS REFUSED TO break the unilateral U.S. production ban in 1981 and 1982, and last summer the House refused to authorize the program. However, the Senate approved the program when Vice President George Bush broke a 49-49 tie vote and House negotiators deferred to their Senate counterparts when the two bills were reconciled in a conference committee. Asked after the vote if it had been in doubt, Hatfield said, "No. We had our heads counted." Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, chairman of the appropriations defense subcommittee, said he was not sure whether an effort would be made to restore the nerve gas funds when the military bill was taken up by the full Senate. If so, it will probably be offered by Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, Stevens said. THE COMMITTEE COMPLETED work on virtually all of the bill in its third day of meetings. However, it did not complete a full work on a classified section of the bill. In its work yesterday, it restored $138 million in cuts made by the defense subcommittee, including $168 million to provide for annual production of 840 M-1 tanks instead of 720; $23.5 million to purchase new fire control systems; and $77.6 million for equipment to be warehoused in Europe for ready access in case of war. Overall, the committee added $550 million to the subcommittee version, Candidates welcome Jackson to race By United Press International WASHINGTON — Democratic candidates yesterday lauded Jesse Jackson's entry into the presidential race as a way to increase the number of votes that his candidate who vote, and some said that his candidate who vote, from front-runner Walter Mondale. Jackson, a civil rights activist, said Sunday that he would formally announce his candidacy at Washington's new Convention Center Thursday. The prospect of his candidacy has split the race among Democrats and Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley and Detroit Mayor Coleman Young are both committed to Mondale. "ANYONE WHO WANTS to run for president can and should." Mondale said of the president's decision, former president is a civil justice maker, civil rights maker and social justice a critical part of his campaign platform and would compete with all the candidates for black and minority votes. Monday's press secretary, Maxine Mondale, would be hurt by lacks. Mondale would be hurt by lacks. Some polls have indicated that Jackson would cut heavily into the number of black people voting for Mondale, she said, but a Harris poll two weeks ago showed Mondale leading by 20 points among black people. Sen. John Glenn's campaign manager Bill White said, "We welcome Reverend Jackson in the race and he will be a tough competitor." FORMER SEN, GEORGE McGovern said, "I think he will reach some voters who are now immobile, watching the whole thing from the sidelines. I don't see Reverend Jackson taking votes away from other Democratic candidates — I see him mobilize people now on the sidelines." John Rousellaen, press secretary for Sen. Alan Cranston of California, said, "Jackson will energize and mobilize the black voters. In terms of black voting it probably hurts Mondale more than anyone else. It hurt us a little bit." DON FOWLER, ONE of the three people in charge of the campaign of Sen. Ernest Hollings of South Carolina, predicted that Jackson's entrance would have no immediate effect on Hollings' chances. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mass phone 84-6115 OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRINDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 WASHINGTON — The Senate, in a surprise move late last night, overwhelming defeated a bill to raise the national debt ceiling, squelching the government's immediate authority to borrow money or pay its bills. Senate defeats raising of debt limit The Republican-controlled Senate, minutes before its midnight deadline, voted 53-19 against the motion to raise the national debt ceiling from its current trillion to $4.45 trillion that would carry the government into February. By United Press International Earlier yesterday, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Robole Dole, R-Kan., warned that unless the debt ceiling was raised by midnight, the Treasury Department would be forced to cancel its quarterly refinancing auction of about $16 billion worth of notes and bonds scheduled DOLE, MANAGING the bill, said canceling the auctions would disrupt market conditions, raise the Treasury interest rates by about 0.125 percent, costing the government about $250 million over the life of the debt," and could affect other interest rates as well." Failure to raise the debt limit on time also would prevent the Treasury from transferring $13 billion to the Social Security trust fund, but Dole said Social Security checks will go out on time in any case. "I think Halloween is certainly a good night to pass the debt limit," he quipped. "We're certainly going to scare a lot of people." However, Republican leader Howard Baker of Tennessee indicated that he would move to reconsider the vote today. Last night's defeat climaxed four days of debate that were often bogged down in unrelated amendments. One of those amendments called for a mutually verifiable nuclear freeze, which the Senate, in a historic veto by President Reagan, to vote to kill 58-40 EARLIER IN THE DAY, the Treasury Department had canceled its auction of three-year bonds scheduled for today. The delay was expected to raise interest rates slightly on Treasury securities and ultimately cost the government an estimated billion in higher interest payments paid to investors over the life of the debt. The House had approved a $1.6 trillion ceiling earlier this year. If the Senate had approved its own $1.45 trillion figure, then either the House would have had to agree to the lower figure or a joint conference committee would have had to work out a compromise. Tufts prof arraigned in slaying of prostitute By United Press International DEDHAM, Mass. — A fired Tufts University professor was arraigned yesterday on murder charges for the slaving of his hooker-lover. Anatomy expert William Douglas, 42, with his wife in the courthouse, pleaded innocent in the slaying of raven-haired Robin Benedict, 21, a prostitute in Boston's Combat Zone, who disappeared in March. Prosecutors said that Douglas, the father of three teens, had squandered family savings and $50,000 in Tufs research funds on Benedict, whom he reportedly put on his payroll as an anatomy sketcher. Her body has never been found, but her car was found in New York City. they could get a conviction "without a body." PROSECUTORS, CITING AN 1850 case in which a Harvard professor was convicted of burning victims even though no corpses were found, said that They said that they had assembled evidence, including a bloody hammer and pieces of tissue "from the deepest part of the brain" in a pocket of a jacket found hanging in a closet of Douglas's travel home in surburban Sharon, Mass. Assistant District Attorney John Kivian said that Benedict had wanted to break off the relationship with a friend, the slaying had followed a quarrel. "FBI tests will show beyond a doubt this defendant did murder Miss Benedict," he said of Douglas, fired from his Tufts job in May and two weeks ago NORFOLK SUPERIOR COURT Judge Thomas E. Dwyer refused to set bail for Douglas, a burly man who spent the arraignment staring at the floor. charged by a Suffolk County grand jury with with stealing university funds, A Nov. 22 date was set for a preliminary hearing in the case. Douglas's attorney, Daniel O'Connell III, called the decision not to set bail ridiculous and said that his client had been badgered for months. Mrs. Douglas, who has described her marriage as "volatile," has been mentioned in court papers as a possible victim in the case, but has not been charged. Boyds Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy-Sell-Trade Gold-Silver-Coins Antiques-Watches New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913.842 8773 A FULL SPECTRUM SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 RUNNERS - Plagued with foot injuries? FRESHMEN - Can't decide on the running shoe to buy? Funded By SUA. 864-3477 James Reeves, D.P.M., will teach you to evaluate your old or new running shoes at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Party Room of the Burge Union. NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Stop by 115 Military Science or Call 864-3161 SUA DATES & DAYS CALENDAR Once $4.75 Now reduced 60% to $2.00! Get them at the Main and Burge Union Bookstores and the SUA Office. Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 I WANT YOU! TO TRY THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA FRENCH BREAD PIZZA NITE (Tues & Thurs.) All You Can Eat-$2.95 2228 Iowa 842-0154 6 packs to go No Carry Out or Delivery on this Special Order; calls and valid with the offer SYA FILMS TONIGHT! HAS 1000 VOTERS JELT! SHOCK CORRIDOR: THE MEDICAL JUNGLE THAT DOCTORS DON'T TALK ABOUT! SHOCK CORRIDOR: 7.30 p.m. $1.50 in Alderson Aud. ALSO, THIS WEEK AT SUA Limontow, Wed. Nov 2 Jonny Quinn in Delaware LA STADIA 7.30 p.m. Tomorrow, Wed. Nov 2 Jonny Quinn in Delaware LA STADIA 7.30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. Fri 8 a.m. Nov 4 & 5 Edite Murphy (Trading Places) and Nick Note in 48 HRS. 7.30 p.m. 7.9 30 p.m. THE BULING CLASS has been unofficial No midnight on Thu. weekday 4. 6.) All shows in Woodruff Aud. $1.50, $2.00 Midnight Illinois vs Minnesota Wichita St. vs New Mexico St. Auburn vs Maryland Georgia vs Florida Boston College vs Army East Carolina vs FLI) Alabama vs FLA) Iowa St. vs Nebraska Kansas St. vs Oklahoma St. Missouri vs Oklahoma Texas vs Houston Washington vs Harvard Holy Cross vs Harvard Pitt vs Notre Dame Circle your choice as the winner KANSAN FOOTBALL CONTEST (Official Entry Form) How The Contest Works: This week simply circle your choice as the winner. In case of a tie the contest closest to the score of the KU game gets preference. Be sure to include scores for KU and opponent. Winner of this week's contest will receive $25. Second-place winner will receive $15 and the third-place winner will receive $10. Tie Breaker Game KANSAS___ vs COLORADO___ (Be sure to include scores for KU and opponent) Name: Address: Contest Rules Student ID # ___ 1. Entrants will be students enrolled at the University of Kansas during the Fall semester. 1983 and use the official entry form to enrol. 3) Mail your entry form or delivery it personally to the Business Manager of the University Daily Kansan, R. 119 Staunford-Fall Hall not later than noon each Friday. All entries postmarked or delivered after noon Friday will be rejected. 2. Be sure to print your name and address legibly on your entry form. 4. ) Contest winners will be announced each Tuesday in the University Daily Kansan. 5. University Daily Kansei employees and their immediate families are not eligible to enter the contest. that person must be enrolled at the University of Kansas. 7) In the event of a tie, the person coming closest to the score of the KU game of the week gets preference. In cases where there are further deadlocks on that basis, duplicate prizes will be awarded. Winners will be notified how to claim their prizes. **Winners** 1. Paul Quaterbury $180 13 correct closest to correct score 2. Dennis Gullet $160 13 correct closest to correct score 3. Fiona Kostaw $140 13 correct closest to correct score Winners 13 correct—12, 12 correct—35, 11 correct—58, 10 correct—62, 9 correct—42 others 8 correct or less. Let the sunshine in...AGAIN! Presented by the University of Kassas Theatre and the School of Fine Arts · Book and Lice by Gerome Rugh and James Rafe · Made by Gail MacDermott November 3, 4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 1983 · 8:00 p.m. nightly · Crafton-Preyer Theatre / Murphy Hall Tickets in sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office · All seats reserved for reservations call 910-9844-3624 · Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fund HAIR 819 Massachusetts Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 * Thurs. nil 8:30 Arensberg's = Shoes One step beyond Zodiac USA Fashion Footwear 1 SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 1, 1983 Page 10 NFL pioneer Halas, 88, dies in Chicago By United Press International CHICAGO — George Halas, one of the titans of pro football, died after a long bolt with cancer last night in his Chicago home. He was 88. Halas was the last survivor of the small group who sat in a Canton, Ohio, auto showroom in 1920 and founded the American Professional Football Association, which became the National Football League. He remained active in the league, as a owner and owner, from its birth until the day he died. Halas, an innovator during his more than a half century in the game, helped give the new league credibility by luring Red Grain into the pro ranks. He later transformed football into its modern form with the introduction in 1940 of the modern T-formation, with its spinning quarterback and man in His Chicago Bears were thought to be the first pro team to practice every day, the first to take game movies for strategy purposes, the first to hire its own band and have its own team song, the first to distribute a club newspaper, the first to play every game on radio and the first to play an annual homecoming game. But Halas also was the first to tear off his hat and jump up and down on it to vent his frustrations when his beloved Bears failed on a play. He roared the length of the field on the sidelines and allegedly intimidated officials who made calls against his team. The team, coaches box near the bench, and coaches box near the bench, and another about commenting to the officials. During a game against the Rams in 1963, Halas found himself — illegally — on the 20-yard line during an altercation. An official waved him back and he surprised Halas to comment after the game: "He must be new in the league." "I'll fight anybody, as long as there's a cause to be caused." Halas once said. "I'm not sure I can do that." Halas said he never felt sure of a Bears victory until his team was 15 points in front with less than a minute left. He had the very game and he was vicious in defeat. The only man Halas ever ran from was Jim Thorpe — and that run landed Halas in the NFL record books. In a game against the Oorang Indians on Nov. 4, 1923. Halas recovered Thorpe's fumble and ran 98 yards for a touchdown, with Thorpe, an Olympic gold medalist, in pursuit. Halas' run set a record that stood until 1972, when Jack Tatum of the Raiders returned a Green Bay fumble. When Halas' name Halas' name from the record book. Despite his record-breaking football career, he said he had always thought he would have been a better baseball player. He even played briefly for the New York Yankees, after he graduated from the University of Illinois and played football for Great Lakes during World War I. But in 1919, he injured his hip sliding into third base, ending his dreams of a baseball career. And the vacant spot on the lineup was taken by Babe Ruth. Ivan Nivsen George Halas MOLSON 25 United Press International SAN DIEGO — Redskins running back Joe Washington is brought down by two San Diego tacklers. Mark Moseley kicked a 37-yard field goal with four seconds left to give Washington a 27-24 victory over the Chargers lost night. Moseley's 37-yard boot lifts 'Skins to 27-24 win By United Press International SAN DIEGO — Mark Moseley, who missed four field goals earlier in the game, connected on a 3-yarder with four seconds remaining last night to lift the Washington Redskins to a 27-24 victory over the San Diego Chargers. John Riggs scored two touchdowns and the Washington defense forced eight turnovers to offset San Diego's 17 fourth-quarter points. The Redskins' winning drive went 72 yards on nine plays after the Chargers had tied it 24-24 with 1:52 left on toll Benirschie's 43-ward field goal. Charger quarterback Ed Luther, starting in place of the injured Dan Fouts, threw six interceptions, included that were picked off by Mark Murphy. The Redskins also recovered two fumbles. The victory kept Washington, 7.2, a game behind Dallas in the NFC East. The Chargers, 3.6, watched their playoff hopes dim as they remained mired in last place in the AFC West with a schedule that still includes games against Pittsburgh, Dallas and two against the Los Angeles Raiders. San Diego cut it to 24-21 with 4.13 left when Luther connected with Wes Chandler for a 27-yard touchdown pass. The score capped a four-play drive that went 99 yards. Luther brought the Chargers to 24-14 with 8-41 remaining when he scrambled and hit tight end Pete Holson on a touchdown. Woolston's first as a pro was Holson's first as a pro. Washington took a 7-0 lead 1-48 into the game. Quarterback Joe Theismann connected with Virgil Seay on the Redskins' fourth play from scrimmage for a 39-yard touchdown pass. Seay caught the pass at the 15-yard line, split two defenders and rambled into the end zone. Theismann finished 25-of-47 for 325 yards and Luther was 18-of-35 for 313 yards. Washington took a 16-7 lead on a 43-yard field goal by Moseley with five seconds left in the half. The Redskins went 52 yards after cornerback Anthony Washington intercepted a long pass by Luther. San Diego tied it 7-7 with 32-23 in the first quarter on an 11-play, 74-yard scoring drive that ended when Chuck Hollins scored for a touchdown from 5 yards out. Carr, defense lead JV squad to 29-18 win By the Kansan Staff The game against Baker was one of three junior varsity games scheduled by the league. Tailback Dennis Carr rushed for 162 yards and Dodge Schwartzburg kicked a 52-yard field goal as the Kansas Jayhawk junior varsity football team beat Baker 29-18 yesterday at Memorial Stadium. "We wanted to get a lot of kids a chance to play in the maximum number of games," Gofftried said. "I think our other games are going to be against Independence Juco and William Jewell." FRESHIMAN MIKE ORTIL, whom Gottfried decided to take off the redshirt list in the Oklahoma State game, played quarterback for the Jayhawks and completed 6 of 24 passes for 158 yards and two touchdowns. Orth and Carbine combined on a 73-yard down play. Orth hooked up with Wayne Ziegler of a 33-yard score and ran for a 14-yard touchdown. Schwartzburg, who is Bruce Kallmeer's backup, booted his 52 yard field goal in the fourth quarter. He also had a 41 yarder with 3 45 left in the game. KU's makeshift defense held Baker to 26 yards rushing and only 22 yards in total offense. Baker did get 142 yards in returns, including a 91-yard kickoff return for a touchdown in the first quarter. JAYHawk NOTES — Gottfried reported that the injury plague that has hit the KU recently be may diminish. Wide receivers Bobby Johnson and Daren Green may be recovered to play against Colorado on Saturday. Johnson suffered a slightly separated left shoulder against Oklahoma last Saturday. Gottfried said the injury was not as bad as first believed. Green has been out since the Kansas State game on Friday, an ankle. He can ryanesterday in practice. Also, inenen Chip Schuster and Rod Timmons will also probably play against the Buffaloes. Tight end-punter and receiver will be the only jayhawk listed as doubtful. SPORTS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Morgan released by Phils, may play for Giants again PHILADELPHIA — Veteran second baseman Joe Morgan, saying he wanted to be closer to home should he decide to return for his 19th major league season, was given his release yesterday by the Philadelphia Phillies. Phillies President Bill Giles said yesterday that he spoke with Morgan, 40, "several times" in the past week, and that Morgan had not made up his mind about playing next season and requested that the Phillies release him. "There was a clause in Joe's contract in which we had an Oct. 31 deadline for renewing his contract for 1984," Giles said. "Joe requested that the Phillips exercise their option not to renew his contract and be given his release, so that if he decided to play next season, he could play closer to his home." Such a move by Morgan gave rise to speculation that he would be returning to the San Francisco Giants, who traded him to the Phillies after the 1982 season. Morgan makes his home in Oakland, Calif. Wake Forest reprimanded by NCAA MISSION - The NCAA Committee on Infractions has reprimanded and censured the Wake Forest basketball program for violations in the recruitment of two prospective players. The penalty does not include sanctions and will not affect Wake Forest's eligibility for postseason basketball competition or television appearances. The case involved recruiting violations that were discovered during general interviews conducted by the NCAA enforcement staff with two highly recruited prospects during the 1982-83 academic year. One of the players eventually enrolled at Wake Forest. The NCAA said that two assistant basketball coaches had personally contacted a player during his junior year in high school and that a friend of a prospect was entertained with meals, a music concert and lodging for two nights. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Michael Clay, a 25-year-old student at the University of Kansas Medical Center, won the fifth annual Macy's marathon Sunday but was nine seconds short of the record time for the race. Med Center student wins marathon Ellen Makarewicz of Bethlehem, Conn., a former dancer with the Kansas City Ballet, was the winner in the women's division with a time of 2:39:50 — 9 minutes and 36 seconds better than the record set by Andrea Ray. Clay, whose only other marathon victory came in Huntsville, Ala., two years ago, finished the course in 2:20:43 Bob Busy the set up for a game. Mike McDonald of Prairie Village, crossed the finish line 35 seconds later. Randy Kinder of Topeka, finished third with a time of 2:54. Golf team eighth in fall invitational The KU men's golf team finished eighth out of nine teams, including teams from every Big Eight school this weekend in the Kansas Fall Oklahoma State, with a three-day, 54-hole total of 884 strokes, won the tournament which was played on the Sunflower and Hidden Valley courses at Alvamar. "Our finish here didn't mean anything," said Ross Randall, KU golf coach. "This fall, we've had a large squad, and I've been playing different people in each tournament. We'll finish much better at the Big Eight championships in the spring." Led by sophomore Sandy Landgren's final 18-hole round of 74 yesterday, Kansas as a team shot six strokes better on the final day than on Saturday. Record isn't his only criterion for success Gottfried's a winner on and off the field The four-lane stretch of roadway between Tulsa, Okla., and Oklahoma City was lit only by an occasional passenger motorist late Friday night. Assistant football coach Bill Baldridge manned the steering wheel. The eyelids of his passenger, head mounted Gottfried, were heavy from a night of recruiting. Then Baldridge glanced to his left and saw a Chevrolet pickup slam through a steel guard rail on the other side of the freeway and topple into the line of traffic. Several cars sped past the wreckage, but Baldridge pulled the car to the shoulder. Gottfried leaped from the auto and ran to the injured driver's aid, Baldridge said. As the rudely awakened coach darted across the highway, two trucks swerved to avoid the wreck and gave Gottfried a "close shave." When Gottfried got to the truck, fuel and radiator fluid were dripping onto the asphalt, the engine was A. B. P. ANDREW HARTLEY Sports Editor smoldering and the driver's seat had been pushed through the back of the truck. Gottfried and Baldridge extracted the man, set up signal flares and discharged a fire with a flashlight until state troopers arrived. If United Press International had known what Gottfried was doing the night he was named Coach of the Week after KU defeated Southern Cal, the team made a new award: Humanitarian of the West. Gottfried may have been at the right place at the right time to become the Good Samaritan. Some might say that he simply was thrust into a situation requiring the same quick action of any other hum- But when taking into account the number of lives that Mike Gottfried has touched in his 17 years of coaching, his "close shave" with two semi-trailers had been a long line of generous and hard-acted people. A dying boy To be sure, Gottfried himself probably would offer that as a reason for his actions. The week following that victory Gottfried traveled to several Southern states to woo some high school public schools. When KU played Texas Christian, Gattfried's sister-in-law introduced him to Neil Williamson, her The football team gave the boy an autographed ball and a card. But the trip had special importance to Gottfried because it gave him the opportunity to visit and eat supper with a 10-year-old boy in Mobile, Ala., who was slowly dying from a brain tumor. "He was a great little kid and had a lot of love in him," Gottfried said. Neil was also an avid football fan. Gottfried called his friends in the profession and suggested they telephone Neil. The list included three of their colleagues. quarterback Kenny Anderson, Green Bay Packers coach Barr Stark and USC coach Ted Tolliar to But Gottfried didn't stop there. "I called him periodically and then I went down to see him and had a chance to eat supper with him." What makes Gottfried's good deed even more honorable was his reluctance to tell the story. One other writer knew about the boy, but Gottfried wanted him to use it in a story about Switzer's involvement, Switzer, a man often under fire from critics, needed the publicity — he didn't. Gottfried is a man who doesn't perform acts of kindness for the ink. They are part of his character Atop padded shoulders At the final gun of the Jayhawks' benchmark defeat of Southern Cal, five jubilant Kansas football players lifted their coach off the ground and carried him onto the field. But Gottfried's face was wrinkled in discomfort. His body language said, "I'm not sure whether I want to be up here." The thrill of victory for Gottfried was overshadowed by his bent to walk across the field and shake the hand of losing coach Tollner. He ended up compromising, steering the herd in Tollner's direction. "I'm a little uncomfortable with being carried off," he said last week. "I was kind of looking for the other coach. You almost feel bad that you're being carried off and here's the other guy walking." "I enjoy the wins but I think you just have to keep things in the proper prespective." Unsportsmanlike tirade Gottfried thinks he might have temporarily lost sight of that perspective two weeks ago when his argument with an official during the Oklahoma State game cost his team 15 yards. it was really out of character to get the 15-yard penalty," Gottfried said. "At that point I feel like either I have to do something here or we're going to continually get bad calls. "One thing I take a lot of pride in is not being too high and not being too low. It was just an emotional time. But I should have never gotten a 15-yard penalty. "Poise is a big word — poise and class. I think it's OK to have a little flare-up. It goes back to what's expected in you in this position — the way you're looked at and observed by people. So it's important for you to conduct yourself in a manner in which you're always in control." Former college coach "I guess he did it to repay him for the things he'd done," Sports Information Director Doug Vance said. "That's just the kind of guy he is. There's always someone out of town visiting." carl bentley, Gottfried's college coach at Morehead State, Ky., and long-time friend, was the guest of the coach — a special guest. Gottfried paid the gentleman's air fare from his own pocket. An older gentleman wearing a three-piece suit and a "Bear" Bryant-style hat stood stonically on the KU sidelines Saturday in Norman, Okla., watching his former pupil coach a limping Jawhawk team. When talking about the influences in his life, Gottfried said last week. "I've always admired Earl because he was always close to his players. That felt a lasting impression on me." Rapport with his players Throughout the football season, players have frequently told writers what a great influence Gottfried has had on them. Perhaps that is because Gottfried chooses to be close to his players. "I feel it's important that you're in the battle with them — through the problems, the relationships, he said." "Wimming and losing is important to me because in the end whether I'm hired or fired or whatever depends on that. Your successes are decided in those wavs. "But to me the successes go further: how your kids are doing, how they react under different situations. To what's more important is do our kids graduate and are our kids given the basic things they need to get through school. That was not what we were trying to do. It was more important to me than the wins and losses." It's how you play the game With games remaining against Nebraska on the road and Missouri at home, it appears as if Kansas may have more losses than victories this season. But again, Gottfried won't judge the season by KU's "I think there's been a pretty good foundation built here," he said. "It's like I said after one of the earlier games. Hey, this is just part of a chapter in the game we are working on, writing the whole book. So we're in chapters right now." "There's only one way the fan will judge the season, and that's the W's and L's. But I think we've made progress. It's going to take time. People don't want to hear that, but it's a slow process. And again, that's why I don't get caught up in that part of it. You'd be hard pressed to find a more sincere man to trust a football program with PETER VAN SCHIJN Mike Gottfried . 1 3 MX victory House approves production money Inside, p. 2 KANSAN CLOUDY THE COUNTY OF BALKENNY Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas Vol. 94, No.53 (USPS 650-640) High 70. Low 45. Details on p. 2. Wednesday morning, November 2, 1983 U.S. troops capture 23 Grenadians By United Press International ST. GEORGE'S. Grenada — U.S. troops搜索 for suspected Cuban holdouts stormed the tiny island of Carriacou yesterday and took 23 Grenadian soldiers prisoner without firing a shot. U.S. officials said. Officials said that the Marines, who stormed the island in landing ships and No Cubans were encountered in the six-hour operation on the island about 15 miles north of the main island of Grenada, Pentagon officials said, but it took prisoner seven Cuban Carriacou, a possession of Grenada, has a population of 7,000. See related picture p. 5 helicopters, found a warehouse packed with more than 70 rifles, 150 cases of ammunition, 12 cases of TNT and other arms and equipment. THE PENTAGON RAISED the U.S. military death toll in the invasion of Grenada to 18 — with 86 wounded and one soldier listed as missing. Maj. Douglas Frey, public affairs officer for the U.S. Army forces on Grenada, said that troops were concentrating efforts to flush out small pockets of resistance in four areas on Grenada. "The Army is running soldiers all over the island in operations every day to ferret out the last of the resisters," said Adrian Khalil, who were combining four areas of the island. He said the soldiers were using helicopters and vehicles to search the area south of Pearls airport, the central lake district, an area near the town of Sauteurs on the northern tip of the island and along the west coast. FIVE MEN WERE captured near Sauteurs and another was marched into the prisoner of war camp at Point Salines — site of a Cuban-built airport that the Reagan administration said was constructed for military purposes — bringing the total of Grenadians captured yesterday to 23. President Reagan had overwhelming evidence to justify the invasion of Grenada as a move that neutralized a Cuban and Soviet threat to security of the Western Hemisphere, Republican congressional leaders said viedeard. Senate Republican leader Howard Baker and other GOP congressional leaders gave Reagmn a solid vote of support. The Senate voted, that included a review of intelligence information that the administration said detailed a threatening Cuban military build-up on Grenada. "I think it will emerge that there was a clear pattern of determination by the Cubans, no doubt for the Soviet Union, to use that island as a staging area for military adventure and other parts of oceanism and this hemisphere," Baker said. PREDICTING THAT A majority of Americans would join them in supporting the president, the congressional leaders sought to allay concerns about U.S. motives and the legal justification for the invasion one week earlier. The State Department said yesterday that "it would be a very serious development" if the Cuban government were proven to be behind a recent wave of terrorist attacks against U.S. installations in Central America. The threats and bombing attacks have occurred since the invasion of Grenada and, Hughes said, "We are obliged to take them very seriously." American personnel had been warned to be on alert after a series of bomb attacks against U.S. installations in Bolivia, Colombia, and Puerto Rico and a number of telephoned death threats to Americans. In Jamaica, Prime Minister Edward Seaga ordered the expulsion of four Soviet diplomats and the bureau chief of the official Cuban news agency, Prensa Latina, in connection with an alleged murder plot. U.S. detains Cubans By United Press International HAVANA — American troops yesterday surrounded the Cuban Embassy in Grenada, detaining four Cuban diplomats and ordering the rest to leave the country within 24 hours, an official said. SOURCES CLOSE TO the prime minister said Seaga's action was intended to draw a parallel between the events in Jamaica and the situation in Grenada. Two of the detained diplomats were later released, but the fate of the others was not known. Cuban President Raul Alcaron told a news conference. Alarcon released the text of a diplomatic message that Cuba sent to the U.S. Interest Section in Havana that said: "Paul Scoon, without any legal representation or authority and acting under instructor, ordered the U.S. government ordered the Cuban diplomat-personnel in Grenada to abandon the country within 24 hours." Paul Scoon is the Governor-General in Havana. THE MESSAGE SAID that the Cuban government held the United States totally responsible for the fate of its embassy personnel. Vice Adm. Joseph Metcalf, commander of the invasion force of about 5,200 American servicemen and 300 others from six Caribbean nations, estimated that 69 Cubans had died during the invasion and that 36 others were wounded. The Organization of Eastern Caribbean States announced that it would no longer recognize Grenadian envoys named by former Marxist Prime Minister Maurice Bishop, killed Oct. 19 during a curfew by hard-line cabinet members. The OECS, which requested last week's U.S.-led landing to oust Grenada's militant rulers, also pledged that it would provide emergency food supplies and other aid as the island's 110,000 residents try to return to a normal life. HUFFLEY PERRY — Carl Hughes, Tonganoxie senior and platoon leader for Army ROTC's Recondo, waits for his troops to assemble. See p. 7 for story and photos Gary Smith/KANSAN House sets Christmas as Grenada deadline By United Press International WASHINGTON — The House voted overwhelmingly yesterday to invoke the war powers act and give President Reagan until Christmas to remove U.S. troops from Grenada or get Congress to approve their presence on the island. The resolution passed on a 403-23 vote and was sent it to the Senate. The Senate approved a similar provision last week as an amendment to legislation to raise the national debt limit. Though the debt bill was defeated Monday, a motion to reconsider has kept it at least technically alive. Senate leaders gave no indication that a separate resolution invoking the war powers would be adopted. THE HOUSE ACTION seeks to set the clock ticking on the 60-day limit set by the Vietnam-era War Powers Resolution for military areas without congressional authorization. While the House considered its resolution, Senate Republican leaders meet with Reagan at the White House yesterday and emerged with a strong support for the Grenada invasion. The House resolution, while not critical of Reagan or the invasion, states that the two-month limit was triggered Oct. 25 when U.S. forces landed on the Caribbean island nation. That gives Reagan until Christmas to pull the troops out or win congressional approval of their mission on Grenada. The House debated the issue Monday but postponed the vote until yesterday. It became apparent during the debate that Republicans would support the resolution so long as it was not critical of Reagan or the invasion. Rep. William Broomfield, R-Mich., senior GOP member on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said he backed the resolution to ban that U.S. armed forces were sent into hostilities. HOUSE FOREIGN AFFAIRS Committee Chairman Clement Zablok, D-Wis., said the legislation "does not address whether our presence in Grenada is right or wrong." Zablocki said Monday the resolution was necessary because Reagan's report to congressional leaders did not cite the section of Powers Resolution triggering the 60-day limit. "I regret he did not do so. ... the president should under the proper section. Zablocki said. Congress passed the War Powers Resolution in 1973 to assure Congress a voice in committing U.S. troops overseas and prevent military involvement in another situation such as the Vietnam War. City delays decision on developers Staff Reporter BY JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter The Lawrence City Commission last night declined to clarify its legal status with a downtown developer and at the same time issued a list of 15 questions for another developer to answer before next week's City Commission meeting. The commission has said that the agreement expired in July. But Sizeler says it is still the developer of record, and has indicated it might take legal action if the city changes developers. The commission met with City Attorney Gerry Cooley in a half-hour closed session to discuss the city's legal tie to Sizerel Realty Co. Inc. (Sizerel), the official downtown developer in March. THE CITY COMMISSION has set Tuesday as its deadline for naming a developer and will be picking between Sizeler and Town Center in Chicago. The City Commission will choose the downtown developer competition last month. The Sizezer proposal calls for a retail shopping center in the 700 and 800 blocks downtown, east of Massachusetts Street. Town Center has proposed closing the 600 block of Massachusetts Street to build a mall between Vermont Street and the alley east of Massachusetts Street. After the commission decided against making a decision on the legal issues of downtown redevelopment, Commissioner Nancy Shontz announced her resignation from the Center to answer before Tuesday's selection. The questions deal with ownership of the corporation, the company's financial structure, and its operations. bers and their previous experience building and mimicking shopping malls. SHONTEZ ALSO SAID she would have Sizerel answer the questions, although Sizerel has not answered them. One of those questions asks whether the developer would put up a full performance bond for the project, and if not how much would it be willing to cover with a bond. The second question asks the developer whether it can provide a loan or not, indicating how much the bank is willing to loan Mayor David Longhunter questioned Shontz about why she brought up the questions only a few times. "I didn't wait." Shontz said. "I was hoping Town Center would volunteer come forward See DOWNTOWN, p. 5, col. 1 Applications available for Kansan positions Applications for University Daily Kansan editor and business manager for Spring 1984 are now available at 200 Stauffer Flint Hall; at the Kansan Business Office, 119 StauFFER Flint Hall; at the Student Senate Office, 105B Kansas Union; and at the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union. Applications should be completed and brought to 200 Stauffer Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 16. Montessori schools stress independence as a part of learning By JOHN UNREIN Staff Reporter Staff Reporter MONTESSORI SCHOOLS, for the most part, differ from traditional pre-schools and public school systems in that children learn to work independently of the teacher. An Italian physician named Maria Carducci developed a system that children as young as 2 $ _{1/2} $ could learn effectively in the classroom. A teacher sits down to complete the circle, as the 20 or so pre-school children, between the ages of 2 $ \frac{1}{2} $ and 6, look on with anticipation. At the beginning of school in a Montessori classroom, children sit quietly in a circle near a living room, a kitchen and a variety of learning materials. But despite an apparent increase in interest and support of the Montessori method of teaching pre-schools, a director of Montessori school in Lawrence said that most universities, including the University of Kansas, did not offer courses to train teachers in the Montessori method. Llois Caips is director of the Montessori Children's House, 2312 Harvard Road, which is one of three Montessori schools in Lawrence. She said recently that Montessori training had been offered only in private American schools because the United States had not recognized a need for Montessori education. AVILA COLLEGE. A private college in Kansas City, Mo., is one of the few schools in the United States to offer certified Montessori training as an Why isn't the Montessori method taught in Kansas when, according to Capps, public school systems in places such as Milwaukee and Cincinnati See SCHOOL, p. 6, col. 3 "Working hard on making a silence," Kristopher Arrandale, 3, sits quietly on the floor of a Raintree Montessori School classroom. Art curator at Nelson-Atkins will head Spencer Museum By DONNA WOODS Staff Reporter KU officials yesterday announced that an assistant director of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art would become the permanent director of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art. Jay Gates, assistant director and curator of American Art at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Mo., will assume his duties as director on Jan. 1. Chancellor Gene A. Budig yesterday said, "Jay Gates is one of the most promising young professionals in art museum administration today. We are delighted to have him at the University of Kansas. He is nationally known for his documentation of the high standing of Spencer museum." BUDIG SAID THAT the ties between the two museums should be strengthened by, Gates' appointment. Douglas Tilghman, acting director of the Spencer museum, said that the two museums had already cooperated by sharing special displays. He said he hoped Gates' knowledge of the Nelson-Atkins Museum would increase interaction between the museums. Following his graduation from the College of Wooster, Gates studied at the Vienna Institute of European Studies and earned a master of arts degree at the University of Rochester, N.Y. He has completed course work toward a doctorate degree in art history at the University of Gates came to the Nelson Museum in 1981 after serving three years as director of the Brooks Memorial Art Gallery in Memphis, Tenn. He also served as curator of education at the St. Paul's School of Art and Cleveland Museum of Art and museum curator at the College of Wooster in Wooster, Ohio. IN ADDITION TO his duties as museum ___ See MUSEUM, p. 5, col. 1 New system delays twice as many paychecks as originally anticipated By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The number of state paychecks at the University of Kansas that were delayed yesterday by KU's change to a statewide, computerized payroll system almost doubled earlier expectations, the KU Endowment Association controller said. The association controller, Stephen Carttar, said no-interest loans would be available for state employees who the payroll office knew would not receive their checks on time because of the change. At least two student employees, an undergraduate on work-study and a graduate teaching assistant, also reported that taxes were improperly withheld from their paychecks. Cartart said the comptroller's office and the association had expected that 125 to 140 employees would not receive paychecks yesterday. They prepared 134 loans, and 50 of those were nicked up yesterday. AN ADDITIONAL 1/16 loans, which will fill in for state checks identified as missing yesterday, were to be prepared and ready to be picked up at the KUEA office on West Campus after 1 p.m. Keith Ratzloff, KU assistant comproller, acknowledged some problems had occurred but Cartar said the usual number of no-interest loans caused by missed checks this late in a semester was about 30. Checks are routinely returned to a bank, and you can in turn to the state on time, or if other errors occur. Students who miss their checks can apply for loans at the office of student financial aid, CAC. State employees other than students may apply to the dean or department chairman under State employment laws. See PAYROLL, p. 5, col. 1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Post office will raise price of first-class stamp in '84 WASHINGTON — The Postal Service announced yesterday that it was seeking approval of a 15 percent increase in the price of a first-class stamp — from 20 to 23 cents — and that it also wanted to boost other mail rates late next year. other mail rates last year. Postmaster General William Bolger said increases for most classes of mail were needed to avoid a projected $800 million loss next year. The price of mailing a card would jump from 13 to 15 cents. The rate request must be approved by the Postal Rate Commission, a process that takes about 10 months. The increases would likely go into effect in October 1984. The Postal Service last raised rates for first class letters in 1981. Democrats sav Clark evading issues WASHINGTON — William Clark breezed toward confirmation as interior secretary yesterday, but came under fire from Senate Democrats who charged he was dancing around key policy issues. Clark, chosen by President Reagan to be James Watt's successor in the Cabinet, also frustrated Democratic members of the Senate Energy Committee by refusing to criticize Watt. "I hear you're good at stonewelling." Sen Wendell Ford, D-Ky., said. "I think you should to decide." replied Clark. "That's for others to decide. Replenish it," Clark's sharpest critic in the first day of confirmation hearings was Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, who accused him of "dancing the light fantastic" around issues. South Africa to vote on constitution JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — South Africa's white minority readied for today's vote on a proposed new constitution that would grant unprecedented political rights to some non-white but would ignore the majority 20 million blacks. majority 20 million whites. The constitution, designed to blunt criticism of South Africa's regime and soften the world's image of apartheid, its institutionalized system of racial discrimination, has sharply split the country's 4.5 million whites. raca'a distimin 'a day approached, South Africans were "more sharply divided than at any time in the country's turbulent past," said Chris Freimond, political correspondent of the leading liberal newspaper, the Rand Daily Mail. Autoworkers strike against Chrysler TWINSBURG, Ohio — An estimated 3,200 autoworkers went on strike against a Chrysler Corp. stamping plant yesterday, forcing the layoff of 6,300 workers at two other Chrysler production plants, the nation's No. 3 automaker said. automaker said. Chrysler said the Twinsburg strike closed two of it eight U.S. and Canadian assembly plants yesterday, and the company will review the future of four other plants on "a day-by-day basis." nature of Japan to keep up with. Meanwhile, the United States and Japan agreed yesterday to raise the number of Japanese automobiles that can be sold on the U.S. market during the 1984 fiscal year to 1.85 million. U. S. automakers were outraged by the new import ceiling. Publisher Murdoch buys Sun-Times CHICAGO — Publisher Rupert Murdoch yesterday bought the nation's eighth-largest daily newspaper, the Chicago Sun Times, for $90 million cash, ending three generations of ownership by the Marshall Field family. Field family Murdoch, Australian owner of communications companies on three continents, outbid an offer of $63 million by Sun-Times Publisher James Hoge. Marshall Field V, who sold the paper with his half-brother Frederick, said. "To be perfectly frank, my brother felt from his position that he wanted to maximize his return out of the paper. The agreement ... between us took control of the decision out of my hands and I don't want a big fight with him anyway." Drifter retracts murder confession HOLLYWOOD, Fla. — A homosexual drifter who confessed to killing 6-year-old Adam Walsh and dumping his severed head in a canal now says he did not murder Adam or anyone else, his attorney said yesterday. Ottis Elwood Toole, 36, has retracted the confession that was the evidence linking him to the notorious 1981 kidnap-slaying of Walsh, said police, citing gory details Toohe provided, remain convinced that he killed Adam. Kirkland, "You can take (Toole's denial) and do whatever you want with it," Hollywood Police Chief Sam Martin said yesterday. "I still feel we have a prime suspect, Toole, in this crime." Workers continue to strike in Tahiti PAPEETE, Tahiti - Striking workers picketed four luxury hotels and harassed beach-going tourists yesterday in the sixth day of a bitter labor dispute that could shut down parts of this South Pacific island paradise. The hotel employees, demanding higher pay and a shorter work week, resumed picketing at the Maeva Beach, Tahaara, Beachcomber and Maetavai hotels. Police fired tear gas Monday to break up protests after violence erupted among the strikers, who rampaged through several hotels, breaking glass, damaging buildings and heaving at least two tourists into a swimming pool. The hotel managers agreed to close their hotels unless the walkout was settled. WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-2-83 SEATTLE 30.00 30.24 COOL 30.00 MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON FAIR 13W CHICAGO NEW YORK SAN FRANCisco DENVER FAIR LOS ANGELES 10W ATLANTA HIGHEST TEMPERATURES DALLAS WARM NEW ORLEANS MIAMI LEGEND RAIN SHOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW Today will be mostly fair across the nation. Today, nationally, today will be partly cloudy with a high near 70, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a low near 45. Tomorrow will be clouds and cooler with a high near 65. House approves funds for MX production By United Press International WASHINGTON - The House narrowly approved funds for full-scale production of the powerful MX nuclear missile Tuesday in a crucial victory for President Reagan's military buildup advanced funding plan for the B-1 bomber, rejecting arguments that approving money for future years is a violation of the design of the aircraft is not yet complete. On a 217-208 vote, the house rejected an amendment by Rep. Joseph Addabbo, R-N.Y., to delete $2.2 billion for building the first 21 of the intercontinental 10-warhead weapons. It was the last House vote needed before production of the weapon, developed over a decade, begins. The weapon is expected to approve the weapon. Earlier, the House endorsed an MX opponents appealed to about a dozen undecided members to consider the ramifications of approving a decision. The decision will be vulnerable to Soviet attack "If we fund this weapon, we are in a hair-trigger state and that gives the incentive to one side or the other" to win the war, warned Rep. Les AuCun, D-Ore. THE AMENDMENT TO delete $438.7 million for certain long-term contracts for the bomber, also offered by Addbadda, was turned back 247-175. But Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis, one of the architects of a compromise worked out with the White House calling for MX distribution in exchange for renewed efforts at arms control, argued now to come back down on that agreement. Reagan, who wants the MX to counter the Soviets' huge SS-18 and SS-19 strategic missiles, changed his arm to put more emphasis on arms control. target, and putting greater emphasis on arms control. He strongly endorsed the findings of his Scoyworc Commission, which called for placing 100 MX missiles in existing Minton silos in Wyoming and extending the range to single-warbred missile that would presumably offer a less tempting DURING THE PROCESS of authorizing Pentagon weapons programs earlier this year, both the House and Senate added further conditions tying distribution to arms control. Specifically, they called for production of 21 missiles in 1984 instead of the 27 the administration sought. "This compromise isn't perfect," said Rep. Normie Dicks, D-Wash, another Democrat who, like Aspin, initially opposed the MX. "But on balance, the best way to get an arms control agreement is to keep this bargain, (to) work toward all three elements of the Scowcroft report." Druse rebels free 209 Christian refugees By United Press International DEIR EL QAMAR, Lebanon — Drusen Muslim rebels freed 209 aged, ailing or orphaned Christians yesterday as a humanitarian gesture and promised to release hundreds more of the 25,000 refugees besieged in a Shofu mountain town since September. Drusen leader Walid Jumblatt said the evacuation was timed to coincide with peace talks among Lebanon's waring factions in Geneva as a good-will gesture to the Christian-led central government. The talks continued for a second day but there were no reports President Amin Gemayel had acceded to Muslim demands for greater control of the government and abrogation of the May 17 withdrawal accord with Israel. See related stories p. 12 THE REFUGEES WERE helped by Red Cross workers into five buses and driven to a soccer stadium for reunion with their families in the predominantly Christian sector of east Beirut, 13 miles to the north. A Red Cross spokesman said 209 Christians were evacuated and that the Drusse Muslims circling the town gave a total of 1,000 people over five days. About 5,500 people lived in the town before a three-week Drusue drive for control of the Shofu forced thousands of Christians in surrounding villages to seek refuge in Deir el Qamar beginning Sept. 6. George Dib Nehme, the mayor of Deel the Qamar, said between 20,000 and 25,000 refugees had been "packed like sardines" in houses, churches, the mosque and the synagogue since then. "There are about six persons for every bed," he said. THEERE IS NO heat or electricity and a single fountain in the main square is the only source of water. Nehme said there is a particular hygiene problem at a hospital housing 350 retarded children and that three people have been killed and 11 others wounded by snipers. SAIL THE BAHAMAS with the KU Sail Club COME TO THE INTRODUCTORY MEETING Wednesday Night, November 2 7:00 p.m. Kansas Room—Kansas Union Or Contact John Perry 749-2099 TONIGHT: at THE SANCTUARY All You Can Drink! Beers & Bar Drinks ($3.00 Cover) 7:30-Midnight * Reciprocal With Over 180 Clubs* 1401 W. 7th (Bet. Michigan & Florida) 843-9703 SANCTUARY A University Symposium UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WINTER THE SCREENWRITER'S ARTS OCTOBER 30th - NOVEMBER 2nd WALTER BERNSTEIN, SCREENWRITER Movies by Walter Bernstein 1 The Molly Maguires Sunday, October 30 at 4 p.m. Double Billing 2 & 3 Yanks and Semi-Tough Monday, October 31 at 7 p.m. 4 Fall Safe Tuesday, November 1 at 8 p.m. 5 The Front Wednesday, November 2 at 7:30 p.m. Question and Answer Period by Walter Bernstein Introduction by Robert Day All Films Shown in Woodruff Everything is free Colloquy Movies: A Writers Genre Tuesday, November 1 Burdett Loomis, Pol. Sci. David katzman, History Clifford Ketzel, Pol. Sci. Charles Krider, Business Charles Berg, Radio/TV/Film 4 p.m. Jayhawk Room Kansas Union BERNSTE Sponsored by the SUA and the departments of Political Science, English, Center For Humanistic Studies, Radio/TV/Film, Business and Theatre, Academic Affairs. University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1983 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Carlin to join dedication, speak with KU employees Gov. John Carlin will meet with classified employees and participate in the afternoon dedication of the Summerfield Hall addition Friday at the University of Kansas. Carlin will be in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall from 11:45 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. to meet with classified employees, said Tom Swearingen. KU Classified Senate president. Swearring said the governor probably would devote most of the session to answering questions from the audience about topics such as merit pay, state health-insurance plans, the 1984 pay raise and pay proposals and prospects for the next fiscal year. "We hope we have a big turnout," Swearing said. "This is a chance to hear directly from the governor and to ask him questions. It's a good time for him to come, given the fact that there is low morale and people are very much in question of what is going on." Man arrested in hit-and-run death LEAVENWORTH — Authorities arrested a suspect late Monday in the weekend hit-and-run death of a Kansas City, Kan., man. A 37-year-old Leavenworth County man posted a $500 personal recognition bond Monday night after his arrest and was ordered to appear in Leavenworth County District Court tomorrow, Sheriff's Officer Barbara Adolbush said. A charge of vehicular homicide was pending against the suspect, who was not named. Adolphson said. Evidence taken from a pickup impounded by sheriff's deputies at the time of the arrest was sent to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation laboratory in Toneka George N. Marcus, 48, was killed Saturday night when he was struck by a vehicle as he stood next to his disabled car on Kansas Highway 32 near Tonganoxie. Authorities Tuesday continued to investigate the accident, Adolphson said. Early morning fire damages shop An early morning fire yesterday caused about $15,000 worth of damage to a shop in Palmyra Township, Douglas County Sheriff's Department officials said yesterday. An electrical short caused the fire, which began at 1:10 a.m. yesterday but caused no injuries. 7 students place in debate tourneys Seven students from the University of Kansas placed at debate tournaments in Texas and North Carolina last weekend. Thirty-eight teams competed for the top honors at a tournament at North Texas State University in Denton, Texas. The KU team of Diane Gregory, Houston junior, and Steve Gray, Buffalo Grove, Ill., sophomore, took fourth place in the senior division. Gray's performance also earned him eighth place honors in individual performance. In the junior division, the team of Ed Watson, Arkansas City freshman, and George Lopez, Wichita freshman, took fourth place. Mike Dudick, Lee's Summit, Mo., freshman, placed sixth in individual speaker performance. Forty-two teams competed for top honors at a tournament at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. The KU team of Martie Aaron, Wichita sophomore, and John Culver, Overland Park freshman, won the championship. The KU also earned individual honors by placing eighth out of 84 speakers. The KU debate team will host its 15th annual fall debate tournament Saturday through Monday. Elimination rounds will be at 3:30 p.m. Monday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The tournament is open to the public. Four hurt in Coffeville bus crash COFFEYVILLE — A school bus ran off a curve and overturned a mile south of here after its brakes failed. The accident injured four elementary school students, authorities said yesterday. An Oklahoma Highway Patrol spokesman said that driver Carl Bryant, 33, reported that the brakes had failed on the bus at the top of a hill on a county road, and that the bus had overturned on a downhill curve. Bryant was not injured. Cheryl Greenfield, 9, was hospitalized in serious condition with a head injury, authorities said. Bryan Moore, 11, Monty Rossen, 13, and Barbara Greenfield, 5, all of rural South Coffeyville, Okla., were treated and released. The other 11 passengers were not injured. Authorities said the wreck occurred northeast of South Coffeyville around 8:15 a.m. yesterday. KC man arrested for alleged fraud KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A 38-year-old Kansas City, Kan. man inducted by a federal grand jury was arrested at his home yesterday for his alleged involvement in a fraudulent check scheme, federal authorities said. A federal grand jury Monday issued an indictment charging Raymond J. Newton with transporting a $25,000 forged and counterfeited cashier's check, drawn on the Peoples Mercantile Bank from Kansas City, Mo., on June 8, the FBI said. Newton was scheduled to appear before U.S. Magistrate Calvin Hamilton yesterday, said Robert Davenport, special agent in charge of the Kansas City FBI office. If convicted, Newton faces a possible sentence of 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine. SW Bell lowers record rate increase TOPEKA — In a move that would save residential customers $1.95 a month in higher telephone bills, Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. has pared its record rate-increase proposal by $9.2 million, a company spokesman said yesterday. The telephone company filed a modified rate-increase proposal with the Kansas Corporation Commission asking for a $204.5 million rate hike instead of the original $213.7 million boost, said Bell spokesman George Regan. The revision came at the start of the second week of KCC hearings on the proposed rate hike. Regan said the lower rate-increase proposal meant that Southwestern Bell residential customers would pay $7 more a month in basic telephone service rather than the $8.95 Bell was originally seeking. JEWELRY WORTH $2,260 and sterling silver worth $160 were among items stolen sometime between 11 p.m. Saturday and 1:20 p.m. Monday from a residence in Wakara township, the Douglas County Sheriff's Department said yesterday. Thieves entered the residence after breaking a window. Other items taken included jewelry tools, a 21-inch television, a wood stove and a sleeping bag. The total value of the items stolen was $2,970. The sheriff has no suspects. sold well by Pearl BEAD necklace worth $2,000 was stolen Oct. 7 from a dresser drawer in the Gamma Phi Beta sorority, 1339 W. Campus Road, police said. They have no suspects. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 664-4810. The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. Seven people were briefly trapped last night when fire engulfed the rear of a Lawrence house at 1233 Pennsylvania St. By the Kansan Staff Gunshots delayed escape from fire, resident says And one of the occupants said gunshots kept them from leaving through the front door. The residents were not injured, but a firefighter, Clifford Smith, suffered a twisted knee while fighting the fire. He Fire officials made no immediate estimate of the damage caused by the fire that began at 7:50 p.m., but the owner of the house, James Caskey, 1516 New Hampshire St., said the house was worth about $20,000 or $25,000. was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Mai.丹Morrow said. Loretha Parker, who rents the house, said she, a nephew and five children were watching television in the front of the house when they smelled smoke coming from the back. He nephew. John Brockman, went to investigate. BROCKMAN SAID he went to the office of the business, but that when he opened the door, his eyes were on. "When he opened the back door, flames hit him in the face," she said. Parker said the shooting stopped when a neighbor came by and began asking whether all the children had been taken out of the house. Lawrence police late last night had not determined whether gunshots were fired. They have made no arrests. Morrow said three engine companies and one ladder company fought the fire. The firefighters had originally been given an address different from the one where the fire was. Morrow said the police were asking why they were given the wrong address. Morrow was one of the first fire fighters at the scene. Commission to study fuel relief program By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter The Lawrence City Commission agreed last night to study two proposals that could help residents who have problems paying their winter heating The Natural Gas Task Force, a group appointed by the commission, asked the city to appropriate $25,000 to start a fuel assistance relief program that would aid both low-income families and individuals. The city also will consider making the Kansas Public Service Co. Inc. adopt the Cold Weather Hub, a unit of the National Commission, that would prevent utilities from turning off fuel to households that are unable to pay their winter gas bills. PAUL BERRY, TASK force member, asked that the city donate the $25,000 from its contingency fund. Although money for fuel assistance relief is available through different programs in the community, Berry financing has not been increased. He also said that members of the task force feared that one of the programs, Warm Hearts, might not be continued because of a lack of financing. People are interested in the task team's proposed assistance program, BCR. "There are people who think it should have been started already," he said. Last year, city and county assistance programs helped 1,809 households pay fuel bills, he said. The task force estimated that the number would increase by 14 percent this winter. "We were fortunate that we had a mild winter," he said, "because we had a great deal of need for funds other than those made available by traditional THE TASK FORCE'S Cold Weather Rule proposal, if approved by the commission, would extend the Lawrence Gas Co.'s shut-off policy. The gas company now will not shut off gas from Nov. 15 until March 15. If the KCC rules are adopted, the company would extend the shut-off policy to March 31, said Pat Donahue, a member of the task force. "We've looked at those last 15 days," Donahue said. "There are usually cold days in that period." With the KC rule, a customer would be on a payment-level plan, he said. Payments would remain at the same level from month to month. BERRY SAID THAT the utility company had been working with the task force on the recommendations. The company has already agreed to voluntarily comply with most of the recommendations, so the City Commission would not have to write a formal ordinance forcing them to comply. Donahue also said that before service would be shut off, a customer would receive a phone call and a written notice. A representative of the utility would also try to call the customer in person. Commissioners last night questioned whether they could approve such an ordinance. fall/winter 83-84 Sweaters from around the world in棉巾, cashmere, Shetland and more. Trouvers from khaki to moleskin and materials between. 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Lee Jeans (Reg. $14.99) King of Jeans coupon expires Nov. 6 This coupon entitles bearer to $4 OFF Guys' Lee Jeans (Reg. $24) King of Jeans coupon expires Nov. 6 Hurry and Save Today through Sunday at KING of Jeans LEVI'S Lawrence's Headquarters For All levis For Guys And Gals 843-3933 740 Mass. Open Sundays OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 2.1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kansan (USPS $69,640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall Lakehurst, Kan 60012 during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer sessions. Subscription to mail is $15 for six months or $7 a semester in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 for a year Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $7 a semester in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 for a year Subscription changes to the mailing address are $15 for six months or $7 a semester in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 for a year MARK ZIEMAN Editor MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM Managing Editor STEVE CUSICK Editorial Editor DON KNOX Campus Editor PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser Business Manager DAVE WANAMAKER MARK MEARS Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager Senate hearings William Clark was prepared this time. Clark, President Reagan's nominee for secretary of the Interior Department, quoted a variety of facts and figures about department programs during his confirmation hearings before the Senate Tuesday. This situation was far different from the confirmation hearings Clark went through in 1981 after Reagan had chosen him as deputy secretary of state. Clark's lack of knowledge in foreign affairs embarrassed administration supporters and outraged opponents. Tuesday, Clark discussed energy leasing programs and wildlife refuges with members of the Senate Energy Committee, and got a favorable reception from almost all of them. In 1981, Clark did not know the names of the leaders of South Africa and Zimbabwe, yet went on to win confirmation to the State Department post. He later won respect in that job and was named national security adviser in 1982. Clark was able to answer some questions at length this time during questioning by the Senate committee. He brought with him to the Senate hearing a green-covered transcript of James Watt's 1981 confirmation hearings. But Clark refused to criticize Watt, the man he is to replace at the Interior Department. The biggest question now is not whether Clark is thoroughly familiar with environmental issues, or whether he is talented enough to provide leadership on those issues despite his inexperience. Rather, the key question is this: Will Clark change the disastrous policies of Watt? If Clark does not change those policies, the months ahead will be dangerous ones for the environment. Watt indeed was a genuine opponent of the environment at times. The damage that unconcerned and uncaring people — particularly those in high places — can do often is irreparable. Let us hope that Clark is a proponent of sound environmental policies, rather than a warmed-over Watt. A shallow reflection Christine Craft will have to plead her case again. But regardless of the outcome, the pretty, packaged news now beamed into many homes across the country will remain long on looks and short on substance. It won't get less pretty — the his and her smiling faces of the anchor team will still be there. It's attractive, and it digs easily with the evening meal. Television news is only following the trends in television, the trends in American society. Television is slick these days. It's a multimillion-dollar business that is set on making America feel good — and making Forget the untimely smiles that tell of the car wreck and fatality on Highway 54. The annoying chit-chat at the close of the news and the stupid jokes will keep bringing enlightenment to your life, regardless of whether Craft wins any money from her suit. money, of course. A few television shows attempt to bring reality to the living room, but for the most part, TV, the modern hearth of the American home, truly is a wasteland of shallowness and absurdity. It probes America's abdomen for that soft spot, that pleasure button to keep them glued to their tubes. The slickness and the materialism of prime time only reflect a deeper disease. The sores and the symptoms are evident in the nation's multibillion dollar shopping rush before Christmas and the multi-million dollar slick presidential campaigns. Issues are irrelevant; may the prettiest man win. Craft's case brings to light some of the shortcomings of television. Unfortunately, those shortcomings are reflected in the rest of society. And for all that spending and slick packaging, Americans aren't one bit better off. Perhaps worse. Football vs. baseball Football may have long ago passed baseball as Americans' favorite sport — that is, if you go by numbers only. But in our mind, nothing that football can produce equals a World Series. Super Bowl? It's just another Johnny-come-lately, over-priced event that the average fan can hardly relate to. The Super Bowl certainly has nothing to do with the long-suffering local fans who finally get a winner. Football's prime extravaganza is now usually scheduled a thousand or more miles away from such football hotbeds and frozen stadia as Green Bay, Pittsburgh and Cincinnati boast of in January. But baseball still features its world championship games in the ball parks frequented during the long losing seasons by the finally rewarded local fanatics. Baseball championships are also more fairly decided — through best-of-five league championship playoffs and best-of-seven World Series. The magic of baseball, unlike most purely national team games, goes beyond its borders. It is widely played in Japan and Taiwan, as well as Latin America. Ironically, baseball is the one item that both Ronald Reagan and Fidel Castro can agree on. -The Newport (R.I.) Daily News LETTERS POLICY The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to contact the lautier individual groups to submit guest columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. O'Neill's antiquated approach WASHINGTON — Speaker Thomas O'Neill, now nearing 71, may be living in a political world that no longer exists — a world that died in the Vietnam War. O'Neill's old-fashioned approach during a national crisis is to rally around the flag on whatever stage it is played by American Marines or American Rangers. In the past month, O'Neill has given a remarkable demonstration of this form of blindfold patriotism. To begin with, he strongly supported an 18-month extension of the U.S. presence in Lebanon, more vocal Democrats under his command and the near-annumous opposition of Senate Democrats. United Press International as requested by President Reagan. This, despite the serious misgivings among many younger, STEVE GERSTEL After the 'Beirut massacre, O'Neill once again rallied to Reagan's call that the Marines must stay in Lebanon. U. S. soldiers and Marines, the speaker refused to criticize the administration's action, of which he was not consulted but on which he was not consulted. And in the days after the invasion of tiny Grenada by 2,000 "I'll have plenty to say about this after the action is over," O'Neill said on the second day of fighting in Grenada. "This is not a question in my opinion for my party or the press to try to divide the nation PEACEKEEPER 2003 "It's great to be partisan but there are times when people have to be patriotic too. I'll have plenty to say about Grenada when the action is over and our boys are secure." O'Neill's genuine patriotism and his sincere efforts not to make either Lebanon or Grenada a partisan issue are laudable. Yet, in neither case would O Neil's criticism endanger the security of Americans under fire. What is lost, however, is an important voice in opposition. And only O'Neil, as the highest Democrat, can provide that. The criticism leveled at the administration's policies in Lebanon and the invasion of Grenada by rank-and-file Democrats, in addition to a good number of activists, has a negligible effect. The O'Neill approach was the prevailing one in Congress during the Korean War, the invasion of Japan. The Republic and the Vietnam War. Only because it existed, was President Lyndon Johnson able to rush through the Gulf of Tonkin resolution. Only two back-bench senators — Ernest Grunewald of Alaska and Wayne Morse of Oregon — rose in opposition, smothered by their colleagues eager to give Johnson a free hand. The unquestioning loyalty to a presidential action that sends Americans into combat is no longer valid. Many of the Democrats, and some of the Republicans recognize that. "I'll have my views and my saying of what the president did, whether I think he was right or wrong, when I think it is the proper time to speak up." O'Neill after the invasion of Grenada. That, in O'Neill's case, is really too late. This should be Reagan's last picture Although Reagan has disgraced this nation by his clammy efforts to play policeman, the Senate has opted to minimize his inbicentric errors. Senators rightly invoked the War Powers Act and demanded that Reagan get U.S. troops out of Grenada within 60 days; they also plan to send a fact-finding group there. That cowboy must be forced to leave office in 1994. Reagan has tried to turn the world into a rodeo of American strong arm politics. Will someone please tell him not to wear a wrist, or West won't exist any more. Don't wear no longer wear black 10 gallon hats, or red ones, either. Reagan invaded Grenada, wrestled a revolution to the ground and tied three of its legs together. Forces already have caught Marxist leaders Bernard Kissinger, who now must suffer because their vision of good government differed from the capitalist one. protect the regime of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop when he visited in June, but later crushed Grenada's revolution. A tiny group of Caribbean countries asked for U.S. assistance, so American soldiers have died on a Caribbean island The United States refused to KIESA HARRIS Staff Columnist A where the main sources of income are nutmeg and tourism. After all, Reagan doesn't like to be on the U.S. brand of democracy The United States should rela- t and let parts of the world settle their own affairs. If the government refused to prevent a revolution, it had no right to destroy one. Reagan's contention that forces invaded Grenada because Americans could not leave the island lacks truth. An American official left from the airport at Pearls the day before the invasion, as did some officials from the Canadian embassy. However, some flights had to be canceled because the Caribbean countries that asked the United States to invade Grenada also had refused to accept Grenadian jets into their airports, including those jets bearing American passengers. Now, Reagan wants to keep journalists safe from harm's way because they might not be able to take care of themselves in Grenada among all the men Marxists. After all, in "High Noon," everybody cleared the streets so the big guys could battle. That's the way things happen in Hollywood. Unfortunately. Grenada lacks glitter and stardust. Besides the Marine deaths, 47 innocent people were accidentally killed when U.S. forces shellled a mental hospital, according to the Wash. State Department, in Canada Maclean's magazine. Yet journalists don't have access to the islands to report such details. One senior administration official said that the Reagan administration staged the invasion to show Latin American nations that the United States was not afraid to use its power. "What good are maneuvers and shows of force, if you never use them?" he asked. Perhaps Reagan thinks the same way about nuclear missiles. Let's put that power-hungry coot on a tall, white gelling and let him canter into the sunset. But first, disarm him. There's no telling where he'll aim his pistol next. The problem of deficits pops up everywhere. A consensus of professional observers, among them Sen. Bob Dole and economist Walter W. Heller, thinks that the economic recovery is being dragged down by the deficit. Other experts predict dire problems, from hyper-inflation to economic stagnation, because of coming deficits. The problem must be solved through the tax code by raising more revenues. And when you examine our options, the value-added tax, or VAT, is clearly favored by Congress and the public. A VAT is simply a sales tax applied to each stage of production, not just Value-added tax would relieve federal deficit WASHINGTON — A little logic and thought on the question of closing the federal budget deficit leads to an inexorable conclusion: We should join virtually all our European allies and institute a value-added tax. the retail sale. It is simple to apply and hard to evade. Further spending cuts, the alternative to tax increases, are unfeasible. The solution is the VAT. The public consistently has condemned as unfair the income tax and NORMAN ORNSTEIN Professor property taxes - while calling the sales, of all levies, a fair one. In a recent survey by the Advisory Council on Intergovernmental Relations, a government group, 32 percent of Americans said they would prefer sales tax increases to other tax increases. And because it consumes, it is acceptable to supply subsidies and conservatives. No tax can raise as much revenue with as small a percentage base. Americans in 1984 will generate an economy of roughly $3.5 trillion, of which consumption will account for $1.6 trillion to $2.6 trillion. Exemptions from the essential items, a 10 percent value-added tax could raise roughly $200 billion in one year. Obviously, the shock of a sudden $200 billion tax increase would bring the economy to a halt, or worse. But consider a 10 percent VAT with appropriate exemptions and tax credits for the poor — along with a program to reduce income taxes for the middle class by $100 billion a year. We could sensibly realign the tax system, taxing consumption more and earning less. We could give appropriate tax relief to those who need it most. And we could raise $100 million a year to apply to our deficits, and thus bring them back to a manageable level. To say that politicians greet this proposal with something less than glee is a gross understatement. Every legislator in Washington remembers Al Ullman, former chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, who lost his seat in 1980 after embracing the VAT concept. But times and thinking have changed since then. Liberal politicians want to reduce the deficit without eliminating Medicare and food stamps. Conservative politicians want to encourage productivity and savings and discourage consumption. All of us want to erase future deficits and keep the economy moving. The value-added tax would help accomplish both the goals of the New York normal Ornstein is a professor of politics at Catholic University and a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute for Policy Research. To the Editor: e Kiesa Harris' column in the Oct. 26 Kansan titled "Deployment Needs, Protest Wanes," was a silly essay that said, "I have such extensive silhouette in 990 words." LETTERS TO THE EDITOR U.S. not the 'bad guys' in deployment issue Harris begins her piece by using statistics — poorly. She says less than 50 percent of the people of the NATO countries want the weapons deployed. That does not mean that more than 50 percent are against them, but more thoughts of that paragraph: Why should she dominate NATO if we are so much larger and more powerful than the largest country? Then she says we are untrustworthy and hypocritical because we deploy weapons while offering a "build-down" proposal. What hypocrisy? What promises have we not kept? Only a fool would bargain from a position of weakness. By deploying these weapons we are showing resolve and strength. The Soviets have a substantial conventional superiority that we are deterring. Why isn't Harris complaining about Soviet weapons and Soviet deployments? They have no public opinion or free speech. The Soviet Union has been openly opposing such a statement since the early 1980s without much letup. In contrast, we have somewhat stagnated. Even so, one could argue that Also, I have not heard any of Harris" "doves" give viable alternatives to a strong defense. All of us should want disarmament — not just our nuclear weapons have provided the freedoms for us to do as we please — to wit, Harris' silly and critical editorial. I am also tired of hearing from people who know all there is to know about nuclear war. We do not know all that would happen in any kind of nuclear exchange, and a limited exchange may very well remain limited. A massive exchange may not destroy the whole world. There are too many unknowns. Any nuclear war would be terrible but let us be realistic. the elimination of nuclear weapons. let us destroy all weapons! A great idea, but we cannot do it alone. And the world being as it is, can we trust the Soviet Union to not take advantage of us if we do foolishly unilaterally disarm? Finally, protest deployment if you want. You are still free to do so. Write to your congressman. And while you are doing that, write to Yuri Andropov as well. You are not doing that. You are doing the problem unilaterally. Just think about this whole situation. We might not be the bad guys. Neal Duncanson Fairbanks, Alaska, senior University Daily Kansan, November 2. 1983 Downtown continued from p. 1 Page 5 17 with answers to these questions. It's not my responsibility to ask these questions, but I'm taking responsibility because I think it has to be done. "I'm disappointed that more of this information wasn't provided earlier." he recalled. In other action the City Commission: *Amended a city ordinance dealing with moving houses within the city limits. Last month the commission approved on first reading an amendment that would limit the height and width of buildings moved within city limits. Further research by city staff uncovered a state statute that prohibits such limits. Therefore city staff rewrote the amendment, adding some additional financial burdens, which are similar to those in other Kansas cities. - Stopped demolition of a house at 725 New Jersey St. owned by Robert Brown. The city told Brown two years ago to repair the house, but officials have said that little work has been done despite repeated attempts by the city to have the work done or demolished. In light of damage on the house, Commission relented to give Brown an extension. - Approved selection of Capital Helicopter Inc.'s Air Services branch to become the new fixed-base operator at the Lawrence airport. The airport has been without a permanent operator since May, and Air Services has been the temporary operator. The city will now negotiate with Air Services for a three-year contract beginning Jan. 1. - Approved a staff recommendation raising trash pickup rates for Lawrence residents by 40 cents, to $5.40. The commission also raised the minimum commercial rate to $7.32, a 2% cent increase. - Adopted an amendment to the city's ordinance relating to dancing and dance halls. The revision eliminates the need for double safety inspections for establishments that serve alcohol and also eliminates a second fee for a dance permit in addition to a liquor permit. Museum continued from p.1 director, Gates will be a courtesy art history professor. In the past, he has taught classes in Baroque art, European landscape art, the art of England and 19th century American art. Tilghman said he hoped that Gates would help strengthen the museum's resources. "I think he will continue the fund-raising efforts that we have already undertaken," he said. "We need to do some long-range planning in setting budgets and goals." The Spencer Museum has been without a permanent director since Charles Eldredge left the University to become the director of the National Museum of Art at the Smithsonian Institute in Washington in July 1982. The University conducted an unsuccessful search for a permanent director last spring and hired him as its president. Elizabeth Broun, former curator of prints and drawings at KU, served as acting chair until Sept. 1 when Tilghman took over. Broun last week was named chief curator of the National Museum of Art at the Smithsonian. Payroll continued from p.1 The process could take as little as two days, Cartar said. IN THAT PROCESS, he said, the association pays employees from 50 percent to 70 percent of their checks, intercepts the next check from the employee and refunds the balance in two to four weeks. Some students who got their checks found that mistakes had been made. About a dozen people milled about the payroll office yesterday afternoon with questions about their checks. One was Alex Paula, Rio dejanero graduate student and a graduate teaching assistant in the department of Spanish and Portuguese, who said he had completed 677 in 16 taxes that should not have been withdrawn. "You have bills and groceries, and you expect to have money on a certain day," Paula said. "I have my paycheck in my hand but I don't have money. You've worked for this money and it's just not there." PAULA SAID he would have to wait to cash the check because the payroll office might issue him a new one for the right amount, but that he could not wait more than a few days. Another student, Mona Lee, East St. Louis, Ill., junior, said £25 in state and federal taxes had been withheld from her paycheck although she had filled out documents stating that taxes would not be withheld. Yesterday's payday was the first to be done at any university by KIPPS, the Kansas Integrated Personnel-Payroll System, which provides services to state employees in several agencies. The first Board of Regents school to go on the KIPPS system was the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina, for the Oct. 1 payday. Donald Cravens, director of personnel, payroll and employee relations at Emporia State University, said Emporia State was also to have used the system for its paychecks yesterday. HOWEVER, CRAVENS SAID, the system caused problems in its first round at KTI. About 25 percent of KTI employees missed their paychecks entirely, and many more had checks in the wrong amount because of errors in withholding money for taxes or for benefits. "We were glad to hear we wouldn't be on it for awhile." Cravens said. "This eventually could be a really great system. Probably, in my opinion, they just pushed it too hard." ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada - A man leads a herd of goats past a U.S. Army barricade as life returns to normal in the capital city. United Press International Minsky's Introduces ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT SERIES 6 packs beer to go 2228 Iowa PIZZA Shoppe 6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center WE DELIVER! "IT'S NOT A HAMBURGER, IT'S A 1/2 LB. STEAKBURGER!" $2.50 includes curty-Q-fries via videotape Friday, November 4 FREE PIZZA Shoppe 1:30 Preparing for Tests 2:30 Time Management 3:30 Listening and Notetaking we deliver 842-0154 THE WESTINGHAM HILL MUSEUM Minsky's PIZZA To attend, register at the Student Assistance Center 121 Strong Hall. 864-4064 KINGSIZE TRIPLE TOPPING UDK AND 32 oz PEPSI plus tax DELIVERED $8.75 842-0600 NEW SPECIALS AT The Pladium 901 Mississippi NO COVER!! WEDNESDAY — NO COVER!! (Due to a copy error in Monday's Kansan, there is no cover charge tonight.) BUY A DRAW AND KEEP THE SPECIAL MILLER GLASS — REFILLS ONLY 50c AND $2.50 PITCHERS ALL NIGHT! THURSDAY — ALL YOU CAN DRINK $5.00 COVER OR $3.50 WITH THAT WORTHLESS KUID FRIDAY AND SATURDAY — PARTY WITH J.T.N. 50c DRAWS ALL NIGHT 'TIL 10 OR 12 (WE'LL BET IT'S 12) $3.00 COVER OR $2.00 WITH THAT WORTHLESS KUID! NEXT WEEK—MALE BURLESQUE RETURNS PHARMACY Pharmacists: Farrell Mitchel Mark Smith 25th & Iowa, Lawrence 25th & Iowa, Lawrence 842-6325 GIBSON'S Hours: Mon.- Sat. 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. VISA Prices effective thru Sunday, Nov. 6 master change KING JOHN'S - we accept student health insurance claims Gibson's Pharmacy offers you... DISCOUNT PRESCRIPTIONS & PATIENT PROFILES & FREE MEDICAL EXPENSE RECORDS . . . compiled by the latest in computer equipment . . . ideal for personal use or tax records. . fill we fill welfare prescriptions ALLERGAN Cleaning and Disinfecting Solution SPECIAL GIBSON'S PHARMACY PRICE $3.09 8 oz. only one coupon per person exp. 11/6/83 ALLERGAN CLEANING AND SOLUTION ALLERGAN CLEANING AND SOLUTION Cold Capsules SPECIAL GIBSON'S PHARMACY PRICE CONTAC $2.17 10 capsules 10 GRAMS 120 MIL CONTAC only one coupon per person exp. 11/6/83 Offer Not Valid without coupon limit one item per coupon 7 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 2. 1983 Page 6 PASSIONATE Gary Smith/KANSAN John Dooley, 5, mixes different colored points during class at the Rain树 Montessori School, 4545 W. Clinton Parkway. John is the son of Michael and Becky Dooley, 1836 W. 27th St. Terrace. are beginning to offer Montessori education as an alternative to existing public elementary schools? continued from p.1 School Capp's husband, Lelon, a professor of curriculum and instruction in the School of Education, said that universities didn't offer Montessori education because the country needed more public school teachers than Montessori teachers. "Universities, in specific, are public schools, and Montessori has been a private-type of education in this country," said Mr. Capps. "That is why the teachers for the method are being trained in private schools." MRS. CAPPS SAID, "Montessori cannot be incorporated into public universities because universities are larger and more philosophical than that. They incorporate all of the most-noted psychologists' theories into their programs. "Public Montessori would be a dream come true. But in public school, you would never base your entire program on one single person's philosophy." But some Lawrence parents praise the method and don't want to see interest in it decline. Flora Wyatt, assistant professor of curriculum and instruction in the School of Education, said, "The thing I really like about Montessori is that it nurtures a child's curiosity. It probably has had a tremendous impact on my child's life." Wyatt, whose daughter attended the Montessori Children's House, said that she thought Montessori schools were beneficial because they surrounded children with learning materials such as real dishes and sinks so that they could learn the joys of discovering their environment. MARGARET SCHADLER, associate professor of psychology who teaches child psychology classes at the University, said, "I have come to have a lot of respect for the Montessori approach. Montessori teachers are much more low key, which is good in helping children's self-direction." "I see socialization as being of secondary importance in Montessori, but I can't really say whether that is bad or good, because that aspect of development is not emphasized. In general, the Montessori children who were men were much more well-behaved and well-mannered than others." ONE EXAMPLE OF behaviorist theory in practice is the Edna A. Hill Child Development Lab in Haworth Hall. "Montessori believed that the basis of knowledge is action," she said. "Behaviorists, on the other hand, talk about environmental control and minimize the causal role of the child." Schadler said that behaviorist theory, probably the main developmental theory that disagreed with the Montessori method, was based on reason. Elizabeth Goetz, associate professor of human development and family life, said that the Haworth behavior analysis pre-school program was based on two significant components — that children were always right and their behavior was a consequence of their environment, and that if children were acting in an undesirable way, the fault and the remedy lie with the parent or supervisor who had control over their environment. GOETZ DECLINED TO comment on any comparisons of behavior analysis to the Montessori method. The Montessori method, on the other hand, stresses the importance of natural motivation. The method is an approach to education in which children are first surrounded by an environment that will stimulate their curiosity and encourage them to learn what they wish to learn. They also are permitted to learn at their own pace. Montessori was convinced that an environment should be scaled down for children, so she formulated the idea that children should be surrounded at school by an environment much like their own living room. “What we do is prepare an environment for the child that is very specially done so it’s totally child-size,” said Lieanna McReynolds. She goes on to describe Montessori School, 4545 W. Clinton Parkway. “Everything is special prepared so that the child has a lot of success in his environment at school.” THE CHILDREN BENEFIT by the Montessori method because they work independently of their teacher. Directors, as teachers are called in Montessori, introduce lessons to the child. Children are then free to work in the classroom with a teacher. The teachers intervene only when children do not wish to work on skills they need. "I had a little boy once who needed cutting skills, but he didn't want to cut anything," said Susan Kaean, director of Sunshine Acres Montessori pre-school, 2141 Maple Lane. "So I observed him to see what he was interested in and found that he loved cars and trucks. "I found this little activity where cars and trucks were pictured and you would cut out the pictures. I presented it one day to him, and he loved it. For five days straight he didn't do anything else, he just cut and cut." GOETZ SAID THAT respected psychologists said that about 50 percent of a child's intelligence was formed by age 4. "Parents need to take pre-school education seriously," she said. "Lawrence is very rich in the area of pre-school education, but it is very important that parents match their philosophy of education and what they are child with the type of school that can offer what they are looking for." Goetz, who is also the director of the Edna A. Hill Child Development Lab, a pre-school in Haworth Hall that is part of the department's research program, said that there was a difference between pre-schools and day-care centers, and that parents needed to recognize that difference. CAPPS SADT THAT day care centers often were no more than basic writing services or modestist schools, she said, a good expansion of pre-school programs. "We stress feeling, because Montessori believed that the hands are very important to the mind," Capps said. "She realized that although parents may take for granted an activity such as hand washing, three year olds love washing their hands and can learn from it." SUA FILMS TONIGHT IN ALDERSON AUDI WE PROUDLY PRESENT LA STRADA An unfamiliar experience, a package to place square in the new masterpiece. New York Post. A genius piece from the only international firm that offers guided tours. Doubleday Cockburn. The Great Film Festival. Released by Anne J. Furni Released by Dece B. Doe Lu- and Cindi Pinto Released by Redafer Felin Released by Anthony Gann Quinn Released by Sergio and Soguet Making a Music Video 7:30 p.m. Alderson Aud. $1.50 LAST SUNDAY Also, this week at SUA: FRIDAY, SATURDAY Nov. 4th & 5th: THURSDAY, Nov. 3: MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON (with Jimmy Stewart, Jean Arthur, Claude Rains and Edward Arnold) 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. 48 HRS. 48 HRS. (with Eddie Murphy, Nick Note and Annette O'Toole (Superman II) 3:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:30 p.m. THE RULING CLASS has been cancelled. No midnight show this weekend, (November 4th & 5th). All shows in Woodruff Aud. $1.50 $2.00 Midnight Half price for KU Students SUN HIGH RENAISSANCE LIVES ON The London Early Music Group Directed by James Tyler Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved For reservations call 913-842-1982, 55 & 56 KU Students with valid student IDs at Murphy Hall Box Office *kU students must show a valid ID of the time of purchase and at the onset on the day of purchase. Partially funded by the kU Student Activity Fund. 3:30 p.m. Sunday, November 6, 1983 Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall 图 --presented by KSU KANASAS STATE UNIVERSITY k-state union upc special events --presented by KSU KANASAS STATE UNIVERSITY k-state union upc special events HILLCREST 3 WAY ST. LOUIS TWENTY-FOUR Darren Sinclair, Director of America THE FIRST CASTLE OF WAR IS THE PRIME UNDER FIRE R 7:25-9:30 Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:15 Eve. 7:25-9:30 Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:15 CINEMA 1 TELEPHONE 9:400 The Wicked Lady R 7:40-9:30 Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:00 Eve. 7:40-9:30 Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:00 CINEMA 2 TELEPHONE 9:400 "The eight star actors deserve one big Oscar." (in this funny and ferociously smart model. THE BIG CAT R 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:00 Eve. 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:00 CINEMA 1 1955 AND 2004 PRESENTED BY The Wicked Lady Eve. 7:40-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00 R HILCREST 3 ILLUSTRATION THE FIRST CAUTALITY OF WAR IS THE TRUTH. UNDER FIRE Ew. 7-29,50-Mat. Bat. Sat. 3/18 GRAN Fan "The eight star actors deserve son big Oscar... (in) this funny and leriously smart movie" THE BIG CHILL Broadway Eye: 7-30-9-30 Sat. Sat.-Sun. 2:00 BOTTOMS UP! a serious drinking establishment WEDNESDAY LADIES NIGHT 25c DRAWS THURSDAY DIME DRAWS 8-10 $1.00 Cover 10-12 25¢ draws HILLCRES1 914-820-DOW 1234567890 Eve. T-4:09-35 Mat. Sal.-Sun. 2:15 ALL NEW RUSHBACPRYOR Here and now R --presented by KSU KANASAS STATE UNIVERSITY k-state union upc special events Where Everyday Low Prices Complement The Student's Budget. - BOTTOMS UP * COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA Broadway电话:718-259-4000 Telephone number: SEAN CONNERY Houston电话:718-259-4000 Telephone number: JAMES BOND New York电话:718-259-4000 Telephone number: NEVER SAID AGAIN East Village电话:718-259-4000 Telephone number: HILLCREST 1 THE ICONIC AVE AND IOWA SPORTS FOOD WEEK Stephen King's THE DEAD ZONE Eve. 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 R VARSITY BOMBAYS TELEPHONE 212-645-7800 TOM CRUISE All The Right Moves Eve. 7:30-9:25 Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:15 STRAY CATS Tickets on Sale at KU in the SUA Box Office IN CONCERT 1983 Homecoming Friday, November 11, 1983 8 p.m. Ahearn Fieldhouse Kansas State University HOT RODS 1 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1983 Page War games turn students into soldiers By JILL CASEY Staff Reporter Staff Reporter PERRY - Autumn at Perry Lake, a brisk gray Saturday with leaves rustling quietly, seemed alien to the perimeter guard's harsh command. "Hall. Advance and be recognized." Identified and allowed inside the perimeter, in accordance with standing operating permit, in bush patrol report no guerrilla sightings. For the Army ROTC Recondo patrols conducting war maneuvers last weekend at the lake 18 miles northwest of Lawrence, the Marine Reserve Officer Training Corps. Both sides were supplied for maneuvers with such sophisticated military equipment as PRC-77 radios, used for communication between patrols and for intercepting communication between the enemy's patrols. The radio signals were also used to light, were used to spot "guerilla"s at night and field telephones were also part of the equipment provided to the Army patrols. The students, clad in camouflage fatigues and camo stick, a skin camouflage paint, created an atmosphere of authenticity around the maneuvers. From Friday night through Saturday afternoon they lived the lives of soldiers, eating C-rations and sleeping, some, in military-issue sleeping bags. The Jayhawk shoulder patches on their field jackets, though, served as sole reminders that the soldiers were KU ROTC practicing war games, however sophisticated. Because most of these students will serve in the military after graduation for at least three years, actual participation in combat is a possibility. The recent developments in Lebanon and Grenada, and the overall military presence advocated by the Reagan administration, have made career-oriented students more likely to work in Emporia sophomore in Army ROTC, "a little more serious, and a lot more fervent to go." Eric Clemensen, a Marine ROTC senior from Wichita, said that he thought often of the sailor's long hours. "But right here there's nothing I can do about it," he said. "I really wouldn't want to go, but I wouldn't hesitate if I was ordered to go into combat." Mark Sumner, Marine ROTC and St. Louis senior, agreed. "I joined knowing that it's a hazardous occupation. I think about it, but I trv not to lose sleep over it." Michael Dugolopiski, Army ROTC and Lansing senior, said that the purpose of ROTT training is "not to make us efficient," he said. The University program, is to get a degree. Recodo patrols spent most of their time guarding the perimeter and going out on reconnaissance and ambush patrols. The Marine guerrilla forces employed a more aggressive strategy to attack the Army perimeter. The Marine assignment was simple: "harass." The Army ROTC strategy for the weekend involves securing a perimeter on a hill near Dearborn. One of the maneuvers conducted by the Marine ROTCs was a double envelopment, in which they attacked the Army perimeter from two sides. "The Army was eating lunch and they didn't want to play, though." Sumner said. Eating meals were the only times, save for a few hours of sleep, that ROTCs weren't bothered. Maneuvers by both the Army and Marine ROTCs were carried out in compliance with standard military practices. Ferlemann, who led an Army Recondo patrol for many of the maneuvers, said the mock combat was a learning experience for his troops. The KU ROTC program is not set up with the kind of emphasis on maneuvers that would be common at a military school like West Point, he said. And because the KU program doesn't give students experience in maneuvers, he said, Recondo members decided to conduct field exercises for themselves. "The most important thing we try to teach to younger cadets is how to lead people in a way that they can understand." Mark Millerile. Lansing sophomore, said maneuvers provided experience in learning to "judge territory, and how to move with respect to the environment." Clemensen said that the Marine ROTC group wanted to give the freshmen and sophomores exposure to basic patrolling techniques, like using a shake battle veterans out of them," he said. Millerlile, who has participated in several maneuvers, said that although last weekend's maneuvers were mediocre, something could be learned from any field experience. Many of the maneuvers were difficult to learn, said that sound and light discipline are important lessons in preventing the enemy from discovering the troops' positions. Many of the Recondo members have seen more realistic maneuvers, sometimes where live rounds were fired, at basic infantry training during summer break. Ferelemann said. Even in maneuvers without live fire, he said, the same lessons can be learned, although it's "not quite as macho to go pow, pow, pow." Ferlemann said that during his stint in basic training at Fort Benning, Ga., he was almost hit during live fire M-16 maneuvers when he rioted the rocetted off of a log a few inches away. In either case "keeping your head" is the most important lesson taught in any war mission. "In the real world (combat), there is pain, death, and suffering." he said. "We're not pretending when it comes to combat, and we can't play John Wayne." [Picture of a soldier in a military uniform, wearing a helmet and a radio.] Mike Dlugopolski, Lansing senior, calls a patrol from the Army ROTC base camp to find out its position. Story by Jill Casey Photographs by Gary Smith COMBAT IND Allen Tiffany, Hays senior and commander of Army ROTC's Recondo, samples G-rations at his camp perimeter. | 1945-1946 John White, Leavenworth junior, has a coat of camouflage paint applied to his face by John Houston. McPheron sophomore, in preparation for an ambush on Marine ROTC troops. [Back view of soldiers running through a muddy path in dense forest]. John White, Leavenworth sophomore, hurdles a muddy wash near Perry Lake on Saturday morning while following other members of his patrol in standard ranger file. WARNING: THIS PHOTO IS FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. ALL COPYRIGHT HOLDERS RESERVE THE RIGHT TO DISCARD OR REUSE THIS PICTURE. NO OTHER USE, MODIFICATION, COMMERCIAL OR SEMI-EXCLUSIVE EDITIONS ARE Welcome. John Houston, McPherson junior, Sonja Ford, Jetmore junior, and John White, Leavenworth junior, react to an advance patrol returning from a scouting mission. CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1983 Page 8 Crime in city up 6.9 percent this year,stats show By the Kansan Staff Crime in Lawrence is up 6.9 percent for the first nine months of this year compared with the first nine months of last year, according to statistics released yesterday by the Lawrence Police Department. Nearly 61 percent of all the crimes committed during the first nine months of this year were larcenies, the statistics showed. Of all the crimes committed, 21.5 percent were burglaries, about 5.5 percent were auto thefts and about 2 percent were murders, rapes and robberies. Assault composed about 10 percent of the crimes, with non-aggravated assault accounting for about 7 percent of the aggravated assault accounting for 3 percent. EVERY CATEGORY OF crime showed an increase except burglary, which has declined 1.8 percent, from 622 reported burglaries during the first nine months of 1982 to 611 for the first nine months of this year. Three murders occurred between January and September of this year, compared with one through September of 1982. percent Aggravated assault and non-aggravated assault have also increased. Sixteen rapes were reported through September compared with 13 for the period last year, an increase of 23 percent. Aggravated assault increased to 107 from 70, a 52.9 percent increase. Non-aggravated assault increased to 199 from 161, a 23.6 percent increase. Robberies, larcenies and auto thefts also were higher through September as compared with September last year. ROBBERIES INCREASED 104.3 percent, to 47 from 23. Auto theft increased 34.8 percent, to 151 from 112. Larcenies increased 3.2 percent, to 1,769 from 1,714. Although crime is up for the first nine months, less crime occurred from June through September this year than last year. Crime was up 14.5 percent during the first six months of this year compared with the first six months of last year. But crime is up 6.9 percent for the first nine months this year, which indicates a decrease in crime of 7.6 percent during July, August and September. Costa Ricans feel threat of Nicaragua, prof says By GINA K. THORNBURG Staff Reporter The recent deterioration in relations between Nicaragua and Costa Rica seems unfounded because the Costa Rican government supported the Sandinistas during their struggle against Gen. Anastasio Somato in 1978 and 1979, a KU professor of political science said yesterday. Robert Tomasek, the professor, said, "Costa Rica has no army; the Sandinistas can't feel that Costa Rica is a threat." Tomasek spoke to about 50 people in the Kansas Union. He said that Costa Rican leaders had said that Nicaragua would never invade their country because the Organization of American States would impose harsh sanctions. BUT THE COSTA Rican government of President Luis Alberto Monge is becoming more distrustful of the Sandinista commanders, especially after elections in Nicaragua were postponed until 1885, he said. "The Costa Rican leaders ideally would like to see free elections take place," said Tomasek, who has spent several weeks in Central America this year studying the political situation there. "Costa Rica can't understand why Nicaragua would want to do this," he said. Costa Rican leaders fear that Nicaragua has been involved in domestic subversion in Costa Rica, Tomasek said. And although the Costa Rican government opposes the formation of an army, in its country, it formed an anti-terrorist brigade in May in response to about a dozen acts of terrorism in the last two years, he said. THIS FEAR OF terrorism has led to "Costa Rican leaders feel extremely vulnerable to terrorism," he said. restrictions on the activities of exiles in Costa Rica, he said. Costa Rica tries to follow asylum law as closely as possible. Asylum law prohibits exiles to purchase arms, to recruit other exiles, or to establish exile camps, he said, but allows exiles to conduct and attend meetings, print memorandums, collect funds and obtain mass media publicity. "The problem, however, is that although Costa Rica has clamped down on exile leaders when necessary, she cannot control her borders." Tomasick and The Nicaraguan-Costa Rican border is difficult to monitor because it is 220 miles of jungle and because of Nicaraguan and Costa Rican disputes over the navigation rights of the San Juan River. he said. Another reason that relations between the two countries have been deteriorating, Tomasek said, is that the Office of Judicial Investigation claims to have uncovered a Sandinist supported plot to take advantage of Costa Rica's economic crisis by supporting labor strikes in the country. WHEN MONGE BECAME president in February 1982, the external debt of the country was $4.6 billion, the highest per capita debt in the world, Tomasek said. Moreover, inflation had reached 100 percent in 1981 and 1982, and the Costa Rican currency, the colone, fluctuated from eight to 63 colones to the dollar between 1979 and 1982, before stabilizing at 43 to the dollar. He said that Costa Rican leaders were formulating a statute on neutrality. Although some scholars say that Costa Rica is a pawn of the United States government and has no foreign policy of its own, Tomasek said that Costa Rica's foreign policy interests, although congruent with those of the United States, were very much its own interests. FREE MAKE-UP CONSULTATION Discover the best color and Silver Clipper Unisex Hairstylist Discover the best color and best make-up looks to complement - We'll teach you the best application techniques, too, so you can look your best everyday. Call for appointment 842-1822 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza coupon PAC MAN $2 Off PIZZA & VIDEO $2 Off Any Large, Two Topping Pizza Bring in this coupon Expires Fri., Nov. 4 GAME TOKENS Bring in this coupon Expires Fri. Nov 4 for $5.00 50 No other coupons accepted with these offers. NEW YORKER 1021 MAFSACHSETTS THE Testimony is repetitious, judge says KANSAS CITY. Mo. — A federal judge yesterday told attorneys arguing for desegregation in Kansas City schools that testimony so far had been repitious. Also, defense attorneys objected to testimony about acts that were passed before 1954. The third witness of the six-year- ont trial, which resumed Monday, testified yesterday about families who lived in the White Oak area in Clay County from the turn of the century until the mid-1950s. U.S. District Judge Russell Clark indicated that he did not consider relevant testimony given by Lulu Bertleee Fielder, 84, of North Kansas City. patagonia software Discount Prices! Why pay more? 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"MARKETING YOURSELF," a workshop by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, will be from May 14-17 in the Regionalist Room of the Union. PRE-PHYSICAL Therapy Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Watkins Hospital. Camilla Wilson will discuss Physical Therapy school requirements. DUNGONS AND Dragons will meet at a p.m. in the Trail Room of the Uniting CHURCH ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., will have Contemplative Prayer at 7:45 a.m. a. m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. UNIVERSITY FORUM will feature Barbara Anthony-Twarog, assistant professor of physics and astronomy at MIT. This event is a Universe in Space and Time* at 11:45 GERMAN CLUB will feature "Early Settlers in Germania, PA," a lecture by Helmut Huebsberger, professor of German at 4 p.m. in the Burge Union. TOMORROW GUN CLUB will sponsor a trap and meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 2191h. Show BASEBALL SIMULATIONS will meet at 7 p.m. in Pparr C of the Union. EPISCOPAL EUCHARIST will be at noon at Daforth Chapel. A meeting of the Literary Magazine will be at 7:30 p.m. in the International Research Center for Literature. CHESS, GO, and Backgammon Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail of Roses. THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE College Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS on Campus will discuss 'Persecution in Eastern European Countries' at 7 p.m. in the Regional Room of the Union Unplanned pregnancy? Decisions to make? For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and to talk with you. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Understanding all your alternatives makes you really free to choose. Replace pressure and panic with thoughtful, rational reflection. Birthright 843-4821 ski s ski ski ski ski ski 5 DAYS LIFT TICKETS ski ski ski ski SIGN UP IN SUA OFFICE NOW! 864-3477 ski ski Ski JAN. 2-8 ski ski ski ski ski ski ski SKI RENTAL ski ski ski ski ski ski CONDO LODGING ski ski ski ski ski WINE & CHEESE PARTY ski ski ski ski TRANSPORTATION ski ski ski ski 5 DAYS LIFT TICKETS ski ski s IN SUA OFFICE NOW! 864-3477 ski ski ski ski ski ski ski ski ski SKI TRAVEL Steamboat Rent it. Call the Kansan. November Choices Fall, 1983 EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S CENTER November Choices Fall,1983 Career Help Offered to Inspire Continued Equality and satisfaction **Nov. 2:** Marketing Yourself, a workshop designed to help you improve your interviewing and resume writing techniques. 2:40 - 3:00 p.m. Regional Workshop in Kansas City Nov. 4: Women Supporting Women, Personal and Professional Growth, a tueleton series that meets the first and third Friday of each month. The topic for this lunch will be "Your Visions of the Future." Bring or buy a lunch and join us from 12:00 - 1:30 p.m., Alcove B, Kansas Union Nov. 9: Women at Work, the third in a luncheon series featuring Nan Harper who will speak on the topic "Women In Journalism." Bring or buy a lunch and join us from 12:00 - 1:30 p.m., Sunflower Room, Kansas Union Nov. 18: Women Supporting Women: Personal and Professional Growth, a luncheon series that meets the first and third Friday of each month. The topic for this luncheon will be "You Can Do It!" Bring or buy your lunch and join us from 1:20 - 1:30 o.m. Alcove B, Kansas Union Nov. 29: Killing Us Softly - Advertising's image of Women, a 30 min film that explores the way in which stereotypes in the media affect women's images of themselves, 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. i.yajhawk Room, Kansas Union Following the film an informal discussion will be facilitated by the Court of Appeals. Dec. 2: Marketing Yourself, a workshop designed to help you improve your interviewing skills and resume writing techniques; 2:30 - 4:30 p.m., Oread Room, Kansas Union. Did you know? The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has over 100 topical notebooks with a wide variety of articles related to women's issues. If you are writing a research paper you may want to make use of these materials because they provide some of the most current information available. SAVE CALENDAR FOR FUTURE REFERENCE Office hours: Monday-Friday 8-12,1-5 218 Strong Hall 864-3552 11 University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1983 CAMPUS AND AREA Budig praises contributions of KU retirees AUTHORIZED EDITOR: ALEXANDRA HENRY By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter Kansan staf The loyalty and hard work of classified employees at the University of Kansas has helped increase enrollment by making students feel welcome to enroll in the encycloir Gene A. Budig said yesterday during a ceremony honoring 26 retiring employees. Chancellor Gene Budig congratulates Roy Scribner, retiring facilities operations sheetmetal worker, at the fifth annual retirement dinner for classified staff. Scribner worked at the University of Kansas for 37 years, longer than anyone else at the dinner. "Because of you, retirees, this University has one of the most attractive campuses in the United States." Budig said during the ceremony in the Kansas Union. "Because of you and your work in making young people feel welcome, enrollment at the Lawrence campus increased by 148 this year." Roy Scribner, a sheetmetal worker with facilities operations, who has worked with the University for 37 years, said earlier yesterday that he was proud of having worked at KU for almost four decades. "I think staying in one place is the thing to do," he said. "I don't think that we will go through this period." SCRIBNER, WHO LIVES in Lawrence, said he was keeping busy working on his farm and wanted to keep with his friends at the University. "I've been up there several times," he said. "I liked all the boys." During the ceremony, Budig presented plaques to the retiring employees and thanked them for their contribution to the University. David Lewin, director of personnel services, said that this year's retiring employees had worked a total of 475 years for the University. Leo Katzefy, who was a physical giant supervisor with facilities operations said, 'I put in 35 years and I enovied every bit of it. "I was planning on working until the end of the year but I am still glad it worked out." THE EMPLOYEE RECOGNITION Committee decided five years ago that the University should honor retiring classified employees as well as unclassified employees, said Phil Rankin, director of personnel services. "We were trying to come up with an appropriate farewell," he said. Retired employees honored last night along with their years of service and experience. Roy Scriber, 37 years, sheetmetal worker with Krystall Industries. Send resume to plant supervisor I with facilities information. Mary Jeanne Fox, 27 years, account clerk II with the University of California. Send resume to cook II with housing. Wilience Willette 23 years Carolyn Helmer, 22 years, food service supervisor I with housing, Hildred Pendleton, 22 years, medical assistant, Daniela Schmidt, 20 years, Golden Schink, 21 years, clerk IV with history; John D. Chrixty, 21 years, physical plant supervision II with housing, Richard McDermott, 21 years, clerk III with the student health service; Virginia Morrill, 19 years, clerk IV with the University K贺雷 Kroeder, 18 years, physical plant supervisor II with facilities operations. E. Arne Roseman, 16 years, project manager and health service; Vance Hobbes, 17 years, residence housekeeping and housekeeping supervisor II with facilities housing the domestic supervisor III with nurse II with the student health service. Flora Thompson, 16 years, clerk V with human development. engineering and automotive services, clerk III with civil engineering, Berke Kotler, civil engineer, Curtis Coleman, Cary Cabib, 18 years, clerk III with the School of Education, Eugene Walker, 15 years, custodian, Eugene Walker, 19 years, assistant 19 years, accountant, 19 years, center with the Center for Biomedical Research, John Ames, 20 years, medical operations; Hazel Reynolds, eight years, clerk III with housing, James Tryon, seven years, general operations; Norman Wycoff, eight years, clerk I Walter Bernstein says he worries about the world situation. He worries because he's afraid what has happened to him in the past could have been his fault. By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter Bernstein, their screenplays include "Fail Safe," "Yanks," "Semi Tough," "Little Miss Marker" and "The Front," is visiting the University of Kansas this week to present a series of films written the "Screenwriter's Arts." "The Frost" will be shown at 7:30 night in Woodduff Auditorium. Born in Chicago, he is the founder of In an interview yesterday, he said he thought the blackisting days of the McCarthy era could occur again as a result of the government fervor of the Reagan administration. THIS FEAR IS particularly ominous to Bernstein, who remembered his own feelings of discouragement and betrayal when he was blacklisted by Sen. Joseph McCarthy's Committee on American Affairs, which have vaulted the film industry in the 1960s. "How can you negotiate with anyone who has a grievance?" he asked. "I think that is frightening." "The grip of mindless anti-communism will kill us," he said. "It will drive us to see what is not real in the world, to understand it again and that seakes the out of me." He said he feared the Reagan administration's constant portrayal of the war. World situation worries writer Bernstein said "The Front" was based partially on his eight-year experience of being blacklisted and trying to find work. He said he was unable to receive credit for much of his television writing because he had to have others pose as the authors of his work. BERNSTEIN WAS blacklisted in 1950 because his name appeared in the book "Red Channels," written by a former FBI agent. The book lists the names and left-wing activities of people in the entertainment business. The book listed Bernstein as having been connected with seven communist activities, one of which was writing an article, a communist magazine. Magazine HE SAID HE also found the U.S. government and police were on his side, but he quickly found out that the Cold War era changed that. After attending a concert in 1948, he said the police had directed Communist supporters to a one-lane road where local people, armed with rocks, were gathered. He said the police did nothing but pelted the Communists with stones. "It was a nightmare," he said. "It was not just the fear of the rocks, but the feeling that the cops were not on my side and I wasn't there to mess me. It was a fierce frightening blow." However, people who were blacklisted were allowed to try to clear their names, he said. Bernstein gave up idea because he knee the committee pigeon" about someone else or publicly self-attempt right-wing cause I will wait for you. People and friends could not understand that they did it because they were scared, because they wanted to work again and because of social pressure "I did believe in the communists," he said. "I've seen them action in the SIGA DISCOUNT Prices Effective Nov. 2-8 SUPER SAVER WIN RUSTY'S IGA DISCOUNT FOOD CENTERS LAWRENCE KS WESTRIDGE • 6th & Kasold • 841-0411 HILLCREST • 9th & Iowa • 843-2313 NORTHSIDE • 2nd & Lincoln • 843-5733 SOUTHSIDE • 23rd & Louisiana • 843-8588 LAST CHANCE TO WIN A 1984 CAMARO Win a 1984 Camaro by registering at any one of the four Rusty's locations. Winner announced Nov. 5 on 96x radio. SUPER SAVER U.S. NO. 1 TEXAS RUBY RED GRAPEFRUIT FOR .99 139 LB. IGA TABLERIGHT BONE-IN ROUND STEAK FOR .99 139 LB. TV COTTAGE CHEESE 24 OZ. CTN. IGA BATHROOM TISSUE 6 ROLLS FOR .99 139 LB. IGA TOMATO SAUCE 8 OZ. CAN FOR .99 139 LB. PEPSI, DIET PEPSI, MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE, DIET PEPSI FREE, PEPSI LIGHT, DR. PEPPER AND S.F. DR. PEPPER 2 LITER BTL. SCHAEFER BEER 12 PK. 12 OZ. CANS IGA TABLERIGHT T-BONE STEAK LB. FOR .99 259 LB. TV ORANGE JUICE 6 OZ. CAN. FOR .99 259 LB. IGA BEANS RED, DARK RED KIDNEY, PINTO, CHILI HOT & GREAT NORTHERN 15½ to 16 OZ. CAN WASHINGTON FANCY AND RED GOLDEN DELICIOUS APPLES 10 FOR RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 306 DOUBLE COUPON Prepare this coupon along with any one manufacturer's crest off coupon and double the savings from Rusty's Offer does not include retailer free coupons or limit one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 9, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 306 DOUBLE COUPON Prepare this coupon along with any one manufacturer's crest off coupon and double the savings from Rusty's Offer does not include retailer free coupons or limit one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 9, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 306 DOUBLE COUPON Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's crest off coupon and double the savings from Rusty's Offer does not include retailer free coupons or limit one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 9, 1983 TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills: 6.00-7.00 $0.75 7.00-8.00 $1.00 8.00-9.00 $1.25 9.00-10.00 $1.50 10.00-11.00 $1.75 11.00-11.45 $2.00 It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO MINSKY'S COLOSSAL COMBO NITE $3.95 ALL YOUR CAN EATS Children just $2.00 2228 Iowa 842-0154 6 packs beer go No Carry Out or Delivery on this Special Other Specials not valid with this on SNA FILMS Tonight Walter Bernstein's THE FRONT with Woody Allen in his first dramatic role. A film about Hollywood blacklisting. Walter Bernstein will be present after the film for a Question and Answer period. Also. The Ruling Class has been cancelled. No midnight show this weekend—(November 4th & 5th). Woodruff Aud. 7:30 p.m. SAVE 90¢ LB. TV Cottage Cheese SAVE 45¢ Cotta Cottage Cheese SAVE 45¢ Cotta BATHROOM TISSUES 6 ROLLS 2 PLY SAVE 30¢ IGA BATHROOM TISSUE 6 ROLLS .99 IGA. TOMATO SAUCE IGA. TOMATO SAUCE SAVE UP TO 35¢ 8 OZ. 8 OZ. IGA TOMATO SAUCE 5 FOR 1 8 OZ. CAN IGA. TOMATO SAUCE 8 OZ. 2 LITER MATIC BOTTLE PEPSI PEPSI FREE AUTHENTIC Pepsi SAVE 52¢ William pew PEPSI, DIET PEPSI, MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE, DIET PEPSI FREE, PEPSI LIGHT, DR. PEPPER AND S.F. DR. PEPPER 2 LITER BTL. 117 New制造业与质量·服务 Schaefer BEEF SAVE 78¢ TV Orange Juice SUPER SAVER TV Orange Juice Frozen Concentrated SAVE $1.00 LB. IGA TABLERIGHT T-BONE STEAK 259 IGA GREAT NORTHERN IGA SUPER SAVER NORTHERN IGA BEANS 15 1/2 OZ. RED, DARK RED KIDNEY, PINTO, CHILI HOT & GREAT NORTHERN 15 1/2 to 16 OZ. CAN .25 SUPER SAVER DOUBLE COUNT Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's receipts, off coupons and get double the savings from lukey. Offer allowance for bulk purchases of two or more items, and fluid milk products. Not to include resale, free coupons, coupons valid for one dollar or reduced value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES N.O. 9, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 306 DOUBLE COUPON — Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get double the savings from Rusty's Offer does not include coupon for beer, tobacco items and fluid milk products. Not to include retailer, free coupon, coupon per dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 9, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 306 DOUBLE COUPON — Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get double the savings from Rusty's Offer does not include coupon for beer, tobacco items and fluid milk products. Not to include retailer, free coupon, coupon per dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 9, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 306 DOUBLE COUPON — Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get double the savings from Rusty's Offer does not include coupon for beer, tobacco items and fluid milk products. Not to include retailer, free coupon, coupon per dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 9, 1983 NO. 306 DOUBLE COUPON — Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get both coupons from Bank of America. Offer the coupon not include coupon for beer, tobacco items, and fluid milk products. Treat to include retail. Free coupon, coupon greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 9, 1983 Amt. Bell. RUSTY & RUSTY & RUSTY & RUSTY'S NO. 306 DOUBLE COUPON Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cash off coupon and get the discount. This coupon does not include coupons for beer, tobacco items, and fluid milk products. Fill in the provided fields, fill in milk products, coupons greater than one dollar or exceed one dollar per manufacturer's coupon and first four coupons per family. Limited one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and first four coupons per family. EXPIRES 9/9, 1983 war and they were the bravest, noblest people I've ever met." RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 306 — DOUBLE COUPON — Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's credit card and get either the following from Rusty's: - not include coupons for beer tobacco - not to include retail, free coups, coupons granted that you will or exceed the price of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 9, 1983 Bernstein said he liked to write about people making a commitment by biting the bullet or by going to jail for something they believed in. At that time, Bernstein said, he was young, romantic and innocent. "I thought we were all pals," he said. "I loved them and they loved me." He said he never knew when the FBI would politely confront him at his home. LOOKING BACK, Bernstein said there were certain things he did then that he would not do now. He said he still fundamentally believes in communism, but he has changed his mind because he sees many things wrong with it. BERNSTEIN SAID THE time was frightening both in terms of making a living and in finding himself under FBI surveillance. "It was very creepy. You got the feeling that they always knew where you were." But the 64-year-old screenwriter considers himself one of the luckier people who lived through the era. He was able to keep writing because he his work through another person, or a 'front', hence the name of his book. But the pessimism of today's younger generation disturbs him, he said. He thought the youth of today would not be prepared unless they are directly threatened "It is terribly sad to see young people cutting off this idealistic part of themselves. They have lost the innocence and things to believe in anymore," he said. "They're scared, frightened and helpless. I hope they do something." Boysd Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy-Sell Trade Gold-Silver-Coins 731 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 60044 913-842-8773 First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills: 6.00-7.00 $0.75 7.00-8.00 $1.00 8.00-9.00 $1.25 9.00-10.00 $1.50 10.00-11.00 $1.75 11.00-11.45 $2.00 TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills: 6.00-7.00 $0.75 7.00-8.00 $1.00 8.00-9.00 $1.25 9.00-10.00 $1.50 10.00-11.00 $1.75 11.00-11.45 $2.00 No Gain, Out at Dice Other Specials n't MINSKY'S COLOSSAL COMBO NITE $3.95 ALL YOU CAN EAT Children just $2.00 Minisky's 2228 Iowa 842-0154 6 pounds beer to go No Carry Out or Delivery on this Special Other Specials not valid with this offer SUA FILMS A University Daily Kansan, November 2.1983 NATION AND WORLD Anti-nuke protesters cautioned Thatcher warns soldiers will fire to protect bases United Press International A man is being dragged from a car by police officers. By United Press International GREENHAM COMMON AIR BASE, Great Britain — Women peace campers are arrested as they try to block the entrance to the air base. The incident occurred yesterday after an American transport aircraft had landed at the base. LONDON — Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's government said yesterday that peace protesters who penetrated an air base where U.S. nuclear missiles were being distributed ran the risk of being shot. Defense Secretary Michael Heseltine issued the warning in Parliament a day after it approved the distribution of nuclear warhead cruise missiles at two bases in Britain. "It has been the absolute duty of all governments to defend nuclear weapons in this country and to defend all the military bases of this country's defense forces," Heseltine told an opposition Labor Party questioner. "To suggest that we would now abandon that policy is reckless." ASKED TO GUARANTEE that British sentries at Greenham Common air base would not shoot peace protesters, who have threatened to invade the facility, Helstens replied, "I categorically will give no such assurance." Tatcher, asked to confirm Heseltine's remarks, said: "It is the duty of all governments to defend these installations." "If someone gets through, there is a point where there is a possibility he might be shot," said a Defense Ministry spokesman. "There is no point in having guards unless they are prepared to take all action necessary to stop anyone damaging or threatening nuclear installations. "At the end of the day, if someone is threatening a sensitive base and likely to cause damage to sensitive installations, we would be asked could be shot," the spokesman said. NINETY-SIX CRUISE missiles are to be distributed at Greenham Common, some 60 miles west of London, by the end of the year. Britain has agreed to distribute another 64 missiles at Molesworth base. The cruise missile deployment in At the Greenham Common base, 26 people were arrested yesterday on charges of blocking a highway, vandalism and breach of the peace. Britain is part of NATO's nuclear modernization program that calls for installation of 572 cruise and Pershing-2 missiles in Western Europe to counter Soviet SS-20 weapons already denplowed. The arrests followed the detention of 203 people at the weekend, many of them women who cut down part of the fence surrounding the base. House judicial panel OKs bill limiting use of insanity plea WASHINGTON — More than a year after John Hinckley Jr. was acquitted by reason of insanity of shooting President Reagan, the House Judiciary Committee endorsed a bill yesterday to limit use of the insanity defense. By United Press International The measure narrows the class of criminal defendants who qualify for acquittal on grounds of insanity and provides for a verdict of "not responsible" or the reason of insanity." The current "not guilty by reason of insanity." AKEY FEATURE of the House bill is its provision shifting the burden of proof that he is insane to the accused criminal. Currently, the federal government carries the burden of proving that he is insane and can be held responsible for his acts. Similar legislation, prompted by the public outcry following Hinckley's acquittal by a Washington, D.C., jury on June 21, 1982, has also passed the Senate Judiciary Committee and is waiting for action by the full Senate. The difference can be important. For example, the government had the power to change the distribution of taxation. The measure also tightens the description of who qualifies for the protection of the insanity defense. Instead of showing a defendant had a "mental disease or defect" that kept him from recognizing right from wrong, the House bill would require a defendant to show he was suffering from "a severely abnormal mental condition that grossly and demonstratively impaired (his) perception and understanding of reality." U.S. to renegotiate debt By United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan has agreed to renegotiate part of Poland's $11 billion debt to the West, but is not ready to lift all sanctions imposed on the communist state, administration officials said yesterday. One official称 Reagan authorized discussions with U.S. allies on rescheduling the 1981 Polish debt, while stressing that the action will not affect later debts or other economic sanctions imposed by the United States. the willingness to reschedule the debt had been expected to be announced late yesterday by the State Department. But later yesterday State Department aides said the official announcement not come until today at the earliest. The sanctions / primarily limits on trade and credit / were imposed in response to the Warsaw regime's imposition of martial law in December 1981 and the crackdown and eventual sacking of the free trade union Solidarity. WHEN IT COMES, the announcement is expected to be accompanied by a reaffirmation of the remaining sanctions. The official said the United State also will oppose any financial assistance to Poland through the International Monetary Fund. the president's National Security Council "In view of Poland's lack of progress in restoring national dialogue," an administration official said. The report says that the move will be no new credit extended to Poland." "We're still wrangling about it with the NSC," one official said, referring to Turks search for casualties of earthquake By United Press International As rescuers fought snowstorms and freezing rain to search for more victims of Sunday's quake in eastern Tennessee, bodies had been recovered so far. ERZURUM, Turkey — Rescue teams broke through yesterday to isolated mountain villages cut off for almost three days by an earthquake that killed more than 1,200 people. Another 1,500 people were believed to be buried in the rubble. "All 44 villages which were hit by the quake have been reached by rescue forces," said LT. Armgun Abaziqou, a martial law spokesman in Erzurum. "But it's hard to tell if final death toll is what we gave here." Officials estimated a 1,300 people were still buried as rescue teams broke through to isolated mountain villages cut off for almost two months. Erzurum, a mountainous region 350 miles east of Ankara, the capital The rescue teams, added by 15 dogs specially trained to smiff out buried victims, clawed at the collapsed mud-and-straw brick structures of at least 33 villages and townships said to be destroyed and badly damaged 'they can never be lived in' as 'one official put it' More than 500 victims were being treated in hospital in Erzurum. Nearly 5,500 tents and 20,000 blankets were airlifted to the zone alone with 12,200 tons of medical supplies, officers said. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mass. phone: 844-1151 A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 Now until Nov. 16th .25 DRAWS & $1.00 DRINKS TONIGHT!! UNTIL 10:30PM EVEN MORE SPECIALS AFTER 10:30PM GAMMONS SNOWFLAKE 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 Anthony Chiropractic Clinic FREE SPINAL EXAMINATIONS Now until Nov. 10th LIMITED APPOINTMENT AVAILABLE Office Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sat. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. As A Public Service The Anthony Chiropractic Clinic is offering free Spinal Examinations for the early detection of neck, back and related problems. There is absolutely no obligation to you in connection with this service. Early detection of spinal problems is a must in addition to advancement of future health problems. - You will be checked first for freedom of movement range of motion and tenderness in various spinal areas. V - You will then be painless, and extensively examined by being given a Chiropractic Orthopedic study and evaluation. | | | | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | Example of poor spinal structure Example of good spinal structure NINE DANGER SIGNALS NINE DANGER SIGNALS 1. Returning Headaches 2. Neck, Shoulders & Arm Pain 3. Pain Between Shoulders 4. If you suffer from any of these warning signs, call immediately to prevent any possible advancing complication. We accept Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Credit Life, Worker's Compensation, We accept Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Credit Life, Worker's Compensation. 8TH ANNUAL SHOE SALE PUMA CONVERSE 10 TO 50% OFF B new balance NIKE Saucony 9:00-5:30 MORRIS Sports 1016 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE, KANSAS 601 Kasold, D-105 Westridge Center Call 841-2218 --- KU BOOKSTORES’ TRADE-IN DAYS October 31-November 4 MONDAY T-SHIRTS Bring in any old T-Shirt and receive $1.00 off the purchase of any new shirt. THURSDAY PAPERBACK BOOKS Trade in your old, well-read paperbacks and receive 50% toward the purchase of any new paperback in the Great Bookshop Level 3 of the Kansas Union. TUESDAY CALCULATORS Bring in your old calculator and receive $1.00 off for every $10 value of the new calculator. Ex-ample: New calculator price $10 or more $1 off. New calculator price $20 or more $2 off—$40 calculator $4 off. FRIDAY SWEAT SHIRTS Is that an old sweat shirt or are you just a slob? Trade in that old, ugly sweat shirt of any type and receive $2 off any new sweat shirt. WEDNESDAY BACK PACKS Trade in that dirty, old, grumpy back pack and receive $2 towards the purchase of a new one. Maybe your friends will start talking to you again! KUBookstores Kansas Union Trade in prices apply to regular selling price only. Fine trade in per item. Sale Oct. 31 Nov. 4 Bibliotecas KU INDIA CLUB presents diwali nite ENTERTAINMENT AND EXOTIC INDIAN FOODS Priestess Cordley School Hall 19th & Vermont Sat., Nov. 5, 7 p.m. II $6/4.50 members at door $7/5 tickets SA Office at 749.35320750 & Foreign Student Office, Hall St --- 60 70 O O SUPER SALE SPECIAL E CompletePair of Lenses & Frames 59. 95 8 Reg. $65-$130 Save up to 53% when you purchase a complete pair of single-vision lenses, any frame (excluding boutique frames), any prescription, glass or plastic, for $59.95. Multifocal, photocromatics, tints, and oversize additional. 图 - Zsa Zsa Gabor - Mary McFadden - Jordache - Oleg Cassini - Arnold Palmer - Oleg Cassin and more Please no special order frames Offer good through Nov. 5 HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 HUTTON OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. 图 University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1983 Page 11 SUPER SAVINGS FOR HEARTY MEALS! CASSEROLE How About Pot Roast Tonight? CALIFORNIA FRESH CARROTS BONUS SPECIAL! 59¢ 2 LB. BAG SELECT BEEF BONELESS CHUCK POT ROAST BONUS SPECIAL! LB. $128 Russet Potatoes $129 BONUS Special! 10 LB. BAG BONUS Special! GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS 23¢ LB. BONUS SPECIAL! PIERRE SAUVIGNON MORE BONUS SPECIALS! STIR FRY MIX 89¢ Chuck Steak Select Beet Boneless LB $1.48 Stew Meat Lean Boneless LB $1.48 Sliced Bacon Sugar Crust 18 oz Pkg $1.29 Advance Fritters Beef Porch Chicken Fry 18 oz Pkg 99¢ Little Sizzlers Homelot 17 oz pkg 99¢ Hormel Wranglers 16 oz Pkg $1.69 Ground Beef FRESH SOLD IN 5 LB CHUBS LB. 99¢ FRESH FOOD OUR Deli & Cheese Ham & Cheese Loaf Wilson LB $2.49 Swiss Cheese Sandwich Cul LB $2.99 Potato Salad Old Fashion LB 89c Fried Chicken One Whole Birds EA $2.99 WHERE AVAILABLE ONLY IN SERVICES WITH SERVICE DELIUS BONELESS WHOLE IN BAG BEEF BRISKET THESE ITEMS AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH SERVICE DELIS BEEF BRISKET BURG SPECIAL 89¢ L.B. TRIMMED $1.49 DUMP SPECIAL! 89¢ LB. TRIMMED ¥1.49 TOP FROST FROZEN CONCENTRATED FLORIDA ORANGE JUICE 12 oz. CAN BONUS SPECIAL! 69¢ WHITE ROCK CARBONATED BEVERAGES 59¢ 2-LITER PLASTIC JUG GINGER ALE -TONIC WATER -CLUB SODA -LEMON-LIME -COLA -ORANGE -ROOT BEER BONUS Special! TONY'S $149 FROZEN PIZZA 16 oz. SAUBAGE. NAMBURGER. 15 oz. PEPPERONI or EXTRA CHEESE... 15 oz. CANADIAN BACON or 17 oz. SUPREME...11.59 TONY'S FROZEN PIZZA 16 oz. SAUSAGE. HAMBURGER. 15 oz. PEPPERONI or EXTRA CHEESE...$149 15 oz. CANADIAN BACON or 17 oz. SUPREME...$1.59 INSTANT JELL-O BONUS Special! PUDDING & PIE FILLING SELECTED 3% oz. to FLAVORS...4% oz. Box FIELD'S FROZEN PECAN PIES BONUS Special! 32 oz. CTN...$279 INSTANT JELL-O BONUS Special! PUDDING & PIE FILLING SELECTED 3% oz. to FLAVORS...4% oz. Box INSTANT JELL-O BONUS Special! 3 $1 PUDDING & PIE FILLING SELECTED 3% oz. to FLAVORS...4% oz. Box FIELD'S FROZEN BONUS Special! PECAN PIES 32 oz. CTN...$279 NEW! Ga! GALA PAPER TOWELS BONUS Special ! 59¢ 1 ROLL WHITE OR COLOR DECORATOR Buttermilk Dollars Quart Canton 39¢ DILLON'S FRESH BAKED 7 Pina Colada Cake 24 oz $2.19 SPECIAL OFFER DILLON'S FRESH FRIED ROLLS 4/$1.09 CHIFFON SOFT STICK MARGARINE NEW GRAND 1 LB PKG 39¢ DILLON'S FRESH BAKED Honey Bran Bread BONUS Special! 59¢ 20 oz. LOAF READ THE BEST SELLER AND SEE THE SERIES! "PRINCESS DAISY" IN PAPERBACK EDITION $2.99 REG. $3.95 BONUS SPECIAL SEE THE MINI SERIES BASED ON THE BOOK NOV. 6-7 NBC-TV (PRICE INCLUDES DILLON'S REG. 10% DISCOUNT) DILLON'S FRESH BAKED Honey Bran Bread BONUS Special! 20 oz. LOAF 59¢ DILLON'S FRESH BAKED 7 Pina Colada Cake 24.09 $2.19 DILLON'S FRESH FRIED ROLLS 4/$1.09 CHIFFON SOFT STICK MARGARINE 1 LB PKG 39¢ KRAFT NATURAL SHREDDED CHEDDAR CHEESE MILK & SHARP 8 oz. PKG 99¢ CITY OF MIDLAND BAYSIDE 547-921-3000 JOSHUA KARATZ FRIEDRICH B. MAYER DISTRICT OF CHICAGO JOURNEY KRANTZ TERRY KRANTZ "PRINCESS DAISY" IN PAPERBACK EDITION $2.99 REG. $3.95 BONUS SPECIAL (PRICE INCLUDES DILLON'S REG. 10% DISCOUNT) SEE THE MINI SERIES BASED ON THE BOOK NOV. 6-7 NBC-TV HYPOWER CHILI WITH BEANS HYPOWS CHILI WITH BEANS BONUS SPECIAL! 49¢ WE RECYCLE ALL ALUMINUM CANS SMASH 'EM AND CASH 'EM 24¢ LB. SUNSHINE KRISPY Sunshine 1427 1502 1428 OAKLAND SALTINE CRACKERS NET WT 16 OZ (500g) BONUS SPECIAL! 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(Diphenylamine HCL) (PD) 100 ct $8.09 DILLON'S PHARMACY THESE ITEMS AVAILABLE ONLY IN SELECTED STORES WITH BEST MATCH DEPARTMENTS. The purchase of these drugs requires a prescription. Prices are based on quantities. A prescription costs $149 with other quantities. These items available only in stores with Pharmacy Alert. COUNTRY MAID ICE MILK ASSORTED FLAVORS BOUND SPECIAL GAL. PLEASE LIMIT YOURSELF TO 2 THE SESAME STREET TREASURY NEW! FEATURING JOHN BOONE STAFF & COORDINators THE SESAME STREET TREASURY VOLUME 8 $2.69 ALPHA PLAYERS NUMBER GAMES WHISKER WRITERS BREWERS STUDIOS POOLS We Support The United Way We Support The United Way Dillons the best food store in town! -1 NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1983 Page 12 Gemayel urged to deny Israel, align with Syria By United Press International GENEVA, Switzerland — Syrian foreign minister told Lebanese President Amin Gamaley yesterday to scrap a security pact with Israel and accept Syrian control over east Lebanon if he wanted peace in his land, officials said. The Syrian conditions were spelled out amid reports of progress in talks among the leaders of Lebanon's Christian and Muslim factions meeting to discuss peace for the first time since the 1975 civil war. The groups met for nearly five hours in two sessions and formed a committee to draft a resolution for adoption of a law granting the right of nation Lebanon should strive to be "It is an American base? A Soviet base? An Arab state? An independent state?" asked Druse Muslim leader Walid Jumball. A SPOKESMAN FOR the Christian-led government said the evening discussions "went better than expected" because "people started talking to each other, started warming up." Earlier, Gemayel met with Syrian Foreign Minister Abdel Halim Khaddam for two hours in a penthouse suite in the Hotel Intercontinental. A high Lebanese official said "it did not go well at all." That discussion overshadowed the peace talks largely because no agreement among the warring sects is expected without tacit Syrian approval, since Dumascus supplies money, arms and military support to the Muslim opposition armies. "The future of Lebanon depends to a great extent on whether any understanding can be reached between the government and Syria," one diplomat said. Lebanese officials said the meeting was the first high-level contact between the two governments since the Israeli invasion of Lebanon last year. A LEBANESE OFFICIAL said Khaddam declared that reconciliation among the warring political and religious factions in Lebanon was under control of Gejmaney scrapped the May 17 troop withdrawal agreement with Israel. United Press International 1 LOS ANGELES — Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt, lower center, is surrounded by federal marshals to protect him from a horde of newsmen as he is put into a station wagon in front of his home. Flynt was arrested yesterday on contempt charges for failing to appear in court to produce audio tapes that could provide information for former auto magnate John DeLorean's cocaine-trafficking trial. Flynt, a paraplegic, did not resist arrest, despite threats to shoot anyone who tried to take him into custody. Six crewmen die, 35 hurt in fires on USS Ranger Official denies Nicaragua invasion plans By United Press International PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii — Two fires aboard the aircraft carrier USS Ranger killed six crewmen and injured 35 others yesterday during operations in the northern Arabian Sea, the Navy said. Names of the dead and injured were being withdrawn notification of next of kin, Pacific Fleet headquarters said. They broke out in one of four main engine compartments and spread to adjacent auxiliary power equipment. The latter did. The exact cause was not known. The Ranger's commanding officer, Capt. Arthur H. Fredrickson, reported to headquarters where were extinguished within an hour. The Navy ordered an inquiry into the fires. 60% to $2.00! SUA DATES & DAYS CALENDAR Once $4.75 Now reduced Get them at the Main and Burge Union Bookstores and the SUA Office. By United Press International GUATEMALA CITY, Guatemala -- Guatemala's military ruler yesterday denied Nicaragua charges that the Central American Defense Council would take part in a U.S.-led invasion of Nicaragua, but he confirmed that the group met secretly in Honduras last week. Inactive since 1979, the defense council was revived Oct. 1 in Guatemala at a meeting among defense chiefs from the armed forces of El Salvador, Honduras and Panama, with the United States as an observer. Nicaragua charged that the secret meeting was aimed at plotting the bombing. He told reporters. attack that would include Nicaraguan rebels first, then other Central American troops and finally U.S. soldiers. IN NICARAGUA, THE Roman Catholic Church canceled all services for today's major Latin American religious holiday to protest demonstrations by pro-government crowds who disprotest masses and harassed priests. In a sign of the growing confrontation between the church and the Marxist regime, the Sandinista government ordered the expulsion of two foreign priests for encouraging young members to register for the country's military draft. In a daylong meeting, the 40 priests in the Managua archdiocese decided to cancel services for the Day of the Dead, and they waited 2 for deceased relatives and friends. The Interior Ministry said two priests of the Salesian order — Luis Corral Prieto of Spain and Jose Maria Pacheco of Costa Rica — had published propaganda inciting young men not to sign up for the military draft, as required under a law passed this September. Nicaraguan officials have charged that the maneuvers are a camouflage for U.S. preparations to invade Nicaragua with its Central American allies pletion of the first stage of joint Honduran-U.S. maneuvers, which started this summer, called Ahaus I, an Indian word meaning Big Pine THE MINISTRY CHARGED that the priests had also urged young Catholics to stage hunger strikes, demonstrations and to forcibly take over schools and churches to protest the law. It ordered them exempled from Nicaragua. GÉN. PAUL GORMAN, head of the U.S. Southern Command in Panama, presented the Honduran arm of armed forces, Gen Gustavo Alvarez Martinez, with 12 606 artillery pieces in his hands to the opening that the government of Honduras has offered for unique training experience." In Honduras, the top general thanked the United States for training the first 400 Honduran troops to graduate from the new American school, saying they would be used against "the enemies of liberty and democracy." The graduation ceremony also included the presentation of artillery wares. The graduation marked the com- Syrian tactics with Lebanon anger Shamir Israeli soldiers await agreement for withdrawal 3y United Press International JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir said yesterday that Israel would keep its army in Lebanon if Beirut yielded to Syrian pressure and canceled the U.S. mediated troop detraffal agreement, a senior official said. The warning came on the eve of talks with Undersecretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger on the status of the May 17 withdrawal accord and U.S. plans to form a rapid-reaction force in Jordan and Gulf oil states in emergencies. Eagleburger, upon his arrival, would only say "the whole range of international and bilateral issues" would be discussed with Shamir. The Israeli official said Shamir told visiting British Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Richard Lue that cancellation of the May 17 agreement would make Syria the dominant force in Lebanon. "The Lebanese government will not be able to reach agreement on security arrangements." Sharah was quoted as saying that she "will not be able to withdraw its troops." Israel redistributed its forces from the mountains surrounding Beirut to more defensible lines in the south, but has refused a complete pullout until Syrian and Palestinian forces evacuate. UNDER THE ACCORD, Israel agreed to withdraw from Lebanon simultaneously with a PLO and Syrian pullout. The agreement also ended the state of war between the two nations and prepared for normal diplomatic and trade relations in the future. The agreement is regarded as Israel's most important achievement after 17 months of a war increasingly unpopular at home. $2.00 off haircut all semester with KUID Silver Clipper 1234 Main Street San Francisco, CA 94105 (212) 555-1234 www.silverslipper.com HOLIDAY PLAZA 842-1822 DR. PAGL LIMBERG Optometrist Announced that Dave has assumed the practice and retained all records of DR. DALE SILLIX Optometrist For an appointment phone 843.5966 DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG Optometrist 202 Lawrence National Bank 843-5966 "Our special is easy to remember-- it's 7 nights a week!" EYE EXAMINATIONS CONTACT LENSES FULL FRAME SELECTION TIRED? BARRON'S The Private Club Of Crowded Or Inadequate Work out Facilities? NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER 1691 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center 749-1501 CHECK US OUT 50c DRAWS $1 DRINKS until midnight Underneath the Eldridge House 7th & Mass. 749-9758 ( All candidates running for office in Student Senate may proof the ballots TODAY in Jayhawk Room of Kansas Union from 4-5 p.m. Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE! Paid for by Student Senate Ballot Proofing Today Legal Services for Students - Notarization of legal documents - Advice on most legal matters - Notization of legal occaions - Many other services available - Preparation & review of legal documents - Preparation a review of legal documents 8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday 117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665 Call or drop by to make an appointment. Offer good Wed., Nov. 2 thru Fri., Nov. 4 Funded by student activity fee. 17th Annual University of Kansas Photography Contest Eligibility: Fall 83 K.U. Student All photos in by 5:00 p.m. Wednesday Nov. 16th at the S.U.A. Office Kansas Union Sponsored by: School of Journalism School of Fine Arts, and Student Union Activities SUA MISS. STREET DELI INC. 941 MASSACHUSETTS No Coupons reg. $1.25 95c Accepted With This No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Homemade CHOCOLATE, CHERRY, LEMON OR BLUEBERRY CHEESE CAKE wants College of Liberal Arts & Sciences UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Graduate Office 210-1 Strong Hall. —Self-nominations are required. — Self-Information are required. — Filing deadline — 4:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 11. Election will be held Nov. 16-17 with Student Senate Election. All LA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. FREE FOOD TODAY. 5 p.m.-6:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY BUM STEER BAR-B-Q 2554 Iowa COME BY FOR A FREE BUM STEER SPECIAL WITH SIDE DISH AND A PEPSI.!! Have your 96X IS 4 U2 Sticker on your car OR we'll put a 96X IS 4 U2 sticker on your car and still treat you to the FREE 96X Bum Steer Special! LISTEN TO 96x radio For Details! } NATION AND WORLD Page 13 University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1983 Wreckage of U.S. ship found Re United Press International PEKING — The wreckage or glomer Java Sea, a U.S. oil-drilling ship that sank with 81 people aboard, including 42 Americans, has been the most Chinese searchers in the stormy South China Sea, officials said yesterday. The sunken wreckage of the ship, missing since last week, was identified by Chinese ships using special sonar. The ship was owned by owners. Global Marine Inc, of Houston. The week-old search for survivors, still hampered by bad weather, continued without result. The 81 people aboard included 42 Americans, four fish geologists, one Australian and the two were identified as members who were identified by their families as John Lawrence, 38, of Odessa, Texas, and Bernard Patrick Cates, 39, of Midland, Texas, an underwater engineer. "We found nothing today. It's still raining and visibility is poor. For now we will continue the search but I don't know for how long," said a spokeman for the Western Pacific Search and Rescue Center on Okinawa. THE GLOMAR JAVA Sea, on lease to the Atlantic Richfield Company of Los Angeles, went down off the south China coast last week in Tropical Storm Lex. Chinese search vessels located the wreckage last Friday under 300 feet of water but were unable to identify it at first. Global Vice President Dick Vermer said the wreckage was finally confirmed by a Chinese ship. "They have definitely confirmed the fact that our drill ship, the Glomar Java Sea, has been sunk at the drill site." Vermeer said in Houston, adding that the Chinese ship used a special "side-scan" radar. In Peking, oil company officials said another vessel with divers was heading toward the drill site south of China's Hainan island and about 40 miles from Vietnamese waters. WITH THE AID of underwater cameras, they will also try to discover why the Glomar Java Sea became the first ship of its kind to be sunk in a storm. The divers' first task will be to determine how many of the 81 aboard went down with the ship. Built to ride out hurricanes, the drill ship had already weathered several storms fiercer than Lex it arrived in the South China Sea last January. 'We don't know why it sank and won't know until the divers can inspect 100 miles CHINA VIETNAM Hanoi Gulf of Tonkin HAINAN ISLAND U.S. oil drilling ship found sunk at drill site LAOS 108 111 United Press International the ship," an Atlantic Richfield official said. Taking part in the search for survivors were more than a dozen Chinese ships, three Vietnamese ships and two Japanese P-3 Orion search planes from Okinawa. The Vietnamese sent out vessels to search their own waters after refusing to allow Chinese ships to enter them. Bill would deny contracts to labor-law violators By United Press International WASHINGTON — A House subcommittee took the first step yesterday to bar government contracts from companies that repeatedly violate labor laws. Reps. William Clay, D-Mo., chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, and Labor management relations, and Paul J. Cox, sponsor of the legislation, cited Litton Industries as "a classic example" for such debarment. Litton, which has $1.5 billion in government contracts, mostly for defense-related activity, has been charged with nearly 50 violations of the National Labor Relations Act over the 80 years, involving 18 different unions The Simon bill, sponsored by more than 100 other House members, is similar to a provision passed by the House in 1977 as part of comprehensive labor law reform legislation. That bill, was defeated by a filibuster in the Senate. LITTON SPOKESMAN Ray Nobile reacted to the use of the firm as an example by saying that while it have been accused of violating the law, "We have had very little return showing that we have violated it." Noble pointed to several unions, including the Teamsters, Machinists, and Auto Workers, which he said have had even more violations. "Those folks never bother saying those kind of things." Nobile said. "It is only the corporations that are fault here and the unions are pure." The new legislation, approved by voice vote by the subcommittee, would deny federal contracts to companies or labor organizations certified by the U.S. as having engaged in "a pattern of harmful violations" of federal labor law. A COMPANION BILL has been introduced in the Senate. Public utilities are losers in high court decision By United Press International WASHINGTON - Public utilities lost a multimillion-dollar fight in the Supreme Court yesterday, with the justices ruling unanimously that they cannot bill cities for the cost of relocating equipment in urban renewal areas. In other business, the Interior Department's $220 million sale of offshore oil and gas leases near the California coast will trigger a "chain of events" that threatens the coastal environment. the state told the Supreme Court yesterday. U. S. Solicitor General Rex Lee told the justices, however, that the sales are not subject to state approval because he do not directly affect the environment. "At the lease-sale stage, only surveying is contemplated," Lee said. Actual exploration and drilling, he said, "may or may not come about." The issue before the Supreme Court is whether new regulations conform to state coastal zone management decisions in selling oil leases for the Outer Continental Shelf. CALIFORNIA OFFICIALS and local governments in the Santa Barbara area filed suit against the Interior Department in 1981 to block the sale of a historic Continental Shelf tracts in the Santa Maria Basin on the Santa Barbara coast. The utilities ruling means cities can continue to bulldoze urban blight and order utilities to move telephone lines from the old grid to pay millions of dollars for the work. In the first decision of this term, the justices reversed a lower-court ruling that required Norfolk, Va., to reimburse Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co. for the displacement of facilities during a redevelopment project. The appeals court ruling in the Virginia case was the first to find utilities were entitled to relocation benefits. It had spurred utilities in many areas to claim compensation and brought cries of outrage from other cities. DAVID RICE, EXECUTIVE director of the Norfolk Redevelopment and Housing Authority, said the agency had set money aside to pay C&P in case the Supreme Court upheld the appeals court. !!GRADUATE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ELECTIONS!! November 16 & 17 Nominations-Self Nominations due in Graduate Student Council Office, Kansas Union By Friday, 12 pm November 4, 1983 Also soliciting names of write in candidates for graduate student senators. (STUDENT SENATE-FUNDED AD) RECORD RENTAL SPECIALS $1.49 Brand New! Paul McCartney—"Pipes Of Peace” Just Released! Bob Dylan—“Infidels” New! Arrived Today! Paul Simon—“Hearts And Bones" Arrived Today! 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Go K.G.- Beat the Golden Buffaloes PEPSI AIDS disease disrupts nation's blood banks By United Press International NEW YORK — Fear of the deadly disease AIDS is leading people who need blood transfusions to seek donations from friends or relatives a practice that threatens to disrupt the nation's blood banking system in an official of the American Association of Blood Banks said yesterday. "I believe two blood inventories would be unethical," he said, saying that under a "donor directed" system blood perceived to be less safe would go to the poor and elderly. "Whether there is a cause and effect relationship between the blood transfusion and AIDS in the one in a million case is totally unknown," said Bove at the AABB's annual meeting. Joseph Bove of Yale Medical School, who is chairman of the association's Transfusion Transmitted Diseases Committee, said a so-called "donor directed" blood supply system may lead hospitals to stock two kinds of blood / "one safe and one considered less safe." "We've got a good blood banking system,but nothing is without risk." WHEN GETTING A transfusion, there's a seven in 100 chance of getting hepatitis, a in 500,000 chance of getting the wrong kind of blood and dying, a one in a million chance of getting malaria, and a one in a million chance of getting AIDS, Bove said. "Collections are down and I don't know why," said Katz. "Fear of AIDS may be a factor because polls show that 25 percent of people feel they can get AIDS by donating blood." He and Bove said this belief is wrong. "Eating ice cream cones and drowning go up in the summer but the two are not related. There is no cause and effect relationship." AIDS, or Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, which mainly affects homosexual men, cripples the body's ability to fight disease and leaves victims open to a variety of cancers and other deadly conditions. Alfred Katz, executive director of the American Red Cross Blood Services, said blood donations have stayed level for about a year, an increase in demand because over the last ten months adoptions increased 5 percent each year. "There are hot spots for AIDS." Bove said, noting that it is not found everywhere across the nation or even in every city. KAPPA ALPHA PSI Skating Party Tonight—9:30 p.m.-??? Wednesday, Nov. 2, 1983 Fantasy Skateland 3210 Iowa KAW MEXICO BORDER BANDIDO Taco Salads 99c Reg. $1.49 Super Salads $1.99 Reg. $2.69 Guacamole Salad 99c Reg. $1.49 Wednesdays 11a.m.- 10 p.m. All you can eat Taco Salad Bar $2.99 all day Video Games 1528 W. 23RD. Across from Post Office 842-8861 PHONE AHEAD FOR SPEEDY CARRY-OUT SERVICE 842-8861 --- MTV MUSIC TELEVISION I want my MTV! Available in stereo. sunflower cablevision 644 NEW HAMPSHIRE / TELEPHONE: (913) 841-2100 SPORTS University Daily Kansan, November 2,1983 Western Kansas awaits hunters' arrival By United Press International In less than two weeks, fields in western Kansas will turn into a shooting gallery with tens of thousands of hunters taking aim on the state's bountiful flocks of pheasant, quail and prairie chickens. And while the Kansas Fish and Game Commission predicts hunters may bag up to 1.5 million pheasantes alone, it also suggests that hunters will be spent during the 1983 hunting season. "We set our all-time record for Kansas for the pearasant harvest last year," the fish and game commission's Rob Manus said. "We expect the harvest might be down a little bit this year because the hard summer we had knocked them down some. But it's going to be another dynamite harvest." Manus said 196,000 hunters flocked primarily to western Kansas for last year's pheasant season. This year's season for pheasant, quail and prairie chickens begins Nov. 12 and ends Jan. 31. Quail hunting in some sections of western Kansas, however, doesn't begin until Nov. 19. Motel rooms in Colby, Dodge City and Hays already are spoken for and, barring some last minute cancellations, hunters without reservations had better be equipped with tents or campers. "I couldn't find you a room in Dodge City short of putting you in my basement," said Dick Ranney, manager of the Dodge City Convention and Visitors Bureau. "Most hunters, if they haven't got a place to stay by now, aren't coming the first week," said Paul Layland, executive director of the Colby Chamber of Commerce. "You darn near have to have reservations or know somebody." "Every hotel room in Hays is filled for that (opening) weekend," Bob Collins, manager of the Hays Chamber of Commerce, said of the city's 715 motel rooms. According to the commission, each upland game bird hunter spends about $190 a season. Included is a $40 hunting license for non-residents ($8 for resi- dents and expenditures for food, lodging, gear, motor fuel and beverages). qual hunters last year spent $3.7 million and hunters laid out $8.7 million. Mama Sa! "The economics have been overlooked for some time," he said. write pheasant hunting is especially good in western Kansas, Manus said there also is prime quail and pheasant hunting in eastern sections. "We have the largest flock of prairie chickens in the nation," he added, noting the immense expanse of range land for the birds. Manus said Kansas' upland game bird flocks are huge because of the state's vast fields of milo, wheat and barley. These are prime sources of food and shelter. In recent years there has been some resentment by land owners in western Kansas against hunters from Johnson County and other sections of eastern Kansas because of the controversial severance tax on oil and natural gas production. But officials say harsh feelings have begun to subside now that the battle against the tax has been lost. "When the thing really got heated up, there was quite a bit of animosity." Collins said of land owners in Ellis and other western counties. "They were saying if you've got plates from eastern Kansas on your car, don't stop here and hunt. I haven't heard any of that this year." Officials said hunters from across the nation converge on Kansas for its national park. He estimated hunters spend an average of $100 daily. "Dodge City's airport looks like a beehive with all sorts of planes." Ramney said, referring to the influx of out-state hunters in past years. "The flows of money that come in are really an economic impact to the area," he said. "That money will turn over a minimum of 3.2 times up to 11." Officials are optimistic another huge peasant harvest is in store this year. "We look forward to another blue ribbon pheasant season," said Manus, the assistant editor of the commission's Kansas Wildlife Magazine. He also predicted hunters would be able to take their limit of quail. said Collins: "There's no doubt in my mind there's plenty of birds. Lots of big Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 FRESHMEN NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Stop by 115 Military Science or Call 864-3161 OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRINDER MAN WE DELIVER! 843-7398 WHAT ARE "FUNFLOWERS"? They're flowers just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to arrange and enjoy. Put a little fun in your life. Pick up a bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" today or any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 Specially priced! SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" 748-2913 749-2912 "ROSES DAY TODAY." "ROSES DAY TODAY" Yes, we're up to our delighted noses in lovely roses. And that means good news for YOU— or that special person you choose to delight with a dozen. Carry 'em away at a very special price. $1600 per lovely dozen Special only for "Roses Day" SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" 749-2912 1/2 PRICE INITIATION SALE! Hurry! Now is the time to join Trailridge Athletic Club. You can save on our one-time membership initiation fee. Now through November 13,1983, you pay only half of our initiation fee. We Offer: Trailridge Athletic Club is a full service fitness facility, offering weight training, handball, racquetball, men's and women's spas, aerobics and many other services. You are invited to visit the club have a tour of our facilities and obtain answers to any questions you may have. BALANCE AND COORDINATION Trailridge Athletic Club 2500 W. 6th EVERLAST United Press International LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Middleweight champion "Marvelous Marvin" Hagler works out in preparation for his Nov. 10 bout with Roberto Duran. Yesterday, Hagler turned down a $100,000 offer from Duran for a side bet on the fight. Hagler is the undisputed champion while Duran is attempting to regain the title. SENIORS Starting Nov. 7, Senior Yearbook Portraits will be taken again Stop by 121 B Kansas Union or call 864-3728 Make your appointment TODAY! nineteen hundred eighty-four JAYHAWKER Place an ad. Tell the world. Pyramid Salutes: World-Famous Landmarks Statue of Liberty 841-7230 RAMN THE LIBERTY SPECIAL • Large, three topping pizza • two free Pepsis ($3 Off) (exp. 11/2/83) 842-3232 PYRAMID PIZZA PYRAMID University Daily Kansan, November 2, 1983 SPORTS ALMANAC Page 15 ODDS Favorite L.A. Raiders 6 New Orleans 11 Pittsburgh 8 Green Bay 5 Cleveland 7 New England 6 Dallas 11 Cincinnati 8 Minnesota 7 LA Rams 7 San Francisco 9 Seattle 10 Washington 9 N.Y. Jets 9 Sunday Nov. 6 Kansas City 12 San Diego 5 Cleveland 7 New England 6 Philadelphia 11 Houston 4 Tampa Bay 7 Lake Tahoe 7 Chicago 7 Miami 2 Denver 3 Washington 9 N.Y. Jets 9 Halifax 6 Monday Nov. 7 N.Y. Jets 6 COLLEGE Virginia Ga Tech 1 Wake Forest Duke 6 No Carolina Clemson 7 Michigan Pearl 17 Boston College Army 22 Dartmouth Columbia 14 Yale Cornell 14 Georgeta Florida 14 Harvard Harvard 13 Ohio St Indiana 20 Syracuse Navy 1 Norde Dame Pittsburgh 7 College Pennsylvania 10% W Virginia Temple 17% Arkansas Baylor 17% Ohio St Northwestern 14 Iowa Wisconsin 6% Auburn Maryland 7% Kansas Kansas 5% Okahoma Missouri 3 Kansas Colorado 1 Virginia Tech Tulane 1 Texas Tech TCU 8% CLA Houston 18% LLA Illinois 14 Wash. St California 13% Arizona St Oregon 7% S. Calif Stanford 12 Vanderbilt So. Carolina 10 Vanderbilt Kentucky 3 Illinois Minnesota 25 Bingham Wash. 17% Alabama SU 7% Touchdowns rd rush rec rest ratts Dickerson, Kimman 15 13 13 90 Dickerson, Kimman 15 13 13 90 T Brown, Minn 9 8 1 0 54 Quich Phi 9 8 1 0 54 Giants Gators 9 8 1 0 54 D Cark, SF 6 0 6 0 36 Gail, Chi 6 0 6 0 36 HOLL, ML 6 0 6 0 36 Jones, Det 6 0 6 0 36 Spring, NO 6 0 5 1 0 36 Wilson, No 6 0 5 1 0 36 Riking ep-a fg-a lg ptts Moseby, Wash ep-a fg-a lg ptts Seption, Dinn 30-30 17 30 49 Seption, Dinn 34-35 15 49 69 Ricardo, Mann 32-32 18 48 77 Ricardo, Mann 32-32 18 48 77 Haji-Shenk, NY 16-17 16 18 64 Steiner, Gurden 16-17 16 18 64 Steiner, Gurden 16-17 16 18 64 Steiner, Gurden 16-17 16 18 64 FOOTBALL NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCE NFL Statistics Receptions no yds avg id tg 49 G77 607 12 13.3 10 Wilder, Tb 49 677 12 13.3 7 Brown, Wash 45 674 12 10.4 7 D. Clark, Shf 45 683 12 10.7 6 Springs, Dall 40 342 16 8.1 6 Barners, Rtsh 35 428 16 11.3 3 Barr, Ramsh 35 428 16 11.3 3 Quick, Phil 37 845 12 22.8 7 Loffon, All 37 845 12 22.8 7 L. Thompson, Adl 35 500 12 22.9 5 Jenkins, Ali 33 649 12 18.5 3 Jenkins, Ali 33 649 12 18.5 3 Kills, Gial 35 453 12 12.9 1 Pearson, Gial 35 453 12 12.9 1 Derrick, Ramsn 35 500 12 11.2 4 Carter, Chi 32 468 16 14.6 1 Payton, Chi 32 468 16 14.6 1 xyds no yds avg id tg Quick, Phil 845 37 22.8 7 Loffon, Gial 800 35 22.8 7 Brown, Wash. L. Thompson, Det. Gray, Giants Crowley, St. Solomon, SF Jeferson,淄 D. Clark, GB Bailey, IL Jenkins, IL Ellis, GB Mammoth, Chi Barber, Barris Tilley, SL Bell, Pearl Dewar, Pearl 674 45 15.0 4.3 649 35 15.3 4.3 627 41 15.3 4.3 621 41 15.3 4.3 520 25 20.8 3.4 518 35 14.8 4.4 483 35 14.8 4.4 483 45 10.7 4.6 473 29 16.3 4.4 464 36 10.7 4.6 453 35 12.9 4.1 444 35 12.7 4.1 434 35 12.7 4.1 428 38 11.3 3.3 410 29 14.1 3.3 410 29 14.1 3.3 294 11 11.3 1.1 291 35 11.3 1.1 O'Donoghue, Stl. Luckhurst, AU 24-24 10-13 52 54 14-24 10-13 19 52 no yds fd tg id mourish, WOH Poe, NO K. Collins, Rams Wright, SP Schmidt, Shi no yds fd tg id mourish, WOH Poe, NO K. Collins, Rams Wright, SP Schmidt, Shi Dorsett, Chall Payton, Chi Davis, Bill Anderson, Giants Carpenter, Giants Gerogers, No T. Brown, Mima T. Brown, No Tyler, SF Craig, SF Washington, Hwah Jones, Det Wilder, TD Williams, TI Iver, GH Nelson, Na Mitchell, Stl 166 819 4.77 4.18 176 754 3.24 3.08 139 585 4.24 3.23 154 560 4.24 3.23 154 560 4.24 3.23 102 514 3.74 4.13 112 463 4.12 4.05 102 514 3.74 4.13 97 403 4.29 3.03 97 403 4.29 3.03 107 382 3.18 6.23 111 359 3.24 3.08 86 340 4.02 4.16 86 340 4.02 4.16 51 416 3.84 3.93 No. no. lg avg Birkong SIL, 42 39.6 43.9 Black, Det 42 60.0 43.9 Garcia, TB 58 64.0 42.5 Exobiess, N O 40 56.0 42.0 Scrubbing, KO 40 56.0 42.0 Coleman, Mann 33 65.5 41.2 Hunnang, Phil 65 25.0 40.8 Wilder, W 65 25.0 40.8 lenningis, Giants 50 66 40.4 Warren, Dall 50 64 39.8 Iayee, Waxen 41 56 39.7 Dickey, Routs 41 56 39.5 irroz, FSW 35 61 39.5 UPI Top Twenty KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS The University Daily 1. Nebraka (38) (9-0) 612 2. Texas (34) (7-0) 677 3. Auburn (7-1) 684 4. Georgia (7-0) 470 5. Miami (Fla.) (8-1) 429 6. Illinois (7-1) 454 7. Maryland (7-1) 349 8. Southern Methodist (6-1) 313 9. North Carolina (7-1) 277 10. Georgia (6-1) 216 11. Oklahoma (6-2) 176 12. Brigham Young (7-1) 126 13. Collegeville (6-1) 114 14. Iowa (6-2) 104 15. Ohio State (6-2) 77 16. Michigan (6-4) 64 17. Alabama (5-2) 314 18. Notre Dame (6-2) 28 19. Pittsburgh (6-2) 26 20. West Virginia (6-2) KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES COURSE STUDIES Words 1-2 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 16 Days or 2 Weeks 0-15 2.00 3.15 3.75 6.75 10-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80 21-25 1.10 4.15 5.25 8.85 For every 5 words add: 25c 50c 75c 1.05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday POLICIES Classified Display $4.20 - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 2 words * Dashlines on Display Advertisement Classified display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than nine inches deep. Minimum depth is an inch. No reserves allowed in classified display advertisements except for logos. The University Daily KANSAN > Above rates based on conservative day insertions only Working have prior to punctuation. > Above rules based on consecutive day insertions. - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising - Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements - only earned rate discount Samples of all mail order items must be submitted - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established - Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University Daily Kanal Found items can be advertised 10% of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the Kuwaitan business office at 843-4158. ANNOUNCEMENTS Kansan classifieds get results OPEN NAMMA JENERUS PIZZA 900 indiana. D4824, 6:28 p.m. i a m BELLEY DANCING CLASSES beginning and beginning in November Call the Dance Gallery, 841-9253 Paid Staff Positions The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; in and rooms 200 and 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applications due in Room 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Wed., Nov. 16 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 The University Daily Kansas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employment Applications are sought from all qualified people who have been admitted to the college, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry a MORT SULEANCE Jan 1 to May 31 2 bedroom, carpeted apt in 4-piece. Close to campus and Bryce. Call 800-745-6700. FOR RENT Available Nov. 1. Small one bedroom house, only $12 ous utilities. BK41-8027 affords 1 bed room apartment, near KU, downtown Sapporo $200.00 and 1.7 utilities 804.377 864.377 (Markar) DUPLEX 2 bedroom & storage appliance, off-street parking, $200 month. Call 841-2812-918 an Excellent location one bedroom apartment, equipment area, air located at 1800 Suite 1 call 841-2424 Male Roommate needed 3 bedroom house, nice cheap. Available now or beginning of semester. Email: steven@san Diego.edu Meadowbrook studio for sublease Available November 5. Ask for apartment U1230 842-4200 For RENT. Nice, available brand new hot water heater. Call ALL UTLITEPAID (542) 642-9627. EXPENSIVE PRESENT in nice 51 BR house. $100 mo/ plus L.T. utilities. 841.000. Ask for Steve. STUDIO Hours: 9am to 5pm for rent near university and downtown. No set prices. 841-5000 Large 2 bedroom furnished apartment for sublease to camp and downsweep. Call 818-7294 or 800-5361. Non-smoking female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment $120/month and 1.3 units. Across the building. Low rent $137/month noUtil. Roommate needed for 2 HR apt.1, Nov 1, Bill 843-1869 after 5 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOHIOHUSES: spacious, quiet 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at 26th & Kasoid Posturing all appliances, washer-dryer book ups, laundry machines, a swimming pool. Call 748-158 for an appointment Save money, rent a 1 or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets. Book 842-7458. Spacious furnished 2 HR apt with fireplace Water heater. Two additional bedrooms in university and downtown. No pets please. 841-5060. Spacious furnished 4 HR 1/2 bath apt with water heater. Two additional bedrooms in university and downtown. Must be to appreciate! Off-street parking. No停车。 To sublease furnished 2 HR apt. Available Nov. 1st. On bus route. HP4 8539. Two rooms for rent ($16 and $8) on 1st floor of house located on #4 block of black Kitchen. Smaller room is in basement. FOR SALE 1972 Buck Regal rump great, rare, very deep, must sell $575.00 Calent Kent. 749-280 1974 AUDI FOX, 94,000 miles. Good condition. radio engine, camera and radiator. **800; Call** 312-563-7530. 1976 Buck Lashley Custom 4 door sedan. Excellent condition, the air conditioner, air purification & steering. Certified by American Automobile Association. 1977 Cee Concours 38,744 m. PS BF AC AM. 1978 Concours 38,744 m. PS BF AC AM. £260 fee 943 8730 1978 Isham 280Z, blue 5-speed, A/C Also 1972 Wimbus window bss 4-5, 843-286 early windows. 1980 Datsun 400, 4x20ed, 30 mpg, backtrack, hacks great, a.c. A/C MF-P cassette, sport! Call 749-6219 © 2002 GAMESBROOK.COM 181. Madera RX 7: GSL. Custom TURBO. Must sell Perfect condition. Awesome power. Bk4-1624 1982 Toyota Corolla SLS extra clean, special paint & materials. Extended warranty. Call 6-554-8412 causseur. Survive. 6-week maintenance 8412-5122 cassette setter. After 6, weekends 841-0122 Volkswagen Bug. Needs some engine repair 71 Toyota 4-speed, radials extra wheels and aftermarket high mileage. $325 820-6001. 9:30 a.m - 10 p.m. 75 Toyota Corolla 1600 - $1,000 must sell, leaving country. 841-1139 ANGEL MOPED. Lake New Cont $650 Sell $250 Call Lenexa, K-145 1811 RCA Video Recorder · VCFR: VP6506 (top of the line) RCA video recorder, easily visible, programs equipped, compatible with most systems. OLINMARK IV skis, 170 cm) with Sahmona 727 bikers, $160 Nordica boards, size B 1/2 m/s. www.sahmona.com Classical Buffs. 90 val. set, Harvard Classics, only. $5.3 per volume. $175 total. 842-719 evenings. other 1985 plus assorted other issues 1,994-7577 ANGEL MOPEJ. Like New. Cost $60. Sale $29 Call MOPED GREATRUY 79 Butuvas, 500 miles, first 15:30 lanes. Call Rom At 749-7479 Six POLICE tickets for sale. Great location, Call 843-3601 and leave message. HONDA CV19C 1976. Must sell $1700 or best offer. Runs good. Call 842-6618. Yamaha RYA 200R $130 $235 Yamaha TRIMTBL P220 $225 RV. P Bristol Boston. Sphrs $130. Jr. old perfect condition. Solid together. $55 Call Mary 493-910. LOST AND FOUND bar, Call Sonny, 842-4024 HONDA CIVIC 1976. Must sell $1700 or best offer Storehouse television video. All name brands. Lowest prices. Kc area. Total Sound Distributors. WE SELL STAMP'S! U.S. and Foreign. 811 New Hampshire. Open weekends 10-3. Z-19 computer terminal, like new, compatible with Z-19 computer terminal, 128 lines/character, $400, $625-$1250 Lost Black male cat. 1/2 years old. Black flea collar. Victim of 26th and Kaiden. Wed 10:28. Cat lost. Kitten, white, male with black spots and tail. Lost kitten, male, white with black spots and tail. Lost around Hawk's Crossing on Saturday night. HUGE SELECTION OF MEN'S MAGAZINES FOR SALE. $100 COMICS, #111 NJ OPEN IN JAPAN Members only management reversible female members only management reversible female section on 69 pages # 864103 to # 864106 to # 864107 HELP WANTED Last orange striped tabby kitten with green eyes and colorful neck, near 10h & 12tennessee. Please call BOSTON, EAST COAST ADVENTURE - Explore opportunities of exciting city adventures at our new openings and year commitment. Contact Child Care Placement Service 149 Buckminster Dr. Brookline, MA 02164 Caregiver to assist female with disability No ex- ceedance of 5 hours per day. Weekends, needles during holiday. Call贝克 Berkshire Hathaway Insurance Agency Inc. Earn $2,000 in one month at home. Less than $10 investment. Sigh. Registration. D.C. CHurch. Signature. Necklace. N.S. 69441. NS 69443. FRESHMEN SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE. It is not too late to attend in NAVAL HATRU '74. Call 861-3481 GRADUATE RESEARCH ASSISTANT (704) 259-2491, bookkeeping service serving two newly-funded projects working with families with developmental problems (50 wpm), and library research skills required. $10,000 Send resume to Mary L. Hurley, KU Lawrence, KS, by November 4, 1985. An EOE/AFF, Lawrence, KS, by November 4, 1985. DOCTORALIST RESEARCH ASSOCIATE (synthetic chemistry) position available immediately for the synthesis of reagents useful for the preparation of dyes, indicators and other bioactive chemicals for very low-level analysis. Minimum salary $16,000. The successful candidate should have a recent Bachelor's degree in chemical or related science and strong interest in the design and execution of organic syntheses. Send curriculum vitae, three letters of reference and a cover letter to Professor Robert G. Carlson and Richard S. Givens, Department of Chemistry, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 6094-2112. The University of Kananaskis is seeking opportunity affirmative active employer. Research Assistant half-time position in chemistry The Center for Biomedical Research at the University of Kansas has an opening beginning in September. The position will serve one year with possible extension to three or more years. Duties include performing annual salary BS 19,000 bourne, proteases and acetylcholinesterase by various, some toxic inhibitors. Annual salary BS 19,000 bourne, Bachelor's degree in a chemically or biochemically related field. Desired experience: in protein or enzyme biology. Apply online to the use of microcompatients. Applications are accepted by mail only until November 7 at 5:00 p.m. Please send your resume to Hildiko Mikkelsen, ability to carry out work independently and responsibility, and it possible, a transcript to Dr. Hillko Mikkelsen, Kansas, Lawrence, KS 69045 Kansas University is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity SENIOR POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE (photochemistry) available January 1, 1984. Studies on the synthesis, photochemistry and chemistry of postdoctoral or equivalent research materials for derivatives for peptide analyses. Requires Ph.D in either physical or organic chemistry with at least three years of postdoctoral or equivalent research experience. Requires a master's degree in photochemistry, photolimniscence spectroscopy and various chromatographic methods of analysis. Must have a background in working knowledge of photochemistry and luminescence of various organic functional groups. This is a full-time, 60 hours per week, position. Applicants must have an undergraduate degree and/or to apply, resume list of publications and three letters of reference by November 29, 1983 or December 30, 1983. Carlson, Department of Chemistry, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, 6065-2112 The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer. TRAVEL **Maquintauro** is looking for Tour Managers, people we hire to usertour our group tours. Visit Middle East, Africa, Orient, India. You must love people, be outgoing, have a good attitude towards others. Be enthusiastic and senior citizens, our major market, as well as with all age groups. Personality, pose a good impression. But must be smart and a quick learner. Too public speaking ability will in North America so you must speak English well. But fluency in German, Spanish, French or Italian is required. The season is May to October but chance for year "round work. Pay is good and if you are good the tips are rewarded. Please contact Director of Team Management 183 S. Church Street, Lawrence, SC 6004. No phone calls please. EOE Wanted: BabySitter/Deskworker for Trailside Albion Club. Mornings: 9:00 12:00 Call Tom at 6:30. MISCELLANEOUS PERSONAL $115.00 Old Milwaukee Pool Tournament, Sat Nov 5. Register for men's and women's or more dates in the back of the pool. Used furniture bought and sold. Pick-up available Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont. KWALITY COMICS A strong kg outlet Benetail Retail Liquor Chilled Wine - Kegs - Ice-Cold Beverage 2 lb north of northwest of New York. M-F: 11-7 Sat: 10-5 For the best prices and service anywhere Dammit! Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of wine, including the *Buffalo Bill* billa tainse (Bad fun Friday night, Hawk has it). 843-7239 107 W. 7th Bill (aalt Popeye). Had fun Friday night. Hawk has my number. A H. Cross over the bridge to history. North Lawrence drug, for a new education, cold beer, cold milk, drag, for a new教室, spice bottles, cold beer and milk. COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early care, confidentiality Kansas City area Care; confidentiality Kansas City area Care LAR-BEAR: BEST OF LUCK TO MY FAVORITE "WHITE BOY"! I love you. Marybreast "ECKANKAR, and the uniqueness in its teaching of Eck, is the only path to God that allows one its complete individual freedom" *W* Wed, Nov 2, 7:30 p.m. Groomers Room, Kansas Union UFS GOVERNMENT TOWN, Kansas City FALLER CHANDLER HOWELL WOOL TOP COATS, WOOL TAPESTRY, Looks REALY SHARP ADD A NEW WOOL HAT TO THE ETC SHOP 732 Massachusetts, 843 0611 EHE SHiNING Friday and Saturday November 4 and 5 7-9:30 p.m. $1.75 MIDNIGHT $2. Downs Aud. Dyche Hall I have POLICE TICKETS available for the Nov 24 concert at Kemper Arena. Call 864-2622 after 1pm. instant passport, portfolio resume, naturalization, immigration and of course fine portraits. Swells Studio 749-1611. ★ Mrs. Lang Psychic Tarot Card Reader America's foremost reader of astrology and the cards is taking apps, for private readings, to help people understand on love, marriage, business, etc. ★ ★ Call 841-0489 But it is not too easy to order Christmas portraits for PHOTOS 80 Pensylvanian 841-860. By appoint- ing a photographer, 841-860. By appoint- ing a photographer, 841-860. Lose weight with acupuncture. 749-4422. 9 - 5 Happy Birthday Tony Love, Lisa Go Get 'em Tygr! MONEY FOR SCHOOL! We guarantee to fund scholarships, grants, and aid which you are eligible to receive. Application材料 $1.00. Indicate the graduate or graduate Financial Aid Finder. But if your financial aid is denied. Mature non-smoking female residence with own carriage. Must be at least 21 years old. Older female residence to downstairs. Must be clean & well cleaned. START POINT Are you paying $139.00 a month for the Blue Cross Family Health Plan? Consider saving $500.00 or more That's very expensive. Call Me Bil Dutton Dutton Insurance LTD. 9th & Kentucky 842-0515 The Complete Insurance Facility --for more information VIRTUAL SAIL/HEAVER CREW LADY FREE PLEASE RSVP BY NOVEMBER 2015 FOR DISCOUNT HATES on lodging, life, and travel insurance. Randall You are the BEST! (Now all of KU knows its true). All my love, Myk. Picture yourself as a drawing from Sunrise Paucer $300. Great for Christmas Call; *84-9399* or $80. Great for Christmas Call; *84-9399* Say if you a, custom silkscreen print T-shirts jerseys or caps. Shirt: Swells 749-1611 Special for students Haircuts $7 and perms $23 Chalkboard $12 and $18 in Skincare S: InSkinties 10 to 14 Months $30 The Jayhawk Singer presents "A Salute to American Music" Wednesday, November 2 1983 7:30 p.m. at The Metropolitan Opera "Variety Series I" "Warcraft" TO MY FAVORITE KID: HAPPY 20th. you are a friend with a smirky him. LOVE of Love. Daughter Dearled VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENLANCE 1:30 Preparing for Tests, 2:30 Time Management, 3:00-3:10 Notetaking. Free. Contact the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall. Hall 407. Wanta have a Function and get laundry doo'to? Caddi Ss nud 3.756 749-4132 Jayhawk Open Racquetball Tournament Trailridge Athletic Club Events: Men's & Women's ABCD Date: Nov. 11, 12, 13 Men's & Mixed Doubles AR Entry Call 841-7230 Deadline: Nov. 9 BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing .. confideni counseling 843-8231 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sense to use in your research papers! Apply for 3rd For exam preparation 'New Analysis of Western civilization' available now at Town Crier. The book is published by University Press. Vintage & contemporary clothes and purty & formal attire. BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE 918½ Mass. M-S 10-5 841-2451 Thurs. 10-8 THRIST STORES. Appliances, furniture, clothing, knife-hairs, bedding. Always good bargains. CUSTOMER SUPPORT. (718) 243-9000. SINGING TELEGRAMS I'll specialize lyrics for your occasion. Call Andrea. 864-1016 SPECTRUM OPTICAL, Eyeglasses made UP to 48 mm, down TO a pristine 47 East 7th St. Wholeale Sound Rental, P.A., Guitar, and Bass amps 841-645 SERVICES OFFERED Artists with the written word * typing, editing* graphics WORLD ARTISTS Eleni 841-2172 INTRODUCING Fashion Fingers DUCTS AND TECHNIQUES . . . A COMPLETE SCULPTURED NAIL SYSTEM OF SPACE AGE PRO. SOLAR YAILS (tires) (glas) Won't lift, tan, slam or often no polish needed Not an acrylic, not a porcelain. It's fiberclay and it's fantastic. "BEAUCLAIR" MANICURING AND PEDICURING All work guaranteed. Trained expert application Call for a free demonstration 842-8600 LOCATED IN THE HAIR SUITE(Ramada Inn) 6th and iowa . . . Phone 842-8600 800-621-5745 IN ILLINOIS CALL 312-022-980 AUTHORS' RESEARCH, ROOM 800 S. Dearman, Chicago, IL 81605 S. Dearman, Chicago, IL 81605 RESEARCH PAPERS TOLL-FREE HOTLINE BANJO LESSONS: SCRUGGS. MELOIC, FRAILING. Experienced Teacher Jim, 749-2515, evees ENGLISH I will edit your thesis, dissertation or lecture. Anderson Engl. 101, 102, etc. Call Ms. Thompson, 843-3745. M. A. in English, five years' experience teaching on the secondary level in mathematics, proofread, and纸书制作, those and thesis work. Apply to the following schools: Qualified Torsuring in Pascal, Certified by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). Call 415-693-8200. STADIUM BARRER SHOP 1032 Massachusetts, downstairs all haircuts. $5.90 No appointment. PRIVATE FLIGHT PRIVATE FLIGHT GROUND SCHOOL COURSE Private Flight Aeronautics will be offered in Spring 84 by Charles E. Wilson, flight instructor. Topics: Flight Standards, Certification Requirements, Theory of Flight, Performance, Navigation, Meteorology, Flight Planning, Oxygen Systems, Pilot Factors. Enrolment information: AE 424; Private Flight Aeronautics; 3 hours; 64015; 9:30-10:20 MWF; 2002 Learned; open enrolment. **Raquetball** tennis, squash raquet stringing specializing in new graphite hybrid stringing. Tennis, computers and accessories. New used; 482-3508, 749-3527 evenings. **TUTORING** (5250) Math and French. Individual 24 hour typing Faint, fast accurate Resumes, letters, reports, theses, I want to do your writing 842/6012 A.A.A.A. Affordable TYPING SERVICE. Fast, first quality Word, PROCESSING 841/6006 TYPING AFPORABLE QUALITY for all our typing needs Call Library 842-7094 after 6 p.m. Call TIP TOP TYPING : 1203 low. Experimented with Acer, Acerix 6100 paper, Royal Epson, and HP. Absolutely! Letter Perfect Typing, Editing, Book killing. Prompt professional quality high 850 and 950 points. Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed, overtime service (under 25 pages). Call Maria. 841-6873. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School secretary. Call Nancy. 841-1218 Call Rary for your typing needs. letters, term 847 725 or 843 867 791, 11 30 m a 10 30 p m 847 725 or 843 867 791, 11 30 m a 10 30 p m Clear and fast typing assured. Call 841-6846 any time DEVELOPMENTAL service, professional typing HM SERVICES PICA or else Large jobs small 规模. Experienced typist will type letters, theses and references from IBM Correcting Selective. Call 842-7641 Experimented hybrid Tern paper, them all, as well as the Fuji V60s. I used Pena, and can correct spelling Phone 843-8049 Mrs. Processing you can afford it 843-2609 JEANETTE HAPPY TYPEING SERVICE IBM Experienced (typical) type to type dissertation documents. taper papers; Reasonable rates. Can write in Spanish, French, Greek, Word ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT 841-3500 Professional Typing: Dissertations, term papers, Professional Type: legal et al. IBM Correcting Selective, Debi 449-9029 TYPING PLUS Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition grammar, spelling, etc English for foreign students or Americans 841-6254 3 services at 1 location typing, editing and graphics WORT ARTISTS, call Eden, 841-2127 Word Processing plus typing Declaration Plus Graphic Design Plus Photoshop Plus Ralphsthought plus graphics plus photography Plus pickup & delivery. Ab's Arts Plus T-70230 Library Research - Tipping - Editing. Will help you find the best resources. WANTED 2 female roommates modern 4 BR; 2 bthouse FP; 12 bthouse; 4 plus 4 utilities plus 6 rooms; 789-444 APPLE 2/2 plus computer manager *Call* 842 6485 after 5 Female roommate to sublease own room in 2 a bedroom appl. Very close to campus $10 plus /12 roommate appl. Very close to campus $12 Female roommate nice room, campus 2 blocks. W/1/ fac. 841-4788 GWM wanted for downtown apartment. Private bedroom, comfort room and balcony available to $49441 after 8 months. Need 2 tickets for Nebraka vs. K.U. call 82-0481. 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SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 2, 1983 Page 16 Brown leaves football team, Gottfried says By Staff and Wire Reports Jeff Brown, a starting cornerback for the Kansas Jayhawks, has left the team because of personal issues. Mike Gottfred said yesterday. Brown, a 5-11, 170-pound junior, had been a starter at cornerback for the last three games. He replaced senior Rod Demerrite, who suffered a broken ankle against Iowa State on Oct. 8. This season Brown had made 25 tackles. He is the fifth player to leave in team, following Garrardift and Johnston, Rodney Madden and Ken Maior. Brown's defection leaves the Jayhawks thin in the defensive secondary. Besides Demerrite, cornerback Dino Bell broke his wrist in the Wichita State game. Either Bobby Peterson or more Bill Vechiarella will probably take Brown's place in the secondary. At yesterday's practice, senior wide receiver Darren Green participated for the first time since spraining an ankle against Kansas State two weeks ago. KU's other starting receiver, Bob Johnson, did not practice because of a shoulder injury he sustained in the Oklahoma State Confirmed team. Johnson's condition was on a day-to-day basis. Starting backfill E.J. Jones also sat out yesterday's workout because of ankle injury he suffered against Oklahoma. Two Jayhawk teams to sport Brooks By the Kansan Staff Converse basketball shoes for all of its regular season games. For more than 10 years, the KU men's basketball team has worn But when Larry Brown was hired last spring, the Jayhawks got more than a new head basketball coach. The team INDIANA United Press International INDIANAPOLIS — Houston's Ralph Sampson, left, battles Indiana's Steve Stepanovich in a matchup of the top two draft choices in last spring's NBA draft. Sampson scored 21 points last night, but the Pacers beat the Rockets, 116-108. Former pitcher paralyzed in diving accident NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. — Pete Redfern, former pitcher for the Minnesota Twins, remained paralyzed from the neck down yesterday after he dived into the ocean and landed on rocks Saturday night. By United Press International Redfern, 29, is in the intensive care unit of Hoag Memorial Hospital. Hospital officials, acting at the request of Redfern, would not release any further details. not Jay Jaffe, Redfern's friend, lawyer and teammate at the University of Southern California at the University possibly never walking again as a result of the accident. "The doctor who originally treated him moments after he was brought to the hospital told me the spinal cord was severed between the third and fourth vertabra." Jaffe said yesterday. "He apparently hit his head on the bottom and fractured his neck and spinal column. "The doctor told me that he felt there would be a very slim chance of any recovery, any motor function, returning." Redfern, who has a wife and young son, was with friends Saturday night on Balboa Island when the accident occurred, Jaffe said. He apparently dived into water only one or two feet deep. Redfern starred on USC's baseball team and was Minnesota's No. 1 pick in the secondary phase of the 1975 draft. He pitched in parts of seven seasons for the Twins with a best year of 7-3 in 1979. After the 1982 season he underwent elbow surgery and the Twins cut him last spring. The Los Angeles Dodgers signed him as a free agent at midseason and sent him to their Triple A club in Abu Dhabi to do well and the Dodgers also cut him. He was released by the Dodgers Saturday, the day of the accident. More sports pages 14,15 Walking Shorts WALKING SHORTS, for football games or just for fun. Available in many fall shades. Argyle Vest - 35.00 Pin Striped Shirt - 35.00 Wide Wale Corduroy Shorts 20.00 to 30.00 "When Larry first took the job, about everybody, including Converse. Nike and Brooks, approached us about signing with them," assistant basketball coach said. got a new brand of shoe to wear. "A lot of people tried to get us, but Brooks was really great. Larry felt really comfortable with the company." Because Brown agreed to switch to Brooks shoes, Hill said that for the first time to his knowledge, the Jayhawk or other shoe he wearing a shoe other than Converse. John Leavens, legislative assistant at the NCAA headquarters in Shawnee Mission, Kan., said that national sporting goods manufacturers, such as Brooks, could donate gear to athletic departments of universities legally. Leavens said the only stipulation was that athletic departments check out the gear to the team athletes on a lend and return policy. Not only will the men's basketball team be wearing Brooks shoes, free of charge, but both the KU men's and women's basketball teams have outplayed perfectly outlined by Brooks next season. Scott Perealman, KU tennis coach, said he agreed last week with a national representative from Brooks for the company to supply the tennis teams with practice and meet warm-up suits, wristbands shorts and a shoe allotment. "Brooks will be outfitting us basically from head to toe." Pereiman said. "It will be a tremendous savings to our budget." "It's a prestigious thing for us because right now we're the only school in the country to be sponsored by Brooks." Johnson leads late surge for 116-114 win The Malls Shopping Center • 711 W. 23rd Mon.-Thurs. 10:00-8:30 *Fri.-Sat. 10:60* Sun-15 By United Press International carouse KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Mark Obering scored on a drive with 19 seconds left, and guards Billy Knight and Larry Drew combined for three free throws, to give the Kansas City Kings a 16-14 ILLINOIS night last over the Golden State Warriors. Eddie Johnson scored 39 points and Edith Zion 28 to help Kansas县 win its first football game. Short scored 9 points in the opening seven minutes of the fourth quarter to help make the Warriors at a 109-94 lead. But Johnson scored 8 straight points to cut the deficit to 111-107 with 68 seconds remaining. SPORTS BRIEFS From Staff and Wire Reports KC owners belong to group backing Sacramento sports SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A private group proposed yesterday to raise up to $100 million for construction of a stadium and arena to lure professional sports to California's capital. The offer was discussed at a news conference by the Sacramento Sports Association, which includes various developers and the owners of the team. "The guarantee is unique," said Omer Rains, a former state senator acting as spokesman for the private group. "I don't know that it's been done anywhere in the United States. We want to demonstrate our sincerity." He referred to a long dispute over the proposed stadium that has become a key issue in the Nov. 8 mayoral election in Sacramento. Volleyball team splits two matches The KU volleyball team won one match and lost another in volleyball action Monday night in Atchison. KU continued its winning ways in only the first game of the second match, but lost the last two games to Missouri Western in its final game 15-7, 7-15 and 10-15. The Jayhawks faced Benedictine College in their opening match and won in two games, 15-1 and 15-13. "Missouri Western is a good team," coach Bob Lockwood said about the third-ranked NAIA squad from SL. Joseph, Mo. "We dominated the first game with our power offense." Talks between NBA. referees stalled NEW YORK — NBA Commissioner Larry O'Brien, members of the Labor Relations Committee and the league's negotiating team met for $3 \frac{1}{2}$ hours yesterday with Richie Phillips, general counsel of the National Association of Basketball Referees, and his associates, but no meaningful progress was made in the ongoing labor dispute between the NBA and the referees' union. The National Basketball Association said it increased its playoff salary proposal by 50 percent, but said that there was little or no movement on the part of the union. In addition, according to the league, the NBA's 2018-19 season proposal wasoaded to the NBA's wage proposal that was made nearly two weeks ago. Prior to this meeting, O'Brien chaired a joint meeting of the Labor Relations Committee, which is comprised of team owners and general managers, and the league's negotiating team to review all elements of the labor dispute with the referees. ANHEIM, Calif. — Rod Carew, a seven-time American League batting champion and 16-time All-Star, has until Friday to reach a contract agreement with the California Angels or the team says he will be wearing a different uniform next season. Carew sets deadline for free agency A spokeswoman for the Angels said yesterday that negotiations between Carew's attorney, Jerry Simon, and Angel officials Buzzie Bavasi and Mike Port, were continuing but that she did not know if the parties were scheduled to meet yesterday. The 38-year-old Carew, who fitted with a 400 average through the first half of the past season before being nugged by injuries and settling for a 360 average — behind only Boston's Wade Boggs — has filed for free agency. All negotiations with players who have title for free agency must end Friday and cannot resume until after the file agent re-entry draft Monday. The Angels have said, however, they will not retain negotiating rights to any player going through the draft. 100 calvin klein BRITCHES CORNER New national holiday Reagan signs bill declaring holiday in honor of Martin Luther King Inside, p. 9 KANSAN RAINY O High, 65. Low, 55. Details on pg.2 Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas Vol. 94, No. 54 (USPS 650-640) Thursday morning, November 3, 1983 LA FERMATA DE L'ARMADA AU JUSSAN FRANCISCO PARIS — The coffins of the 58 French paratroopers who were killed in Beirut are lined up in the courtyard of the Invalides for a memorial ceremony President Francois Mittertner pinned decorations on each coffin. See related stories P. 2. Priority coordinator resigns position By PETE WICKLUND Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The campaign coordinator of the Priority Coalition resigned Tuesday, saying that his coalition had engaged in "unethical practices" and had disgraced a student from running for student body president. Robert Walker, the coordinator, said yesterday that leaders of his coalition and members of the present Senate administration met Oct. 24 to find a way to reverse a decision made by the Senate's Elections Committee earlier that evening. The committee had voted 5-2 that night to allow members of the opposing Momentum Coalition to have their candidates for student body president and vice president placed on the ballot. THE MOMENTUM team of Kevin Walker, Webster Groves, Mo., senior, and Mark McKeen. Overland Park junior, had been barred from filing on the initial Oct 17 election deadline because of his violations officials could not Kevin Walker's enrollment at the University of Kansas. But on Oct. 26, two days after the committee voted to grant the appeal, it voted 15-2 to reverse its decision, again barring the Momentum candidates from the election. Robert Walker, Kansas City Mo., junior, said that the Senate leaders and coalition members met at the Sigma Nu fraternity house only to find that the Senate leaders had come among those present, Walker said, were himself, Lisa Ashner, student body president; Scott Swenson, Priority candidate for student body president; David Adkins, former student vice president; and Jim Cramer, student body vice president. Also in attendance, according to Walker, were two of the Senate's paid office staff, Bonnie Deynelles, Senate secretary, and Mark Bossi, Senate administrative assistant. THE SECOND vote by the Elections Committee, he said, was the result of the meeting. But the Elections Committee, which is autonomous and can make its decisions without Senate approval, apparently did not violate any of the Senate's rules and regulations. Although the Senate voted last night to See RESIGN. d. 5, col. 3 Endowment loans cover mishandled checks Staff Reporter By BRUCE F. HONOMICHI. About 125 KU employees now have received no-interest loans from the Kansas University Endowment Association because their paychecks were mishandled by the state's new computerized payroll system, the endowment association's controller said yesterday. The University of Kansas began issuing paychecks through the computerized system yesterday. The Endowment Association had prepared about 300 loans through yesterday for University employees who had experienced problems with their checks, said Stephen Carttar, the controller. Most of the KU employees applying for loans were students, he said. However, some tenured faculty members also have applied for loans. faculty members also have applied for loans. Carttar said that the 300 loans totaled about $200,000. "IT'S ALL pretty much across the board, down to ten faculty." Cartar said. Keith Ratzloff, KU's associate compilter, yesterday declined to say how many employees had been affected by the computer problems. He did say, however, that the compilter's office Most people aren't angry, though, he said. They're just pleased that they were able to get the job done. "We seem to have a pretty good handle on the situation, but we're still digging through the was better able to deal with the situation yesterday than Tuesday. The Endowment Association and the controller's office had originally estimated that about 140 KU employees would have paycheck problems. In addition to students and faculty who did not receive paychecks, at least two students reported that state and federal taxes were especially high for their businesses and that at least one paycheck was duplicated. See CHECKS, p. 5, col. 3 End of hostilities in Grenada spurs U.S. troop withdrawal; Cubans defy expulsion order By United Press International ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — The United States said yesterday that hostilities had ended in Grenada and ordered the withdrawal of U.S. troops within the next few days, but Cuban diplomats vowed that their expulsion from the island could that "only be executed by force." Fifty-five wounded Cubans — some urgently needing surgery — arrived from Grenada on an International Red Cross cross plane at Jose Marti International Airport to a welcome from President Fidel Castro, said Havana's official Prensa Latina news agency. It was the first such repatriation from Grenada since it began by U.S. troops from six Caribbean forces in 1967. The task force topped a militant leftist regime, which had seized power in a coup a week earlier. A STATE DEPARTMENT spokesman said all hostilities on Grenada had ceased and the United States began withdrawing 11 ships, including a Marine contingent and an aircraft carrier task force. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger later ordered all remaining U.S. forces to begin withdrawing within the next few days. Further details about the withdrawal of the U.S. force, including 6,000 from the Army's 82nd Airborne Division and the 1,800-Marine amphibious task force that also participated in the invasion, were not available. But Maj. Douglas Frey, Army spokesman on Grenada, said 2,300 soldiers of the 82nd Airborne would leave today and return to FT. Bragg, N.C., about 2,500 soldiers of the division on the island. ONLY A HANDFUL of Marines remain or Grenade. Frey said. The Rangers were with drawn last week late. The Pentagon adjusted the casualty figures for the week-long Grenade operation, announcing that 18 Americans were killed and 91 were wounded. Ten of the dead See GRENADA, p. 5, col. 1 Congressman requests investigation into deaths of servicemen on Grenada By United Press International WASHINGTON — A key congressman asked for an investigation yesterday into allegations that as many as nine of the 18 U.S. servicemen killed by the Islamic State may have been killed by other American troops. "There's speculation that some of them were killed by their own gunfire because of the closeness of the fighting," said the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, Rep. Melvin Price, D-III. "There's no accurate information vet that that is fact." But, he said, his committee has asked the Defense Department "to give a full report on what happened. We expect to receive that report very shortly." A Pentagon spokesman, Col. Robert O'Brien, said he knew nothing of the request for a report. The department said it was reviewing the request. that 12 Americans had been wounded when an officer better-suited inadvertently released a bomb at the scene. Rep. James Scheuer, D-N.Y., said there were indications from the "intelligence community that what happened in Grenada was a monumental snau." "First, we hear that our Marines are sent into the invasion with tourist maps," he said. "Now the intelligence community says that as many half of the Marines killed there were killed by friendly fire. Somebody ought to take some steps. "I hope that the Armed Services Committee will call for some built-in accountability from the military command so that next time there's a snafu, there will be some courts martial and some reassigning and that sort of military judgment will be questioned, as it ought to be." Ten of the dead were Army Rangers, four were Navy SEALS and three others were Marines. Staff Reporter By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter Jury's verdict of justifiable homicide ends investigation of Schall's death The jury that heard testimony during a coroner's inquest into the shooting death of Lawrence resident Robert L. Schall determined yesterday that his death was justifiable homicide. The jury of five men and one woman deliberated for about an hour before it returned the verdict that Schalah had died Oct. 26 from a stroke caused by James Oran Watson, 38, of Long Beach, Calif. Watson testified that he had shot Schall in self-defense about 2 p.m. Oct. 26 after Schall had kicked in the door to a house at 801 Locust St. The bullet entered Schall's left shoulder and passed through his aorta, said Alan Sanders, deputy coroner Schall's blood alcohol limit of 0.10 percent, he said. JERRY HARPER, Douglas County district attorney, said that because the jury had returned a justifiable homicide verdict, the case file on the shooting of Schall would be closed. The inquest was convened to determine who shot Schall, when he was shot, what caused his death, what weapon was used, and whether the man was a felony, an accident or justifiable homicide. Testimony revealed that Schall had gone to the See INQUEST, p. 5, col. 5 Student Senate passes amendment to retain nine existing committees By PETE WICKLUND Staff Reporter The Student Senate last night voted to approve an amendment that would retain its nine existing committees, including the conservative Minority Affairs Committee. THE AMENDMENT to retain the committees resulted from debate on whether to accept a proposed revision of Article V, which deals with Senate proceedings. The committee would have outlawed the committees to four. Both amendments ended six weeks of debate on accepting proposed changes in Articles IV through VI of the Student Senate Rules and Regulations — the manual that sets Senate operating policy. And, in another amendment, the Senate voted to tentatively eliminate five Senate seats that represent KU living groups. Under that proposal, the Senate Sports, Communications, Legislative Affairs, Academic Affairs and Minority Affairs committees would become Senate subcommittees. The Senate will decide Nov. 16 whether to permanently approve changes in the eight articles. but Fidler last night said the committees' occasional inactivity did not justify making them subcommittees. David Fitter, Salina sophomore and author of the amendment that proposes to keep all nine committees, said that the proposed changes would not make it easier for the Senate to conduct its business. Several senators have argued that the five committees were not active enough to justify their existence. "TO ELIMINATE a full committee on the rationale that it hasn't done anything doesn't address the problem, which is involvement." Fidler said. "You're not going to get people interested in participating in a standing subcommittee if they're not interested in joining a committee." Fidler said that there also was a chance that issues and concerns brought up by students in the subcommittees might not reach the Senate floor because of bureaucracy. Loren Busy, chairman of the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee, made the amendment to eliminate four appointed Senate seats that represent the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Society, The Association of Universities, Halls, and the All-Scholarship Hall Council. BUSBY SAID that it was inconsistent for the Senate to have a system that was based on electing representatives from the University school but not for special interest seats in the building group. Cheri Brown, president of the Black Student Union and a senator from the School of Social Welfare, said the amendments would help increase student involvement in student government at the University of Kansas. He also proposed the Senate eliminate its off-campus seat, an elected position. If the living group seats are eliminated, student concerns may be addressed, their questions to seniors he said. About 100 minority students attended last night's meeting to show support for retaining the school. "At least this year the minority students can sign up and work on committees," she said. "That way they will get involved with the Senate system." 10280 Gary Smith/KANSAN Mike Davis, Bonner Springs sophomore, uses his coat to protect himself from rain and the wet, falling leaves. An eight of an inch of rain fell yesterday in Lawrence. Olympian Mills Coach Bill Easton recall days at KU Film traces victories problems experienced by former track star By PAMELA THOMPSON Staff Reporter From a large picture window in his Lawrence home, Bill Eason can see the stadium where he coached Olympic gold-medal runner Billy Mills when he was a student at the University of Georgia. The 79-year-old Easton says he'll never forget the day when Mills, a half-Indian long distance runner who came to KU in 1959, shocked the sporting world by his surprise win in the Olympic 10,000-meter run in the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. "It was the most emotional moment of my entire athletic career," said Easton, who watched Mills' victory in Tokyo Stadium. "He had a lamp in his throat and tears were running down." NINETEEN YEARS later, Easton's memories of coaching Mills have been incorporated into a motion picture titled "Running Brave." The movie, which opens tomorrow in Lawrence and in theaters across the country, stars Robby Benson as Mills and Pat Hingle as Easton. The movie traces Mills' life from his childhood on a South Dakota reservation, to his traumatic years at KU and his unexpected Olympic victory. See RUNNING BRAVE, p. 7, col. 1 - Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1983 NEWS BRIEFSEs From United Press International Clark attacked for failure to rebuke policies of Watt WASHINGTON — The most conservative elements in the environmental movement yesterday criticized William Clark for refusing to renounce the policies of Interior Secretary James Watt. But Clark's confirmation by the Senate appeared certain as the Senate Energy Committee completed two days of confirmation hearings on Clark. The committee is to vote on the nomination tomorrow. The full Senate could vote on the matter next week. Leaders of the National Wildlife Federation and National Audubon Society — among the nation's most politically conservative environmentalists — repeatedly expressed fears that he would pursue a pro-development agenda. South Africa votes on constitution JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — South African whites voted heavily yesterday on a proposed new constitution that would give political rights to some non-whites but exclude the nation's overwhelming black majority. Police stepped up security at polling booths after two bombs rocked downtown Durban. Sources attributed the bombings to "militant black groups." Before the whites-only voting started, liberals predicted that approval of the new constitution would create political chaos, and right-wing proponents of strict racial segregation — apartheid — said it would be the beginning of the end of white supremacy. Chrysler. UAW far from agreement TWINSBURG, Ohio — Negotiations in a strike by employees at Chrysler Corp.'s Twinsburg stamping plant recaptured last night with the two sides "quite far apart" in their efforts to avert a possible shutdown of the nation's No. 3 automaker. Representatives of Chrysler and the 3,200 members of United Auto Workers Local 122 met for about two hours in an attempt to end the two-day walkout, after union officials spent most of the day studying "ongoing contract language." Contract talks were scheduled to resume at 8:30 a.m. CST today Contract talks were scheduled to resume at 8:30 a.m. "CST" early. At this point, it's very strained. Paul Jaumeen, financial secretary for the company, said: Greyhound stops rolling its buses PHOENIX, Ariz. — Greyhound Lines, the nation's largest transportation company, decided to shut down its nationwide bus service at 1 a.m. today and asked company employees to reconsider a 9.5 percent pay cut. The workers, including 7,500 bus drivers, called a strike for the same hour. The company, whose buses carried 57 million passengers last year, said service would be disrupted for several days. John W. Teets, chairman and chief executive officer of the parent Greyhound Corp., said buses would stop running at 1 a.m. CST and remain off the roads until the company's 12,000 union-covered employees had a chance to review and presumably vote on the company proposal. Columbia may be launched Nov.28 WASHINGTON — U.S. and European space agency officials decided yesterday to try to launch the space shuttle Columbia and its instrument-laden Spacelab cargo Nov. 28 despite a reduced scientific return from its experiments. Adverse seasonal conditions will affect seven of the 38 scientific instruments aboard the European-built orbiting laboratory during the nine-day space flight. The flight originally was set to start on Sept. 30 and has been delayed twice. The record six-man crew for the mission consists of John Young, Brewster Shaw, Owen Garriott, Robert Parker, Byron Lichtenberg and Ulf Merbold. Case overload of labor board cited WASHINGTON — An accumulation of more than 1,300 cases has put the National Labor Relations Board on the verge of being a non-functioning federal agency, a House subcommittee chairman said yesterday. "I am convinced . . . that this thing has nearly broken down," said Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the House Government Operations Subcommittee on Manpower and Housing. Frank made his comment after union officials complained of delays of up to two years to get final NLRB decisions after administrative hearing decisions were handed down. Rep John McKernan, R-Maine, added, "People who take cases to government agencies deserve a decision. They deserve a timely decision." Baker named 2nd-best-dressed man WASHINGTON — Senate Republican leader Howard Baker, describing himself as a "slob," said yesterday that he was stunned at being named the second-best-dressed man in the government. "I have absolutely no taste in clothes," Baker told the Senate. "I am a slob." Baker was narrowly beaten by President Reagan in a poll of best-dressed men in the government. The poll was conducted by the Tenth Circuit Court. Baker said some of the glory of the award was tarnished by the naming of John Travolta in the film category and Julius Erving among athletes. He said Travolta was seen only in a T-shirt and Irving was never seen "except in his underwear." WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 P.M. EST 11-3-83 SEATTLE 30.00 COOL 30.24 COOL BOSTON LBW MINNEAPOLIS NICH CHICAGO NEW YORK FAIR NIH DENVER COIL ATLANTA SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES DALLAS FAIR HIGHEST TEMPERATURES NEW ORLEANS MIAMI LEGEND RAIN SNOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST® NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST 10 7 PM EST 11-3-83 today will be mostly fair across the nation. Locally, today will be cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The high will be near 65. Tonight will be cloudy with a low near 55. Tomorrow will be cloudy with a high near 60. New fighting in Lebanon threatens Geneva talks BEIRUT, Lebanon — Lebanese troops and Muslim gunmen engulfed Beirut's southern suburb and surrounding hills with artillery, mortar and machine-gun fire yesterday in a serious breach of a cease-fire that threatened to unravel peace talks in Geneva, Switzerland. By United Press International Army sources reported Drusse Muslim shelled the Defense Ministry in Yarze and the Shouf mountain village of Souk el Gharb, the key army base 8 miles from Beirut that guards the southeast approaches to the capital. IN WASHINGTON, the house, heeding warnings that it could sabotage the last chance for peace in Lebanon, overwhelmingly rejected a proposal yesterday to pull U.S. troops out of Beirut by March 1, 1984. State-run Beirut radio said that the nine leaders of Lebanon's warring factions learned of the fighting and began calling from Geneva to their The House, wrapping up work on a $247 billion military spending bill, defeated 274-153 an amendment that would have prohibited the use of funds for the Marine peace-keeping force after March 1. Christian and Muslim field commanders to try to silence the guns. U. S. administration officials said that President Reagan would appoint former Defense Secretary Donald Hummer as his special Middle East envoy today White House sources said that Rumsfeld, 51, agreed yesterday to take RUMISFELD, chief executive of G.D. Searle & Co., a Skokie, Ill., drug company, is a former Republican congressman from Illinois who served as head of the Office of Economic Administration before becoming White House chair of staff and, later, defense secretary under President Gerald Ford. on the delicate diplomatic mission, succeeding Robert McFarlane, who was recently named, the president's national security affairs adviser. A warning of the terrorist attack on U.S. and French forces in Lebanon was circulated among top government officials three days before a truck bombed the embassy in Beirut. Marine headquarters in Beirut, the New York Times reported yesterday. The New York Times said that an intelligence report specified that a pro-Iranian Shiite Muslim group known as "Islamic Amal" and "the Party of God" was planning an attack THE NEWSPAPER said that the report was distributed Oct. 20 to top government officials and military officials in the region who had been seen by top Marine officers in Beirut. Unconfirmed reports on the right-wing Phalange militia radio reported more battles on the Galerie Semaan, Beirut's main east-west roadway, and the Tayoune area that separates Christian east from Muslim west Beirut. The artillery and mortar blasts echoed over the U.S. Marine peacekeeping base sandets between the two nations, but no American said that no Americans were involved. Lebanon factions reach accord, declare country independent By United Press International GENEVA, Switzerland — Lebanon's warring factions yesterday reached their first concrete agreement in three days of peace talks, declaring the nation an independent state aligned firmly with the Arab world. The declaration, contained in a formal resolution, was written by the nine leaders in the talks, who represent the U.S.-backed government, the right-wing Christian militia and opposition Shite. Sunni and Drua Muslims. A formal text of the resolution was not released, but officials said its overall direction for the first time placed the future course of the nation Since Lebanon gained independence in 1943, the identity of the country has been divided between Christians, who have deep financial and political ties to the Syrian government, and spiritual allegiance and political strength with neighboring Arabs. EXACTLY HOW the definition of Lebanon as an Arab state would be put into effect was not explained. That apparently gave the Christian Phlaion leader, Pierre Gemayel, father of president Amin, and former president Camille Chamoun the leeway to support the measure Walid Jumblatt, leader of the Drusse Muslims and founder of the pro-Syrian National Salvation Front, said he would insist that the resolution lead to dramatic changes in school texts and control of the radio and television. Despite the agreement, a morning meeting ended with heated exchanges on the crucial issue of the May 17 vote. The Lebanese government and Israel Jumblait said he stormed out of the talks because he had been prevented from raising the withdrawal accord for discussion by Gemayel and his father. PRO-SYRIAN groups, saying that the accord amounts to a peace treaty with the Jewish state, have demanded that Israel should have if he wants to bring peace to Lebanon. Israel has threatened that its 30,000 troops in southern Lebanon would seal off the area — partition it from the rest of Lebanon, if the accord is abrogated. The accord provided for a simultaneous withdrawal of Israeli and Syrian troops in Lebanon and provided the United Nations with political and trade relations in the future. Syria, however, has demanded that Israel withdraw unilaterally. HOLIDAY PREMIERE SALE Lights..Camera..Action! It's the premiere showing of our exciting new Holiday Fashions! Great values to keep you in fashion...or for gift giving. We've even brought our 1/2 Price Sweater Sale back! 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MAURICES Where Fashion Doesn't Cost A Fortune 706 Massachusetts Street DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE•METCALF SOUTH•OAK PARK MALL 706 Massachusetts Street, DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE·METCALF SOUTH·OAK PARK MALL 1 University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1983 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Fourhorn's attorney seeks drop of murder conviction The attorney for James Chadwick Fourhorn filed a motion in Douglas County District Court Tuesday to have Fourhorn's murder conviction dropped. Stanton Hazlett, the attorney, filed the motion, which stated that evidence presented during Fourhorn's six-day trial was insufficient to sustain a conviction. Fourthborn was convicted Oct. 25 of the first-degree murder of Harry Puckett and of aggravated burglary in connection with the June break-in of Puckett's residence. 1109 Delaware St. During the trial, testimony revealed that none of the tests conducted on the physical evidence directly linked Fourhour to the murder scene. A hearing on the motion has been scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Nov. 29. Student reports attack on stairway A KU student was assaulted on a stairway in Jayhawker Towers A about 1:20 a.m. yesterday, KU police said. The student told police that the suspect grabbed her while she was on a stairway in the building. Both lost their balance and fell on the stairs, but no one was hurt. The woman told police that the suspect never said anything to her. Police said they have a KU student as a suspect, but no arrest has been made. Philosophy prof to speak on ethics John Ladd, professor of philosophy at Brown University, will give a lecture titled "Computers, Business Ethics and Ethical Theory" at 8 tonight in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Ladd, who is chairman of the American Philosophy Association Committee on philosophy, has done pioneering work in the field of philosophy in the workplace of medicine, business, and government. Ladd also is the past president of the American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy. His lecture will be the first of four such talks about economic justice and free enterprise, sponsored by the School of Business and the department of philosophy. Kansan applications are available Applications for University Daily Kansan editor and business manager for spring 1984 now are available at 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall; the Kansan Business Office, 119 StauFFER-Flint Hall; the Student Senate Office, 105B Kansas Union; and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union. Applications should be completed and brought to 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Nov. 16. Parking to be limited for ceremony Parking Services tomorrow will restrict some parking on campus to provide space for guests who will be attending the dedication ceremony for the new addition to Summerfield Hall. Lt. E.W. Fenstemaker said that parking would be restricted to invited guests from 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in lot 17 behind Summerfield Hall and along the sidewalk west of Robinson Center. Gov. John Carlin is among the invited guests expected to attend the dedication ceremony, which is scheduled to begin at 3:30 p.m. Contest to pick Miss Lawrence set Fourteen KU students will compete for the Miss Lawrence title at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the auditorium of Central Junior High School, 1400 Massachusetts St. Admission will be $4 at the door. More than $2,500 in scholarships will be awarded during the ceremony Saturday, said Chris Miller, coordinator of the competition for Delaware (JKirksey). Janice Tenant, Stafford senior, was named Miss Lawrence last year and went on to compete in the state competition. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 864-4810. The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. SUPER SALE SPECIAL 59. 95 Reg. $65-$130 Complete Pair of Lenses & Frames Save up to 53% when you purchase a complete pair of single-vision lenses, any frame (excluding boutique frames), any prescription, glass or plastic, for $59.95. Multifocal, photocromatics, tints, and oversize additional. - Zsa Zsa Gabor - Arnold Palmer - Mary McFadden - Jordache Please no special order frames Offer good through Nov.5 - Oleg Cassini and more Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 HUTTON OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Museum head aims to enhance art collections By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter Jay Gates, the new director of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art, said yesterday that he was looking forward to working in a small museum where he could work closely with his staff. "I think there is a special kind of pleasure in working with a small group." Gates said in a telephone interview from New York. Gates, 37, is now assistant director of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. He will begin work as director of the Spencer Museum in January. BUT SUCH plans have to be coordinated with the Kansas University Endowment Association, he said. Gates said an important role of a museum should be to organize special exhibitions but that role was sometimes overused. The detriment of permanent collections ALEXANDER J. HARDY He said that he had not yet made specific plans for the museum, but that he hoped to hire more curators as soon as possible. "I am personally of the opinion that museums spend too much of their resources on special exhibitions," he said. Spencer should try to bring three exhibits a year to the KU campus. "The business of art museums is to collect exhibits," Gates said. Jay Gates And because of this, Gates said he would like to focus his energy on acquiring works of art to strengthen collec- tions that are already in good shape, he said. Spencer Museum has good collections of European painting and sculpture and of art from the Middle Ages. HE SAID THAT, without neglecting other areas of the museum, he would like to strengthen the 18th century European art and sculpture collection. The market in ancient art is such that it is often a futile and expensive effort to try to make new acquisitions of that kind, he said. Chancellor Gene A. Budig said Tuesday that Gates "is one of the most promising young professionals in art museum administration today." "We are delighted to have him at the University of Kansas," Budig said. He is nationally known and his appointment is one of the high standing of Spencer Museum." Gates, who taught at the College of Wooster in Ohio 10 years ago, said that he was looking forward to teaching again but that he wanted to get settled into his new job before taking on academic duties. "I DIDN'T see a return to academics in the cards," he said. "The academic environment is a very attractive part of a job and I look forward to it." "Once I get the reigns of the museum comfortably in hand, then I will want to stare at them, probably would concentrate my attention in areas of American painting." Gates is a 1968 graduate of the College of Wooster in Ohio and completed his master's degree in 1970 at the University of Rochester. He has completed doctoral work at the University of Pittsburgh. A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 GET INTO A UNION! Slip into winter with a classic union suit! This smart button-front style is known for its warmth, durability, and flair. It's a solid foundation for everyman's wardrobe with a seamless collar and ribbed cuffs. 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Sun. 2:15 R CINEMA 2 3157 AND IOWA TELEPHONE 862.6400 STREET 2 91470 NW 34TH ST 8400 W 110TH ST Eve. 7:48-9:35 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2-15 RICHARD Here and now R CINEMA 1 3137 AND 1094 TELEPHONE 812-5450 The Wicked Lady Eve, 7:40-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00 THE eight star action detect one you hurt and funny and俊雅 smart movie BIG CHILL BIG CHILL 10:30 a.m. Tue 9 Feb 2016 8:00 p.m. SUA FILMS MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON BENJAMIN MCCALLS stirring and inspiring testimony to liberty and reason, to be a great source of inspiration for the people. It is the job for the payoff in all our lives. —New York Times [VIRGINIA] TAYLOR CAPA [EST] JESSIE SEAWARD, JAN ANTHUR, CLAUDIE RAINS, EDWARD ARNOLD, T (ONIGHT) 7:30 p.m. $1.50 Woodruff Aud. ALSO, THIS WEEKEND AT SUA: FRI., SAT., NOV. 4th & 5th 48 HRS Professional Guitarist Mick Noble, Eddie Murphy Awards Recognized Annual Music Educator $1.50 3:30 p.m., 7:00 p.m., 9:30 p.m. SUN, NOV. 6th: AGUIRRE: THE WRATH OF GOD Werner Herzog's surrealistic view of a group of Spanish conquests battle with the Brazilian jungle $1.50 2:00 p THE RULING CLASS has been cancelled No midnight show this weekend— (November 4th & 5th) All shows in Woodruff Aud. OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 2.1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kansan (USPS 60-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 60043; the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer sessions, Sunday, Sunday holidays, and second class periods. Second class periods are $15 each. Subscriptions by students are $15 each and $18 for six months or $4 for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 semester paid through the student account (POSTMASTER). Send materials to USPS, PO Box 96287, Kansas City, KS 66106. MARK ZIEMAN Editor Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Editor DON KNON Campus Editor PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager DAVE WANMAKER Retail Sales Manager MARK MEARS National Sales LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser A historic talk Through a satellite link-up, U.S. and Soviet scientists held an historic phone conversation about the dangers of the world's growing nuclear arms stockpile. The discussion took place in a teleconference that was described as the first such meeting between scientists from the two superpowers. Not surprisingly, the two sets of scientists agreed that nuclear weapons are a menace to the world as we know it today. Calling the weapons "cancerous growths," scientists from both sides of the ocean agreed with Soviet scientist Yuri Izrael's statement that "in a nuclear war, there can be no victor and no vanquished." The U.S. scientists who discussed the arms race and nuclear war with their Soviet colleagues were attending a conference on what the world would be like after a nuclear war. Carl Sagan, the planetary sciences specialist from Cornell University, and Paul Erlich, a biologist from Stanford University, said that expected damage from the aftermath of even a limited nuclear war was underestimated. In their report of the post-nuclear war world, Sagan and Erlichesti- mated that the world's agricultural output would be drastically affected by nuclear explosions that would send clouds and dust into the atmosphere. Mass starvation would be certain. Soviet scientists added that if anyone managed to survive the aftermath, they would be genetically and behaviorally unsuited to living in the new environment. Reproduction would be questionable under such living conditions. Both sets of scientists agreed that nuclear weapons should not be a tool of politicians — in either country. The conference is heartening, especially as the December deployment date for the Pershing 2s in Europe draws closer. The Soviets have already said that with the additional U.S. missiles in Europe, they will switch their missiles to a split-second computer system that leaves little or no time for double-checking for false alarms. Scientists in the United States have rallied against the arms race for some time now. That may be the case in the Soviet Union as well. For the health of the world, the superpower's political and military leaders be in such easy agreement about the arms race. Federal labor proposal More than 100 congressmen are sponsoring a bill that would restrict the federal government from doing business with companies or labor unions that have repeatedly violated federal law laws. The bill was approved by the House Education and Labor Management Relations subcommittee Tuesday and a companion bill has been introduced in the Senate by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. Litton, which has $1.5 billion in government contracts mostly from the Defense Department, has been charged over the past 20 years with nearly 50 violations of the National The chief sponsor of the House bill, Rep. Paul Simon, D-Ill., and subcommittee chairman, Rep. William Clay, D-Mo., cited Litton Industries as a prime example of the kind of labor law violator the bill would bar from federal contracts. Labor Relations Act. The company has been declared guilty of at least 24 of those violations by the NLRB or federal appeals courts. Another company that could lose lucrative federal contracts if Simon's bill gets through Congress is the J.P. Stevens company. A textile company, it has been awarded over $100 million in contracts from the federal government despite a long history of labor violations and union busting efforts. Although this bill covers labor unions as well, the subcommittee seemed more intent on curbing the labor violations of big businesses. And in a time in which unions are being besieged by layoffs, plant closings and union busting tactics, Congress has extended a lifeline to them that may not solve their problems, but will certainly make their dealings with violator companies more equitable. A Chicago patriarch What do football greats Red Grange, Gale Sayers, Dick Butkus and Walter Payton have in common? They all played for the Chicago Bears under longtime owner George Halas, who died Monday at age 88. Unlike today's brand of millionaires who own professional sports teams but have careers in other fields, Halas founded his football team in 1920 and was both a player and a coach on the professional level. Indeed, Halas was head coach of the Bears when the team won its most recent championship, 20 years ago. Moreover, he was one of the prime shapers of professional football, which has become an important force in the nation's economy and leisure time. Halas's interests, however, were not restricted to football; he played for the New York Yankees and came to be recognized as a civic leader in Chicago. Yet his chief contributions were made in pro football. According to family and friends, Halas lived for his team; in the midst of the Bears' losing seasons of recent years, he awaited a return to the team's past excellence. The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan also invites individ-ual groups to submit guest columns. Columns and articles are brought to the Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. LETTERS POLICY Intervention necessary The shock has worn off. Much of the emotion has subsided, and I can say from what we know so far that President Reagan did the right thing in ordering the Grenada invasion. Yet the move into Grenada from what information we have available seems to be justified. In fact, there was little choice but to take a work, affirmative action, if we were to take any action at all. No, I can't not a war monger. Nor can I give my endorsement to any future invasions without first looking at motives and outcomes. The invasion was illegal from the standpoint of the Organization of American States charter. Under that charter the United States could have invaded only if it had approval from OAS members. But the Reagan administration had a decision to make, either to let Grenada alone and abide by the charter, which could have had some extremely damaging consequences, or to move and risk national and international condemnation. To get OAS approval, the United States would have had to prove that an invasion was justified by a threat to its territory — something some experts suggest could not have been possible. Reagan needed to balance the effects of action and inaction. And since he saw a threat to American interests, the only alternative was to respond. I must believe in the administration's motives because there is more proof in favor than to the contrary. I should decide based solely on emotion. The effects of turning away from Grenada and letting the Austin dictatorship take its course are now moot. Liberals say there was no present danger; conservatives say that a direct threat to the United States was imminent. Neither side has won the argument. An arsenal was found, but the use of the weapons and ammunition could have been avoided. We will probably never know how the arsenal was to be used. Liberals argue about a new "Reagan Doctrine" much like the one Brezhnev used to invade Ukraine. The same parallel cannot be drawn, because NOTE: COFFEE MONO ©2015 THE THOMAS COMPANY Staff Columnist the U.S. troops are leaving, though not as soon as expected, and a democracy will be instituted. MICHAEL BECK In Czechoslovakia, the Soviets invaded at the request of other Soviet Bloc states only to restore the old regime. In Grenada, the Organization of East Caribbean States asked the United States to restore order and establish elections The Grenada invasion also cannot be compared properly to Afghanistan because Soviet troops have taken control, obviously unimpressing the country. The Grenadans applauded U.S. troops. And although the chaos before the invasion may not have been as extreme as U.S. officials claimed, the support from Grenada reflects that they wanted no part of the Austin regime. The long term effects of the invasion, as with the effects had the United States stayed out, are also speculative. Great Britain, France and West Germany objected to the invasion, yet with most things, people soon forget and other issues take precedence. On the other hand, the Cubans may reinhalt their support of rebels in El Salvador, and the Soviet Union is also likely to act when we deem it necessary. I reject notions that the United States was simply showing its strength to other nations; rather I was in part showing that I was in part showing what it will to act. If the action was to show our military might, we didn't do a good job. We shot our own men, didn't know the terrain and our knowledge of Cuban strongholds wasn't correct. The Grenada affair will help Reagan politically. Few will argue that it won't. Yet with the public support and condemnation, we must weigh what information we have available. Americans were in Grenada during a dangerous period, the Soviets and Cubans had extensive influence and the government lacked popular support. Given the circumstances and the Reagan ideology, the United States had no choice but to intervene. And as I want to avoid another Iranian crisis, don't like the Soviet Union. Don't be fooled by the people should have a choice about their government. I agree with the invasion of Grenada. ...INTRODUCING NEW GRENADA. FOR THOSE OF YOU WHO DISLIKE MY OTHER FINE PRODUCT... GRENADA IT'S EXPOSIVE OLD LEBANO STAYING POWER Invasion can't be justified WASHINGTON — The cynical justification offered by President Reagan for the invasion of Grenada by United States forces and, the Pentagon says, military units from seven Caribbean nations, risks ushering in a dangerous situation elsewhere. Especially troubling is Reagan's claim that this act of war was designed "to help in the restoration of democratic institutions" on the island. It is his portrayal of his actions as the United States' defense of democracy in a foreign country that is by far the most disturbing element. In effect, he has proclaimed an entirely new United States doctrine in foreign affairs — he says it must serve a sanity American military action elsewhere in the world when he deems that democratic institutions — as he defines them — again must be saved. It is plausible that the new airport built in Grenada with Cuban (and Western European) aid could be used by the Russians against us in case of war. It is even understandable that Reagan and Caribbean leaders had become concerned over possible new revolutionary trends in the region for decades. The Boehner-Bishop three Cabinet ministers and others were slain by Grenadian army extremists. None of this, however, justifies an invasion in the name of democracy, especially when a double standard — hypocrisy, to call it by its right name — is applied. Though the administration argues that it launched the invasion at the request of the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States, its assertion that the non-intervention clauses of the United Nations and Organization of American States' charters are not violated is spurious. TAD SZULC Author apparently accepted the view of Dominica's Prime Minister, Eugenia Charles, who stood next to Reagan when he announced the invasion. She said that Bishop "was on the way to having elections. That is a real vindication of a Marxist revolutionary who all along had been accused of refusing the democratic process. The Reagan formulation has placed America in the immoral position of taking it upon itself to define democracy abroad — and to act on it if we wish. This is uncomfortably reminiscent of the Brezhnev Doctrine in Czechoslovakia, where the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact forces struck to impose "internal order," as it is of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the crackdown in Poland. Our nation should instantly prosecibe the new "Reagan Doctrine." Suddenly, the administration, which had virtually shunned Bishop for three years, now Copyright 1983 the New York Times. Tod Szulc writes on foreign affairs. Poverty myths ALBANY — Not much is ever said about the poor that is accurate or clear. The Reagan administration does not say much about the poor at all. So when it provides useful statistics, they ought to be examined. In August, a federal census report contained data that amounted to this. One American had fallen below one special poverty line every 12 seconds. Far from being a huge, burdensome program, welfare is dwarfed by other federal government activities. It looms far larger in controversy and myth than in reality, and no program — no group of people — is so badly understood as welfare and those who receive it. But the poverty report did not point out that in the same 12 seconds, the government spent $72,000 more on defense programs than on Aid to Families with Children. Supplemental Security Income stamps, the work incentives program and the Job Corps combined. The Reagan administration, with its talk about the "needy" and "the safety net," has not contributed to an understanding of the problem. CESAR A. PERALES Commissioner Thus, the myths persist, programs are cut or crippled, the number of poor people grows, and very few police officers are safe; the safety net is suddenly so full. Here are some of the myths. People get on welfare and never get off. The most persistent fallacy is that there are two classes of poor people the "working poor" and the "welfare poor". Actually the so-called welfare poor are simply the working poor who have fallen on hard times. Several studies show that most A.F.D.C. cases are open for just two years, or less. These usually come about because of some major interruption of income; illness of the wage-earner; exhaustion of employment benefits, desertion by a high-risk job; and A.F.D.C. families, the adults move between low-wage seasonal labor and the welfare rolls. Welfare destroys the incentive to work. Statistics show that this isn't so. The number of New York state residents living below the poverty line increased by an estimated 22 percent between 1959 and 1982, but dropped in roseidous load rose by less than 1 percent. This means that in most instances, families held on to low wage jobs or borrowed from friends and family, turning to public assistance only as a last resort. This is confirmed by a department of Social Services study involving 3,507 extremely low wage families that had been receiving public assistance along with Medicaid and food stamps. They were denied benefits as a result of federal cutbacks beginning in January 1982, and it was widely forecast that a significant majority would abandon work and return to the welfare rolls. As of last March, 77 percent had never returned to public assistance, despite a deep recession and high unemployment; of the remaining 23 percent, about half returned briefly, then left the welfare rolls. Under the Reagan administration, many people have learned simply to expect this. And in 12 seconds, the problem will get worse. What is decidedly not mythical is that these myths tend to guide national policy in conservative times. Moreover, a growing body of evidence points to the appearance of a small but permanent cast at the center of the economic ladder for whom there is no opportunity and no hope. Copyright 1983 the New York Times. Cesar A. Penales in Commissioner of the New York State Department of Social Services. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Shut-off policy won't solve problem To the Editor: There are some grave misstatements in the Kansan editorial of Oct. 19 regarding the Kansas Corporation Commission's cold weather rule. It was stated that utilities cannot shut off service on delinquent customers from Nov. 15 to March 30. This is not true. Customers behind on their bills can be affected, as as the temperature is not predicted in fall below 32 degrees for the next 24-hour period. Also, it was stated that customers can be reconnected if they make a "good faith" effort to pay. The correct figures for that good faith effort are 25 percent or $4, whichever is greater, of the past month's bill, plus one-twelfth of the total back bill. Also, the customer must enter a level payment plan, paying the of expected bil for the year. The program the Kansas editorial says will insure heat to low-income Kansans does no such thing. The size of the monthly payments normally is much larger than a low-income family can afford. In it is figured that the average annual twelfth of the expected bill for the next year, plus the initial 25 percent or $4 to get on the plan. Outstanding balances for many families are $600 to $700, and the payment plan can call for as much as $100 to $200 a month. Families on fixed or low incomes are finding it difficult, if not impossible, to meet the huge monthly payments demanded. For families on various low-income assistance programs this can easily lead to them losing half their income, in some cases exceeding their monthly income. Although I think it is good that the Kansan devoted an editorial to this important, life-threatening issue, it would seem just as important to look beyond the initial "oh good, the KCC has a plan" to the real ramifications and questionable effectiveness of it. amplequest. My feeling is that a decision must be made whether heat is a luxury or a necessity. And if it is a necessity, then the availability of the product cannot be dependent on income. It is true that utilities are businesses, but they are carrying a product that is necessary for many to be able to live in cold weather. They should be regulated carefully to make sure their profit-motive does not exceed their concern with maintaining utility service to residential households. Patti Hackney Lawrence law student University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1983 Page 5 continued from p. 1 Grenada were Army Rangers, who were part of the initial invasion force. At the United Nations, the General Assembly approved a resolution deploring the invasion and occupation for the immediate withdrawal of foreign troops in Iraq and Somalia island. The vote was 108-9 with 27 abstentions. It called for "an immediate cessation of the armed intervention and the immediate withdrawal of the foreign troops from Grenada." A BELGIAN amendment that sought "free elections as soon as possible so the Grenadian people can democratically elect their own government, also was approved as was a report by U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar to assess institution and report to the assembly in 72 hours. At the same time, a nine-ship battle group headed by the aircraft carrier America departed Norfolk, Va., for a "surprise" exercise in the Caribbean that Pentagon officials said is separate from U.S. operations in Grenada and Central America. Cuban Foreign Minister Isidoro Malmiera sent a letter asking the U.N. chief to intervene on behalf of four Cuban diplomats detained Monday in Grenada and in Granada was surrounded by U.S. soldiers. "We are asking for your intervention as Secretary-General to prevent the U.S. government from committing a new massacre against persons protected by diplomatic immunity given them by international law, which is the case of the Cuban embassy in Grenada," the letter said. LAST WEEK, the United States vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution on the fighting. Assembly resolutions are not binding on states as are those passed by the Council. Grenadian Governor General Sir Paul Scoon, the island's interim leader, ordered the Cuban diplomats to leave by late yesterday. He also ordered the U.S. to withdraw from the Soviet Union and Libya leave the country. "That order can only be executed by force and by means of troops of the United States," said a statement passed by Cuban diplomats to reporters through the fence around the embassy. The deadline passed with no immediate reaction from the company, who scheduled a news release for today. "Our problem is leaving our dead and wounded," said Gail Reed, a member of the Cuban diplomatic staff guarded by U.S. troops in the embassy on a hill overlooking the Grenadian capital of St. George's. Similar guards were posted at the Soviet and Libyan Embassies. AMONG DOCUMENTS given to reporters at the Cuban embassy was a statement saying Col. Pedro Tortolo, Cuban commander on Grenada, was safe in the embassy of a 'friendly country' Reed said 37 Cubans and two Grenadians were inside the Cuban Embassy. The prisoners have been moved to a new "tent city" with better conditions including permanent showers and toilets, U.S. Army Maj. Allen Grammer said. There was no word on arrangements for the transfer of the bodies of about 69 Cubans killed in Ten Cuban medical personnel who were on Grenada at the time of the invasion and about six Red Cross officials accompanied the 57 wounded from Grenada to Barbados C-130 on a flight from Grenada to Barbados. "SOME OF THEM need surgery urgently," said Catherine Peduzzi, spokeswoman for the International Red Cross, who said the prison compound where the prisoners were kept "was not in the best condition." "It is very hot and they don't have proper housing," she said, adding that "if we keep the wounded more time it could be dangerous." Reporters had seen prisoners in tents with wounded kept in barracks without air conditioning. At Barbados' Grantley Adams airport, the wounded Cuban Masquerade preserver a charm that is a sight to have in Hawaii and the four-hour tour to Havana. Ten of the wounded were on stretcherers, and the rest were able to walk, many of them hobbling. Many had no shirts and carried their few possessions in plastic bags. disapprove of "the hurried manner" in which the Elections Committee made its decisions, it also voted to uphold the decisions because it said the committee did not violate any Senate rules. Resign continued from p. 1 "It's not a question of breaking rules." Robert Walker said, "It's a question of ethics." But several people who Walker said attended the meeting at the Sigma Nu house said that they had done nothing to influence the Elections Committee's decision to reverse its ruling. Swenson said, "I called Lisa and we talked a little bit about it on the phone, and I did ask her to stop by, but I never lobbied the Elections Committee." WENSON SAID that he had arranged a meeting Oct. 24 and had asked Ashner and members of the Priority campaign to talk about his appeal of the election committee's decision. Ashner and Cramer said that no official meeting took place, and that their gathering at the Sigma Nu house was unplanned. They said that some people at the gathering had talked about how to get the committee's decision reversed, but that the talk was in jest. Presidential candidate Kevin Walker said last night that the meeting at the Sigma Nu house and the second decision by the Elections Committee was "conspiracy with a capital C." He said he had sought legal advice about the meeting from a local attorney. Robert Walker said that Swenson called the meeting on Wednesday, the opposition had beaten the ballot and been elected on the ballot. HE SAID that the people at the meeting had asked Ashner to talk to some members of her sorority who also were on the Elections Committee. Ashner, a member of Alpha Phi would ask to ask them to make a motion to rescind the vote at an Oct. 26 meeting of the Elections Committee. of the election committee were not going favorably as far as they were concerned." Eight of the 30 members of the committee are members of Alpha Phi. Ashner denied yesterday that she told the members of her sorority how to vote. Cythia Wilkinson, Overland Park sophomore and a committee member, made the motion to reverse the Oct. 24 ruling. She is an Alpha Phi member. Wilkinson said she made the motion because she thought the committee, including herself, had acted hastily in granting Momentum's request to that Ashner had asked her to make the motion. ROBERT WALKER also said that the people at the meeting at the Sigma Nu house debated whether to ask members of the Freedom Coalition to appeal the Oct. 24 decision so that priority would appear to be unconcerned about Momentum candidates being placed on the ballot. At one point the group had discussed calling members of the Costume Party and Freedom coalitions about joining a possible appeal, but Swenson said that no calls were made. Staff reporter Gina K. Thornburg also supplied information for this story. Checks continued from p. 1 The remaining 15 state agencies, including the rest of the Board of Regents schools, are expected to join KIPPS by February 1984, he said. UNIVERSITY comptroller John Patterson yesterday declined to comment on the paycheck problems. agencies, including KU and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina, have joined KIPPS. The statewide, computerized system, called KIPPS, Kansas Integrated Personnel-Payroll system, began operating in June. Inquest Harold Gibbon, state assistant director of accounts and reports, said that almost 100 state continued from p.1 Watson testified that Schall was he going to kill him and Haissin, and burn down her house. Wayne Othick, a police officer who responded to all three of the calls, said that after Schall visited the house for the third time, Haislip was "extremely frightened." residence at 4:02 a.m., at 4:38 a.m. and at 6:02 a.m. on Oct. 26 and had threatened Sheril Haislip, who lives at the house, and Watson, who was visiting her. Schall was released from Douglas County Jail about 10:45 a.m. SCHALL WAS arrested after he went to the house for the third time and was booked into Douglas County Jail about 6:30 a.m. on charges of criminal trespassing and criminal damage to property. HE SAIED that Watson had brought a rifle into the house to defend himself but had emitted it of his own. Haisip testified that about 2 p.m. she received a call from Schall who said that he was coming to her house again. "I took the 30, 30 and sat down on a rocking Watson said. "I thought he was going to kill us." Haislip then called the police. A tape recording of that call indicated that she had told the dispatcher that Schall was coming to the house and had responded the police to "give someone over here fast." "HE'S GOING to kill me, that's what he's going to do," Haislip screamed. She then hung up the phone. "What's he doing?" asked the dispatcher. Ron Beauchamp, 1343 Maple Lane, testified that at about 2 p.m., he and Schall went driving in Schall's van and that eventually Schall drove the van to 801 Locust St. "He didn't tell me who lived there," Beauchamp said. "He told me to take the van and come back in about 10 minutes." What's Going on THURSDAY at THE SANCTUARY? 16 0z. PRIME RIB—$6.95 au jus, baked potato, steak fries, salad DON'T FORGET YOUR QUARTERS! Quarter Draws From 9-12 p.m. 1401 W. 7th (Bet. Michigan & Florida) 843-9703 Reciprocal With Over 180 Clubs 9 6 PUPPETS? "I never knew George was sick." How *awful*—she was only 20. How often have we said these things? Or heard of them? We feel like asking: Where is God? Why doesn't He step in? How can he Let this happen? Unfortunately, if God did this, we'd be puppets, with no will or freedom of choice. God gave us a free will and choice at creation. And with that we can go to Him for strength and comfort. After all, His Son died at 33. University Lutheran 15th & Iowa-843-6662 Sunday Worship 10:30 am catch us JLC by J.W.L. We have expanded our facilities, our staff and our hours to better serve you Now open Mon.-Fri. 8-6 P Sat. 8-5 SHAMPOO, CUT $10 & BLOWDRY... CUT, PERM $40 & STYLE... Coupon Expires 11/19/83 Coupon Expires 11/19/83 for men Gentleman's Quarters 811 w.94 843-2138 Student Loans at The First are worth writing home about. The Man and Dad Dear Mom and Dad, surprise! This is not a letter asking for more money. I just applied for a guaranteed student loan at The First Tution and expenses are Covered for next semester. And don't begin payments until after graduation Thanks for everything. PS Sand Food 11 Stop writing home for money. Come to The First instead. Terry Boyer, our student loan manager, can help you get a guaranteed student loan to cover your tuition and expenses at any approved college or university. The application form is uncomplicated, the interest rate is low,and your loan is processed quickly. TheFirst We want to help. The First National Bank of Lawrence Ninth & Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913)843-0152 Member F.D.I.C. Equal Opportunity Lender Employer Stop by the 4th Floor Student Loan Office to see Terry. Then send the above note to your folks. NEW PERSONAL PAN PIZZA SUPREME Pizza Just For One-Just For Lunch Ready in just 5 minutes-or your next one's free. Guaranteed:11:30 AM-1:30 PM.Personal Pan Pizza available'til 4 PM. Get 2 Personal Pan Pizzas with a Single Topping for Only $2.29 Regularly $2.98 Regularly $2.98 Regularly $2.98 Pan Pizza Supreme for only $2.99 Regularly $3.98 Lawrence—1606 W. 23rd St Lawrence—1606 W. 23rd St. 804 Iowa 932 Massachusetts St. Present coupon when ordering. **Coupons** valid between 1 a.m. and 8 p.m. NOT valid in combination with any other offer. Valid from 1 a.m. to 5 p.m. for one two selections on orders or up to three free meals per customer. Offer expires November 25, 2013. Cash rewardism is 1/8% **Discounts** vary by carrier. Pizza Hut. $2/$1 Off Get $2.00 off any large pizza, or $1.00 off any medium. Lawrence—1606 W. 23rd St. 804 Iowa 932 Massachusetts St. Present coupon when ordering. Offer limited to one coupon per person via mail (Must NOT be issued in combination with any other Pizza Hut offer). Valid on November 29, 2013. Cash redemption value November 29, 2013. Pizza Hut. 1 CAMPUS AND AREA Page 6 10 10 70 90 90 Firefighters train to clean up after hazardous-waste spills November 3, 1983 By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter The gas masks indicated that something was wrong. But Lawrence firefighters wore them Tuesday morning not to guard against noxious fumes but to prepare for the future. The Lawrence Fire Department conducted a training exercise Tuesday to teach firefighters how to clean up after a hazardous-waste spill. The training, which is part of Douglas County's Emergency Preparedness Program, occurred north of the city in Clinton Parkway and Drag Strait Road. Firefighters from Fire Station Number One and Number Four participated in the morning exercise. All Lawrence residents are encouraged to classes today and three days next week. During part of the exercise Tuesday, firefighters were told that a truck carrying a flammable corrosive liquid entered through a drainage pipe into a creek. During the exercises, the firefighters were told to determine what the liquid was and then stop it from flowing into the creek TO STOP the flow of the chemical and to prevent it from spreading, the firefighters did three things: First they built what they called a dam downstream from where the lake is. After determining that the liquid was lighter than water, firefighters built a dam in the creek by using rocks, mud and muck. Since the contaminated liquid was lighter than water and would float, the firefighters threw the water into the dam, thus allowing only the water to pass through. They then plugged the drainage pipe from which the liquid was flowing with a "Vetter plug." A Vetter plug is a tube that can be inserted into a pipe. The tube is then filled with air to block the pipe and prevent water from flowing through it. THE FIREFIGHTERS built a dam of straw downstream from where they had built the reverse siphon dam. The purpose of the dam was to collect oils or other substances that might be flowing downstream . Fire Chief Jim McSwain said that in an actual emergency, all firefighters would be called to the scene and that crews would be rotated every 15 or 20 minutes to prevent fatigue from occurring. Stokes Rugby School Firefighters drain toxic chemicals during a training exercise. Stephen Proposal for night shuttle-bus on campus tabled for this year By DONNA WOODS Staff Reporter A proposal to restrict nighttime campus parking and offer shuttle-bus service from peripheral parking lots to campus will not be acted upon this year, the chairman of a Traffic and Parking Board subcommittee said yesterday. "I sort of anticipated that it would not go through this year," Getter said. "You really can't talk about implementing something for the next fiscal year that's not ready to go at this point." Getter said that he had expected some negative reaction to the proposal and that the committee now had a plan for the kind of information they needed Russell Getter, chairman of the board's subcommittee on rules, said that time constraints and potential problems with the proposed shuttle-bus service prompted the subcommittee to table the proposal for this year. The tabled proposal would have restricted nighttime parking to faculty with nighttime permits. One thousand students could be sold to students for $10 each on either a SENIORS Starting Nov. 7, Senior Yearbook Portraits will be taken again. Stop by 121 B Kansas Union or call 864-3728 Make your appointment TODAY! nineteen hundred eighty-four JAYHAWKER WHAT ARE "FUNFLOWERS"? They're flowers just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to arrange and enjoy. Put a little frame in your life. Pick up a branch of "FUNFLOWERS" today or any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 Specially priced! SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" 749-2912 749-2912 12 "ROSES DAY TODAY." Yes, we up to our delighted loyals in lovely robes. And that means good news for YOU—or that special person you love—to wear a dozen. Dozen. Carry'em away at a very special price. $1600 per lovely dozen 品 Special only for "Roses Day" SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center 749-2912 NAUTILUS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL HOLIDAY INTRODUCTORY MEMBERSHIP OFFER TO DISCOVER THE "ALVAMARA DIFFERENCE." Located above Alvamar Racquet & Swim Club - SCIENTIFICALLY DESIGNED MACHINE FOR TONING ABDOMINAL MUSCLES * EFFECTIVE, SAFE, INTERESTING WORKOUTS CALL FOR YOUR COMPILIENTARY WORKOUT! Phone 842-7766 4120 Clinton Parkway "OUR NEW NAUTILUS ABDOMINAL MACHINE HAS ARRIVED!" FEATURING: ALVAMAR FITNESS CENTER FEATURING: GET PHOTO SHARP ON YOUR CAMERA MAKE YOUR NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION FOR PERSONAL FITNESS EARLY PRE-HOLIDAY CONDITIONING MEMBERSHIP PRE SKI SEASON MEMBERSHIP - GET IN SHAPE FOR THE SLOPES - SPECIALLY DESIGNED PROGRAM FOR THE SKIER * WORKOUTS INDIVIDUALLY MONITORED BY OUR PROFESSIONAL STAFF - WORKOUTS INDIVIDUALLY MONITORED BY OUR PROFESSIONAL STAFF DATES: NOV. 1, 1983 - DEC. 31, 1983 COST: $20.90 plus tax ❤️ - GET IN SHAPE FOR THE SCOPES • SPECIALY DESIGNED PROGRAM FOR THE SKIER SAUNA - SHOWERS - LOCKERS - AEROBICS - FREE NURSERY CARE Doreta's Decorative Arts 9th Anniversary Open House Free Demonstrations/Refreshments Holiday Gifts & Decorations Sun., Nov. 6 12:30-5:00 1006 N.H 2100 A W. 25th • Holiday Plaza • Lawrence, KS 66044 THOMAS COLEMAN MITSUBISHI TURNTABLE DP-12 Retail Value: $220.00 KIEF'S Price: $110.00 w/ cartridge KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE SHOP Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse Come On Down To Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse Smoked Buffalo Buffalo Wheels, Logs and Dinners New through Sunday 719 Mass. Go K.G.- Beat the Golden Buffaloes PEPSI first-come, first-served basis, or by class ranking. ELIGIBLE FACULTY would have been able to purchase blue zone parking permits allowing them to park on campus at night. For those unable to buy a permit, free nighttime parking would have been available in parking lots near Memorial and south of Robinson Center. Free shuttle-bus service to camps would have been provided from those lots. Getter said that students and faculty had complained that they did not want to pay for nighttime parking. Colleen Eck, All Scholarship Hall Council representative, said that the proposal would force students living in Watkins and Miller Scholarship Hills to walk through poorly lit areas because they would not be able to park in front of Fraser and Blake. The rules subcommittee is proposing other changes that should help alleviate the nighttime parking shortage on campus, Getter said. $2.00 off haircut all semester with ROID Silver Clipper Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m. Close 841-3268 OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRINDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 雪车 自行车 足球 跑步 山地马拉松 843-7398 3 fall / winter 83-84 Sweaters from around the world in cotton, cashmere, Shetland and more. Trouvers from khaki to moleskin and materials between Jackets, parkas, wires, windbreakers, anoraks, and rangeau in Goretex down, thinsulate, bunting, fleece and polypro, colors Sox and hats, gloves and mitts, shirts and long undies top numerous to list. Books, Boots and blankets, bicycles, optics and skis. A good store for the fall and winter seasons: A store very likely to please. Bicycle B ( ) A bicycle ” m SUNFLOWER THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA F I WANT YOU! TO TRY THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA FRENCH BREAD PIZZA NITE (Tues. & Thurs.) All You Can Eat-$2.95 2228 Iowa 842-0154 6 packs to go No Carry Out or Delivery on the Special Order please visit with this offer TEACHERS NEEDED IN FLORIDA Instructors needed to teach math, science, or engineering at the Navy's Nuclear Power School in Orlando, Florida. BENEFITS:up to $19,500 starting salary; over $33,000 in four years. Over $1,000 per month for selected students during Dr. and Sr. years. Full medical and dental coverage. 30 days' earned annual paid vacation. Opportunity for Navy-financed post-graduate education. Family benefits. QUALIFICATIONS: U.S. cit. aenges. 19-29. College graduates or seniors/juniors, BS-MS Technical majors only. Call Navy Officer Programs Toll free 1-800-821-5110. 1 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 3. 1983 Page 1 Running Brave continued from p. 1 Milts beat 37 of the world's top endurance racers, including the Australian favorite, Ron Williams, who in a desperate attempt to win, bumped milts out of his lane 400 yards from the finish line. Despite the bump, Mills won the 10,000 meter Olympic race, the first U.S. runner to do so. EASTON SAID that even before the film project was started in 1978, he and his wife, adamarie, had kept in close touch with the 442-foot tower which is an insurance executive in Sacramento, Calif. Easton was a technical consultant for "Running Brave," and he spent three weeks on location last year in Canada, where the movie was shot. His wife worked as a wardrobe adviser for the film. "Ada and I had a fantastic time," he said. "We've seen the finished movie several times now and feel satisfied that the film carried out the real story of a young, unknown man who was up against former Olympic champs in the 1964 Games, and wasn't even a possibility." Easton was KU's head track and field coach for 18 years until his retirement in 1965. He said that he got a kick out of Pat Hinkle's portrayal of him, the actor who was "a little plump compared to me." "HINGLE SHOWED Coach Easton was a very tough guy with certain principles," he said. "He does a good job, but he's a little more stern than I was." A year before production on the movie began, the movie's producer asked Easton to read through the script and make suggestions regarding its authenticity. Although the movie originally was supposed to be filmed in Lawrence, Easton said, it was shot in Canada because the money exchange rate there was much better than in the United States. The oil-wealthy Ermineskin Band of Cree Indians from Canada financed the $9 million project and saved about $1 million by producing the movie in Canada, he said. All of the KU scenes were filmed at the University of Edmonton, which has a campus similar to KU's, he said. Mills, whose father was a half-Oglaiah Sioux Indian, was born on the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. Both his father and his mother were Mills, the sons of Jake Mills and his 14 brothers and sisters orphaned. ALTHOUGH MILLS he always wanted to be a boxer, like his father, he decided against it because he was too small. He started running on the reservation simply because he enjoyed it. After he won the first race he entered at Haskell Institute, now Haskell Indian Junior College, Mills trained for four years under Haskell's coach, Tony Coffin. Easton inherited Mills after the runner received an athletic scholarship from KU. Mills remained under Easton's tutelage until he graduated in 1962 with a degree in physical education and decided to join the Marine Corps. "When I first coached Billy as a freshman he was quiet," Easton said. "He was out of his own Indian world and in the world of the white man for the first time." WHILE AT KU, Mills led the track team to NCAA National Outdoor Track and Field Championships in 1959 and 1960 and was the Big Eight cross-country champion in 1960 and Big Eight 2-mile indoor and outdoor champ in 1961. The team also won the real competitive potential until after he left KU. "Billy did well with us, but he was young and did not mature easily," he said. "His body just was." Mills suffered from a poor diet and allergies, problems that were undetected until he enlisted in the Army. Easton attributes Mills' post-college success to his improved diet and better medical care. During the two years he was stationed as a Marine lieutenant in California. Mills trained for AFTER EASTON attended the Olympic trials to watch Mills, he said he thought Mills "had come of age and had found himself." distance running in preparation for the Olympic trials in Los Angeles "He was farther along than I'd ever seen him. He was the qualified for the games, he was in the best position." Easton said that he did not see Mills again until the opening heat of the Tokyo Games, when his former protege set a new Olympic record by winning Clarek and Mohammad Gamudi of Tunisia. "I said as though I was in a traince until I felt the finish line tape snap across my chest," he said. At a small press briefing three weeks ago in Kansas City, Mo., Mills described how he felt in the race after pulling away from his two challengers coming off the curve. THE REALITY of that exhilarating moment hit Mills when he heard a Japanese official ask him above the roar of the crowd, "Who are you, who are you?" "That is so clear in my mind today," he said. Easton said, "No one knew anything about him. His name was never in print. The Russian press called him our 'secret weapon.' " Mills achieved fame overnight when he withstood the elbow-bump by Clarke and the lane-boxing in tactics of the other runners, who record smashing time of 28 minutes, 24.4 seconds. WINNING THE gold medal marked a pivotal point in his life, Mills said, not only as an athletic accomplishment but as a personal milestone as well. The dramatic finish is captured in the film with a series of slow-motion shots that show Benson throwing up his arms in triumph as the tape breaks across his chest. "For the first time in my life I could find out who I was and understand who I am as a human being." TOMMY FISHER Actor Robby Benson, former KU track star Billy Mills and Bill Easton, KU's head track and field coach from 1947 to 1965, talked about the film 'Running Brave' at a recent press briefing in Kansas City, Mo. The film traces Mills' life from a South Dakota reservation to his unexpected 1964 Olympic victory. The conflict between Easton's standard racing strategy of always staying in the lead and his desire to push from behind made Mills "get off confused" that he would often stop trying to win. Gerald Tuckwain, a former classmate of Mills' at Haskell and Haskell's present director of physical education, said that he understood Mills' problems adjusting to the white man's society from an Indian world, "although it was easier at Haskell than at KU." "You have all kinds of fears and insecurities you leave the rescue team," he said. "KU left the rescue team." MILLS SAID that the movie was an accurate representation of the discrimination he experienced while a student at KU. The authenticity is there," he said. "The film shows my confusion at being thrust into a new environment." But there was no confusion in his mind when he personally selected Benson to play the lead role. Not only was Mills aware of the striking physical resemblance between them, but he said he was also impressed by the 27-year-old actor's skill and his previous films and his penchant for athletics. "Robby is an incredibly talented actor and athlete," he said, "In fact, he beat me by two minutes recently in a 10K run." Join us at The Hawk when we "ROLL OUT THE BARREL" TONIGHT and EVERY THURSDAY Ke Guild Only Happen in THE HAWK K.O. Tradition Since 1920 The "BARREL" is a heavy-duty 32 oz. glass (as big as a schooner) featuring the infamous "Drooling Jayhawk". Buy yours for $2.75 full of beer. Refills are only $1.00! It Could Only Happen At THE HAWK Bring your "BARREL" to the Hawk every Thursday for $1.00 REFILLS! 1340 Ohio county Colorado Weekend starts at MISTER GUY Colorado Weekend starts at Mister Guy . . . for MEN and WOMEN . . . Hours: M-T-W F-Sat. 9:30-6:00 Thurs. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 1:5 (TGIF) Free Beer and Pop every Friday afternoon & all home football game days 920 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 842-2700 Let the sunshine in...AGAIN! HAIR Presented by The University of Kentucky Theatre and the School of Fine Arts. Book and Lyrics by Geremia Haug and James Rooke. Music by Gait Mac Demon November 3, 4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 1983 · 8:00 p.m. nightly · Crafton-Preyer Theatre / Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats reserved for reservations (919) 878-6344. Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fund. NOW OPEN E A M A Y NURSERY & GARDEN CENTER Open Sundays Brand New Earl May Nursery & Garden Center in Lawrence, Kansas Pet and Pet Supply HEADQUARTERS Offers Good thru Sunday, November 13 Hwy. 58 Downtown 31st 3200 Iowa St SALE On Larger Size Aquarium Set-ups Each set-up includes tank, stand, hook and fluorescent light and each set-up is offered at a special when bought as a package. 29-Gallon Set-up Regular $118.97 if purchased separately $79.99 30-Gallon Set-up Regular $139.99 if purchased separately $93.99 55-Gallon Set-up Regular $267.96 if purchased separately $184.99 20-Gallon (Tall) Set-up Regular $94.97 if purchased separately $63.99 27-Gallon (Hex.) Set-Up Regular $158.89 if purchased separately $99.99 Deluxe 10-Gallon AQUARIUM Set-up SPECIAL Includes Perfecto Woodtone Aquarium, 10 lbs. Estes Aquarium Gravel, Whisper, 200 Air Pump, Pen-Plax 10-gal* 'E' undergravel Filter, Tetra Aquarium, Tetra Staple Food, Tetra Aqua Safe and more . . . plus $5 of fish. ONLY $29 99 Tropical FISH Buy TRO at the price . second only 1C 1¢ SALE Tropical FISH Buy one TROPICAL FISH at the regular price ... get the second one for only 1¢ 1¢ SALE While Supply Lasts Limited Quantities EMARY E M A Y NURSERY & GARDEN CENTER 3200 Iowa MTW & Sat. 8:30-5:30 ThF 8:30-8:00 OPEN SUNDAY 11:00-5:00 VISA' Member Card 11 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1983 Page 8 Most aid goes to families and the handicapped Utility-bill assistance rarely given to students By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter As the weather turns colder, many Lawrence residents and KU students will find it increasingly difficult to pay their winter heating bills. Although Lawrence residents can apply for many types of financial assistance, such programs do not pay money to pay the students' utility bills. Kathy Valentine, program specialist in the Department of Social and Community Services, said that providing all students for utility bills was difficult. Most financial aid programs are set up to help families, individuals with dependent children or handicapped people, she said. But some financing for these programs is provided by the SHS department through its Low Income Energy Assistance Program. PEOPLE APPLYING for aid must meet three qualifications to obtain financing, she said. Applicants must have made payments on two of their last three utility bills. Although their bills do not have to be paid up to date, applicants must be making payments and must be responsible for their heating bill. The last criterion disqualifies most students, Valentine said. Many are not fully responsible for their bills because parents are still helping them pay. The amount of financing that people receive depends on what income level they live at. 'About one-half of the student body is receiving financial aid, but we can't help all of them.' —Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid live in and the size and type of house they own, she said. The SRS department spends most of its money on gas bills during the winter months, she said. More than 87 percent of them use natural gas to heat their homes. "SOME OF OUR money is given to Indian tribes for their own programs." Valentine said. "Last year two tribes that they got $50,000 for their program." If students do not qualify for aid under the LIEAP Program, some financial assistance is available through the University. William Shunk, a loan officer in the Endowment office, said, "If they can't get another type of loan, they can apply." Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said that students could be provided with short-term loans, but not full-time loans, a limited amount of money available. The Kansas University Endowment Association provides the short-term ler "About one-half of the student body is receiving financial aid but we can't handle that," she said. An undergraduate student can get $550 from the office and, if he obtains a co-signer, the office can loan him $1.100. he said. "THE MONEY IS supposed to be used for educational purposes, but if a student has a problem and needs money to continue his education, it is difficult to tell him no," he said. The Endowment Association sometimes considers heating bills on rent. "But the average student can't come in and request money to pay their heating bills," Shunk said. Fuel bill assistance is also available through city programs, but little of that is offered. Dave Murell, director of the University Housing Authority, said, "Unfortunately the system is pretty well overloaded — over-loaded is more accurate." Single students don't qualify unless they disabled, handicapped or elderly. WARM HEARTS, another organization that helped many Lawrence residents pay their bills last winter, may not exist this year, said Kansan Hep Jessie Branson. Dianne Warm of Warm Health funds drive last year. Financing may be a problem for the program, she said. TIRED? Of Crowded Or Inadequate Work out Facilities? CHECK US OUT C SEE US ABOUT GROUP RATES NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center 749-1501 The First Annual Crafts Bazaar A perfect opportunity to purchase Christmas gifts. S. U.A. Fine Arts Committee presents: November 29 & 30 Kansas Union Lobby Attention Campus Community: Attention Campus Community If you are interested in participating in the Bazaar pick up an application from the SUA Office. Deadline: Nov. 11,5 p.m. college of Liberal Arts & Sciences wants UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY All LA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Graduate Office 210-1 Strong Hall. Self-nominations are required. Filing deadline----4:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 11. William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Terr. With all due respect to Senator Winter, the substance which reason dictates should be thrown on this fundamentally flawed offering is certainly not one that purifies. (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) Although a contract is, according to Black's Law Dictionary, "A promissory agreement between two or more persons . . . who are jointly bound to fulfill its obligations," a small group of officeholding Kansans evidently wish to continue the jurisprudential revolution of 1973 by ignoring one signature to a contract's contractual obligation. Senator Wint Winter, Jr., R-Lawrence, who considers this bill a "contract" with acceptable "requirements," says: "There's no reason for the court to throw holy water on it." MITSUBISHI TURNTABLE DP-12 THE MUSIC BOX Retail Value: KIEF'S Price: $220.00 $110.00 w/ cartridge KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE SHOP WILL ONE CONSTITUTIONAL CLARIFICATION BEGET ANOTHER? A bill adopted recently by the Kansas Legislature's Special Committee on the Judiciary gives the natural father and his wife custody of a baby born to a surrogate mother 48 hours after birth and prohibits both single fathers from contracting with a surrogate mother and artificial insemination for single women. In its 1973 legitimation of the abortion procedure, seven members of the Supreme Court confessed that the considerable disagreement about when life begins rendered them unable to examine the evidence and resolve the question. This state of affairs resulted in their discovering that the abortion procedure was a long-suppressed Constitutionally-condoned practice. After prolonged discussion, the committee voted to make the natural father financially responsible for the child even if the surrogate mother decided to keep and rear it. When this display of naked sexism still failed to satisfy the committee's appetite, it concluded that the addition of any kind of penalty for a surrogate mother who chose to abort her considered pregnancy would be inappropriate because the woman in question would only be exercising her Constitutional right. 2100 A W. 25th • Holiday Plaza • Lawrence, KS 66044 Half price for KU Students The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Brings You The Gift of Opera Vinson Cole Tenor One of the fastest rising stars of the New York City Opera George Darden, Piano 8:00 p.m. Sunday, November 13, 1983 Crafton-Prey Theater/Murphy Hall Vinson Cole Wilhelmenia Fernandez Soprano Star of the award-winning film, Diva The program will feature Mr. Cole and Miss Fernandez as soloists and in duets of arises from La Traviata and Faust. Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved / for reservations, call 913-864-3982. Public: $8 & $6; KU students with ID*: $4 & $3; senior citizens and other students: $7 & $5 *KU students must show ID at time of purchase *and* at the door Founded, in part, by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts; also partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee, KU Endowment Association and the Swarthout Society. TODAY ON CAMPUS STEVE FEHR, a lawyer in Kansas City, Mo. will speak at a forum about sports/abor law at 12:30 p.m. in 104 Green Hall. THE KANSAS Brass Quintet will present a faculty recital at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. GUN CLUB will sponsor a trap and skeet meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 217B Snow Hall. A MEETING OF THE group putting out the Literary Magazine will be at 7:30 p.m. in the International Roem of the Union. BASEBALL SIMULATIONS will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union, CHESS, GO, and Backgammon Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE College Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. in Danfort Chapel. ORTHOID CHRISTIANS in Campus will discuss 'Persecution in Eastern European Countries' at 7 at the Registrant Room of the Union UNTIL 10:30PM EVEN MORE SPECIALS AFTER 10:30PM GAMMONS SNOWS .25 DRAWS & $1.00 DRINKS TONIGHT!! GAMMONS SNOWBOARD 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 Homemade CHOCOLATE,CHERRY LEMON OR BLUEBERRY CHEESE CAKE Homemade MASS. STREET DELI in 041 MASSACHUSETTS SCOOPED PIE No Coupons Accepted reg. $1.25 95c With This Offer Offer good Wed., Nov. 2 thru Fri., Nov. 4 PEPSI V Spend the night with P. Christopher UNDERCOVER UNDERCOVER 21 W. 9th NATION AND WORLD Page 9 University Daily Kansan, November 3. 1983 Reagan signs bill to create King holiday President says leader caused historic change PETER MCCARTNEY WASHINGTON — President Reagan speaks to Coretta Scott King after giving her the pen he used to sign a bill that makes the third Monday in January a national holiday to honor her slain husband, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. Reagan signed the bill yesterday during a ceremony in the Rose Garden. By United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan signed a law yesterday creating a national holiday to honor Martin Luther King Jr., and — quoting his own words, he said that the slain civil rights leader had "changed America forever." With about 200 civil rights leaders gathered under bright sunshine in the Rose Garden, Reagan handed Corretta Scott King the pen with which he designated the third anniversary holiday in memory of her late husband. Afterward, guests sang "We Shall Overcome." Reagan had initially opposed the legislation, which was approved by the House and Senate by overwhelming margins, creating a 10th federal holiday. But he told the White House gathering King in his "39 short years changed America forever." "IN AMERICA in the 50¢ and 60's, one of the important crises we faced was racial discrimination. The man whose words and deeds stirred the nation to the nasty truth that Martin Luther King Jr., Reagan said, "Often he was beaten and imprisoned, but he never stopped teaching non-violence." Quoting King's 1963 dramatic speech, which was given on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, Reagan said, "I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia, the sons of slaves and the sons of slaveowners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood." "If American history grows from two centuries to 20," Reagan said, "his words that day will never be forgotten.' Mrs. King said, "All right-thinking people, all right-thinking Americans are joined in spirit with us this day." "AMERICA IS a more democratic nation, a more just nation, a more peaceful nation because Martin Luther King Jr. became her preeminent non-violent commander," she said. After the bill signing, guests began signing "We Shall Reagan and Vice President George Bush shook hands with the guests but did not join in the singing. Overcome, the civil rights anthem, and the soft hymnal chorus swelled row after row until the entire audience was on its feet signing. conference that he would have preferred a day honoring King on his Jan. 15 birthday without creating a national holiday. Last night, Reagan said at a news HE ALSO declined to criticize Sen. Jesse Helms, R.N.C., for seeking to unseal FBI records the conservative senator has said would show that King associated with Communists. Reagan said that it might take "35 years" to bring it about but that he would sign the bill because of the "symbolism." Scheme resulted in access to defense data UCLA student is arrested for computer crimes By United Press International LOS ANGELES — A UCLA science student was arrested yesterday for using his home computer to break into a multinational Defense Department computer system, gaining access to "very sensitive" information. He said that it had not been determined what Austin planned to do with the information, or whether he had altered any data. District Attorney Robert Philibesian told reporters that Ronald Mark Austin, 19, used local telephone connections from his home in suburban Santa Monica to gain access to the system linking governments, agencies and universities in the United States and Europe. A Defense Department spokesman in Washington said the department had a policy of not commenting on cases of this nature. "We do not comment on any case that would end up in active litigation," Major Bob Shields said. A SPOKESMAN for one of the agencies involved, the Rand Corp. in Santa Monica, said no classified or sensitive data was released through its computers. Also among the accounts accessed were the Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET), the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, DC, and the Norwegian Center in San Diego and the Norwegian Telecommunication Administration. "These computers store data primarily of research projects for agencies such as the U.S. Department of Defense." Philibius said. "Some of the information we can see was very sensitive." Austin, 19, was arrested at his home and jailed in lieu of $10,000 bail pending arrangement Tuesday in Municipal Court on 14 counts of maliciously accessing a computer system and 14 thefts of property and receiving stolen stolen property. included airline tickets he allegedly acquired through his illegal computer activities. "At this time, due to the increasing frequency and complexity of computer crimes, I am establishing an Electronic Crime Task Force," the district attorney added, saying a dozen investigators would be trained for the work. Authorities said Austin, who was not studying computer sciences, allegedly used a small black and white TV set for video display and a Commodore home computer and his telephone to gain access to 300 accounts in 14 different locations. Other accounts included Purdue University, Cornell University, UC Berkeley, the University of Wisconsin and the BBN-Communications Corp. in order to keep up with advances on the system were working under Defense Department research grants. Austin was traced to his home after UCLA officials found that the school's programs were being blocked and asked the district attorney to invest. PHILIBOSIAN said the property "WE ARE still investigating Austin's motives, including what he intended to do with the information," Philibosian said. "We don't know what he was doing with the data. We're still trying to figure it out." Philipson said many of the accessed accounts had not been used for a long period of time and said the matter was being addressed by another business as "capturing accounts." He said another technique Austin allegedly used, inserting a new program within an existing program, was known as the "Troian Horse." Philippines said a massive reprogramming effort would cost the affected institutions "hundreds of thousands of dollars" to change their access procedures. "This is not a childish prank," he said, "but it can and it needs swift wit." If convicted, he said, Austin might spend as man as many a 4 to 6 years in prison. Troops ward off wolves as Turks dig for victims ERZURUM, Turkey — Troops shot packs of wolves crazed by the stench of the dead yesterday as rescuers unearth hundredes of more victims from earthquake-flettened villages. A military official said that the death toll would soon reach 2.000. By United Press International Three powerful aftershocks and several minor tremors rolled across the demolished villages in eastern Turkey and felled some of the damaged buildings, particularly schools, that survived Sunday's unake. The renewed tremors struck terror in survivors as relief teams worked across the region to disinfect water and prevent outbreaks of typhoid. "We want to leave this place as soon as possible," said Resim Erbas, 72, one of 190 residents of the village of Degirmeni. "We are scared." THE OFFICIAL death count was put at 1,330, but recovery teams pulled out of the race. At least 33 villages were destroyed and another 44 suffered heavy damage in the Sunday morning quake, which caused an on the Richer scale, officials said. Military officials on the scene said the official count was behind and a ranking army officer in Erzurum said the toll might reach 2,000 by day's end. Troops also shot packs of wolves that descended on the villages. Officials said the wolves were "driven mad" by the stench of flesh, including human hairs and the carcasses of some 30,000 head of livestock killed in the quake. The Red Crescent, the Moslem equivalent of the Red Cross, said that tons of relief supplies, tents and drugs arrived in the area from other provinces and abroad. MEDICAL TEAMS from the 3rd Turkish army fanned out to protect survivors against disease. Crews poured disinfectant liquids into wells and streams. "The recovery operations will continue through Friday," said Gen. Fikret Oktay, the 3rd Army commander. Armed troops cordoned off the flattened expanse of what were villages in the northeastern-most region of Ukraine, and the Soviet border, to ward off looters. Diggers found 79 more bodies in the village of Kizlarkalei, one of the hardest hit. Only some 100 of the 350 villagers survived. In contrast, the village of Degirmenli escaped without a fatality "I have lost tens of relatives, but nothing happened to my own family," she said. Senators question nominees for Legal Services over views By United Press International WASHINGTON — Democratic senators sharply questioned three of President Reagan's choices to head the White House in a day about possible conflicts of interest. But tough questioning failed to shake Michael Wallace, Robert Kane and Robert Valois from their stand that the legal aid provided with providing legal aid to the poor. In a confirmation hearing before the Senate Labor and Human Resources Committee, the three insisted that their personal views and backgrounds will not interfere with their ability to oversee the government's program for providing lawyers to people unable to afford their own legal counsel. Six of Reagan's nominees, named Oct. 7 appeared before the committee BUT LAWMAKERS devoted their time to scouring Wallace's work as a Republican congressional aide, Kane's involvement with a conservative non-profit legal group, and Valois' work in labor cases. One of the controversies over Wallace, 31, a former aide to Rep. Trent Lott, R Miss, dealt with his opposition in negotiations of the Voting Rights Act extension. While Wallace testified he disagrees with certain provisions of the Voting Rights Act as adopted by Congress, the Jackson, Miss., attorney said he supports its principles guaranteeing voting rights for minorities. Kane, a former justice of the California Court of Appeal, was questioned at length by Sens. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, and Thomas Eagleton on his current law practice as the Pacific Legal Foundation, a non-profit group that has been known to take legal stands against poor people. KANE SAID he has no intention of resigning from the Pacific Legal Foundation if he is confirmed to the part-time government job on the Legal Services Corp. and said he sees no conflict in belonging to both groups. If a conflict does arise on a particular case of issue, Kane vowed to disqualify Valois, 45, a Raleigh, N.C., lawyer, knocked down suggestions in media reports that he opposes labor unions because he represented non-union textile workers during labor tensions at Stevens Co. plant in North Carolina. "I certainly don't accept the label of being a union buster." Val told me. To a lesser degree, lawmakers also grilled LeaAnneBernin of Baltimore. Md, who has been on the staff of Legal Services Corp. since January 1982 CITING LEGAL opinions from the Justice Department, Berrnstein said there would no conflict in her quitting. But she was placed on the agency's board of directors. Also appearing were nomines Claude Swafford of South Pittsburg, Tenn., and William Clark Durant of Nashville who received only minimal questioning. The Legal Services Corp. has been in turmoil for more than two years. Reagan has tried repeatedly to abolish the agency by recommending no funds for it. Congress each year has financed the agency, which has covered over lobbing done by the agency. The agency has operated with less than a full slate of directors for the past two years. While Reagan named a clean slate of 11 directors earlier this month, one already has withdrawn his name. The names of the four remaining choices have not been officially sent to Capitol Hill for consideration. ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT SERIES FREE Via Videotape Via Videotape Friday, November 4 1:30 Preparing for Tests 2:30 Time Management 3:30 Listening and Notetaking TALK TRONG MILC B. A. SAN JOAO To attend, register at the Student Assistance Center 121 Strong Hall, 864-4064 MITSUBISHI TURNTABLE DP-12 Retail Value: $220.00 KIEF'S Price: $110.00 w/ cartridge KIEF'S Price: 6110.00 w/ cartridge KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE SHOP THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 2100 A W. 25th • Holiday Plaza • Lawrence. KS 66044 LA&S DEAN'S APPROVAL STAMP NOW AVAILABLE Oct. 31—Nov. 22 9 a.m.-12 p.m., 1 p.m.-4:30 p.m. 102 Strong Hall-Undergraduates 210-1 Strong Hall-Graduates 1307 Mass phone: 844-1151 "Finally we can see DON'T LOOK BACK, a portrait of the young Dylan tearing the pop world apart." "A running, jumping, and standing still portrait of the American rock star as a young oracle...DON'T LOOK BACK is blessed with the spontaneous and untapped comic talent of Dylan himself." —The New York Times BOBDYLAN DONT LOOK BACK A FILM BY D.A. PENNEBAKER Boysd Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy-Sell-Trade Gold-Silver-Coins 731 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-842-8773 With JOAN BAEZ SHOWS NOV 4-10 756-0382 BIJOU 425 Westport Rd FREE LEG WARMERS WHEN YOU ENROLL IN ONE OF OUR AEROBICS CLASSES Individuals Groups-3 or more HAIRCRAFT WHEN YOU ENROLL IN ONE OF OUR AEROBICS CLASSES Individuals 16 sessions-$35 Groups 3 or more 16 sessions-$25 C NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center 749-1501 . NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1983 Senators accuse contractors of 'criminal' overcharging By United Press International WASHINGTON — Senators, enraged by tales of $9,609 wrenches and $7,417 steel pins, yesterday demanded an end to "criminal" overpricing by defense contractors and accused the defense industry of giving way to a "footing mentality." Pentagon officials testifying before the Senate Government Affairs Committee acknowledged that some contractors had overcharged for military equipment and said that the military was ferreting out and punishing the offenders. Rear Adm. Joseph Sansone, deputy chief of Navy material, said that 53 firms or individuals have been suspended or barred from doing business with the Navy this year for pricing abuses. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Thayer blamed overcharges on insufficient competitive bidding, contracts that failed to specify prices and purchasing agents who met the requirements to determine what is a reasonable price. THE COMMITTEE cited proposals by General Dynamics Corp. of St. Louis, which sought to charge the Air Force $9,609 for a hexagon wrench committee aides found priced at 12 cents in a hardware store and $7,417 for a 3-inch steel piads said they could get free from a Washington-area electronics supply store. General Dynamics withdrew the price proposals after learning of the committee investigation, the committee aides said. "These prices are unconscionable," said Sen. Winnie Roth, R-Del., chairman of the panel. "It's kind of a looting mentality", Sen. William Cohen, R-Maine, said. "I'ts tantamount to being crimin- tion, that it is in my judgment (is fraud)." But Thayer said Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger's 10-point program to end price abuses, put into effect in July, has had a throughout the Defense Department and within our defense industries." Rear Adm. R.D. Johnson, who oversees the purchases of the F-18 jet fighter, said there were examples of overpricing for some plane parts that "cannot frequently be accounted for." Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., emphasized the need for vigilance by the Pentagon, warning that contractors "are going to get away with murder if they fail." He charged the Pentagon has resisted the idea of competitive bidding. "You would think we were trying to turn the Pentagon into a four-corner building," he said. TOKYO — Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasao will dissolve Parliament and call an election before the new year to end a political crisis over the Lockheed bribery scandal, news reports said yesterday. Kyoto News Service, quoting "informed, party sources," said early elections for the law-making house of the Diet, or Parliament, would probably be held Dec. 18 or Dec. 23 — before its first 16-year term expires. By United Press International Parliamentary proceedings stalled after the opposition demanded that Kakui Tanaka, Nakasone's political mentor, resign his parliament seat over his conviction last month for taking $2 million in bribes from Lockheed Corp. while prime minister in the 1970s. THE ELECTION would turn an embarrassment for Nakasone to his advantage. It would follow visits this month by President Reagan and Senator Hillary Clinton, Party chief Hu Yaohang, both of whom are expected to help Nakasone's image. Nakasone calls for early Diet elections to end Lockheed crisis Tanaka, 56, one of Japan's most powerful politicians, has stubbornly refused to resign or acknowledge guilt despite his conviction. He is appealing his four-year prison sentence and $2 million fine. Although he resigned from the ruling Liberal-Democratic Party in 1976, Tanaka still sits in Parliament as an independent and controls the Diet's largest LDP faction from behind the scenes. Opposition parties, strengthened by support from minority groups within the LDP, have demanded that Tanaka step down before they act on any other legislation. NAKASONE, who alone is empowered to dissolve the Diet under Japanese law, has apparently decided his administration will survive a test at the polls and might be served better by a vote than by prolonging the impasse. The media reports speculated that the prime minister will extend the current Diet session, due to end Nov. 16, for about 10 days to enable Hu to address the assembly during his visit the following week. Both the visits of Reagan and Hu, added to this week's trip by West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, were not expected to produce any disgracements and rather shore up Nakasone's posture as a world statesman. The dispute brought a rare show of unity as the chief opposition party, the Socialists, joined other minor groups to pressure the LDP to introduce a motion demanding that Tanaka quit the lower house. Opposition groups believe early elections might help them. EATS 1105 MASS LAWRENCE, KANSAS TASTY. TONGUE TICKLING, TIDBITS! BARRON'S The Private Club "Our special is easy to remember-- it's 7 nights a week!" 50c DRAWS $1 DRINKS until midnight Underneath the Eldridge House 7th & Mass. 749-9758 TIN PAN ALLEY MIDNIGHT — FRIDAY & SATURDAY BODY TALK ! Rated xxx XXX BODY TALK ! Rated XXX - 1 year of graduate level education SOME OF THE BENEFITS INCLUDE: - $3,000 Bonus upon acceptance If you're a Math, Chemistry, Physics, or Engineering major, the Navy has a program you should know about. It's called the Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate (NUPOC) Program, and if qualified you could earn $1,000 per month, for up to 24 months prior to graduation. Varsity Downtown 843-1065 - $23,000 starting salary—over $42K annually after five years four years and dental care Box office opens 11:30 SENIOR YEAR 20 The NUPOC program can help you not only to complete college, it can also be the start of an exciting career. If you'd like to find out more, contact your placement office or call. EARN OVER $1,000 A MONTH THROUGH YOUR SENIOR YEAR - Unequalled hands-on training and experience using the most - Immediate management responsibility - ENGINEERING OFFICERS PROGRAMS • 800-821-5110 NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST. - Free medical and dental care A MEETING FOR the formation of A MEETING FOR the formation of THE NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN CLUB OF UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SPONSORED BY: * Office of Minority Affairs with refreshments TIME: 6:00 P.M. DATE: Thursday-NOV.3,1983 PLACE: KANSAS UNION, PINE ROOM, LEVEL 6 CONTACT *MINORITY AFFAIRS FOR SPECIFICS THE SHINING A STANLEY KUBRICK FILM JACK NICHOLSON SHELLEY DUVALL IN THE WEEKLY "THE SHINING" STEPHEN KING Friday and Saturday November 4 and 5 7:00, 9:30 $1.75 12:00 MID. $2 WFS UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall !!GRADUATE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ELECTIONS!! November 16 & 17 Nominations-Self Nominations due in Graduate Student Council Office, Kansas Union By Friday, 12 pm November 4, 1983 Also soliciting names of write in candidates for graduate student senators. (STUDENT SENATE-FUNDED AD) TURKEY TROT 8th Annual Turkey Trot, Sat., Nov. 19 23rd & Iowa - KU WEST CAMPUS COST: FREE REGISTRATION: From 8-8:50 a.m. on the day of the race at ShenK Complex. Entry forms should be delivered or mailed to Recreation Services, Robinson, KU campus, 66045, or Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department, Box 708, 4th Floor, City Hall, Lawrence, Ks. 66044. We prefer you enter the Turkey Trot before the day of the race, but you may show up and enter during the 8-8:50 registration time. DIVISIONS: RACE TIME IS 9:00 a.m. FOR ALL DIVISIONS COURSE: APPROXIMATELY 3 - 3.5 miles. It will not be shown until the day of the race. KUHASKELL STUDENTS MEN & WOMEN KU/HASKELL FACULTY/STAFF MEN WOMEN OPEN DIVISION MEN & WOMEN (anyone from Lawrence) AWARDS: KU/HASKELL STUDENTS, FACULTY/STAFF, AND OPEN DIVISION WINNERS WILL RECEIVE TURKEYS. ALSO, IN EACH OF THE THREE DIVISIONS THE INDIVIDUAL WHO CLOSEST TO HIS/HER PREDICTED TIME WILL RECEIVE A TURKEY. Sponsored by KU Recreation Services and SpecialThanks to Rusty's and KLZR 106. PIZZA & VIDEO $2 Off Any Large, Two Topping Pizza Bring in this coupon Expires Fri., Nov. 4 PAC-MAN GAME TOKENS 50 for $5.00 Bring in this coupon No other coupons accepted with these offers. THE NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS 1 SPORTS University Daily Kansan, November 3, 1983 Cornhuskers, Texas refuse $1.5 million offer By United Press International DENVER — Officials of the NCAA and the universities of Nebraska and Texas say that no national champion will be played by the schools in January. Barry Fey, a promoter of rock concerts and other events in Denver, had guaranteed the scholls $1.5 million each to play the game at either the Superdome or the Rose Bowl in mid-January. But an NCAA spokesman said the game between the nation's two top-ranked teams would violate NCAA rules, and officials of the schools said they were not interested. David Cawood, assistant executive director of communications for the NCAA, said NCAA Division I schools are limited to 11 games and a post-season bowl game each season. "A GAME LIKE THIS simply couldn't happen without some special act of legislation by the NCAA," said Tuesday. "I'd say it's just impossible." DeLess Dodds, Texas athletic director, said, "As a Fan, I'd love to see a game. As an administrator, it simply won't happen." "The national champion is decided at the end of the bowl season by the polls. And besides, we're No. 1, so why would we want to play the No. 2 team?" I'm not going to waste my time talking about it. The telegram, Fey suggested the game be played Jan. 14 or 15 "in either the Superdome in New Orleans, La., or the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., both of which I have on hold." W 1.0 W 2.0 T Pct. PEF PA Miami 5 4 7 Petit 667 494 1A Buffalo 5 4 8 Petit 673 192 1A Baltimore 5 4 0 Petit 556 169 19 New England 5 4 0 Petit 164 198 19 FOOTBALL Pittsburgh 7 2 0 787 217 165 Cleveland 7 4 0 556 171 206 Cincinnati 3 6 0 333 170 151 Houston 9 0 0 000 170 246 SPORTS ALMANAC EASW W L T PET. PF PA Dallas 8 1 0 889 291 195 National Conference LA Raiders 6 3 0 67 167 242 154 Denver 6 3 0 66 167 204 147 Seattle 5 4 0 56 129 219 160 Cincinnati 5 4 0 56 129 219 160 San Diego 5 4 0 44 121 221 American Conference Minnesota 6 3 0 667 215 223 Detroit 3 5 0 404 252 189 Green Bay 4 5 0 444 260 264 Bayport 3 5 0 333 264 234 Tampa Bay 5 0 0 900 141 147 Washington 7 2 0 778 294 130 Philadelphia 4 5 0 444 136 167 St Louis 3 5 1 389 166 294 NY Giants 2 6 1 389 166 214 San Francisco 6 3 0 67 661 284 197 LA Rams 5 4 0 567 261 187 New Orleans 5 4 0 556 203 203 Atlanta 4 5 0 444 201 179 Houston at New Orleans Buffalo at New England Cincinnati at Houston Cleveland vs. Green Bay at Milwaukee Phoenix vs. Phoenix Los Angeles Raiders at Kansas City San Diego at Pittsburgh Tampa Bay at Minnesota Baltimore at Seattle Baltimore at N.Y. Jets BASKETBALL Chicago at Los Angeles Rams Miami at San Francisco St. Louis at Washington NBA Cleveland 105 Houston 84 Benton 119 Milwaukee 105 Dallas 125 Portland 119 San Diego 110 Los Angeles 106 Tonight's Chicago at New Jersey Detroit at Washington Dearer at Kansas City San Antonio at Phoenix Tolton Cities 4 Cities At Boston, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, Indiana or Detroit. Chicago at Atlanta, Dallas at Cleveland, Seattle at San Diego, New York at Portland KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES | | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or Weeks | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Words | 1-Date | 2-Date | 3-Date | 4-Date | | 0-15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 | | 16-20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 | | 21-22 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.05 | | For every 5 words add | 25c | 50c | 75c | 1.05 | AD DEADLINES PCLICIES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Friday 5 p.m. - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words - Deadlines same at Display Advertisement - 2 working days prior to publication The University Daily KANSAN - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only Classified Display $4.20 one column inch - assured display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues allowed in classified displays; advertisement costs for log (log, log) advertising are not covered. - Blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge. - Checks must accompany all admissible admin tags. - To the University Daily Kansas - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established * Tear sheets are not provided for classified or thinly earned rate discount Samples of all mail order items must be submitted FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or callen by the Kuala Lumpur business office at 864-4158 ANNOUNCEMENTS No more missing out on your favorite comics! Have them reserved— at a discount at KWALITY COMICS For the best prices and service anywhere. M-F: 11-7 Sat: 10-5 107 W. 7th Kansan classifieds get results. Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Edit The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; in Rooms 200 and 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applications due in Room 200 StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Wed., Nov. 16. The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry. NOW OPEN MAMA JENERUS PIZZA, 900 In- dia, b483-6482, 4 p.m. 1 a.m. 1 bed apartment 19, kd downtown, Sunnipark $200.00 and 1/2 unit(s) 843-978-8614 (Mark.) Exception location one bedroom apartment, equipped kitchen, central air, located in 100 Mission Hill. FALL CLASSIC '83 FOR RENT Available Now: 1 Small one bedroom house, only $125 plus utilities. 841-307 afternoons 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 STUDIO Baseement studio apartment $18.00/month, utilities paid. Single, no smoking, quiet, mature individual. Available 24/7. Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. For RENT. Niceest, available brand new, just com- mings up on a large lot. All UTILITIES PAID *叫* 892-649-1268 www.rentland.com EXPENSIVE朋客 in room 51R house. $100/mo. ninx 175 utilities. 841-8091. Ask for Steve. Low rent $127; no util. Noroomate needed for 2 BR apt. N, 1 Bill 8439 1869 after 5 years. Male Roommate needed 3 bedroom suite, nice chair. Available now or beginning of semester. BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please come to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. 842-1876 or 841-1287 Meadowbrook room for sublease. Available November 5. Ask for apartment U1230, 842-4206. Non-smoking female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. $12/month and 1/3 rooms. Across the building. Room for rent near university and downtown. No pets please. 841-5500 SHORT SUBLEASE. Jan 1 to May 31 2 bedroom, carpeted apt. in 4plex to campus and administration. 60% off. SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHUSES: spacious, quiet. 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at 26th & Kaskad featuring all appliances, washer-dryer hook ups, at-waiting area, private swimming pool. Call 749-1507 for an appointment. Villa Capri www.villacapri.com 1734 Ohio Call for info on availability 842-9703 case leave message To sublease furnished 2 HR api. Available Nov. 1st. On bus route B邮 841-2539 1082 Toyota Corolla SIDE, extra clean special paint & electricals. 1082 Toyota Corolla SIDE, extra clean special paint & electricals. 6 weeks, beginning 8/6/24 & 5M + PZM career, survey. 6 weeks, beginning 8/6/24 & 5M + PZM career, survey. 10% black LaSabre Custom 4 door seat. Excellent condition. FM/MF stereo. Call 1-841-1815. 183. Mbarda RX-7 (SL, Custom TURBO. Must sell. Perfect condition. Awesome power: 841-612-3040. country METRID ANGEL M14120 Lake Neck, Conn $500 Sell $250 Call 813-795-6250 Save money, rent a 1 or a 2 bedroom, or apart nearment to campus. No pets, phone 944-8158 Willing to negotiate price. Call 347-686-105 75 Toyota Corolla 1,000 $1,000 must sell, leaving 2,000 miles. Crumar Electric Piano and Moug Synthesizer; the pair for $80, 843-7454 HONDA CIVIC 1976 Must sell $1700 or best offer. Brass road. B49-6618. 69 Volkswagen Bug. Needs some engine repair to negotiate price. Call 841 6498 1975 Vega runs great, good steel tires and battery. No rust. Nr. 846-615 or 843-3036. HOT DANCE RECORDS for sale! Balfi 'African' Arabit 'Haurit' DONT MISS THESE Imported LP*S! For Discographic Catalogs, CONTACT, J Templeton Box 72, Prinze St. NYC, 10218, or mail to: Discography.com 1947 AUDI FOX, 94,000 miles. Good condition. redundant engine, camera and radiator. 890. Call (212) 536-2222. Two rooms for rent ($100 and $8) on 1st floor of house location. Please contact Karen. Smaller office entrance. Call Karen. MOPED-GREAT RAY 79 Butauus, $800, first, $130, take off. Call Ron at 749-7479. 1080 Daihan 310.4-3peed, 30 mpg, hatchback, runs 620 Daihan FM/Mamacissate, Call 749-0219 KeepTrying Must Sell 1980 Kawasaki 250 LTD Excellent condition, low mileage 864-647 Spacious, fortress-like room with fireplace. Watens room with 9ft x 7ft walk-in closet and downstairs. No pets please. 841-5000 FOR SALE SK POLICE tickets for sale. Great location, Call 843-300 and leave message. 1973 Black legal. runs great, very durable, must sell. $455.00 Cal. Kent. 749-260 1979 Datam 2002, blue, 5-speed, A/C. Also 1972 WV window has a 5-pass. 843-368 early-sleep. Stereo television video. All name brands. Lowest price. KC area. Total Sound Distributors, WE SELL STAMPS! U.S. and Foreign 811 New Hampshire, open weekends 10-5. Z19 computer terminal, new compatible with Honeywell, 42 lines/80 characters, $450, Hewlett-Packard. OLINMARK IV skis. 170 cm./ with Salomon 727 bindings. $160. Nordica boota. 8 size / 12 mm. Yamaha RVC80, RVC120, 525 Yamaha TINTINTE 900, 750, 600 old perfect condition. Solid together, 600 Call Mary BUTUGE SELECTION OF MEN'S MAGAZINES FOR MAY'S MAX COMICS 911 NJ OPEN EVERY DAY. Lost orange striped tabby kitten with green eyes and black color, near尔州 & Tennessee. Please call Lost black male cat, 1/12 years old, black flea coli. Vicinity of 24th and Kassidwol 10:26. Call Dave. at 843-4999 days, 843-7465 evenings. Howard. Call Dave. at 843-7465 nights. Friday at Creepy Party at Carlo: 843-6065 LOST AND FOUND HELP WANTED Lost, kitten, white, white with Black spots and tail. Lost at night Hawk's 'crossing on Saturday night. Lost keys. 7 keys on knot, Friday at Crew Party on Mass. Call 841-6435 Pair of clear frame glasses in a blue case found in between Wesley and Hoc on Oct. 16. Call 854-5900 Caregiver to assist female with disability. No ex- cuses required. Caregivers must be weekend, needed during holiday. Call Betts at 800-341-2756. POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE (synthetic chemistry) position available immediately for the synthesis of reagents useful for the preparation of biochemical products and other bioactive chemicals for very low-level analysis. Minimum salary $16,000. The successful candidate will be responsible for organic or inorganic chemistry and strong interest in the design and execution of organic syntheses. Send curriculum vitae, three letters of reference and resume to Robert G. Carlson and Richard S. Givens, Department of Chemistry, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 69048 2112. The University of Kan- Research Assistant half-time position in chemistry The Center for Biomedical Research at the University of Texas at Austin received a 1963 for a motivated person for at least one year with possible extension to three or more years. Duties include preparing, maintaining, and protecting enzymes and acetylcholinesterase by various, some toxic inhibitors. Annual salary $10,000-8,000, compounded annually. Bachelor's degree in a chemistry or biochemistry related field. Desired experience in protein or enzyme biology. Possible experience in the use of microcomputers. Applications are accepted by mail only until November 7 at 5 o'clock p.m. Please send resumes to the Office of SENIOR POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE (photochemistry) a available January 1, 1984. Studies on the synthesis, photochemistry and development of derivatives for peptide analysis. Requires Ph.D. in either physical or organic chemistry with at least an M.S. degree in biochemistry or experience beyond the Ph.D. in the areas of organic photochemistry, photoliminescence spectroscopy and various chromatographic methods of analysis. Must have a master's degree or be necessary. The successful applicant must have a proven record to enable him or her to work in the photochemistry and working knowledge of photochemistry and luminescence of various organic functional groups. Salary $10,000-20,000 per year. For full job description and list of publications and three letters of reference by November 26, 1981, apply to, send resume, TRAVEL Mappinoutt is looking for Tour Managers, people we hire to邀 group tour groups throughout USA, Alaska, Hawaii, Canada, Europe, the U.K., Germany and France. people be outgoing, have a good attitude towards others, be people-able, have a good attitude towards senior citizens, our major market, as well as with all age groups. Personality, poise, a good looking appearance, smart and a quick learner, too. Public speaking ability, giving commentary a must. Most assignments require us to be smart and a quick learner, too. But fluency in German, Spanish, French or other is a phi if you send you abroad. Our major work involves ground work. Pay is good and if you are good the tips are excellent. If you you know技巧 and are overachieving you can yourself to Alton Hagen, Director of Tour Managers, Mappinoutt: 151 St. Senden, Drive, Lawrence, KS 63704 FRESHMAN SCHOOLSAIRSHIPS AVAILABLE. It is not too late to rent in NAVAL ROTC. Call 861-3416 Child Research. This is a 75% time clinical and bookkeeping position serving two newly funded professional disabled skills. B.A. and graduate developmental skills (90 wpm), and library research skills required. Distance learning, and library research services, Bureau of Child Research, 348 Haworth, KU, Lawrence, RS. by November 4, 2018. An EOE/Athletic RS. Wanted: Babysitter/Denworker for Trailside Athletic Club Mornings: 9:00-12:00 Call Tom at MISCELLANEOUS Used furniture bought and sold. Pick-up available Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont PERSONAL $115.00 Old Milwaukee Pool Tourery, Sat Nov 5. Register for men's and women's or only women. (No children). 20th anniversary sale. INFLATION FIGHTER 8 E.th. 72% off everything. Party clothes and vintage sweaters, walt skirts, coats, mens clothes and dresses you can uscure. Hear: 12-30 M-F, 10-30 Saturday A strong kg outlet. Bennett Retail Liquor Club, north of Memorial Stadium. 846 Illinois 947/027 We're An Official Representative ALL Airlines offering the Lowest Air Fares Possible ON CAMPUS LOCATION In the Student Union Flights Filling Fast Now is the time to make your Thanksgiving and Christmas travel plans . . . See Us TODAY! Maupintour travel service 748-0700 Bennett's Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine, ABG, Illinois. B272-722 Cross over the bridge to horticulture. North Lawrence flowers, pruning shrubs, fertilizing plants, for a nice selection, spells, cold heat and chill for a healthy tree. COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured Kansas City area. Call for appointment 914-642-3100. Curtis Mathes showcampa® 600 movies to choose from. Rent a video machine, and pre-recorded movies to watch. America's foremost reader of astrology and the cards is taking appts for private readings. He can be reached on love, marriage, business, etc. ★ Mrs. Lang Psychic rot Card Reader Call 841-0489 Dear Janet Dana (Skip and Marie Remember the Marble KUA rivalty) We met that night, you walked across the room to meet her phone. We were tired that since and it turned out bad. There was no Theta named Dana Crona. Now it's your turn; if you want an Agniviele spain, deal with it! No, I don't. In FALL MERCHANTISE! WOOL TOP COATS, WOOL BANDED JACKETS for GUYS LOOK REALY SHARP-ADD A NEW WOHL HAT TOO THE ETV Lose weight with acupuncture 749-4022. 9 - 5 HAVE POLICE TICKETS available for the Nov. 24 concert at Kerner Stadium. Call 644-8259 after 1 p.m. < STAFF & EAPT WI. Are you paying $139.00 a month for the Blue Cross Family Health Plan? That's very expensive. Consider saving $500.00 or more It not too early to order Christmas portraits for PHOTOS 108 Pennsylvania - 841-493. My appoint- ment number is 256-4937. Call Me Bil Dutta Dutton Insurance LTD. 9th & Kentucky -045-015 The Comprehensive Facility The complete instruction clearly says: * Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, view, visa ID, and of course fine portraits with suitable backgrounds. Rent video cassette recorders and pre-recorded movie types (60 movies to choose from) 'Curtis' SKI VAIL/HEAVEN CREEPER call TOLL FREE SRI VAL/HEAVEN CREEPER call TOLL FREE FOR DISCOUNT RATES on Lodges, lifts and travel insurance. BARB'S VINTAGE ROSE Vintage & contemporary clothes and party & formal attire Say it on a shirt, custom silkscreen print, T-shirts; jerseys and capes; Swirls by Swillra 749-1611 Special for students. Haircuts $7 and perms $25. Charm ask, for Deena Jensen 843-380 Duds in Uddo open up 10 12 Man. 12-12 Sat. Lawrence's only laundered hat. 749-412 Trailridge Athletic Club Jayhawk Open Racquetball Tournament Date: Nov. 11, 12, 13 Entry Men's & Women's ABCD Men's & Mixed Doubles Deadline: Nov. 9 Call 841-7230 for more information VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCE Friday, November 5 at 10:30 a.m. Prepares for Tests on the computer and 3:00-Listing and Notetaking. Free Contact the Student Assistance Center. 121 Strong Hall, Chelsea Drive, New York, NY 10019. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization that sakes use to see the past in a different way. See Chapter 3. For exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' is available now at Town Creek. The course is free and open to everyone. Wanna have a Function and get laundry done too? Sacki Dud-sn: 749-4132 FALL CLASSIC '83 BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing : confidential counseling 843-8212 Danger signals! Headache, backache, arm pain, arm pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, call the Chiropractic Health Center and Doctor M.E. for physical therapy and insurance accepted. No charge for consultation THRIST STORES Appliances, furniture, clothing, knitwear, bedding Always good bargains! DRESSERS Always good bargains! SINGING TELEGRAMS - I'll specialize lyrics for your occasion. Call Andrea. 844-1616. SPECTRUM OPTICAL Eyeglasses made UP to SPECTRUM OPTICAL not down to a prince E 7th st. London Wholehouse Sound Rental. P.A., Guitar, and Bass amps. 814-4495 SERVICES OFFERED Artists with the written word * typing Edit*, graphics. WORD ARTISTS. Ellen 841:2172 Qualified Tutoring in Pascal Certified by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Call Center. M. A. in English, five years, education teaching on the subjects of reading and writing, proofread and edit paper, thesis and dissertation work. STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1023 Massachusetts, downtown, all haircuts, $5.00, no appointment The Falcon Association can help you achieve occupancy of a building. We offer self-affordable housing for 2024, Kansas City TUTORING. (CS90) Math and French. Individual sessions. Call 841-4396. Racquetball, tennis, squash racquet stringing specializing in new graphite hybrid stringing. Tenis Racquets for sale also. Head, Prince, Dunup, et. New Used, 858-358 days, 749-1372 months. WAKE UP SERVICE We will wake you up in the morning by phone. Call Us: 824-6040 TYPING AAA TYPING Helvetica good typestyle 842 #192 after AAAA AAA TYPESET AAA quality for all your text designs AFORMAL QUALITY (all, for your own use) AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs Call Judy, 842.7945 after 6 p.m. 24-hour typing Fast, accurate. Resumes letters, reports; these tests to do your want to do your letter. 842 6122 quality typing WOOD PROCESSING 841 6004 quality typing WOOD PROCESSING 841 6004 AAA TTPING Helliva good! typet 842 1942 after 1 Absolute Letter Perfect Typing, Editing, Book Writing. 84/341-84/349. 84/341-84/350. overseas overnight service. Accurate, affordable typing Ask about speed, over- night service (under 25 pages) Cali. 841-6873 Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School secretary Cali. 941-1219 Becky's Typing Excellent typing at reasonable rate Becky's Typing Excellent typing at reasonable rate Becky's Typing Excellent typing at reasonable rate Call TIP TOP TYING 1200 lbs. Experimental and editions **Autox** Mimemaster, Royal Paper, Autox. TYPING, 1200 lbs. Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, term- nials, or resumes. 812-473-5671, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. 812-473-5671, 843-876-3671, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Clear and fast typing assured. Call 811-6484 any time. DEFENDABLE.DLL, professional typing. HIM SELECTIVE NP, Pica or else Large jobs small. SELECTIVE NP, Pica or else Large jobs small. Experienced typed will type letters, theses and durations HM Corrective Selecting Call 827-390-5160 Elvis could shake, Shakespeare count = ___ talent, typing. Call 842-6049 after 5 a.m. and weeks. Experienced typist tapes, desserts, term papers, music, IBM Correcting Selective, Barb. JEANETTE SHIAFFER TYPING SERVICE JM SECURITY IU, Plae or Plate 441.8977 Experienced typist will type classification, documentation, thesis, and reports. Requires an AET or equivalent. A Fact, Faint, Affordable Charpy Typing, Word Processing, Mail-Format, and Comp Sci. ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT @410, 2510 Experimented typet Term, paper themes, all miscellaneous IBM Corrective Selectric Elite or Pica and will correct spelling. Phone 843.9544, Mrs. Wright Professional Typing. Dissertations, term papers, journals. Legal, legal etc. IBM Correcting Texts. Deb 849 900-6815 *5 services at location typing, editing and graphics. WART ORTHIS, call Eilen, 841-2172 TYFING PLUS. THESS, dessertations, papers, textbooks. TYFING PLUS. Thesis, essay, grammar, spelling, & English tutoring. TYFING PLUS. Critical thinking. Word Processing plus typing Dictation plus photography plus drawing Airbrush plus airbrush charts plus graphics plus photograph plus graphic design Library Research - Typing - Editing. *Will help research, outline, write!* 828240 2 female roommates - modern 4 BR, 2 bath house PD, DW, WD = $100.00 plus 4 usfplaces per hour WANTED Female roommate to sublease own room in a 2 bathroom apartment for $349/month. 72+ cheap rentals. Free until Nov 1, 1984-6399 Female roommate nice room, campus 2 blocks, W/D( buffalo) 841-4678 GWM wanted for downtown apartment. Private bedroom, complete床,屋顶 rooftop 城Call soon for appointment Hent negotiated 748-549-126 for I need 2 tickets for Nebraska, vs. K U | contact 82-08441 1 need 2 tickets for Nebraka vs. K'U! call斋 kit2! need someone to share 2 Bed 2 Fatha (home) & else 1 need 2 tickets for Nebraka vs. K'U! call斋 kit2! Roommate wanted to share a nice, furnished 2 bedroom apt. 5m from campus and downtown $$ Roommates needed share beautiful, large, Kentucky Trucks! 100 inches to All. Excellent Place-good to Drive! Roommate wanted $87.50 month & 1/4 utilities. Very good deal. For info. 841-8121 Roommate needs $2.00 monthly includes usrilties. No phone. Stop by and or leave phone at 1834 Lau Fenny. NATIONAL SELF DEFENSE. A no-number course provides an introduction to the basic warnings will be offered. Only £13 to the first row. Wanted: Bass player for rock band, experience and vocal ability required. Call Todd 842-0834 vital ability requires... female non-owner to share brand new onewish at 3–Midtown & 8th Avenue. KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS Classified Heading: Write Ad Here: Name: 15 words or fewer $2.60 $3.15 $1.75 $6.75 Additional words 25c 50c 75c 1.05 Classified Display: 1 col x 1 inch—$4.20 . SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 3, 1983 Page 12 Roster shrinks as Kansas prepares for CU By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor Jayhawk football coach Mike Gottfried has to wonder when it is going to end. From the beginning of the season the KU coach has said how low the Jayhawks were as far as the number of players on the squad. Now, halfway through the Big Eight schedule, Gottfried's problems have multiplied. "I've never been in this serious of a situation as far as numbers and injuries because it's so great." In an injury report, which has been a daily occurrence, Gottfried said linebacker Darnell Williams probably would not play against Colorado this Saturday. Williams is suffering from an Achilles' tendon injury. "I THINK HE HURT IT in practice yesterday," Gottfried said. "I doubt he will play. We'll probably start either Dane Griffin or Eddie Simmons." The KU defense also had to make another change yesterday to compensate for the loss of cornerback Jeff Burke and his squad Tuesday for personal reasons. Elvis Patterson, who has played defensive end all season, will be moved to cornerback to replace Brown. Patterson's spot will be filled by Clyde Johnson, who started at safety earlier in the season. "Clyde hasn't played much safety lately because Derek Berry has done a great job." Gottfried said. "It's altogether different for both of them because Elvis is used to playing on the line and Clyde is used to playing off it." Patterson, a senior, played cornerback before this season, when he was moved to end to take advantage of his THE DEFENSE IS NOT the only group that injuries have weakened. Wide receiver Bobby Johnson did not practice yesterday because of a separated shoulder, Gottfried said. Johnson probably not play against Colorado. strength. Fullback E.J. Jones also did not practice yesterday. "I can hardly see him playing," he said. "He can barely move his paw." "I really don't know about E.J." Gottfried said. "His ankles are the size of balloons." The Jayhawks' other wide receiver, Darren Green, continued to practice. Green has been out for two weeks with a severely sprained ankle. "I think we even had one of the trainers go down today and it looks like he won't be ready either," Gottfried said, trying to find some humor in KU's situation. IN ALL SERIOUSNESS, the Jayhawks will be batting to stay out of last place in the conference when they take on Colorado. KU is 3-4-1 overall and 1-3 in the Big Eight. The Buffaloes are 2-6 and 0-4 in the conference. "I think they will come in and try to pass against us." Gottried said "It's hard." Junior Steve Vogel will lead the Colorado offense. Vogel has thrown for 1,079 yards and eight touchdowns. He often is suffered by sophomore Derek Hall, who has thrown for 644 yards and has completed 56.9 percent of his passes. Vogel and Marshall will look for split end Loy Alexander and tight end Dave Hestera. Alexander has caught 31 receptions, including five touchdown receptions. 1 Linebacker Darnell Williams, who is suffering from an Achilles' tendon problem, is the latest addition to the KU injury list. Coach,family helped Denny win Cy Young By United Press International PHILADELPHIA — John Denny, named yesterday as the 1983 winner of the National League Cy Young Award, said he made great strides as a pitcher and as a person during his first full season with the Philadelphia Phillies. Denny, a right hander, credited the demanding conditioning program of Gus Hoefling and the handling of Philies pitching coach Claude Osteen for his productivity and religious skillets for the changes in his personal life. “This award should go to all those I’ve mentioned,” said Denny, who posted a 19-6 win-lost record with a 2.37 ERA for the National League champions and received 20 of possible 400 earned points at 103 points in the Cv Yound balloting. "THIS IS NOT just my award and I will never view it that way," said the smiling, relaxed Denny at a news conference in Veterans Stadium. That Denny contrasted sharply with the one who came to the Phillies late in the 1982 season following a 6-11 year. He had played in only 2 while refusing to speak to the press. "My attitude was full of hatred and bitterness," he said. "But I realized during the playoffs (against the Los Angeles Dodgers last month) that that was a wrong attitude and I tried to change. That has been beneficial in my profession. And it will be beneficial in my life." Denny, who led the NL in wins and finished second in ERA this year, was followed in the Cy Young voting by Cincinnati right-hander Mario Soto, who received two first-place votes and 61 points after leading the NL with 18 complete games while posting a 17-13 record. NEW YORK METS' reliever Jesse Orosco (13-7, 14-7 ERA) placed third with 19 points and Montreal's Steve Rogers received 15 points for fourth, with each earning one first-place ballot Denny, who also received a second-place vote, appeared on 21 of the 24 ballots cast by members of the Baseball Writers Association of Amer- UPT's Comeback Player of the Year. Denny is also the third Philadelphia Phillies pitcher to win the Cy Young in the last four years. Left-hander Steve Carlton claimed the prize in 1980 and 1982. Carlton, the only pitcher to win* CITY OF NEW YORK John Denny award four times, fell to 15-16 in 1983 and was not named on any ballot. But Denny said Carlton is still the Philips' pitcher. "UNTIL HE RETIRES, in my mind he's the ace of the staff." Denny said. "He's a great pitcher. No matter what I accommodate, I'm an ever-benver to Steve Carlton." colpheps, Deevan said Hoelfring, a strength and flexibility coach, urged him, Carlton and other Phillies pitchers to work out during spring training by saying no one could know which of them would win the 1983 Cy Young Award. "Most of that went in one ear and out the other," he said. "But when I did hear it, I looked over at Steve Carlton. Never in my wildest dreams did I think that I would win this award." Striking NBA refs picket outside Boston Garden 32 NK BO BOSTON — While striking NBA referees demonstrated outside Boston Garden last night, the Celtics played against Milwaukee as scheduled. Celtic Kevin McHale, right, attempts to pass to Larry Bird, left, in the second period. Bird's 27 points lifted the Celtics to a 119-105 victory over the Buckets. United Press International Union referees, NBA still at an impasse in pay negotiations By United Press International BOSTON — At least a dozen striba NBA referees and their chief attorney walked a picket line last night in front of Boston. They were met with the fans' about their impasses with the league. The officials also distributed 2,000 toy whistles before the game. "It's just a fun thing with the fans, and it takes away the bored of the picket line," referee Ed Rush said. The referees have not worked any exhibition games and have been replaced with stuntman. "The league made a decision to lock us out, and we're trying for fair negotiations." Rush said. "Unfortunately, to quote one of their owners, they want to bring us to our knees. What they're saying is that we’re not worth it, and we can be replaced." UNION COUNSEL Richie Phillips, who also represents major league baseball umps, told the fans that they would not be involved in the national game because of the referees' walkout. "We're here to bring the message to the fans they're the ultimate consumer," Philips said. "Once the league recognizes the referrals referrer make, they sit down and talk." On Tuesday, representatives for the NBA and the referees' union met for 31/2 hours in New York, but no substantial progress was made in the ongoing dispute. The NBA said that it increased its playoff salary proposal by 50 percent, but that there was little or no movement on the part of the union. In addition, the union continued to counter-proposal to the NBA's wage proposal, which was made nearly two weeks ago. NBA commissioner Larry O'Brien, members of the Labor Relations Committee, the league's negotiating team and Phillips attended the meeting. 2 KU Olympic-bound athletes to be on television By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer Both athletes qualified for the 1980 Olympic team in their respective sports but were unable to participate because of United States boycotted the Moscow games. Woodard, currently an assistant women's basketball coach, won the Wade Trophy Award in March 1981. Two KU athletes will be featured in a five-part series on Olympic hopefuls in Kansas on the *KSN News 6 O'clock* on KSNT-TV, channel 7 in Topeka. Lynette Woodard, former KU basketball player, Pan American gold medal winner and Olympian, will be featured along with former KU swimmer Ne Ruenug, also an Olympian. The series titled "California Dreamin'" has a senior. Woodward was an Academic All-America her junior and senior thus receiving recognition as the outstanding women's basketball player in the nation. She was also named a member of the NCAA All-Star team and was an NCAA Top Five Award winner NEUGEN HAS SIX KU swim records and two Big Eight Conference The article featured Thomas in a full-page photograph, leaning against a poolside ladder in a one-piece, red swimsuit with pink, yellow and white horizontal stripes. The feature showcased 10 athletes and was titled "Best Bodies - Sportstyle chooses the choice specimen." Former KU swimmer and Olympie hopeful Tammy Thomas appeared in the November issue of Sportstyle magazine as part of a photo feature on the latest swimwear and workout fashions. The magazine said, "At 6'1", 150 lbs. Tammy Thomas is an awesome figure poolside. Her sledge状 of the art body was formed by a lifetime of competitive swimming. Magazine features Thomas as a 'choice specimen' "This twenty-two-year-old University of Kansas senior was unknown until last March when she broke the 50- and 100-meter freestyle American records at the NCAA championships." records to his credit. The school records are the 200- 500, 1,000 and 1,650-yard freestyles; the 200-yard butterfly; and the 400-yard individual medley. The conference records are in the 200-yard butterfly and the 400-yard individual medley. He also holds the 300-yard one-meter freestyle in a 25-meter course. Kim Biehl, producer of the same series at KSNW-TV in Wichita, said the goal was to talk to five athletes from the state of Kansas who had a chance to make it to the Olympics next summer in Los Angeles and to have those athletes represent different areas in the state. The athletes who will appear in the series are Lisa Neuburger, a wind surfer from Wichita, on Monday; Neugent, on Tuesday; Doug Lytle, a Kansas State University pole vaulter, on Wednesday; Woodard, on Thursday; and Gene Gilsdorf, a 30-year-old weight liftter from Onega, on Friday. NCAA seeks President's Commission Panel would have less jurisdiction than ACE suggests By United Press International MISSION — The NCAA Council has announced that it would propose legislation at the 1984 NCAA convention in Dallas that would establish a President's Commission, but with far less power than one earlier recommended by the American Council on Education. The council's proposal, which also will be presented at the 78th annual convention, would allow a board of chief executive officers, university president or reserve or relase any position passed by the NCA and to enact its own rules. But NCAA president John Toner said the recommended President's Commission would just as effectively university presidents in athletic matters. "THIS IS A MAJOR commitment by the Council to develop a meaningful alternative for more involvement by chief executive officers in the overall governance and control of intercollegiate athletics." Toner said. "The NCAA was founded on democratic principles and always has strived to encourage participation by chief executive officers in NCAA matters." Backers of the President's Commission plan has charged that the council's proposal takes the control of the NCAA out of the hands of the annual convention and puts it solely into a board of university presidents. Either proposal would take a two-thirds majority vote of the nearly 800 NCAA member schools to become part of the constitution. UNDER THE PROPOSED legislation, Division I schools would have 22 members while Division II and III would have 11 each. At least three women chief executive officers would be included in that number. The NCAA Special Committee on Governance submitted a detailed proposal Tuesday that would incorporate a body of 44 chief executive officers into the NCAA convention, adopted the proposal and elections be made at the NCAA convention. Each member of the President's Commission would serve a four-year term with the commission being appointed by the clerk who would serve a two-year term. The commission would be empowered to: - review any activity of the NCAA. - place any matter of concern on the agenda for any meeting of the Council on Climate Change. - commission studies of matters of concern in intercollegiate athletics and urge certain courses of action; - *propose legislation directly to the convention; - establish the final sequence of legislative proposals in any convention agenda; - call for a special meeting of the NCAA on a two-thirds vote. THE COUNCIL PROPOSAL, however, not only would you give the presidents power to suspend or replace any legislation passed by the NCAA convention but also would be able to enact its own rules apart from the convention. Both types of action would be reversible only by a two-thirds recidence vote by the entire NCAA membership at a subsequent convention. "The ACE's proposal clearly questions the integrity of the democratic legislative process that has been the basis of the NCAA existence for nearly 80 years," said Arliss Roaden, president of Tennessee Tech and a member of the NCAA Special Committee on Governance Review. "The individuals most closely associated with the everyday problems of college athletics — faculty representatives, directors of athletics, primary women administrators and adversarial position in regard to those who authorize them as delegates to consider legislation at the NCAA convention." Comets may be a contender despite loss of two stars By United Press International The Comets finished their second Major Indoor Soccer League season with a 26-22 record and a fourth-place standing in the Western Division last year and promptly shed two of the better players on that team, goalkeeper Victor Petromi and forward Yilmaz Orhan. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Comets look a lot better on a soccer field than they do on mana Petromi finished as the No. 5-rated goalie in the MISL with a 14-10 record and a 4.49 goals-against average, while Orhan led the Comets in scoring with a club-record 43 goals and 26 assists and earned league all-star honors. Petroni was traded to the Phoenix during the offseason and Orhan was given his release in training camp because of disciplinary problems. But Kansas City Coach Pat McRide expects his team to be stronger both on offense and defense despite the departure of those two stars. THAT'S BECAUSE the Comets have added goalkeeper Manny Schwartz, formerly of the Steamers, and also four proven front-lineers in Tasso Koutsoukos and Tim Twellman from the Chicago Stiff, John Stremlau from St. Louis and Gordon Hill from the New York Arrows. Schwartz signed with Kansas City after leading the Comets to a 6-5 exhibition victory over a touring Russian team (Dynamo Minsk) last summer. Schwartz, playing on loan from the Steamers, made 15 saves and McBride rotated Petroni and DiPede last season and figures to do the same winter with Schwartz and DiPede, who was the No. 7-rated goalkeeper in the MISL a year ago with a 12-12 record and a 4.38 goals against average. allowed only one goal after relieving Enzo DpDede in the net in the second half to help the Comets rally from a 2-0 lead and be assisted on the winning game in overtime. "THESE GUYS REMIND me of the hockey goalies Jacques Plante and Glenn Hall for St. Louis when the Blues first came into the league." McGrieve "Plante was a wild man and Hall played goal in the orthodox, traditional sense." "Manny is like Plante. He's physically more intimidating than Enzo and likes to roam around out of the net. "When Stremla was in St. Louis," McBride said, "his job was not to score goals. He was supposed to set up Tony Ackley for the home run. That won't be the case here. We're Forwards tend to stay away from the front of the net when Manny's out there because there could be a collision. Enzo, on the other hand, is like Hall. He plays the percentages." Koutsoukos was the No. 3 scorer on the Sting last season, with 36 goals, including a team-high six gamew winners, and Twellman scored 13 times while playing defense a year ago. McBride has since moved him to forward. Hill scored 26 goals in 1982-83 and Stremlau tailed only five — but he'll have a different role with the Comets that he did with the Steamers. looking for John to carry a good chunk of the scoring load." THE FRONT-LINE WILL be bolstered by returnees Elson Seale (30 goals a year ago), Zoran Saciv (26 goals) and Stuart Lee (24 goals). Schwartz and DiPede will get plenty of minutes. Alexei Kuznetsov, Makowski and Tim Clark, who were both selected to play in the All-Star Game last season. "We enjoyed some success last year," McBride said. "We won some games and made the playoffs. Now we've got to prove our accomplishments weren't a fluke. This is going to be our challenge year." More Sports, p. 11 New troubleshooter The University Daily Reagan names Donald Rumsfeld as Middle East envoy Inside, p. 9 KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas COOL M Vol. 94, No. 55 (USPS 650-649) High 60. Low 50. Details on p.2 Friday morning, November 4, 1983 President dismisses reporter's comment on Grenadian action By United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan, announcing U.S. troops would pull out of Grenada soon, yesterday angrily rejected comparisons of America's military "liberation" of the island and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. "Oh, for heaven sakes," Reagan said when asked whether the U.S. invasion of the tiny Caribbean island was made by Moscow's intervention in Afghanistan On two other occasions during a brief session with reporters in the White House briefing room, the usually unflappable Reagan bristled at questions about what the Grenada operation means to U.S. foreign policy. my breakfast." And he chided reporters for parroring Nicaraguan leaders' assertions that their nation might be next on a U.S. military hit list. "I haven't believed anything they've been saying since they got in charge," Reagan said of the Sandinistas, "and you shouldn't either." THE SESSION OPENED with Reagan smiling as he delivered a statement announcing the "situation is stable" on his own, "military resistance" has ceased. "Our objectives have been achieved and as soon as logistics permit American personnel will be leaving," he said, reporting that Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger told U.S. commanders in the field Wednesday "to begin withdrawing their forces within a few days." "The operation was See REAGAN, p. 5, col. 1 Chairman appointed for computer science By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter William Bulgren, professor of computer science and mathematics, yesterday was named acting chairman of the department of computer science. Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, appointed Bulgen to replace Victor Wallace, who resigned as department chairman Oct. 11. CHAE JIN LEE, associate dean of the College, made the announcement for Lineberry, who is attending the college to accept a College Deans in San Antonio, Texas. Bulgren will begin his duties Nov. 15 and will serve until a permanent headmaster resumes. "The department has a number of difficult challenges and opportunities." Wallace said he resigned because he was frustrated by a lack of financial resources in meeting the department's requirements, course load and service demands. The appointment came after Lineberry withdrew his original offer to have Bulgen and Jerzy Grzymalna computer science, act as co-chairman. Lee said. "We are pleased he is willing to give the necessary intellectual and administrative leadership for the department." Minorities Have Rights Clearly, There can be no Purpose for BIGOTRY, INTOLERANCE, RACIAL OR SEXUAL DISCRIMINATION" GENE BUDIG CHANCELLOR RACISM LIVES LET'S KILL IT!! Grzymala-Busse said that as an alternative, Lineberry offered him the position of acting associate chairman. Grzymala-Busse refused the position and said he thought the position would be ineffectual. In a brief interview, Bulgren said he thought the department would be most helpful. HE SAID THATif the administration in the College had wanted to have the department run by more than one chairman, he would have complied. "The department has to get off on the right foot," Bulgren said. "Things had to be worked out in a certain way. My way to do it is to make sure the department of computer science is a growing, positive entity on campus." About 70 demonstrators stage a silent protest outside Murphy Hall. Last night's rally concerned disputes over casting for the musical 'Hair.' Discrimination alleged in casting of 'Hair' By GUELMA ANDERSON Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The anti-war themes of the University Theatre production of "Hair" now generate less controversy than when the musical was first produced. But behind the scenes of the KU production a controversy of another sort has emerged — one of alleged discrimination. JOSIE WASHINGTON, Lawrence senior, and Christine Cressie, St. Louis junior, said yesterday that they were planning to file a formal complaint of discrimination about the casting of the play with the office of affirmative action against specific members of the theatre department. Washington said that she was not told that her options were only for those roles designated in the script as black roles. During auditions in August, Washington said she was asked to sing but was never tested for her voice range. Along with singing, she expected to do a reading audition, but said that the next day the cast had already been selected. Washington said that she was cast as part of the crowd designated in the musical as black and that she won. How could I be cast without reading? Crescise auditioned for the open call for the musical, which consisted of reading, dancing, singing and a group performance. She also worked with Washington as part of the chorus. WASHINGTON AND Cressie said that they had approached the department about the matter after they saw the cast list. A meeting was conducted between them, two repre- sentative departments and the direction of the production. "But they 'did not remedy the problem' presented them with, Washington said. Ronald Willis, chairman of the department of theatre, said that he had pursued a plan to allow more men. Valerie Sue Jones, Montpellier, Vl., graduate student and the director of the production, said last night that she would discuss the casting for the performance. Washington said that she and Cresslie wanted the show recast and that they sought counsel at the office of minority affairs. MEMEMERS OF THE production said that they did not think the production "I think it's a shame that this sort of shadow is being cast on the theatre." Ken Wheatley, shop foreman at the theatre, said last night. Vernell Spearman, acting director for the office of minority affairs, said that she advised Washington and Cressie to call the office of affirmative action, as she would advise any other member of the student body, faculty or staff with a complaint of discrimination. Washington and Cressie decided to delay making a formal complaint with the office and instead decided to initiate a silent protest at last night's opening. "The route we chose was to speak to the black population here at KU to involve them and make them aware of the channels available to them if they ever had a problem with discrimination." Cressie said. University committee to consider divestiture from S. Africa By DONNA WOODS Staff Reporter money to state corporations or to the state powerpent. Since 1978 the KU Committee on South Africa has been trying to persuade the KU Endowment Association to divest funds from South Africa. This decision by the local governance has decided to explore the issue. At a meeting yesterday, University Council members decided to refer to the Human Relations Committee a resolution that calls for the divestment of funds, or sale of holdings, from corporations that directly participate in the South African economy and from banks that loan The KU Endowment Association reportedly has $8 million invested in American corporations operating in South Africa, said Edward Dutton, associate professor of social welfare. THE COMMITTEE WAS directed to gather testimony favoring or opposing the resolution. The committee must report its findings and submit recommendations to the Council by March 1. Don Marquis, professor of philosophy, said he submitted the resolution and the mandates to the committee because he thought the issue was a moral one that should not be ignored. The KU Committee on South Africa last year met with the Board of Trustees for the Endowment Association, a member said, but the board responded to the committee's presentation. He said that he had written a letter to the University Senate Executive Committee last He has expressed interest in the matter again this year to SenEx, he said. Dutton said that although the Endowment Association listened to last year's presentation, it did not accept his offer. MEMBERS OF THE American Association of University Professors have also discussed the issues raised by the recent attacks. Dutton said the Endowment Association is adamant in its position and will not divest Marquis said that he was not involved in the KU Committee on South Africa and that he did not know of any other involvement. Proponents of divestiture of funds from South Africa maintain that such funds $cp$ to support a white-supremist society that daily oppresses the so-called political and economic rights of a black population. But he said that University governance should be better informed about the divestiture issue. Opponents argue that corporate involvement in South Africa is a good influence on the oppressive government and that corporations will create fair labor practices and social policies. PRAIRIE TERRACE One-year-old Daniel Jiricanto keeps the raindrops off his head but has some trouble balancing the umbrella. Daniel is the son of Alan and Karen Jiricanto, alumni from Columbus, Ohio, who are in Lawrence for the American Chemical Society Conference at the Kansas Union. Stanben Phillips/KANSAN Living under martial law in Poland is inspiration for professor's writings By BRUCE F. HONOMICHL Staff Reporter Hebald, a KU associate professor of English, went to Poland to find her roots and fresh inspiration for writing. She returned to America with inspiration, but an ache in her heart. She returned as a witness to the imposition of martial law. For 12 months, Carol Hebab boiled her tap water to kill bacteria, like every other Pole. When guests visited, she ran the water full blast to evade governmental wires.taps. Her eyes stung for days from tear gas that police used to subdue protesters at May Day ceremonies. I will not forget you. HEBALD, WHO TAUGHT at the University of Warsaw on an exchange program in the 1981-82 school year, has been back at the University of Kansas since the fall semester. She is now working on a novel about Poland based on her year there and last week recounted some of her experiences in Poland in an English department colloquium. She also has written articles for several literary magazines on her year in Poland. Carol Hebald "I hurt for the Polish people when I left," she said. "Not for myself, but for the people. The military government took away so many things." "World War II is remembered so well there. Parents never let their children forget about it. Everyone in Poland lost a relative. But they see the rule by Moscow as just as bad. The Nazis didn't starve them. Now, they get just a little meat a month, usually about six pounds." She said that without hesitation she had signed up for the International Academic Exchange Program, because she had wanted to find the house in which her father had been born in Krakow and to learn what it was like to live among the Poles. "My mother was American, an excellent scholar," she said. "But she scrubbed floors at age 12. She always said. 'You don't know what See POLAND, p. 5, col. 1 Bill seeks to oust head of elections in Student Senate Staff Reporter Bv PETE WICKLUND Two student senators and a non-elected Senate Committee chairman yesterday introduced a bill to the Senate that calls for removal of the chairman of the Senate Committees. Lawhorn and Coffelt are running for Senate seats with Momentum, whose president and vice president candidates, Kevin Walker and McKee, have been barred from the ballot. The bill asks that Elections Chairman Jim Clark be removed from office because of "various violations of practical and moral ethics." The bill also charges Clark with being unfamiliar with the Senate elections process. Lawhore was out of town yesterday, but Russ Pitacek, Nunemaker senator, said that Lawhore's proposal was an attempt to ensure that the elections on Nov. 16-17 were run CLARK SAID THAT he was new to the chairman position, but that he had not broken any Senate rules. He went on to say that the bill was politically influenced by the Momentum Coalition, whose candidates are running in this month's student elections. Charles Lawhorn, chairman of the Senate Services Committee, was the bill's author, and senators Cheri Brown and Chris Coffelt introduced the measure. "As Student Services chair, I see, and I think Charles feels, that it is one of his responsibilities that the students' interests are protected." Placek said. Piacek, who is also the Momentum Coalition campaign chairman, denied that his own team was involved. "We didn't know about it until Charles, Cheri and Chris showed us a copy of the bill." CLARK DISAGREED AND said that the allegations made in the bill were groundless. "It seems that the driving force is coming from Momentum," Clark said. "It's interesting that the other coaltions haven't come forth with any charges." See CLARK, p. 5, col. 4 1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 4. 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Officers quarantine towns after earthquake in Turkey ERZURUM, Turkey — Military officials quarantined dozens of villages Thursday to stem the spread of disease from animal carcasses killed in an earthquake that killed at least 1,333 people and left 30,000 others homeless. The death toll was expected to rise even higher because many other villagers still were missing, officials said. Military officials said that the villages were quarantined because medical teams suspected that carcasses of farm animals could spread disease. Recovery crews sprayed the rubble with disinfectants and poured chlorine into wells after pulling out bodies in some villages. Congressman assails crop payments WASHINGTON — A California congressman, releasing names of 15 large U.S. farms which have gotten commodities worth more than $23 million for not growing crops this year, yesterday threatened to file a lawsuit to recover large sups paid to farmers. The General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, has issued a non-binding opinion stating that payment-in-kind payments in excess of $50,000 per farm were illegal. So Rep. Fortney Stark, D-Calif, chairman of the Ways and Means Select Revenue Measures subcommittee, said he is "considering filing a suit on behalf of the taxpayers to recover these millions of dollars of illegal payments." A Kansas farm, Hughes Livestock Inc., Syracuse, appeared on Stark's list, Stark reported that Hughes received $333,388 in sorghum money. Israel tests mobilization of reserves TEL AVIV, Israel — Israel, for the first time in five years, set in motion Thursday a test mobilization of 400,000 reserve troops and demanded that the Palestine Liberation Organization guarantee the safety of six prisoners held in a Syrian-besieged base in Lebanon. A senior army official said that Israel's Arab neighbors were informed about the mobilization drill "through certain channels" to avoid misunderstanding that the test was a preparation for war. The exact date of the exercise was not disclosed The officer said the exercise had been planned for five months and was intended to reevaluate emergency call-up procedures. Computer hacker pleads not guilty LOS ANGELES — A college sophomore described as an outstanding and law-abiding student pleaded not guilty yesterday to charges he used his home computer to penetrate a Pentagon international computer network. Bail for Ronald Austin, 19, was set at $2,000 by Municipal Court Judge Michael Tynan, who told the defendant to stay away from computers and return to court on Dec. 2 for a preliminary hearing. Austin, a UCLA physics major, faces 14 counts of maliciously accessing information at universities and institutions doing research work under Department of Defense grants. He also faces single counts of theft and receiving stolen property. Indian officials arrest Sikh terrorists NEW DELHI, India — Police arrested 1,700 people in the northern state of Punjab in a government crackdown on militant members of the Sikh faith demanding political and religious autonomy, officials said yesterday. Moderate leaders of the popular Sikh Akali Dal Party have tried to keep protest against the central government peaceful, but a handful of terrorists has killed security officers, derailed trains, planted bombs and robbed banks. The government of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi hopes to stop the violence because Punjab is also at the center of India's grain-producing region. Chevron official predicts oil surplus SAN FRANCISCO — Uniess supplies are cut off by Mideast turmoil, consumers should enjoy oil surpluses and stable prices for the next decade, an oil industry executive said Wednesday. Chevron U.S.A. President Kenneth T. Deer, speaking to the Society of Automotive Engineers, said he does not forsce "another dramatic boom cycle in the oil business anytime soon." "To the contrary, our industry's recovery is likely to be gradual." Deer asserted. "After 1990, supply and demand should tighten enough to cause oil prices to once again increase faster than inflation — although not by the quantum leaps experienced in the '70s." Not until the 21st century will "reliance on oil as our primary source of energy begin to fade." Deer said. Dog mauls 3-year-old boy to death HOLTON, Mich. — A 3-year-old boy was mauled to death yesterday by one of an estimated 25 large dogs his parents kept at their home, officials said. The child, Mason Scurlock, was attacked by a 60 pound Malamute and was pronounced dead a little more than an hour after the attack, Muskegon County Deputy Michael Prow said. The animal was confiscated by the Muskegon County Animal Control unit, Prow said. Mason became the fourth victim of a dog attack in the last three weeks Mason was found lying near the dog by his mother, Pamela Scurlock. The boy t father, Michael Scurlock, guesses that the child was attacked by a dog. WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 P.M. EST 11-4-83 SEATTLE HIGH COOL MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON NEW YORK FAIR LOW COOL BOSTON CHICAGO FAIR DENVER ATLANTA SAN FRANCisco DALLAS NEW ORLEANS MIAMI HIGHEST TEMPERATURES 60 60 80 UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-4-83 Today will be rainy over parts of the lower Plains and over many of the northeastern states. Locally, today will be mostly sunny with a high in the mid- to upper 60s, according to the National Weather Bureau in Topeka. 60s, according to the National Gazette. Tonight will be fair with a low around 50. Tonight will be rain with a low tide. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the mid-60s. Arafat leads troops against leftist forces By United Press International ARAFAT, WHO HAS Failed to control a growing leftist revolt against his leadership of the Palestine Liberation Organization, appealed to Arab, non-aligned and East bloc leaders to halt "this dangerous situation." The fighting erupted at dawn in the northern Lebanese port of Tripoli, with tanks and 100 artillery pieces firing 70 rounds a minute into the besieged Arafat compound in the Baddawi and Bared refuge camps. Yasser Arafat led 5,000 troops in a fight for survival yesterday against an all-out tank and artillery blitz by Syrian, Libyan and PLO rebels seeking to drive the embattled guerrilla chief from his last Lebanese stronghold. Police said at least 60 people were killed. The rebels, in a broadcast from Damascus, claimed that they took the heights overlooking the refugee camps under the orders of Arafat's forces had deserted. He also urged Syrian President Hafez Assad to halt the attack before the 40,000 Palestinian refugees in the camps were massacred and the rebels fulfilled what Israel failed to achieve in its invasion of Lebanon 17 months ago. "We are surrounded on all sides," he told the Lahese Press News. He asked Assad to personally intervene to halt the "meaningless" onslaught and urged Arab leaders to "prevent a Sabra and Shatila style massacre," referring to the killing of 160 people by Christian Lebanese in two Palestinian refugee camps in Beirut. Arafat said his supporters were "tied up with being treated like rats" and told London's Daily Express newspaper that the terrorist cried that Syria was to kill him. He said they acted like "packs of hunting dogs . . . with a taste for the kill." POLICE SAID AT least 60 people were killed and more than 100 others were wounded. Rescuers were prevented from reaching most of the embattled camps, and police said they expected the death toll to swell. Damascus radio claimed that its forces were not involved in the fighting, but Lebanese police said at least one of the killed was a regular Syrian army soldier. News reports said that terrified women and children fled down the coastal road to shelter in the center of Triolii. The fighting centered in the two refugee camps north of Tripoli, Mount Torbal overlooking the camps from the southern side. The oil tanks exploded after being shelled. T.G.I.F. (THANK GAMMONS IT'S FRIDAY) DON'T FORGET OUR SPECIAL— STUDENT HAPPY HOURS EVERY FRIDAY T.G.I.F. (THANK GAMMONS IT'S FRIDAY) DON'T FORGET OUR SPECIAL— STUDENT HAPPY HOURS EVERY FRIDAY GAMMONS SNOWFLAKE 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 GAMMONS SNOW Muslims agree to put Israeli accord on hold By United Press International GENEVA. Switzerland — Lebanese Muslims, softening their stand in peace talks, agreed with the Christian government yesterday to freeze the Israeli security accord and to withdraw 30,000 Israeli troops. The agreement removed a key obstacle that threatened to doom the talks among the nine major Lebanese political and religious rivals and represented a major Muslim rupture with their Syrian advisers who wanted the accord scrapped outright. A unanimously adopted resolution temporarily set aside implementation of the May 17 Israel accord and urged President Admirin Gemayel to visit Washington and Arab Israel to ensure "to end the Israel occupation." GEMAYEL SAID HE would suspend the peace talks Saturday. travel to Washington next week, and then reconvene the reconciliation conference in Geneva to report on his diplomatic appeals In Washington, a State Department spokesman reached before the freeze decision was announced, said that the U.S. would stand by the existing 'excellent' freeze decision, meeting after the news, said that the freeze 'sounds reasonable, since it was frozen anyway.' There was no immediate response from Israel, but it warned earlier that its 30,000 troops would seal off Lebanon up to the Aawari River and — in essence — partition the nation if the accord was canceled. The accord, signed May 17 by Gemayel, calls for an Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon in exchange for guarantees of security on its northern border and normalized trade and trade relations in the future. S.U.A. Fine Arts Committee presents: The First Annual Crafts Bazaar A perfect opportunity to purchase Christmas gifts. November 29 & 30 Kansas Union Lobby Attention Campus Community: If you are interested in participating in the Bazaar pick up an application from the SUA Office. Deadline: Nov. 11, 5 p.m. WD TOWN WED & MON Birkenstock Danish Swedish CLOGS MICKS 1339 MASS. 843-5650 Outdoor Outfitters GEORGE BENSON BREEZIN' Includes the Hit This Me! Also includes: Six to Four GEORGE BENSON BREEZIN' CASSETTE GET SUPER SAVINGS NOW FROM WARNER—ELEKTRA—ATLANTIC AND KIEF'S RECORDS! MFG. LIST: $6.98 MINIS GROVER WASHINGTON JR. WINELIGHT INCLUDES JUST THE TWO OF US WHEN LIGHT LEFT IT FLOW RICKIE LEE JONES Includes The Hits Chuck E. X in Love and Stronglead Also Includes Easy Money The Last chance Texaco Danny's All-Star Joint KIEF'S SALE $4.49 OR 5 FOR $20.00 GET THE SUPER RECORDINGS PICTURED ABOVE PLUS HUNDREDS OF OTHER GREAT HITS FROM ARTISTS LIKE: ABBA, B-52'S, JACKSON BROWNE, DOORS, EAGLES, JIMI HENDRIX, TALKING HEADS, JONI MITCHELL, LED ZEPPELIN, JEAN LUC PONTY, ROXY MUSIC, MANHATTAN TRANSFER, and PRINCE. KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE DISCOUNT STEREO shop HOLIDAY PLAZA RICKIE LEE JONES Includes That Day Chuck E. & I's In Love and Woundood Also Includes Easy Money The Last chance Resco Danny's All-Star Joint RICKIE LEE JONES CASSETTE GROVER MASHINGTON, JR WINELIGHT including JUST THE TWO OF US WINELIGHT LET IT FLOW CASSETTE STEVIE NICKS Bella Dorato LEATHER AND LAKE STOP DREAMING MY HEARL AROUND STEVIE NICKS THE HEROES OF LOVE CASSETTE Genesis abacab ONLY FOR NO REPLY AT ALL ANOTHER RECORD KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE DISCOUNT STEREO shop HOLIDAY PLAZA University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1983 Page NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Arson and assault charges filed against Topeka man Willis Seville Vance III was charged yesterday in Douglas County District Court with one count of aggravated arson and two counts of aggravated assault in connection with a fire Tuesday at a residence at 1233 Pennsylvania St. A preliminary hearing for Vance, who is from Topeka, will be at 11:15 a.m. on Nov. 11. The complaint charges that Vance committed aggravated assault by using a firearm. A police report said that one of the occupants of the house heard four gunshots as he and the other occupants were leaving the house through the front door to escape the fire on the back porch. A mother, her five children and a nephew escaped uninjured from the fire. The fire caused about $22,000 damage to the house, which the owner had estimated was worth $25,000. Residents to view downtown plans Vance is being held in Douglas County Jail on $25,000 bond. The two companies with proposals for downtown redevelopment will be presenting their plans to the six Lawrence neighborhood associations at 8 p.m. Monday. The presentation will be at the South Park Recreation Center, 1141 Massachusetts St., following a meeting of the Oread Neighborhood Association. John Stainbeck, the architect for Sizerler Realty Co. Inc., Kenner, La. will represent Sizerel. The Sizerel plan calls for a retail shopping center in the 700 and 800 blocks downtown, east of Massachusetts Street. Town Center Venture Corp., a local group, entered the redevelopment last month competition with a plan to close the 600 block of Massachusetts Street and build a mall between Vermont Street and the alley east of Massachusetts Street. The Lawrence City Commission is scheduled to pick one of the two developers Tuesday night to be the official downtown developer. Policeman testifies in forgerv trial A F' police officer testified yesterday in Douglas County District Court hat a student told him he had forged four checks that belonged to another student. Richard Rosenshein, a KU police detective, testified during the preliminary hearing for John Joseph Bristow, Leavenworth freshman, that the statement was made during questioning at by KU police. Bristow, a resident of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, is charged with one count of burglary of Timothy Scott McTague's room at JRP and with four counts of forging McTague's checks for $25.20 each. The checks were dated Oct. 18, 20, 21, and 22. Rosenshein said that he had interviewed Bristow on Oct. 27 and had requested samples of his handwriting, which Bristow gave voluntarily. Rosenhein said that he then compared Bristow's samples and Bristow's registration card from his residence hall with the four checks. ASK to discuss legislative agenda The Associated Students of Kansas, the state student lobby organization, will meet this weekend in Emporia to discuss their lobbying agenda, which they will present to the State Legislature this spring. Mark Tallman, the group's executive director, said that ASK members would discuss several lobbying possibilities at their two-day legislative assembly, which will begin at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Emporia State University. He said that of particular interest to ASK members would be the issues of merit pay for teachers and new national legislation on financial aid. Tallman said that on Sunday, state Rep. Jim Lowther, R-Emporia, will speak to the ASK legislative assembly. ON THE RECORD TOOLS WORTH about $1,730 were stolen sometime between 8:30 p.m. and 11:50 p.m. Wednesday from a car parked in the 1000 block in Massachusetts St., police said. Burglar entered after breaking a back door window frame. Police said they have a suspect. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news book at (013) 864-4810 The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse Come On Down To Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse and enjoy our Special Smoked Buffalo Right off the range at Paxico, Kansas Buffalo Wheels, Logs and Dinners Now through Sunday The same popular price as our Beef, Ham and Pork PRISN 719 Mass. Go K.G.- Beat the Golden Buffaloes Oklahoma man charged with mail fraud Case involves student-loan payments By Staff and Wire Reports A federal grand jury has indicted an Oklahoma man accused of defrauding two Kansas schools and colleges, and universities in 10 states, by collecting but withholding payments on federal student loans through his collection agency. KU officials said yesterday that KU was not involved in the action, but a spokesman for the U.S. District Court in Tulsa said that Emporia State University and its college are among the schools that were allegedly defrauded. Grand jurors returned a 16-count indictment Wednesday, naming Jon V. Chase of Skiatook, Okla., and Collegiate Recovery and Credit Assistance Programs Inc., of which Chase is president. John Pittenbarger, manager of general accounting, said that the University of Kansas did not use Chase's agency, but that it did use two other collection agencies to help it collect delinquent payments on National Direct Student Loans, the type of loan in which Chase's company specialized. Marvin Burris, Regents associate director for budget, said that those agencies, Credit Adjustment Co. of Wichita and North American Credit Services Inc. of Overland Park, were contracted by the Board of Regents to provide NDSL debt collection for Regents schools. After a school has failed to collect an account, it turns the account over to one of those agencies. Burris said the agencies handled 2,790 accounts, at least 80 percent of them for NDSLs, in 1982. KU SENDS AN average of 25 accounts a month to the collection agencies, Pittsburghbarger said, out of more than 10,000 active NDSL account. If one of those agencies fails to collect the account after a year or so, or indicates that it has no hope of collecting the account, the account is returned to the school. The school may continue its collection effort or give the account an agency for a "second referral." Chase's Oklahoma company was hired on a second referral basis by Emporia State and by Mid-America Nazaren. Pittsburgher said that such loans returned to KU would go to the other collection agency under contract by the state. If that failed, KU would return the loan to the federal Department of Education so that it could be taken off the University's books. The DOE would then continue the collection effort. OFFICIALS AT BOTH Emporia and Mid-America said they had received good service from the company until the team stopped. Many stopped returning collected money. and will return them to the school. He said he did not know how much money might be owed to Emporia State by the collection agency, and would not know until the school had verified the agency's figures. John Stephens, business manager at Mid-America Nazarene, said his school did not have a large amount of loans that he could pay off. He know how much they might be worth. John Blaufuss, Emporia State comproller, said, "We turned to them for deadbait accounts. Some of them had been totally inactive for years. They actually did an excellent job collecting for us." The company has about 42 Emporia State loan accounts now, Blaufuss said, IN OKLAHOMA, ATTORNEY NEW Mike Turpen had filed a lawsuit against Chase's company on behalf of Northeastern Oklahoma State University in Tahlequah, southwestern Oklahoma State University in Weatherford. Ohio State University in Alva and southeastern Oklahoma State University in Durant. Turpen's lawsuit alleged that the company had collected but withheld more than $33,000 from the four universities. In Wednesday's indictment, Chase was accused of defrauding colleges in Oklahoma. Mississippi, Kentucky, Missouri, Arkansas, Indiana, Mississippi, Arkansas and Ohio Budig wants student help with academic review By DONNA WOODS Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Chancellor Gene A. Budig said yesterday that KU administrators would study ways to involve students in the Board of Regents next academic year. I am convinced that students can play a meaningful role in the academic review process," he said in an address to University council members. Students were not involved in the Regents review process that last month led to Regents action that eliminated several degree programs at KU. Commenting on other actions taken by the Regents last month, Budig said he did not think the Regents resolution discouraging universities from asking for new programs, especially graduate programs, threatened existing graduate programs. KU FACULTY MEMBERS have expressed concern that the resolution indicated that the Regents favored strong union action at the level of graduate programs. However, Budig said he did not interpret the resolution in that manner. "I believe the Regents are saying that this is not the time to expand graduate programs unless there is a compelling need," he said. The Regents are committed to maintaining high quality graduate and professional programs at KU, Budig said. "I am certain that the Regents recognize and respect the fact that KU is and must remain a comprehensive institute of higher learning," he said. Budig also expressed optimism that the University's proposed fiscal year 1983 budget would be well-received this year, as it is reviewed by the State Legislature. "We have a defensible budget which enjoys strong support by the Board of Regents," he said. million over the 1984 operating budget of $94.3 million. Budig said that because the state's financial reports reflected an improving state economy, he hoped that some of the cuts would be budget in 1983 would be restored. THE PROPOSED BUDGET calls for an 11 percent increase of more than $10 "We believe we do have a chance for reinstatement," he said. Fiscal reports for the first quarter of fiscal year 1984 ending in September showed that the state's general fund estimates by $7.2 million, or 2.1 percent. However, the flow of revenues into state coffers has been increasing. The general fund was down by $19.6 million at the end of August. LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE ROCK & ROLL with the PEPPER CATS Free beer all night long! TONIGHT Doors open at 7:30 p.m. $5 Cover BREAK THE BORING BURGER HABIT Rax Feature: RESTAURANTS 707 W 83RD IN THE MALLS SHOPPING CTR LAWRENCE, KS 749-450, 761 All you care to eat, loaded with hot scrambled eggs, sausage, fresh fruit in season, peas and potatoes, the potato and much, much more. Plus, a deluxe weekend buffet! A Breakfast Buffet Only Rau can build six delicious cornbreads a nutritious potato Choose from: Barbecue, Cheese & Broccoli Bacon, Cheese & Broccoli Or grilled or roasted on the potato skin meal. Rax Potato Patch Endless Salad Bar Loaded with fresh ingredients plus two hot soups called, the Rax Soup & Salad Bar is sure to please everyone! TO EAT EXPIRS 13/21/83 AND OTHER OFFER WEEKEND BUFFET MILK CHEESE Rax HEALTHCARE 50¢ OFF ALL YOU CARE ALL COUPONS EXPIRE 1231/18 NOT GOOD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER OR DISCOUNT Rax RESTAURANTS Raxx 2 CHICKEN SANDWICHES ALL COUPONS EXPIRE 12/31/83 NOT GOOD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER OR DISCOUNT FOR $2.69 SAVE 81¢ 50¢ OFF ANY BAKED POTATO MEAL Rax RESTAURANTS ALL COUPONS EXPIRE 12/3/18 NOT GOOD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER OR DISCOUNT Raxx BBC SANDWICHES (BEEF, BACON & CHEEDAR) FOR $2.89 SAVE 89¢ 2 TURKEY BACON CLUB SANDWICHES RELICONS EXPIRY 12/31/183 NOT COUPD WITH HOLDER OR DECREMENT FOR $2.89 SAVE 89¢ Rax RAX ROAST BEER SANDWICH FOR 99c LOVING COUPS EXPIRE 12/31/83 NOT GOOD WITH ANY COUPON COUNT LIMIT 10 PER COUPON SAVE UP TO $4 $2.00 off haircut all semester with RGID Silver Clipper 842 1822 SEAN CONNERY NEVER SAY PG NEVER AGAIN 09:40 Mhk Sat 2:00 Ey VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1065 CHEVY CHASE DEAL CENTURY PITT STATE Mon Sat Sun 2-15 HILLCREST 1 971 AND IOWA TELEPHONE 842-8400 THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND Eve: 7-20 9:35 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:15 ALL NEW RIGHT and WOR Here and now R ALL NEW RICHARD BRYRD Here and you R Eve Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 3 Stephen King's THE DEAD ZONE Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 CINEMA 1 On October 14, 1964 Billy Mills stunned the world by running the most sensational race in Olympic history. But it wasn't how he finished, it was where he started that made him a champion ROBBY BENSON RUNNING BRAVE INTERNATIONAL PRODUCTION A MUSIC BY WILLIAM C. HARTLEY PRODUCTION DESIGNER JOHN ROBERTS MUSIC BY JOSHUA LEE PRODUCTION DIRECTOR JASON SMITH PAUL RIESMAN PRODUCTION EDITOR JASON RIESMAN WITH A FILM BY JOAN SMITH MUSIC BY JASON RIESMAN PRODUCTION DIRECTOR JASON RIESMAN WITH A FILM BY JOAN SMITH Eve: 7:35-8:35 Mat. Sat.Sun: 2:00 CINEMA 2 The eight star actors deliver one big Oscar... (n) this funny and ferociously smart movie! THE HILLCREST 3 TELEPHONE 815-2600 Stephen King's DEAD ZONE Eve: 9.30 9.30 Mat: Sat: 2:15 K 19 199 GIE ROBBY BENSON RUNNING Brave PUBLISHING PRODUCTIONS IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE COMMUNITY BANK WHERE THE RUNNING BRAVE THE RUNNING BRAVE THE RUNNING BRAVE MAKES A FANTASTIC WORLD OF MUSIC MAKE A FANTASTIC WORLD OF MUSIC PRODUCED BY D. J. HERTT Mati Sat-Sun 2:00 "The eight star actors deserve one big Oscar... (in this funny and ferociously smart movie) THE BIG CHILL Eve. 7:30-9:30 Sat. Sat.-Sun. 2:00 R OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 4,1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kansas is published at the University of Kansas. 118 Staffer Fint Hall, Kansas State University, Kannapolis, IN 47905, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer session excluding holidays. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 for each outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 a semester paid through the student activity program. POSTMATALY. Send proof of payment to University Daily Kansas, 118 Staffer Fint Hall, Kansas State University, Kannapolis, IN 47905. MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Editor DON KNOX Campus Editor PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager DAVE WANAMAKER MARK MEARS Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser King's holiday The clamor and debate has subsided, and President Reagan has signed a law creating a national holiday to honor Martin Luther King Jr. We think a holiday for the Rev. King is an appropriate thank-you to a man who taught an important lesson to all Americans. The third Monday in January will be set aside to remember King — a crusader not just for blacks, but for all people. The former minister and civil rights leader is remembered in a multitude of ways. He was a sensible, rational leader who committed his life to fighting racial discrimination, poverty and hatred. He sought to expand employment, housing and economic opportunities for blacks through peaceful means, instead of violence. He risked Lyndon B. Johnson's support of civil rights legislation by condemning the Vietnam War. When militant black leaders were setting buildings ablaze, King was organizing sit-ins and preaching a gospel of love. King is not fondly remembered by everyone, though. Southern government and civic leaders saw him as a threat to their ancient order of white supremacy. Reports have shown that J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI tried to embarrass King in a smear campaign, seeking to paint him as a Communist. King had his faults, no doubt. And many people argue, rightfully so, that Americans such as Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson deserve to be honored with a holiday. Others point to the cost of giving federal employees another day of vacation when the United States is facing record budget deficits. We think that the United States can bear the financial burden of honoring King, considering all the injustices that he and his race have endured in their quest for equal rights. The holiday will not only pay tribute to King, but will symbolize the oft-forgotten achievements of other American blacks, such as Frederick Douglass, George Washington Carver and Sojourner Truth. We hope the holiday will remind Americans of the legacy of love that King left behind, exemplified by his 1936 speech, "I have a Dream." "I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia, the sons of slaves and the sons of slaveowners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood." No more Mr. Nice Guy Ronald Reagan is a nicer man than Ward Cleaver, or even Robert Young. But that nice guy image doesn't give him the qualifications to inhabit the White House. Americans may not approve of Reagan's policies, but they like that niceness, according to a recent survey of 1,000 people conducted by the National Organization for Women. He has such a pleasant smile and gentlemanly demeanor. Nancy is nice, too. And the two of them have brought a little bit of Hollywood class to the presidency — such a clash with the rough-cut of the Carter administration. He's nice, yet he cuts money for the poor and jacks up the defense budget. He's nice, yet his policies put millions out of work and millions of others closer to desperation. He's nice, yet he spends the lives of U.S. soldiers for questionable causes. And the hangman smiled when he pulled the lever. The American public must put away their penchant for accepting the superficial and look deeper this election. What they'll find, behind the niceness, they'll probably not like. "President Reagan's continued support for increased military spending at the expense of education and social programs does not reflect the priorities of the American people, said NOW President Judy Goldsmith. "While Ronald Reagan may be personally a nice man, he is also personally president of the United States and these policies are his policies and people need to be clear about it. "If they are not, they will possibly go out and re-elect this very nice man who will give us four more years of regressive, oppressive policies." Dangerous precedent Despite its rhetoric about preserving and expanding freedom, the Reagan administration now seeks to increase federal secretiveness and impose censorship on others. The invasion of Grenada provides the freshest example. By denying U.S. journalists an opportunity to report firsthand on the post-invasion fighting in Grenada, Reagan administration officials acted in the same spirit that marked their attempts to weaken the Freedom of Information Act and to gag thousands of federal employees for the rest of their lives. Unless the U.S. people show themselves unwilling to settle for what the government decides to spoon-feed them in its own good time, the news blackout could be repeated again and again. The blackout of the news media on Grenada didn't come from fear of hordes of reporters and TV cameramen interfering with a military operation. No, the Reagan administration simply gave the impression that it didn't want to bother with one of the niceties of a democracy. -Raleigh [N.C.] News & Observer The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kanasan also invites individuals to submit his columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansas office, 111 Staffier-Flint Hall. The Kanasan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. LETTERS POLICY chilling reminder A chilling reminder of the other day was a terrifying moment in the history of war. The image shows a soldier lying on his back, surrounded by debris and blood. He appears to be dead or severely injured. The soldier's arm is outstretched, and he seems to be in a state of despair or hopelessness. The scene is set in an urban environment, with buildings and roads visible in the background. The sky is dark, suggesting that it might be nighttime. The word "chilling" is repeated twice in the image, emphasizing the serious nature of the situation. It could be referring to the fear of violence or the haunting memory of past conflicts. The text surrounding the image is not clearly legible, but it appears to be part of a larger document or article. The text is likely related to the events depicted in the image, possibly discussing the aftermath of war, the importance of remembrance, or the impact of war on society. The image does not contain any identifiable people or figures. It focuses solely on the soldier and the immediate surroundings. Purpose of killer dog passed with the days of pit fighting manslaughter. Harper's police chief had ordered Reynolds to keep the dogs leashed after one of them snapped at a city employee. It may not be news if a dog bites a man, but it certainly is if the victim dies. JESSE BARKER Staff Columnist In a recent attack, two of man's best friends mauled a 67-year-old woman, displaying something less than nobility in nature. A pair of pit bull terriers attacked Grace Parsons, a Harper woman, when she left the safety of her home to pick up her newspaper. The dogs tore off her scalp and dragged her 60 feet. She died later in a hospital. The dogs have been destroyed. Their owner, David Reynolds, has been charged with involuntary Reynolds said he had trained the dogs to react to weapons. Parsons reportedly had thrown a rock at the dogs two weeks before the attack. What type of person feels a need to train pit bull terriers to attack? Who needs a dog with such deadly potential? Is some sort of macho yearning satisfied by walking a dog down the street that can kill a person? The military, certain police forces and some security guards may have a legitimate, day-to-day need for a dog capable of killing. But what rationale can there be for the average person to own such a dog? The pit bull terrier was bred by crossing terriers and bulldogs, specifically for use in "sports" like bull and bear baiting. Pit Bull terriers have short, stiff coats, broad shoulders, narrow hips, a long, tapering muzzle and small, piggish eyes. They were designed to kill. The American Humane Association says it usually receives one report a year of a dog killing a person. These are not wolves, jackals, or dingos. These are domestic dogs — pets. I have no prejudice against dogs in general. Our family pet is a mixed breed that looks like a Samoyed, with less hair. Ostensibly a watchdog, it sleeps at night until one of the family arrives home. Then it starts ferociously and completes a circuit of the yard, grabs an object, and chasing all trespassing rabbits, and taking care not to endanger any. When it does detect something or someone prowling about, it barks fiercely until the danger is past — from the safety of the yardlight's circle, and directly under my window. It is cowardly, harmless as a watchdog and great as a pet. But some dogs are dangerous. Perhaps some large dogs should be kept in zoos with the other dangerous animals. Little dogs pose much less danger than large dogs, especially those that have been trained to attack. Perhaps dogs should be limited to a size whereby any disagreement can be settled with a quick, brisk kick in he ribs. A gentle punt will effectively take the fight right out of a small dog. If Stephen King's "Cujó" had been a Chihuahua instead of a Saint Bernard, the novel would have been reduced to a short story. At the first sign of trouble the lady could have stepped out of her car and dispatched the nasty little dog with one blow to the chuhaua. Perhaps pit bull terrifiers should be licensed, as handguns are, before they legally can be trained to attack. Since pit fighting and bear baiting The military, certain police forces and some security guards may have a legitimate, day-to-day need for a dog capable of killing. But what rationale can there be for the average person to own such a dog? are illegal, the pit bull terrier has little legitimate use in modern society. He was bred for a way of life, and death, that no longer exists. The trained pit bull terrier is an anachronism. Rawdon B. Lee, in his book on terriers, recounted stories of Jacko, the greatest bull terrier in history. Jacko won 200 rat-killing matches in England in the 1860s, and "amongst other deeds he succeeded as master in 40 cows in 5 min. 28 sec. and 1,000 rats in less than 100 min." A swell quality for a modern pet. Agreement could doom Geneva talks BEIRUT. Lebanon — The Israeli-Lebanese withdrawal accord — an agreement that has yet to be implemented — threats to doom the talks in Geneva, Switzerland, that would end nearly eight years of war between Lebanon's Muslims and Christians. Syria, which heavily backs the main Lebanese opposition group, the National Salvation Front, insists that there will be no peace unless the war is scrapped and its 40,000 troops will remain in eastern Lebanon. Israel, which signed the accord with the Christian-led government of Amir Gammayel, warns that its president has been forced Lebanon by the pact is scrapped There is, as yet, no public display of moderation. The United States officially supports the Israeli position, a point Gemayel must take into serious consideration given the important help he receives from U.S. Marines and Pentagon military advisers. When asked what the American reaction would be if the Lebanese factions agreed unanimously to SCOTT MACLEOD United Press International serap the accord, a Western diplomat familiar with U.S. policy replied, "If Lebanon throws it out, I don't suppose the United States will respond with Lebanon, but it would probably try to take them out of it." According to Western diplomats, one reason for U.S. pressure is that President Reagan considers the United States a 'peacemaker' policy — a 'peacemaking' symbol. But Lebanon is not Egypt Whereas Anwar Sadat freely went to Jerusalem, Gemayel's government said it signed the pact with Israel thinking that it was the only way to get the Israeli troops to leave. Although the agreement called for normal relations and joint security arrangements between Israel and Lebanon, its key feature for Lebanon was the withdrawal of the Israeli forces, which invaded to crush the Palestine Liberation Organization. Perhaps a bigger problem, for which the Lebanese government no blames the United States, is that Syria was not made a party to the negotiations calling for troop withdrawals. With 40,000 troops in Lebanon, where they intervened to quell the Lebanese civil war in 1976, Syria is now the second most simply refusing to pull its troops out. Instead of being left out, some Lebanese sources say, the Syrians should have been a main party, but they are the fresh Soviet support for Syria LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Professor clarifies some points on voodoo To the editor: Douglas Hensley in a letter to the editor in Tuesday's Kansan quite correctly took issue with several of the statements that I supposedly made, as reported by the Kansan Oct. 27, during a talk given by me on Oct. 18. These were not, however, the statements made by me. Obviously voood, which is a separate religion, differs markedly from Christianity. In my talk I stated only that there are important rites taken directly from the Roman Catholic liturgy that are often used during the course of certain voood ceremonies. In addition, obviously the voood gods or spirits are certainly not the same as those found in Greco-Roman mythology. I stated that the vooood gods or spirits are similar to the Greec-Roman ones only through their multiplicity and their anthropomorphic nature. The similarities end there. Other errors contained in the Kansan article but not pointed out by Hensley are as follows: I do not have a particular "love for voodoo." As a specialist in Haitian language and culture, I naturally devote a certain amount of study to a religion quite important to that culture, but I am not sure why neither approves nor disappores. Similarly, I view voodoo possession as nothing more or less than a form of self-induced hypnosis. Next: Haitian Creole is made up to a large extent of words of French origin, while retaining certain African grammatical structures — easily the contrary of what was stated in the article. Next: Priests and nuns were banned from Haiti between 1804 and 1860 for political rather than religious reasons, contrary to what the article implies. Next: There was indeed a small Protestant missionary effort in Haiti during that period, though limited in scope. Next: I never asserted that President Jean-Claude Duvalier did not aid that I say he does not; I stated simply that be in no way attempts to oppose it. Finally, a peristyle is a fairly good-sized enclosure, not "a small hut." Such errors are bound to occur whenever the somewhat complex text of an article is not checked even if only by telephone — with its source before publication. From this it is hoped Hensley will learn two things about everything he reads as quoted by the psychiatrist, not to believe everything he reads Bryant C. Freeman Professor of French Imitation of truth To the editor: While the Kansas City sophomore's response to the Kansan Hattian voodoo story is that he would student would prefer a more qualified advocate for Age 56 is not 'elderly' To the Editor: On Oct. 26, you printed a short front-page article titled "Injured Elderly Man in Critical Condition After Being Hit by Car." According to the first sentence of the article, the "elderly man" who suffered this unfortunate injury is a "56-year-old." Since we presently have 9.1 million people in the United States aged 75 or older, and since about 11 percent of our population is older than 65, it seems to be rushing things a bit to refer to a person in his mid-50s as elderly. In fact one does not even reach the status of senior citizen for commercial discounts or eligibility for programs such as Elderhostel until the age of 60. speaking on behalf of that original group of Christians called Catholics. No doubt some number of KU faculty who are in their 508 were surprised to find that they are are considered "elderly" by the Kanans. Possibly a 19- or 29-year-old reporter considers someone aged 56 to be elderly, but very likely in that age group would appreciate having that label applied to themselves. It is enough that the Kansas would publish the variety of truth that one particular person's religion espouses, it is quite another when such persons speak for others on the shaky ground of their own premises. Lynn Osterkamp Donna Schafer Research associates, gerontology center I was not at all certain whether the article on voodoo required a response; such offhand comparisons of obviously disparate systems are a glut on the tabloid market these days. Anyone knows there's a difference between stabbing straw effigies and mounting Sacred Heart pictures in one's living room. But when a student suggests by his analogy that the blood of a pig is that of the blood or the cleansing ceremony with pig's blood and the practices of the Christian religion are totally distinct, incapable of comparison, I am bound to protest and admonish him to reread the history over which he has so blatantly glossed. I know of no liker comparison than that of drinking of Christ's blood and certain voodoo practices. But our sophomore from Kansas City forgets that and foreshags with his blinked defense that Catholics and Protestants alike outraged by these unsayable comparisons Now I am not at all sure I mind the voodoo comparison. At least it allows the human need for cerebral stimulation, but voodoo practice is an imitation of truth. Scott J. Bloch 1 Los Angeles law student University Daily Kansan, November 4.1983 Page 5 Grenada expels Soviet, Cuban and Libyan ambassadors By United Press International ST. GEORGE'S. Grenada — About 70 Soviet, Cuban and Libyan diplomats were expelled from Grenada yesterday and a fleet of transport planes stood by to fly hundreds of American paratroopers home, a U.S. military spokesman said. Two C-9 Air Force planes with the diplomats aboard took off from Point Salines airstrip on the southwest tip of the island late yesterday, their destination believed to be Mexico, the spokesmen said. An undetermined number of East Europeans and North Koreans who had taken refuge in the embassies also were believed to be aboard the flights. Grenada's Governor-General Sir Paul Scoon Tuesday broke relations with the Soviet Union and announced that Grenada was no longer a member of the United Nations. persona non grata. personal horizons. U.S. troops had surrounded the Cuban Embassy on Grenada, where 37 staff people were held up in defiance of Scoon's order for them to leave. The Soviet and Libyan Embassies were also ordered closed. THE CUBANS HAD vowed that only U.S. troops using force would be able to expel them until some 600 Cuban prisoners of war and slain Cubans were repatriated. But an accord apparently was met and only one Cuban was reportedly left in charge of the embassy. Cuban Col. Pedro Tortolo, who commanded Cuban resistance to the American-led invasion of Grenada Oct. 25, was thought to have found asylum in the Soviet embassy after his forces Ten days after the U.S.-led invasion began, U.S. Army spokesmen said that as many as 2,300 soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division would be flown home in the first wave of the pullout. Army spokesmen in nearby Barbados said a fleet of C-141 transport planes was standing by to fly the paratroopers to their home base in Ft. Bragg, N.C. At the Pentagon, Army officials said most of the remaining troops would leave Grenada in the next four days. They said the departure would begin tomorrow although an army spokesman on Grenada had said some troops would leave yesterday. The officials also said there would continue to be an Army presence until the civilian administration had decided that all soldiers should leave. About 1,900 Marines and 700 Army Rangers, who joined the 82nd Airborne in the Oct. 25 invasion, have already left the tiny Caribbean island, 1,900 miles south of Miami. The Defense Department said 18 Americans were killed and 88 others were wounded since the attack. Placeck said that charges made this week by Robert Walker, chairman of the Senate Rights Committee, proved that the Elections Committee was unjust. Clark continued from p.1 Walker charged that members of the Priority Coalition had contacted Election Committee members to arrange for a motion last week that reversed an earlier ruling that allowed Kevin Walker and McKee to run for student body president and vice president. On Oct. 24, the election committee had agreed to allow the two candidates to be put on the ballot, but two days later reversed the decision. Placeck said that Clark had also been contacted to help. Clark denied Placeck's BROWN SAID SHE co-sponsored the bill because she supported Ptacek's manipulation theory. "People who know the rules know how to manipulate the rules," she said. "They issue of the issue of keeping Kevin Walker on the ball." Kevin Walker's and McKeen's appeal on Oct. 24 came after they were barred from filing on the Oct. 17 candidate deadline, because Kevin Walker could not verify his enrollment. The Senate passed a resolution Wednesday night disapproving of the hurried manner in which the committee reversed its decision, and added that the committee was operating legally. "I saw last night's resolution as an affirmation of confidence in the Elections Commission." Poland LOREN BUSY, chairman of the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee, said that although there was confusion surrounding the meetings, the indictment of Clark was unfair continued from p. 1 suffering is.' I looked at the trip as an educational experience. I didn't go with a book in mind, though." SHE SAID THAT the labor union Solidarity, the Communist Party and the Catholic Church were not mutually exclusive before mortal law was declared by the government Dec. 12, 1881, but that Poles were forced to choose between the party and the other two pillars of Polish life. The situation was tense before and after martial law. Something of that nature had been expected. But this hit the Poles hard. The people were scared, even if the police were anonymous. It was the fact that their religion was being taken away. From that point on, it was known if you went to church and when you went to church. "It was so still after martial law. You saw beatings on the streets. And mail often came opened. The government, being of the Soviet bent, lives in a world where religion is called living in a stupid dream world." AT ONE POINT, while trying to smuggle out some articles on Poland that she had written for an American magazine, Hebald was arrested for posting a message about her trip to West Berlin to mail the articles. As an American professor visiting, she was allowed to travel outside the country. She said that she was detained and stripped of $50 by the Polish border patrol because they had questioned her passport. "The only reason they couldn't make a case that my handwriting was illegible, she said of her mother," he said. She lived in a three-room apartment in Warsaw. "It's a time of great joy when a young couple is allowed to get its own apartment. There is usually a wait of years for an apartment. You live with parents instead," she said. SHE REMEMBERS THE day martial law was imposed. "It was tense before that," she said. "The whole university of Warsaw shut down. The students, as a result, were very depressed. The reason of an education had been broken to them. "A 10 p.m. curfew. No phone. No mail. They took away the citizens' liquor privileges. You didn't travel in threes and you didn't carry Solidarity literature. That would at least arouse interest. And they said, 'Why are things being getting worse since then, even after martial law was lifted.'" SHE DESCRIBES THE book about Poland, which is untitled, as being "fiction based on fact." “It’s a collection of memoirs by a fictional character,” she said. “It’s something that is hard to verbalize. It’s the story of desperate people who were so much, both under the Nazis and the Soviets. "I had no predetermined thoughts when I went into Poland. I left not really ready to go back anytime soon. If the progress of the book reaches a certain level, I'll want it. But I'm not ready to go back at this point." Reagan not without cost," Reagan acknowledged, saying the 18 Americans killed and 89 wounded were "heroes of freedom." Stressing that the operation was needed to rescue some 1,000 American on Grenada, Reagan said it also "saved the people of Grenada from repression and laid aside a potential threat to all people of the Caribbean." "After viewing the massive hoard of "Soviet weapons found on that island, who knows what evil the liberation of these tanks in averted in the years ahead?" he asked HE SAID THAT given the same circumstances — the need to protect Americans, coupled with an appeal for help — he would act the same. "But I don't foresee any similar situation on the horizon." Reagan, who rarely has displayed anger in public, flushed as he repelled to a comparison of the Grenade in 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. "Oh, for heaven sakes," he said. "Anyone who would link Afghanistan to this operation and incidentally I know your frequent use of the word invasion; this was a rescue mission — but in Afghanistan, if you will recall, when the Soviets installed their choice of weapons, there was no process in changing the forces there, an American ambassador was murdered." gan apparently had his dates confused. U.S. Ambassador Adolph Dubs was killed in Kabul during a raid to rescue him from kidnappers in 1978 — more than a year before the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1980, leading opposition from Afghan rebels. IN RECITING THOSE events, Rea In the case of Grenada, Reagan said, "This was a rescue mission ... and the Grenadians that have been liberated are down there delighted." Deputy press secretary Larry Speakes later told reporters that Reagan was in a "fiesty mood" yesterday. "I don't get the feeling he's boastful about it or macho about it," he said, referring to the end of hostilities in Grenada. First act of 'Hair' ends with surprise By the Kansan Staff The first act of the KU production of the musical "Hair" ended with a surprise last night. A parachute grated like a jellyfish as the members of the "Hair" cast moved beneath it. As one man sang alone in the spotlight, the cast embraced the parachute and stood straight, proud and made in the shadows. road productions have opted to keep cast members clobbed. However, the use of a minute of nudity exemplified an important message in the production, the KU show's choreographer said. Although the original Broadway production contained nudity, many "It's just a statement on the beauty of the human body," said Sandra Rivera, choreographer. "It's like a Rubens nainting." Few gasps were heard as the living painting was unveiled on stage. "I didn't even notice it," said Mindy Maggard, Lawrence resident. "There was nudity?" she said. "Oh, no, I missed something!" ANOTHER AUDIENCE member agreed. About 275 people attended night's showing of the musical, which addresses concerns of the 1960s Before the show, there was some question as to whether cast members would appear nude during the production. "Hair" will be shown again at 8 tonight and tomorrow in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre and also on Nov. 10, 11 and 12. University of Kansas Department of Music Presents Menahem Pressler Pianist in a special Scholarship Benefit Concert Menahem Pressler SCHOLARSHIP BENEFIT CONCERT 8p.m. Tuesday, November 8.1983 Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved Public: $8 & $6; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $7 & $5; KU Students with ID: $4 & $3 For reservations call 913-864-3982 All proceeds benefit the Music Scholarship Fund The Arts NAUTILUS 4120 Clinton Parkway Located above Alvamar Racquet & Swim Club ALVAMAR FITNESS CENTER "OUR NEW NAUTILUS ABDOMINAL MACHINE HAS ARRIVED!" 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This is not a letter asking for more money I just applied for a guaranteed student loan at The First Tuition and expenses are covered for next semester. And I don't begin payments until after graduation Thanks for everything, P.S. Send Fred!! Stop writing home for money. Come to The First instead. Terry Boyer, our student loan manager, can help you get a guaranteed student loan to cover your TheFirst We want to help. The First National Bank of Lawrence Ninth & Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 8133-843-0152 www.ninthmassachusetts.org The application form is uncomplicated, the interest rate is low,and your loan is processed quickly. Stop by the 4th Floor Student Loan Office to see Terry. Then send the above note to your folks. ENTERTAINMENT The University Daily KANSAN November 4, 1983 Page 6 Lemmon turns to stage HOLLYWOOD — Jack Lemmon's career takes another twist this winter with a turn on stage in Ernest Thompson's "A Sense of Humor" at the Los Angeles Music Center. Co-starring in the world premiere of the play will be Estelle Parsons and Polly Holly under the direction of Robert Greenwald. The play will run from Dec. 2-Jan. 22. Namath returns to film Lemmon and Parsons were childhood friends before achieving acclaim on the Broadway stage and later in motion pictures. Holiday is best known for her four Emmy nominations in the role of Flo in the "Alice" television series. HOLLYWOOD — Joe Namath, the former pro-football star who show business career never got off the ground, returns to the screen to play his first game in the Sue Anderson in "Chattanooga Choo Cho." Best-seller now movie The romantic comedy will be produced independently by Phil Borack at a cost of $4.5 million beginning next month on locations in and around Toronto and will be released in the summer of 1984. HOLLYWOOD — James Garner heads the cast of the HBO movie "The Glitter Dome," based on novelist Wambaugh's best-seller about Los Angeles cops involved in a crime. Co-stairing with Garner are Margot Kidder, John Lithgow, John Marley and Colleen Dewhurst. Producer-director Stuart Margulies Jr. served as co-producer exclusively in the United States on HBO in 1984. Oscars director returns HOLLYWOOD — Marty Passeta will direct the telecast of the 56th Annual Academy Awards, marking the 13th consecutive year Passeta has won among the highest rated TV shows of the year. The 56th annual awards show will be telecast on ARC-TV from the Los Angeles Music Center. Savalas, Lane on stage HOLLYWOOD — Broadway has lured TV sta- tion. 'Telly Savasal and my new movie dearie Diana Lane to star in "Waterfront," a new play by Budd Oscar-winning Oscar-winning screen- play, "On the Waterfront." Savalias will play the role of a union leader and Lane will play the lead ingueen under the duchy. "Waterfront" will mark the Broadway debut of both performers. Savalas is best known for his title role in TV's "Kojak" series. Lane is best remembered for her movie roles, "A Little Romance," "The Outsiders" and, more recently, "Rumble Fish." Johnny, Ed still a team HOLLYWOOD — And they said it wouldn't last! Johnny Carson and Ed McMahon celebrate 25 years together as a team, first on the game show "Who Do You Trust?" followed by the "Tongtown Show," on which they've been associated for 21 The combination began in New York City in 1958 when Carson was host of ABC-TV's "Who Do You Trust?" and McMahon auditioned for the announcing job. Lange, Shepard in film In addition to working with Carson, McMahon recently began his own series, "Star Search," a syndicated talent show for new performers. HOLLYWOOD ... Academy Award winner Jessica Lange, of "Tootsie," and Sam Shearp, who plays Chuck Yager in "The Right Stuff," star in "Country," a Walt Disney Studios drama. "Country" marks a reunion for the actress and actor who co-starred in "Frances," the screen story of Frances Farmer's life, for which Lange won an Oscar nomination. William D. Wittifl will direct "Country" from his original screenplay. The supporting cast includes Willford Brimley, who won critical accolades for his performance in "Absence of Malce." Devices may get Oscars HOLLYWOOD — Fourteen technical achievements of the past year, inventions that have advanced motion picture production, have won recognition considered for the 56th annual Academy Awards. Among the inventions under consideration are a traveling matte process, an electronic fader for continuous film printing, an electronic light value, a high-speed precision light value and a high-speed negative film. —Information for these stories was supplied by United Press International. Traditions captured in prof's work Photos of rural life uncover pride, joy of towns in Kansas SEEDS OF THE FUTURE By PAMELA THOMPSON Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The rituals of small towns are as familiar as the post office to rural residents and farmers, but to a newcomer from the big city, a traditional events sometimes seem bizarre. In his photographs of rodeo pony pulls, homecoming parades, demolition car derbies and threshing bees across Kansas, Earl Iversen, associate professor of design, uncover the sense of community pride and that are inherent in small towns everywhere. This photograph, titled "Seeds of the Future," is one of several black and white photos of rural Kansas for which Ford Jeanner With a map and a camera, Iversen has been traversing the back roads of Kansas since 1975, determined to preserve the history of the "doomed" small town. However, from his extensive travels which have taken him to every small town in Kansas, Iversen said he recognized the "e" of the character of the state's rural areas. THE QUALITY OF small-town life will determine agribusiness replaces family land Iversen has concluded that the small town is a dying breed, after photographing the festivals, ceremonies and traditions that are commonplace in rural communities. "Trendy stuff passes over kansas from the east coast to the west coast and often doesn't do." the bosses associate professor of design, won a $3,500 grant. It was taken at the Baldwin Mint Leaf Festival in 1976. Although Ivors, a native of Chicago, has been a resident of Kansas for nearly 10 years, M. G. BARRITZ Jim McCrossen—KANSAN Earl Iverson, associate professor of design, says the small Kansas towns he photographs may die as agribusiness takes over family farms. he said he always felt like a tourist when he visited the small towns. But even as an outsider in those communities, he has never encountered any hostility from the town residents and farming families. "USUALLY THEIR ONLY reservation comes from being bashful," he said. "They are not apprehensive, only curious." But he said he had not gotten to know many of the local people because they were involved in the community events that came to photograph and were not very talkative. Some community residents naturally assumed that he was a newspaper or magazine Iersen often "just takes off" from Lawrence, sleeping in his truck during his treks across the state. Occasionally he stays with people he has met at a town's event a But no two Kansas towns or their special events are exactly alike, he said. "EACH TOWN HAS a certain look," he said. "They have a social scene you don't find anywhere else." Because his photographs record real situations time is not a factor in the situation. "My photographs are informational," he said. "They are slow journalism." Because many standard elements in small towns are slow to change, Iversen said, he only labels his photos with the name of the town, since "the dates don't make too much difference." Because his photographs are not arranged, his designs "take care of themselves," he said. He edits the scenes with his eye before taking the final shots in rules or standard compositional formulas. BECAUSE BLACK-AND-WHITE photographs give him more flexibility with shading and more control of the image in his face. He said, he rarely takes color photographs. He said he used a lot of special techniques for night photography because the majority of the community celebrations he captured on him during the night, especially in the summer. "Kansas holes out for the winter," he said, so I shoot through the year and save up the first week of spring. To keep informed of the well known events as well as the obscure, off-season celebrations, Iversen said he referred to an event in Kansas on October 16th in the schedule of most of the events in Kansas. A self-proclaimed "compulsive photographer," Iversen said he carried a camera "nine days out of 10", even when teaching at KU. Iversen was recently honored with a $3,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and Mid-America Arts Alliance for his black and white vignettes of small towns. He was one of 20 artists from the mid-America arts community. Our contribution to the field of visual arts. PARE TIME ON CAMPUS 图 THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE Series will present the musical “Hair” at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in瘩坪 Hall. Tickets for students are $2, $3 and $4. SUA FILMS WILL show "48 Hours" at 3:30 p.m. 7. p.m. and 9:30 p.m. today and tomorrow. Tickets are $1.50. The film will be shown in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. UNIVERSITY FILM Society will show "The Shining" today and tomorrow at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. for $1.75 and at midnight for $2 in Downs Auditorium in Dyehe Hall. KANU 92-FM will broadcast "Opera is My Hobby" with James Seaver at 7 tonight. This week's show is "Excerpts from Verdi's 'Giovanna d'Arco.'" THE OREAD STRING Trio will present a faculty reacute at tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. ROBERT WARD) will present a piano recital and lecture on the music of John Cage at 8 THE CHUCK BERG band will play at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the lobby of the Union. THE CHAMBER MUSIC Series will present The London Early Music Group in a concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the Crafton-Prever Theatre Tickets for students are $3 and $4. ERIC ARBOGAST will give a student recital on trumpet at 8 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall. JEFFKEY CHIPPS SMITH will speak on "Nuremberg: A Century of Brilliance" at 2 p.m. Sunday at Spencer Museum of Art. PHOTOGRAPHS BY Diane Covert will be on display Sunday through Nov. 18 in 1:4.30 p.m. Design Gallery. The gallery is open 1:4.30 p.m. Sunday and Monday and 8.30 a.m.-4.30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday A WORKSHOP TITLED "Corals, Crinoids and C Curious Critters" will be presented for people 8 years old and above at 1:30 p.m. Sunday in the Chapel of St. Paul's History in Dyceh Hall. Admission is charged. SUA FILMS WILL present "Aguirre: The Wrath of God" at 2 p.m. Sunday in woodruff Auditorium in the Union. Tickets are $1.50. London ensemble to perform music from the Renaissance By the Kansan Staff The London Early Music Group, a sixmember ensemble that features instruments of the Renaissance and early Baroque periods, will perform Sunday at the University of Kansas. The concert, a part of the KU Chamber Music Series, will be performed at 4:30 p.m. in the Cincinnati Music Hall. Founded in 1976 by James Tyler, the London Early Music Group has performed for capacity audiences in Great Britain, Belgium, Holland, Italy, France, Australia and the United States. Tyler serves as director as well as a performer on lute, mandola and baroque guitar. Other members include Glenda Simpson, mezosoprano; Duncan Drume, baroque violin; Alan Lumsden, recorder, flute and bass dulciana; Bertel Pieters, cello; and Barry Mason, tenor, violin and lute. In its KU performance, the group will include a variety of Italian virtuoso music from the high end of the spectrum. Since making its London debut in 1977 at Queen Elizabeth Hall, the group has been successful in its world travels. The group will feature music by Monteverdi, Turini, Cavalli, Marina, Gabrieli, Frescobaldio and others. Play says society is hurt by progress Duane Sharp, Westwood sophomore, one of two actors in the play, said that he would walk The age of computers and high technology is just another example of the continuing push for progress in science and society around the world. But three KU students are presenting a play arguing that this progress is being obtained at the expense of humanity. "The Assault," by Brazilian author Jose Vicente, will be presented at 8 tonight in the Lawrence Arts Center. Admission is free. Bv the Kansan Staff among the audience members, engage in conversation and ask them questions such as, He said that this was the first time one of Vicente's plays would be presented in the United States. Vicente wrote "The Assault" in the early 1980s and has since pushed for industrialization and work in Brazil. The director of the play, Deolino Checcucci, Bahia, Brazil, graduate student, is producing the play as part of his master's degree in play directing. The plays two characters, Victor, a bank worker, and Hugo, a junior, are at odds about Warren Frerichs, Russell senior, portrays the older character, Hugo, who is hardened and accepts his lot in life. Sharp's character, Victor, is often the first to wonder if there is more to life than work. "The play tries to establish a dialogue with the audience to question a capitalist society where the main goal is money." Checcucci said. "Man is being sacrificed by the machine." "The audience should come out of this play feeling questions," Sharp said. "If they leave the play without questioning their own lives and clock they are punching, then we've failed." BY BERKE BREATHED BLOOM COUNTY LET'S GET UP MISS TURBO TIME TO SICKLY CROWN. LEAVE GO WITH THE FLOOR. WORK ON WHEN KNOW THERE'S A RUNNER GOIN' BACK THE GROUND OUT AND WILL THEN TURN HAS GONE WITH THE FLOOR AND TO RELOCATE OLD GOLD ANNA. MORNING TUNES. IT'S SHOW TIME. MISS TURBO! MISS TURBO! YOUR GAME IS WAITING. HELLO? KIDS WORK MISS TURBO! MISS TURBO! ★ 火车上唱歌 HEY! SOMETIMES ROCK N' ROLL ISN'T PRETTY! YOU HEARTLESS SLUB WILL HE WELL EVER GET ON MY THROUGH THIS REEL IN A ROLL SHALL I AND INTO THE SLY BARN? WHAT WILL THE SLY BARN AND BRIAN BROWN AND SILLY MANHATTAN DO? SHE'S BOOKIN' SHE'S BOPPYT TONIGHT TESS THURDY IS PLUGGED IN MAT CRAWFAN'S UP DOWN IN PIRATE WITH ROMAN TO DUMMY SCUZBALL! SCUZBALL! BABY, YA AINT NOTHIN' BUT A SCUZBALL! LET EM WORK ( ) LEARN TELL ME WHAT, DRY! A ROOK MARK AND A PRAYER WARRIES LAND, DANCE YOU CAN HAVE ANYTHING WHAT WANT. IT CAN'T DEATH AND GOOD WHEN WE GET IT. NO JOKE 1 100 AWMH! MACK! KEEZ IT BLEAH! NO, NO THAT'S JUST HAW! HEY! CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1983 Page Blaze at K.C. city hall forces hundreds to evacuate FIRE DEPT. United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A Kansas City firefighter surveys the damage to the legislative chamber room on the 26th floor of city hall after a four-alarm blaze swirled through the upper stories of the 30-story building. There were no injuries, but heavy smoke damaged the top floors. By United Press International KANSAS CITY. Mo. — Although estimates were not readily available, damage from smoke and fire that forced the evacuation of hundreds of acres from the 30-story City Hall building yesterday was said to be extensive. Workmen on the roof touched on fire, which sent smoke and sparks swirling through the duct work of the upper stories, creating a nightmare for firefighters attempting to bring the situation under control. Despite Fire Chief Ed Wilson's statement that the blaze was well under control by 10 a.m. — less than an hour after it was reported — the fire continued to spread and by 11 a.m. was classified as a four-alarm blaze. Workmen using welding torches apparently set the fire, Wilson said. However, there were conflicting reports and the cause of the fire was unknown. There were no initial damage estimates available and no injuries reported. THE FIRE SENT smoke into the building's air duct system, which encounters a large amount of flame. loops of City Hall, which was built in the 1908s. At 11 a.m., a battalion chief said he believed firefighters had knocked the main body of the fire out, but said there were still trouble spots. And reserve fire companies were being called. Fire Department spokesman Harold Knabe said there would certainly be serious damage from smoke and said the potential for other damage was quite high. The fire spread to the legislative chambers on the 26th floor, causing significant damage and forcing the City Council to move a meeting across the street. The evacuation was said to be orderly. People on the top 15 floors were evacuated first, followed by the rest of the building's occupants. Firefighters carried equipment up numerous flights of stairs to the blaze. AT MIDAFTERNOON YESTERDAY, the first through the 34th floors were reopened to workers and the public. The 20th through 24th floors were closed only, and the 25th through 29th floors were closed to workers and the public. Hearing put off for 18-year-old in Puckett case By the Kansan Staff The hearing for Danny Jo Jennings, charged with aiding and abetting an aggravated burglary in connection with the break-in of Harry Puckett's residence on June 24 it been continued until 11 a.m. in December. Shelley Bock, Douglas County assistant district attorney, requested the continuance until after the motion for a new trial for James L. Rivers, who was rushed upon ruling. The hearing on that motion will be at 1:30 p.m. Nov. 29 Fourhour was convicted Oct. 25 of the first-degree murder of Puckett. Jennings, 18, testified during the trial, and fourhour enter Puckett's house. Bell's attorney says insanity will not be used as a defense In exchange for Jennings' testimony, the district attorney's office agreed to try Jennings, who was 17 of the break in, as a juvenile. By the Kansan Staff The attorney for Bryan Keith Bell said yesterday during a hearing in Douglas County District Court that he would not use insanity as a defense. Bell, charged with the second-degree murder of Frank Seurer Sr., had undergone a psychiatric examination at Larned State Hospital. Associate District Judge Mike Elwell said during a hearing last Friday that the results of that examination indicated that Bell, 23, was competent to stand trial and that the results did not provide much evidence for a defense of insanity. At that time, Robert Duncan, Bell's attorney, had said that he would consider another psychiatric evaluation. He would likely ask for a continuance of the trip. Jury selection for the trial will begin at 9 a.m. Monday. Seurer's body was found Aug. 2 in the kitchen of the restaurant he owned, Paul Henningsen said. Bell, a former employee of the restaurant, was arrested Aug. 19. He is being held in custody. 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After the game. 4th Floor Lobby of the Kansas Union Chuck Berg-saxophone and flute Jim Stringer-guitar James Jeffley-bass George Boberg-drums Sponsored by SUA Fine Arts, AFM Local 512 and the Music Performance Trust Fund. THE SHiNiNG A STANLEY KUBRICK FILM JACK NICHOLSON SHELLEY DUVALL "THE SHINING" STEPHEN KING Friday and Saturday November 4 and 5 7:00, 9:30 $1.75 12:00 MID. $2 UFS UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall 1 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1983 Federal act to provide local job training By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter Unemployment in Kansas this month hit its lowest point since last March, but the figures may drop even more once the Job Training Partnership Act goes into full effect, a Department of Human Resources official said yesterday. The program, passed by Congress in 1982, will train and provide jobs for disassemblaged people, said Kathy Osterman, an official officer with the department. Although the program went into effect Oct. 1, the Douglas County JTPA program will begin Wednesday with a training session at 9 a.m. in Navarre Hall at Haskell Indian Junior College. NANCY HIEBERT, Douglas County commissioner, said the program would be geared toward employers, potential participants and anyone else interested in the program. The program is supposed to increase employment and earnings of partici- depend on members of the community to determine what type of programming will be provided, how much will be spent on the training and who will be trained, O'Hara said. pants and to decrease welfare dependency, she said. "I'm not sure if it will stay that high since our unemployment is dropping. They are targeting the money to areas of highest unemployment," she said. easy. Heibert estimated that the federal government would allocate $2.5 million for the Kansas JTPA program. of highest unemployment, size of the The JTPA program is replacing the "This program has a lot of options. If they determine that high-tech will be big in the area, they can set up programs for this," he said. 'They need to earn while they learn. They need to put food on the table.' Nancy Hlobert, Douglas County commissioner CETA job training program that has been used for the past 10 years. "They usually run about 10 years and then are abolished," Michael O'Hara, area supervisor for the JTPA prog"said of training programs. "There was considerable evidence that the CDTA was indeed well. However, it has done well in Kansas." And people will be trained for jobs that already exist, Hiebert said. THE KEY DIFFERENCE between JTPA and CETA is that JTPA will "They need to earn while they learn. They need to put food on the table," she said. One disadvantage of the program is that less money is allocated for support services while people are being trained for a job. In the CETA program, money was available for baby-sitters and transportation. That was the trade-off with the JTPA program, Hiebert said. MOST OF THE people involved in the JTPA program will probably be learning a vocational skill such as welding or auto mechanics, Hiebert said, but the program is not restricted to vocational training. If people have the interest, they can be trained as Licensed Practical Nurses. Area employers have said that jobs might be available in high technology equipment, computer programing and telemarketing. To meet the federal requirements set for the program, 90 percent of the participants must be in the poverty income level, she said. The other 10 percent need only have some serious barrier to employment to qualify for training, such as limited English proficiency or a physical handicap. The program has been directed toward minorities because they have the highest rate of unemployment, Ketchum said. JTPA can also provide money for job training for youths and elderly people, Hiebert said. However, those programs have not yet been developed. KU India Club to celebrate Hindu festival By KALPANA TRIVADI Staff Reporter In countries across the world — from India, England, South Africa and the United States — the wicks of clay candles will grow deep into the night for Diwali, a typically Hindu festival commemorating the triumph of good over evil. Attired in new clothes, young and old Hindus, the rich and poor, will partake in huge feasts and will light firecrackers during the celebration, often called the "Festival of Lights." SATURDAY THE KU India Club will host a program that includes a variety of entertainment shows and a tradition Indian dinner cooked by club members. "Diwali for Hindus is like Christmas for Christians," Ninan Chacken, Pening, Malaysia, sopplomore and treasurer of the KU India Club. said 130, is a needs-based group of the community. Apart from organizing social gatherings on religious and festive days, it provides the meeting ground for Indians on campus. "We try to create the atmosphere of a home away from home," Chacko said. On Diwal, he said. "We hope to have someone just as we would have back home." Chacko he expected as many as 400 people to attend the Diwali night celebration, which is scheduled to last from 7 to 11 p.m. at Cordley Elementary School Hall, 19th and Vermont streets. Tickets are $8 and attendee activities office in the Kansas Union. Tickets at the door cost $1 more. LAWRENCE INDIANS will find the celebration an excellent time to get to know each other and to appreciate the talents of the participants, said Pratiba Amin, 212 N. Crestine Dr., the club's cultural secretary. a traditional Indian folk dance will be staged by Indians. Also, a Western Bombay, India, said she would be celebrating Dhali. Having lived in a predominantly Hindu neighborhood, her family celebrated Dhali, she said, and over the years absorbed many practices and celebrated Hindu festivals. music recital will be performed by three Americans on Indian musical instruments, Amin said. Local woman fatally struck by lightning Despite efforts by the India Club, nothing replaces the "Diwali-at-home-spirit," said Ketan Parikh, Bombay, India, graduate student. "Here, Diwali passes by uneventfully, and you don't even realize that it has come and gone." The woman, who police identified as Jacqueline Johnson, was struck about 9:40 a.m. MJR. Ron Olin of the Lawrence Police Department said. Olin said that a bicyclist discovered the body. The bicycle had disturbed Oln said, and was returning from the end of the bike when he saw the body. Angina Parek, Durban, South Africa, graduate student, said that Diwali is a day when she visits relatives and returns home with gifts. "Because my mother comes from India, she has followed all Indian traditions even while in South Africa," Parekh said. A 46-year-old Lawrence woman jogging along a dike near the area of Lawrence River Front Park was struck and killed by lightning yesterday By the Kansan Staff working on a roof at Lawrence Freight Lines, 1321 North Third St., when she saw a woman wearing a blue top and jogging shorts run by about 9:15 a.m. He said a black German shepherd was with her. 1. David Oshel, Route 3, said he was About 10 minutes after he saw her, he said, it began to sprinkle, and about five minutes later, the sky became darker and it began to thunder. Even though the festival is mostly celebrated by Hindus, Shamim Jivani, a muslim graduate student from dubbed him Oselie. Oshel said he also saw someone ride by on a bike about five minutes after he had first seen the woman. The dog was uninjured and was found sitting next to the body, Olin said. Preliminary identification of the body was made by an animal control officer who recognized the dog and the owner. HAPPY HOUR SPECIALS FRI. 5-8PM----2 FOR 1 DRINKS AND HALF PRICE FOOD FRI. & SAT. 11-MIDNIGHT SPECIAL LATE NIGHT-HAPPY HOUR PRICES!! GAMMONS SNOWING 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 GREEK HARVEST 1983 Wednesday, Nov. 9 7:30 p.m.-12:00 Midnight Featuring Plain Jane At the Pladium Presented by SAE, $ \Phi\Delta\Theta $ , $ \Sigma N $ , $ \Delta X $ All the beer you can drink! $4.00 FREE TACOS! at THE SANCTUARY Make Your Own Every Friday From 4 to 6 Your Choice of Toppings, Including Mild & Ace's Extra Hot Sauce! 1401 W. 7th (Bet. Michigan & Florida) Reciprocal with Over 180 Clubs 843-9703 ON CAMPUS ASTRONOMY ASSOCIATES of Lawrence will hear John Davidson, chairman of the department of physics and astronomy, discuss his research in international. Ultraviolet Explorer Satellite, a 7 p.m. in 500 Lindley Hall. TODAY INTERVARSITY Christian Fellowship will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. EMILY TAYLOR Women's Resource Center will present a workshop titled "Your Vision of the Women's Union" at 1:30 p.m. in Alcove B of the Union. FOLK DANCE Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. on the second floor of the Military Science Building. UNDERGRADUATE Biology Club will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union. TOMORROW GERMAN CLUB will meet to celebrate the annual Berliner Baer pilgrimage at 5:30 p.m. on the west side of Murphy Hall. SUNDAY CIRCLE K Club will meet at 7 p.m. in 2007 Malott Hall. MONDAY KJHK WILL feature Monte Johnson, KU athletic director, on "Alternative Conversations," a call-in talk show at 6 p.m. ASSOCIATED GENERAL Contractors Student Chapter (K.U.A.G.C.) will meet at 7 p.m. in 315 Art and Design. KU MOUNTAINEERING Association will meet at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union. STUDENT Creative Anachronists will meet at 8 p.m. in the Union. K.U.Telephone Directory is now available For sale at all 3 K.U. Bookstore locations $1.50 with staff or student I.D. $3.00 without I.D. CKU KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union Over $250 in prizes 10k Run for Excellence Awards for all age groups Sun., Nov. 6, 8 a.m. Entry fee of $7 includes: A) race packet B) shirt Pick up registration form at Military Science Building or call 864-3311. Sponsored by KU Army ROTC/Recondo We have expanded our facilities, our staff and our hours to better serve you Now open Mon.-Fri. 8-6 C SHAPED OUT SHAMPOO, CUT & BLOWDRY. $10 CUT, PERM & STYLE. & STYLE...$40 $40 Cenon Encores 11/19/83 GQ for women Coupon Expires 11/19/83 for men Gentleman's Quarters 611 W. 9th 843-2138 Patronize Kansan advertisers. KIEF'S EVERYDAY PRICES ON RECORDS, TAPE AND STEREO EQUIPMENT ARE KIEF'S EVERYDAY PRICES ON RECORD AND STEREO EQUIPMENT ARE CONSISTENTLY LOWER THAN MANY STORES' "SALE PRICES" KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE DISCOUNT STEREO shop 1 NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1983 Page 9 Rumsfeld named new envoy By United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan tapped Republican troubleshooter Donald Rumsfeld as his new Middle East envoy yesterday and added to "use the talents of our best minds to a achieve a just and lasting peace." Reagan reaffirmed his long-stalled Middle East peace initiative in announcing the former defense secretary and White House chief of staff he is his new "point man" in a real cracked by crises and uncertainty. "We intend to use the talents of our best minds to achieve a just and lasting peace in the Middle East," Reagan said. Reagan and Rumsfeld appeared in the press room to announce the appointment. RUMSFELD WILL, TAKE a leave of absence from his post as president of G.D. Searle & Co. of Skokie, III., a giant drug manufacturer, to take the envoy job, for which he will get no government compensation. Rumsfield will retain his corporate post and will continue collecting his salary, which in 1982, with bonuses, sold $444.583, a Searle spokesman said. Asked whether the challenge of bringing peace to the Middle East is "a no-win job." Rumsfeld replied simply, "I guess time will tell." "The fact that the problems there are intractable and difficult and have persisted over long periods doesn't mean that the United States should ignore them," Rumsfeld said. "Rather, I think it suggests that it is what is intended," that is what is intended," he said. WHAT IS RUMSFELD REPLACES ROBERT McFarlane, who was named Oct. 17 to succeed William Clark as White House national security adviser Rumsfeld, 51, is a former four-term Illinois congressman, and director of the Office of Economic Opportunity and Cost of Living Council under President Nixon. He also served as U.S. ambassador to NATO. During the Ford administration, tumors served as a White House plate of glass. Reagan praised Rumfield's "distinguished career in public service," as well as "the talent and vigor that I want to bear on these weighty problems." Rumsfeld said he will begin work "almost immediately" and devote all his time to the job "for what would be a rather extended period of time. Reagan said the peace proposals he set forth in September 1982 still offer "the best chance for a resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict." THE UNITED STATES "No one's come up with a better proposal since," Reagan said. "I'm confident that progress in Lebanon will add momentum to the serious efforts that are going on to establish this broader peace." WITH CRITICAL TALKS on Lebanese national reconciliation way in Geneva, Switzerland, Reagan WASHINGTON — President Reagan announces his special Middle East envoy, former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld during a press conference at the White House. Rumsfeld, who has held several posts under the Nixon and Ford administrations, succeeds Robert McFarlane who was recently named Reagan's national security adviser. challenged the leaders of Lebanon's warring factions to "put the problems of the past aside" and join together in progress toward a broad peace. PYRAMID PIZZA Weekend Specials Good fud! Good fud! "All weekend" KING TUT the KING TUT — large, 8 topping pizza — double cheese — 2 free Pepsis (expires 11/6) $3 off SUNDAY All you can eat! "At the Wheel" Get stuffed— $375 Guys CHEAP. 5:30-8 p.m. $275 Gals 842-3232 PYRAMID PIZZA & DIA COOKING PARTY WEEKEND AT The Pladium 901 Mississippi FRIDAY AND SATURDAY J.T.N. ROCKS THE PLADIUM 50c DRAWS ALL NIGHT 'TIL 10 or 12 (WE'LL BET IT'S 12) $3.00 COVER OR $2.00 WITH THAT WORTHLESS KUID NEXT WEEK—MALE BURLESQUE RETURNS! Greyhound to resume service within 2 weeks despite strike By United Press International PHOENIX, Ariz. — Greyhound Lines said yesterday that it would reopen its strike-bound nationwide bus system within two weeks, using either employees who agreed to take pay cuts or hundreds of unemployed who want the strikers' jobs. John W. Teets, chairman of the parent Greyhound Corporation, set the timetable for reopening the nation's largest bus system, which shut down at midnight. Wednesday when 12,000 employees went on strike. More than 7,000 drivers were participating in the walkout, which began over union rejection of a company-proposed pay cut, which it says is necessary to correct reported losses of $2 per mile on every route Grewould operates. COMPANY SPOKESMAN Dorothy Lorant said that when operations resumed, striking employees would be invited to return to work. She said that if they did not, the company would have no trouble filling their jobs. the 500 people outside?" They're not talking about passengers, but job applicants that we haven't recruited." "It's absolutely mind-boggling the calls we're getting from our terminals," Mrs. Lorant said. "They're asking. What are we going to do with The Boston bus terminal was surrounded with barbed wire and security guards on the roof filmed picketers below. Terminal windows were covered to prevent picketers from seeing drivers being interviewed. Mrs. Lorant said 550 people lined up outside the Cleveland terminal, 700 in locations in New York, 200 in Birmingham, and 200 outside the Chicago garage. THOUSANDS OF frustured travelers experienced delays yesterday as Greyhound, which carried 57 million passengers, marked its buses and locked its terminals. However, Norman Sherlock, president of the American Bus Association said there were plenty of seats available on buses throughout the city. Greyhound was only one of hundreds of bus lines that operated intercity runs. The Amalgamated Council of Greyhound Union Locals rejected the company's proposal of a 9.5 percent pay cut. Union leaders contended that it PIZZA Shoppe 842-0600 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center Private Party Room Available As. For Our Football SPECIAL Triple Topping King Size Pizza and 32 oz. Pepsi $8 75 plus tax DELIVERED! would amount to a 20 to 25 percent reduction in wages and benefits. In Phoenix, Connie Luna, 52, of Indio, Calif., who was traveling to Detroit, said, "It's going to take me 63 hours instead of 38. They're giving a birthday or my grandson and I don't know if I'll be able to make it. This is a mess." MRS. LORANT AGREED that some travelers were caught in the labor dispute as it began, but she said no one was stranded. Scott Hanson, delayed in Memphis, Tennessee was angry with the striking workers. "They have to understand, too, they have jobs where a lot of people don't." Hansen said. "We had interline agreements," she said, "and in some cases we flew people. We flew six people from Fargo, N.D., to Winnipeg. To the best of our ability, we took care of anybody in the system last (wednesday) night." TGIF at THE HAWK DR. PAUL LIMBERG Optometrist Announced that he has assumed the practice and retained all records of DR. DALE SILLIX Optometrist First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills 12:00-1:00 . $0.75 1:00-2:00 . $1.00 3:00-4:00 . $1.25 4:00-5:00 . $1.50 4:00-5:00 . $1.75 5:00-6:00 . $2.00 6:00-7:00 . $2.25 For an appointment phone 843-5966 TGIF at THE HAWK DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG Optometrist TGIF at THE HAWK First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills 12:00-1.00 $0.75 1:00-2.00 $1.00 2:00-3.00 $1.25 3:00-4.00 $1.50 4:00-5.00 $1.75 5:00-6.00 $2.00 6:00-7.00 $2.25 It Could Only Happen at . THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO EYE EXAMINATIONS CONTACT LENSES FULL FRAME SELECTION 202 Lawrence National Bank 843-5966 WHAT ARE "FUNFLOWERS"? They're flowers just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to arrange and enjoy Put a little fun in your life. Pick up a bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" today or any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 Specially priced! SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" 749-2912 "ROSES DAY TODAY" Yes, we're up to our delighted noses in lovely roses. And that means good news for YOU—or that special person you choose to delight with a dozen. Carry 'em away at a very special price. $1600 per lovely dozen Special only for "Roses Day" SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammon's" 749 2012 "ROSES DAY TODAY." 1 749-2912 Meet Larry Brown and the '83—'84 JAYHAWK BASKETBALL TEAM Olympia 16 LILAS HAWKS LILAS LILAS LILAS LILAS 20 TODAY 12:30 p.m. at the Wagon Wheel Cafe NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1983 Page 10 Navy spots lame Soviet sub off U.S. coast By United Press International WASHINGTON — A late model Soviet nuclear attack submarine lay crippled and bobbing on the surface of the Atlantic 470 miles off the U.S. yesterday — stranded by unknown mechanical difficulties, the Navy said. The 6,000-ton late model Victor III Class boat, which does not carry intercontinental nuclear missiles, was spotted at 2 a.m. CST Wednesday by a propeller-driven U.S. P-3 Orion reconnaissance plane while on routine patrol, a Navy announcement said. Other P-3s continued surveillance and took photographs from every angle of the stricken sub, whose disability gave the Navy its first long look at a Victor III Class boat, Navy officials said. "We'd like to get as much information as possible," one official said. "This affords us an opportunity to do that." "We're all over that sub, believe me," another official said. "We finally got it." THE NAVY PUT the position of the sub in international waters at about 282 miles west of Bermuda and 470 miles east of Charleston, S.C., which is a major base for U.S. missile-carrying submarines. Though the sub surfaced in one of the most heavily trafficked seaslanes in the world, Navy officials said its presence in the area was part of routine patterns of Soviet surveillance of Charleston and a new base under construction at Kings Bay, Ga., for the Trident missile-equipped subs. Attack submarines, both Soviet and American, are designed in part to hunt and kill subs armed with intercontinental range nuclear missiles that can be launched from below the surface. Navy officials, who spoke on condition that they not be identified, said that UNITED STATES New York Atlantic Ocean Washington BERMUDA Charleston Crippled Soviet sub surfaces 500 miles D.7 CUBA a Soviet intelligence-gathering trawl was in the vicinity and that a Soviet submarine tender was on the way to the bases (assays) and probably would arrive Friday. THE TENDER WAS expected to tow the sub to Cuba for repairs, they said. The 341-foot sub, which carries a crew of 90, was seen bobbing in 4-to-6-foot swells, which "makes life miserable for the girls aboard," a Navy official said. He said it was in no apparent danger of capsizing. There was no sign of any radiation leakage from the boat, the officials said. They said they did not know the technical failure that crippled the sub. The Victor III, first built in 1978, is the latest model of the Victor Class submarines that joined the Soviet fleet in 1967. It can attain speeds of 30 knots while submerged and carries six torpedoes and nuclear-tipped SSN-15 anti-submarine rockets with a range of 35 miles. THOSE SHORT-RANGE nuclear weapons are similar to the submarine-launched rockets carried aboard U.S. attack subs. The submarine was in its normal patrolling pattern in the Atlantic when it was stricken, the officials said, indicating U.S. intelligence-gathering equipment is able to track Soviet subs off the American coasts. FCC asked to change phone-access fee plan By United Press International WASHINGTON — A House committee said yesterday that the Federal Communications Commission should scrap a plan to charge phone customers an "access fee" to call. The commission said the issue was not properly studied. In a report that recommended reopening the hearing process on the plan, the House Committee on Government Operations said the FCC had no idea how the charges would affect customers. The plan would allow local phone companies to add $2 to residential phone bills and $6 to business phone bills each month. Commerce committees in the Senate and House have passed legislation that would substantially change the FCC plan many people would be forced to cancel their phone service due to the charges, or how many businesses would set up their own long-distance networks to bypass the phone company. THE HOUSE VERSION is expected to be debated next week. The report was the result of an investigation by the subcommittee on government information, justice and civil affairs. The FCC could not estimate how FCC staff members said the agency received a copy of the report, 'Leap Before You Look.' The Federal Communication Commission's Access Charge Decision' late Friday had no immediate order. Studies cite advances in research on cancer By United Press International CHICAGO — The removal of large gallstones — whether or not they cause gallbladder problems — may help prevent cancer of the gallbladder, a doctor said yesterday. Another doctor said that the pain of cancer victims could be eased by continuous infusion of narcotics in the spine. The studies of both doctors were reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Andrew K. Diehl of the University of Texas in San Antonio warned that the risk of surgery to remove a kidney can be the benefits of cancer, prevention. Diehl found in his study that patients with stones 3 centimeters — 1.2 inches — or larger were 10 times more likely to have cancer than patients with stones smaller than 1 centimeter. IN THE OTHER cancer research, Dennis W. Coombs of Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center in Hanover, N.H., and colleagues studied to patients — five cancer and five pain patients — with pain not easily manageable. The patients were treated for 12 weeks with continuous intrasphral morphine delivered by catheter from implanted reservoirs. However, there were poor results in the five other patients with malignant disease and had no unresponsive to past treatments. Five patients with bowel cancer reported relief of pain, Coombs said. They were able to reduce their intake of oral narcotics and improve their performance on tests of cognitive function. Bell announces national forum on public schools WASHINGTON — Education Secretary Terrel Bell announced yesterday that he would hold a national conference next month for state, local and federal officials to exchange and possibly form plans on how to best upgrade America's schools. Bell told a news conference that chances were good that President Reagan would attend the Dec. 6-8 National Forum on Excellence in Indianapolis which is expected to draw about 1,200 participants. The secretary said that as a result of what might be learned at the summit, the department might seek certain unspecified new federal initiatives. BUT HE QUICKLY reiterated the administration's position that states and localities — not Washington — had responsibility for public education. "We feel our job is to help states, local communities, private institutions," he said. "For too long, failures at state and local levels have given rise to a chorus of demands for federal action." The forum is an outgrowth of a report last spring by Bell's National Commission on Excellence in Education that helped trigger an unprecedented movement to improve schools and education into a hot political issue. The report, "A Nation At Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform," found schools engulfed in a "rising tide of mediocrity" and offered a host of recommendations, such as higher pay for teachers and a return to the basics. education groups and Democratic presidential candidates, have called on a reluctant administration, which is seeking funding of schools, to increase funding of schools. Bell said that much could now be done within existing financial restraints. Polls have shown, he said, that the public is willing to pay more for education, provided the money is well spent. BELL SAID THAT in recent months 36 states had initiated curriculum reform, 40 had started to raise high school graduation requirements and 11 were moving ahead on various merit pay plans for teachers. He said that the forum would provide an opportunity for state and local educational and political leaders to swap their blueprints for action. proposed legislation and education budgets to state legislators in January and February, we need to provide a forum where states can share copies of draft legislation, master plans and financing proposals," he said. Bell last month completed the last of a series of 12 regional forums on the commission's report and said in an Oct. 3 news conference in Seattle that he would hold a national forum in Indianapolis in early December. "With governors presenting their. Bell said that among those being invited to the Indianapolis forum were state and local school superintendents, teachers, leaders, governors and congressmen. At the same time, many financially strapped states, along with several Doctor uses penknife to save teen-ager mauled by shredder By United Press International Steven Bednas, 19, remained in a deep coma and in critical condition at Ottawa General Hospital, nearly a day after incident last Friday at a shopping mall. OTTWAIA — A doctor used a penkine to open the chest of a teenager whose heart stopped after he lost both legs in a garbage shredder and then performed open heart massage to save his man's life, officials said yesterday. Doctors said he lost massive amounts of blood and his heart stopped for six minutes, an often fatal time lapse, when he took it to free him from the shredder. Bednas, who worked at a Consumers Distributing store, was apparently AN AMBULANCE CREW arrived with Dr. Trinjat Maloney and began working to free Bednas, whose legs were trapped in the shredder. hailing trash out to the shredder and "pushing boxes in with his legs"—but it is so slimy he must have slipped," said Allen MacMillan, 19, a co-worker. Dr. Barry Armstrong, a Canadian army doctor who lives three blocks from the mall, was called to help by his wife, who was shopping. He rushed to the other doctor. Capt. Charles Buckley of the National Defense Medical Center. While they worked on the bleeding teenager, his heart stopped and the doctors decided to amputate his legs to be free from the injuries carried Bednas to a stretcher and an ambulance attendant began closed-chest heart massage. 6 packs beer to go 2228 iowa Minsky's Introduces "IT'S NOT A HAMBURGER, IT'S A 1/2 LB. STEAKBURGER!" $2.50 includes curly-Q-fries Minsky's PIZZA Flowers for a Friday Today's Special Colorful Mixed Bouquet The Flower Shoppe ON THE FLOWER SHOPPE A flower is worth a thousand words. MERCURY BOTTLE Lawrence High School Auditorium Saturday, Nov. 5 2 shows 6:00 p.m., 8:30 p.m. LAWRENCE LOCAL 1596 FIREFIGHTERS BENEFIT SHOW IN CONCERT ARK VALLEY BOYS MUSIC & VARIETY SHOW plus featuring HANK WILLIAMS ORIGINAL DRIFTING COWBOYS Bring the whole family Family Ticket: Only $10.00 Adults $5.00 advance, $6.00 at door Children $2.00 advance, $3.00 at doors For ticket info. call: 749-0200 Only $10.00 in advance MIDNIGHT — FRIDAY & SATURDAY 1840-1879 BODY TALK ! Rated XXX Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Box office opens 11:30 LAST CHANCE TO WIN A 1984 CAMARO 1856A1 Register at any one of the four Rusty's locations every time you visit. Four lucky winners will receive a $50 grocery gift certificate each week. (One from each store) Listen to 96x radio for other ways to win. Winner announced this Saturday, Nov. 5th. No purchase necessary — must be 18 years and older. RUSTY'S WESTRIDGE 6th & Kasold HILLCREST 9th & Iowa IGA DISCOUNT NORTHSIDE 2nd & Lincoln SOUTHSIDE 23rd & Louisiana EATS 1105 MASS LAWRENCE, KANSAS TASTY, TONGUE TICKLING, TIDBITS! TIN PAN ALLEY Rent it. Call the Kansan. o o SUPER SALE SPECIAL CompletePair of Lenses & Frames 8 59. 95 Reg. $65-$130 Save up to 53% when you purchase a complete pair of single-vision lenses, any frame (excluding boutique frames), any prescription, glass or plastic, for $59.95. Multifocal, photocromatics, tints, and oversize additional. - Jordache - Mary McFadden - Oleg Cassini - Arnold Palmer and more Please no special order frames Offer good through Nov. 5 Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 HUTTON OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. 1 1 NATION AND WORLD Page 11 'Rainbow coalition' seeks peace and justice University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1983 Jesse Jackson makes candidacy official By United Press International WASHINGTON - Black civil rights activist Jesse Jackson, pledging to lead a "rainbow coalition" in "a quest for a just society and peaceful world," yesterday became the eighth candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination. Jackson, 42, said he was not running as a black candidate, but was forging a "rainbow coalition" of the rejected that would include whites, blacks. Hispanics, Indians, Asians, women, young people, poor people, old people, gay people, immigrant farmers, small businesspersons, peace activists and environmentalists. Jackson announced his candidacy at a political rally and revival meeting that never lost the attention of the 2,500 supporters who used almost any excuse to interrupt the three and a half hour rally with chants of "Run, Jesse, run." want to affirm my belief that leadership is colorless and genderless, and that the sole hallmark of a true leader is not the skin color of her or she received the ability of the person to bring compassion, compassion and fairness," he said. the event, Jackson was introduced by former Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D-N.Y., the first black to seek a major party presidential nomination in 1972. JACKSON MADE HIS announcement. Jackson said, "No one is in doubt about what Mr. Reagan advocates; his rhetoric and his record are clear. He is pro-rich, pro-aristocratic, pro- "I seek the presidency because I flanked by 100 prominent supporters. Although about half were black, the group also included former Attorney General Ramsey Clark, Barry Commoner, the 1980 Citizens Party candidate for president, and leaders of Indian, student, Hispanic, peace, agricultural and environmental groups. He is anti-black, anti-Hispanic, anti-civil rights, antihuman rights, anti-poor, anti-family farmer, anti-youth, anti-public education, anti-women, anti-worker and anti-environment.' - Jesse Jackson agribusiness, pro-military and pro-big business. With six rows of television cameras and more than 300 reporters covering "HE IS ANTI-BLACK, anti-Hispanic, anti-civil rights, anti-human rights, anti-poor, anti-family farmer, anti-youth, anti-public education, anti-women, anti-worker and ant-environment." Saying he would withdraw American troops from Lebanon, Grenada and Latin America, Jackson said, "My foreign policy proposals will seek to emphasize negotiations over contention, gunboat and big stick diplomacy, military adventurism and racial insensitivity." Asked about a poll showing that he would lose his home state of Illinois in a contest with President Reagan, Jackson said "if it takes Ronald Reagan three years to get a three-to-one jump on me, he's running awful slow." A NATIVE OF the civil rights movement, Jackson was a top deputy of Martin Luther King Jr. In 1971 he founded Operation PUSH, People United to Serve Humanity, an organization based in Chicago that encourages the young and the poor to advantage of education, government programs and other self-help programs. In Atlanta, Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale said he did not expect to lose vital black support to Jackson. Senate approves covert aid to Nicaraguan rebels By United Press International WASHINGTON — The Republican controlled Senate, clashing with the House, easily passed a bill yesterday allowing continued U.S. covert aid for rebels fighting the Marxist Nicaraguan government. Approval of the 1984 intelligence authorization bill — a victory for President Reagan — came on a voice after less than an hour of low-key debate. The Democratic-crated House voted 227-194 Oct. 20 to cut all funds for the program. That was the second House vote to halt the CIA aid. The intelligence authorization bill now goes to a House-Senate conference committee, which will try to work out a compromise between the sharply differing bills passed by the two chambers. SEN. DANIEL MOYNIHAN, D-N.Y. vice-chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said the panel and its House counterpart were “closer in these matters than might be supposed.” Boyds Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy-Sell-Trade Gold-Silver-Coins 731 Antiques-Watches New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 60044 913-842-8773 Moynihan said his committee had agreed to allow continued covert actions based on a new finding submitted by the administration outlining the goals and details of the program. Earlier plans were too broad and too ambitious, he said, but the one outlined for the committee Sept. 20 by CIA Director William Casey and Secretary of State George Shultz had goals that were more precise and much more limited. Moynhan noted assurances by administration officials that the program was not intended to overthrow Managua's Sandinista government. Sen Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., spoke against the bill, however, saying, "The president's course of action is illegal." Leahy said Reagan was attempting to substitute covert and military programs for foreign aid. FRESHMEN NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Stop by 115 Military Science or Call 864-3161 College of Liberal Arts & Sciences wants Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Graduate Office 210-1 Strong Hall. UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY All LA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. CELEBRATE THE KU GAME WITH * BARRON'S the Private Club 7nights -- until midnight $1.00 drinks 50¢ draws 7th & mass. * inverted margaritas —Self-nominations are required. —Filing deadline—4:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 11. Election will be held Nov. 16-17 with Student Senate Election. CELEBRATE THE KU GAME WITH* Moynihan said the intelligence committee's work on the bill was not aided by Reagan's comment at his Oct. 19 news conference defending the right to practice covert activity when it took such actions served its interests. 7th & mass. * inverted margaritas Details of the authorization bill are classified, but the Senate measure is believed to authorize the same funding last year, approximately $19 million. U. S. pressure on the Nicaraguan government is only "strengthening the hands of Sandinista radicals to bring in Cuban and Soviet military assistance."1 But Moyinhan said Nicaragua had violated international law and "it follows that we have an obligation as well as rights to respond to these violations." THE ADMINISTRATION HAS been supporting rebel groups opposed to the Sandinista government. In recent months the rebels have sharply increased their offensive, hitting eco-targets such as airports and oil depots. Administration officials say support of the rebel groups is intended to pressure the Nicaraguan government to stop aiding leftist guerrillas operating in neighboring El Salvador and other Central American nations. OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRUNDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 Subman Delivers 5 p.m.-Close Yello Sub 841-3268 World Health Organization Listed Medical School Spartan Health Sciences University is located on the island of St. Lucia in the West Indies. Openings are still available for the Jan. 84 class. Offering: 36 month M.D. degree program Instruction in English Clinical clerkships in the United States WFO - listed status to be held by the ECFMG Graduates have been accepted into specialty training in U.S. hospitals School awards scholarships, loans and burarries. Please send me more information. SPARTAN HEALTH SCIENCES UNIVERSITY (formally known as St. Lilia Health Sciences University) U.S. OFFICE: P.O. Box 85 I Ei Paso, TX 79941 Telephone: (703) 523-5800 Half price for KU Students SUN The London Early Music Group HIGH RENAISSANCE LIVES ON Directed by James Tyler 3:30 p.m. Sunday, November 6, 1983 Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All valid reserved. For reservations: call 913-684-3922. Purchase $8 & $6-Kids students. To obtain a discount, call 913-684-3922. *KU students must show a valid ID at the time purchase and at the door on the day of performance. Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fund. V S. African non-whites obtain limited power By United Press International PRETORIA, South Africa White voters approved by a 2- to-1 ratio a new constitution giving limited power to non-white but still denying political rights to South Africa blacks, results showed yesterday. Prime Minister Pieter Boha, looking pleased after a divisive two-month campaign that focused on Pretoria's apartheid policy of racial discrimination, said the size of the protests exceeded my wildest expectations." The results of Wednesday's referendum showed a 66 percent approval vote from a brisk turnout of 76 percent of the 2.7 million registrations. Final results were 1,369,223 in favour and the constitution with 697,477 against. "It is an overwhelming result. The government feels strengthened to go forward with evolutionary reform," he said. THE NEW CONSTITUTION, white giving the vote to the 2.5 million "colorado" — people of mixed race — and 850,000 Asians, would maintain the white hold on political power by maintaining a white-dominated president's council and a white executive president. Supporters of Boha's moderate National Party said they were "thrilled" by the result. But right-and left-learning white and black leaders, who opposed the constitution throughout the campaign, reacted with disappointment and anger. "The struggle to undo the new constitution begins today," said Dr. Andries Treumann, leader of the right-wing Conservative Party, which opposes any form of racial integration. Treu胤's northern Transvaal strengthhold around Pietersburg was the only one of the country's 15 cities to turn down the reform measures. "Blacks will see them (coloreds and Indians) as part of the oppressive machinery." he said. RADICAL BLACK LEADER Dr. Natholia Mota said the constitution would split South Africa's non-whites and warned blacks — 70 percent of the population — might violently against colorados and Indians. The party had maintained the proposals strengthened racial discrimination and angered the black majority. The new plan gives coloreds and Indians limited power-sharing with whites in a racially segregated, three-chambered parliament. Dr. Frederick van Zyl Slabbert, leader of the liberal, anti-apartheid Progressive Federal Party, who had urged South Africans to reject the proposals, conceded many PPF members voted "yes" to what they saw as a "step in the right direction." BUT IT UPHOLDS most of the existing apartheid machinery, leaving untouched a host of race laws including prohibitions against racial mixing in residential areas and interracial marriage. Coloredes and Indians did not vote Wednesday but Botha said he would ask their leaders if they wanted their own referendums. THE Drinking Myth of the Week IF THE PARENTS DON'T DRINK, THE CHILDREN WON'T DRINK. Sometimes, but the highest incidence of alcoholism occurs among offspring of parents who are either teetotalers, . or alcoholic. Perhaps the "eximism" of the parents' attitudes is an important factor. S7C MAY 19, 2014 8AM TO 5PM The Student Assistance Center PRESENTS TODAY AND TOMORROW SUA FILMS 48 HRS. Produced by Lawrence Gordon, Joel Silver Directed by Walter Hill Nick Nolte, Eddie Murphy FRI. & SAT. at 3:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. ALSO, SUN., NOV. 6th AGUIRRE: THE WRATH OF GOI Starring Klaus Kinski. Director Werner Herzog's films depicts a party of Spanish conquistadors as they struggle against the jungle in search of El Dorado. With plenty of frightening imagery, this is an unforgettable film. $1.50 THE RULING CLASS has been cancelled. No midnight show this weekend— (November 4th & 5th) All shows in Woodford Aud. SPORTS University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1983 Page 12 Memorial for George Halas draws 1,200-plus By United Press International CHICAGO — More than 1,200 friends, fans and colleagues paid tribute yesterday to George Halas, owner of the Chicago Bears and one of the founders of the National Football League more than 60 years ago. Services for Halas, 88, who died Monday after a long illness, were held at St. Ita Raoman Catholic Church, when they attended in an hour-long memorial service. "Anyone who knew George knew that his life was not always a happy one." said the Rev. Charles Banet, president of St. Joseph's College, Resnaeral, Ind., where the Bears trained before moving to north suburban Lake Forest. "There were moments of great pain and hurt, physical and emotional. Were beyond that to share the hurts and pain of his players and friends," he said. OUTSIDE THE CHURCH, Chicagoans lined the street as an American flag-draped coffin carried by six of Halas' grandchildren was lifted into a limousine that led a procession of 70 cars to St. Adalbert's Cemetery in suburban Niles. Among those attending the memorial service were members of the 1983 Bears team, who filed off three bushes and silently into the church. Following the service, the Bears returned to Lake Forest to continue preparing for Sunday's game against the Los Angeles Rams. "Halas would have wanted it that way," a team snokesman said. Hundreds of Halas' friends, former team members and adversaries in the NFL were also present to pay their respects to the man known as "Papa Bear." MANY COMMENTED on the man who helped found the NFL on a shoestring more than 60 years ago and who is now a millionaire worth hundreds of millions of dollars. "George invented, helped and helped in the growth of the NFL," said League Commissioner Pete Rozelle. "He'll be dearly missed." Former Bears General Manager Jim Finks, who resigned in August after Halas diluted his authority, said Halas' death was a mixed blessing. "I feel very sad. But it's a blessing since he had four or five months of suffering." Finks said. "He was a real people person." The president was like walking down the street with the president. He always bad time to say hello to everyone." Genie Upshaw, president of the NPL. Players Association and a former player for the Oakland Raiders, said he exemplified what the NPL stood for. "I FEEL WHAT HE DID for the game is beyond reproach, and we're going to miss him." Upshaw said. Tex Schramm, president of the Baylor School of Medicine, would power heyers without Halaes. "He was the glue, the tough man that saw the future and believed in the future. He is beyond a legend." Schramm said. "I really loved the man," said DePaul basketball coach Ray Meyer. "Twenty years from now we'll really understand how great a man he was." PREDICTIONS
CarothersBrownBudigCravensHartley
Colorado at KansasKansas 30-21Kansas 41-21Kansas 35-24Kansas 36-34
Oklahoma at MissouriOklahoma 27-21Oklahoma 35-14Oklahoma 23-20Oklahoma 21-20Missouri 27-21
Iowa State at NebraskaNebraska 57-12Nebraska Pi squared-2xNebraska 52-20Nebraska 63-14Nebraska 55-6
Kansas State at Oklahoma St.Oklahoma St. 33-13Oklahoma St. 30-14Illinois 38-13Oklahoma St. 28-0Oklahoma St. 27-12
Illinois at MinnesotaIllinois 40-7Illinois 27-0Oklahoma St. 23-10Illinois 38-6Illinois 45-13
Florida at GeorgiaGeorgia 21-17Florida 24-14Florida 16-13Georgia 17-16Florida 22-21
Clemson at North CarolinaNorth Carolina 31-24North Carolina 28-21North Carolina 20-17North Carolina 24-10North Carolina 26-21
Pitt at Notre DameNotre Dame 13-13Pitt 13-10Notre Dame 17-14Notre Dame 17-14Notre Dame 17-16
Maryland at AuburnAuburn 24-21Auburn 27-17Auburn 24-17Auburn 21-17Auburn 30-21
Northeastern at Cent. ConnecticutNortheastern 44-4Northeastern 20-6Northeastern 24-11Cent. Connecticut 9-8Northeastern 37-14
Season Totals59-20-1—.74653-20-0—.72656-23-1—.70848-31-1—.60852-27-1—.651
The predictors are James Carothers, associate professor of English; Larry Brown, head basketball coach; Chancellor Gene A. Budig; Jeff Cravens, associate sports editor; and Andrew Hartley, sports editor. SPORTS ALMANAC MONEY 1. Hal Sutton $169,261. 2. Fuzzy Zelzer $147,597. 3. Lanny Wagkins $169,271. 4. Calvin Veine $131,845. 5. Gil Morgan $100,132. 6. Rex Cadalew $164,75. 7. Ben Hickman $100,132. 8. Alex Burch $164,75. 9. Kate Tomic $25,666. 10. Jack Kisnick $166,158. LPGA GOLF 1, Johanne Carrier $283.029, 2, Patty Sheehan $246.781, 3, Pat Bradley $282.541, 4, Dana Ripken $259.881, 5, Ben Daniel $267.104, 6, Lucia Miller $155.941, 7, Hollis Stacy $149.036, 8, Amy Alcott $141.091, 9, Okayako Mugai $149.036 MEN'S TENNIS **Asia (Ass of Tennis Professional)** 1. Ivan Petrovic, 865,114. Gulliver Vals, Argentina, $635,735. 4. Mats WILander, Vitals, $681,012. Jimmy Connors, $346,467. 5. Tom Smati, Smid, Czechovskadia $346,467. 6. Tom Smati, Smid, Czechovskadia $346,467. 7. Tom Smati, Smid, Czechovskadia $346,467. 8. South Africa, $753,543. North France, $677,590. 10. Hill California, $611,272. 1. Martina Navarrete $1,232.99; 2. Chris Evert $338.48; 3. Pam Sharr $26.58; 4. Andrea Jaeger $23,621. 5, Wendy Turnbull, Australia, $161,625. 6, Kathy Jadow $39,599. 7, Joanne Brady, T皇城 Palace Hanka, West Germany, 8, Andrea T皇城 Palace Hungary, $17,407. 6, Billie Jean King $131,633. 1, Darrell Walpurgle $167,000 2, Bobby Allison $168,352 3, Dale Fleer $380,271 4, Richard Fletcher $381,974 5, Jon Grace $342,105 6, Bill Elliot $282,852 7, Dave Marcus $285,000 8, Cary Lawborough $285,100 9, Terry Marris 1. Tet Somva $35,330. 2. Al Uster Sr. $400,109. 3. Teo Fasio $450,566. 4. Marten Riess $468,362. 5. Bock Means $450,765. 6. John Paul II $468,362. 7. Al Uster Sr. $471,214. 8. John Paul II $471,487. 9. Pancho Canocher $185,000. 10. Chip Gassman $185,000. 1, Earl Anthony $135,602. 2, Marshall Halman $109,435. 3, Tom Milton $87,933. 4, Joe Berardi $84,322. 5, Turin Duran $78,222. 6, Doren Gerael $70,415. 7, Tank Bakek $60,748. 8, Pete Kerner $60,748. 9, Weber $60,970. 10, Mark Hosta $67,424. THOROUGHBRED RACING Dalila Racing Kerry (Compiled by Daily Racing Form.) JACKEYS 1. Annel Cordera $749,768. 2. Chris Maccaron $740,844.1 Lainfaff Cirk Jr. $737,157.6 Jorge Vesperia $388,387.9 Pat Day $425,928.6 Kobe Van Bessing $382,376.1 Pat Day $352,918.6 $4,847.75 Jacinto Vasquez $739,307.9 Jean-Luc寿马 $529,231.10 Pat Valenzuela $424,838.2 Wayne Luks $306,219.2 Wayne Luks $306,219.2 Woody Stephens $297,847.4 Laz Barberry $287,954.7 Jack Van Jenkins $287,954.7 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harlem $190,888.8 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harlem $190,888.8 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harlem $190,888.8 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harlem $190,888.8 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harlem $190,888.8 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harmlen HOUSES - 1, Ralph Hanover #711.329, 2. Josee Bauer 666.809, 3. David Wong #600.478, 4. Tracie Lobel 666.709, 5. Carter Bird #700.168, 6. Trustone Lobel 665.103, 7. Apple Circle #645.577, 8. Shannon Fancy 733.509, 9. Why Not #679.104, 10. Lucky Jack HARNESS RACING (Compiled by U.S. Trotting Assn.) BASEBALL Free Agent List Pitchers Doug Barr, Detroit; Jim Barr, San Francisco; Jim Bibby, Pittsburgh; Doug Bird, Boston; Jamie Easterly, Milwaukee; Kami Hamada, Chicago; Kamia Karny, Jerry Kosman, Chicago (AL); Frank Lacarte, Houston; Dennis Lamp, Chicago (AL); Hugh Moffett, Chicago; Joel Krug, Chicago; R.J. Richard, Houston; Dan Schatzeler, Montreal, Lary Sorenstein, Cleveland; Elias Sao San Diego; Ken Tekulve, Pittsburgh; Jon Ransom, Underwood, Oakland; Wil Milwox, Detroit Milwaukee Infielders Catchers Ted Simmons. Milwaukee Bert Campanieri, New York (AL); Rod Carew, California; Julio Cruz, Chicago Henry Bender, San Francisco; Bethen Hobner, Pittsburgh; Pitcher Bob Piccoli, Milwaukee; Aurelio Riguel, Chicago (AL) Manny Trillo, Montreal Nelly Mark, Mark Wagner, Texas A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 *Includes all fees including sales tax Selling price $2795 taxes $126.29 16% A/P AR for 30 months Bob HopkiNS' THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1.307 Mass phone 844-1151 CHEVETTE $9950 per mo. $495.00 Down KU INDIA CLUB presents diwali nite ENTERTAINMENT AND EXOTIC INDIAN FOODS Cordley School Hall 19th & Vermont Sat., Nov. 5, 7 p.m. 1979 KU INDIA CLUB presents Lawrence's original Christian Nightclub Every Friday & Saturday Doors open at 7:00 p.m. concerts begin at 8:00 p.m. In the Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa A $6/4.50 members at door $7/5 tickets-SUA office or call 749-3532/0750 & Foreign Student Office, High Wall November 16 & 17 Nominations-Self Nominations due in Graduate Student Council Office, Kansas Union By Friday, 12 pm November 4, 1983 !!GRADUATE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ELECTIONS!! (STUDENT SENATE-FUNDED AD) Also soliciting names of write in candidates for graduate student senators. WE'RE LOOKING FOR PEOPLE WHO ARE LOOKING FOR A CHALLENGE. You can learn one of hundreds of skills in the Army. But some offer a bigger challenge than others Like Infantry. And Signal Intelligence. If you enlist for training in these extra challenging skills for three years, you could qualify for a bonus of $4,000. Or you could get $8,000 if you enlist for four years. And maybe even money for college. A lot of these skills use the latest in high technology, such as computers or laser systems. You'll not only take on the challenge of learning to use this equipment, but we can also provide you with training that's in demand by civilian employers. Find out if you qualify, by calling your Army Recruiter at the number below. Or stop by. CALL: 843-0465 2522 IOWA 843-2200 ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. In the October 31st issue of the University Daily Kansan (UDK) can be found an astonishing effort by UDK staff columnist Kalpana Trivadi entitled "Third World Fights for Fair Information Flow." Ms. Trivadi attributes "the Third World's demand for the creation of a New World Information Order" to the Western press's commitment to the sensational, distorted and "negative." (It might interest Ms. Trivadi to learn that this same claim was frequently made by former Vice-President Spiro Agnew before his unmasking.) A FEW THOUGHTS ABOUT THE THIRD WORLD'S FEAR OF THE FACTUAL For over a decade the Soviet Union and various Third World countries have ignored Article 19 of the U.N.'s Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which endorses the right to freedom of opinion and expression, by calling upon the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization to license and otherwise control all news correspondents. The New World Information Order which so excites Ms. Trivadi can only become manifest by transferring Western technology to Third World countries so that each of these governments might manipulate its own news apparatus, and limiting the Western press's access to and dissemination of information in said countries. Although Ms. Trivadi feels that the Western press erred when it "offered the stories of . . . Pol Pot's regime in Cambodia, the Ayatollah in Iran . . . and Idi Amin in Uganda as evidence of failure in Third World leadership", she fails to cite anything productive accomplished by any member of this murderous triumvirate. Says Ms. Trivadi: "To Third World leaders, freedom of the press is seen as an illusion . . . and a luxury that their societies cannot afford." The October 1st issue of the Kansas City Times contains an example of what Ms. Trivadi probably considers naked negativism. This article, which describes Africa as "stumbling toward calamity," discusses the Dark Continent's population growth, death rate, infant mortality rate, environmental problems, limited amount of safe water and increasing dependence on imported food. Perhaps there's a relationship between the vigor with which Ms. Trivadi and some Third World leaders claim that such problems as the aforementioned become illusory when examined by the Western press and their inability to see that neither prolonged prevarication nor subsidized propaganda is "a luxury that their societies" can now afford. William Dann 7. 1922 W. 24th St. Terrace (PAID ADVERTISMENT) Save a Bu SIRLOIN STOCKADE Weekend at Dinners include: choice of potato or vegetable, roll and butter. Save a Bunch this SIRLOIN STOCKADE MEDIUM CUT $ 6 99 SIZZLIN' SIRLOIN DINNERS 2 Coupon must accompany order. Expires November 6, 1983. 1015 IOWA 2 K.C. STRIP $899 DINNERS SIRLOIN STOCKADE Coupon must accompany order. Expires November 6, 1983. 1015 IOWA PAC-MAN PIZZA & VIDEO $2 Off Any Large, Two Topping Pizza Bring in this coupon Expires Fri. Nov. 4 GAME TOKENS 50 for $5.00 Bring in this coupon Expires Fri., Nov. 4 No other coupons accepted with these offers. THE NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS 1 KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS The University Daily KANSAN November 4, 1983 The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES | Words | 1-Day | 2-Days | 4-5 Days | 10-Days | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 0.15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 | | 16.20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 | | 21.20 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.65 | | For every 5 words add: | 256 | 316 | 725 | 955 | AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Saturday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. **per column inches** Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide or three columns deep, depending on minimum depth in each column. No more than two displayed display advertisements accept for layout. POLICIES - Workouts - Deductions once as Display Advertisement - 2 working days prior to publication - Classified display advertisements. - Classified display ads do not count towards - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words. - Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words. Page 13 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only until credit has been established * Tear sheets are not provided for classified or 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 this earned rate discount - Samples of all mail order items must be submitted Formal emails can be addressed FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the business office at 413-8500. - blind mock ads = please and a $2 service change * bills must uncompany all adscensed marks used - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established ANNOUNCEMENTS Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Edito Correspondence is attached for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement. - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising. The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Ed位 positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Rooms 200 and 119 Staufer-Flint Hall. Applications due in Room 200 Staufer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Wednesday, Nov 16 Kansan classifieds get results The University Dalian Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employment Applications are sought from all qualified people who are interested in teaching, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry. FALL CLASSIC '83 OPEN OPEN MAMA JENERICKS PIZZA 900 In dana, 843-682-4 6 p.m. 1 a.m. plus utilities: 841.902 afternoon distance studio apartment 841.900 month apartment FOR RENT 2 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。3 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。4 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。5 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。6 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。7 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。8 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。9 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。10 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。11 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。12 BHUs newly remodeled. 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K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。35 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。36 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。37 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。38 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。39 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。40 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。41 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。42 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。43 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。44 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。45 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。46 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。47 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。48 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。49 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。50 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。51 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。52 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。53 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。54 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。55 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。56 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。57 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。58 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。59 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。60 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。61 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。62 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。63 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。64 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。65 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。66 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。67 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。68 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。69 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。70 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。71 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。72 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。73 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。74 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。75 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。76 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。77 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。78 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。79 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。80 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。81 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。82 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。83 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。84 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。85 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。86 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。87 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。88 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。89 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。90 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。91 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。92 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。93 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。94 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。95 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。96 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。97 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。98 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。99 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。100 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。101 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。102 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。103 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。104 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。105 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。106 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。107 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。108 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。109 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。110 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。111 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。112 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。113 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。114 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。115 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。116 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。117 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。118 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。119 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。120 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。121 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。122 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。123 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。124 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。125 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。126 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。127 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。128 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。129 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。130 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。131 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。132 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。133 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。134 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。135 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。136 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。137 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。138 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。139 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。140 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。141 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。142 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。143 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。144 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。145 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。146 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。147 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。148 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。149 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。150 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。151 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。152 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。153 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。154 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。155 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。156 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。157 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。158 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。159 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。160 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。161 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。162 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。163 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。164 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。165 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。166 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。167 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。168 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。169 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。170 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。171 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。172 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。173 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。174 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。175 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。176 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。177 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。178 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。179 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。180 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。181 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。182 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。183 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。184 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。185 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。186 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。187 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。188 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。189 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。190 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。191 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。192 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。193 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。194 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。195 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。196 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。197 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。198 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。199 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。200 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。201 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。202 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。203 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。204 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。205 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。206 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。207 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。208 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。209 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。210 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。211 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。212 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。213 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。214 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。215 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。216 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。217 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。218 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。219 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。220 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。221 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。222 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。223 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。224 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。225 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。226 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。227 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。228 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。229 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。230 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。231 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。232 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。233 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。234 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。235 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。236 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。237 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。238 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。239 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。240 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。241 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。242 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。243 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。244 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。245 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。246 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。247 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。248 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。249 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。250 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。251 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。252 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。253 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。254 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。255 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。256 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。257 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。258 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。259 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。260 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。261 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。262 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。263 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。264 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。265 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。266 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。267 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。268 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。269 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。270 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。271 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。272 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。273 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。274 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。275 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。276 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。277 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。278 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。279 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。280 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。281 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。282 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。283 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。284 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。285 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。286 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。287 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。288 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。289 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。290 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。291 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。292 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。293 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。294 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。295 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。296 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。297 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。298 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。299 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。300 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。301 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。302 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。303 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。304 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。305 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。306 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。307 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。308 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。309 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。310 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。311 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。312 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。313 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。314 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。315 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。316 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。317 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。318 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。319 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。320 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。321 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。322 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。323 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。324 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。325 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。326 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。327 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。328 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。329 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。330 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。331 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。332 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。333 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。334 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。335 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。336 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。337 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。338 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。339 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。340 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。341 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。342 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。343 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。344 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。345 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。346 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。347 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。348 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。349 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。350 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。351 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。352 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。353 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。354 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。355 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。356 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。357 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。358 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。359 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。360 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。361 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。362 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。363 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。364 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。365 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。366 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。367 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。368 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。369 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。370 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。371 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。372 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。373 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。374 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。375 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。376 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。377 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。378 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。379 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。380 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。381 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。382 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。383 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。384 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。385 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。386 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。387 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。388 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。389 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。390 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。391 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。392 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。393 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。394 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。395 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。396 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。397 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。398 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。399 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。400 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。401 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。402 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。403 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。404 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。405 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。406 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。407 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。408 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。409 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。410 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。411 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。412 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。413 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。414 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。415 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。416 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。417 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。418 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。419 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。420 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。421 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。422 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。423 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。424 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。425 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。426 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。427 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。428 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。429 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。430 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。431 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。432 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。433 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。434 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。435 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。436 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。437 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。438 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。439 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。440 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。441 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。442 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。443 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣,租賣到期前退房。444 BHUs newly remodeled. K1B unit租賣 Reserved room apartment 1453 80月房间, allilities included. Room size 9'2" x 11'0" (276 cm x 332 cm). 847 805 after 1.0 p.m. from stock, from stadium. Room rate: $49.95/month. STUDIO 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 1 bed apartment, near KL, downtown. $890.00 and 2 utilities. 842-917-8643, 843-4777. Mark $890.90 am a / / / / / / For RENT Nexist, available brand new, just completed 2 bedroom apartments: PON2E, the AU7U ALL UTILITIES FAID! Call 842.987 leave message EXPENSIVE room in nice 59 BR house. $100 mo plus 1/2 rooms. 841 809. Ask for Steve. Kale Kommune needed 1 bedroom house, nice, cheap. Available on or beginning of semester Villa Capri 1734 Ohio Call for info on availability 842-9703 Please leave message. **Meadowlark studio for sublease. Available** November 5. Ask for apartment UU2208 **842-4300** **Carlyle, Suite 6, 1.1/2 Bath, all appliances. C/A W/D** heights a. 1/2 Bath, up. PF with wood. Garage big corner. up. FP with wood. Garage big corner. 2. nice bedroom apartment just north of stadium available immediately. $275. 842-4434 Keep trying no smoking female roommate to share 2 bedsroom apartment. $121 monthly and 1-3 utilities. Across city. SHIGHT SLASH LEASE. Jan 1 to May 31. 2 bedroom, carpeted up in 4 plexes to campus and apartment complex. $999/month. SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES spacious, quiet 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at 68th & Raisdus Figuring all appliances, weather-dry book-ups, at-suite baths, a warming kitchen, Call 749 1067 for an appointment Room for rent near university and downtown. No pets please. 1415-5500 Save money, rent a 1 to 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campervan. No pets, phone 842-1485 and electricity paid off. Streetcar ride to university and downtown. No pets please. B1-5000 and plumbing with water. Water and electricity paid with plumbing and water. Water and electricity paid. Must see to appreciate! Off-street parking. No parking. Use Kansan Classifieds ... Studio apartment for rent on bus route, need further water, water and cable paid. Call Anne G741-6056 To sublease furnished 2 BH apt. Available Nov. 1st on bus route BM 841 4538 Two rooms for rent ($10 and $5) on 1st floor of house located 400 black block of Kentucky. Smaller FOR SALE 1925 Hands SL 350. Low miles, $25 or more offer. 1925 Huesk lugel runs great, nice veils, very雍 fortunate color. 74/65/88, 14/13/15. *** 1941 AUDI FOX, 94.00 miles. Good condition. built engine, catheter and radiator. $800 Call (866) 327-5222. 1975 Vega runs great, good steel tires and battery. No rust. m464155 or 843 3036 1867 Buck LabsRubber Custom 4 door sedan. Excellent alignment. AM/FM stereo. & steering. AM/FM stereo. Cali 441-1853 austria 280Z, blue 5-speed, A/C Also 1972 WV window bus 4-5 speed, 842-366 early岁 108 Datum 310, 4 speed, 30 mpg, hatchback, runs great, a/c M FM cassette, game: G91-4291 728 1982 Toyota Corolla SLE, clean special paint and interior P.S. 30 F.S. speed crane, A/C; FMF manufacturer 69 Volkswagen Bug. Needs some engine repair. Willing to negotiate price. Call 841-6498 70 Bug need some work. Good life. £24-7000. ANGEL MOBIL! Like New Cost $20.00 Save $2 Call HEYE! Malibu Classic Station wagon-white 41-1824 Best Offer KONIA CWUC 1996. Must sell $7000 or best offer toured warehouses #64166848. Honda MT 125. Good Condition, $850 or best offer 843-7637 Must Sell 190 Kawagaki 250 LTD. Excellent condition, low mileage 864-6479 Six POLICE tickets for sale. Great location, Call 843-360 and leave message Stereo television video. All name brands. Lowest prices. IC area. Total Sound Distributors. Yamaha 2-speed, 35 M P H . moped very clean! $295 841-2655 HUGE SELECTION OF MEN'S MAGAZINES FOR SALE, MEN'S COMICS, 811 N.J. OPEN EVERY WEDNESDAY. WE SELL STAMPUS! U.S. and Foreign. 811 New Hampshire. Open weekends 10.5. 19 computer terminal, like new, compatible with Honeywell 24, line/8 inches, graphics, $450, Honeywell 24, line/8 inches, graphics, $450, $ ^{\circ} $LOST AND FOUND FRESHMIS SCHOOLSHIPS AVAILABLE It is not too late to enroll in a NAVAL ROTC. Call 691-381-6110 Child Research. This in a 170% clearance bookkeeping position serving two newly-funded programs with families with developmental disability (50 wpm), and library research skills required (50 wpm), and library research skills required (50 wpm). Bureau of Child Health, 348 Hawthorne, KU Lawrence, KS, by November 4, 1988. EOE/AHR Yamaha RVH18 N300 - $259 Yamaha TRNTH7 old, perfect condition. Sold together. $259 Call Mary HELP WANTED Black female kitten found behind Oliver Hall Tuesday night. 864-8671 Lost keys. 7 keys on host, Friday at Crew Party on Mass. Call 841-6435. One macro economics book in Wescoe. Claim at the candy counter at the Union. Care-giver to assist female with disability No excused absences. Please keep her overnight, meetings during holidays. Call Bell 617-259-3800. Last kitten, male, white with black spots and tail Last around Hawk's 'Crasing on' Saturday night Lost black male cat. 1/12 years old, black flea color. Victim of 24th and Kasold, W10. Dec 16. La Vie. Ld 83-459-699 days. 837-483-evenings. Reward Law. Keys. 7 keys. On Kes. Friday on Club Party on Cy ) POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE (synthetic chemistry) position available immediately for the synthesis of reagents useful for the preparation of small peptides and other bioactive chemicals (analysis) analysis Minimum salary $14,900 The successful applicant have a recent Ph.D. in synthetic organic, organic chemistry in the design and execution of organic syntheses, Send curriculum vitae, three letters of reference and graduate transcripts to Professor Robert O. Carroll, Department of Chemistry, University of Kansas, Lawrence, 6060-2312 The University of Kansas equal opportunity/affirmative employee Research Assistant half-time position in chemistry The Center for Biomedical Research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is responsible for 16 mvtated person for at least one year with possible extension to three or more years. Fultes internships require a degree in biochemistry, proteases and acetylcholinesterase by various, some toxic inhibitors. Annual salary is $20,000.00, complements Bachelor's degree in a chemically or biochemically related field. Desired experience in protein or enzyme characterization. Applicant must use the use of microcomputers. Applications are accepted by mail only until November 7 at 3:00 p.m. in Madison. Internships may be held independently and responsibility, and if possible, a transcript to Idrillo Millo (Millo, Lawrence, KS 69045). Kansas, Lawrence, RS 69045. Kansas University is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer. SENIOR POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE (photochemistry) available January 1, 1984 Studies on the synthesis, photochemistry and biological processes of organic derivatives for petrologic analysis. Requires Ph.D. in either physical or organic chemistry with at least three years of postdoctoral or equivalent research in organic photochemistry, photoluminescence spectroscopy and various chromatographic methods of analysis. You must have a master's degree necessary. The successful applicant must have a proven research record to enable him or her to work as a scientist in the laboratory working knowledge of photochemistry and luminescence of various organic functional groups. This is a full-time, 60 hours per week, position requiring the ability to apply, resume, or to apply, send list of publications and three letters of reference by November 29, 1983. Mail resume to: Carlson, Department of Chemistry, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, 6600-2112 The University employs an equal opportunity affirmation policy. TRAVEL Ma pintourin is looking for Tour Managers, people we hire to offer our group tours in the Middle East, Africa, Orient, India. You must love people, be outgoing, have a good attitude towards others, be active, have a good looking senior citizens, our major market, as well as with all age groups. Personality, pose, a good looking appearance, smart and a quick learner, too. Public speaking ability, giving commentary a must. Most assignment requires a strong fluency in German, Spanish, French or other is a plus if you send an email. Our major focus is on ground work. Pay is good and if you are good the tips are excellent. If you think you qualify and are over the age of 35, you can yourself to Alton Hagen, Director of Tour Managers Ma pintourin 131 S. Andre Drive, Lawrence, RI The Budget Office of the University of Kansas is seeking a full-time permanent Budget Analyst to perform budget analysis and maintenance of the University's budget; design and maintenance of primarily computer-based budgeting systems; advise to Administrative Computing staff, departmental chairpersons, faculty members, budget per person; manage accounting and management procedures; budgeting, accounting and management procedures; budgeting, budgeting and analytical report preparation; knowledge of COHQ1, RASID2, BAG1, PREFERENCE 4001, BAG3; experiential experience in accounting budgeting or similar quantitative field analytical problem solving; willingness to work an irregular work schedule on a non-regular basis; ability to submit weekly application deadline of 15, 18, 19; application deadline of 15, 18, 19; letter of application to Office of Business Affairs; phone number 601-872-1600; Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60436, or phone 913-8641-500; AAE 0603. Cross over the bridge to historic North Lawrence. Visit Schmidt's Retail Liquor, 800 N.2nd, on Main drag, for a nice selection, spirits, beer and chilled wines. Curtis Matts Showpostwriters 600 movies to choose and pre-recorded movies 1447 W.289 W.842 W.824 *** MISCELLANEOUS Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont PERSONAL 33 45 ROCK THERAPY 1607 westport k.c..mo. rd. $15,000 Old Milkwee Dog Pool Tourery. Sat. Nov. 5 Register for men's and women's or women's club events. $299. 2nd anniversary sale. INFLATION FIGHTER, E 7th E 7th 20% off everything. Party clothes and vintage wearers; wok skirts, coats, mens clothes and top coats. Come help us celebrate. Hours: 12-30 Attention: Poodlehead! Your Halloween Bash was a success; with all those great walters and waverlettes, you made a great presentation. Give an excellent shower. The kissing booth's in attendance was a huge crowd. On the turn light, your Party was the only one of the best. But, I may be more partial than the rest. Thank you for your hard work. You will stay for awhile. Thank you for your protective walk, and thank you for being part of the team. You've just got to learn to believe, that a paw you could never achieve! The raincheck still stands. And you're not going to lose it. A strong keg outlet. Bennett Retail Liquor. Chilled two cogs. Eggs to 9 oz. north or south of northwest. 1865-1884. 842-223. 842-224. Tarot Card Reader America's foremost reader of astrology and the cards is taking appts, for private readings. She tells past-present future; advises on love, marriage, business, etc. Date: Nov.11, 12, 13 Bernard's Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles Bernard's Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles I need. I want my language files. ★ Events: Men's & Women's ABCD Men's & Mixed Doubles AB Trailridge Athletic Club Jayhawk Open Racquetball Tournament Call 841-0489 ★ BARB'S VINTAGE ROSI Deadline: Nov. 9 Mrs. Lang Psychic Tarot Card Reader Vintage & contemporary clothes and party & formal attire 918 $1/2 Mass. M-10.5 COMPRESSED HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early diagnosis of cardiovascular disease, confidence获救 Kansas City Area City staff. ★ Entrv Call 841-7230 for more information I/O Happy 22nd birthday in my life... I/O Happy 22nd birthday in my life... Dana Saare, two down, nine to go! we are one I! Dana Saare, two down, nine to go! we are one I! M-S 10-5 Thurs. 10-8 FALL CLASSIC '83 DWL! Wahk 22nd Birthday to my best Favorite in the whole world! I dun do! LAT Dear Jamel, Skip and Marie are its again don’t you know that it’s really hard to find someone much is true. There’s only one failing friend. Missing you is a great loss. 918 1/2 Mass 841-2451 Earn a potentially Infinite Income. This is a multi-level marketing plan which involves only one product, a loafful, dry milk replacer that superior nutrition and better taste than regular milk should you believe it. Call 842 7351 8140. 842-7351-8140. HAPPY BIRTHDAY BROTHER NOBJ FROM YOUR SISTER WAKA FALL-MERGERHANDSEIN: WOOL COTT CAPS, WOOL CAPS, WOOL CAPS WITH NEW NAPKET, A NEW WOOL HAT, THE ETC. HEY LOUIS! Happy Birthday. Brat, you JB LAVE? delta love. dhama and Suzanne DODI HOPE YOU GET A BITE SATURDAY NIGHT! —LOVE. PAM & JILL. impatient passport, portfolio resume, naturalization, immigration, vsa, IIS, and course fine portraits. [238-240] NORWICH VT 06947 CONTACT WALKME FERRIGUS HAMMETT VIRGINIA CONTACT MICHAEL 18109FFN LONDON LT. BLUE SPENDS, MO MARY WONG It is not too early, to order Christmas portraits for you. The photos are available at: PHOTOS FOR PENNYVILLE 614-800-2530 PHOTOS FOR BROOKLYN 614-800-2530 Happy Birthday Julie! Rent video: cassette recorders and pre-recorded audio. Choose to choose from: Curtis Mallard 447 W. 22rd St. (818) 539-0200 Mallard 447 W. 22rd St. (818) 539-0200 OBSESSION FAULTY Are you paying $139.00 a month for the Blue Cross Family Health Plan? That’s very expensive. Consider saving $500.00 or more a year. Call Me Bil Dutton Dutton Insurance LTD. 9th & Kentucky 2021-15 * The Complete Insurance Facility * VIDEO TAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCE 1: 20am Tuesday - Friday, November 4 - 1: 30am Preparation for Tests, 1: 30am and 2: 30am Taking and Notetaking. Free. Contact 864-8044, Center District, 121 Strong Hall, 864-8044, to register. Sat., Nov. 5th, 7:00-10:30 p.m McCollum Hall JAPANESE FAIR Exhibition, Show & Food FREE BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing . confidential counseling 843-4821 Danger signals* Headache, backache, arm pain, arm pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, call the Chiropractic Center and doctor M.E. for assessment and insurance accepted. No charge for consultation. Special for students. Haircuts $7 and perms $25. Charm, ask for Deena Jenna 843-3300 WOOMPA FANES UNITE: Time to celebrate. $^2$ The 13rd Annual 'Invention of Sex' party is Saturday. If you think you should be invited, you know whom to contact. Western Civilization Notes. Now as Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization Notes to sense use to solve the problems of Western Civilization 3. For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Creek. The Notes are updated weekly. HAPPY BIRTHDAY TINA Say it on a shirt, custom silkscreen printing. T-shirts. --for foreign students or Americans 814.6244 3 services at a location, editing and graphic design courses ENCORE: 84, the All Campus theatre production, is now accepting applications for stage manager and technical director. The show will be Feb 23, 24, and 25 in Hoch Auditorium. Applications are at the office on Monday, November 10. Previous experience is required. For more information call 804-4564 or 749-7303. Dubai Downe open 10:12 Mnun 12:12 Sat, 10:10 Mnun Lawrence's only onlun darauf.umat.um 12:12 Mnun 1SKI VAIL/BEAVER CREEK call TOLL FREE 1890-222-4488 or CONSULT YOUR TRAVEL AGENT FOR DISCOUNT RATES on lodging, renting, and rentals [Image of a baby laughing] Planned Parenthood, reproductive health services including contraceptive counseling and supplies, pregnancy testing, abortive counseling and services. (718) 758-2679 in Kansas City for the clinic nearest you. THRIST STORES Appliances, furniture, clothing, knitwear, bedding Always good bargain 828 1356-0749 828-828-828- SPECTRUM OPTICAL Eyeglasses made UP to 100W from a pristine 4E.7th St. Miami Wholeware Sound Rental, P.A., Guitar, and Bass amps 841-6495 SERVICES OFFERED M. A. in English, 7 years of experience teaching on campus, 5 years of experience teaching online, proofread and add paper, theses and dissertations. Artists with the written word Typing, editing graphics WORD ARTISTS. Ellen B412 2172 ENGLISH Ph.D will edit your thesis, dissertation book article, e-book, Turing in English 101, 102, 201, etc. Qualified Tutoring in Pascal, Certified by the Association for Computing Machinery (JACM) Call for Applicants Wanta have a Function and get laundry done too? Sada Sush-a nud. 749-4122 **Raquetball** tennis, squash racquet stringing **Rackets** basketball rackets, tennis rackets **Raquettes** for sale on head. Head, Dump, Dump, Dump. STADIUM BARRER Shop 1033 Massachusetts, downown all haircuts. $5.00 No appointment The Educaion Association can help you achieve a evacuation plan. For more information, envelopte to No. 2321, Kansas City. TUTORING CS250, Math and French, Individual Sessions Call 814-436 WAKE IP SERVICE We will wake you up in the morning by phone Call Chris. 842-0660 TYPING 4-hour typing. Fast, accurate. Resumes, letters, exposses, tests. I want to do your job. 842-6912 A.A.A.A. AFFABLE TYPING SERVICE. Fast, first mailing. 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Experienced typists and editors Xerox 615 Memorywriter, Royal Correcting ES3000D 843 5675 Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term- papers, dictionaries, etc. IBM correcting selective H. 842-4744 or 843-8761, 11:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Call fast and accurate试聘 Terry or 843-6484 any DEPENDENT MAIL service, professional typing IBM DEPENDENT III,桃心 large jobs or small. Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations. IBM Correcting Selective Call JEANETTE SIAFFER TVPING SERVICE IBM III RECIPE P3 Elite Euler 815-7482 Experienced typist will type classification theses, text documents, and technical writing. Must be a U.S. citizen, a F.A.T. fact, Affordable, Clean Typing Word processor, & keyboard. Job offered by Dell Technologies. Elvis could wagle. Shakespeare could write my talent. Call 842 6904 after 5:30 and weekends. Experienced typist, desserts; terminations for Correcting, Selective, Barb 842 2150 after 5:00 Experienced typed term papers, themall on Experimental Psychology. Mail resume to: Pice Pies and will correct spelling. Phone 853-9240 Mrs. Miller. E-mail pices@psy.unl.edu ONTIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT 841-3510 Word Processing plus typing Dictation plus transcription from cassette plus microcardette. Plus arrhythm plus charts plus graphics plus photography. Plus pickup and delivery . Ab's Art Books 749 3230 Library Research - Typing - Editing - Will help research, outline, write! 812.8240 WANTED Female roommate -nice room, campus 2 blocks, W/D/ 841-4476 Female roommate to sublease own room in a 2 bathroom suite. Free lease. 816 plush 16 pillow. Free lease. Until Nov. 30th. Need 1 ticket for Netraska vs. KU. Call 029-8481. Need money to share 2 Bed II Reflah Hotel »&« or need money to share 2 Bed II Reflah Hotel »&« GWM wanted for downstairs apartment. Private room available. Contact HR for appointment. Resume negotiate 14-364-half year. Roommate wanted to share a nice, furnished 2 bedroom apt. 5m² downcity and downtown. $199.00 Part time observations needed for behavioral research project in Topka. Approximately 15 hours weekly of laboratory work on data. No experience required, but must be reliable worker. Must be available afternoon and evening. Send application letter with 2 work references to Research Assistant, AA 315 3015 Terrace, Lakewood, CO 80219. Roommate for huge house apartment. Private room efficient energy. $150/month. Roommate wanted $75.30 month & 1/4 units. very Good deal for you. 841.812 Roommates needed share beautiful, large, Kentucky Hotel; $150 includes All, Excellent Place-go- ing room. Roommate need $2.00 money includes utilities No phone. Stop by and or leave phone at 1134 Lauren third roommate needed for nice, modern 3 BR townhouse close to campus. Available immediately. WOMEN'S SELF DEFENSE. A no-intimates course that is taught in the classroom will be offered only $180 to the face of the price. No refunds or exchanges. Wanted: Bass player for rock hard, experience and vocal ability required. Call Todd 843-8034 *Wanted: Mature co-operative female non-smoker to share brand new townhouse at 9th & 8th Avenue. 190.00 --with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045. Use the rates below to figure costs and watch the results. Now you've got selling power! KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS People read the Kansan classifieds to find homes, jobs, cars, typing services, etc. You can use the Kansan classifieds to sell anything from A to Z. Just mail in this form Classified Heading: Write Ad Here: ___ Name: ___ Address: ___ Phone: ___ Date to Run: ___ Classified Display 1 col x 1 inch - $4.20 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days on Two Weeks 15 weeks at home $2.00 $6.15 $9.75 $6.75 Abbott-owned health $7.90 $8.00 $7.90 $7.90 14.45 1. } SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1983 Page 14 Kansas forced to play musical football Colter the lone veteran of KU secondary By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor And then there was one. The Kansas Jayhawk secondary, already beset by injuries and departing players, found another way to lose a player when coach Mike Gottfried said that freshman supersherif Berry would need Colorado because of a bruised shoulder. The situation is so bad that KU is expected to start only one player who has seen ANY action in the secondary this season. The lone veteran is senior Jeff Colter, who has started every game for Kansas this season. Elvis Patterson, who has played defensive end all season, will move back to cornerback, the position he played last season. Wayne Ziegler, a redshirt freshman from Nickerson, will replace Berry at safety. Colter said he wondered whether he might be next. "ITS CROSSED MY MIND every now and then," Colter said yesterday after a light workout "A couple of the others, but I try not to think about it." Colter himself is back, which is an accomplishment in itself considering the problems the secondary has had since fall practices began; - Rodney Madden, listed as the *Jeff Brown, who had taken de- merciter's spot, quit the team Tuesday, wearing his third jersey. - Derek Berry's injury, was not diagnosed until Wednesday. "I think the layoff hurt me," Colter said. "I had to adjust after sitting out. I did a couple of things wrong on some other jobs. I'm back have back, but I think I'm back now." 'It's not so much that I have more responsibility,but I just have to play harder and do a little more.' M. HOLLIS Jeff Colter, KU cornerback starting safety on the depth charts, quit before the season began. - Tony Berry, used sparingly at cornerback as a freshman, was ruted academically ineligible for the season. - Rod Demerritte, who replaced Bell as the starting cornerback, broke his ankle against Iowa State and is also out for the season. - Dino Bell, who moved from running back to cornerback and had started early in the season, broke his wrist against Wichita State and is out for the game. But Colter looks to the bright side. "It's not really that bad," Colter said. "Elvis has played back here before, so he just has to review the coverages. It's not so much that I have more responsibility, but I just have to play harder and do a little more." THE JAYHAWKS and the Buffaloes square off tomorrow in Memorial Stadium. Kickoff is set for 1:30 p.m. "They like to throw a lot anyway, and I think they might do it even more so." Colorado is tied for last in the conference and has given up an average of more than 40 points a game. "I think we are going to win," Colter said. "We have to play hard on every play and fly around to the ball." The Jayhawks are 3-4-1 overall and 1-3 in the conference. After Colorado, they must play Nebraska in Lincoln and then face Iowa in at-last Missouri in the homecoming games. "We'd like to finish out at least even." Colter said. "We'll try to win every game. I'm not going to say we lose," he said. We'll see after these last three games. JAHWAY NOTES — The playing status of wide receiver Bobby Johnson, fullback E.J. Jones, offensive lineman Chip Schuler and tight end Jeff Anderson will be determined by game time tomorrow. Running back Harvey Fields, linebacker Darnell Williams and Berry are all definitely out. KU [3-4-1] vs. CU [2-6] Flanker Darren Green will be back for the first time in two weeks since spraining his ankle against K-State. Quarterback Frank Searer, who hyperextended his knee against Oklahoma State, is 100 percent. Gottfried said. Ziegler, who injured his knee in spring practice, had not played in a game until Monday, when he participated in the junior varsity game against Baker. Ziegler caught a touchdown pass while playing receiver. Clyde Johnson, who started at safety earlier in the season, has been switched to defensive end, replacing Patterson. Steve Cole, who had been the No. 3 safety, has been moved to receiver and will back up Richard Estell as split end. Date: Saturday, Nov. 5 Time: 1:30 p.m. Place: Kansas Memorial Stadium Estimated crowd: 30,000 Weather forecast: Partly cloudy, high around 65 Line: Kansas hv.11 Probable Starters Kansas Colorado Offense Offense 82 Richard Estell (6-4, 196) SE 5 Loy Alexander (5-11, 173) 81 Sylvester Byrd (6-3, 215) TE 77 Mike Sylvester (6-3, 263) 72 Renwick Atlans (6-5, 265) LT 63 Junior III (6-1, 254) 69 Paul Failchid (6-4, 257) LG 61 Steve Heron (6-2, 225) 68 Bennie Simecka (6-4, 265) C 64 Shaun Beard (6-2, 250) 75 K.C. Brown (6-6, 260) RG 70 John Firm (6-1, 266) 76 Reggie Smith (6-4, 260) RT 7D Dave Hestera (6-3, 242) 22 Darren Green (5-10, 170) FL 8 Ron Brown (6-0, 182) 10 Frank Seurer (6-2, 194) QB 13 Steve Vogel (6-4, 202) 4 Kenwin Bell (5-9, 185) TB 48 Lou Rouson (6-2, 201) 39 E.J. Jones (6-0, 210) FB 26 Chris McLemore (6-1, 211) Defense 24 Clyde Johnson (6-2, 215) LE/LOLB 54 Sandy Armstrong (6-1, 262) 37 Carkey Avery (6-3, 220) LT 74 Randy Hopgin (6-3, 257) 90 Erdridge Avery (6-3, 220) LG/SLB 55 Don Fairbanks (6-3, 219) 29 Rod Timmens (6-4, 245) RN/GN 91 Don Muncie (6-2, 220) 48 Mike Arbanas (6-4, 220) RT/WILB 51 Terry Irvin (6-1, 203) 15 Len Gant (6-1, 210) RE/RT 96 George Smith (6-3, 259) 46 Dane Griffin (6-2, 204) LLB/ROLB 52 Wayne Carroll (6-3, 200) 60 Willie Pless (6-0, 210) RLB/SS 31 Jeff Donaldson (6-0, 214) 33 Jeff Colter (5-11, 175) LC 44 Clyde Riggins (5-10, 183) 32 Elvis Patterson (5-10, 190) RC 22 Victor Scott (5-10, 192) 18 Wayne Ziegler (6-2, 190) S/WS 7 Kent Davis (6-2, 191) Specialists P 3 Tom Field (6-0, 175) 31 Clint Colburn (6-0, 175) 3 Bruce Kallmeyer (5-10, 180) 3 Tom Field (6-0, 175) 34 Allan Braun (6-2, 190) OU's Switzer says Mizzou will be tough Sooners, Tigers still have a shot at Big Eight title By RICK GOSSELIN United Press International Oklahoma knows that the unbeaten Nebraska Cornhuskers loom on the front porch in the Big Eight title chase but Coach Barry Switzer is trying to keep his Sooners aware of Missouri lurking on the back porch. And Okahama must go to the back door tomorrow when the Sooners travel to Missouri to play the Tigers in a regionally televised game. Oklahoma has corrected its course after nonleague losses to No. 2 Texas BIG 8 FOOTBALL and No. 15 Ohio State, scrambling back from a 3-2 start and the transfer of star tailback Marcus Dupree to Southern Mississippi to win three consecutive games and climb back to the No. 11 spot in the UPI poll with a 6-2 record. OKLAHOMA SHARES first place in the Big Eight with No. 1 Nebraska with 4-0 records but Missouri is only a game back at 3-1. Although the Tigers are only 5-3 overall, they are certainly capable of beating anyone as evidenced by their 28-18 triumph earlier this season over No. 6 Illinois. Missouri still has a shot at the Big Eight championship. A win over Oklahoma coupled with a loss by Nebraska at Oklahoma in the regular-season finale could produce a trichampionship. "Missouri is the most pivotal game in our season," Switzer said. "We all know Nebraska is down the road but that's insignificant if we can't beat Missouri. And we're going to have our hands full trying to do that." "I talked to (Kansas State Coach) Jimmy Dickey last week and asked him about Missouri. He said we were about equal. He thought we might be a better defensive team against the rush but offensively he said they were about the same type of football team as we are. I don't think it was a bad thing as good as we are right now but I respect his opinion and evaluation of the people he 's played." Missouri has won two games in a row, outscoring Kansas State and Iowa state by a combined 79-18 in the past two weeks. The Tigers also scored 59 points in an earlier conference victory over Colorado. OKLAHOMA WON that game 29-10. The key for Missouri has been Marlon Adler, who has already set a school single-season record for quarterbacks with 11 rushing yards and 54 punt returns from Winfield has also completed 63 percent of his passes for 1,129 yards and eight more touchdowns. "He's the kind of quarterback who can execute this offense to near perfection." Missouri offensive coordinator Larry Beigeltd问. "When he's hot, I don't know of a better quarterback in college football." IN OTHER GAMES, No. 1 Nebraska plays Iowa State, Kansas State is at Oklahoma State and Colorado travels to Kansas. BEGINNING SWIMMING KU swimming coach Gary Kempf, 1983 NCAA Coach of the Year, thinks the Jayhawks will be a Big Eight contender despite losing members on both the men's and women's teams. File photo Swimmers open season this weekend with head coach spouting optimism By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer The KU men and women's swimming teams will open their seasons this weekend, one on the road and the other at home. Head Coach Gary Kempf, 1983 NCAA Coach of the Year, is looking forward to a good showing this weekend, as well as throughout the season. The men's squad faces Southwest Missouri State and Drury tonight in Springfield, Mo. "We're really going to this meet kind of blind," Kempf said. "I don't know much about those teams. I'm just a regular coach and I work outrubs from the last two weeks." THE WOMEN'S TEAM will swim against Colorado State University and the University of Nebraska at 7 p.m. in Johnson Nataratior. Admission is free. Nebraska was runner-up to the University of Kansas in the Big Eight Tournament. "The women are in a situation — that because of the national status they have earned — that the other teams are always pointing toward us." Kempf The women's team has won the Big Eight Conference nine years in a row and finished seventh in the National Association swim meet last year. Kempf has coached the women's team for the past eight years and both the men's and women's teams the past three. "We can't enter the pool without the other teams we face having done that little bit extra to prepare for us." The instructor says of the program, but it also adds pressure. KU LOST ALL-AMERICA Tammy Thomas to graduation, but has five AWARDS. "Anytime you lose someone the calfman of Tamery Thomas. it is going to hurt." Kempt said "But we are faced as a team than we have ever been." Leadership on the women's team should come from returning All-American Jenson Waggstaff. Tammy Cerney and Bower Schaeffer, Celene Cerny and Kelly Burke. "Our goal is to continue like we have over the last eight years." Kemp said. "We have got to be ready for everybody that gets in the pool with us." Both squads have been working to improve their weak areas since the crimson and blue intrasquat meet two weeks ago. "I did not see anything I did not expect in the intrasquad meet," Kempf said. "Our biggest weakness is youth. We are inexperienced on the intercollegiate level, but we will get that in the next couple of weeks." ELEVEN OF THE 20 men competing tonight were not on last year's Big Eight championship roster, he said. The strength he sees in the men's program this year is the leadership from people such as senior Brad Wells, who is dominant in the backstroke and freestyle; junior Brad Coens, because of his versatility and power in the freestyle, individual medley and backstroke; junior Doug Hiemstra, because of his progress from last year and over four years; junior Tomas Swimmer; and sophomore Jim Amnons and senior Jay Engel, because of their improvement in sprints. "The biggest thing I am looking for each week is a step in progress and maturity on the part of the team," he said. "Potential-wise, this could be the best team I have ever had. But we have a long way to go." THE MEN PLACED SECOND at the Big Eight Conference Championships last year. Kempt also said that the men's diving team had more talent than ever. "We have four solid divers this week. And kept the Kempt. It has been a big boost to our team." "We lost five seniors who were vital parts of our program," he said. "But I don't view this as a rebuilding year, just the next step." Frank White named KC's Player of the Year He also said that the addition of freshmen Darcy Gregor, Brigid O'Reilly and Marcie Herrold had helped solidify the women's program. By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Frank White, a six-time Glove Owl winner, has been selected as Kansas City Royals' Player of the Year for the 1983 season by the Baseball Writers Association of America, the Royals announced yesterday. "Although winning individual awards is not as important as overall team accomplishments, I am still excited about being Royal Player of the season. We have great players with outstanding accomplishments over their careers, and to be selected from them makes it very significant to me." He will receive the award Saturday at the 13th Annual Kansas City Baseball League. White, 32, turned in a good all-around season with a 260 average, 35 doubles, six triples, 11 home runs and 77 RBI. His RBI count was high among major league second basemen and established a Royals' record for his position. He also led the Nationals in consecutive games with at least 1 RBI in 11 straight games from June 10-22. White won the Royals' Player of the Month Award in June when he hit .209. (AP) He has spent his entire career in the Royals organization, compiling a lifetime 258 average with 70 homers and 484 RBI. In addition to winning an American League-record (for second base) six consecutive Gold Gloves, he has been named to four AL All-Star teams and was the Most Valuable Player in the 1979 AL Championship Series when Kansas City swept the Yankees in three games for the pennant. right-handed hitter finished the season strongly, complying a .298 average with four homers and 21 RBI in the final 32 games. White's first player of the Year award. KC Frank White Baseball writers name managers of year White Sox surge helped LaRussa capture AL award NEW YORK — Tony LaRussa, who brought the Chicago White Sox their first championship in 24 years and watched Chisex pitcher LaMarr Hoyt gain the Cy Young Award, yesterday was named American League Manager of the Year by the Baseball Writers Association of America. By United Press International LaRussa the strong second half surge with the White Sox, in which they won 59 of 85 games, enabled Chicago to capture the A.I. Western Dvision title for the first time since 1967; however, stopped the Chicago machine in the playoffs and went on to beat The BBWAA's inaugural voting for American League skipper, LaRussa received 17 of the possible 28 votes to easily outidust Baltimore manager Joe Altobelli, who was named on seven ballots. Philadelphia in the World Series. THE 39-YEAR-OLD LaRussa formulaized a starting rotation that turned the division into a merry-go-round, as Hoyt grabbed the brass ring 24 times, Richard Dotson won 22 games, Floyd KerrJoes Krossen 11 and Burns 18. Bobby Cox of Toronto received the remaining four votes for keeping the Blue Jays in pennant contention until a weary bullpen gave out in August. LaRussa, a former infielder for the A's, Braves and Cubs, has been manager of the White Sox since the middle of the 1979 season. The only AL manager with longer tenure is Detroit's Sparky Anderson. Dodger's Lasorda narrowly defeats Houston's Lillis NEW YORK -- Tommy Lasorda, who directed the Los Angeles Dodgers to a Western Division title in what was supposed to be a rebuilding year, yesterday was named the National League's Manager of the Year by the Baseball Writers Association of America. By United Press International Lasorda, along with Tony LaRussa of the Chicago White Sox, the American League's Manager of the Year, are the first recipients of the award created by the writers. It will be awarded annually. Lasorda, 56, guided the Dodgers to a Tanner, who finished third in the voting, also saw his team get off to a poor start but then sprint late in the season before losing the NE. East to the West by six games. Lasorda and Tanner are the deans of major league managers. IN THE VOTING for the NL award, Lasorda nipped Bob Lillis of Houston by one vote. Lasorda got the nod from 10 writers while Lillis was named by nine Chuck Wilson and Paul Wavens of the champion Phelps won one of them. Lillis led the Astros to a strong comeback after an 0-9 start. Houston finished third in the NL West with an 85-77 record. 91-71 record in edging the Atlanta Braves for the NL West crown. Since assuming command of the Dodgers in 1977, Lasorda has won his division title four times and the league championship three times. Crimson meets Blue in the field house after football game The Kansas Jayhawk basketball team will be featured in its first official scrimmage tomorrow during the annual Crimson and Blue intrasquad game at Allen Field House. By the Kansan Staff Tipoff is set for 45 minutes after the completion of the Kansas-Colorado football game at Memorial Stadium. Admission to the basketball game is a can of food, which will be given to needy local residents. There will be a game with a person who does not bring a can of food. The Jayhawks are opening the season under first-year coach Larry Brown. The first scheduled game is against the Dutch National team on Nov. 16. The first regular season game will be Nov. 26 when KU will take on the 1983 NCAA runner up Houston Cougars in a nationally televised contest. Team posters will be given out to the 1,000 spectators high school age and the Crimson and Blue game, the team coached by assistants Bob Hill and R.C. Buford will consist of Greg Dreling, Kelly Knight, Kerry Brogan, Calvin Thompson, Tad Boyle, Mike Marshall and Tim Banks. The opposing team, coached by Ed Manning and John Calipari features Carl Henry, Brian Martin, Jim Pelton, Mike Cohn, Kellogg, Cadrie Hunter and Jeff Giutti. The athletic department will sell 334 remaining student season tickets Tuesday. Ticket locations have not been given. The price is $22 for 14 games. ↑ The University Daily Red Sunday Cubans killed in Grenada honored Inside, p. 2. KANSAN FAIR Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas C Vol. 94, No. 56 (USPS 650-640) High 60; Low 50 Details on p. 2. Monday morning, November 7, 1983 Mass graves discovered within Grenada village; Bishop presumed buried By United Press International ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — U.S. officials found several bodies yesterday in mass graves where Grenadian soldiers reportedly buried Prime Minister Maurice Bishop and dozens of others. Five leaders of the coup that ousted Bishop — including the head of the defunct Revolutionary Military Council, Gen. Hudson Austin, and Deputy Prime Minister Bernard Coard — were transferred from the USS Guam to Richmond Hill Prison. The commander of U.S. ground forces on Grenada said American troops would have to stay on the troubled Caribbean island, 1,900 miles from the coast of a Cabanaback counterattack was eliminated. "IF WE TOOK THEM (the troops) out now, they would have to come back right in again," said Gen. Jack Ferris in an interview. "The sooner it is, to get out soon and the sooner the better." Andrew Antipup, a counselor at the newly-established U.S. Embassy on Grenada, said officials feared that 100 to 150 people might be caught in the canal. The navy might sign east of the island's Cuban-built jet airport. U. S. officials located the army truck driver who hauled away bodies of people — presumably including Bishop — killed Oct. 19 by soldiers firing into a crowd of more than 3,000 who freed Bishop from house arrest, Antippus said. A U.S. INTELLIGENCE officer who declined to be named there were at least two grave sites and said some bodies had been found in the graves of the graves. The officer did not identify the bodies. Former Agriculture Minister George Louison told a delegation of visiting U.S. congressmen yesterday that soldiers had buried or dumped at the site and said the were killed at the Fort Rupert massacre. The Rev. Billy Hamilton of Trinidad, who spoke to a soldier of the People's Revolutionary Army, last week that Bishop's body and those of his brothers had been dumped in a mass grave and burned. A guard at Richmond Hill Prison, Devil Bowen, 25, said the five prisoners were "brought to the hill under heavy guard on a bus. They were taken into blindfolded and placed in individual cells." BESIDES AUSTIN AND Coard, the other three prisoners transferred to the prison were Maj. Leon Cornwall, Lt. Col. Liam James and Lt. Col. Ewart Joseph Loayne. TOMBALS AIRBASE, SOUTH CAROLINA By United Press International POINT SALINES, Grenada — Cuban prisoners are escorted to a transport plane that will take them to a Cuban plane in Barbados. Official says low pay caused 11 officers to leave KU force By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter Because the University of Kansas has been unable to find money to pay its police what a state department says they deserve, 11 out of 30 police officers have resigned from the force since Jan. 1, the director of the KU police said yesterday. Jim Denney, the director, said that in early 1982, the state Department of Personnel had determined that KU police were not as well paid as other police officers and should be reclassified from patrol officers to University police. The patrol officer classification is for a security guard-type job. Denney said. "THIS IS FOR people who are not armed, who don't enforce the law, who stay at a post and guard something." he said. Since early 1982, the University has been studying ways to find money that could be used to pay new salaries under the reclassification, he said. But 11 of the 30 KU police officers apparently became tired of waiting. "The officers just got tired of waiting and went elsewhere," he said. Denney said that 11 officers had resigned during the first six months of this year because of a dispute over their pay. Demey said that he had hired people to fill the 11 positions but that he expected more resignations if the KU police did not receive the money due them under reclassification. See POLICE, p. 5, col. 1 Humor encourages students in classes with HOPE winner Staff Reporter By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter Humor makes some things easier, including occupational therapy, Erica Stern, assistant professor of occupational therapy, said last night. The 1984 HOPE award was presented to Stern before Saturday's football game against Colorado. She was one of five finalists selected by KU seniors for the awards. The others were: Timothy Pondent, associate Stern professor of journalism; Don Green, professor of engineering; Louis Michel, professor of architecture and urban design; and Lawrence Sherrr, professor of business. THE HOPE AWARD is given as the KU Honor for Outstanding Progressive Educator. The Hopper Award is given to individuals each year is presented by a member of the senior class to honor a KU faculty member. Stern received her bachelor's degree in occupational therapy from Indiana University Medical Center at Indianapolis and her master's degree in health science education and evaluation from State University of New York, Buffalo. “But I was surprised that I made it into the semifinals and even more surprised that I made it into the finals, and then when I won, well, I was happy. I had to learn what happens when you receive something like that,” she said. Stern, 29, said she was not surprised that she had been nominated for the award because she also had been nominated last year, but was not a semifinalist. SHE CAME TO KU in 1977 and taught respiratory therapy at the University of Kansas Medical Center for two years and occupational therapy at the Lawrence campus for four years. Stern teaches Occupational Therapy Treatment Techniques. Physical Disabilities; teachers teach students about temporary assistance devices used to support parts of the body; and Neurology. See HOPE, p. 5, col. 4 Arafat stronghold seized Arafat forces last stand Nahr el Bared oil refinery Beddawi 5 miles 20 miles Mediterranean Sea Tripoli LEBANON Beirut Valley SYRIA Bekaa Damascus UPI Palestinian and Syrian forces seize main Arafat stronghold By United Press International TRIPOLI Lebanon — Palestinian rebels and Syrian forces seized one of Yasser Arafat's last strongholds yesterday and surrounded the battlefield its fighters at a refugee camp in northern Lebanon. Hours later, a spokesman for the Palestine Liberation Organization chairman said that the beleaguered Arafat forces at the Beddawi camp had been ordered to back beat the attackers for the time being. THE ANTI-ARAF ATF forces seized the Nahr el Baref refuge camp 10 miles north of Tripoli yesterday morning after three days of fierce fighting with Algeria south along the coastal road to besiege Beddawi. The forces advanced to key heights overlooking the camp, on Tripoli's outskirts near the Mediterranean Sea. Anti-Arafat Palestinians holding Mount Terbul, a strategic hill above Beddawi, rained shells down on the camp, lighting up the sky with incessant flashes. As his position worsened, Arafat sent a message to the Soviet Union's leadership in an apparent attempt to enlist support from the Kremlin, Syria's main backer, in calling the attack off. "There will be no negotiations." Arafat told reporters he camp. "Syria has chased me to Tehran." Several stray shells fell on Tripoli, 45 miles north of Beirut. Some street fighting was reported in the port city Saturday night, but yesterday the streets were deserted. Violence also flared in Beirut yesterday, with several shells crashing down on on the city's streets. BEIRUT RADIO SAID Lebanese troops at the Shouf Mountain town of Souk el Gharb, eight miles south of Beirut, came under sporadic shelling, wounding one soldier. Elsewhere in the capital, U.S. Marines strengthened the defenses around the British embassy, where U.S. embassy offices have been moved to New York and the embassy was destroyed by a car bomb on April 18. The Marines closed off the coastal road that runs past the embassy, blocking off the area with anti-tank barriers and rolls of razor-tipped wire. Military party loses Turkish elections By United Press International ANKARA, Turkey — The right-of-center Motherland Party surged ahead of its more conservative, military-backed rivals by a two-to-one margin yesterday in parliamentary elections ending more than three years of martial rule. Although the cautiously prepared election marked a return to democracy for Turkey—the only NATO country ruled by a military regime President Kenan Evan banned many former politicians from running for office and only three prime parties were allowed to present candidates. Four hours after polls closed, the state radio said unofficial returns from 21 provinces showed economist Turgut Ozal's Motherland Party won 29.46%, a total — a 29.69% out of 483.83 valid votes. OZAL, THE CHIEF planer of the military regime's economic recovery program, is more independent than the Nationalist Democracy Party's ultraconservative retired Gen. Turgut Sunalp, who won support Friday from Evren in a nationally televised speech. Despite the endorsement, Salapal's NDP trailed the liberal Populist Party, winning only 23.3 percent, or 106,937 votes. The Populists, led by former provincial governor Needet Calp, had 26.7 percent, or 122,247 votes. Smalp told reporters in Ankara he was not dishearpened by Ozal's early lead. "We are depending on the vote from the rural areas," he said. Voters defied rain, mud and cold weather to line up at the polling centers. There was no immediate indication of the turnout in the voting across the country's 67 provinces. More than 19.6 million Turks were registered to vote at more than 84,000 ballot boxes for 400 members of a parliament called the Grand Alliance, whose results would not be announced for a week. P. V. S. PANCHATRA United Press International Guillermo Gibens, Caracas, Venezuela, special student, looks at a picture of his American grandfather who went to Venezuela in the 1920s and then mysteriously returned to the United States. Gibens is hoping to find his roots in the United States. Stephen Phillips/KANSAN Venezuelan student searches for relatives in United States By ANA DEL CORALL Gullemro Gibens felt emotionally attached to the United States long before he visited the country for the first time. Staff Reporter And now he is determined to find the roots that bind his emotions to the MONDAY MORNING United States by digging up an explanation of why his `American grandfather` left his young, pregnant mother, her native country, never to return. Gibens, who has a degree in journalism, decided to go to graduate school in the United States to try to find his relatives. "I ALWAYS CARRIED it in my blood. I always had a great admiration for the United States," Gibbs said recently. "When I was little and I was told that my grandfather was American, I always thought, 'I want to know that country. I want to know where I come from.'" The reasons for his grandfather's return to the United States remain hidden behind the veil of his grandmother's silence, said Gibens, Caracas, Venezuela, special student at the Applied English Center. See ROOTS, p. 5, col. 2 "When I asked about my grandfather, they would never tell me why he left Venezuela or why he went there," he said. He knows that the American company who hired his grandfather notified his grandmother of his death and sent her a yearly pension. But his grandmother has always refused to reveal details about her husband's life. By United Press International Greensburg mayor,4 others die in crash of small plane GREENSBURG — Sheriff's deputies found the wreckage of a small plane yesterday and the bodies of its five passengers, including the mayor of a southwestern Kansas town, authorities said. The Cessna 210 crashed about a mile and a half northeast of Greenbsn between 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. Saturday, the dispatcher said. A dispatcher of the Kiowa County Sheriff's Department identified the victims as Greensburg Mayor Crawford Barber, 51, his grandson Rigel Barber, who authorizes drought relief to farmers. Day, 47, of Greensburg, Shelldon Louthan, 49, and David Leach, 47, both of Wichita. Sheriff's deputies found the plane in a field about 1 a.m. yesterday. The victims died at the scene, the dispatcher said. THE CRASH WAS being investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration and the sheriff's department, the dispatcher said. However, the cause of the crash had not been determined. T. J. Chandler, 47, of Greensburg, who operates a crop dusting service from the city airport, said that the party was returning from a football game at Colorado Springs. Colo. The flight takes about two hours, Chandler said, and the mayor, who owns the plane, was the pilot. Chandler, who said he was a friend of the elder Barber, said residents reported hearing a plane crash on Wednesday at airport about 8 p.m. or 9 p.m. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 7, 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International N. Ireland police on alert on eve of Anglo-Irish talks LONDON — Police went on full alert in Northern Ireland yesterday on the eve of the first summit in two years between Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Irish Prime Minister Garret FitzGerald. The talks mark the full restoration of Anglo-Irish relations since last year's Falklands war when Ireland criticized Britain for recapturing the disputed South Atlantic islands from Argentina. Three guerrilla attacks during the weekend killed three policemen and injured 43 people. No violence was reported yesterday after three small incendiary bombs went off late Saturday at businesses in County Fermanagh. United Steelworkers' president dies PITTSBURGH — Lloyd McBride, president of workers, who guided the 750,000-member union through the worst steel-industry slump since the Depression, died at home yesterday. He was 67. McBride, who had been recovering from coronary bypass surgery at his home in the Pittsburgh suburb of Whitehall, died at 8:19 a.m. in a fatal cause of death was not immediately determined. McBride McBride, who was known as a nuts-and-bolts unionist, had been president of the union since 1977. Volcano erupts on island of Hawaii VOLCANO, Hawaii — Kilauea Volcano burst into new life yesterday, shooting fountains of lava 50 feet high and pouring lava over an isolated portion of the island of Hawaii. "At this point, we have low fountainage but a real high volume of lava," said Jon Erickson of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. "There are two lava flows, one heading to the northeast and the other to the southeast." Alarms were off at the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory at the volcano's summit just before midnight Saturday to signal the start of the new activity, said scientist Reggie Okamura of the U.S. Geological Survey. Refugees to move into model village COBAN, Guatemala — Some 1,000 Indian refugees who recently lived with guerrillas are being prepared by the army to move into a model community that will have housing, a school, electricity and armed guards — the villagers themselves on patrol. By latest count, there are 1,000 of them — short, dark people who are descendants of the great Mayan tribes. They now live in the Tzacol refuge camp just outside Coban, located 60 miles northeast of Guatemala City at the base of the majestic Sierra Chama mountain range in Alta Verapaz province. Navy urged to develop A-6 bombers WASHINGTON — A Navy panel is recommending that the Navy develop a new generation of its A-6 Intruder light bomber instead of ending production of the plane after this year, defense sources say. The sources said Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Thayer has endorsed the decision, reversing his earlier stance in favor of scrapping the A-6 and producing only the new F-18 fighter-bomber and conducting research on an advanced Navy plane for the 1990s. The A-6F, as the new plane would be designated, has figured prominently in a feud between Thayer and Navy Secretary John Lehman because of a continuing wrangle over how much money should be devoted to the Navy in the fiscal 1984 budget. Brothers, wives charged in shooting NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Murder charges were filed yesterday against two brothers and their wives accused of pumping a barrage of gunfire from a car into a tavern, killing one woman and wounding five other people, police said. Homicide Lt. R.C. Jackson said some of the people involved had been in a fist fight at the Penalty Box Lounge in suburban Hermitage before the Saturday night shooting. "It was terrible, horrible," said Steve Locke of Mount Juliet, who witnessed the shooting about 9 p.m. "A car pulled up and just began firing left and right through the windows at nobody and everybody," he said. Jackson said the fight resulted from "someone punching someone with a cue stick." Giant moth triggers alarm in Japan TOKYO — A giant moth triggered an ultra-sensitive alarm system, installed for President Reagan's visit to Japan, sending scores of security personnel hunting for an intruder, police said yesterday. About 40 police in Hinode, a sleepy village at the foot of Mount Fujiya, scrambled when the alarm sounded Saturday. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was there. Police searched for 50 minutes until they discovered the alarm was triggered by a 3-inch-long moth that became caught in the detecting device. The device was installed at the Tachihirai Middle School in Hinode, a foothill town some 40 miles west of Tokyo. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-7-83 30.00 29.77 LOW 29.77 SEATTLE 30.24 COLD MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON NEW YORK SAN FRANCisco DENVER FAIR LOS ANGELES WARM HIGHEST TEMPERATURES 50 50 DALLAS NEW ORLEANS MIAMI LEGEND RAIN SNOW SHOWERS AIR URL WEATHER FOTOCAST WEATHER FACTS Today will be mostly fair across the nation with showers expected in the Lower Mississippi Valley and the northern Rocky Mountains. Locally, today will be partly cloudy with a high in the 60s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tomorrow will be cloudy with a chance of rain and a high in the 60s. Volunteers give free labor on 'Red Sunday Cubans honor countrymen killed in Grenada HAVANA, Cuba — Two million people gave up their day off yesterday to work on "Red Sunday" — Cuba's "largest ever" voluntary labor force honoring countrymen killed or wounded by U.S. invasion of Grenada, officials said. Some 80 percent of the country's work force volunteered to participate, officials said. The volunteers included i million workers participating in Havana and another 1 million in the countryside, they said. By United Press International teriarly" for the state without extra pay, but one official called yesterday's operation "the largest ever" in the 25 year history of the Cuban revolution. PEOPLE PUT IN the extra day on work at their factories and farms throughout the island of 10 million people to honor 25 Cubans who were killed and 60 others who were wounded in the U.S. invasion, officials said. Cubans have been asked occasionally to give up days off to work "volun The day was dubbed "Domingo Rojo" or "Red Sunday." Included in the labor force were 130,000 construction workers, officials reportedly enthusiastic about the extra job to honor some 600 countrymen who President Reagan has said the airport was being built for military purposes, including long-range Soviet bombers and long-range supply craft to shuttle men and equipment between them and its armies in Ethiopia and Angola. the cuban government says were building an airport on Grenada. The deposed Marxist regime of Grenada insisted that the airport was intended for jumbo civilian aircraft to increase the island's tourist trade. THREE SOVIET-MADE IL-62 Cubana Airlines commercial jets arrived at Havana's Jose Marti international Airport Saturday with pris- owners from Grenada, bringing between 350 and 400 Cubans back home. As the second plane landed in the early evening, the first person to emerge from the twin-engine craft held a Cuban flag over his head that he presented to President Fidel Castro at the bottom of the ramp. Castro gave the man a warm embrace. CASTRO, HIS BROTHER, Defense Minister Raul Castro, and other top Communist and government officials, have met all the flights coming from state-run Cuban television, radio and newspapers. Chrysler strike ends as workers approve contract By United Press International TWINSBURG, Ohio — Workers at the Chrysler Corp.'s Twinsburg, Ohio, stamping plant yesterday approved by a wide margin a contract agreement ending a six-day strike that shut down the company's strikely lines of the nation's No. 3 automaker. Members of the United Auto Workers Local 122 voted 804 to 293 for the contract, and plant officials said the gates were open for the 3:30 p.m. shift yesterday. But Mitchell Lewis, the manager of five few workers returned. He said the plant would be back to normal operations by the midnight shift this morning. THE STRIKE TUESDAY by 3,200 workers at the plant, which makes front doors and floors for all the company's cars, forced six of Chrysler's eight assembly plants to close shortages and idled 21,000 automakers. Members of the union negotiating committee had unanimously recom- The strike was over safety practices, job assignments, scheduling and management. The new contract includes provisions limiting overtime, giving the workers every third weekend off, and restoring work during the work day, union officials said. "I'm grateful they had the confidence in us to raffle," said Paul Jeehnett, a spokesman for the New York-based firm. Jennette told the company had been "very, very stubborn, about allowing production workers to perform non-production jobs, such as crane operator or jainist, but he said the new contract requires those jobs to non-production people. THE UNION HAD demanded that cranes be operated only by personnel who had intensive training and that the workers are hired to clean up soiled oil Jeunette said workers held no grudge against the Twinsburg employ "Almost all the other workers in the other plants that we have talked to supported us in our efforts to get good working conditions," he said. "In fact, all reaction we got was purely in support of our actions." Chrysler Corp. and the UAW reached a tentative contract agreement Saturday following a 34-hour negotiating session Union officials had said that issues had prolonged the bargain. Following the announcement of the tentative settlement Saturday, a Chrysler spokesman in Detroit said, "We're gratified we have an agreement and look forward to ratification so we can get back to building cars." CHIRSLER SAID FOUR of its U.S. and Canadian assembly plants would operate as usual today. Chrysler indicated that production at the four assembly plants shut down earlier this week because of the strike would start up on a staggered basis as sufficient components are delivered to each. Fitness Awareness Techniques featuring "Nutrition and Natural Foods" Individuals from the Community Mercantile Store will be available for this discussion. Tues., Nov. 8 12:10-12:50 p.m. Robinson Center Pool Lobby --one sheet per coupon EXPIRES 12/30/83 COUPON Zip Save 50¢ - $1.00! 842-0154 KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union Half Sheet 50¢ OFF 2-Half Sheet Pkg. $1.00 OFF DRY TRANSFER LETTERING Zip-a-tone SORORITY RUSH REGISTRATION Wednesday and Thursday November 9 and 10, 1983 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Centennial Room, Kansas Union ku MONDAY! $3 off any Large Pizza No delivery on this special. Minsky's PIZZA 2228 Iowa --- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 * 0 # "Alternative Conversations" This week's guest is KU Athletic Director, Monte Johnson. KJHK's Call Us at 864-4747 Tonight at 6:00 p.m. KJHK FM91 K "The Sound Alternative" --- Half price for KU Students The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Brings You The Gift of Opera I Love You Wilhelmenia Fernandez Soprano Star of the award-winning film, Diva Vinson Cole Tenor One of the fastest rising stars of the New York City Opera George Darden, Piano 8:00 p.m. Sunday, November 13, 1983 Crafton-Preyer Theater/Murphy Hall The program will feature Mr. Cole and Miss Fernandez as solos and in duets of airs from *La Travista* and *Faust*. Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats reserved / For reservations, call 913/864-3982. Public: $8 & $6; KU students with ID^1; $4 & $3; senior citizens and other students: $7 & $5 *KU students must show ID at time of purchase *and* at the door. Funded, in part, by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, also partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee, KU Endowment Association and the Saworth Society V University Daily Kansan, November 7, 1983 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Worker aided fire's spread at City Hall, KC Star says KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A city employee contributed to the spread of last week's fire at City Hall by refusing to allow workmen to use extinguishers and by switching on a huge blower, the Kansas City Star reported yesterday. Paul L. Morris, president of the firm working on a new roof for the building, said the actions of the worker turned what would have been a minor mishap into a large fire, according to a copyright story in yesterday's star. A cutting torch apparently was the cause of the fire that spread through the upper five floors of the 30-story building last Thursday, causing more than $1 million damage and forcing the evacuation of the entire structure. Accident victims listed as critical Two people were in critical condition yesterday at the University of Kansas Medical Center after they were injured in a car accident Saturday night at the intersection of Clinton Parkway and Crossgate Drive. Sarah Carr, 38, Wellington, a passenger in a car driven by Francis Carr, 38, Wellington, and Wayne Hammeryly, 26, Meriden, a passenger in a car driven by Carl Stilley, 21, Lake Side Village, were injured in the accident, which occurred at 9:57 p.m., police said. Carr was taken to the Med Center by ambulance. Hammerly was taken to the Med Center by Life Flight helicopter. Law students to try national contest A team of law school students from the University of Kansas qualified this weekend for competition in National Moot Court competition, scheduled for January in New York City. The members of the winning team were second-year law students Mark Parkinson, Wichita; Matthew Keenan, Great Bend; and Dolph Schmidt, Towson, Md. The three successfully prepared legal briefs and argued a case involving securities fraud in competition at Green Hall on Thursday and Friday. A team from the University of Missouri-Kansas City, which finished second, also qualified for the national competition. The KU team was also recognized for preparing the best legal brief in the 14-team field. ON THE RECORD A 17-YEAR-OLD YOUTH on Friday night received an 8- to 10-inch cut on his neck that required 15 stitches, police said. About 11:25 p.m. Friday at 1026 Massachusetts St., a suspect approached the victim and asked him to hit him in the chest, police said. The victim hit the suspect, who then fell to the ground. When the suspect got up, he pulled a knife and cut the victim on the neck. The victim was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Police said that the two men knew each other and that the victim did not want to press charges. POLICE ARE searching for a person who robbed Country Chicken Restaurant, 1500 W. Sixth St., at gunpoint about 10 p.m. Thursday of almost $800 in cash, police said. The robber was a green Halloween store owner and a store clerk told police. No one was hurt during the robbery, police said. BURGLARS STOLE $4,087 worth of goods, including $1,300 worth of gems and $452 in cash, about 11:20 p.m. Saturday from a residence in the 1300 block of Tennessee Street, police said. Burglarls also stole a home computer, a telephone and four woolen suits. Burglarls entered through a window, police said. There are no suspects. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 864-4810. The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. SAVE BUCKS. Open 'til 3:00am Pizza by the slice all night! MONDAY GLADNESS Save $3.80 Large Pizza • one topping • double cheese • 2 free large Pepsis all for only $7.95 exp. 11/7/83 842-3232 PYRAMID PIZZA Open 'til 3:00am Carlin tells state employees their raise is coming By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter Losses the University of Kansas has suffered from recent budget cutbacks will not necessarily be restored even if the state is now in better financial condition, Gov. John Carlin said Friday. However, Carlin, who was here for the dedication of the new addition to Summerfield Hall, told an audience of about 200 in Craft-Pronery Theatre that state employees could count on receiving the 4 percent cost-of-living raise that was promised them by the Kansas Legislature last year. Carlin remained noncommitted in his answers to questions about whether the Legislature would approve pay to look at and discuss budget estimates. "It may not come as soon as you wanted, or as much as you wanted, but I think." MEMBERS OF THE audience of mostly classified employees raised several complaints about pay and benefit-pay evaluations and bonus benefits. State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, asked Carolin whether the budget cuts for 1982 would be considered in the next budget. Carlin said, "Yes and no. Some of those cuts were beneficial in terms of efficiency. We are literally going to build from where we are." The losses the state suffered then will be the first to be considered for relief. IN OTHER MATTERS, Carlin defended the performance of the Kansas Integrated Personnel-Payroll System, or KIPPS, a statewide computer system that the University used for its paychecks for the first time last week. necessarily be restored. He said the regents schools had gerrered the schools. Several KU employees have complained that their checks were incorrect, and at least 250 checks were corrected by switching of switching to the KIPES system. improve the system, but that even with the problems the computer system worked better than hand calculation, some state organizations had been in place. Similar problems were reported when the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina began using the system for its October paychecks. Carlin said that the Department of Administration was looking for ways to SEVERAL EMPLOYEES criticized the evaluation system, which was used in determining merit raises. Merit pay has not been financed by the Legis-ration and many employees said they could not point the point of continuing evaluations. "The evaluation system has proved valuable in helping managers to decide who would be promoted." Carlin said. "We are in one area, but not across the board." Having a comprehensive evaluation system also keeps managers from having to look outside the agency for managers, he said. Greyhound strike won't alter Trailways' schedule By United Press International Despite a nationwide strike against Greyhound Bus Lines, Trailways Bus System officials said yesterday that they did not plan to add extra bus service to Lawrence. Because Trailways runs twice as many routes through Lawrence as Greyhound, officials said, the existing routes could easily handle students riding buses home for Thanksgiving and Christmas. An official for the Trailways Kansas City, Mo., office said that student traffic usually increased Trailways' passenger business by about 50 to 60 percent during the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays but that the figure DRAW OWLEY, MANAGER of the Trailways, Kansas City office, said, "The student crunch is only one day, maybe, at Thanksgiving and one or two days at Christmas. Not nearly as many students go home for Thanksgiving." Greyhound has only two daily routes pass through Lawrence, but Trailside. The Greyhound routes are not operating during the strike. In other regions, Trailways added extra runs to accommodate travelers on Saturday and Sunday. Greyhound is the nation's largest bus company. Trailways is the nation's second-largest bus company. They are the only two bus services that run through Lawrence. Roger Rydell, spokesman for Trailways, estimated that Trailways was carrying twice the normal number of passengers for this time of year. Meanwhile, national members of the Amalgamated Transit Union showed no signs that they would accept a two-week grace period that Greyhound had given them to accept the company's proposal. Mr. Shapiro rejected the company's proposal to return in two weeks with a 9.5 percent salary cut. "I CAN'T LIVE on that," said John Heimke, a driver for 17 years, as he walked the picket line outside the Phoenix terminal." "They neglect to talk about the benefits we're losing," he said. He said that national figures were not available, but that during the first days of the strike Trailways run 50 extra miles to Dallas and 25 extra out of Los Angeles. Ralph Henne, a ticket agent for the Lawrence Trailways depot, 638 Massachusetts St., said yesterday, "We expect business to increase quite a bit over the holidays because of the holiday and not the strike." SENIORS Starting Today, Senior Yearbook Portraits will be taken again Stop by 121 B Kansas Union or call 864-3728 Make your appointment TODAY! nineteen hundred eighty-four JAYHAWKER M KU Vietnam Memorial 1984 K.U. Vietnam Memorial 1984 Special Events November 7-11 Information and donation table, buttons available, Monday thru Friday, 8:30-4:30 Kansas Union at performances of HAIR Brown bag lunch with Tom Berger and John Musgrave, Vietnam Veterans, Wednesday 11:30-12:30, Alcove D, Kansas Union. PBS Frontline Segment "Vietnam Memorial" free showings at Room 3 Lippincott Hall Auditorium, Wednesday 7 p.m.; Thursday 10 a.m.; Friday afternoon at 11:30. 12:30,1:30,and 2:30. "Marines in '65"'—training/recruiting film used by United States Marine Corps, Thursday, 7 p.m., Council Room, Kansas Union. partially funded by Student Activity Fee PhilKappaTheta-GammaPhiKappa Fall Classic 83 NOVEMBER 12 & 13 SEAN CONNERY JAMES BOND NEVER SAY NEVER AGAIN COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-5728 W VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 643-1065 VARSITY TELEPHONE 512-7486 CHEVY CHASE DEAL CENTURY HP. Eve 7:15-9:15 Mat Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 1 9TH AND IOWA TELEPHONE 842-6400 HILLCREST 1 914-753-6200 www.hillcrest.edu THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND Eve 7:30 - 9:30 Mai Sat-Sun 2:15 R HILLCREST 2 9TH AND IOWA TELEPHONE 842-8400 HILLCREST 3 Telephone BARRYD Stephen King's DEAD ZONE Eve 2:30 9:30 Mat Sat. 2:15 K CINEMA 1 3151 AND IOWA TELEPHONE 842-6400 On October 14, 1964 Billy Mills stunned the world by running the most sensational race in Olympic history But it wasn't he how he finished. it was where he started that made him a champion. 1992 GIE 1994 GIE ROBBY BENSON RUNNING BRAVE ENGLAND & PRODUCTIONS BY MICHAEL ROBBY BENSON Presented by ROBBY BENSON, KEVIN WALKER, JOHN BROWN, AND DAVID HENDRY PRESENTED BY MICHAEL ROBBY BENSON AND DANIEL HENDRY PRODUCED BY MICHAEL ROBBY BENSON AND DANIEL HENDRY MUSIC BY MICHAEL ROBBY BENSON AND DANIEL HENDRY COMPILED BY MICHAEL ROBBY BENSON AND DANIEL HENDRY AT SUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 2015 AT 8:30 PM IN THE FIRST FLOOR OF THE CITY CENTER Eve: 7:36-8:35 Mat: Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 TELEPHONE BOX 0 "The eight star movie deserves one big Oscar" (in this funny and ferociously smart movie). THE BIG CHILL Eve. 7:30-9:30 Mt. Sat. Sun. 2:00 21 OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 7, 1983 Page 4 Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily KANSAN The University Daily Kansas (USP-605640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuaffer Finst Hall, Kansas City, 60942, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer sessions. Excluding Stuaffer Finst Hall, the USP-605640 is available for subscription by mail are $13 for six months or $27 in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 for a fee. Subscriptions by county are Student subscriptions are $1 a semester paid through the student activity fee POSTMATKR. Send address changes to USP-605640, 230 North Dakota Avenue, Kansas City, KS 64103. MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Author DON KNOX Campus Editor ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager DAVE WANAMAKER Retail Sales Manager MARK MEARS National Sales Manager LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser Mock elections Democracy will not work in Turkey until restrictions are removed from it. The parliamentary elections there are only a mockery of democracy and will continue to be so until more political parties are allowed to participate. Turkey is the only NATO country ruled by a military regime. So it remains a blot on the record of of the Western alliance, and the sooner it returns to democracy the better for the alliance. Yet it seems to be taking a slow, if not backward, route toward political freedom for its people. Voting began yesterday, and the official results will not be ready for a week. But regardless, the elections are a farce — only three parties were allowed to participate. Twelve political parties were barred from the voting, and 240 politicians were prohibited from participating. Voting was mandatory and those who didn't vote faced a fine, all of which makes for a twisted brand of democracy. The military ruler of Turkey, Gen Kenan Evren, will become president and will not be up for re-election for seven years. In another perversion of the democratic process, Evren has the right to dissolve the cabinet at any time. However, the seeds of democracy may sprout in Turkey. These elections, though they aren't much of an alternative to military rule, may be a small step toward democracy. Or the opposite could happen. Evren could feel his power slipping away, even to a parliament of like-minded right-wingers, and bring the nation back to military rule. For the sake of the Turkish people and the Western alliance, we hope that doesn't happen. We also hope the country can establish the strong democratic tradition now shared by many of it allies. Heeding ex-presidents What does one do with a former president while he is alive? As government leaders in many other countries leave office through assassinations and coups, the United States has the relative luxury of wondering whether and how to put to use those people who became national leaders after years of apprenticeship as local officials, congressmen and governors. representatives to the funeral of Egyptian leader Anwar Sadat. Are all those years to go to waste after a person has just tackled the biggest job of all? Fortunately, recent presidents have shaken off political ruin and electoral defeats, and have let the nation benefit from their experiences. Harry Truman, who reflected more than once on the experience that was being wasted by the sending of former presidents out to pasture, is well known for having done something about the matter: He gave Herbert Hoover a top role in the coordination of relief efforts in Europe after World War II. More recently, Ronald Reagan sent all three living former presidents, Nixon, Ford and Carter, as U.S. Most importantly, the three current living ex-presidents have taken the initiative to speak out on their own. Thus, Nixon has written books about international strategy and prominent political leaders of his time; one may despise Nixon, but one should not ignore his views, shaped through many years of work in the field. Likewise, Carter and Ford are participating in a conference on Mideast affairs that began over the weekend at Emory University in Atlanta. Although both men lost their bids to stay in office, they can speak from personal experience on dealing with issues in the region. Ex-presidents such as these three do not necessarily possess the ultimate solutions; indeed, had they found answers for some problems they might have survived longer in office. Yet they should be heeded—they have seen the nation and the world from a perspective that only 36 other people have ever had. Books can be closed It's hard to think about the dictionary being a "dirty" book, or "The Diary of Anne Frank" being a threat to the morals of our children. Yet there are parents and groups, whose sincerity we accept but whose judgment we do not, who see these and other books as dangers. superintendent to remove 100 copies from the schools; and in Alabama, John Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men" was cut from English classes because 700 parents protested its inclusion. Already this year a group of protesters in Vermont burned a school library copy of Ernest Hemingway's novel "The Sun Also Rises"; a parent in New Mexico objected to alleged obscenity in the "Merriam-Webster New Collegiate Dictionary" and pressured a school Burning or banning books, which by most standards are acceptable, is not the way to preserve the morals of the young. If a book offends, it can always be closed. On the other hand, if a school censors dictionaries and classics, it cannot open young minds to learning. Boston Herald The University Daily Kanese welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kanese also invites individual students to submit guest columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansson office, 111 Stauffer-Finn Hall. The Kanese reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. LETTERS POLICY KUEA puts profit before people Officials of the Kansas University Endowment Association have consistently argued that their investment policy is dictated by the need to maximize profit. And they maintain this position even when confronted with evidence of the social consequences of their investments. The association invests money in corporations that profit from impoverished South African blacks. Other corporations in which the association invests make their money while polluting Indian reservations in their quest to mine uranium and coal. Others make their profits from the development and production of nuclear weapons. But is the association accountable to the University, in whose name it invests? Applicants. The association manages and invests the funds donated and bequeathed to the University, yet it is a private corporation whose trustees and president are not selected publicly. And the association is exempt from the Kansas Open Meetings and Public Records acts, according to a 1980 ruling by the Kansas Attorney General. Because of its lack of accountability, the association has been able to unethically invest money entrusted to the University. Investment policies of the association have put profit before people. Apparently not. By tabulating various corporate stock holdings from its 1982 tax statement, one finds that the association has invested at least $9 million in corporations involved in South Africa, where the living standard of the black majority is kept deliberate while the white minority and corporations resp benefits from its labor. The 1982 tax statement indicates that the Endowment Association had Philips Petroleum Co. stock purchased by the company. Corp stock worth $135,441. Those PETER C. HOLMES STU SHAFER Guest Columnist Association funds also are invested in the corporations of some of its trustees. These include William Douce, chief executive of Philips Petroleum; Stanley Learned and Daniel Learned; Philipks chief executive; Robert Mallott, chief executive of FMC Corp.; and Dean McGee, chief two companies have abandoned millions of tons of radioactive uranium tailings on Indian lands in the Southwest, according to documents from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Taxpayers will eventually have to pay for the cleanup of these hazardous wastes. executive of Kerr-McGee. The total amount invested in corporations that have executives or directors who also serve as Endowment Association trustees or advisory trustees is $3.4 million The Endowment Association also has found it profitable to invest in corporations that develop nuclear weapons systems, including FMC, which makes guided missile launching systems. In addition to investing in stock, the association also coordinates corporate "donations" in accordance with the wishes of the donor. These corporate donations to the University often have directly served the interest of the corporations making them. Besides being a tax write-off and a public relations tool, corporate gifts have traditionally been earmarked for pet research projects. The KU Nuclear Reactor Center was built with state, federal and endowment money. At the dedication of the reactor, then Chancellor W. Clark Wescote foresaw "a new end of collaboration in research state and federal government, industry and higher education." One way in which such "collaboration" may take place is through classified research on campus. And although there are restrictions placed on classified research at the University, these restrictions are currently under attack. A new category of classified research, "proprietary research," recently was proposed on campus. It would keep confidential the results of corporate-sponsored University research and could enjoy patent privileges. It's possible the University might turn into an industrial research operation dominated by corporate Endowment Association trustees who "benefeciously" give to the University the direction of University research. As it is now, if University research produces a patentable item, the association finds an "appropriate friend" of the University. If the friend, a corporation, thinks the item will sell, the association negotiates a contract for patent rights. But who in the association selects the friend? Does the association have a list of appropriate friends? Ask Endowment Association officials and see whether they'll tell you. When the affairs of any state-affiliated group be, it the Endowment Association or a research department, are conducted in secret, suspicions arise. And because these institutions are acting in the name of the University, they must be made accountable to the public Stu Shuer, Great Bond graduate student, is a founding member of the Ad Hoc Committee for KU Accountability. GREAT NEWS, RON! WEVE GOT EVERY LAST ONE OF THEM PINNED DOWN IN THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF GRENADA! THEY LL NEVER GET OUT OF THIS! This Glimmies GREAT NEWS, KON! WE'VE GOT EVERY LAST ONE OF THEM DINNED DOWN IN THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF GRENADA! THEY'LL NEVER GET OUT OF THIS! SO MUCH FOR THE MEDIA. © 1973 MAMI NEWS SO MUCH FOR THE MEDIA. This Gimmie LETTERS TO THE EDITOR To the editor: U.S. protecting freedom in Grenada, Lebanon In Tuesday's Kansan, Gary McCullough states that Reagan is "showing his true colors" with his actions in Grenada and Lebanon. I was shocked at McCullough's apparent misunderstandings and misperceptions of the two countries. I first hard to swallow that McCullough, who so strongly supports "The rights of an individual to a decent life, free of political, spiritual and economic tyranny," cannot fathom the fact that this is precisely why we are in Grenada and Lebanon. The invasion of Grenada was for two reasons: to protect the lives of nearly 1,000 American citizens, and to liberate the people of Grenada from the hard-line Marxists who brutally murdered Maurice Happ and 38 children on Oct. 19. The people of Grenada deserve the same rights you spoke of. As for Lebanon, our peace-keeping forces are trying to keep two sides from exterminating each other. Once again we are simply trying to ensure that the people of Lebanon can continue to speak so speak so highly. The hope is that they will be able to live their lives decently, without fear of suppression from the Soviets or their They, not the Kremlin, should have the right to choose those surrogates. It is truly unfortunate that in this country we have pseudo-intellectuals and distractors who condemn the actions of our president and soldiers, while they die in the field to preserve and protect the ideals you hold so high. If one were to seek an indictment against us for any reason it would legitimately be that we have bred this generation of vipers. who they want to govern them. That is why the people of Grenada the overreligiously sup- pressed the liberation of their country. Young Conservative Alliance TV editorial was loaded with specious logic To the editor: Shame on you, Kansan, for your "A Shallow Reflection" editorial on Wednesday Taking TV's Christine Case craft and extrapolating it as a universal example of television news is specious logic, what you colorful illustrators might call "a cheap shot." There is much that is wrong with television news, particularly at the local level, just as there is much wrong with the National Enquirer, the Daily News and even some student newspapers published by traditional, conservative, print-orientated journalists. did it be that those who preach that there is no alarmed at television's growing dominance of the news market and its revenues. Your editorial glibly dances from Christine Craft to "Happy America," the American pursuit of pleasure, to Christmas shopping and presi- Sickeningly sweet news To the Editor: 16 To the Editor. Three cheers for the author of "A Shallow Reflection" in Wednesday's Kansan. It's about time someone saw through the sickeningly sweetened news we must choke down. As I scrutinize the enormous group of people that watches TV news - a sign of our country's laziness in reading newspapers - I am sickened at the sight of so many people sitting back in their plush chairs, kicking their feet up and joyfully viewing their plastic news. Who cares if the woman接纳 an important national disaster isn't wearing enough blush! Perhaps people don't realize what has happened to TV news. In any event, the Christine Craft case is just one small symbol of the shortcomings of not only television and media, but of a shallow society that really hopes to be more like "a century of reflection" will help江 Americans into reality. Judy Scott Leavenworth freshman The reality is that television in general and television news in particular are reflections of our dental campaign spending. Could you possibly just, as we in television say, "Focus up a little bit." please? diverse society. Just as in the newspaper business, there are practitioners who are motivated by money, by malice, byjournals, by other means that comes from practicing the craft. by all the motivations Don't lament about television's "shallow reflection." Television news is just a different way of bringing information to our harried society. Isn't it delightful to realize that the adult who had difficulty with geography and history as a child now knows, thanks to television news, where Lebanon and Grenada and Iran are located on our globe and their relevance to America? that have inspired men and women to communicate since we became social beings. Christine Craft will pass away Walter Crankite will pass away. We will all pass away, but man's appetite for information on which to make decisions will not pass away. As a consequence, unless we destroy our civilization, there will always be room for — a need for — diverse news dispensing mechanisms. George Rasmussen Assistant professor of journalism and RTVH University Daily Kansan, November 7, 1983 Page 5 Police continued from p.1 UNDER ONE PROPOSAL, the officers' starting monthly salaries would change from $1,060 to $1,277, which is close to the starting salaries of other policemen. The reclassification will cost about $40,000 for the last part of this year and about $60,000 to $90,000 for a full year, he said. Denney said that what complicated the process of finding money for the reclassification was that the police department for the Kansas City, Kan., campus also had to be included. Rodger Oroke, director of support services for facilities operations, said that it was only fair to inquire the Kansas City campus police in the decision and laudence police because they did the same work. Stephen Phillips/KANSAN AN ADMINISTRATIVE GROUP at the Kansas City campus is now trying to find money for next year, he said, but until that money is received, an incubation for both groups will not be put into effect. Denney said that if the Kansas City campus police were unable to find money for next year, KU police would probably go another year without reclassification — even though the department had the money for the reclassification. It's a Catch-22 situation that has created frustration "The later in the year we go without hearing anything, you can see the morale before they slip up." A decision would have to be made before Dec. 18, which is the start of the first pay period for next year, for the reclassification to take effect by January, he said. Denney said that the salary situation had become so bad that three sergeants had resigned. TWO SERGEANTS TOOK a 5 percent cut in pay when they went to work for the parking services, but by working overtime they were able to make more money than they did while working as sergeants for the KU police, Denney said. Gov. John Carlin, right, talks with former KU Chancellor Archie Dykes, who is now a member of the Board of Regents. Carlin and Dykes were at the University of Kansas Friday for the dedication of a five-story addition to Summerfield Hall. Part of the problem in generating support for reclassification is the image of the KU police, he “And it means no more midnight shifts, no more calls in the middle of the night. It means weekends with the family,” he said. “What would you do?” "THERE IS A FEELING that this is a soft job," Denney said. "But it isn't. We do the same job here as any municipal police force that has a population the size of this campus." Bernard F. Heller and David J. Gorrie Roots continued from p. 1 He knows that his grandfather's name was either Wilfred or William Gibbens and that an American oil company sent him to Venezuela in the early 1920s, he said. HIS FATHER CHANGED Gibbens to Gibens to eliminate the double "b" and make the name less foreign in Venezuela, he said. He has little else to go by, except memories of hearing that W. Gibbens came from Texas or Oklahoma, and a compelling sentimentality and curiosity to find his American relatives. "I have been investigating for five years and I know it is going to be a long search," he said. And he thinks he needs to prepare emotionally because the mystery might hide an ugly story. "Maybe they will be friendly and welcoming but I am aware that I might find a wall, something that says, 'We don't want to have anything to do with you,' " he said. But he is also compelled by the hope that he might find a warm reception. early teens that his grandfather's American family had wanted to get in touch with their Venezuelan brothers. But his grandmothermit them to call to her children andgrandchildren. Gibens was told by an aunt when he was in his "I know they tried to get in touch with us and that gives me hope that they won't reject me." BESIDES HOPE AND determination, Gibens has a picture of his grandfather and a document that tells what ship his grandfather took to return to the United States. "My father never knew him. He left before eb. 15, 2019 when my father was born." he said. "I don't believe in that," she said. BUT DESPITE SETBACKS, he remains hopeful of finding a lead to his past, partly because he has heard stories of success under less promising circumstances. "I know a Venezuelan lady who found her relatives in the Soviet Union," he said. "She told me that if I ever found my relatives I would feel a great emotion." Crowd celebrates dedication of Summerfield Hall addition Gray business suits, concrete pillars and gaping aluminum air ducts did not darken the spirits of the crowd that attended the dedication Friday of a five-story addition to Summerfield Hall. By GINA K. THORNBURG Staff Reporter The green plants and yellow flowers brighten the corners of the unfinished four-floor room in the new addition were more congruous with the mood of more than 200 men and women who attended the ceremony and a party afterward at the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center. "It was the greatest party the School of Business has had in 16 or 17 years," said John Tollefson, dean of the school. GOV. JOHN CARLIN began the ceremony with greetings to the crowd, many of whom had helped finance the construction of the $1.4 million addition. Carlin commended the private donors for their work, and encouraged that he was partly responsible for the success. "It was my stinginess, my conservativeness that forced the private sector to come in and carry the ball," he said. "Your generosity in encouraging me for more public dollars for higher education." In his office after the dedication, Tollefson pointed in the direction of the new addition, smiled and said, "Everything out there is a result of private contributions." The contributions began coming in during spring 1979 when the KU School of Business Board of Advisors initiated a fund drive under former President John S. O'Neill, the dean of the School of Business at that time. DYKES, WHO IS now a member of the Board of Regents, said at the dedication that the board of advisers had raised $840,000 between September 1979 and June 1980. The funds donated by the board came from members' private contributions and from their companies. Tollefson said that original estimates or the project's cost ranged between $1.8 and 2.3 million. The final cost of the project, $1.4 million, fell short of the estimate, he said, because the construction bids were made at the right time in 1982. "Building construction was way down in the summer of 1862," he said. "The contractors were busy." Dykes said that the addition was necessary because enrollment in the School of Business had declined. IN THE FALL of 1971, 810 students were enrolled in the School of Business, whereas 1,591 enrolled in the School this fall, Tolleson said. Hone continued from p. 1 One of Stern's students, Fran Wolfe, senior from Fargo, N.D. said, "She knows her stuff to a tee. She gives all she's got in class. She really keeps us on our toes." Stern said she had to keep challenging her students during class because, "you have to get the information across. I use personal experience because if I can make a point in day-to-day life, I can tell you how much I use humor because of the emotional tone. Then it is filed in the memory and in the emotions. "SOMETIMES I USE humor on purpose because I have to interest in what I say or I stop because I don't." Pam Keglovits, Lebanon, N.H., senior, also Stern as a teacher. She said humor in the class is one of her greatest assets. She does not make fun, Keglovits said, but taught him, "When I study, I remember bearer, with humor." "Enthusiasm — that transfers quicker than anything. You can tell if they are not interested in what they are teaching." she said. "Also, I wanted new information. I didn't want them saying Ten years ago." And I wanted a task me work, who valued what I was producing. In teaching her classes, Stern said she looked at the qualities she wanted in a teacher when she was in school. Stern wanted to be that kind of teacher and she is, according to her students. But she is not friends with her students, she said. Instead she maintains a professional relationship with them. Though it is not really possible, she said, some of her students have tried to sleep through her "I WAKEN UP. I used to be a student who slept in class, front row, center seat. I don't even notice it." Keglovits said that falling asleep in Stern's classes was impossible "She comes into the room, whether you are tired or not, you are into that class." Keglovlis said. "She bounces and jumps and runs from end to end to describe her patients." PIZZA Shoppe and pub PIZZA EATEN WITH YE FROGENS 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center WE DELIVER! PIZZA Shoppe and Pub PIZZA EATEN WITH YEAR ROUND Monday Night Football Special (cour) 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center Triple topping King Size Pizza and 32 oz. Pepsi Exhibit By Mr. FREE This Ad! K.U.Telephone Directory is now available For sale at all 3 K.U. Bookstore locations $1.50 with staff or student I.D. $3.00 without I.D. KU KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union KU Pladium THE Pladium Malt Duck Night! 50¢ a bottle "The Love a Duck" The Pladium is Pleased to Announce The Return of MALE BURLESQUE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10 — 7:30 to 10 p.m. Ladies Only—$3.50 Guys Admitted at 10:10 p.m. Live Entertainment at 10:15 Plain Jane No Membership Needed For Reservations Call: $1 reservation fee per group 841-4600 from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday thru Friday — Thursday, Nov. 10 is also Malt Duck Night!— The Pladium • 841-4600 • 901 Mississippi "Love a Duck" RED GRAPE MALT DUCK 901 Mississippi The Pladium 843-7398 OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRUNDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 Get away with SUA OUTDOOR RECREATION SLOUGH CREEK BACKPACKING and CAMPOUT at Perry Lake for more info Contact SUA, Kansas Union 864-3477 $10 SUA FILMS Upcoming Films at SUA: Tuesday, November 8th: Sam Fuller's (Kingin of "B" movies) Underworld U.S.A. 7-30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. Wednesday & Thursday. November 9th & 10th: Carlos Saura's (Cra. Swear Hours) Marvelous new blood Marvel Blood Special admission $2.00 7:30 p.m. Woolfrud Auft. Friday & Saturday, November 11th & 12th: All-time classic. The Deer Hunter. 2:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Woodruff Aud. * AND Midnight: Woody Allen in: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex But Were Afraid to Ask! $2.00 12 Midnight Woodruf Aud Sunday, November 13th: Billy Walder directs William Holden in Stalag 17. 2:00 p.m. Woodruff Audu ENTERTAINMENT The University Daily KANSAN November 7,1983 Page 6 Subtle rapport between local riders and horses will be put to the test at The American Royal TAYLOR MURRAY Stephen Phillips/KANSAN Sarah Ailor, 16, grooms her horse, Aristo Domino, after a muddy workout at Stable of joy in preparation for competition at The American Royal Livestock Horse Show and Rodeo in Kansas City, Mo. The stocky, black Morgan horse troted in a circle, leaping and straining at the long tether defining his path. Gripping the tether at the hip, she ran toward her girl, her figure dwarfed by the horse's bulk. By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter "Round and 'round he ran in the twilight, cats and humans dodged his path in the muddy barryward. The girl called "Hall," and Domino to Domino to his friends, stopped in his tracks. Control is what showing horses is about, and Sarah Allor, 16, a sophomore at Lawrence High School, had Domino under control. She called "walk" and he walked, not in half a minute but right then. Sarah's teacher, Joy Underderg, watched from a distance and "They call him 'The Black Gelding,' Underberg said. "You do know the difference between a stallion and gelding, don't you? You'd be surprised how many people don't." She recognizes that the language of horse lovers, with their lunging, canters and drivers, is full of subtleties that may escape the trained ear. When Underberg goes with Sarah and two other students Nov. 16-18 to the American Royal Arabian and Morgan show, subtlety will make the difference in the eyes of the judges. The American Royal Livestock Horse Show and Rodeo, which billts itself as the largest show of its kind in the country, began Satu- mber 19. In City, Mo., and continues through Nov. 19. The horse categories are saddle horses, hunters, jumpers, Arabians and Morgans. The competition is divided by age and skill level of the rider and style of riding, and only a few of Underberg's students are ready for such a prestigious show. Underberg operates the "Stable of Joy," a sprawling oasis for horse-lovers, on 31st Street just west of Iowa Street. Among her 40 or so students are Sarah, her friend Pam Studebaker, 14, a ninth-grader at South Junior High School, and Janelle Bellew, secretary to the dean in the School of Architecture and Urban Design. Underberg and those three students have put in many hours of practice at the farm, preparing horse and rider to go in front of the American Royal judges. The preparations were hampered recently by wet weather which has turned the lightened arena there to mud. styles of riding. This summer she took the class in horseswainship offered by the University of Michigan. "I went from riding no times a week to riding six times a week," Bellew said. "I've wanted a horse since I was little, but I never had opportunity until recently. Now I have two." As the days become shorter and Daylight Savings Time has ended, Belle will have less time to ride her Arabian, Sa Dresto, at Underberg's farm. Because she needs practice before the American Royal, she said, she might begin riding during her lunch hour. Sa Destroy is a station, a difficult horse for a beginner, and Belle said she had to learn how to stop. Work at the American Royal will be showing the judges that the horse knows his paces, and that horse and rider can demonstrate the Western and English styles of riding. "He's a challenge — that's the nature of a stallion," she said. "He's real strong, and he can stand out there are certain things to do to calibrate him, so you can get him book to work again." The former, as Sarah described it, is "more like cowbys"; it is easyaging and relaxed. In English riding, the horse steps more lightly, and the rider is more formally dressed. In the races, in categories of those styles, the judges also want to see a horse that appears to be at ease. Underberg said that it was more difficult to train for the English style of riding because different paces were required. Paces and other actions of the horse are taught by instructions from the rider's hands, legs, voice or posture and from "artificial aids," such as a whip. Horses learn that a certain cue or combination of cues is a signal for a certain action, such as trotting or stopping in their tracks. Sometimes riders in a panic forget to use the cues they were taught, and the results can be painful. Sarah said that three years ago, she was riding a horse that started to throw her. "She did exactly what I told her to do." Sarah said "She stood up on her legs and they were walking upstairs." Instead of reacting as she had been taught, she tightened up on the reins. The resulting broken pelvis taught her a lesson that she hasn't forgotten, she said, and is not likely to forget. Despite hard-learned lessons along the way, Sarah and Pam said, Pam said, "You get really tired and it’s a lot of work, but why do it if it’s not going to be hard." Pianist to present concert to benefit scholarship fund By DAN HOWELL Staff Reporter KU's pianist-in-residence, internationally renowned as a performer, will present a solo concert tomorrow as a benefit for the University's Music Scholarship Fund. The benefit concert will be at 8 p.m. at the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Menahem Pressler, pianist for the well-known Beaux Arts Trio and distinguished professor of music at the University of Indiana, will perform four pieces, including one considered to be among the most difficult of all piano compositions. "There is a great desire." he said. "I find it very inspiring and very gratifying to be part of the experience." Pressler, in his second year as pianist-in-residence here, said last week that he had developed warm feelings for the University and its enthusiastic people. At the benefit recital, Pressler will play "Gaspard de la Nuit" by Ravel, widely considered to be exceptionally difficult. Pressler said for years the nigo was golden performed. "It is a piece that I love very much. Besides being very difficult, it is very beautiful. It is that way of being." The other pieces on Pressler's program are *Choral Preclude* "Nun kommt der Heiden Holland by Hutch-Busson" "Sonata in A Flat" and *Sonata in B Minor, Op. 38* by Chopin. Pressler's visits to KU fit into a crowded schedule that included East Coast performances the past two days and a four-nation European tour beginning Thursday. He comes to Lawrence about eight times in the academic year for about two days at a time, said Stanley Shumway, chairman of the department of music. Pressler's main duty is to teach master's classes in piano where he works with advanced students in a setting open to the public. Michael Kimber, assistant chairman of the department, said that the Music Scholarship Fund was helping about 170 students this year; both music majors and non majors. The awards are announced in high schools for four years, are announced in high schools and other schools and are won by audition MOVIE REVIEWS Rating System 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 excellent Running Brave It's hard to live in Lawrence and take this movie seriously. The problems with the locations exemplify the overall problems of the film. The film reads like an old Hollywood glamourization and is really corry — sometimes downright melodramatic. Sure, Billy Mills' career was fantastic, but the film overdoes it. The movie, about former KU runner and Olympic star Billy Milly, is supposed to take place, in part, in Lawrence. Those scenes, however, were filmed in Canada. To a Lawrence film, it is sometimes comical and the appearance of so many Jayhawks on the screen is almost terrifying. One of the most disturbing problems with this film is its anachronisms. The story is supposed to take place at the University of Kansas during the late 1950s and early 1960s. So, there's KU's Stadium on the screen. It looks suitably old to be the real thing. But what is that new stadium lurking in the background during many of the running scenes? It looks as if it could be no more than 10 years old, and it is a very nice stadium. Kansas City Harry S. Primm Sports Complex The real insult, however, comes when the producers use that very stadium — the one shown in the background throughout the film — as the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo. And how about when Mills' wife, Pat, is shown in the crowd at the Olympic Games? She is surrounded by Japanese, with no other Ameri- tian friends, with whom she shared those moments Japanese? Throughout the film, the film makers seem almost embarrassed about the measure of realism depicted in their film. So they go too far into making themselves some sense of proof that they tried to be realistic. The story itself is contrived and over-dramatized. Some scenes seem to have been left over from the Hollywood soaps of the '60s and '70s, and are incidentally spliced into the running reels of this print. In this movie about a half-Indian athlete, the film makers raise questions about racism and discrimination and alienation, then seem to forget they ever brought them up. There is no resolution of any of the problems Billy Mitchell has faced in his life. What about the problems he's had making a place for himself in the world? Did winning the Olympics solve all these problems? If it did,fill us in It just doesn't seem fair that three or four slow motion replays of the finish of the race are possible. -Mike Cuenca Richard Pryor Here and Now [a] tension. Mills and the rest of us deserve more than just another version of "One on One." Dear Rich. I saw your new movie the other day, and I didn't like it very much. Let me explain. You talk about how you haven't used drugs and alcohol in many months, which is great, but then you give routines on using drugs and being drunk. The routines are boring, anyway. I hate to be blunt, but that's the way it is. Tell funnier jokes. You need some variety, too. Rich. Some of your stories are funny, sure, but they're too obscene to print. One big plus for your movie, Rich, is your ad lib with the audience. It's your greatest gift, and it's the funniest part of this film. If you do another movie, put in more audience participation. I'll be waiting for your next flick Your friend in comedy. —Victor Goodpasture 'Hair' flaws weaken enjoyment "When the moon is in the seventh house, and Jupiter aligns with Mars, then peace will guide the planets, and will steer the stars." Elizabeth L. Blanchard's sharp-voiced Sheila failed on numbers that seemed to be out of her range, such as "I Believe in Love," and John D. Anderson's Claude was often flat and unsteady. The sweet, clear voice of J. Guevara as Ron sent the lilting lyrics of "Aquarius" soaring above the audience, and the cast moved as a unified whole in circles on the stage. The choreography in KU's production of the "Hair," which opened Thursday and will be performed again this weekend, was powerful but not always strong enough to rescue the production from a lukewarm puddle of mediocre voices and uninspired acting. However, Becky Barta's spaced-out, innocent, pregnant Jenie sang in well-rounded bell tones, and her songs rang pleasantly throughout the show. Lisa Engelken, as Debbie, met the challenge of performing "White Boys" with a lusty, vivacious vigor. Engelken proved with her randy, charming demeanor that the part could be played by a white or a black "Hair" concerns a tribe of hippies at a toll booth on a highway leading to the sky, loving and laughing, protesting war and doing drugs. The hippies didn't move along the road, they just lived there, frozen in time and space, New York City 1969 The anti-war theme came across hard and strong. The choreography and sound of *Three Meets Zero-Zero* were made in *Three Meets Zero*-How Dare They Try* she cast the cast not as a group of hippies who met death with a lily-livered whimper, but as a met group of people who were so in love with living that death seemed like a terrible, repulsive waste of beauty. They couldn't understand the war they were protesting. As one character said, "War is white people sending black people to kill yellow people to protect the land they stole from the red people." THEATRE REVIEW young hippie pipple in opposite directions by the free-living hippies and his conservative, God- forsaken religious. Anderson convincingly portrayed Claude as a At the end of the upbeat first act, the players stood together, nude and lovely in the shadows as claude sang of confusion and alienation. The second act ended as a protest of beautiful bodies vibe. But they understood that life was beautiful and war meant death, so they fought against it. Anderson convincingly portrayed Claude as a The show began with effective choreography that reoccurred during the group numbers. The dances 'effectiveness existed in their simplicity, and they could be performed in a kaleidoscope of movement with meaning. Sound problems marred the show's effectiveness. Almost every time that the leader of the gang, Devin Scillian's Berger, ran, crackling noises ran with him. Most solos played a black and white routine, a tinny music of a 13-piece band, and when the group moved, the sound was turned up to Although Richie Robert's Woo looked like an he let Sabra Harmla's frumpy blonde Cheryl pull the microphone out of his pants, most of the movement goes on to against the easy flow of movement onstage. The microphone kept the players distant from the audience that they wanted so desperately to reach. If players cannot project their voices, they should not be cast in a musical production. compensate for breathlessness. Berger's voice overpowered the group effect that could have made the song "Hair" an exciting, vibrant number. Images of the '60s were projected on two screens at the sides of the stage; more powerful images could have been selected. The projections were mild; a commonplace photograph of Lyndon B. Johnson was used even as the cast sang that L.B.J. was on L.S.D. Despite an over-dressed cast, inadequate voices and some technical problems, and some failed attempts by the cast to create a group feeling with the audience by wandering down the aisles before the show began, the joyous message of "Hair" reached the audience by the climactic finale, when the audience stood and clapped in time to "Let the Sun Shine In." That appealing message overcame jokes that were old and tired more than 15 years after they When Woof sang "Musturbation can be fun," nobody seemed shocked; not a giggle erupted from the audience. "Hair" belongs in the 70s, but its love for life is everlasting. —Kiesa Harris Music Television alters students' musical tastes Staff Reporter Stewart, a senior from Pretty Prairie, Kan., has not discovered a miracle drug, nor does he own a sauna or any other familiar symbol of hedonism. He is simply one of the many KU students who avidly absorb the offerings of Music Television, or M-TV. As soon as the whistle signals the end of classes with its deafening groan, Roy Stewart rushes out the door and heads for home, where he relax, enjoy and enjoy one hour of purity bloom. By LYNN HUMPHREY Staff Reporter M-TV, which first appeared in August 1981, has permeated the lifestyles of KU students, not just influencing what records they buy, but altering their musical tastes as well. In fact, some students treat their daily video-viewing sessions as others would treat their hallowed commitment to "General Hospital" or "Dynasty." "I usually watch M-TV for one hour each day, between classes." said the devoted Stewart. The network has a reputation for introducing new and different kinds of music, and according to Dave Stroun, program director for KLZR (Keller-Lorenz Media), "M-TV is usually the first to play a new song. M-TV spokesman Jonathan Jacobson said, "I'm sure we're having a great effect on (people's tastes), even though there haven't been any studies conducted for me to comment on." Sharon McMurtry, St. Louis freshman, said she didn't like New Wave music at all when she first heard it. However, her opinion changed when she began watching M-TV. "I watch it a lot, especially when I'm home for the summer." she said. Strout said that he strongly believed in the influence of M-TV. "M-TV's actually a bonus for us," he said. "We've always had a reputation for playing newer songs first, so if M-TV starts playing something that we're playing, it good for us." "Listeners are becoming open to a wider variety of music today. If you really like a video and think it's kind of fun, your tastes may be affected more than if you just heard the song." Duran Duran, the group that many say owes its monumental success completely to M TV, is 'Listeners are becoming open to a wider variety of music today. If you really like a video and think it's kind of fun, your tastes may be affected more than if you just heard the song.' —Dave Strout, KLZR program director The songs most often requested of Dave Street at KLZR all are featured in video form on M-TV. 'What's on M-TV is what's selling for us.' Steve Wilson, buyer for Kief's Discount Records and Stereo Supply, said, "People buy in large numbers what they are exposed to. Although the pre-M-TV Beatles are still among favorite rock groups, Stroat said, all the other most popular bands, including the Rolling Stones and the Who, have made rock videos. "We did a survey back during enrollment, asking for peoples' three favorite bands," said Strout. "The results were surprising." According to the station's tabulations, most students still listed long popular bands as their favorites. However groups such as the Police and Guns N' Roses, said Sprout, largely because of their videos. BLOOM COUNTY BY BERKE BREATHED SAY SON, WANT TO GO AT THE FESTIVAL, ALL WEEK? AN' YOU BEEN SLEEPIN' IN THE BAND AND IN THE YOUTH' IN WORKING WITH AN' AN INKSTIN' CROUGH' MEWB SUBSTANCES YEAH TEN MORE! HAPPY! COMMITTEE ! QUICK, PORTNOY, GET THE MUSIC! WARNING: LET'S DO IT AGAIN! DON'T WIRE UP AND YOU'LL ENJOY YOUR LISTENING. WHAT YOU HEARD ABOUT THINK NEW CORDOUDOY PILLOWS? 4 THEY'VE MAKING HEADPINS. HA! HA! HA! HEE! HEE! HEE! HEE! HOO! HOO! OH, I TELL YA. HA! HA! HA! HA! CORNOPHONE IS AN UNSOLVED THING IN THIS COUNTRY WHAT DID YOU MEAN? HEALS LOVE? CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 7, 1983 Page : Redevelopment vote may stir conflict of interest By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter All five Lawrence city commissioners will probably vote tomorrow night on selection of a developer for downtown, but two commissioners have said they might not be able to vote if the commission is selecting a redevelopment plan as well as a developer. The Kansas attorney general's office issued a four-page letter Friday, which, according to some city officials, appears to say that commissioners who signed the letter can vote to select a developer, but not a plan for downtown redevelopment. MAYOR DAVID LONGHURST and Commissioner Mike Amyx both lease business space in the area that Sizeler Realty Co. Inc., Kenner, La., has proposed for redevelopment, but do not have business interests in the area proposed by Town Center Venture Corp. The commission is expected to select either Sizerel or Town Center, a local group of developers and architects, as the official developer for downtown redevelopment during the City Commission meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets. The Sizerel proposal calls for development of a retail shopping center in the 700 and 800 blocks downtown, east of Massachusetts Street. The Town Center plan proposes closing the 600 block of Massachusetts Street and building a mall between Vermont Street and the alley east of Massachusetts Street. LAST MONTH, Kate Webber, 819 Maine St., asked state Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, to ask the state attorney general for a legal opinion about whether Amyx and Longhurst's business holdings would present a conflict of interest in voting on downtown redevelopment. After reviewing the opinion, both Amyx and Longhurst said that they intended to vote tomorrow on the commission. But the commission was not selecting a plan. "If we are truly picking a developer there is no problem," Amyx said. "If we are picking a plan, then there is a Renewal Act that we need to follow." Amyx said that even if the commission makes that decision, the public should be aware. "It's obviously a choice between a 600 block plan and a 700 and 800 block plan," he said. CITY MANAGER BUFORD Watson, after checking with City Attorney Milton Allen, said that it appeared that Amyx and Longhurst could vote on the Town Center plan, but not on the Sizerer plan. The opinion, which was prepared by Assistant Attorney General Terrence Hearshman, said that the commissioners would not be violating the Kansas general conflict of interest laws, but would be under U.S. law to act. If the commissioners' property was included a specific urban renewal project. Watson said that the city would create an urban renewal project for the against the Sizerel plan this summer, but Amyx said that those votes were not a conflict of interest because the law pertained only to the Urban Renewal Act, and at the time the city was undergoing a financing methods for redevelopment. Both Longhurst and Amyx voted COMMISSIONER NANCY Shontz echoed Amy's concerns about the legal opinion, and said that the letter had made it clear that she had wanted answered before the vote. "The commission has not made it clear if we are voting on a plan or a developer," Shontz said. "I'm grateful the attorney general's office has sent the letter because it takes the issue out of supposition. "I HOPE ALL my questions are answered or the vote will be very confused," she said. "But because more confused, and that's bad because we started out with a logical system for the train, 'I'd certainly like to get the train back on the track.' Shontz said that she hoped the commission would make a decision, but said that her vote would depend on how the commission answered her questions. In other action tomorrow night the city will consider: She also said that Sizeler had agreed to develop anywhere in the city that the commission wanted, but that Town would only develop in the 600 block. - Implementing the Cold Weather Rule created by the city's Natural Gas Task Force. The rule would limit the gas company's ability to shut off gas during the winter when people haven't paid their fuel bills. - Starting a fuel assistance relief tube to help people pay their winter fuel bills. McMurry's sentence reduced; parole possible in 18 months A Douglas County District Court judge has reduced the prison sentence that Steven McMurray, former head of the drug agency in Wheels program, received in July. McMurray pleaded no contest June 10 to five charges of felony theft in connection with the theft of funds from the bus service, which is subsidized by students. He was charged in September 1882 taking money from the program. to five years consecutively for four of the counts of felony theft. The fifth count to which he pleaded was to be served concurrently. McMurry was sentenced to serve two Ralph King, Douglas County District Court judge, said Friday that McMurray would now serve all five sentences he was charged with in eligible for parole in about 18 months. But King ordered McMurry to repay the nearly $257,000 that was embezzled from the bus service from 1976 to 1982. ON CAMPUS THE KU JAZZ Ensemble II, conducted by Ronald McCurdy, will present its concert at 8 p.m. in Swarthort Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. TODAY KJHK WILL feature Monte Johnson, KU athletic director, on "Alternative Conversations," a call in talk show to be broadcast at 6 p.m. ASSOCIATED GENERAL Contractors Student Chapter (A.G.C) will meet at 7 p.m. of the Art and Design Building. BASEBALL Simulations Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor C of the Kansas Union. KU MOUNTAINEERING Association will meet at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union. STUDENT Creative Anachronists will meet at 8 p.m. in the Union. THE LIFE-ISSUE Seminar: "The Committed Marriage: A Christian Perspective" will discuss "Knowing and Being Known" at 4:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Orave Ave. THE GEOGRAPHY Department Colloquium series presents Robert Day, author of "The Last Cattle Drive" speaking on "Along the Edge: A Writer's Geography" at 4 p.m. in Room 317, Lindley Hall. THE BIBLICAL Seminar "Gospel of Mark: Triumph Through Suffering" will discuss "The Gospel of Power: Jesus Opposes His Enemies" at 4:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. CAMPUS CHRISTIAN Fellowship will meet at 2:30 p.m. at 1116 Indiana St. CAMPUS CRUSADE for Christ will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW KU WORD and Shield will meet at 7:30 p.m. at a residence at the corner of Fourth and Elm streets TAU SIGMA Dance Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Dance Studio 242 in Robinson Center. CHAMPIONS! will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. COFFEE BAR --the Bahá'í Faith Uniting the world one heart at a time Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.- Close 841-3268 All around the world members of the Bahai Faith are spreading the principle of race unity one heart at a time. Taco Via' Expires 11/21 3 TACOS FOR $1.29 NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Stop by 115 Military Science or Call 864-3161 --the Bahá'í Faith Uniting the world one heart at a time FRESHMEN LA&S DEAN'S APPROVAL STAMP NOW AVAILABLE Oct. 31—Nov.22 9 a.m.-12 p.m., 1 p.m.-4:30 p.m. 102 Strong Hall—Undergraduates 210-1 Strong Hall—Graduates An introduction to the Baha'i Faith: Monday, Nov. 7; 7:30 P.M. For information call: 843-1803 Region/Kingston/Ulton Everyone is welcome! Valued at $2.16 1700 W. 23rd. coupon Open late every night P we deliver 842-0154 Minsky's Introduces 6 packs beer to go 2228 Iowa Minskog PIZZA "IT'S NOT A HAMBURGER, IT'S A 1/2 LB. STEAKBURGER!" $2.50 includes curly-Q-fries You might win to the tune of $25,000. 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Expires: 12/30/83 Fast, Free Delivery* Good at listed locations. 35104 / 63012 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 7, 1983 Panel says KU should run Med Center From staff and wire reports TOPEKA - A legislative committee recommended Friday that the University of Kansas Medical Center continue to be run by the University as long as it showed progress in solving revenue and other problems. The Legislative Budget Committee has spent the past four months trying to determine whether a private hospital-management firm should be allowed to run Ken. Kan, facility or whether it was essential that the University own and operate it. AFTER MEETING WITH the Board of Regents in August at the Med Center, many of the committee's members agreed that revenue collections had been under the floor and that the hospital was making progress in keeping bed space filled. Chancellor Gene A. Budig advised the committee that a new office of health care resources, to be directed by David Waxman, former Med Center vice chancellor, would work aggressively to improve patient referrals to the hospital and market the hospital's specialty services. Waxman, who is now a special counselor to the chancellor for the health sciences, said that he had worked with marketing and public relations work. "I've been making excursions in the state asking doctors what the Med Center can do for them," he said. "They support us, and we should support them." The panel said in its report, "The committee recognizes that the institution's multiple missions require a careful balance between successful competition with other hospitals and the provision of quality health care education. "NEVERTHELESS, THE committee encourages the institution to continue its efforts to maintain adequate patient volume and increase private support At the October Regents meeting, D. Kay Clawson, Med Center executive vice-chancellor, reported that the number of patient days in the hospital Despite the decrease in patient volume, Clawson reported that Med Center revenues were up from last year. was down for the month and that patient-days had been steadily declining. The panel said it appeared that the present hospital management team was starting to solve problems the hospital has suffered for the past few years, including revenue shortfalls, poor billing practices and shoddy housekeeping. Because of that turn around, the committee rejected alternative management options "at this time." HOWEVER, the committee recommended that it be allowed to meet with the Board of Regents periodically to discuss any problems in the situation and any problems that arose. Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, initially asked that the hospital's management operation be studied to determine whether it could be run more efficiently by a professional management firm. A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. SPECTRUM OPTICAL 841-1113 Boysd Coins-Antiques Class Hags Buy丝货 Trade Gold-Silver.Coins Antiques-Watches New Hampshire 132 834-8727 By DONNA WOODS Staff Reporter Wichitan crowned Miss Lawrence Ragtime music poured out of the grand piano on center stage, transforming the auditorium at a swinging or light for a swinging New Orleans honk-konk. PRESIDENT The intoxicating rhythm of Nancy Lynn Cobb's piano-vocal jazz performance sent feet tapping and hands clapping in the audience. Cobb, Wich- its sophomore, seemed to be at ease in front of the audience that had gathered to watch the 1984 Miss Lawrence Scholarship Pageant. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM Cobb, 19, was crowned Miss Lawrence 1984 Saturday evening following talent, evening gown and swimsuit competition. The five judges This is not the first pageant Cobb has won. Last year she reigned as Miss Wichita and was crowned first pageant in the Miss Kansas pageant. AS MISS LAWRENCE, Cobb will receive a $1,100 scholarship and more than $800 in merchandise from Lawrence businesses. More than $2,500 in scholarships was awarded during the pageant, which was sponsored by the Delta Chi fraternity for the second year. Cobb was selected from a field of 15 final contestants, 14 of whom were KU students and a Lawrence High School senior. Thirty-three contestants entered the preliminary competition, which was conducted on Oct. 9. Amid backstage hugs and desperate attempts to get her crown fastened securely on her head, Cobb said that she was still surprised she had won. walked away with the show, the judges said. The panel of judges said that the contest had been particularly difficult to judge. No one contestant also made their decision based on prepageant interviews. Christine Adele' Frieswyk, Topека junior, won the talent competition for her vocal solo titled "Superman," by Barbra Streisand. Frieswyk was named first runner-up in the Lawrence pageant, but she said she was still determined to make the state pageant, which will be in Pratt. "I'm REALLY SINCERE in the fact that this is an exceptionally talented group," said Rocheen Dursky, member of the Board of Directors of the Missouri Local Pageant Association. "It might be the next page pageant or in the Topka pageant, but I'll be in Paris." The second runner-up was Karen Kay Nielsen, Sioux City, Iowa, freshman. Third was Anna Marie Selleck, Lawrence junior. Dorcen Annette Seely, Lawrence sophomore, was fourth. 1307 Mass phone:843-115 The Man. The Legend . . . returns! $2.00 off haircut all semester with KUID Silver Clipper 842-1822 PIZZA PETE He's back and bakin' that pizza again! Dine in. Carry out. Have it delivered. MAMA JENERIC'S PIZZA 900 Indiana 843-MAMA NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center 749-1501 WHEN YOU ENROLL IN ONE OF OUR AEROBICS CLASSES Individuals 16 sessions-$35 Groups 3 or more 16 sessions-$25 FREE LEG WARMERS AFTER GRENADA ...? MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1983 7:30 p.m. ALDERSON AUDITORIUM, KANSAS UNION FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC The historical development, the British Commonwealth/Caribbean Dienna, U.S. Intervention and foreign policy are the focus of a panel discussion on Grenada. OFFICE OF MINORITY AFFAIRS Sponsored by the Office of Minority Affairs Monday Night is PROGRESSIVE PITCHER NITE at SGT. PRESTON'S SSF PRESTONS OF THE NORTH AD DCTAIDAN BAR & RESTAURAN a reciprocal club 1 a.m. $1.00 12 $1.50 11 p.m.$1.75 10 p.m.$2.00 9 p.m.$2.25 8 p.m.$2.50 7 p.m.$2.75 D Tuesday Night Special check at SGT. PRESTON'S for this week's special Wednesday Night is Ladies Night 25c draws 50c bar drinks 7-2 815 N. Hampshire College of Liberal Arts & Sciences College of Liberal Arts & Sciences wants UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Graduate Office 210-1 Strong Hall. Self-nominations are required. Filing deadline ::30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 11. Election will be held Nov. 16-17 with Student Senate Election. All LA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. Breakfast at Vista NOVEMBER SPECIAL Ends 11/30/83 Breakfc at Vista $1.89 Regular $2.75 --- Vista RESTAURANTS Mon-Sat 6-10:30 Sun 7-10:30 1527 W.6th NOVEMBER SPECIAL A ham and cheese or bacon and cheese omelette made with three fresh eggs. Served with golden hash browns, toast or home made biscuits. Enjoy our full breakfast menu ...including Sunrise Sandwiches! --- KIEF'S EVERYDAY PRICES ON K AND STEREO EQUIPMENT ARE CONSISTENTLY LOWER THAN MANY STORES' "SALE PRICES" KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE DISCOUNT STEREO shop HOLIDAY PLAZA NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 7, 1983 Page 9 Congress' agenda jammed By United Press International WASHINGTON — The House and Senate must complete an agenda crammed with defense spending, the national debt and the civil rights commission if Congress is to adjourn on schedule Nov. 18. That leaves two weeks to settle some long-simmering controversies and deal with the disputes certain to win, as lawmakers in their rush to adjournment The Veterans Day holiday on Friday may have to be forsaken unless the House and Senate have on the continuing resolution needed. Then the government operating another four months past midnight Thursday. ONLY SIX OF THE 13 key appropriations bills for the 1984 fiscal year have been passed by Congress, and four have been signed by President Reagan, although the new fiscal year began last week. Jim Wright, D-Texas, the House Democratic leader, will try to add $1 billion for education to the continuing resolution. Another amendment requires a Republican Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N-Y, would help Israel and Egypt by $242 million each. The Senate has been unable to reach agreement on legislation already passed by the House to raise the debt ceiling because members balked at raising the government's spending limit without doing anything to curb the $195.4 billion deficit. The debt limit remains hostage to the efforts of a bipartisan group of Senate leaders who are trying to fashion a package of spending cuts and tax increases to slash the deficit by about $150 billion over the next three years. The White House hinted that President Reagan might support the package if tax increases are similar to his "contingency" tax proposal and are accompanied by spending cuts. CONGRESS MUST TAKE action on the U.S. Civil Rights Commission or the panel becomes defunct Nov. 29. There is a movement to strip Reagan of power over the commission by making it an arm of Congress. The proposal was introduced after Reagan fired three liberal members of the six-member commission two weeks ago. Reagan already has replaced two commissioners. The Senate plans to spend today and tomorrow on a military bill that provides $22.5 billion for Pentagon weapon and other programs. Votes are tentatively scheduled today on whether to cut funds for the MX missile and tomorrow on whether to restore funds to resume nerve gas production for the first time since 1969. BACK FOR CONSIDERATION when the military bill is finished is an administration-backed natural gas deregulation measure. Key sponsors may be reluctant to resume debate because of an amendment by an unrelenting opponent. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, a former adjudicant of cheap oil's privilge price wells drilled before 1977. It also would block changes in price ceilings set in 1978. A 14-member House delegation returns today from a fact-finding trip to Grenada and will be making its report on the U.S. invasion of Grenada. House Speaker Thomas P. McCain he wants to hold hearings to testimony from American medical students rescued during the invasion. The confirmation of William Clark as interior secretary is expected by the Republican-controlled Senate sometime before adjournment, depending on when the Energy Committee takes a vote. A committee vote Friday was put off for lack of a quorum. Scientists say tremors could follow Idaho quake By United Press International BOISE, Idaho — Scientists warned yesterday that a violent earthquake that rocked central Idaho 10 days ago might have been a prelude to a series of strong tremors along faults in the northern Rocky Mountains. Geologists generally agree that the forces leading to the Oct. 28 quake, which measured 6.9 on the Richter scale and topped a storefront wall on two small Challis children, will cause many small tremors and up to three intense quakes in the next half-century. The high-risk Intermountain Seismic Belt encompasses about 500,000 square miles in central and southern Idaho. west-central Montana, western Wyoming and along the Wasatch Front "WE CAN EXPECT earthquakes of magnitude 7 or better from that belt over the next 50 years," said Ed Williams, director of the Rexbury-based Ricks-Teton Seismic Network. "We get an idea that maybe we'll have two or three more large earthquakes in the Intermountain Seismic Belt." of Utah, a mountain range just east of Salt Lake City. In the past, Williams said, earthquakes appear to have occurred in the northern Rockies only once every 100 to 200 years. But three violent tremors in August and October added, and all signs indicate that the northern Rockies are ripe for more activity. "We've seen some pretty good ones in the past, and as we project into the future, we're going to see some more," Williams said. University of Idaho geologist Peter Isaacson said the quakes were caused by "crustal extension," a phenomenon common to several intermountain areas in which some mountain ranges "are literally rising straight out of the crust." TWO CHILDREN DIED in the tremor that rocked Idaho. It caused about $2.5 million in damage and destroyed buildings more than 50 miles apart in the isolated towns of Mackay and Challis. The quake, the largest in decades, took place in 24 years, was felt in seven states and part of British Columbia, Canada. The quake carved a 15-mile-long, 10- to 24-foot-deep trench in the foothills around the epicenter at Mount Borah, which is about 12,662 feet high. The quake also radically altered the "underground plumbing" of the region, said Boise State University seismologist Spencer Wood. The boggy "Thousand Springs" area just west of Mount Borah was transformed into a slowly spreading lake when arid Chilite Butte began spewing mud. The springs in Clayton was flooded, and Mackay's city-owned wellspring tripped its flow. Wood said the intermountain region, particularly central Idaho, had been virtually ignored in past earthquake studies because of its remote location and low population. As a result, much less is known about the zone than urban high-risk areas such as the San Andreas Fault in California, he said. University of Utah seismologists, who quit counting aftershocks from Idaho's quake after recording more than 100 aftershocks, said the region was due for more tremors. Rembrandt etchings recovered in New York By United Press International NEW YORK — Five works of art thought to be stolen Rembrandt etchings worth up to $500,000 were found stashed in a locker at Grand Central Station in Manhattan, the FBI said yesterday. Police and FBI agents acting on an anonymous tip opened a public locker at the rail terminal at 7:30 p.m. Saturday and found the etchings. Agent John Trahon said the etchings were thought to have been stolen last month from galleries in Ottawa, Canada, and Syracuse, N.Y., by a man who used a Rembrandt scholar. He said they were worth between $300,000 and $500,000. TWO OF THE ETCHINGS — tentatively identified as the “Presentation in the Temple in the Dark Manner” and “Clement de Jonghe — Print Seller” — were thought stolen from the National Art Museum of Canada in Ottawa on Oct. 14. INTERESTED IN PHARMACY? ★ Learn about the Pre-Pharmacy curriculum ★ Learn about the Pharmacy School ★ Learn about the Pharmacy profession Attending to answer questions will be: Pharmacists Students, Administrators & Faculty from the School of Pharmacy 7:00 p.m.Tues., Nov. 8 2048 Malott Hall All Interested Students are Welcome! GET READY FOR A TOTALLY GONE CRAZY SKI WEEK Destination: BRECKENRIDGE Date: January 2-8,1984 6 nights lodging, 5 day lift tickets, rental discounts, free beer parties, live bands, wine & cheese parties, jacuzzi parties and lots of powder. plus $80 for chartered party bus- Price: $197^{50} Police said the man, who asked to inspect the prints, was taken to a storage area where the prints were being held. Once there the man allogely stole the two prints and replaced them with a new one. Sun & Ski Adventures 2256 N. Clark St Chicago, IL 60614 312-871-1070 OTTWA POLICE SAID Cruz told authorities at the National Gallery that he was a Rembrandt scholar from Syracuse University. Officials at Syracuse University said a man identifying himself as Cruz received the library five times in July and and again this year, himself as an art expert from Ottawa. Brought To You By For Details Contact: Joan M.Putt Ph. : 749-3423 CNA Abadía F. P. Alcalde DR. PAUL LIMBERG Optometrist Annual license has assumed the practice and retained all records of DR. DALE SILLIX Optometrist For an appointment phone 843-5966 The other three etchings — tentatively identified as the "Faust" "Van der Linden" and "Manasseh" — have thought to have been stolen from the rare book section of the Bird Library at Syracuse University. Trabon said the FBI was confident that the pieces of art were the stolen works. A positive identification will be made and the artist will be called in to inspect the etchings, he said. The FBI declined to say whether there had been any arrests in the case. In both cases, the Rembrandt paintings were stolen by a man identifying himself as Dr. Thomas Cruz. DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG Optometrist EYE EXAMINATIONS CONTACT LENSES FULL FRAME SELECTION 202 Lawrence National Bank 843-5966 University of Kansas Department of Music Presents Menahem Pressler Pianist in a special Scholarship Benefit Concert Menahem Pressler SCHOLARSHIP BENEFIT CONCERT 8 p.m. Tuesday, November 8,1983 Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved Public: $8 & $6; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $7 & $5; KU Students with ID: $4 & $3 For reservations call 913-864-3982 All proceeds benefit the Music Scholarship Fund M MONDAY COME SEE MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL ON OUR BIG SCREEN 15¢ DRAWS $1 COVER 8-11 P.M. HAPPY HOUR 11-CLOSE GAMMONS SNOWS 23rd & Ousdahl • So. Hills Center • 842-3977 NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 7, 1983 Page 10 Firm predicts higher rates from several nuclear plants By United Press International WASHINGTON — Many nuclear power plants under construction will produce electricity when they are completed at rates double or triple the price of OPEC oil, an energy consulting firm said yesterday. The increasing costs of building new reactors are creating severe economic problems for about a dozen electric utility companies, a study by Cambridge Energy Research Associates of Massachusetts. The report identifies several troubled projects, and predicts the probable cancellation of one of the best known — the $1.6 billion Zimmer plant near Cincinnati. If the project were cancelled, it “could have resulted in financial run” for Cincinnati Gas & Electric Co., the report said. "American ratepayers and utility company shareholders and creditors have yet to learn — let alone pay them," the electricity "the report said." Nuclear industry officials said they would withhold comment on the study until they reviewed it. SOME REACTOR PROJECTS are well-managed, the report noted, and the cheapest of them "will be competitive with gas- and oil-generated electricity at current But using utility company figures, the report concluded that "the most expensive new plants could produce about 100 barrels equivalent to $100 a barrel of oil." The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries' current benchmark price for oil is $29 a barrel. The study on the economics of nuclear power was written by Professor Irving Bupp of Harvard University Business School and Charles Komanoff, a consultant on energy research at bridge energy Research Associates is a private firm specializing in energy market analysis. The firm predicted that utilities involved in the most troubled receiver areas receive huge presses, ranging from 30 percent to as high as 80 percent. RATE INCREASES OF that magnitude, the researchers said, will further worsen the financial health of some utilities by depressing their sales of electricity. Woman inundated with offers after advertising for a child By United Press International CONCORD, Calif. An unemployed nurse who placed a newspaper advertisement for a child said yesterday that she would offer with offers from male telephone callers. One call was from a man with a pregnant mistress and another was from the husband of a woman who had been pregnant. The couple, months pregnant, said Nancy Skaggs. "Single mother desperately wants to adopt Caucasian infant. No money to give but a warm home and lots of love." Skaggs, 37, the mother of three teen-age children, placed an ad in the Contra Costa Times that ran for five days before it was pulled when the newspaper discovered such advertising was illegal in California. The ad read: She told the newspaper in an interview published yesterday that by the time the ad was halted, she had over a dozen offers, including four from different people who said that they were willing to give up children ranging in age from 5 months to 7 years. Included in the calls were one marriage proposal and an offer by a man to help her get pregnant, Skaggs said. "The interesting thing is all the calls have been from men," she said of the offers, which she cannot legally accept. --contaminated with cancer-causing PCBs and other chemicals. HAWK'S NEST 9:00 am-3:30 pm M/F KANSAS UNION LEVEL2 Vulcanus I, one of two incineration ships for which the EPA proposes to issue permits, has reported occasional spills aboard the ship during its operations in the Gulf, the North Sea and the Pacific Ocean in the last decade. It was learned yesterday that in 1981, Dutch authorities withdrew a certificate of approval from the ship because of "leaking cargo tanks." BOSS SPECIALS MONDAY. NOVEMBER 7 Pizza Pocket Small Tossed Salad 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $1.70 WASHINGTON — Lawyers for environmentalists, shrimpers, farmworkers and the states of Texas and Louisiana said yesterday that they would file suit in an attempt to block federal permits allowing incineration of 80 million gallons of toxic wastes at sea. THE AGENCY'S PLAN to allow high-temperature incineration of wastes far out in the Gulf of Mexico signals a controversial new turn in the government's program to assure safe disposal of hazardous wastes. The plan has triggered a storm of protests from at least one national environmental group, Greenpeace, and Gulf Coast residents, who fear a catastrophic spill, and shrimpers, who worry that shellfish will be TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8 Hot Ham Sandwich Onion Rings 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $2.10 "The Air Force seemed to feel if there was anybody left, they would be in Vietnam. So, we're instituting private help to try to try to search in Vietnam on the mainland and along the coast," he said. Searchers have found one empty life boat from the vessel and located the Glomer Java Sea's drilling rig on the surface, where they found no signs of survivors or bodies. HOUSTON — Hope was dimming that survivors from a drilling vessel that sank during a storm in the Pacific near Hawaii. The Marine Inc. spokesman said yesterday. By United Press International WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9 Survival hope dim for storm victims on oil-drilling rig Double Cheeseburger French Fries 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $2.65 Larry Norton, an attorney for Texas Rural Legal Aid Inc. of Wesleco, Maryland Groups trying to stop toxic-waste burning at sea THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10 By United Press International Vermeer said each life boat was equipped with 30 days of rations. Sloppy Joe French Fries 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $1.90 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11 Texas, said that the groups would challenge the Environmental Protection Agency's failure to draft broad regulations for ocean incineration before granting permits. Now Serving Breakfast 9 a.m.-10:30 a.m. Taco Hot Dog French Fries 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $1.75 He said the suit would be filed today in U.S. District Court in Brownsville, Texas, where the EPA in two weeks planned to hold public hearings on the proposed permits for ships owned by Chemical Waste Management Inc. of Oakbrook, Ill. "The military has suspended their search, so what's left is a sea search using Chinese vessels," he said. "We also have eight private vessels in the area." Divers have been at the scene of the well where the boat was drilling to determine whether any bodies went down with the ship. But the weather has hampered their efforts since they arrived Saturday. 反安促行動会 トマホーク配備反止 日本の趁軍事大国化に反対しよう United Press Internationa TOKYO — Demonstrators clash with riot police in front of the U.S. Embassy in protest against President Reagan's four-day visit to Japan. Yesterday's protest precedes Reagan's scheduled arrival on Nov. 9. GREEK HARVEST 1983 Wednesday, Nov. 9 7:30 p.m.-12:00 Midnight Featuring Plain Jane At the Pladium $4.00 All the beer you can drink! Presented by SA $ \Sigma $ , $ \Phi\Delta\Theta $ , $ \Sigma N $ , $ \Delta X $ STRUGGLING WITH STAT? TRY THIS! PROVED EFFECTIVE WITH 85% OF STUDENTS THE STAT TUTOR PETER LEE & BENJAMIN GILAD BONUS: FREE Calculator With The Book* *proof or pun base required* TPC-C 1001 - Extensively Class-Tested * Recommended By Professors And Students * Referenced To All Leading Slat Texts RANDOM 201 East 50th Street HOUSE New York, N.Y 10022 OREAD BOOK SHOP OREAD BOOKSHOP KUBookstores Oread Bookshop Kansas Union Level 3 MEXICO NO.1 REGULAR 99¢ MONDAYS 11 A.M.-10 P.M. BURRITO REG. $1.49 1528 W. 23RD. Video Games Across from Post Office 842-8861 PHONE AHEAD FOR SPEEDY CARRY-OUT SERVICE 842-8861 BORDER BANDIDO MONDAY MANIA CARRY-OUT SERVICE 842-5801 66 99 SUNGLASSES 19. 95 FRAME SALE 图 Save 33% to 69% Get the Frames You Want for the Lenses You Need 69 Hutton Optical can fill your new prescription or duplicate your present one and fit you with a new frame that is just right for your face. Come in and select from: . Jordache Mary McFadden Oleg Cassini Zsa Zsa Gabor Anthony Martin go . Arnold Palmer and more 8 Offer good through Nov. 19 Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames. Canot be used in conjunction with any other sale. HUTTON HUTTON OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. 842-5208 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2 Eye Glasses 99 天气预报 a0 200 SPORTS ALMANAC FOOTBALL Colorado 7 10 7 10 - 34 Kansas 0 6 6 1 2 3 McLemore 5 run (field kick) Kan- Houson 7 pass from Marshall (field kick) Ko- Houson 7 pass from Marshall (field kick) Kan- FG McLemower 28 Kan- FG McLemower 29 Kan- FG Field 22 Kan- McLemower 5 run (field kick) Kan- McLemower 1 run (field kick) Kan- McLemower 75 run (field kick) Kan- Johnson 70 pass from Seurier (Seurier to Green) Kan- FG McLemower 28 Kan- FG McLemower 28 Col 17 Kan 36 First downs 17 18 Rushy yards 50-255 394 Rushy yards 148 394 Retries 182 0 Passes 11-2.0 35.5 Punts 9.37 5.25 Venalties lost 3.40 3.5 Venalties lost 4.40 4.0 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Passing - Colorado, Marshall 11-22-0-148. Kansas. Seuerer 32-52-5-994 Rushon - Colorado, McLemore 23-160, Rushon 15-31, Egging 3-20, Kansas, Mimbs 16-103, Jones 9-36. University Daily Kansan, November 7, 1983 Big Eight Football Standings W L T P Ia Pss W L T P Ia Pss W L T P Ia Pss Nebraska 5 0 0 240 96 19 0 329 152 Oklahoma 5 0 0 240 96 19 0 329 152 Missouri 5 0 0 240 96 19 0 329 152 Oklahoma 5 0 0 240 96 19 0 329 152 Okla St 5 0 0 217 80 17 0 329 145 OKla St 5 0 0 217 80 17 0 329 145 Kansas 5 0 0 113 147 15 0 324 226 Colorado 5 0 0 197 143 15 0 324 226 Colorado 5 0 0 197 143 15 0 324 226 Nebraska 72 Iowa state 29; Missouri 101 Oklahoma 6; Kansas State 21 Ohio State 20; Colorado 34; Kansas 23 THE WINNING CUPS Kansas at Nebraska; at Oklahoma Oklahoma State at Missouri; iowa State at Kansas State. Miami W 4 L T Pct. PF PA Monroe 5 1 7 0 63 104 121 Buffalo 6 4 0 600 180 221 New England 5 5 0 600 220 106 Colorado 5 0 0 600 206 106 NATIONAL FOOTBALL American Conference LEAGUE | | W | L | T | Pet | PF | PA | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Dallas | 9 | 1 | 0 | 300 | 31 | 218 | | Washington | 8 | 1 | 0 | 300 | 31 | 218 | | Philadelphia | 4 | 6 | 0 | 450 | 159 | 184 | | Louis | 4 | 6 | 0 | 450 | 159 | 184 | | Louis | 2 | 6 | 1 | 778 | 166 | 194 | National Conference eitzshang 26. San Diego 3 Tampa Bay 17. Mistana 9 Tampa Bay 24. Dallas 27. Philadelphia 20 Dallas 27. Philadelphia 20 Great Cleveland 51. Green Bay 21. New England 21. Buffalo 7 Buffalo 8. Buffalo 7 Baltimore 18. N.Y. Jets 14 Baltimore 18. N.Y. Jets 14 Washington 48. St. Louis 7 L.A. Rams 6. Chicago 14 L.A. Rams 6. Chicago 14 central Minnesota 0 4 0 0 600 272 245 Green Bay 6 4 0 1 600 237 286 Detroit 4 9 0 444 202 188 St. Louis 4 9 0 300 196 185 Tampa Bay 1 0 0 100 158 239 San Francisco 6 4 0 60 278 204 New Orleans 6 4 0 60 230 213 LA Rams 6 4 0 600 224 214 Atlanta 6 4 0 400 206 214 Green Bay at Minnesota Miami at New England Chicago Seattle at Lake Huron Tampa Bay at Cleveland Pittsburgh at Baltimore Dallas at San Diego Los Angeles New Orleans at San Francisco Washington at N.Y. Giants Sunday, November 13 Buffalo at N.Y. Jets Cincinnati at Kansas City Detroit at Houston Today's Game N.Y. Giants at Detroit BASKETBALL Blue Team — Marshalls 9-2 1-2, 5anks 8-0, 6.0g, Boagn 8-1 18-1 7, 11k 4-17 7-12, Dreling 6-10 3-4, 15b, Boyle 5-6 2-2 12, Thompson 7-12 13-15. White Team — Henry 13:21 6/18, Guinie 6:10 6:44 16, Hunter 7:37 0/0, Pelton 1:2.2 4.4, Kellogg 6:12 6/12, Martin 4:10 8/12 16, Piper 4:16 0/0 Monday. November L.A. Rams at Atlanta Total Fools - Blue 24, White 18, Rebounds - - Blue 30 (Bogain) White 8, White (Henry) 14 Assists - Blue 17 (Boyle) White 8, White (Henry) 10 A - 6,300 Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Crimson-Blue Scrimmage W L Pet. GB Philadelphia 4 1 800 Boston 4 1 800 New Jersey 3 2 600 1 New York 3 2 600 1 Washington 3 2 600 1 Western Conference NAL BASKETBALL AS SOC. Midwest Division Atlanta 2 3 600 — Milwaukee 3 2 600 Detroit 2 4 900 1 Indiana 2 4 800 1 Cleveland 2 4 333 (½) Chicago 2 4 500 W L P.CL GR Dallas 1 600 Denver 2 600 Houston 2 300 Clifton 2 300 Kansas City 4 300 San Antonio 4 100 Portland 3 2 600 - Los Angeles 2 250 ½ Seattle 3 350 ½ Phoenix 1 2 333 ½ Saturday's Results Indiana 99, Cleveland 87 Philadelphia 119, New Jersey 112 Minnesota 106, Chicago 104 Dallas 107, Los Angeles 102 Kansas City 123, Houston 106 Uah 124, Antonio 118 Milwaukee 115, Golden State 102, New York 106 Today's Games No Games Scheduled Milwaukee at New York San Diego at Washington Boston at Indiana Chicago at St. Louis Portland at Houston Los Angeles at Denver Detroit at Chicago Atlanta at Golden State KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Yesterday's Results San Antonio 132, Seattle 115 Milwaukee 97, Atlanta 84 Phoenix at Portland Toronto's Game The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES | Words | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 0-15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 | | 16-20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 | | 21-25 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.85 | | For every 5 words add: | 25c | 50c | 75c | 1.05 | AD DEADLINES POLICIES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words - working days prior to publication * Above rates based on consecutive day insertions - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only - No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement. Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. Interviews allowed in classified display advertisements except for low-resolution displays. - correct insertion of any advertisement * no refund on cancellation of pre-paid classified - advertising* * Blind box ads—please add a $2 service charge.* 2 BH House, new remodeled, KU bus route, hotline to clean laundry at $250, 843-2801 - Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The !University Daily Kansan. - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established thin earn rate discount Samples of all mail order items must be submitted FOR RENT - Teachures are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements * Classified display ads do not count towards more Found items can be advertised 1832 of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the kansas business office at 844-4538 ANNOUNCEMENTS A Four-Session Bible Study NOVEMBER 1, 8, 15, 22, 1983 4:30 p.m. Gospel of Mark: Triumph Through Suffering THE SEMINAR IS AN EN-COUNTER WITH THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND ITS BASIC MESSAGES IN RELATION TO CHRISTIAN FAITH-FULNESS TODAY. WHAT IS THE MEANING OF JESUS' LIFE, SUFFERING, DEATH, AND RESURRECTION FOR TEMPORARY FAITH-FULNESS? WHAT DIRECTION AND GUIDANCE IS GIVEN THROUGH MARK'S DISTINCTIVE ACCOUNT OF THE GOSPEL FOR OUR LIFESTYLES, VALUES, AND DECISIONS? The University Daily KANSAN Leader: Dr. Jack Bremer Study Book: The Bible Place: ECM Center Registration: free at ECM Center or call 843-4933 ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES 120 ON MONDAY (ONE BLOCK NORTH OF THE KANSAS UNION) Kansan classifieds get results Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application Form available. Office of Senate Available. B.K. Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Rooms 200 and 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applications due in Room 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Wed., Nov. 16. The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry. NOW.OFEN MAMA JENERIC PIZZA 900 In- dia. 8432-6202, 4-1-4 a.m. 1- 2.8 bedroom apartments available immediately 2- 2.4 bedroom apartments available partial utility paid Contact Kaw Valley Manage 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available now or at on-site break. Choose 10 minutes from campus. Primavera with extra storage. Call Doug at 842-9703. STUDIO 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. Basement studio apartment $82.00/month, utilities paid. Single, non-smoking, quiet, mature individual only. 83-5898 after 4:00 p.m. | 1 book from stadium hall. 620-272-6955. 83-5898/272-6955. 83-5898 and 1.2 usages. 83-5898/272-6954 (Mark). BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN New Townhouse For Rent. Located in Nortwood Heights 3 BR, 1/2 baths, all appliances, C.A.W. D. hook up. FF with wood. Garage, big corner w.灯. 841-9211 If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please come to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. 842-1876 or 841-1287 FOR RENT 2 bedroom house, close to KU and JAMES ST. Call: 503-648-1727 $725/month and utilities are paid. Call after 5 o'p.m. on Monday-Friday. Male Roammate needed 3 bedroom house, nike- savage. Available now or beginning of semester FOR RENT - Nicole, available brand new, just coming up. ALL UTILITY FAILED PAY Call 842-904-1962 Furnished Studio. fully equipped kitchen, gas oven route.fully Available. Declare 2.1, reasonable 861-743-143 Jayhawk West APPLICATIONS An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievably Slashed Rates! 1 & 2 BR Apts. From $200 featuring: * Year-round swimming * Free but book campus 14 times daily * Laundry facilities * Excellent maintenance Don't miss this opportunity to join our long term pro- gressive, resident-oriented apt communities in this area. If you're unhappy in your present situation, call us We work Wild Knot! 842-4444 524 Frontier Rd NEXPENSIVE kitchen in nice 18 BR house. $100/mo plus 1/5 utilities 841-8091. Ask for Steve. a two room apartment just north of stadium, available immediately. $275, 844-4434 Keep crying. Non-smoking female roommate to share 2 bedroom appartment $165, 971-1/3 or 1/3 units. Across Hotel Call 841-2941 Room for rent near university and downtown. No please, 841-5500. --classroom on 11/1/13. Call 864-4520 to identify. Fonds. Green men's room, in your apartment, you SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES, spacious, 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at 62nd & Kaskalo Featuring all appliances, washer-dryer hook-ups, at garages with attics and swimming pool. 800-759-4111, southernparkway.com Spacious, furnished 2 HR apt, with fireplace Water heater 2 BR apt, with water heater and downstairs. No pets please. 841-5000 Save money, rent a i 2 or bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets, phone 842-8158 Studio House available Nov. 7; $12.50 plus utilities Call alternations or evenings. 841-8027 To sublease furnished 2 BH apt. Available nov. ist. On has route B邮 841 2538 B邮 Studio apartment for rent on floor I, nicely furnished, water and cable paid. Call Annie 791-1658 Two rooms for rent ($105 and $85) on 1st floor of house located 14 block of Kentucky. Smaller ENTERTAINMENT UFS BATTON Fri. & Sat. Nov. 11 & 12 7 & 9:45 p.m $1.75 FOR SALE **166** Mustang, good condition, 2 steel-belted radial tire size P154.734 | Phone A8.455 50 WL, 36 LW, 120 lwires, 75% mark off will be charged to your credit card will be charged to your credit card must sell. mast. call 745. Calm Kent. 749-280 1974 AUDI FOX, 94,000 miles. Good condition, rebuilt engine, cocker and radiator. 800 'Cull' diesel. 1875 Vega runs great, good steel heels tires and no rust. Not 844 6515 or 843 3036 - measure Custom 4 door sedan. Excellent condition. - prepare for watering. Inspect the steering, AM/FM FM receiver. Call 441-1853. 1975 Datum 2002, blue 5-speed, A/C. Also 1972 VW window has 4-Speed. 1836-2432 early snow 1800 Duratum 10.4 speed, 30 mpg, halfback, runs great, a.i.c. AM-PAM cassette, CD19 749912089 1980 Honda EXPRESS Moped, see at 1900 West 31st N.7 1962 Toyota Corolla S1, extra clear, special paint & interior, T01. S1: spec. clean Won in sweepstakes Call 864 0140 or 864 0144 CHEVY Mallibu Calibra wagon-wake-horse FISHER 60-watt SPARKERS. Double midrange. Nice Cafes! Excellent condition! Call Dean Chevy Impala, blue, 4-door, 78 Call 843 2501. In excellent shape. CHEVROLET Classic Station wagon white 841-8124 Best Offer. COMPUTER TURP 794/1 data cassette, game cartridge, mammals, manuals 841-4734 482-1923 Must Sell! 1880 Kawasaki 250 LTD Excellent condition HUME SELECTION OF MEN'S MAGAZINES FOR HUGE MAJOR SOMMERS, 811 N.J. OPEN EVERY WEDNESDAY. Z-10 computer terminal, like new compatible with honeywell, line 24, faces刀形; graphics, $450, $600. LOST AND FOUND Yamaha 2.5 speed, 35 M.P.H. hoped very clean! $295. 841. 265. Stereo-television video All name brands. Lowest PCK area. Total Sound Distributor. Black female knite found behind Oliver Hall Tuesday night. 964-8671 Times Sinclair 1000 personal computer, hookups, k8 module, cartridges $70 Used Wiener. 812-4253 WE SELL STAMP'S! U.S. and Foreign. 811 New Vamhaphe, open weekends 10.5. HELP WANTED National War Memorial, Chelsea, CA Births: Loss key, 7 Keys touka, Friends of a Crew on Party Moss key, 7 Keys touka - 841-6035 One macro economics book in Wescow. Claim at the candy counter at the Union. Found a girl's light weight jacket in Fraser classroom on 11/81. Call 844-4520 to identify FRESHMEN SCHLARIPSHIPS AVAILABLE 0 to later to载入 in NAVAL ROTC. Call 864-3161-301 ___ sneakers, in my apartment, you left it while looking at the guitar. Marque 749-7284 Lost keys. 7 keys on knot, Friday at Crew Party on Mass. Call 814-6453 GAMMONS. HELP WANTED. Need a number of young ladies with looks and personality to fill waitresses positions. Interviews given 2 p.m to 6 p.m at Graduate Research Assistant, GRADUATE RESEARCH ASSISTANT, Bureau of Child Research. This is a 75% time clinical and booster training班 providing two newly funded professional disabled skills. B.A. and graduate enrollment, typing wpm, librarian and research skills required. Contact University Bureau of Child Research, 340 Haworth, KU Lawrence, NS, by December 4, 1983. An EOE/A, Summer Jobs. National Park City, 21 Parks, 9000 St. Louis, 615.437-8013, www.nationalparkcity.com, Ministry Co. Mt. 615.437-8013, W. Kallupse, 9000 Research Assistant half-time position in chemistry The Center for Biomedical Research at the University of Kansas, Kansas City, KS 64105, is a graduate student in 1883 for a motivated person for at least one year with possible extension to three or more years. Duties include conducting biochemistry experiments that protectes and acetylcholinesterase by various some toxic inhibitors. Annual salary is $ 29,800,000. coursework is required from Bachelor's degree in a chemically or biochemically related field. Desired experience in protein or enzyme engineering is desirable. Students use the use of microcomputers. Applications are accepted by mail only until October 15, 2009. 0 p.m. in Lawrence, KS 64054, to apply through PERSONAL TRAVEL Maunutpaut is looking for Tour Managers, people we hire to usure our group tours to Middle East Africa, Orient, India. You must love people be outgoing, have a good attitude towards your team, be a competent senior citizen, our major market, as well as with all age groups. Personality, pause, a good looking appearance, smart and a quick learner, too. Public speaking ability, giving commentary, a must. Assignments also include fluency in German, Spanish, French or other is a plus. You may be asked "Our may be a ground work. Pay is good and if you are good the tips are excellent. You think you quality and are very familiar yourself to H仑Honagen, Director of Tour Managers, Maunutpaut, 151 St. Andrews Drive, Lawrence, KS 63042. MISCELLANEOUS Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont. 20 anniversary sale. INFLATION FIGHTER, 8th. E-7th. 20% off everything. Party clothes and vintage sweaters, wool skirts, coats, mens clothes and jeans. We celebrate. Hours: 12-30 M-F, 10-30 Saturday TRAVEL CENTER Any Available Air Fare We Have Every DISCOUNT We MEET Or BEAT Colorado Springs $100 Chicago $102 Cincinnati $118 Houston $130 New Orleans $150 Phoenix $160 Toronto $193 Los Angeles $198 San Francisco $198 Washington, D.C. $190 1 Airline Ticket Available TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd M-F 9-5:30 • Sat. 9:30-2 SPECIAL BONDS Receive $500 500 Land Insurance with every airline ticket purchased, at no additional cost. 841-7117 30 cent drawings M-F: 2-3 p. in. during General Hospital Hour Don't forget your laundry. 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School Center, 121 Strong Hall, 404-964, to register. Special for students Haircips 74 and perms $22 Charmase, ask for Deena Jenna 73 and perms $22 WOOMPA FANS UNITE! Time to celebrate. "The 3rd Annual 'Invention of Sex' party is Saturday. If you think you should be invited, you know whom to contact. Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization notes to use in your own work. See chapter 3 for exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Crier. The BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing - confidential counseling 349-4821 **ENCORE 74. The All-Authorial musical production, is now accepting applications for stage management and costumes in 2016 (in Hitch Auditorium. Applications are at the Auditorium) and in 2017 (in November 10). Previous experience is required. For more information, visit www.all-authorial.com.** Danger signal$^1$ Headache, backache, arm pain, arm pain, numbness. 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Call for appointment. Rent negotiate 748-8146 after 7:48. Male roommate 748-8146 and 7/3. Female roommate 748-8146. Call 841-6818. Part time observations needed for behavioral research project in Topica. Approximately 13 hours/week, including 2 hours of data analysis and data realization. No experience required; but must be reliable worker. Must be available afterworks and travel to Topica. Send application letter with 2 week references to Research Assistant, AA 313 Bristol Terrace, Dublin. Roommate for huge house apartment. Private room, energy efficient $150/month. Availability Roommate wanted $3.50 month & 1/4 utilities Very good deal. Wanted info. 841-8112 Roommate needed. $92.00 month includes utilities. Phone stop by, or leave phone at 1143 Lloyd St. Roommate wanted for extra large 2 bedroom furniture on apartment on bus route. Grocery, laundry, bank all within walking distance. Rent includes water. Might negotiate 789-2431 Roommate wanted 3 BIT Townhouse, $140 month plus 1/2 utilities. Call 843-1412. 3rd roommate needed for nice, modern 3 BR house to allow to camp. Available immediately 802.10.4x6 (Nintendo Wii). WOMEN'S SELF DEFENSE. A no-nonsense course in women's self defense Simplicity and effectiveness will be stressed only $15 a month to the first 75 who join. K84 622 844 or 789 2667 Wanted: Mature co operative female on肩 to brand new house at 10th & Michigan 190.06 1 SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 7, 1983 Page 12 Interceptions help Buffs to 34-23 victory Colorado capitalizes on KU's mistakes By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor Two weeks ago, after Colorado was demoralized by Nebraska, CU coach Bill Cartney said that it would take his team six to 10 years before it could compete with the Big Eight powerhouses. "Colorado says they are six to 10 years away from doing it," said KU coach Mike Gottfried after watching the Jayawhaws fall 34-23 to the Buffaloes Saturday. "You can see where we are right now." Gottfried showed his frustration as KU fell into a three-way tie for last place in the conference. Things don't get any better as the 'Hawks finish out the season against Nebraska and Missouri. "WE'RE NOT GOOD enough to get the things done we have to."18 Gettfried said. "The fault lies with the coaches. We didn't do a good job of preparing them. They weren't in the right frame of mind." Sophomore quarterback Derek Marsh, making his first start for Colorado, game by driving the ball in 11 plays, putting them ahead for great. Kansas turned the ball over five times, all Frank Seurer interceptions, and had another breakdown as Colts receiver Ben McAdoo punt to set up its second touchdown. Seurer then led KU back, but twice had to settle for Bruce Kallmeyer field goals after getting first downs inside the 15-yard line. "We were down there four times and either had sacks or interceptions." Got-fried said. "Then we got behind. We needed to get points up, then but we had to settle for field goals. It makes a difference." Colorado scored a field goal before the end of the half, set up by a Victor Scott interception. "We came out as a team a little sluggish," fullback E. J. Jones said about the defense. "We did it." 24-12. Goffried elected to go for a two-point conversion, but a delay of game penalty forced him to call on Kallmeyer. Kallmeyer hit the chip shot, but KU was called for a personal foul. From 40 yards out, Kallmeyer again hit the point, but another personal foul was called. Then, trying to kick a 55-yard extra point against the wind, Kallmeyer was inches short, breaking his consecutive extra point record at 53. 'We were down there four times and either had sacks or interceptions. Then we got behind. We needed to get points up there, but then we had to settle for field goals. It makes a difference.' — Mike Gottfried KU Head Coach pened. We were prepared as a team, but I think we thought we were better than Colorado." TURNOVERS CONTINUED to plague Kansas in the second half. Searer thrived for 283 yards in the second half to finish with 394 for the game. But he also added four interceptions to kill several KU drives. Seurer's second pass of the second half was intercepted by Clyde Riggins, who returned the ball to the 12-vard. Riggs then drew the second of his three touchdowns. The play that epitomized the Kansas effort came on a routine extra point attempt after a Robert Mimbs touchdown run brought the Jayhawks to within 12. "THAT WAS JUST totally ridiculous," Kalmeyer said. "Extra points are supposed to be easy and I'm a little disappointed. There was a ref I talked to out on the field that disagreed with the call." Gottfried, who has had a few run-ins with officials this season, was dummed by his team's loss. "I don't know what they called." Götter tried said. "But then again, I don't know what they're calling half of the time anew." all of a sudden started calling this, "he said. 'I'm tired of getting hot at these guys. They get paid good money to officiate.'" Gottfried was miffed because the officials decided to make the call nine weeks into the season, and after KU had played two field goals blocking the sore wav. McLemore looked as if he had iceed the game for the Buffaloes with a 75-yard touchdown run early in the fourth quarter, but Seurer and Bobby scored for a 70-yard bomb on the next play in scoring, making the score 31-20. "I DON'T UNDERSTAND why they The Jayhawks then drove the ball again, setting up a first down and goal from the 8-yard line. Again, KU had to settle on a Kallmer field goal. Surer then threw two more interceptions and CU had its first conference victory of the season. "We knew they threw the ball about 50 times a game, so we were ready for them," said Colorado's Riggins, who intercepted two passes. "Going into the last part of the game, I thought we'd come up with the big play." COLORADO DID NOT commit a turnover for the entire game. McLemore finished with 160 yards on 23 carries while Marshall completed 11 of 22 passes for 148 yards. Mimbs started ahead of Kerwin Bell at tailback and gained 103 yards on 16 carries. For the game, Kansas rolled up to 7-4 in offense compared with 383 for Colorado. KU defensive end Travis Hardy, a Boulder, Colo., native, made his first start of the season against the Buffaloes and responded with eight unassisted tackles. Hardy started for Elisp Watts, who was moved to cornerback KANSAS Robert Mimbs follows the blocks of E.J. Jones, left, and Paul Furlach into the end zone. Mimbs gained 103 yards on 16 carries Saturday, but the Jayhawks fell to Colorado, 34-23. Janet DuLoberry/KANSAN Janet DuPhery/KANSAN 51 KU defenders Len Gant, 51, Willie Pless, center, and Darnell Williams strain to recover a fumble by Colorado's Chris McLemore, 26. None of the three could recover the ball. Colorado did not commit a turnover Saturday, while the Jayhawks threw five interceptions. Interceptions spoil impressive stats By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor Frank Searer thrilled for 394 yards, completing 23 of 52 passes Saturday. His effort made the 1883 Jayhawks the best passing team in KU history. But Suleur also had some big numbers in a not-so-glamorous category. He unloaded five interceptions and two touchdowns. It was making its final run at Colorado. “You can't expect to win throwing five interceptions,” Seurer said. That’s the thing about stats. It can all look like gory books, but interceptions kill you. THE INTERCEPTION that decided the game came with 4 ½ minutes left. KU had a second and goal from the CU 9-yard line. Seurer couldn't find a receiver open and tried to throw the ball away. It ended up in the arms of Clyde Riggins for his second interception of the game. "I got hit right when I was trying to hit it away," Seurer said. "Also, we expected them to be in man coverage and they zoned up on us. "On the other ones, I just tried to force the ball. That's been a problem of years and years." The Kansas offense struggled in the first half, not because of turnovers, but because it was unable to put the ball in the end zone. Twice in the second quarter, he helped for Bruce Kallmer field goals after stalling deep in Colorado territory. "BRUCE IS A Great kicker," fullback E. J. Jones said. "But we can't depend on him for our points. It hurts a lot with the offense we have to go inside the 20 or 10 and end up kicking a field goal." Seurer said that the team might not have been ready to play. "Couch Gottfried always tries to get us to come out and be relaxed." Seurer said. "I think a lot of people over the years have just think we didn't execute well. "We've got to keep working hard." Steer said. "We haven't played like we ever have." Jones said he knew what was ahead for KU. "Nebraska is the No.1 team in the nation and it's going to be a big challenge." JAYHAWK NOTES — With the 394 yards passing, this year’s Jayhawk team became the all-time best passing team for a single season. The old record of 2,257 was held by the team, led by Jason Jayhawk. The 1963 team now has 2,472 yards. Bobby Johnson, recovering from a slightly separated shoulder, became the single-season receiving yardage hit by catching eight passes for 203 vards. Kallmyer broke OSU kicker Larry Roach's Big Eight single-season field goal record. Kallmyer has 21 on the season. KU officials learned Saturday morning that the game against Nebraska would be regionally televised on the ABC network beginning at 2:30 p.m. The game will mark the final home appearance for the Nebraska seniors, including Turner Gill, Mike Rozier and Irving Fryar. Henry leads White team to victory in scrimmage By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor The 6,300 fans who showed up for the annual Crimson and Blue intra-squad basketball scrimmage Saturday saw both the expected and the unexpected out of Larry Brown's 1983-84 team. As expected, Carl Henry showed off his versatile talents, scoring 32 points, grabbing 14 rebounds and dishing out 10 assists. But, unexpectedly, at least to most of the crowd, was that the Blue team, led by Kerry Boagni, Kelly Knight, Greg Dreiling, Calvin Thompson and Tad Boyle, fell to the White squad. 96-85 "I HATE TO SAY I told you so, but I told a lot of people the White team would win. "Brown said, "I was proud to be a coach. The team came back to make a game of it." After the game, Brown said he realized that he might not be able to play the brand of basketball that he had indicated when he first took the "I thought at first we would be able to press all the cover," Brown said. "But that style is realy not fair to Ge or Kelly, so I'll pull them back the other way." The White squad, led by Henry and senior center Brian Martin, surprised the Blue team with a swarming man-to-man defense and a fast-paced offense to get off to a 27-16 lead. However, the Blue team, behind Boyle and Thompson, rallied to cut the lead to 43-37 at halftime. DREILING, A 7-FOOT sophomore, had 11 points in the first half and ended the game with 15, but looked sluggish, suffering from nausea. "He's going to be fine." Brown said of Dreiling. "He was sick and he looked a little sheepish out there. People expect so much from him." The Blue team rallied in the second half as BoaNgun, Knight and Boyle each scored to points, but the White team, led by freshman Chris Piper, held them off. Boogain had 17 to lead the Blue team, followed by Knight, Dreiling and Thompson, who each added 15. Boyle points while handing out eight assists. "THE WAS GREAT." Brown said of Boyle. "I checked the crowd reaction during the introductions because I heard the tans gave him a hard time last season. So much has been made about our lack of a point guard the last year, but you don't finish 4-10 in the conference because you don't have a point guard." Guit fit finished with 18 points and Piper added eight, hitting four of six shots. W Brown, whose team plays the Dutch National team on Nov. 16 before opening the regular season in Houston on Nov. 26, said he liked what he saw. "We're 500 now," Brown said. "I just got a general idea of how the kids would react. It was a good day for Kansas basketball. I was pleased with the turnout and why everyone in the Fiesta House is such a great place to play. JAYHAWK NOTES — Brown had highly touted Troy Lewis, a high school All-American from Anderson, Ind., in for a visit this weekend. But the schools already. Last season he averaged 29 points a game and this "I thought our seniors played well. We have until the 26th to get ready. We're certainly not ready yet. I'd like them to be ready, but that wouldn't be fair to the kids." Relief pitchers plentiful in re-entry draft Senior guard Tim Banks shoots a layup during the Crimson-Blue scrimmage. Carl Henry scored 32 points Saturday to lead the White team to a 96-85 victory. Quality relief pitchers will be the most plentiful items among the 45 players available today when major league baseball conducts its eight annual re-entry draft of players who have played out their options. season his team is ranked No.1 in Indiana. Dreiling left the game with about 10 feet of help, complaining of stomach problem. NEW YORK - For all those major-league managers who suffered indigestion watching their bullpen crumble under pressure this past season, relief is just a phone call away. Just dial M.O.N.E.Y. By United Press International If major-league owners are ready to dip deep into their vaults, they can choose from among Rich Gossage, Kent Tekluve, Doug Bair, Dale Gossage and seven-time American League batting champion Rod Carew are the biggest names on the list. Each is seeking a long term contract in excess of $1 million a season and figure to attract plenty of interest. All have distinguished themselves at a time or another during their career. Murray, Randy Moffitt, Frank Lacorte and Dennis Moll as possible answers The 32-year-old Gossage has played a prominent role in the success of the New York Yankees over the last six years but has grown increasingly dischanted with the organization over the last two seasons. was hoping to reach agreement with Gossage before the draft but his efforts proved fruitless. Steinbrarner, however, plans to retain rights negotiation to Gossage, even though it appears the team has not set a plan on playing elsewhere next season. Yankees' owner George Steinbrenner Recognized as one of the game's best relief pitchers, Gossage posted a 13-5 record with a 2.27 ERA and 22 saves last season. Tekulve, Bair and Lamp will prove to be a little more costly than the rest of the relief corps — not in terms of money but in terms of what the club that signs them will have to give up in return. All are considered Type-A players and the team that signs them must part with a professional player, who goes into the compensation pool, plus an amateur draft choice. Although Gossage has the most glittering statistics of any of the relievers on the list, he is exempt from either Type-A or Type-B classification since this is his second time through the Yankees. The agent with the Yankees on Nov. 23, 1977, after playing out his option with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Other prominent names on the list include second baseman Manny Trillo of Montreal, second baseman Julio Cruz of the White Sox, catchedter Ted Williams of the Tampa Bay Dearrell Evans of San Francisco and first baseman Enos Cabell of Detroit. Men's, women's swim teams each win twice over weekend The KU men and women's swimming teams each started their season in April. The men's team defeated Southwest Missouri State and Drury Friday night in Springfield, Mo., and the women's team defeated the University of Nebraska and Colorado State Saturday night in Robinson Natatorium. Sports Writer The women's team won all but two events against Big Eight rivals Nebraska and Colorado State. The Jayhawks had an A and a B team entered in each event. KU's two teams had 91 and 80 points, respectively, while Nebraska had 60 points and Colorado State had 50 points. By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer THE JAYHAWKS were led by three swimmers with three victories each. Junior Jenny Wagstaff won the 200-yard freestyle, 200-yard butterfly and 200-yard individual medley; sophomore Celine Cerny won the 100-yard backstroke, 200-yard backstroke and 100-yard butterfly; and freshman the 100-yard breaststroke, 50-yard freestyle and 100-yard freestyle. KU took first in the 200-yard medley relay with a team, consisting of Pease. freshmen Tana Rowen and Liz Duncan, and junior Susan Schaefer. KU's 400-yard freestyle relay team, consisting of Wagstaff, Cerny, and freshmen Taryn Gaulien and Darcy Gregor also placed first. HEAD COACH GARY KEMPF said, after the meet. "It went well for where we are now. I saw a couple of good players there and we still working things, but we're still working hard." KU' s other winner was junior Kelly Burke, who won the 200-year breast- He said that his overall impression of the meet was good. Some of the swimmers handed their first committee well and some learned lessons, he said. The KU men's team also has a 2-0 record after the first weekend of college. KU's winners Friday night were freshman Todd Neugent and juniors Brad Wells, Doug Hiemstra and Cameron Dunn. NEUGENT WON TWO events, the 200-yard individual medley and the 200-yard breaststroke. Wells, Hiemstra and Dunn each won one event, the 200-yard backstroke, the 200-yard freestyle and the 200-yard butterfly, respectively. The medley relay team also took first place. Plunkett leads Raiders past KC, 28-20 KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Quarterback Jim Plunket's first relief appearance of the year will also be his last . . . for at least the next six weeks. By United Press International Plunkett came off the Los Angeles bench for the injured Marc Wilson to direct the Raiders to two fourth-quarter games, and then to a victory yesterday over the Kansas City Chiefs. Plunkett, who completed five of nine passes for 114 yards and a touchdown during his 18-minute stint, will return to practice on Wednesday weeks with the revelation that Wilson's injury was a broken left shoulder that will keep him sidelined until at least mid-December. "It's not a role I particularly like." Plunket said of his relief appearance, "but with the way Marc was playing, I figured it might be one I had to get used to. I'm just glad it was a tight game and we weren't down 31-0 when I came in." 1 Plunket's one touchdown pass covered 19 yards to Dokie Williams with 3:49 left in the game, giving the Raiders the lead for good at 21-20. Linebacker Drew Harper added another 7 yards for a touchdown in the closing seconds to provide the final margin. - The University Daily 'Fiscal conservatism' Modest increase expected for KU budget fiscal 1985 Inside, p. 5 KANSAN PENGUIN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas Vol. 94, No. 57 (USPS 650-640) High, 65. Low, 45. Details on p. 2. Tuesday morning, November 8, 1983 Explosion damages Capitol minutes after bomb threat By United Press International WASHINGTON — An explosion rocked the Senate side of the Capitol late last night, minutes after a caller to The Washington Post warned that a bomb in the building would explode. No one was injured in the blast. Congress was not in session at the time of the explosion, about midnight CST, and few people were in the area. The caller said that the bomb had been exploded in reaction to U.S. military action in Grenada and Lebanon, Capitol Polio. FBI officials who took charge of the case declined immediate comment. In a call to the Post at 9:55 p.m., a tape-recorded voice claiming to represent the Armed Resistance Unit said that the Capitol had been bombed in support of the struggles of all nations against U.S. military aggression. After receiving the phone call, a Post reporter immediately called Capitol Police. "Something has just gone off. I have to go," the officer who answered the phone said. THE EXPLOSION WENT off in a main second-floor corridor near Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd's office. The Senate had been scheduled to work very late on the defense appropriations bill yesterday, but because of progress made during the day the session ended earlier in the evening. Rep. Austin Murphy, D-Pa. was working in the house side of the Capitol when the explosion went off. He said he had arrived to find a door blown off and some damaged woodwork and furniture. He said the damage would be consistent with the effects of "two to five sticks of dynamite." He did not see a fire. "When I came through the rotunda of the Capitol, I could smell the distinct smell of explosive powder," Murphy said. "I was so shocked." "The damage was considerable, but it's repairable. I was worried there might be a statue broken. Some of them are really priceless." But none of them were damaged. Murphy said he thought the explosion had occurred in the corridor outside the Mansfield room, which is named after former Sen. Mike Mansfield and is often used for receptions and Republican caucus meetings. Mike Willard, an aide to Byrd, D-W Va., said, "What the sergeant at arms told the senator is that it the clever front door of the house." "The sergeant at arms said whatever it was may have been placed in one of the window wells outside his office." POLICE QUICKLY SEALED off the entire Capitol and, with the help of dogs, searched the building for evidence of additional bombs. About 15 fire trucks and at least four ambulances rushed to the scene. A UPI reporter who was two blocks away from the Capitol when the explosion occurred heard a loud noise that sounded like thunder. She saw a small amount of smoke coming from a window on the Senate side of the Capitol. The Senate was scheduled to resume its session this morning, despite the bombing. The explosion came several weeks after security in the Capitol was increased because a man was found in the House gallery with explosives strapped to his waist. He was arrested. "I think we definitely have a security problem," Murphy said of the Capitol. "The only alternative is to wall it off like the Kremlin. We can't do that. In a free country, you're free to come in and out of your Capitol." Explosion in Senate side of Capitol took place on second floor, across from Sen. Byrd's office HOUSE HOUSE CHAMBER SENATE PUBLIC LOBBY PRESIDENT'S ROOM SENATE CHAMBER V.P.'s OFFICE East Portico UNITED STATES CAPITOL BUILDING UPI Prosecutor presents evidence in opening day of Bell's trial By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Questions about a missing pickle knife and two envelopes surfaced yesterday during the first day of testimony in the murder trial of Bryan Keith Bell. Bell, 23, is accused of the second-degree murder of Frank Seurer Sr., whose body was found the morning of Aug. 2 in the kitchen of an apartment complex in the city of the father of KU enquarterback Frank Seurer Jr. Bell is also charged with aggravated robbery. He was arrested Aug. 17 and has pleaded not guilty to both counts. Duing his eight-minute opening argument in Douglas County District Court, Jerry Harper, Douglas County district attorney, told the jury of eight women and four men that Seurier had been stabbed more than 20 times, and six of those wounds 'tore into his heart. He knew that Mr. Seurier was a bick money bags and put the murder weapon, a pickle slicing knife, into one of the bags and fled. HARPER SAID THAT the state would introduce evidence that one of Bell's fingerprints was detected on an envelope found near Seurer's body. He said that the jury would be told of a See TRIAL, p. 5, col. 3 Developers stand behind proposals during barrage of critical questions Staff Reporter By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter The two prospective developers for downtown redevelopment both stood firmly behind their proposals last night as Lawrence residents complied them with questions about their project. In a forum at South Park Recreation Center sponsored by the six Lawrence neighborhood associations, the developers fielded a variety of questions critical of the projects. The audience of 100 people played no favorites as both developers were seriously questioned by some in the media. particular emphasis being placed on site selection and integration with the existing JOHN STAINBACK, THE architect for the project proposed by Sizerle Realty Co. Inc., Kenner, La., defended all aspects of Sizerle's plan to build a shopping center in the 700 and 800 blocks of downtown, east of Massachusetts Street. "The city's comprehensive plan indicated that the 700 and 800 blocks were the best area for redevelopment, and the research we did supported that," he said. "I think I could bring in developers from around the country who would agree with that conclusion." See DOWNTOWN. d. 5. col. 4 Grenada still unsettled but is restoring order Elections promised in official's proposal for new government By United Press International ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — Grenada a governor-general is forming a provisional government, and Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said yesterday he hoped U.S. troops on the Caribbean island could be home by Christmas. The State Department in Washington, which earlier said a mass grave had been found on the island that might contain the body of Marxist Prime Minister Maurice Bishop, later said "neither they nor we can confirm the existence of any such site." Bishop was killed in a coup by hard-line opponents last month. A government source said Governor-General Sir Paul Scoon's leading candidate to head the provisional government is Alister McIntyre, a 51-year-old Grenadian who is deputy secretary general of the U.N. Conference on Trade and Development. In Washington, Weinberger said it was too early to set a precise date for withdrawal of U.S. forces from Grenada It "really depends on when a provisional government with some authority, which is totally lacking in Grenada, is re-established," he told NBC news. In a report to the U.N. General Assembly, Scoon said members of the provisional government "would be appointed exclusively on the basis of their personal integrity and professional capacity, while politicians would be excluded." A PRELIMINARY PLAN drafted by Scoon calls for a 12-member provisional administration on Grenada with elections scheduled in six months to a year. Weinberger said that although Thanksgiving seemed "a little too early," he could foresee the removal of U.S. forces by Christmas. At the height of its operations in Grenada, there were more than 6,000 American soldiers on the 133 square-mile island 1,900 miles south of Miami. PRO-CUBAN RADICALS overthrew and assassinated Bishop Oct. 19. "It was unmistakably human flesh turned to charcoal," Rep. Mark Siljander, R-Mich., told reporters. Members of a Congressional delegation that visited Grenada this weekend told reporters in Bridgetown, Barbados they saw the remains of at least one charred body. ALSO IN THE delegation were Reps. Bill Alexander, D-Ark., Michael Barnes, D-Md., and Ron Dellums, D-Calif. After meeting with the congressmen, Prime Minister Eugenia Charles of Dominica told reporters she thought U.S. troops could leave Grenada in "a few weeks or months. We are not thinking about a permanent military presence." In Washington, Reagan scorned the news media and critics in Congress during a full address "welcome home" ceremony on the White House lawn for recently returned students from Grenada, whose safety he cited as one of the reasons for the Oct. 25 invasion. Prof expects stability with McIntyre's role as temporary leader By GINA K. THORNBURG Staff Reporter If Alister McIntyre becomes head of the interim government in Grenada, he will be an effective leader and will probably not seek long-term involvement in the Caribbean island's politics, a KU professor said yesterday. McIntyre, deputy secretary general of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, is the leading candidate to become U.S. government. U.S. government officials said. "He isn't going to become any politician," said Arthur Drayton, professor of African studies, who was McNyttre's colleague at the University of the West Indies several years ago. "He even refused to become a university politician," Drayton, a native of Trinidad and Tobago, told about 100 people in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. DRYTAON SAID THAT McIntyre, a Grenadian who has been away from his country for more than three years, was highly respected throughout the Caribbean. Drayton was one of four professors who participated in a panel discussion sponsored by the KU office of minority affairs. In 2013, he and two other professors discussed the U.S. invasion of the See PANEL, p. 5, col. 3 102 TRIOPOL, Lebanon — Two Lebanese brothers, wounded by an exclosing shell in the inter-Palestinian fighting yesterday, were carried by civil defense workers into the Red Cross Hospital. The boy on the left later died of his wounds. Muslims attack Marine base in worst fighting in 6 weeks; U.S. soldier slightly injured BEIRUT, Lebanon — Muslim gunmen tried to infiltrate the Marine base in Beirut yesterday under a barrage of mortar, artillery and sniper fire and wounded one U.S. soldier in the worst fighting in the capital six weeks. By United Press International The six hour attack forced the Marines into their highest state of alert, closed Biru airport and turned a 3-mile stretch from the Marine base to Islami village of Shoafut into a no-man's land. "There is intense fighting all around us," said Marine spokesman MaJ. Robert Jordan. "We are taking small arms fire and rocket-propelled grenades. We've returned small arms fire." THE STATE DEPARTMENT said that one Marine was slightly wounded by a mortar round and that suspected infiltrators tried to cross into the compound but were repulsed by small arms fire. The rebels began their assault five days ago and drove Arafat from the neighboring refugee camp Sunday. He is now fighting with his back to the sea and says that 15,000 Syrian, Libyan and Palestinian rebels attacked the last Lebanese strength of Yasser Arafat near Tripoli in a three-pronged tank and artillery onlaught camp where his jungle camp where 5,000 Arafat loyalists remain. State-run Beirut radio said that the rebelis edged to the perimeter of the camp, attacking with rockets, tanks and artillery from the northwest. A bomb was laid in the west and the edge of Tripoli to the south. rebel forces are seeking to wrest control of the Palestine Liberation Organization. THE REBELS SAID in a broadcast on Damascus radio that they would "spare no effort" to end the "chaos brought on by Arafat's gang" and would even attack Tripoli — Lebanon's second largest city with 150,000 residents — if Arafat takes refuge there. Iran accused the French multinational peace-keeping force in Beirut of attempting to blow up the Iranian embassy, the Iranian news agency said. The Islamic Republic News Agency reported that French peacekeeping forces parked a jeep packed with 500 kilograms (1,100 pounds) of explosives outside the embassy at 1 a.m. yesterday (5 p.m. CST Sunday) and tried to denote it by firing a rocket from 100 yards away. State-run Beirut radio reported that Lebanese army troops dismantled a bomb that was concealed in a stolen French army jeep parked outside the Iranian embassy. THE EMBASSY IS in the Janan sector of West Beirut, near the site of a suicide bomb attack Oct. 23 on French soldiers at a peacekeeping post that killed 58 French soldiers. There was no immediate statement from the French peacekeeping force. Throughout Lebanon, there were other reports of violence; - Drusen rebels attacked the government army-controlled village of Souk el Gharb, 8 miles southeast of Beirut in the Shouf mountains, security sources said. See MIDEAST, p. 5, col. 1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan. November 8. 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Senate favors MX missile permits production to start WASHINGTON — The Senate endorsed the MX nuclear missile yesterday, casting the last major congressional vote needed before full-scale production of the weapon begins and handing President Reagan a key victory for his military buildup campaign. On a 56-73 vote, the Senate rejected an amendment offered by Sen. D. Bumpers, D-Aark, that would have cut out $21 billion for building the TransCanada Highway. The outcome in the Senate was never in doubt. Last July, it endorsed the 10-warhead weapon 58-41 despite delaying tactics by Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., and other opponents. Only one senator, Arlen Specter, R-Pa., was persuaded to change his vote, from favoring MX to opposing it. Three Mile Island utility indicted HARRISBURG, Pa. — A federal grand jury indicted Metropolitan Edison Co. yesterday on charges of covering up by "trick, scheme and device" falsified records at Three Mile Island before the 1979 accident at the nuclear plant. 2013年4月18日 U. S. Attorney David Dart Queen said at a morning news conference that the grand jury returned an 11-count indictment against MetEd, which operated the nuclear plant when it was the site of the worst commercial nuclear power accident in history. The indictment, which named no people, stemmed from an investigation by the grand jury, Queen's office and the FBI. The maximum fine for conviction on all counts would be $85,000. Queen said Earthquake in central China kills 30 PEKING — A strong earthquake jolted an agricultural area of central China before dawn yesterday, killing at least 30 people and damaging thousands of homes and buildings, officials said. Seismologists in Shandong province said the quake struck shortly after 5 a.m. and measured 5,9 on the open-ended Richter scale. The focus of the quake was only 12.4 miles below the epicenter and shook areas along the borders of Shandong, Hebei and Henan provinces, the seismologists said. The official Xinhua news agency said that five hours after the quake 30 people were reported dead in Heze and Dongming counties in Shandong. Several thousand houses in Heze county were destroyed, Xinhua said. Reagan considers contingency tax WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Donald Regan said yesterday that President Reagan is confident that an economic recovery will shrink the deficit without new taxes but could sign a contingency tax bill if spending cuts are included. In a question-and-answer session with wire service reporters, Regan made it clear that the White House will keep its contingency tax offer open, under narrow restrictions, only during the remaining two weeks that Congress plans to be in session. "The president at that point might consider some type of contingency tax." with enough spending cuts. Regan said. As written, such a tax would take effect on Oct. 1, 1985, if deficits remained very large. Ex-CIA agent to get a new sentence RICHMOND, Va. — A federal appeals court yesterday upheld the gun-running convictions of former CIA agent Edwin. Wilson but overturned his sentence, saying it was unconstitutionally severe. A new trial was unnecessary but Wilson must be resentenced, said a three-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Court Circuit of Appeals. He had been sentenced to 15 years in prison and finned $200,000 after being convicted in Alexandria in 1982 for selling weapons to Libya. The court ruled the sentence violated Wilson's constitutional right against double jeopardy because it was greater than the maximum sentences prescribed by law for convictions on the two gun-running charges. Andropov misses military parade MOSCOW — President Yuri Andropov was absent from the annual military parade on Red Square yesterday, persuading Western diplomats that he has more wrong with him than the cold cited by the Soviets. An hour after the parade, a man set himself on fire in Red Square in an apparent protest, witnesses said. His condition was not known, nor was his face. A spokesman for Andropov, who has not been seen in public for 81 days, said the 69-year-old leader was recovering from a cold. Several Western diplomats said they were certain a more serious illness kept Andropov from appearing at Lenin's Tomb to review the parade, which featured a pronounced anti-American theme. St. Louis newspaper to close down ST. LOUIS — The St. Louis Globe-Democrat, the largest morning newspaper in a city that also supports the afternoon St. Louis Post-Dispatch, stunned its employees last night by announcing it would cease publication Dec. 31. The Globe-Democrat, which has published since 1852, is the 34th largest paper in America, according to the 1883 edition of Editor & Publisher, Thomas G. Blakeman. The Globe-Democrat's circulation was listed as 260,572, compared to the Post-Dispatch's circulation of 235,520. The Post-Dispatch was listed as the country's 41st largest newspaper. WEATHER FACTS SEATTLE HIGH COOL 30.00 MINNEAPOLIS 30.00 BOSTON HIGH FAIR CHICAGO HIGH NEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO IDENVER LOW MILD LOS ANGELES LOW ATLANTA HIGHEST TEMPERATURES DALLAS LOW WARM NEW ORLEANS 29.77 MIAMI 70 70 LEGEND RAIN SHOW SHOWSERS AIR FLOW UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST © NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-8-83 Today, showers are expected in parts of the central Rockies and along the lower Atlantic coast. The weather will be mostly fair elsewhere across the nation. Locally, today will be mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain and a high around 65, according to the National Weather Service in Tenight will be cloudy with a 40 percent chance of rain and a low around 45. Tomorrow will be cloudy and colder with a high around 50 and a chance of rain. Reagan to discuss trade defense on Far East trip WASHINGTON — President Reagan said yesterday that he would oppose protectionism and urge a strong but reasoned response to terrorism during his six-day journey to Japan and South Korea this week. By United Press International In an interview before leaving for Asia today, Reagan said that the Pacific was "the area of the future" and that "a strong Japan — a Japan whose image more of its own defense — will be a great factor for stability in that area." The recent destruction of the Korean airliner and the terrorist attack on South Korean officials in Burma, Reagan said, "make it even more difficult to protect ourselves, strengthen the bonds" between the United States and South Korea. PRAIISING THE SOUTH Korean government for its "restraint" under the "extreme provocation" of the terrorist attack which Seoul and Tokyo were put on alert. Reagan rejected the use of swift retaliation in response to such acts. "But getting the people directly responsible and doing something to indicate that terrorism does have its origins is not a different from just blindly striking out." "I'ts very easy and I know it' s only human to want to strike out in retaliation. " Reagan said. "I had those feelings about the tragedy in Beirut. The president will also discuss trade problems while he is in Japan and South Korea. The countries are two of the largest trading partners of the United States. Reagan said he would make a point about "the short-term advantages, "destroys prosperity" and damages trade relations in the long run. Reagan made the remarks during separate interviews with Japanese and American students. REAGAN MADE CLEAR that he also would pressure Japanese leaders to take further steps to open their Deputy White House chief of staff Michael Deaver had said he told Reagan the Asian journey would be "the toughest trip he has ever made" because of the tiring 15,800-mile round trip. He let him. He will in the air 32 1/2 hours. markets to American goods and ease "a dangerous imbalance" that now exists between the United States and Japan. Presidential advisers decided that because of the "overriding importance" of the two nations, Reagan should go ahead with the long-planned visit despite turmoil in Lebanon and involvement in Grenada. Deaver said As for the president's personal safety on the Asian swan, Deaver said "we're always anxious about security," but he also said if he was thought to be in danger." NANCY REAGAN, WHO will accompany more appreciative, Denver said. "We just try to keep reassuring the president is not in danger," he said. In Tokyo, the Japanese government has begun to mobilize 90,000 policemen to help prevent violence during Reagan's four-day stay. And in Seoul, President Chun Doo Hwan has taken personal charge of security arrangements, inspecting the places where Reagan will appear. South Korea is nervous because of the threat to the country by Soviet fighters Sept. 1, and the death of Cabin ministers and 17 other Koreans in a terrorist bombing Oct. 9. Deaver said Reagan, who has travelled to Mexico, Canada, Europe and Latin America since taking office, had wanted to make the Asian trip for a long time. The president believes Japan and South Korea are America's two most important allies in Asia, he said. REAGAN HAS CLOSE relations with presidents of both nations, particularly Japanese Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nishiki to be meeting for the fourth time this year. S.U.A. Fine Arts Committee presents: The First Annual Crafts Bazaar A perfect opportunity to purchase Christmas gifts. November 29 & 30 Kansas Union Lobby Attention Campus Community: If you are interested in participating in the Bazaar pick up an application from the SUA Office. Deadline: Nov. 11, 5 p.m. 819 Massachusetts Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 * Thurs. 9:30-8:30 Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Massachusetts Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 • Thurs. 11:30 Arensberg's = Shoes "Tassel" "Penny" "Side Lace Tassel" 'Tassel'' PEDALS P - Hand sewn moccasin construction - Genuine leather uppers - Classic casual style - Quality that has made Bass $ ^{\circ} $ famous since 1876 Ground Supreme Court rejects 2 controversial cases Bass Since 1870 By United Press International WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court, sidestepped an emotional issue, refused yesterday to consider whether "Baby Doe" = a deformed child who could not eat food and medical care — had a right to life-sustaining treatment The court also declined to review a controversial California ruling that could deny Los Angeles access to Monke Lake near Yosemite National Park, where the water level has been dropping dramatically. The justices also agreed to decide whether prisoners and their visitors at a jail have a right to touch. The widely publicized Baby Doe case involves a child born with Downs Syndrome, or monoglossum, as well as a detached esophagus that causes food intolerance and aliment feeding. The baby died in a Bloomington, IN, hospital April 15, 1982. The parents denied the infant food and medical treatment. The baby died while his court-appointed guardian, Lawrence Brodeur, was asked the Supreme Court for an order requiring the hospital to treat the child. In other action yesterday, the court: *Agreed to hear an appeal term by the Los Angeles county sheriff challenging a lower court ruling allowing prisoners awaiting trial to have physical contact with a federal district judge found that loss of contact for a long period was unreasonable for low-risk prisoners. *Refused to review a California Supreme Court ruling on Mono Lake that said the "scene views" the purity of the air, and the use of the lake ... by birds' are protected by the public trust doctrine and must be weighed against Los Angeles' water rights. - Agreed to consider an appeal by a man convicted of racketeering who contends his right to a public trial was violated because part of the trial — dealing with admitting crimes into evidence — was closed. - Agreed to consider whether a credit reporting company, Dun and Bradstreet, is entitled to similar protections against label suits enjoyed by newspapers and broadcasters. 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Allen Hoffman, the plant manager, said that the employees were notified so that part of the plant could be put back into production. Some of the employees who took pay cuts in August will again be paid their original salary, he said. In August, the plant laid off about 60 employees and cut the salaries of another 50 because of slow sales. Hoffman said. Hoffman said that the number of fertilizer orders had not increased, but by studying their inventory and the forecasts for next spring, officials decided they could afford to bring 25 employees back. He was not sure when the rest of the laid-off employees would return to work. Plane crash linked to poor visibility GREENSBURG — Visual conditions were poor at the time of a crash that killed five Kansas during the weekend and would have made a landfall. Eugene Roth, an investigator with the National Transportation Safety Board, said there were only two lights about one mile apart in the area where the plane crashed. The single engine plane had been forced to fly at a speed of 350 to 400 feet. Stars were not visible because of the clouds, he said. It could be several months before the NTSB makes an official determination on the cause of the crash. Roth said. Greensburg Mayor Crawford Barber was the plane's pilot, Roth said. Barber, 51; his 10-year-old grandson, Rigel Barber; Greensburg Elementary School Principal Delmer Day, 47; Wichita psychologist James, 49; and the Rev. David Leach, 47, of Wichita were killed in the crash. Larned hospital expansion sought TOPEKA - Mental health officials yesterday proposed an 80-bed expansion at Larned State Hospital for mentally ill patients to help ease overcrowding in state prisons. Social and Rehabilitation Services Secretary Robert Harder and members of his staff testified before the Joint Committee on State Building Construction on the availability of SRS facilities to curb overcrowding. Along with the Special Committee on Corrections, the panel is trying to develop new prison space without embarking on an expensive construction program. The corrections panel already has approved the use of vacant, state-owned buildings at Topeka State Hospital and Winfield State Hospital. The Joint Committee on State Building Construction is reviewing the proposals this week. KU orienteering team wins honors A member of the University of Kansas Orienteering team won third place last weekend at the Texas Championships by scoring the fastest run Sunday. G慧ering is a sport that combines running and map reading skills. Tom Wolfe, Lawrence junior, placed third in the 19- and 20-year-old category by running the course in one hour on Sunday at Sam Houston National Forest. Paul Jordan, 43, a hydrologist with the U.S. Geological survey at KU, won first place in his age category. The third member of the KU team, Mike Brown, U.S. Army officer at Fort Leavenworth and a member of the KU Orienteering Club, participated in the 21 and over category. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 864-4810. The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. 19. 95 FRAME SALE Save 33% to 69% Get the Frames You Want for the Lenses You Need Hutton Optical can fill your new prescription or duplicate your present one and fit you with a new frame that is just right for your face. Come in and select from: . Oleg Cassini . Anthony Martin Jordache Mary McFadden Zsa Zsa Gabor . Arnold Palmer Offer good through Nov. 19 and more Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames. Canot be used in conjunction with any other sale. HUTTON HUTTON OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. 842-5208 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2 "We may get something in the form of a petition going, but we have no definite plans set." Strickland said. Senators fight to keep living-group seats By PETE WICKLUND Staff Reporter that the living group senators had more contact with their constituents, and that he had notified the presidents of the Senate that he represents about the amendment. A proposal that would eliminate the Student Senate's five living group seats met opposition yesterday from senators who hold those seats, and the student body vice president called the proposal a "had piece of legislation." The proposal, an amendment to the Senate Rules and Regulations, was presented to the Senate Wednesday by Loren Busby, a liberal arts senator, and was tentatively approved by a vote of 19-17. Student Body Vice President Jim Cramer said the amendment was at fault for not addressing the problem of campus seat and next week's election Busby said he proposed the amendment to eliminate "duo-representation" of students in the school system, and students were being equally represented. BUSBY BASE THAT living group senators caused some segregation in the Senate, and as a result, the overall students was not being addressed. were being equally represented by a living group senator and by senators elected to represent their University schools. A "One thing that has bothered me is the group prejudice that the senators have tended to have." Busy said. "They can't get away from their little group to realize that their actions affect all students." school senator is elected to represent about every 400 students on campus. But three living group senators said that they had been more effective in communicating with their constituents than the 62 school senators had been. STEPHANIE SANDERS, a senator representing the Association of University Residence Halls, concurred with Eck. said. "I think if you look at the record you can see that the living groups have contributed a lot over the years." Colleen Eck, the All-Scholarship Hall senator, said student representation would suffer if the amendment is not next Senate meeting, which is Nov. 16. Only one of the living group senators, Dennis Strickland, who represents the Interfraternity Council, was present at Wednesday's Senate meeting. "We live with our constituents and were aware of problems the school administration had with the program." Under Busby's amendment, the appointed seats representing the Association of University Residence Halls, the All-Scholarship Hall Council, the Interfraternity Council and the Panhellenic Society would be eliminated. An elected seat, which represents students living off campus, would also be eliminated. The elimination of that seat would also remove three candidates from next week's Senate elections. STRICKLAND SAID HE also thought "The intent of the amendment is that it's going to take effect immediately." Cramer said, adding that it could force three candidates out of the election. GREEK HARVEST 1983 Part of the amendment, Cramer said, would permit students running for the off-campus seat under a coalition to change to their school seat if it had not been approved; however, they would have to leave the election if the seat had been filled, he said. Wednesday, Nov. 9 7:30 p.m.-12:00 Midnight Featuring Plain Jane At the Pladium Boysd Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy-Sell-Trade Gold-Silver-Coins 731 Antiques-Watches New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-842-8773 $4.00 All the beer you can drink! Presented by $ \Sigma A E $ , $ \Phi\Delta\Theta $ , $ \Sigma N $ , $ \Delta X $ $2.00 off haircut all semester with KUDI Silver Clipper 845 1633 RACQUETBALL DOUBLES TOURNAMENT Sunday, November 13 1:30 p.m. **Entries Due:** Wed., Nov. 9, in 208 Rohinam by 5 p.m. **Entry:** $1.00 due and an unopened can of racquetballs. Level of Play: Men/Women/Faculty-Staff & Student FREE POSTERS RENT ANY 2 ALBUMS—GET 1 OF THESE POSTERS FREE HURRY! LIMITED SUPPLY OF EACH TITLE. OFFER GOOD ONLY WHILE SUPPLY LASTS LIMIT 2 POSTERS PER PERSON. DAVID BOWIE DAVID BOWIE MICHAEL JACKSON MICHAEL JACKSON 20 STING THIS IS GREAT! A FREE POSTER WORTH $3.50 WITH TWO RECORD RENTALS! U2 FRANCIS I D'PETER SAVING THE ALUMNI FOR LOS OF MONEY AND RESTING THE BROTHER BECOME THAT'S FOR THE DOGS WE'RE CELEBRATING OUR NEW ADDITION OF OZ POSTERS! CHECK OUT OUR FULL LINE OF OTHER TITLES INCLUDING: THE CLASH,THE POLICE,PRINCE,STRAY CATS,MICK JAGGER, AND MORE. ALL POSTERS ARE FULL COLOR AND A GIANT 2x3 FOOT SIZE. AND DON'T FORGET... RECORD RENTALS ARE MAKING MUSIC AFFORDABLE AGAIN. C90 RECORDS 1422 W. 23RD. ST. 841-0256 OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 8,1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kansas (USPS 80-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 60045, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer semester. Subscribes are $1 for six months or $27 for a year outside the county by mail are $1 for five months or $27 in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 a semester paid through the student activity page. POSTMASTER $1 a semester paid through the student activity page. MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM Managing Editor STEVE CUSICK Editorial Editor DON KNOX Campus Editor PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager DAVE WANAMAKER Retail Sales Manager MARK MEARS National Sales Manager LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser Art of teaching It is an art to be able to take knowledge from your head and place it in another's. Often that valuable bit of learning passes out the window with the stares of daydreaming students or it gets lost in the foggy mind of a student about to nod off. That's why a dose of zest and enthusiasm in a teacher's presentation to a class can be effective. It helps set up a communication link between teacher and students, and the information flows clearly from one to the other — learning. Minds tune in, adrenaline starts pumping and student thought expands, breaking thought barriers students didn't even realize moments before The winner of this year's HOPE award, Erica Stern, has the right idea. That's probably why she won the award. She looks at her classes and she thinks about what she wanted in a teacher when she was in school. And the secret ingredient for teachers — "enthusiasm — that transfers quicker than anything," she says. "You can tell if they are not interested in what they are teaching." Humor makes for an added spice, she said. "Sometimes I use humor on purpose because I have to be interested in what I say or I stop listening to myself." And the sleepers must be kept awake. "I wake them up," Stern said. "I used to be a student who slept in class, front row, center seat. I don't take offense but I don't let them do it." All adds up to the Stern approach for teaching students: "You have to get the information across. I use personal experience because if I can make a point in day-to-day life, they will remember it. And I use humor because of the emotional tone. Then it is filed in the memory and the emotions." A fine philosophy for a deserving HOPE award winner. Reagan's Far-East trip President Reagan takes his show on the road this week as he visits Japan and South Korea. Reagan's reception is likely to be less than overwhelming, considering the events of recent weeks. Japan, the president's first stopover, is among the U.S. allies to publicly oppose the invasion of Grenada by the United States. Since the invasion — "rescue mission," as Reagan says — the president has repeatedly tried to characterize the operation as a reasonable, indeed imperative, step. Reagan will need all of his persuasive skills and all the help that he can muster from various world leaders if he is to convince other countries of the necessity of the invasion. The Reagan administration has made a point in recent weeks of bringing in leaders from the Caribbean nations involved to support their move into Grenada. The latest leader to visit was Jamaican Prime Minister Edward Seaga, who was in Washington Sunday. Other Caribbean leaders to call at the White House include Mary Eugenia Charles, the prime minister of Dominica, and John Compton, the prime minister of St. Lucia. Charles was at Reagan's side when he announced the invasion Oct. 25. She also is chairman of the organization of Eastern Caribbean States. Compton was at the White House — and voiced his support for the operation — just hours before Reagan's televised address to the nation a few days after the invasion. The leaders of the Eastern Caribbean are solidly behind Reagan. But then they are the ones who asked for the invasion. And the American public seems to be moving toward a higher level of support for the president in view of the Grenada invasion. Reagan, however, will face a different audience in Asia. More suggestions about parallels between American and Soviet actions are likely to be brought up, however much Reagan might dislike such comparisons. Reagan would do well to have his most convincing arguments ready, because many world leaders are still skeptical of the U.S. position. New rules hurt poor The Reagan administration continues to propose regulations that tend to make the nation's hunger problems worse, not better. The federal Food and Nutrition Service has drafted a new, stricter set of rules to make it easier for the government to reduce or deny food stamps to many poor people by requiring applicants to list welfare benefits, energy assistance and medical insurance payments as income. The rules also would force the very poor, who make less than $150 a month and have less than $100 in assets, to wait for food stamps until they can produce documents certifying their need. The new regulations are an overreaction more punitive than helpful. If President Reagan is sincere when he says he wants to help the hungry, he should recognize that the new rules are a mistake and order his secretary of agriculture to drop them. —Seattle Post-Intelligencer The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan also invites individuals to submit paper columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office. 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. LETTERS POLICY White House credibility suffers WASHINGTON — White House credibility has suffered a damaging blow with the invasion of Grenada, and it may take time to recover. There are indications that at least some aides think that the way information concerning the invasion and U.S. motives was blacked out, then doled out, much of it misinformation, was a "colossal blunder" that may come back to haunt them. The Reagan Administration ALL THE NEW NEWS OF THE WEEK WEDnesday, November 17, 1985 MIDDLE SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL GRENADA: We want! LEBANON: You writing a book or something P. CENTRAL AMERICA: What is it to you P. The Battle for Grenada (Latest on Nuclear Country) OUR OPINIONS Get the Freedom of Information Act MEDICAL STUDIES ORAHION There are many aspects to the events of the last week that called into question the administration's desire for full accountability. The civilian powers completely deferred to the military on making decisions on how and when information should be transmitted to the public. He is telling reporters that he has been assured that in the future he will be brought in on the takeoffs as well as the landings Speakes says he wants to have all available information so that he can answer questions or not answer them with some responsibility as the president's chief spokesman. Deputy press secretary Larry Speakes, in particular, has had his reputation on the line. He was arrested three times after an hour after it was under way. It was a big secret for Americans mostly since there are strong indications that the Cubans, the Soviets and the Grenadians were aware of the preparations and the 20-ship armada in the Caribbean some 24 hours before the invasion. In the past, White House aides have often said they did not care to have information on delicate matters, to preserve their ability to deny, but they may be thinking twice now. In other words, the White House turned over to the Pentagon its control of information outlets on the important matter of keeping the public informed HELEN THOMAS United Press International "We learned our lesson from the British in the Falklands," boasted one Pentagon official. The British managed and censored the news of their three-week invasion of Argentina in June 1982. Remarks by generals and admirals have made it clear that they do not want their wars fought on television as the Vietnam conflict often was and is being rooms of American homes. For two days, the public was denied an independent, nongovernment view of the war because reporters were barred from Grenada. The protests of news organizatiors helped force the issue and did resolve in correspondents finally being permitted to cover the war as independent observers. It was a Canadian correspondent who reported that the United States had hit a mental hospital, killing some of the patients and orders. At night the Pentagon announced the day of the invasion, the Pentagon did not report it. Later, spokesmen said the dead were buried quickly and the other patients and workers fled the scene, making it impossible to get a complete casualty toll. The Pentagon has been slow to announce any casualties it has inflicted on the natives and means who resisted the invasion. Les Janka, deputy press secretary for foreign affairs, who was mired like several others by an official of the National Security Council, found himself defended by a group of his eve of the invasion. He quit a few days later on grounds that his personal integrity was at stake. Speakes said that he had been unfairly singled out since spokesmen at the State Department and Pentagon also were involved in passing along false information. When he complained about it, one reporter quipped, "But the people have a lingering fondness of the president is running the show." Speakes told reporters that had he been given the truth, "I would not have revealed it, but I would not be led, nor would I have misled." In the swirling controversy, a long standing question has propped up again. Does the government have the right to lie, particularly in times of crisis? Journalists would vote "no" and most government spokesmen who want to preserve their own credibility in their jobs would have to agree. I HEARD WE GET TO GO HOME FOR CHRISTMAS. YEAH, IN GOSPEL! GRENADA 8426. 000 China moving toward capitalism MORRISTOWN, N.J. — In my first visit to China, in September, to look at the economy, two things astonished me. I found an economic boom unfolding and never once during nine days in Peking and Shanghai did I feel I was walking in a Communist country. China is running, not walking, down capitalist road. Yes, there have been steady reports of Deng Xiaoping's liberal economic reforms bringing economic improvements. But nothing had prepared me for the dynamism of the economy and vitality of the people. Nor was I prepared for the total absence of interest in the Communist idea among the people and in the government. JUDE WANNISKI Author Unlike the Soviet Union, plastered The Shanghai People's Acrobatic Troupe has changed its name to the Shanghai Acrobatic Troupe. When I suggested to a government tour guide that perhaps the state will also change its name, to the "Republic of China," he insists this could happen "only for purposes of shortening." with Marxist slogans and portraits of Lenin, China displays only no sloganing and only one outdoor portrait of Chairman Mao that I could see — a relatively small picture facing the chairman Mao Memorial Hall on Tian An Men Square. It is half the size of a Sony billboard down the street. The Communist Party is expelling all egalitarian opponents of the government's capitalist reforms — are being purged from the party. The China Daily, a governmentpublished English-language newspaper with an upbeat, free-enterprise flavor and Wall Street market news, reports that 70,000 private enterprises were registered in Shanghai alone last year — an individual is now permitted to hire up to 11 employees. The boom is evident in the cities and the countryside. It's seen in the markets, with good produce plentiful, and in shops, bulging with consumer goods and apparel that put Moscow's finest department stores to shame. It's seen in the housing and building construction all about. Mostly it's seen in the people, freed from the ideological penitentiary that the Soviet people still occupy, free to exploit their own energies and abilities in exchange for commensurate rewards. The "responsibility system," involving "rights, duties, and benefits," has effectively ended communal enterprises in favor of cooperatives. The co-ops are still called communes, but decision makers shifted to the family. Families can join with other families and take responsibility for meeting the state's quota, or tax, on a parcel of land. The group gets to keep the proceeds of any surplus and also has a degree of discretion on crops and livestock to be raised. An elected communal board decides on the portion of surplus that should be invested. And workers supplement their income on private plots. The responsibility system also seems to be working well in light industry and in retailing, where it is possible for smaller groups to supervise the link between individual effort and reward. Clarkers seem extraordinarily motivated they can earn up to four or five times the monthly wage in bonuses keyed to the profits of the state-owned shop. The system hasn't worked as well in heavy industry, and since 1978, when Deng began the incentives, several approaches have been tried and abandoned in the steel mills, chemical and auto plants. All of this suggests that Deng Xiaoping's goal of a $1 trillion gross national product by the year 2000, from the current $400 billion, is realistic. The goal almost seems too modest, given the likelihood that China will increase the billion (Chinese by 2000; even if the extremely low birthrate holds up Unfortunately, liberal economic reforms have not been matched by liberal political reforms. Deng is a capable political leader, but he's still a dictator. Students with whom I talked at universities in Peking and Shanghai had every reason to believe that democratic reforms, Deng would surely be succeeded by a less capable dictator. Unless there are political channels that permit the masses of people to determine policy through their leaders, economic reforms can go only so far before new stagnation sets in. The Maist reactionaries are waiting to say we told you so, to reassert their views through a power shift known as "the purge is on." Only a while the purge is on. Only a while on democracy can carry China to the economic goals Deng envisions. Copyright 1983 the New York Times. Jude Winnick has published on supply-side economics. The Way the World is Shaped into Chinese at Peking University. WASHINGTON — For nearly 3 hours, Thursday, Jesse Jackson kept more than 2,500 supporters enthralled as the black civil rights leader announced he was running for president. "Run, Jesse, run," echoed and re-eached through the Washington ton Convention Center in what was the final reveal meeting as a political rally. Jackson bid could help Democrats It was the same response Jackson sparked across the nation this summer as he used his voter registration drive as a means of exploring whether he would run for president. The enthusiasm of the largely black audience surpassed any that Walter Mondale, John Glenn or any of the other Democratic candidates has been able to stir up in this campaign. Jackson pledged he would take his message not just to the black ghettos of the North or to poor blacks in the United Press International There are suggestions he will take a vote that would otherwise go to front-runner Walter Mondale. CLAY RICHARDS rural South, but to Indian reservations, barrios in the Southwest, senior citizens homes and every other town where were poor and forgotten Americans. It is too early to tell how successful Jackson will be in winning votes and delegates. The polls now show him at 5 percent or 6 percent and most of that comes from the black community. But, make no mistake, Jackson is a serious candidate. He is in this race to prove that a black running team can be the most natural thing in the world. Jackson's campaign will have a big effect on the Democratic Party and the other candidates as well. But there is another school of thought that Jackson won't take many votes from anyone, because his support will come from those who never took part in the political process. The numbers Jackson uses for the voters he would like to add to the rolls in two dozen key states in each case add up to more votes than Ronald Reagan's margin of victory in those states. Those eligible voters — if they are signed up and do vote — represent numbers bigger than the margin of a dozen Republican senators. So even if he doesn't win any primaries or end up with many delegates, Jesse Jackson's can act as a voice of the American political scene He could well tip the political balance in this nation and the results would be a Democratic Senate and a Republican House, although white — in the White House. But that would leave the Democratic Party with an big debt to Jesse Jackson. University Daily Kansan, November 8. 1983 Page 5 State report recommends modest increases for Regents schools during fiscal year 1985 By DONNA WOODS Staff Reporter The state budget division report on Board of Regents universities that will be forwarded to Gov. John Carlin this week will not make any changes in the size, increases, the Regents executive director said yesterday. "The outlook is still going to be one of fiscal conservatism," said Stanley Koplik, the director. The fiscal year 1985 budget that the University of Kansas has proposed calls for an operating budget of more than $105 million, a $10 million increase over the fiscal 1984 operating budget. DAVE DALLAM, state budget division analyst for Regents schools, said that the division's report would only recommend modest increases in the numbers to describe what he meant by a modest increase. "Nobody argues that there are things we have to hear," she says "but the speed at which they can be done matters." Dallam said that the University had urgent equipment needs. KU is seeking a $350,000 increase for instructional equipment in its base budget. Marvin Burris, Regents associate director for budget, said that recommendations for fiscal 1985 showed an increase of more than 6 percent over present operating budgets. However, he said, the recommendations would not make significant strides in helping Regents schools recover from base budget reductions in fiscal 1983 and 1984 that were made permanent in Legislature last spring. KU suffered bank cuts of more than $3.3 million during that time. KEITH NITCHER, KU'S director for business and fiscal affairs said that University budget officials would learn today which fiscal 1985 budget recommendations would be forwarded to Carlin. Carlin will use the budget division's recommendations and revenue projections to make his own recommendations to the Legislature for the 1984 session, which begins in January. Koplik said that severance tax and sales tax revenues looked encouraging, but that corporate tax revenues were substantially below estimates. "That is a great indicator of the financial welfare of the state," he said. Revenues from those sources go to the state's general fund, from which money is allocated for specific projects. Projections of revenue released Friday showed that corporate income tax collections for fiscal 1984 would fall $15 million short of earlier estimates. Budget forecasters estimated that tax collections would be about $17 million, or 1.1 percent, below earlier projections. statement Bell gave on Aug. 17 to police officers "after they confronted him with that tellale fingerprint." In Bell's statement to the police, Harper said, Bell told the officers that he had been jogging the morning of the murder and went to the police station. Bell had been fired from his job there in June. continued from p. 1 Harper said that Bell told the officers that he and Seurer talked about money and that Seurer told him to stop. Harper said Bell then told officers that Seurer bumped him. Bell first thought that Seurer did it accidentally, Harper said, but then thought Seurer did it deliberately. HARPER SAID THAT Bell then told officers that he stabbed Seurer with a pickle knife once in the back and once in the front, put the knife in a bag and left the restaurant. During yesterday's testimony, Gary Steve Montgomery testified that he delivered beer to the restaurant about 9:40 a.m. on the day of the murder. He said that he entered the restaurant through the back door because the door was already open. He said that when he entered the kitchen, he saw a body on the floor. MONTGOMERY TESTIFIED that he saw a crumpled white piece of paper on the floor near the body. Among the items that the state introduced into evidence were two envelopes that had been addressed to Bobby Bell's Bar-B-Q, which was the former name of the Seurier restaurant. Mike Hall, a detective for the Lawrence Police Department, said that the envelopes, one folded inside the other, were found a few inches from Seurer's right hand. The Marines closed the airport after 10 artillery shells and mortars crashed near five planes preparing for takeoff. Officer Robin Moore of the Lawrence Police Department testified that when he arrived at Pop's Bar-B-Q the morning of the murder, he saw Sueer's chest covered with blood, especially on the left side. He said he checked the body for signs of life, but found none. A SINK HAD also been partly torn from a wall and small runs of blood were on it. he said. Bruce McCann, an employee of the restaurant and a first cousin of Susan Seurer, the wife of Frank Seurer Sr., testified that a pickle knife he had used to slice pickles the night before the murder was missing from the restaurant the next day. - Twelve U.S. F-14s flew reconnaissance missions over Beirut for the second time since suicide bomb attacks Oct. 23 and Nov. 4 killed 500 U.S. Overseers and Israeli soldiers in Lebanon Mideast continued from p.1 - Gummen assassinated the head of an Israeli-sponsored paramilitary organization, in Nabatiye in southern Lebanon on the eve of a four-day strike called to protest the ISAF occupation. - The fighting was the most intense since a Sept. 26 cease-fire halted three weeks of civil warfare between the Lebanese army and Muslim militias over water power in the Christian-led government. - Lebanese army troops battled Shiite militiamen amid the pockmark corridors of Beirut's southern slums. One soldier was killed and a civilian were wounded, Beirut radio said. continued from p.1 Panel island and the implications of U.S. involvement there. Brebeca Cramer, a professor of anthropology at Johnson County Community College, said, "I think McIntyre is basically a bureaucrat who will go down there and do what he's told to do for the time . . . to set up a very pro-U.S. government." Cramer, as well as the other panelists, condemn the U.S. invasion of Grenada as a threat to national security. Charles Stansifer, professor of Latin American Studies, said of the invasion, "It is a violation of the United Nations' and the Organization of American States" charters. There is fear in Latin America as to who is next." U. S. CITIZENS be concerned that they might be in legal, he said, but instead generally support the idea. "The reaction of the American public was that they tasted blood and they liked it." Stansifer said. "It scares me that they'll want more." The Reagan administration, which had not had a foreign policy victory, needed to have a rallying point around which American public opinion could gather in support of the President, said Robert Tomasek, professor of political science. "The Reagan administration felt that this was where it had to take a stand," he said. "Grenada was manageable — Nicaragua was not." He said that the American public liked strong and decisive presidents and that the American people could rely on him. CRAMER SAID THAT because the invasion happened so suddenly and because the U.S. press was barred from Grenada during the first days after the invasion, the American people did not have time to formulate opinions. Downtown continued from p. 1 Three representatives were on hand for Town Center Content Corp. a Lawrence group that provides content for local newspapers. Bob Gould, one of several architects on the project, defended Town Center's decision to close off the 600 block of Massachusetts Street. The Town Center plan calls for closing the block of Massachusetts Street and building a mail box between Street and the alley east of Massachusetts Street. IN A PRESENTATION before the forum was opened to the audience, Town Center made a direct comparison with some parts of the Sizerel plan. Gould said Town Center's plan would take less space, provide more parking, displace fewer buildings and disrupt fewer roads and utilities. The Lawrence City Commission is supposed to pick one of the two developers at 7 tonight to be the city's official developer for downtown buildings, and the commissioners attended last night's meeting. "It accomplished something with the people, but if the commission is already dug in, what difference does it make?" asked Barbara of the Downtown Improvement Committee. Mayor David Longhurst, who has sided firmly with the Town Center plan, agreed that the forum would make little difference if all the commissioners had made up their minds. After the meeting, several people said that they thought the forum was worthwhile, but said that it wasn't. HE ALSO SAID the public was obviously concerned about the issue. "Many of the questions weren't questions, they were statements. And they were hostile state responses." After the meeting several pro-Sizeret citizens surrounded Longhurst for about half an hour and asked him to speak. The only new wrinkle to either plan was a trolley system proposed by Town Center. The trolley, which would be paid for through a benefit tax district, would go around the 600 block mall, along Massachusetts Street and around the 1100 block. University of Kansas Department of Music Presents Menahem Pressler Pianist in a special Scholarship Benefit Concert Menahem Pressler SCHOLARSHIP BENEFIT CONCERT 8 p.m. Tuesday, November 8,1983 Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved Public: $8 & $6; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $7 & $5; KU Students with ID: $4 & $3 For reservations call 913-864-3982 All proceeds benefit the Music Scholarship Fund The Arts You can save on our one-time membership initiation fee.Now through November 13,1983,you pay only half of our initiation fee. 1/2 PRICE INITIATION SALE! Hurry! Now is the time to join Trailridge Athletic Club. We Offer: Trailridge Athletic Club is a full service fitness facility, offering weight training, handball, racquetball, men's and women's spas aerobics and many other services. You are invited to visit the club have a tour of our facilities and obtain answers to any questions you may have. I Trailridge AthleticClub 2500 W. 6th Poetry Reading by Chuck Wagner 8:00 p.m. Tuesday 841-7230 Walnut Room, Kansas Union I WANT YOU TO TRY THE ORIGINAL Minster's PIZZA FRENCH BREAD PIZZA NITE (Tues' & Thurs') All You Can Eat—$2.95 2228 Iowa 842-0154 6 packs to go No Carry Out or Delivery on this Special Other special not available with offer SENIORS Starting Today, Senior Yearbook Portraits will be taken again. Stop by 121 B Kansas Union or call 864-3728 Make your appointment TODAY! nineteen hundred eighty-four JAYHAWKER Scientific Technical Book Sale THE FASHION BOOKS OF THE WEEK THE FASHION BOOKS OF THE WEEK Great Bargains MERCHANDISE DYNAMICS 99¢-$4.99 Sale Nov. 2-Nov.18 Available at the Burge Union Bookstore Hours: 8:30-7:00 Mon.-Thurs., 8:30 -5:00 Fri., 10-4 Sat. 864-5697 KU KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union CAMPUS AND AREA ) Page 6 New entrance to add safety at apartments By the Kansan Staff The KU office of housing has submitted a $3,500 request to the state purchasing office to accept bids for construction of a security entrance to the office of Jawahar Towers, the assistant director of housing said yesterday. The security entrance proposal is the result of a petition that was circulated pmong Tower C residents in September. Jayhawker Towers officials said that the petition was circulated because of concerns about vandalism. ' Scott Joslove, assistant manager of the Towers, has said that almost all of Tower C's signed the petition. The petition asked the housing office to provide an entry system similar to that of Tower B, which is restricted to women and has a 24-hour security entrance. Steve Keel, assistant director of housing, said he hoped the new entrance would be installed by the beginning of the second semester. Residents of Tower C will receive keys to the tower entrance in addition to their apartment keys, Joslove said. OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRUNDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 Get away with SUA OUTDOOR RECREATION SLOUGH CREEK BACKPACKING and CAMPOUT at Perry Lake for more info: Contact SUA. Kansas Union 864-3477 YELLO SUB University Daily Kansan, November 8, 1983 just w. of 23rd & Louisiana Got the fast food blues? Subman will chase them away with 13 varieties of foot-long sub sandwiches. A Yello Sub makes a total nutritious, delicious meal. The freshest veggies, quality meats & cheeses are piled high on our natural, homemade, wholewheat bun. Each sub is oventoasted, not microwaved. Subman also features homemade desserts & Dannon Frozen Yogurt. We're open late. Mon-Thurs' till 1 a.m. Fri, Sat 'till 2 a.m. Sun 'till 10 p.m. 6" SUB FREE w/purchase of any 12" sub & this coupon good thru Nov. 22 1 sub/coupon, 1 coupon/person not applicable to delivery Call in your order. It'll be ready when you arrive 841-3268 YELLO SUR --otherwise be considered too risky for regular tournament use. KU debaters fire up in tournament and argue issue of hazardous waste By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter An excited young man slammed his fist down on the table and rebuked his opponent for failure to recognize a valid point on the issue of hazardous waste disposal. The 15th annual KU fall debate tournament offered the emotional, rapid-fire rhetoric usually associated with activists in the heat of a campaign. Fifty-eight teams came to the University of Kansas Friday, armed with three-by-five index cards, legal pads and ballpoint pens. They came ready to debate the issue of hazards on campus at a tournament conducted in Wescoe Hall over the weekend and in the Kansas Union yesterday. ALTHOUGH KU DEBATERS couldn't participate in the tournament's final rounds because they hosted the event, the tournament offered experience for novice debaters to experiment with techniques in preliminary rounds that would When the KU debate team boasts of being number one, it's more than just rhetoric. Last year two seniors were the National Championship title, making KU the nation's top debate team. 'It's hard to do and it's hard to win. But when you do win, you get an individual sense of satisfaction.' — Jim Reed, St. Louis junior Not all KU debaters were unable to compete this weekend. The team of Jerry Gaines, Houston senior, and David Rhaessa, Salina senior, took part in the team they competed with teams at Georgetown University in Atlanta, Ga. In the KU tournament, Macalester College, St. Paul, Minn., won in the senior division. Baylor University, Waco, Texas, defeated Macalester in the junior division. Dom Parson, professor of communications and coach of the 48-member debate team, said that a wide variety of students enjoy the opportunity to match wits and plan strategy against their opponents. However, though, does have its costs, debaters said. They often have to miss classes and have little free time. "Thethey like to argue and think about public policy," said Parson, whom the debaters jokingly refer to as Yoda after the ancient "Star Wars" characters in a movie, or be in an advocacy situation or in a teaching situation in their careers." PARSON, WHO HAS been the coach for 18 years, said that many of the debaters also spend a tremendous amount of their time in the stacks of questions, digging up information with the intent of crippling their opponents. Jim Reed, St. Louis junior, said debate had many advantages. "It's hard to do and it's hard to win," he said. "But when you do win, you get an individual sense of satisfaction." Let the sunshine in...AGAIN! HAIR Presented by The University of Kansas Theatre and the School of Fine Arts - Book and Lyrics by Gerome Righe and James Radeo - Music by Gall MacDermott November 3, 4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 1983 · 8:00 p.m. nightly · Crafton-Preyer Theatre / Murphy Hall Tickets in sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office · All seats reserved / For reservations call (913)848-3982 · Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fund KU Vietnam Memorial 1984 K.U. Vietnam Memorial 1984 Special Events November 7-11 Brown bag lunch with Tom Berger and John Musgrave, Vietnam Veterans, Wednesday 11:30-12:30, Alcove D, Kansas Union. Information and donation table, buttons available, Monday thru Friday, 8:30-4:30 Kansas Union at performances of HAIR PBS Frontline Segment "Vietnam Memorial" free showings at Room 3 Lippincott Hall Auditorium, Wednesday 7 p.m.; Thursday 10 a.m.; Friday afternoon at 11:30, 12:30, 1:30, and 2:30. "Marines in '65"'—training/recruiting film used by United States Marine Corps, Thursday, 7 p.m., Council Room, Kansas Union. partially funded by Student Activity Fee Local group starts campaign to replace Harper in DA post By the Kansan Staff In reaction to unrest in the Douglas County district attorney's office, a group of Lawrence residents is circulating a letter to raise support for Republican Jim Flory to run for the district attorney post next year. Although the election is a year away, a group of 15 Lawrence residents, calling themselves the Friends of Flory Committee, Sunday mailed out 250 letters to other residents asking them to support Flory. Flory, who is deputy attorney general for the criminal division of the Kansas attorney general's office, expressed an interest in the post more than a year ago, after Democrat Jerry Harper was selected to fill the spot vacated by Mike Malone. FLORY, A LAWRENCE native and 1987 KU School of Law graduate, said he was aware that the committee was starting the letter campaign and said he was interested in the job. He plans to make his decision about running sometime after the first of the year. Harper was in court all day and was unavailable for comment. In the letter, the group touched on the controversy surrounding Harper's tenure. In September, Harper became involved in a feud with state Attorney General Robert Stephan about the way marijuana investigations were being conducted. Stephan was spending his time burning fields instead of catching the growers. The letter also criticizes Harper's personnel problems, citing the resignation of three assistant district attorneys last month. "Since the present District Attorney assumed office slightly more than a year ago a number of experienced staff members have resigned and relationships with other elected officials, law enforcement personnel and community agencies have hit an all-time low," the letter said. Tuesday Special USDA Choice club steak includes choice of potato and roll all for only $199 Not valid with any other offer. SIRLOIN STOCKADE® 1015 Iowa Lawrence, ks. ZZ99 & RAVE PROMOTIONS PRESENTS The Romantics UPTOWN THEATRE KANSAS CITY, MO. 8:00pm TUES. 15 NOV. $9.00 reserved seating TICKETS AVAILABLE AT ALL CAPITAL TICKET EXT OR CALL FOR MORE INFO (816) 753-6617 VISA/MASTERCARD CALLS ACCEPTED SORORITY RUSH REGISTRATION Wednesday and Thursday November 9 and 10, 1983 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Centennial Room, Kansas Union LA ZZ99 & RAVE PROMOTIONS PRESENTS THE Romantics EPA UPTOWN THEATRE KANSAS CITY, MO. SORORITY RUSH REGISTRATION Wednesday and Thursday November 9 and 10, 1983 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Centennial Room, Kansas Union University Daily Kansan, November 8. 1983 CAMPUS AND AREA Page 7 Budig to dedicate research center in Spain By the Kansan Staff A joint effort between the University of Kansas Medical Center and a research institute in Valencia, Spain, will be formally dedicated this week. Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Eugene Staples, hospital administrator, left with their wives yesterday for Valencia on the eastern coast of Spain, to represent KU in the dedication of the International Center for Cell Biology. The University and the Institute for Cell Research in Valencia have had an informal agreement since 1979, said Billy Hudson, dean of research in the College of Health Sciences. The Valencia institute is financed by a private foundation in Spain. That foundation is paying for the KU representatives' expenses, according to Jim Scally, assistant to the chancellor. SCALLY SAID THAT this was the first time Budig had gone to another country as a representative of the University. About 15 researchers from the Med Center have worked at the institute, Hudson said, and about 10 of the staff members have done research professors at the Med Center. The agreement will be formalized to stimulate interest in the International Center, Hudson said, and to make it eligible to apply for part of about $10 million in medical-research grants available annually through the State Department under a U.S.-Spain friendship treaty. Hudson said he hoped the International Center would begin cooperative research in microbiology, the immune system and molecular genetics. Researchers from KU have usually spent from two to four weeks at the institute, although some have stayed longer. Utility, city discuss winter fuel programs By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter Representatives of Kansas Public Service Gas Co. and members of the Lawrence City Commission met yesterday to study the Cold Weather Rule and fuel assistance program proposed by the Natural Gas Task Force. At the City Commission meeting last week, the task force proposed that KPS follow the Cold Weather Rule established by the Kansas Corporation Commission. They also recommended that the city start a fuel assistance relief program to help low-income people pay winter fuel bills. Olin K. Petefish, attorney for KPS, said the company would voluntarily comply with the Cold Weather Rule, if the commission would grant two exten- sions. UNDER KCC RULES, the gas company would not be able to turn off a customer's gas if the temperature was forecast to drop below 32 degrees. William Salome III, president and general manager of KPS, said he was concerned that people would not pay bills during winter. If they knew that their gas would not be turned off. "What if we set up a level payments for 12 months and they leave the residence after six months?" Salome asked. "We want proof that they will be there in the 12-month period, whether they so-written or from the landlord." Also, Salome said, he was not sure whether a Level Payment Plan which would allow customers to spread out their payments over the summer months. Commissioner Ernest Angino said his main concern was with student custom "Students are going to blow town," he said. "They have the same problems in Emporia and Manhattan, but since KU is the biggest, it has the biggest PETEFISH SAID KPS was also concerned about possible lawsuits. "On a few occasions, we have been warned that some people have threatened to sue our company and the city in a class action if a plan detrimental to other rate-payers is implemented," he said. Due to a Kansan copy error on Mon. Oct. 31, the offer is only good Sunday thru Thursday. Because KPS is not under the jurisdiction of that company, it has no utility purpose and is not a customer. the city should promote such a program or let volunteer groups like Warm Industries a local group that provided fundraiser events in mapping needy people pay their utility bills. Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 During the study session, fuel assistance was also discussed. Commissioning of the new facility MIDNIGHT MUNCHIES $1.19. DUNKIN' $1.19 2 a.m. DONUTS 11 p.m.-2 a.m. All the donuts and coffee you can eat . . . counter only . . . NO TAKE OUT! Sunday thru Thursday. OPEN 24 HOURS 521 W.23rd New Owners . . . We want your business! PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA·MAZDA Did You Know That . . . TUESDAY at THE SANCTUARY You Can Now Buy $20 Worth Of Cover Charges For Only $10 ?!? THAT'S DIME DRAWS NIGHT! (Reg. Tues. Night Cover $1) Purchase your card on Tues. Night or during office hours only 1401 W. 7th (bet. Michigan & Florida) 843-9703 PLAZA TOYOTA·MAZDA CAMPUS CRUSADE for Christ will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. CAMPUS CHRISTIAN Fellowship will meet at 2:30 p.m. at 1116 Indiana St. PLAZA TOYOTA·MAZDA KEEP THE TOYOTA FEELING... SPARK PLUGS SALI PRICE $9.99 Garantie $1.25 AIR FILTERS SALI PRICE $4.95 Garantie $1.25 OIL FILTERS SALI PRICE $3.75 Garantie $1.25 FUEL FILTERS SALI PRICE $3.39 Garantie $1.25 WITH TOYOTA QUALITY SERVICE AND PARTS. KU SWORD and Shield will meet at 7:30 p.m. at a residence at the corner of Fourth and Elm streets. Rent it.Call the Kansan 864-4358. CHAMPIONS! will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. TUNE-UP SPECIAL $29.95 All Japanese Imports Electronic ignition included all parts and labor 6 cyl. models slightly higher. install new spark plugs set engine for specifications set engine for specifications adjust carburation adjust carburation of house install new fuel filter and Toyota油 plant Lawrence Auto PLAZA 842-2191 Coupons must be presented at time of write up PLAZA TOYOTA·MAZDA Standard ignition included all parts and labor 6 cyl. models slightly higher. install new spark plugs set engine for specifications set engine for specifications adjust carburation adjust carburation of house install new fuel filter and Toyota油 plant Lawrence Auto PLAZA 842-2191 Coupons must be presented at time of write up Sunday, November 13th: Billy Wilder directs William Holden in Stalag 17. 2:00 p.m. Woodruff Auction $2.00 12 Midnight Woodruff Aud THE EMILY Tailor Women's Resource Center will feature Nan Harper, lecturer in journalism, speaking on "Women in Journalism" in a luncheon career series at inook in Cork II of the Union. Special admission $2.00 COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL $21.95 Japanese Imports Only • Pressure test cooling system • Drain & install one (1) gallon of permanent-type anti-freeze • Check belts & hoses PLAZA TOYOTA • MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-1291 Coupons must be presented at time of write up TUNE-UP SPECIAL All Japanese Imports $29.95 Standard Ignition included all parts and labor & cvrs significantly higher. wear it! Install new spark plugs set engine temperature specifications adjust airflow to choke install new fuel filter-Made and installed in new fuel filter-Made and new engine not included PLAZA TOYOTA • MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-1291 Coupons must be presented at time of write up $36.95 Standard Ignition included all parts and labor & cvrs significantly higher. wear it! Install new spark plugs set engine temperature specifications adjust airflow to choke install new fuel filter-M Made and new engine not included Wednesday & Thursday, November 9th & 10th: Carlos Saura's (Cria, Sweet Hours) Marvelous new film Blood Wedding Upcoming Films at SUA: WE KEEP YOUR TOYOTA CHEAP-2-KEEP PARTS AND SERVICE THE BIBLICAL Seminar "Gospel of Mark: Triumph Through Suffering" will discuss "The Gospel of Power: Jesus Opposes His Enemies" at 4:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. THE GEOGRAPHY Department Colloquium Series will present Robert Day, author of "The Last Cattle Drive," who will speak on Along the Edge. A Writer's Geog raphy series, in room 310, Lindley Hall THE INTERNATIONAL Association of Business Communicators will meet at 4 p.m. in Room 4058, Wesco Hall. All-time classic: The Deer Hunter. 2:30 p.m., 7:00 p.m. Woodruff Aud ON CAMPUS Woodruff Aud TODAY AND Midnight: Woody Allen in: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex But Were Afraid to Ask Friday & Saturday, November 11 & 12th: PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Stop by 115 Military Science or Call 864-3161 PhilKappaTheta-Gamma PhilReta Fall Classic 83 NOVEMBER 12 & 13 FRESHMEN COUNTRY LIVING in the heart of the city meadowbrook 8424200 MEMOREX 90 MEMOREX 2405II HIGH BASS 90 ROCK 'N ROLL WILL NEVER DIE Presenting High Bias II and the Ultimate Tape Guarantee. Memorex presents High Bias II, a tape so extraordinary, we're going to guarantee it forever. We'll guarantee life-like sound. Because Permapass," our unique oxide bonding process, locks each oxide particle—each musical detail—onto the tape. So music stays live. Not just the 1st play. Or the 1000th. But forever. We'll guarantee the cassette. We'll guarantee the cassette. Every facet of our cassette is engineered to protect the tape. Our waved-wafer improves tape-wind. Silicone-treated rollers insure smooth, precise tape alignment. Housing is made strong by a design unique to Memorex. We'll guarantee them forever If you are ever dissatisfied with Memorex High Bias II, mail us the tape and we'll replace it free. YOU'LL FOREVER WONDER, IS IT LIVE, OR IS IT MEMOREX NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 8.1983 Page 8 Greyhound issues ads outlining strike offer By United Press International PHOENIX, Ariz. - Grayhound Lines Inc. gave striking workers a one-week ultimatum yesterday and took its case to the public with full-page newspaper advertisements across the country giving its message a story in a walkout that has stopped the buses nationwide. With bold headlines proclaiming "Greyhound wants you to know," the ads appeared in 158 cities. Hours later, the company said the more time it would have until noon Nov. 14 to say if they intended to return to work. Greyhound spokesman Don Behake said at company headquarters in Phoenix that the purpose of the newspaper ads was "to tell not only our own employees who are on the job, it is to the general public know exactly what the problems are and what we offering to employees." THE ADS APPEARED in about 170 newspapers in cities ranging from New York City to Coos Bay, Ore. Behnke said he believed they ran in all 48 contiguous states in which Grevbout operates. Cost of the ad that appeared in sister newspapers The Arizona Republic and the Phoenix Gazette was $8,190. It was $10,470 in the Dallas Morning News. In Florida the bill was $6,949 for the St. Petersburg Times and $6,548 for the Tampa Tribune. The cost was $20,000 for the Chicago Tribune, $6,888 in the Chicago Sun-Times and $2,100 for the Grand Ranids (Mich) Press. "That's pretty nice for a destitute company," said a union staffer in Phoenix who asked not to be identified. THE AD STATED that the company had been hurt by airline fares lower than the cost of a bus ride and presented the company's contract proposals including wage reductions for various classes of employees. The average pay rate was $35,744 a year would make $27,352 under the company proposal. "Greyhound Lines is struggling to regain its historic position as the low-cost transporter of people in America," the ad said. "We are doing this against formidable odds and in a sensitive environment of cut-rate fares." "Our labor costs are 30 to 50 percent higher than other major bus companies in America, and that fact makes it impossible for us to effectively compete against both the bus company and against other bus companies." The ad outlined the offer as a 9.5 percent cut in pay and said it would require employees to pay 5 percent to the pension plan. Amaligamated Transit Union officials said the company failed to outline benefit cuts which made the overall percentage much higher. They also claimed the company was not losing money but only sustained a reduction in profits last year. Algerian official visits France PARIS — Algerian President Chadli Bendjedet met with President Francois Mitterrand yesterday in the first visit to France by an Algerian head of state since the bloody independence struggle ended 21 years ago. By United Press International Mitterrand called the visit "symbolic and memorable." Chadli replied in Arabic that "the moment has come to the future rather than to the past." Chadii's four-day visit opened with the playing of the Algerian national anthem, which was sung by resistance fighters in the long colonial war with France. The anthem was officially played on French soil since Algeria won its independence PRESIDENTIAL SPOKESMAN Michel Vauzeille said the two leaders had "a great similarity of analyses" in their talks on the Middle East. Chadli and Mitterrand expressed "the same concern for the Palestinian people." Vauzele told reporters, but their positions on the rights of the Palestinian people "were not identical." in 1962. Relations between the two countries, cool under previous regimes, have warmed markedly since the election of Socialist leader Mitterrand. The Association visited Aligiers in November 1981, just six months after taking office. Chadli will discuss trade issues and questions that remain from the 8-year period. There have been persistent issues related to property claims by French settlers in Algeria. More recently, the two countries have differed on whether to offer dual nationality to children born to Algerians living in France. France has regained its position as Algeria's leading trade partner. Algeria is the largest market in the Third World and ninth world-wide. The two leaders are also to discuss Algerian immigration to France, a sensitive issue. There has been a resurgent racist backlash against African immigrants, sparked partly by high unemployment in France. France recently began buying gas from Algeria at prices above world levels in return for preference to French firms on Algerian contracts. Woman needs medical information from real mother to aid her daughter PITTSBURGH — An adopted woman said yesterday that she was frantically searching for her natural mother to obtain medical information that might determine whether her own daughter would marry or become a nun. SNYDER'S DAUGHTER, Vicki, 26, took the news "very hard," canceled. her wedding plans six years ago and was forced to find a nun in Tijuana, Mexico, Snyder said. the information secret since 1929, when the doctor who handled the adoption informed her there was a "possibility of hemophilia" but gave no more details. Elizabeth Snyder, 54, discovered that hemophilia could be present in her biological family's genes when her daughter, who is an only child, six years ago announced her intention to marry. By United Press International It occurs in males and is passed on by females and present tests cannot Snyder's adoptive mother had kept Hemophilia, a hereditary condition, results in prolonged bleeding from even minor cuts and injuries. completely determine whether a person is a carrier. Snyder, raised in Toledo, Ohio, and now living in Victorville, Calif., began a frustrating search in 1977 to clear up a longtime error. His search recently led her to Pittsburgh "I have this gut feeling that time is running out," said Snyder, adding that her daughter is a year and a half away from taking her final vows. She said that she had not had any desire to find her natural mother before her daughter's life was adversely affected and knowing who her ancestors were. K. U.Telephone Directory is now available For sale at all 3 K.U. Bookstore locations $1.50 with staff or student I.D. $3.00 without I.D. KU KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union KANSAN FOOTBALL CONTEST (Official Entry Form) How The Contest Works: This week simply circle your choice as the winner. In case of a tie the contest closest to the score of the KU game gets preference. Be sure to include scores for KU and opponent. Winner of this week's contest will receive $25. Second-place winner will receive $15 and the third-place winner will receive $10. Circle your choice as the winner Iowa St. vs Kansas St. Missouri vs Oklahoma St. Oklahoma vs Colorado North Carolina vs Virginia Boston College vs Syracuse Illinois vs Indiana coupon Texas vs TCU Washington vs USC Arkansas vs Texas A&M Iowa vs Michigan St. Indiana vs Wichita Wichita St. vs Southern Illinois Tennessee vs Mississippi Tie Breaker Game KANSAS___ vs NEBRASKA___ (Brease to include scores for KU and opponent) Contest Rules Student ID # Name: Phone: 1) Entrants must be students enrolled at the University of Kansas during the Fall semester 1983 and use the official entry form in enter the football contest. 2) Be sure to print your name and address legibly on your entry form. 3) Mail your entry form or deliver it personally to the Business Manager of the University Daily Kansas, R. 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall not later than noon each Friday. All entries postmarked or delivered after noon Friday will be relied upon. 4) Contest winners will be announced each Tuesday in the University Daily Kansas. 5) University Daily Kansan employees and their immediate families are not eligible to enter the contest. 6) Only one entry per person per week will be allowed and that person must be enrolled at the University of Kansas. 7) In the event of a tie, the person coming closest to the score of the KU game of the week gets preference. In cases where there are further deadlocks on that basis, duplicate prizes will be awarded. Winners will be notified how to claim their prizes. 1) Andrew J. Michel ... $25 2) Pam DePalma ... $15 3) Karen Nicholls ... $15 12 correct-closest to correct score 11 correct 10 correct 12 correct-2, 11 correct-12, 10 correct-69, 9 correct-87, 8 correct-73, others 7 correct or less. Winners 2nd Year Anniversary Sale Our Professional stylists create a look to reflect your personal image. Susannah, Donna, Eddie, Mary Call for appt. 842-1822 NOV. 9th & 10th Shampoo, Haircut, Blowdry "We want to earn the right to be your hair stylist" $8.00 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza Silver Clipper Silver Clipper Unisex Hairstyling Salon TUESDAY FREE DRINKS $2.50 COVER 8-11 P.M. HAPPY HOUR 11-CLOSE GAMMONS SNOWE 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 GAMMONS SNOWS 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 GAMMONS SNOWMEN 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 HAWKS CROSSING 12th & Oread (1 block north of the Union) For the same great subs served at Yello Sub try the Hawk's Crossing. A great lunchtime alternative to vending machines & other forms of on-campus dining. Featuring a dynamite selection of tunes. Kitchen open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. 6" SUB FREE HAWK'S CROSSING wipurchase of any 12' sub £ this coupon 1 sub/coupon 1 coupon/person good thru 11-22 CALL IN YOUR ORDER! 943.6660 843-6660 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA PHONE NUMBER: 512-7500 SEAN CONNERY JAMES BOND NEVER SAY NEVER AGAIN Eve: 7:15-9:40 Mail. Sat-Sun: 2:00 Selling something? Place a want ad. Call 864-4358. VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 683-1066 Eve CHEVY CHASE DEAL CENTURY PO Box 70195 New York, NY 10024 HILLCREST 1 9TH AND IOWA TELEPHONE 842-8400 10 HILLCREST 1 904-267-8000 TEL/Fax: 904-267-8000 THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND WED 2/24 MAR 5 Sun 2/15 R HILLCREST 2 9TH AND 10TH AFTERNOON ALL NEW RIGHTHOUSE Here and now R Eve, 7:09-9:35 Mai, Sat, Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 3 9TH AND IOWA TELEPHONE 842-8400 HILLCHEST 3 TELEPHONE 812-8400 Simplest Mains Eve 9:30 W 9:30 DRD DRUNE Mat Sat: 2:15 CINEMA 1 3420 AND 1098 YELLOWHORSE AIRPORT On October 14, 1964 Billy Mills stumbled by running the most sensational race in Olympic history. But it wasn't he how he finished it was where he started *that made him a champion* 1979 GIET ROBBY BENSON RUNNING BRAVE IN LITTLE PRODUCTIONS AT MIDWAY AVE. LOFT IN MIDWAY AVE. PRESENTED BY ROBBY BENSON, TOM WESTMORE, DAVIS HUNT, JEANNE CHEVREAU, MUSIC BY MARCUS ROBERTS, ANNIE MAYER AND MARCO SORRALDO. PRODUCTION BY MARCUS ROBERTS, ANNIE MAYER AND MARCO SORRALDO. Eve: 7:35-9:35 Mat.Sat.Sun 2:00 (P) COMING SOON TO THEATRE (M) CONTACT US AT (800) 426-1111 CINEMA 2 THE eight star actors deceive one big Oscar… (in) this funny and ferociously smart movie. THE BIG CHILL Eve. 7-30 9:30 Mat.-Sat. 2:00 1 University Daily Kansan, November 8, 1983 Page 9 SPORTS ALMANAC BASEBALL Players available in baseball's free agent draft. Monday listed with the clubs that drafted them: Kent Teklev, Pittsburgh (12) - Chicago Obs. Cincinnati, Philadelphia, San Diego, Texas, Texas, Oakland, Chicago Whitman, Washington, Cleveland, Hitch Gossage, New York, California, Oakland, Texas, San Diego, Pittsburgh, Toronto, Atlanta, San Francisco Lary Sorsensen. Cleveland (7) — Chicago Cubs, California, San Diego, Seattle, Toronto, Oakland, Texas Dan Schatzer, Montreal (8) — Pittsburgh, Los Angeles, California, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, Toronto, Texas, Seattle. Jerry Kooiman, Chicago (AL) (7) — St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Toronto, Montreal, Oakland, Texas Philadelphia, California, San Francisco, Seattle, Texas, Toronto. Milwaukee, Detroit (7) - San Diego, Houston. Chicago Cubs, Oakland, Texas Dominic Lamp, Chicago (AL) (5) - St Louis, Toronto, Baltimore, Cleveland, Texas Doug Bair, Detroit (2) — Cleveland, Pittsburgh Dale Murray, New York (AL) (2) Chicago, IL, Toronto Jim Bibby, Pittsburgh (1) - Montreal Elias Sosa, San Diego (1) - Seattle. Chicago Cubs, Toronto Jim Bibby, Pittsburgh (1) - Montreal. Ehas Soka, San Diego (1) - Seattle Tom Underwood, Oakland (1) (2) Dano Hood, Kansas City — None Randy Moffitt, Toronto — None J. R. Richard, Houston — None Davie Tomlin, Pittsburgh — None Jamie Easterly, Milwaukee — None Don Hood, Kansas City — None Randi Moffitt, Toronto — None Doug Bird, Boston — None. Arnaud, Florida — None. red Simmons, Milwaukee (2) - Pitt shureh, San Francisco Cleveland, California, San Francisco, Montreal, Texas. Darrell Evans, San Francisco (17) Burrell, Kansas City, Milwaukee, Iowa, Cincinnati, New York, Texas, New York Yankees, Halifort, San Diego, San Jose, Baltimore, Tucson, Toronto. Manny Trillo, Montreal (1) — Chicago White Sox Enos Cabell, Detroit (5) — Kansas City, Houston, Los Angeles, Seattle, Texas. Houston, Los Angeles, Seattle, Texas. Richie Hebner, Pittsburgh (1) — Seattle. Rob. Piccione, Milwaukee (1) — San Bert Campaneris, New York (AL) Nana Richie Hebner, Pittsburgh (1) -- Seattle. Rob Picciolo, Milwaukee (1) -- San Francisco. Outfielders (13) Oscar Gamble, New York (AL) (7) — Milwaukee. Chicago White Sox. Boston. Aurelio Rodriguez, Chicago (AL) – None. Mark Wagney, Texas – None. Armelmann, Miami. Darrell Thomas, Los Angeles (7) • St. Louis, Montreal, Houston, Chicago, Dubs Milwaukee, Chicago White Sox, Boston. Baltimore, Montreal, Oakland, Toronto. Louis, Montreal, Chicago, Chicago Cubs, Milwaukee, San Diego, Chicago White Sox Dan Ford, Baltimore (5) — Cleveland Montréal, Seattle, Patsburg, Oakland, Gene Richardson, San Diego (4) — Seattle, Oakland Warren Cromartie, Montreal (3) - Seattle, San Francisco, Boston. Dave Parker, Pittsburgh (2) - Cincinnati, Seattle 1. Nebraska (38) (10·0) 2. Texas (2) (8·0) 3. California (62) 4. Georgia (8·0·1) 5. Miami (Fla.) (9·1) 6. Illinois (8·0·1) 7. Southern Methodist (7·1) 8. Michigan (7·2) 9. Iowa (7·2) 10. Brigham Young (8·1) 11. Ohio State (7·2) 12. Boston College (7·1) 13. Florida (8·2) 14. Pittsburgh (7·2) 15. 586 16. 582 17. 491 18. 499 19. 429 20. 349 21. 225 22. 192 23. 117 24. 167 25. 156 26. 162 27. 94 The United Press International Board of Coaches TOP 28 1983 college football battles, with first place votes and records in the tournament on 15 points for first place, 14 for second and Bake McBridge, Cleveland (1) - Montreal Arms Oles, Kansas City (1) - Baltimore Migdol Dillon, Pittsburgh - None Jerry Martin, Kansas City - None FOOTBALL Note. By agreement with the American Poochball Coaches Association; teams on probaition are eligible for the Top 20 and national championship by the UPI Board of Coaches. The teams currently on probation are Clemson, North Carolina, Webster State and Southern Mississippi. 15 West Virginia (7-2) 64 16 Alabama (6-2) 60 17 Florida (6-2) 60 18 North Carolina (7-2) 40 19 Tennessee (6-2) 21 20 Texas (6-2) 19 NFL Standings W L W T Pet. FF R19 114 Miami 5 4 7 600 699 214 164 Baltimore 6 4 5 600 690 200 196 Buffalo 6 4 5 600 690 200 196 New England 5 4 5 000 000 200 196 American Conference Pittsburgh 8 2 0 800 253 168 Cleveland 8 2 0 500 262 241 Cincinnati 4 6 0 400 225 195 Houston 0 10 0 160 166 30 LA Raiders 7 3 0 700 270 224 Denver 7 3 0 700 172 174 Seattle 6 4 0 600 246 225 Chicago 6 4 0 600 224 228 San Diego 6 4 0 700 224 W L W T Pct PF PI 25 Dallas 9 1 0 900 381 214 Washington 8 1 0 160 381 214 Philadelphia 4 6 0 400 158 214 Louis 4 6 0 400 158 214 NY Louis 2 7 1 0 158 381 National Conference Minnesota 14 4 0 60 251 Green Bay 5 5 0 500 275 288 Blue Jacket 5 5 0 500 275 288 Chicago 3 7 0 500 364 219 Tampa Bay 1 9 0 100 158 294 San Francisco 6 4 0 600 278 204 New Orleans 6 4 0 600 278 204 LA Rams 6 4 0 600 222 214 Atlanta 6 4 0 400 300 214 Pittsburgh 26, San Diego 10 Tampa Bay 17, Minnesota 13 New Orleans 27, Atlanta 18 Philadelphia 28, Chicago 19 Green Bay 35, Cleveland 21 New England 21, Buffalo 7 Miami 26, Philadelphia 7 Baltimore 17, N.Y. Jets 14 Seattle 27, Drew 19 Washington 41, St. Louis 7 Tampa Bay 30, Miami 21 Miami 20, San Francisco 17 BASKETBALL KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Last Night's Result Detroit 15. N.Y. Giants 9 NBA Scoring Leaders | | g | fg | ft | pt | ts | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Vandenge, Den | 5 | 57 | 38 | 152 | 0.94 | | Dantley, Utah | 6 | 51 | 28 | 146 | 0.92 | | Free Clee, NC | 6 | 61 | 50 | 174 | 1.20 | | Trickpaque, KC | 6 | 58 | 27 | 149 | 0.96 | | Tripulape, KC | 6 | 61 | 27 | 149 | 0.96 | | Agourie, GA | 6 | 63 | 32 | 159 | 0.95 | | Carroll, GS | 6 | 51 | 28 | 139 | 0.95 | | Malone, Phil | 6 | 54 | 28 | 139 | 0.95 | | Bird, Bird | 6 | 46 | 33 | 125 | 0.94 | | Bird, Bird | 6 | 46 | 33 | 125 | 0.94 | The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES | | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | or 2 Weeks | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Words | 1-10 | 3.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 | | 0-15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 | | 16-20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 6.00 | | 21-25 | 3.10 | 4.75 | 5.25 | 6.85 | | For every 5 words add: | 25c | 50c | 75c | 105c | AD DEADLINES POLICIES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. Classified Display ... $4.20 - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement correct insertion of any advertisement * No refundation cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising Classified Display advertisements can be only one width wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No reserves allowed in classified display advertisements except for light advertising. - Blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge * * Checks must accompany all adverts mailed - Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University Daily Kansas - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until they can cover the costs incurred by their clients. **PROTEST U.S. INVASIONS IN CENTRAL AMERICAN MARSHALS** Wednesday at 12:30 PM in LAWRENCE SAT Nov. 12th. Join the Latin American Solidarity and other groups to expose outrage at U.S. marshals' actions in Central America. Marshal march down Mass St. to South Park,趴ally at Park includes speakers, music and information. unless advances were required to pay in advance until credit has been established thly earned rate discount - Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to publication of advertisement. UE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be place "online business office at 804-4438 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS arts and Crafts Fair, Sat. 10 Nov 12 4:44 community Nursery School, 64 Alabama Profes- sional Nursery School A Four-Session Bible Study NOVEMBER 1,8,15 22,1983 4:30 p.m. Gospel of Mark: Triumph Through Suffering THE SEMINAR IS AN EN-Counter WITH THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND ITS BASIC MESSAGES IN RELATION TO CHRISTIAN FAITH FULNESS TODAY. WHAT IS THE MEANING OF JESUS' LIFE, SUFFERING, DEATH, AND RESURRECTION FOR CONTEMPORARY FAITH-FULNESS? WHAT DIRECTION AND GUIDANCE IS GIVEN THROUGH MARK'S DISTINCTIVE ACCOUNT OF THE GOSPEL FOR OUR LIFESTYLES, VALUES, AND DECISIONS? Leader: Dr. Jack Bremer Study Book: The Bible Place: ECM Center Registration: free at ECM Center or 电话 843-4933 ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES 1204 OREAC (ONE BLOCK OF THE KANASSA UNION) The University Daily KANSAN Karman classifieds get results NOW OPEN MAPA JENERIC'S PIZZA 900 In- ference The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employee Applications are sought from all qualified people interested in applying to, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry. Paid Staff Positions Business Manager Edit The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Rooms 200 and 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applications due in Room 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Wed, Nov 16 ENTERTAINMENT UFS PATTON Fri. & Sat. Nov. 11 & 12 7 & 9:45 p.m. $1.75 Downes Aud FOR RENT 1. 3 bedroom apartments available immediate partial utilities paid. Contact Kaw Valley Manage 2 BR House, newly remodeled, KU bus route, low uses of lice; close market $250. 843. 290 Bassett school apartment $85.00 monthly, utilities paid. Single, non-smoking, quest. mature individual 835-389 before 4 o'p.m. 1 bedroom from stadium balcony. 835-389 after 4 o'p.m. 2 bedrooms from $85.00 and 1/2 utilities. 835-927, 861-947 (Mark M.) STUDIO Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 FOR RENT. Necess. available brand new just com- mitted by the owner. ALL UTILITIES PAID $199,000. leave until received by the advertiser. FOR RENT 2 bedroom house close to KU and POR rent 1 bedroom house close to KU. monthly rent and utilities and dep.拜5 a.m. on weekends. If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. Furnished Studio. Fully equipped kitchen, gas heat and bus route. Available Dec. 15, reasonableness. New Townhouse for Hent. For rent in Nortwood and Lakewood. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, hook up. FF with wi-fi. Warege. big corner loft. Call (718) 463-0901. BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT Nice 2-bedroom apartment just north of stadium available immediately! $275, 843-3443 Keep try- ing. Available roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment $123/room. 911 acres. Away from stadium. Call 841-2944 SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN 842-1876 or 841-1287 Room for rent near university and downtown. Nets please. 841-5500 SHORT SULEASEL Jan 1 to May 31 2 bedroom, campus to campus and downsourd $901-841-6085. THEEN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES: spa quiet, 3 bedroom duplexes. Located at 260th & Kassid Peturing all appliances, washer-dryer hook-ups, atatsu, and laundry in a swimming pool. Call 749-1507 for an appointment. Save money, rent a 1 or 2 bedroom, or studio apart next to campus. No pets. phone 842-1456 HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APTS. 1 BR Apts. $285 2 BR Apts. $340-$360 3 BR Apts. $415 All apts have CA, gas HEAT, refrig, bus lease. Lease terms available to May 31, July 31, and Dec. 31. Call between 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Fri-Mond. Fri-843-754. Share five bedroom house. Close to campus. $100 plus month + 1/2 utilities. Free rent until Jan. Call Spacious, furnished 2 HR apt, with fireplace, Water and electricity off. Old street parking, New university building. Spacecue, furnished a 4 BK1 1.2 bath apt, with office and laundry room. Must be applicable to street parking. No parking. Must be upright. Studio House available Nov. 7, $125.00 plus utilities Calls or offers on enquiries, 414.9277 --- APARTMENTS West An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievably Slashed Rates! 1 & 2 BR Apts. From $200 featuring: Don't miss this opportunity to join one of the most prestigious communities in this area of southern California in a situation, call us. We work with you. - Year round swimming * Free shuttle bus to campus 14 times daily * Laundry facilities 842-4444 524 Frontier Rd. Studio apartment for rent on bus route nearby; nutured, water and cable pained Call Annie 748-166 [*] To sublease furnished 2 BR apt. Available Nov. 1st. on bus route Phone 8412539 FOR SALE COMPLETELY FURNISHED Studio. 2 or 3 bedroom apartments immediately. Great location with beautiful views of the city. Two rooms for rent ($450 and $85) on 1st floor of house located on block of blacktuck. Smaller 196 Mustang, good condition, 2 steel-belted radial tires 196 size P185-7541. Phone 842-453. 1982 Toyota Corolla SLE, extra clean, plastic paint & carbon fiber cover. For example, at 6, weekends 843-5122. carbon fiber cover. 1962 Duluth J.S. GUH Gwr ginure" 746-Seat Honda EMPRESS Mopel, at see 1000 West 34th St 1676 Buck LSabre Custom 4 door sedan. Excellent cars, AM/MW/BMW. Certified & steering. AM/MW/BMW. Certified & steering. AM/MW/BMW. Certified & steering. 1975 Vega runs great, good steel tires and tire treads. 844-6510 or 843-3036 CHEVY Malibu Classic Station wagon-white 841-1242 Bend Offer Must sell. G.E. 21" color console TV. Nice! #412-284 Nike. Earphones. $39.95 FISHER Cabin 600. SpeAKERS. Double midranger. Cabinette. Excellent condition. Call Dean 1234567890. Stereo television viewing. All name brands. Lowest prices. KC area. Total Sound. Distributors, 70 Bug needs some work. Good tree, 725-390-100 Brand New Sport College Sport. Never ridden up. Tiny Sinclair 1000 personal computer, hookups, 16K module, cartridges. $70 Used. Biaver 412, 842. WE SELL STAMP! U.S. and Foreign. 811 New Hampton. Open weekends 10-5. **Women's Personal Sample Sale.** Designer jeans by Calvin Klein, Jordache, Sasson, less. etc. ($20) Blouses, oxfords, and polo type shirts ($10-13) All of high half price or less. High quality. $45-185. LOST AND FOUND Chevy Impala, blue, 4-door. 78 Call 845 261. In execlent shape HONDA CV19 1976 Must sell $1700 or best offer Ran good, Buit 844-66118. HUXE SELECTION OF MEN'S MAGAZINES FOR SALE. MAX'S COMICS #811 N.J. OPEN EVERY WEEK. Crumar Electric Piano and Moug Synthesizer, the pair for 845, 843-7454. AMPG M5V bass amp, 300 watt head with speaker AMPG M5V bass amp, 400 watt head with AMPG M5V bass amp, 500 watt head. 811 New Manhattan Foyer After 3 a.m. Brown 2 door 1982 Rabbit for sale. Good shape. Call 749-7534 Yamaha 2-speed, 35 M.P.H. moped very clean $295. 841-2655. Honda MFT 125. Good Condition, $350 or best offer PAS-70T8. COMPUTER TW9144A, data cassette, game car trunk manual, CAU 841472M Z 19 computer terminal, like new, compatible with Honeywell J 24 line/80 series, graphics, $450 Black female kitten found behind Oliver Hall Tuesday night, 864-6671 Found a girl's light weight jacket in Fraser classroom on 11.83. Call 841-4320 to identify Found Mimi green Jacket, in my apartment, you left it while looking at the guitar. Mimu 749-2824 Foundia checks 5th flwatton. Church 843-1106 Lives key. Key on Knight. Friday at 11am One macro economics book in Wescow. Claim at the candy counter at the Union. HELP WANTED FRESHMEN SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE. It’s not too late to learn in NAVAL ROTC Call 864-3514 GAMMONS HELP WANTED Need a number of young ladies with looks and personality to fill this role. Please call Thursday, Nov. 10 Call 864-3972 for appointment Summer Job, National Park Co. 21 Parks, 5000 Openings. Complete Information $5.00 Park Report Office, Los Angeles, 651-242 AVE W., Kalispell MT 98901 TRAVEL. Mauntourist is looking for Tour Managers, people we hire to use our group tours to Middle East Africa, Greece, India. You must be people, be outgoing, have a good attitude towards middle East Africa, Grenada, India. You must be senior citizens, our major market, as well as with all age groups. Personality, pose, a good looking appearance, smart and a quick learner, too. Public speaking ability, giving commentary a moral. Must assignments, but not only the MISCELLANEOUS Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available Everything Bucket 4th and Vermont PERSONAL 20周年 anniversary. INFLATION FIGHTER 8, Ethyl 7th, 20% off everything. Party clothes and vintage sweaters, wool skirts, men's clothing and dress shirts. Occasion celebrates. Heats 12:30 M. M, F 15:00 to 30 Saturday. 30 cent drawings M. F. 2.3 p.m. during General Hospital Hour Don't forget your laundry! Snd n-Dads A strong key outlet. Retail Retail Liquor Laqued Wine. Kegs - Ice Cold Beverages, 2 lbs. north of wall. BISCITS and GRAVY only 81 $25 renrake Nebraska BISCITS and GRAVY 119 $19. Barbary Drumkick Drumkick 300$ We're An Official Representative ON CAMPUS LOCATION In the Student Union ALL Airlines offering the Lowest Air Fares Possible Now is the time to make your Thanksgiving and Christmas travel plans . . . See Us TODAY! Maupintour travel service 749-0700 Flights Filling Fast Bennett's Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine. 846 Illinois. 842-702 ENCORE' 84, the all campus applications production, in now accepting applications for at large berths for the KKU bus system. Applications will set all policy for the show. Applications are at HOCU office 110 KKU Union, and are due June 14. For information, call (212) 678-5555. COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early detection of heart disease, carefully assessed insurance coverage city area, and more. Brian, I need my language files Please call Alissa Christmas Bazaar November 10, 3 p. p. m. November 11, 8 a.m. to 4 p. m. LRCHD, Church University Drive, Crafts, needlework, ornamentation University Drive, crafts, needlework, ornamentation Cross over the bridge to historic North Lawrence. Visit Schmidt's Retail Liquor, 910 2 n. on Main, for a nice selection, spirits, cold beer and chili Earn a potentially Infinite Income. This is a multi- earn marketing plan which involves only one product, a low dry, milk reorderer that superior nutriti- ce and quality, a milk reorderer that superior nutriti- ce and quality, you should be! B4 824 0727, 841 4696, 749 4400 Dan, Roses are red, violates are blue, your birthday is here and soon I will be too. Love and Kisses. Martin Matthes Showplays! 600 movies to choose from. Pre- and pre-recorded movies. 149, W. 22rd St. 94-8737. www.matthesmovies.com GAV and LEBSHAN SUPPORT GROUP org meeting 7.01 Walnut Room, Nov 4 more info LINKED TO CONTACT WALLACE FERGUSON NEEDED TO CONTACT WALLACE FERGUSON 910-265-8378 910-265-8378 910-265-8378 BLUE HIPPOWS 810-265-8378 lational passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, ID, and of course free portraits. * ITS not too early to order Christina portraits for the museum. Available at the Museum 806 Persimmon 841-807. By appointment. (212) 541-6359. Will you elect the next U.S. Government, or will someone else? VOTER REGISTRATION Today! 4th Floor Kansas Union Lobby from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Laundry Laundry Night Tues. 7:12. Laundry laundry dry get to ten drawers. Suds in Uds. 794-432. Lavender and the courtyard, cinnamon, lemon or p (if a party with the JCBF! "JGBF!" the Friday at PARTY with the JCBF! Say it on a shirt, custom silicone printing. T-shirts, jerseys and cups. Shirt Barrillw T-shirts 729 6811 6f24d0a 8 _ z p1 "377" 6f24d0a CALL TOLL FREE FREE 24H 8:00-24H 8:45 CONSULT YOUR TRAVEL AGENT FOR DISCOUNT RATES on LIVING LITS, and rentals Special for students; Haircuts $7 and perms Charme, ask for Deena Jensen 843.3300 To the cute boy with the accent Happy 20th! I love you, you lose! Voeur STAFF & FACULTY: Are you paying $139.00 a month for the Blue Cross Family Health Plan? That's very expensive. Consider saving $500.00 or more a year. Call Me Bid Dutton Dutton Insurance LTD. 9th & Kentucky 842-0515 * The Complete Insurance Facility * STAFF & FACULTY: --graphics WORK ARTISTS Ellen 841 241- ENGLISH PAD. will edit your thesis, dissertation, book article, etc. Tutoring in Engl 101, 102, 103; etc. Call Me Thompson, 842, 774. VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCE MENT SERIES Friday, November 11 10 a.m. a.m. to 2:30, and 3:30 p.m. preparing for Exams 11 and 12 in Management. Learning a Foreign Language. Each tape approximately fifty minutes. FREE. Contact the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization notes to use sense in your own writing. 1) For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Crier. The online edition is $3.99. BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing confidential counseling 814-8212 Danger signals! Headache, backache, arm pain, leg pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, call the Chiropractic Center and Doctor M.E. for evaluation of injury, insurance accepted. No charge for consultation. ENCORE 84, the All-Campus theatrical production, is now accepting applications for stage manager and technical director. The show will be Feb. 23, 24, and 25 in Hoe Auditorium. Applications are at the Hoe Auditorium from Feb. 16 to May 10 in November 16. Previous experience is required. For more information call 844-4554 or 749-7330. Drut - Happy 2 years! I LOVE YOU Tread. HATS, HATS, HATS. New shipment of Lost Ark. BAGS, BAGS, BAGS and Etc. The ETC MKP-722 MKP-722. NUCLEAR ARMS RATS is a religious issue too! Join us on Tues. Nov. 8, 5:30 p.m. for a mural and a look at how this multi-faceted reality relates to the christian faith. The Hagist Center, 628 W. 19th. St., SPECTRUM OPTICAL Eyeglasses made UP to a standard, NOT DOWN to a print 47 East 5th St. THRIST STOOThes Appliances, furniture, clothing, knitwear, bedding. Always good bargains for the holidays. Wholehouse Sound Rental, P.A., Guitar, and Bass Music 841-6295 Artists with the written word. Typing, editing, graphics. WORLD ARTISTS. E841 8127 212 Qualified Titling in Pascal Certified by the Machinery Manufacturing MACH (CM) Call and bill taked after 12 noon. SANTA CLAUS LANDS to be at your Christmas party Call Santa's Helper, Dave at 749 0299 Raqueball, tennis, squash raquet stringing, specializing in new graphite hybrid stringing. Tenn- sier used in the exhibition. New used: 842 508 seconds, 249 372 events. WIRE UP SIVEHCE We will wake you up in the night! STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1603 Massachusetts, downsize all haircuts. $3.00 No appointment TYPING The Polish Association can help you acquire a copy of the PLO brochure, add an address envelope to Box 2203, Kansas City, KS. 24 hour typing. Fast, accurate. Resumes, letters, report these, why do I want to do your typing #841022 841030 quality typing. WORD PROCESSING 841-0606 AAA TYPING HELPING quality! 842 (942) after 1 (942) after 1 AFFROGIBLE QUALITY for all your typing needs. Call: 842-7920, after 4 n.m. Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, term- presses, and other information. 816-472-8431 or 816-472-1071, 11:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Absolutely, Letter Perfect Typing, Editing, Book Preserving, Preempt professional high quality 843.6088 **Educational Resources** Clear and fast typing assured. Call 811 6946 any time Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed, over- night service (under 23 pages). B41. 864-763 Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard. Medical Student. IBM telecoms (pacca) Call 842-4688 to 10 p.m. CALL TIP NOPTY TYPING 1299. Iowa experienced typets and editor. Xerox 613 Memorywriter, Royal Correcting SE30000 841-5675 DEPENDALE service, professional, gping. IBM SECTIVE III. Pica or else Large jobs work. Job is a single job. Experienced typist will type dissertations, theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Call 842 3203. It's a Fax. Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing. Word Processing. You can afford it! 842 3203. Experienced typet Term, paper sheets, theses, miscellaneous IHM Corrective Selective. Elite or Pica and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9534, Mrs. Wright JENETTE SHAFFER TYPING SERVICE IBM SECTILE III. PcE Elite 8414 BM ONLINE PAPERS TYPED. FAST & EFFICIENT 841 3510 i Services at location typing, editing and graphics. WORD ARTISTS, call Eilen, 841 2172 TYPING PLUS. THESS, dissertations paper on typing PLUS, the grammar spelling, e.g. English taming and grammar spelling, e.g. English taming. Word Processing plus typing. Dictation plus typesetting. Spelling plus editing. Airbrush charts plus graphs plus photography Plus pickup & delivery Ab's Art Plus 79230 Library Research - Typing = Reading. Will help with finding the facts. WANTED Male roommate wanted $102/month and 1/3 utilities. On bus route. Call 841-9816 2 females to share 2 bedroom apartment for spring semester. Call for details. 842-7661 needed for behavioral research project in Topeka. Duties include collecting and summarizing observational data. No experience required, but must be reliable worker. Must be available afternoon and evening hours. Send application letter with 2 week references to Research Assistant. A23 911 Irvine Terrace. Rommatee for huge house apartment Private room, energy of $749, 185 month. Availability Roommate needed. $92.00 moll includes utilities. No phone. Step by or leave phone at 1318 Louw River St. Roommate wanted for extra large 2 bedroom furniture apartment on bus route. Route, laundry, bank all within easy walking distance. Rent includes water. Negotiate 749-2343 Roomsmate wanted: 3 HRL Townhouse, $140 plus 1.7 utilities | Call 843-4811 third roommate need for nice, modern 3 BR townhouse to campup. Available immediately. WOMEN'S SELF DEFENSE. A no-moment course in women’s self-defense will be attended by only the month to the first week, will be attended by only the month to the first week, will be attended by only the month to the first week. KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS Classified Heading: Write Ad Here: 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 15 words or fewer $2.60 $3.15 $3.75 Additional words 25c 50c 75c 1 Classified Display: 1 col x 1 inch - $4.20 10 Days or Two Weeks $6.75 1.05 SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 8.1983 Page 10 Coaches assess younger KU players in scrimmage By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor Many players on the Kansas football roster participated in an intrasquid scimmage yesterday afternoon, giving less experienced players a chance to prove their talents in front of the coaching staff. "This was a game of mostly the redshirt players against the guys that haven't seen much action," Mike Gottfred said. "It's the only chance we'll have to get some of these players on film." Besides getting playing time for some of the players, Gottfried and his staff also moved people to different fields. The team played 225-pound defensive tackle, played fullback, rushing for 35 yards on eight carries. "These last two weeks, we're not looking for next year, but we are doing some things that might fit into next year." Gottfried said. "The loss on Saturday was really tough. It was more frustrating than anything." CLINT COLBURN, who has been the Jayhawks' putter all season, played receiver and caught four passes for 42 yards, including a five-yard touchdown catch. He also ran 24 yards on a fake punt. The team led by players who have seen some varsity action beat the redshirts 33-6. Fullback Dennis Carr completed downpass and scored on a 1-vard run. Freshman Mike Oth Irtheh a 39-yard scoring pass to Tod Shod in addition to his 22-yarder to Carr. Dodge Schwartzburg kicked field goals from 48 and 35 yards. Skip Peele, who is sitting out this season after transferring from Arizona, caught three passes for 38 yards. Peele will be eligible to play next season. He is the brother of Rodney Peele, a highly recruited quarterback from Shawnee Mission South. THE FIRST-STRING players participated in a light workout at the practice fields behind Allen Field House. Gottfried said safety Derek Berry might miss the final two games because of a bruised shoulder. Wayne Ziegler, who started for Berry against Colorado, will probably start against Nebraska Saturday in Lincoln. According to the Big Eight, game time for the Nebraska-Kansas game has been changed to 2:50 p.m. The game will be televised by ABC. In their game against against the N. Cornhuskers, the Jayhawks will try to overcome two consecutive sluggish performances. ooy, i think they should be ready to play." Gottfried said. "It's incompenible to me that we could not come out of here and play some games. I still don't understand it." with the changes on the KU defense, both Oklahoma and Colorado broke open touchdown runs of more than 70 yards. "Usually what helps you prevent the loot is a Gottfried said. "We lack that right now." Barbaro signs lucrative deal with Generals By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo — The roster of the Kansas City Chiefs officially became one Pro Bowl player lighter yesterday. Unofficially, it has been one ProBowl performer lighter since the start of training camp when free safety Gary Barbaro hold out for a new contract. He wanted a $1.2 million deal over three years from the Chiefs; the club would only go as high as a three-year pact at $30,000 per year. So Barbario was introduced yesterday as the newest member of the New Jersey Generals of the United States Football League. He reportedly received a signing bonus of $200,000 plus a guaranteed three-year contract at $300,000 each season. "WE HATE TO LOSE any player." Kansas City Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt said, "but we can't turn the check book over to any player." Barbaro was a third-round draft choice in 1976 out of Nichols State, the first player ever drafted into the NFL from the tiny Louisiana school. The Chiefs had traded away their stints in college, and Barbaro during the off-season and stuck Barbaro at the top of the depth chart from his first day in training camp. Barbaro went on to play 101 consecutive games over seven seasons as Kansas City's starting free safety before holding out in 1883. He postured 39 career interceptions and recorded a full-time list behind Emmitt Thomas and Johnny Robinson. Barbaro had eight interceptions and 92 tackles in his second year but didn't earn his first Pro Bowl spot until his fifth season in 1980 when he had 10 interceptions. He had five interceptions in the 1981 season and three interceptions in 1982, earning Pro Bowl invitations after each of those seasons as well. BARBARO RETURNED three of his interceptions for touchdowns, including one for an NFL record-tying 102 yards against Jim Zorn and the Seattle Seahawks in 1977. Barbaro had five interceptions apiece against Jim Zorn and Ken Stabler and four more against Dan Fouts. "You just don't lose a guy like Gary Barbaro and not get anything in return," said Gary Green, a two-time Pro Bowl cornerback and Barbaro's best friend on the Chiefs. "We did. It's like losing a diamond ring and not having any insurance on it. "He's a valuable commodity — as valuable as most of the better players around the league. He put his whole weight on him, and I'm glad it worked for him." GIANTS GIANTS NEW YORK — Detroit's Billy Sims dragged two Giants' defenders while struggling for extra yardage during the fourth quarter of last night's NFL matchup. Sims had a 2-yard touchdown in the first quarter and 86 yards on 14 carries to help the Lions defeat New York 15-9. United Press International SPORTS BRIEFS From Staff and Wire Reports Royals pick Darrell Evans, 3 others in free agent draft KANSAS CITY. Mo — The Kansas City Royals selected four players yesterday in the eighth annual baseball free agent draft, including San Francisco infielder Darrell Evans. Evans, 36, who hit 30 home runs with the Giants last season, was selected by 17 teams in the draft. San Francisco also retained the right to negotiate with the infielder. The Royals also selected infielders Dennis Walling of Houston and Foes Cabell of Detroit and San Diego outfielder Gene, Richards. Of the three players on last season's Royals' roster only outfielder Amos Otis was drafted. Otis, who was released by Kansas City near the end of the season, was selected by the World Series champion Baltimore Orioles. Pitcher Don Hood and outfielder Jerry Martin, who is to be sentenced Nov. 17 after a plea of guilty to charges that he attempted to obtain cocaine, were not picked by any of the teams. All three players have the right to negotiate with all teams. Complete list of players drafted in Sports Almanac, p. 9. 334 basketball tickets on sale today Students will have their last chance today to buy season tickets for the 1983-84 basketball season. Tickets will be on sale from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in front of Wescoe Hall and at the Allen Field House ticket office. The athletic department has said that tickets will be sold to the first 334 students. The 334 tickets remain because of redistribution of the student open-seating sections. KU sold 4,303 student season tickets in a four-day sale last month. NU to start sophomore linebacker LINCOLN, Neb. — Todd Proffitt, a sophomore walk-on inenacker, will start for Nebraska Saturday against Kansas in place of injured Mark Daum. Cornhusker coach Tom Osborne said yesterday. Daum, hurt in Saturday's 72-29 romp over Iowa State, underwent arthroscopic knee surgery Sunday to remove torn cartilage. Osborne also said linebacker Mike Knox, defensive tackles Rob Stuckey, Mike Keeler and Jim Skow, and I-back Mike Rozier missed Monday's workout. Knox has a variety of bumps and bruises, Stuckey suffered a mild concussion Saturday, Keeler and Skow sprained ankles and Rozier suffered a thigh bruise. Osborne also said sophomore cornerback Todd Fisher has been awarded a black shirt as a member of the first defensive unit. He did not say if Fisher would start against Kansas. Asked whether the Cornhuskers would change anything for Saturday's game with the Jayhawks, Osborne said. "We are going to change a few things, but I sure wouldn't want them to be in the paper ahead of the game." Bowlers place 4th, 8th in tourney The KU men's bowling club placed fourth and the women's club finished ninth Saturday in the 10-team Face-to-Face Invitational at Warrenburg. Mo. kelly Coffman, Topeka freshman, led the men's club with a nine-game average of 194. Other Jayhawk scores came from Mike Brennan, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore, 190; Howard Shaw, Lawrence senior, 189; Greg Rauch, St. Louis freshman, 181; and Ned Islas, Lyons senior, 174. The Kansas women's club was led by Dianne Mlodozeniec, Lawrence sonhomore, with a 165 average. Commissioner, Steinbrenner locked in sticky battle The bowling clubs will compete next in the National Collegiate Match Games Tournament at St. Louis, Nov. 25-27. Judge upholds order to bar Kuhn's pine tar hearing By United Press International NEW YORK — A New York State Supreme Court justice yesterday upheld a temporary restraining order preventing Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn from conducting a disciplinary hearing concerning the behavior of the owner George Steinbrenner during the summer's pine tar controversy. Justice Irwin Silberwitz announced his decision after a one hour and 20 minute hearing and another hour of private conferences with attorneys from both sides in his Bronx Supreme Court chambers. Justice Silberwitz instructed both sides to return tomorrow for another hearing at which time he will rule on the summary of the motion to block Kkun's bail Originally, Kuhn had scheduled a hearing for yesterday afternoon in his Manhattan offices on a possible fine judgment for the Yankees' principal owner. ATTORNEYS REPRESENTING Steinbrenner and the Yankees received the temporary restraining order Thursday. Statements made and court documents filed at yesterday's hearing indicated that Kuhn, who is scheduled to leave office Dec. 31, intended to levy heavy penalties against Steinbrenner for his actions during the pine tar affair. inning homer. The umpire's decision gave the Yankees a 4-3 victory. But American League President Lee MacPhail overruled hisumpies, allowedretrials home and the Yankees also lost the game 5-4 when it was completed August 18. On July 24, Kansas City's George Britt was called out for using an illegal drug. Steinbern blasted MacPail for upholding the Royals' protest and his attorneys are thought to have used two lawsuits filed by Yankee fans as a means to prevent the resumption of the suspended game. "I WILL WISH to determine whether the Yankees in the Davis and Morrison litigation attempted to subvert President MacPhail's decision in violation of section 6.5 of the American League constitution and in contravention of the best interests of baseball." Kuhn writer to Steinbrenner on Aug. 30. Kuhn also objected to Steinbrener's remarks during that period. Steinbrener was quoted in the July 31 Boston Globe as saying, "I wouldn't want to be in New York and living in New York. Maybe he go house-hunting in Kansas City." On Aug. 17, Steinbrenner was quoted as saying in the Yankees' locker room, "I don't care what Lee MacPhaill of the American League says, I've had enough of Lee MacPhaill's interpretations. We're not going to be in contempt of court. Lee MacPhaill can be in contempt of court if he is that stupid." STEINBRENNER'S LAWYERS yesterday contended that because of previous rulings by Kuhn against Steinbrenner, the commissioner should disqualify himself from the case on grounds of bias. P. A. C. George Steinbrenner 106 SPECIAL AT J.T. PICKLEMAN'S 11 a.m.-10 p.m. 1814 W.23rd J. T. PICKLEMAN'S #1 SANDWICH ON A FRESH-BAKED ROLL. YOUR CHOICE OF WHEAT, WHITE, OR ONION, PILED HIGH WITH DELICIOUS SALAMI, CHEESE, LETTUCE, AND J.T. PICKLEMAN'S TASTY SAUCE FOR $1.06 PLUS YOUR CHOICE OF ANY SMALL SOFT DRINK WITH A LAZER GOLD CARD . . . AND MEET THE J.T. PICKLEMAN'S PICKLE! College of Liberal Arts & Sciences KLZR 106 wants THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mass phones 642 1313 UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY SPECTRUM OPTICAL 841-1113 Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Graduate Office 210-1 Strong Hall. Self-nominations are required. —Self-nominations are required. —Filing deadline —4:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 11. A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 Election will be held Nov. 16-17 with Student Senate Election. All LA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. We have expanded our facilities, our staff and our hours to better serve you Now open Mon.-Fri. 8-6 B 1 SHAMPOO, CUT CHAMPAGNE OUT SHAMPOO, CUT & BLOWDRY $10 CUT, PERM $40 STYLE & STYLE...$40 GO 4. for women Coupon Expires 11/19/83 611 W. 9th Gentleman's Quarters 843-2138 ! ↑ Grenada findings Delegation calls invasion justified Inside, p. 2 KANSAN CHILLY Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas High 40, Low 20 Details on p. 2. Wednesday morning, November 9, 1983 Vol. 94, No. 58 (USPS 650-640) Alternative B 0 50 100 Vermont Shops Major Department Shops Shops 7th Street Opera House Shops Shops Major Department KU World Co. New Hammonhire Commissioners select Town Center as developer BY JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter After three hours of debate, public comment and soul-searching, the Lawrence City Commission last night voted 3-1-1 to negotiate with Town Corp. as its official downtown developer. More than 80 Lawrence residents packed the City Hall chambers to watch the commission as it debated between choosing Town Center, a building, and Sizer Realty Co. Inc. of Kenner La. AFTER MIDNIGHT THE evening's debate reached a climax as Commissioner Ernest Angina made the motion to select Town Center. Commissioner Nancy Shontz was the sole candidate and Commissioner Mike Amay abstained from voting because of personal conflicts. Immediately after the vote, Angino asked Shortz to make the vote unanimous and was met with a resentful face. The selection of Town Center puts redevelopment in the 600 block downtown. The Town Center plan would close the 600 block of Massachusetts Street and place a mall between Vermont Street and the alley east of Massachusetts Street. It also effectively kills any plans for development in the 700 and 800 blocks, east of Massachusetts, in keeping with the city's master plan, where the Sizer plan was placed. Early in the commission meeting the mood was jovial, as Mayor David Longhurst jokingly suggested adding the selection of a developer to the consent agenda — which consists of non-controversial items voted on in one motion. As the night wore on the debate grew more serious. Before the meeting ended, each of the commissioners made statements about their feelings on selecting the developer. Although Cooley assured Amyx that he could vote without violating the law, Amyx said he resented it. AMYX DRILLED CITY attorney Gerry Cooley with questions about the legal status of the vote, expressing concern about a legal opinion issued last week by the state attorney general's office that indicated both he and Longhurst would violate the law if they voted on the Sizeler plan. Both Longhurst and Amyx have businesses downtown "I find I have a conflict voting for one plan and not the other," Amyx said. "But there is something that goes a little bit farther — something that's inside yourself." "Town Center is a fantastic plan. But, inside, do I like it for all the wrong reasons? Is my vote self-serving?" After the meeting, Shontz said she was disturbed by the selection of Town Center. She said that her negative vote would not affect public support for the plan. "We were choosing a pretty picture," she said. The whole thing was railroaded through. It was a fairy tale, the kind of story you like. ANGINO SAID THAT he could still see what happened to his body, but what was necessary to get off dead center. "I was afraid of a 2-2 vote, and concerned that we would go back to square one." he said. Longhurst, who voted despite being in the same ethical and legal bind as Amyx, said he was comfortable with the decision. "I feel tired and drained. I'm glad it's behind us." he said. Arafat and supporters retreat from their last Lebanese base IMMEDIATELY BEFORE THE vote, Long- hurst introduced an amendment to Angio- n's bill. See DOWNTOWN, p. 5, col. 1 By United Press International BEIRET, Lebanon — Supporters of Yasser Arafat, pounded by tanks and artillery, retreated yesterday from their last Lebanese base and streamed into the port city of Tripoli for a final stand against Palestinian rebels. Unconfirmed reports said that Arafat fled Lebanon. Lebanese police estimated that more than 100 people had been killed and at least 300 wounded in the six-day rebel assault that drove Arafat See related stories p. 13 and most of his 5,000 fighters from two refugee camps north of Tripoli. helicopter was French, but a naval spokesman in Paris said it was not. The Palestine News Agency in Cyprus denied the report that Arafat had fled. "the rebels looked really wild, like savages" said one person who allegedly saw rebels at a roadblock north of the city drag a man from a car, stab him then shoot him. Elsewhere, Secretary-General Javier Perez Cuellar will for an end to the bombing of Terrorist Gunballs. THE RIGHT-WING Voice of Lebanon radio said Arafat, leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization, fled Tripoli by helicopter to an unidentified ship offshore. Other reports said the A U.N. spokesman said that Perez de Cuellar had been following the fighting in and around Tripoli with deep concern. "FOR THE WELFARE of Lebanon, and for the lives of all those involved in the conflict, he appeals most urgently for a cease-fire in and to protect him. The U.N. spokesman said in a written statement. Dozens of rebel shells slammed into the heart of the Tripoli, 45 miles north of Beirut, and triggered resistance at the nearby Beddawi refuge camp, Arafat's sole headquarters in Lebanon. Prints on envelope at murder scene belonged to Bell, specialist testifies Staff Reporter By MICHAEL PAUL Three fingerprints and a partial palmprint on an envelope that was found near the body of Frank Seurer Sr. belonged to Bryan Keith Bell, a fingerprint specialist yesterday in a District Court. Bell is on trial for the second-degree murder of Seurer, whose body was found the morning of Aug. 2 on the kitchen floor of his restaurant, where he had been sleeping. Bell also is charged with appurved robbery. HELEN TURNER, A fingerprint specialist for the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, said Bell's prints were found on an envelope that had been mailed July 8 from the Topeka Public Library. Testimony on Monday revealed that Bell wasn't working for Seurer in July. He had been fired in late June from his job at the restaurant. Earlier yesterday, Carol Moddrell, deputy county coroner, testified that Seurer had been stabbed 23 times — 14 times in the back, six times in the chest and three times in the side. She said he died between 6 a.m. and 10 a.m. after bleeding to death in about five minutes from the wounds. The stab wounds were made by two different weapons. One was a knife-like weapon and the other was a different kind of instrument. A meat knife was the kind four of the wounds in Seurer's chest, she said. Turner, the fingerprint analyst, said she did not find Bell's fingerprints on two meat forks that were found in the restaurant after the murder. AS TESTIMONY ENDED yesterday in the second day of the trial, a fingerprint analyst from the Illinois State Crime Laboratory testified that he had found three fingerprints on a brown paper bag powered at the restaurant. He called yesterday to testify as to whose prints those were. Other testimony yesterday afternoon established that Bell had received a check for $208.17 on July 8 from Pop's Bar-B-Q, that he owed $69.38 in cash and that he paid about $140 in cash for some car repairs. Linda Wiseman, a bookkeeper at University State Bank, said that Bell cashed the check July 8. Bell received the check several days after he had been fired. Turner testified that she did not find Bell's prints on any other items. See TRIAL, p. 5, col. 3 FBI views videotapes to identify the suspect who bombed Capitol By United Press International WASHINGTON — The FBI reviewed videotape from a Capitol security camera yesterday seeking the identity of a bomber who planted an explosive charge near the Senate chamber that ripped a 13-foot-high gash in an interior wall. The explosion late Monday night shredded painted paintings, damaged both the Republican and Democratic cloakrooms, and ripped a door off its hinges. It also triggered a rash of bomb threats, including one at the Pentagon, one in the House, another at the Capitol subway stop and a fourth that forced the evacuation of the Republican National Committee several blocks from the Capitol. No bombs were found in any of the incidents. The Senate carried on business as usual, amid heightened security. LOOKING FOR CLUES to the identity of the bomber, the FBI reviewed videotape from cameras trained on hallways leading to the alley where a bomb was slipped behind a window seat, about 30 feet from the Senate building. He would say little about the footage except that it showed a lot of smoke. Senate Sergeant at Arms Larry Smith said the Capitol switchboard was warned of the bomb six minutes before the blast. An anonymous caller said the bombing was a reaction to American military action in Lebanon and Grenada. No one was injured in the blast — thanks perhaps to lawmakers' ability to wrap up work on a military spending bill earlier than expected. Senate Republican leader Howard Baker, sobered by a walk through the littered, valued corridor where the blast shattered windows and floor tiles, told reporters, "I expect there would have been extensive loss of life if the Senate had been in session." But the Tennessee declared, "The Senate will not be deterred from its business. We'll do that in the rubble." A GRANDFATHER CLOCK that has stood outside the chamber since 1859 was stopped by the blast, which occurred at 9:58 p.m. CST, not at midnight as reported in yesterday's Kansan. Nearby stood a marble bust See CAPITOL, p. 5, col. 3 1982 United Press International WASHINGTON — Sen. Mack Mattingly, R-Ga., gazes at a 13-foot hole in an alcove of the Capitol. Schoolchildren explore world of computers Staff Reporter By PETE WICKLUND "Geoff I Love You!! You are the man of my dreams!!" That message is from an intercepted note that was passed by Elschlager's sixth-grade teacher, "Writting" to Mr. White. notebook paper and passed secretly under student desks. The note was composed on a micro-computer terminal, and a copy was taken from each of a few buttons on a computer keyboard On the surface, the note is probably no different from what might be found in any other sixth-grade class in America — except maybe in the way it was circulated. ins traditionally frowned-upon activity was encouraged, however, by Eltschinger as part of a program designed to acquaint elementary students with computers. THE CENTENNIAL SIXTH-grade class is just one of the classes throughout Lawrence Unified School District 497 that has used computers to supplement traditional classroom learning. It wasn't written on a sheet of tightly folded playing video-games to gain familiarity with computers, of which some were developed by Jerry Chaffin, KU professor of special education. Sandra Crowther, director of media literacy for the Lawrence school district, said that increased uses of computers in the district was not enough to bring computer technology into the classroom. In other classrooms, some students are SHE NOTED THAT since 1981, the number of micro-computers in the district had increased from 17 to more than 100. Crowther said that each of the district's 20 schools now had at least See KIDS, p. 7, col.1 THE MIDNIGHT SHOW A horse stands facing the wind and drizzle off K-32 between Lawrence and Bonner Springs. Gary Smith/KANSAN Costa Rica needs U.S. economic aid to retain democracy, observers say By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter Costa Rica has sent out an S.O.S. A severe economic crisis and revolutions in neighboring countries have planted seeds of doubt in the minds of citizens and observers about the future of Costa Rica's democracy. The country is regarded by many as an island of democracy in an angry ocean of political and social unrest, military dictatorships and revolution. The island gives other Central American nations and the United States some hope that democracy can work in the region. IN MAY 1982, Costa Rica's president, Luis Alberto Mongo, took office in a country that has the largest per-capita debt in the world. The country, with a population of 2.3 million, has a foreign debt that experts estimate reaches $4.6 billion. However, in light of Costa Rica's economic woes, some KU faculty and students said recently that they thought U.S. economic aid was important to boost the country's economy and undeterred democracy. Following his visit with Monge, Reagan asked the International Monetary Fund to be more lenient with Costa Rica and to relax its conditions for monetary aid. "We ask for economic cooperation now so that, God willing, we never have to ask for military help." Monge told President Ronald Reagan last year during Reagan's tour of Central and South America. Charles Stansifer, director of Latin American studies, said, "If there is anything clear about the American Congress it is that it's in the mood for helping Central America by way of helping Costa Rica. If they put money into Central America, they are going to put it into Costa Rica." In 1982, Congress approved a $350 million package of aid for the region, bringing total U.S. BUT THE ECONOMIC crisis in Costa Rica is, by most accounts, severe. In 1982, Costa Rica's economic activity shrank by 5.9 percent and its inflation rate climbed to 100 percent. Robert Tomasek, professor of political science and a specialist in Latin American affairs, said, "The standard of living has gone down anywhere since the economic crisis that abashed the colony (Costa Rican currency) sixfold." The enormity of the economic crisis cannot be exaggerated. It has been building up for years due to increasing imports over exports and a social welfare system and deficit state enterprises that became an impossible burden to bear." Unemployment has reached 9 percent, he said, and underemployment has reached 26 percent. John Augelli, chairman of the geography and meteorology department and a specialist in Latin American affairs, was in Costa Rica last year with participants in the University of Kansas Study Abroad program. He said that although Costa Rica was not in imminent See COSTA RICA, p. 9, col. 2 . Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 9. 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Economist warns Congress about possible fiscal crisis WASHINGTON — A top Reagan administration official, wary of last minute congressional enthusiasm for new taxes, urged legislators yesterday to reconsider White House contingency taxes that they rejected 10 months ago. "We are facing a fiscal crisis," administration economist Martin Feldstein told reporters after appearing before the Joint Economic Committee of Congress. He said President Reagan's statement last week that he would reject any new taxes "no matter how they arrive" did not mean he was threatening to veto his own proposal for 1986 taxes on oil and a temporary surcharge on income taxes. Salvadoran denies reports of coup El Salvador's president went on nationwide radio yesterday to deny rebel claims that a military coup was imminent, but a reform-minded general broke openly with the government and condemned its direction of the war against leftists. "I believe that no matter how bad another government could be, it could never be like this one." said Gen. Jaime Abdul Gurtierez. He told UP1 "for the moment, a coup is almost impossible in the country," but he criticized Magana for leading a government unable to A clandestine rebel radio station said it had detected a "rumor of a coup d'etat" by Gutierrez. Discovery of crew's bodies denied HOUSTON — A Chinese newspaper reported that divers had found the bodies of 78 crew members of the sunken drill ship Glomar Java Sea off the coast of China, but owners of the ship yesterday said the reports were unconfirmed. In a dispatch from Canton Monday, the Chinese-language newspaper Ta Kung Poa said that the 78 boys included 37 Americans, 34 Chinese, and 10 Japanese. The newspaper report did not give the source of its information or attempt to account for the other three workers reported on the ship. Gary Kott, president of Global Marine Drilling Inc., a subsidiary of Global Marine Inc. which owns the Glomar Java Sea, said the report was false. Consumer confidence reaches peak ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Consumers have more confidence in the economy now than at any other time in more than 10 years, researchers at the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research reported yesterday. The ISR Index of Consumer Sentiment reached 91.6 percent in the third quarter, just above the 91.5 figure recorded in the second quarter, and the highest quarterly reading since the peak of 94.4 was recorded in 1972. The figures are based on the February 1966 index of 100. Of the families surveyed, 63 percent thought that overall business conditions had improved during the past year, a higher proportion than recorded following any of the six prior recessions during the past 30 years. Report saves gas users overcharged WASHINGTON — Consumers might have paid millions of dollars too much for natural gas because the government failed to detect illegal overcharges, a new congressional report says. In releasing the report Monday, Rep John Dingell, D-Mich., pointed the finger of blame at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which oversees natural gas pricing laws. "Through lack of interest or sheer incompetence due to primitive data collection and methods, (FERC) may simply have failed to enforce ceiling prices for older vintages of old gas," said Dingell, who heads the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which sponsored the report. U.S. will double food aid to Africa ROME — The Reagan administration, expressing "great concern ... for the plight of the hungry people in Africa," said yesterday it would double its emergency food aid to 22 drought-stricken countries to $50 million in 1983. Agriculture Secretary John Block, attending the 22nd biennial conference of the Food and Agriculture Organization, also said he is lobbying against a move by Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., to cut funds for the FAO. The administration seeks to keep its pledge at last year's record level of $250 million. The administration has no intention of withholding its contribution to the FAO as it did two years ago to protest the way the money was spent, Block said. Pulitzer Prize winner Friendly dies WASHINGTON — Pulitzer Prize winner Alfred Friendly, 71, a former managing editor of The Washington Post, died Monday. Friendly died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound at his Georgetown home. A newspaper spokesman said Friendly had been suffering from terminal throat and lung cancer for some time. "We've lost a dear friend and a great journalist," said Katherine Graham, chairman of The Wheeler Report. F. K. G. BALENE Shortly after stepping down as managing editor of the Post, Friendily went to the Middle East in 1967 as a special correspondent and sent back dispatches that earned him the Pulitzer. Friendly WEATHER FACTS SEATTLE 30.00 COOL MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON COLD NEW YORK FAIR MINNEAPOLIS WARM COLD SAN FRANCISCO DENVER MILD LOS ANGELES DALLAS ATLANTA WARM NEW ORLEANS MIAMI HIGHEST TEMPERATURES 29.77 LOCAL WEATHER FOTOCAST® UPI WEATHER NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-9-83 Today will be fair across most of the nation. Locally, today will be cloudy, windy and much cooler with a 50 percent chance of rain, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The high will be in the mid- to upper 40s. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the upper 40s. -posa. The high will be in the middle to upper 45. Tonight will be cloudy with a low in the mid-20s. ANCHORAGE, Alaska — President Reagan, describing himself as a messenger for "peace and prosperity." began his Asian visit yesterday to strengthen ties with Japan and South Korea and his own image as a world leader. Reagan hopes trip will bolster Asian ties By United Press International "My visit to Japan and Korea will, I hope, underline the significance we place on our ties with northeast Asia and the countries of the Pacific." Reagan told a cheering crowd at Elmendorf Air Force Base. Air Force One landed in snowy Alaska for refueling on its way to Tokyo, where discussion of trade and security issues await the president. At a cost of $1.3 million, the Japanese government mobilized 90,000 policemen to back the 150 American Secret agents accompanying the president. Officials said that at least 23,000 policemen would be on the streets at all times during Reagan's stay, which included straying to disguise eneded to disguish with demonstrations. Reagan and his wife, Nancy, were the objects of the largest security operation mounted in Japan since the leaders of the Soviet democracies met in Tokyo in 1979. IN WHITE HOUSE remarks, Reugan emphasized the economic inter-dependence of the three countries, pledging to "work hard to foster a new equality and economic cooperation" and to compromise where necessary. Hours before Reagan was to land in Japan, about 1,500 anti-Reagan demonstrators wearing white helmets and helmets for safety fists through a suburban Tokyo park. Police earlier this week also said that they seized maps and documents indicating that one radical group, the Chukau-ha, or Middle Core Faction, guerrilla attacks on the U.S. Embassy and American military installations. harmful to the economic interests of all concerned. Reagan is expected to ask Prime Minister Yasuhi Nakasone to go further to reduce the $20 billion trade surplus Japan enjoys with the United States by eliminating quotas on U.S. farm products and revaluing the yen. But in an interview before his departure, Reagan indicated he would deliver a blunt warning — especially in Japan — that a failure to agree on ways to promote freer trade could spawn a dangerous cycle of protectionism OVER THE PAST week, negotiators from the two nations have rushed to complete agreements on the thorniest issue confronting the two leaders — setting quotas on Japanese auto exports to the United States. Other economic agreements worked out before the visit include abolishing tariffs on the import of U.S. manufactured semi-conductor products and reducing the transfer of sophistically trained Japanese technology to the United States. Bush breaks tie as Senate OKs nerve-gas funds If the funds were to survive the conference committee, it would set the stage for resuming production of nerve gas for the first time since 1969, when President Nixon banned the production of new lethal chemical weapons. By United Press International WASHINGTON - The Senate agreed by one vote yesterday to provide funds for nerve-gas production for the first time since 1969, with Vice President George Bush casting the tie-breaking vote as he did last July. The Senate then overwhelmingly passed a $233 billion military appropriations bill, 86.6- which also contains the first 21 MX nuclear missiles. The Senate's military bill contains $767 million for the Pentagon's chemical weapons program, most of it for protective equipment and maintaining existing weapons and $4.07 million for estimated research on chemical weapons. Bush's vote made the nerve-gas tally 47-46, keeping the issue alive for the conference committee that will reconcile the two chambers' military appropriations bills. It was on an amendment offered by Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, to restore $124 million for the nerve gas program. However, the military authorization bill signed by Reagan last summer imposes several conditions before the weapons could actually be assembled. The House refused to appropriate the money for two controversial new nerve gas weapons last week when it wrapped up work on its military bill. TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills 6:00-7:00 $0.75 7:00-8:00 $1.00 8:00-9:00 $1.25 9:00-10:00 $1.50 10:00-11:00 $1.75 11:00-11:45 $2.00 First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills 6.00-7.00 $0.75 7.00-8.00 $1.00 8.00-9.00 $1.25 9.00-10.00 $1.50 10.00-11.00 $1.75 11.00-11.45 $2.00 It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO Grenada invasion justified, group says Washington — House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said yesterday that a fact-finding delegation he sent to Grenada concluded the U.S. invasion was justified to protect American lives and that he accepted its findings. By United Press International "The overwhelming consensus of the members of the delegation was that a real potential threat to the American citizens existed in Grenada," O'Neill said in a statement shortly after meeting with the member representing the delegation. "Since this was the case, I believe that sending American forces into combat was justified under these particular circumstances." MEANWHILE, the last 103 Cuban prisoners held on Grenada left for Havana despite a delay in returning the bodies of 42 Cubans killed during the American-led invasion of the island, U.S. officials said. A U.S. spokesman said negotiations between Cuba and the United States over return of the bodies were stalemated. The bodies were being held at a morgue in Grenada "because the Cubans won't take them back," said Mr. Lowe of the U.S. Information Agency. ada to examine the bodies, but Governor General Paul Scoon turned down the proposal. Walsh said Cuban officials wanted to send forensic specialists to Gren- In Washington, O'Neill said the administration's failure to consult Congress before the invasion and refusal to allow news coverage made the fact-finding trip necessary. He said he hopes U.S. troops can come home as soon as possible. O'Neill's statement came shortly after Rep. Thomas Foley, D-Wash, told reporters of the group's decision, but warned it should not be viewed as blanket approval of intervention anywhere in the world. A KEY CONGRESSMAN to back Reagan was Rep Michael Barnes, D-Md, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on Western Hemisphere affairs, Barnes, often a critic of Reagan's policies in the region, told a news conference he approved the invasion. Troops from the United States and six Caribbean nations invaded Grenada Oct. 25 after Marxist Prime Minister Maurice Bishop, a friend of Cuban President Fidel Castro, was killed a week earlier by hardline radicals. Cuban Embassy First Secretary Gaston Diaz said the American officials had overestimated the number of Cuban dead and had not identified their remains properly. He also demanded the return of what he called "a couple of million dollars" of Cuban equipment on Grenada, including a plane that flew Cuban military officer Col. Pedro Tortoil to the eastern Caribbean island just before the U.S. landing Oct. 25. A U.S. PARATROOP unit searching for bodies on Grenada, said the burned remains of what was believed to be three or four bodies had been uncovered in Calvigny U.S. spokesman Jim Dandridge said those searching for bishop's body found one of the four bodies in the dian army training field at Point Calvigny barracks, 4 miles southeast of St. George's. "The bodies were burned, which makes identification difficult," a U.S. spokesman said as workers placed the remains in four olive-colored plastic body bags. Wallets, rings and printed Talent were also found near the bodies. A member of the search team told reporters army officials believe the bodies are those of Bishop and three cabinet members, killed after 3,000 followers freed him from house arrest and marched on the capital. Lino Gutierrez, a U.S diplomat, said: "We are still negotiating with the Cubans," who have asked to keep a four-member staff in Grenada. A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. DR. PAIL LIMBERG Optometrist Annechuck Lille has assumed the practice and retained all records of DR. DALE SILLIX Optometrist SPECTRUM 841-1113 For an appointment phone 843-5966 DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG Ontometriet EYE EXAMINATIONS CONTACT LENSES FULL FRAME SELECTION 202 Lawrence National Bank 843-5966 “Hidden Volleyball” Entry Deadline: Thurs., Nov. 10, 5 p.m. 208 Robinson A Saturday Spectacular When: Nov. 12, 10 a.m. in Robinson Gyms 1 & 2. Recreation Services Special Event Get A Team Together Another Freebie! FALL BOOK SALE Hundreds of Books at Special Prices including: The Giant Book of Insults THE CRANT WORK OF RESULTS JAMES A. ROBERTS $6.98 John Bartlett Familiar Quotations Kenneth A. Wilson THE WINE AND FOOD OF HERITAGE THE ALEXANDRA COX COLLECTION The Wine and Food of Europe Bartlett's $14.98 Bartlett's Familiar Quotations $3.98 Sale Nov. 2-Dec. 1 Hours: 8:30-5:00 Mon.-Fri.; 10-4 Sat. 864-4431 OREAD BOOK SHOP KUBookstores Oread Bookshop Kansas Union Level 3 NEW YORKER Bring your Friends VIDEO MADNESS 101 TOKENS for Bring your house mother $7.00 Offer expires 11/30 (less than 7c per play) BRING IN THIS COUPON VIDEO Bring your professors Bring the family Bring the family 1021 MASS. University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1983 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Mother of ex-congressman loses lengthy legal battle KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A seven-year legal battle has apparently ended for the mother of Rep. Jerry Litton. Litton was killed in a plane crash the night he won the 1976 Democratic senatorial primary in Missouri. Jurors deliberated four hours yesterday in federal court before deciding in favor of Beech Aircraft Corp., a Wichita firm, and against Litton's mother, Mildred. The jury returned a verdict shortly after 5 p.m. Litton's mother, his estate and his wife's parents, Clifford and Vivian Summerfield, had originally filed an $18 million law suit. The suit was later reduced to $3.2 million. U. S. District Judge Howard F. Sachs yesterday instructed the jury to consider claims brought by Litton's mother and not to consider those brought by the Summerfields. Mildred Litton was seeking monetary damages for the income she would have received had her son not been killed. Shortly after the verdict was announced, William H Wimsatt, attorney for the Litton family, had no comment. Plans of whether the jury could prevail are unknown. Topekan named to education post TOPEKA — The state Board of Education yesterday named veteran educator Harold Blackburn as commissioner of education effective Dec. 18. Blackburn, now assistant commissioner of the Education Services Division of the Kansas Department of Education, had been a teacher and administrator in Topeka public schools for 16 years and a program director and regional director for the U.S. Department of Education for 15 years. He replaces Merle Bolton, who is resigning Dec. 17 after eight years as commissioner. Blackburn, speaking to a standing-room-only crowd of about 100 people, said education was the "largest and most important business in Kansas with the most important finished product." The 55-year-old Blackburn said he was honored by the selection and promised to "work very hard." 1. follow a very fine commissioner," he said. "Following him will be a most difficult challenge." ABC-TV crew to interview at Union ABC-TV'S "Good Morning America" will be on campus today to shoot part of a segment about "The Day After" and the movie's effect on Lawrence. Judy Billings, director of convention services at the Lawrence Convention and Visitors Bureau, said the crew would arrive in Lawrence sometime this morning. She also said that the morning news show did not want to concentrate on the issue of nuclear war, but wanted a picture of life in Lawrence. Billings said the TV crew would be asking students at the Kansas Union what they thought about the film, produced by ABC-Circle films. Several other news organizations, including Time and Newsweek magazines and CBS-News "Sunday Morning" and "60 Minutes," have written about the shooting. The film, which depicts the catastrophe of nuclear war, made its premiere here Oct. 12 and is scheduled to be broadcast nationally Nov. 20. KU is short of '83 United Fund goal The University of Kansas is $3,663 short of its $50,000 goal for the 1983 United Fund campaign, which ends at 5 p.m. Friday. University faculty and students have donated $46,367 so far, a volunteer worker said yesterday. Last year's donations totaled $48,605, with the $30,000 being from the University. The $50,000 campus goal remains the same as last year because faculty salaries have not risen during the year, said Thomas Swearingen, a member of the United Fund campus steering committee. (Oakland Tribune) Competing funding Students can contribute to the fund by calling the Lawyer at United Funding Officer, 915-243-7000. The Lawyer is responsible for the fund's use. Fund office at 843-6626. The Lawrence goal for the fund drive is $432,099. Money donated to the fund is allocated to 23 community service events. The organizations include: the Boys Club; the Douglas County Association for Retarded Citizens; the Douglas County Child Development Assocation; the Lawrence Indian Center; Rape Victim Support Services; the Salvation Army; the Red Cross; and Women's Transitional Care Services. AP editors praise Journalism School The William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications last week was cited as one of the top journalism education programs in the country in a study by the Associated Press Managing Editors. Editors meeting at an APME convention in Louisville, Ky., named Missouri, Northwestern, Kansas, Indiana and Columbia as the top five journalism schools. The KU program was described as having broad favorable recognition among editors, especially in regard to which programs were sending them the best young journalists. Extra conference funds go to charity TOPEKA — Money left over from the Midwestern Governors' Conference will be donated to two United Way campaigns, Gov. John Carlin said yesterday. Writer to speak on economic justice Corporate sponsors and registration fees provided $73,275 for the three-day conference, which took place in Lawrence in October. Of the leftover money, $3,000 will go to the Topeka United Way and $2,000 to the Lawrence United Way, Carlin said. Markovic has written several books, including "From Affluence to Praxis" and "The Contemporary Marx." He is now a visiting professor at the University of Pennsylvania. Mihalo Markovic, a former director of the Institute of Philosophy in Belggrade, Yugoslavia, will speak on "Economic Justice, Free Enterprise and Democratic Socialism" at 8 p.m. in Alderson Auditrium of the Kansas Union. His lecture is the second in a series titled "Economic Justice and Free Enterprise" and is sponsored by the department of philosophy, the School of Business and the department of Soviet and East European studies. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 864-4810. The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. Lack of staff to result in fewer poli-sci courses Bv GINA K. THORNBURG The department of political science is offering nine fewer courses next spring because it has been unable to hire new faculty to replace the loss of five professors, the chairman of the department, Paul Shumaker, said yester- Staff Reporter "The department is hemorrhaging, we're really having some significant weakness." IN ADDITION TO those losses, two professors went on sabbatical this year, and another, Mike Harder, will be on leave next semester to begin his position as secretary of the state Department of Administration. The political science department last year lost three professors from its regular staff of 24 when two faculty members resigned to take jobs in the private sector and one professor retired, he said. As a result of the decrease in faculty, the number of students in many political science classes has increased. The number of law students in the department has decreased, he said. "Political science has lost people in the last few years precisely because it's a good department," said Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. People are mobile and good enough to get other jobs." Last year's fall enrollment was 6,911 student credit hours, and this year's fall enrollment is 7,325. However, 350 students are majoring in political science, which is the highest number of students ever to do so, and more than 350 students, 198 are luminary and seniors. The loss of faculty has also meant that some classes offered last spring will not be offered this spring, Shumaker said. THE FOLLOWING COURSES, which usually have been offered in the spring, will not be offered next semester: POLS 601, political ideologies; POLS 606, quantitative political analysis; POLS 617, legislatures in the U.S.; and POLS 633, behavior in public organizations. The following courses will lose their value: Lawrence campus; POLS 637, public personnel administration; POLS 832, organization theory; POLS 843, public financial systems. "It's impinging on our ability to give the best education," he said. Two courses in the Masters of Public Shumaker said that three-fourths of the faculty usually taught three courses in the fall semester and two in the spring, but, in order to compensate for the lack of professors this fall we were teaching more than their regular share of classes. Administration program that are offered at the Regents Center in Overland Park and at the Capitol Complex and at the Capitol Complex are also not being offered next spring. BUT NEXT SPRING, the professors will no longer be able to teach as many classes because they usually do more lessons in sprinting and teach fewer classes, he said. James Drury, professor of political science, said he would teach a class next spring that he usually did not teach. Moreover, he will not be teaching a course next semester that he usually teaches each spring. "We want to have more stuff so we can have regular teaching loads." Drum But Lineberry said that the College did not hire and members last week, because of budget cuts. The department of political science has been the worst hurt of anyDoctorate program in the nation. MORE THAN $100,000 is required to hire the four full-time professors that the department needs, he said, and the College is not ready to hire them. The loss of the faculty coincided with budget cuts but was not a result of the cuts. Shumaker said that when his department lost faculty last year, the money that had been used to pay faculty salaries was used to restore the expenses budget of the College and was not used to hire replacements. But the recent faculty and budget issues may damage the quality of institutes. The College, however, allocated about $8,000 to hire a graduate teaching assistant and several practitioners in businesses to teach two-week courses Shumaker said that the quality of the programs and instruction within his department had been steadily increasing during the last 10 years. “If those losses are not, at least in part, replaced, we’ll lose other members,” he said. “If they sense the role is in action, they don’t want to be a part of that.” Three parole board members quit under pressure By United Press International TOPEKA — Three members of the state parole board, confronted by what Gov. John Carlier yesterday said was their failure to devote enough time and effort to their jobs, resigned at his request. The Kansas Adult Authority, long the butt of criticism from law enforcers, judges and most notably, Attorney General Robert Stephan, has come under increasing fire since August, when Allen County Judge John White Stephan to investigate the release of Nathaniel J. "Vorkie" Smith of Iola. Smith was convicted of killing three people in the summer of 1982 — just three months after his parole from prison. CARLIN, WHO SAID he was prepared to exercise his statutory right to remove the adult authority members if they did not "professionally" tender their resignations, also criticized the board for routinely distracting as few as one or two members to conduct parole hearings. The Democratic governor said he met with adult authority members late Monday and accepted the resignations of Chairman Simon Rob Rth Jr. of Hays and Carroll Mills and Alfredo Calvillo, both of Topeka. "They all took the option of voluntarily resigning." Carlin said. Under state law, the governor may remove parole board members for reasons of "disability, inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office." Carlin declined to say which reason he would have cited. BUT INFORMED SOURCES said Roth, Mills and Calvillo were the subject of repeated criticism for not working 40 hours a week in what is by law a full-time job. Members of the KAA receive an annual salary of $40,932 a year. Roth is a practicing attorney while Mills and Calvino are psychologists. Both Mills and Calvino said Tuesday they worked full time at their jobs. Roth could not be reached for comment. Carlin said other members of the parole board told him of routine situations in which one or two members conducted parole hearings, then turned in their recommendation to the full board for a vote. "I think that when the Legislature finds out what I found out about not sitting in full panel, they will be as shocked as I was," Carlin said in announcing changes he will propose to the 1984 Legislature. CARLIN SAID HE would recommend the KAA be composed of three. full-time members who would sit as a panel in nearly all parole hearings. However, parole hearings for class D and E felons, the least serious of felony offenders, could be handled by fewer than three members. Carlin said his legislative proposal would require a unanimous vote of the three-member panel on class A and B felios, which include murder, kidnapping and aggravated rape among others. Under the current system, it takes three votes of the five-member board to approve parole. "The major problems I have been concerned about, and one which I believe these changes will resolve, is the amount of time and effort each member of the authority has been spending on the education process, or believe the adult authority is a full-time job and expect the members to treat it as such. .25 DRAWS & $1.00 DRINKS TONIGHT!! UNTIL 10:30PM EVEN MORE SPECIALS AFTER 10:30PM GAMMONS SNOWS 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 SORORITY RUSH REGISTRATION Wednesday and Thursday November 9 and 10, 1983 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Centennial Room, Kansas Union GAMMONS SNOWBALD 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 .25 DRAWS & $1.00 DRINKS TONIGHT!! UNTIL 10:30PM EVEN MORE SPECIALS AFTER 10:30PM 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 the fun affordable place to be BARRON'S memberships available HAPPY HOUR DAILY 4 till 12 50¢DRAWS $100 DRINKS were in the Elgridge House 7th Mass. 74/9-9758 19.95 FRAME SALE Save 33% to 69% Get the Frames You Want for the Lenses You Need Hutton Optical can fill your new prescription or duplicate your present one and fit you with a new frame that is just right for your face. Come in and select from: . Jordache . Oleg Cassini . Mary McFadden . Anthony Martin . Zsa Zsa Gabor . Arnold Palmer and more Offer good through Nov. 19 Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames. Canot be used in conjunction with any other sale. HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2 the fun affordable place to be BARRON'S memberships available HAPPY HOUR DAILY 4 till 12 50¢DRAWS $100 DRINKS 19.95 FRAME SALE Save 33% to 69% Get the Frames You Want for the Lenses You Need Hutton Optical can fill your new prescription or duplicate your present one and fit you with a new frame that is just right for your face. Come in and select from: . Jordache . Oleg Cassini . Mary McFadden . Anthony Martin . Zsa Zsa Gabor . Arnold Palmer and more Offer good through Nov. 19 Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames. Canot be used in conjunction with any other sale. HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2 HUTTON OPTICAL CO. 842-5208 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2 742 Mass. OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 9, 1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kamsan (USPK 60/640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Finst Hall Lawrence, Kan. 60055, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during summer sessions. Subscription prices are $15 for six months or $25 for six years. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 a semester through the student access program FOSTMASTER. Send materials to USPK, 2015, Mailbox #C1301. MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSKICH Managing Editor Editorial Author DAVE WANMAKER Retail Sales Mark Mears National Sales Sales DON KNOX Campus Editor ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser Capitol bombing A bomb went off in the Capitol building in Washington Monday night. No one was killed. Only some historic paintings, decorative woodwork and furniture were damaged. Violence of any kind is an unpleasant subject, but political violence is probably the most unpleasant of all, at least in a democracy. The United States has a proud tradition of letting the ballot box settle most disputes; during an election, the public speculates on whether the incumbents will win and on what changes may be made by challengers. One does not hear of military takeovers or coups d'etat. The bombing of the Capitol serves as a reminder that we are removed — but perhaps not by too great a margin — from anarchy and death as factors in government. Do those guilty of the bombing have any reasonable excuse for their destructive deed? One may as well ask whether the end justifies the means. An anonymous person who called the Capitol switchboard six minutes before the bomb went off reportedly said that the act was a response to U.S. military actions in Grenada and Lebanon. The caller's statement shows the uselessness of political violence. What do the mad bombers seek? Perhaps they want the government to withdraw U.S. troops from overseas assignments. Perhaps they want the Marines stationed in Beirut to wave as trucks full of bombs destroy U.S. installations. The bombing is such an uncalled-for act that any of a number of intentions, serious or foolish, can be attributed to the bombers. Fortunately the U.S. political tradition is such to discount wanton violence; the Capitol has withstood invasions by Redcoats and shootings of presidents. Of course, security measures in Washington will be increased. Such a reaction by congressmen is to be expected, and indeed may help prevent similar destruction in the future. The bombers will temporarily succeed in causing fright. They will not succeed in effecting change in policy. That's for the voters to do. A despicable action This week's cross burning on the lawn of a black family's home in Kansas City, Kan., may be just somebody's idea of a prank. Or worse. It may hark back to the days when the Ku Klux Klan regularly performed such "feats of bravery" to harass and frighten their black, Catholic and Jewish victims whom they accused of daring to try and become a part of their country. At this point police have no clues to the identity of the person who decided that burning a cross in the yard of a black woman with three children was probably the best way to communicate with her. If the message was, "Get out, you don't belong here," then he or she is in for quite a surprise. have just made her some new friends. Not only will the Kansas City, Kan., resident probably not move out of her home where she has lived since April, but the incident may The victim's immediate neighbors might be in that category. Several expressed their shock and horror — and surprise at the cross burning. Their neighbor had not offended anyone as far as they could see and this was the first such racially motivated act of hatred on their block of Hispanic, white and Vietnamese families. Unfortunately, the message that blacks still do not have a free hand at picking their neighborhood did get home to the victim, who was reminded once again by the crude action that discrimination does exist outside of the South. Yes, right here in the Midwest. We hope that with the assistance of her neighbors, she stands her ground and stays. Investing in the future The many reports lamenting the decline of the nation's schools have generated a lot of talk and a lot of writing, but not much action. ARCO has invited the nation's 16,000 high schools to apply for 200 grants of $3,000 each to develop programs. Next fall it will hand out grants of up to $200,000 to 20 schools to put the ideas into practice. so we're glad to see the Atlantic Richfield Co. spending $1.7 million to entice high school principals to implement some of the proposals of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. The foundation's recommendations have a familiar ring: more academic courses, fewer electives, higher pay for teachers. ARCO, like all businesses, stands to benefit from a well-educated labor pool. Investing in better high schools will be cheaper, in the long run, than spending millions to teach basic skills to its workers. Chicago Sun-Times LETTERS POLICY The University Daily Kanans welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kanan also invites individuals to send a sample column. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kanan office, 111 Stauffair-Flint Hall. The Kanan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. THE OREGONIAN GROUP, IN THE THRONE COMPANY. GRENADA "RESCUE" GRENADA "RESCUE" LEBANON "PEACEKEEPING" CAMBODIA "INCURSION" KOREA "POLICE ACTION" LEBANON "PEACEKEEPING" CAMBODIA "INCURSION" KOREA "POLICE ACTION" A DEAD SOLDIER BY ANY OTHER NAME... The Grenada debate continues U.S. invasion was illegal WASHINGTON — The invasion of Grenada is history. Our forces performed well in action. The Grenadian government, which we had good reason to dislike, has been overthrown. Those Americans who desired to leave — about half — have been evacuated. The American soldiers who are dead or maimed as a result of the action are also being brought home. Now it remains for the American people to answer the question that should have been answered. Was it right thing to do? Was it the right thing to do? Clearly if the evacuation of Americans was the only purpose EDWARD MARKEY If the invasion of Grenada was meant to improve the position of the United States in the world Democratic Representative from Massachusetts ___ of the invasion, it was justified. But there was a second, more questionable purpose for the invasion: to overthrow the government of Grenada and install an American dictator liking. There are some very good reasons why we should not have done this. First, it is against the law. The charters of the Organization of American States and the United Nations, which we have signed and which are legally binding, explicitly proclaim that by state in the affairs of another, especially by military means. Some make light of international law. This is not only a rather un-American attitude, it is very unwise as well. The international system depends on the rule of law in order to ensure that all who have a climate of lawfulness prevails in the world. today, it was a tragic mistake. The image of the world’s most powerful nation is hardly imminent. It has already been one of the world’s biggest nations. We have also raised grave doubts among our allies as to whether we will act cautiously and in close consultation with them in a crisis. While Grenada is part of the British Commonwealth, Great Britain was not allowed to invade and to invade had been given, at which point the Prime Minister's advice was ignored. There is a perception in the world that the Reagan administration resorts to force when diplomatic skill would better suit U.S. objectives. This will be reinforced by the invasion. And the spectre of American interventionism will be revived in Latin America, to the benefit of anti-Americanism. We have to wonder if we have not given a new signal to the world community regarding the rules we are going to play by. Does the Soviet Union now have the preferential of invading any country that has American or Western-bloc advisers, or any country whose government is disliked by its neighbors? If our cause, which ultimately is the cause of Western civilization, is to prevail in the world, we must be calm, sure and wise in our international relations. We must behave according to our values, not the Soviets' — even when we would rather do otherwise. For the test of a nation's adherence to its principles comes not in the easy cases, but the hard ones. Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass has represented the Massachusetts 7th Congressional District for seven years and is affiliated by United Press International. Reagan took right action WASHINGTON — Be assured that history will record President Reagan took the correct course of action when he dispatched U.S. soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines to Grenada. The lives of 1,000 Americans were in jeopardy. Fear gripped citizens of the island, who — in the wake of the execution of the country's leaders — had been threatened with instant death if they walked their own streets. Thugs, taking instructions from abroad, ruled the island. Neighboring nations teared that the Communist cloak of oppression suffocating Grenada PHILIP CRANE Republican Representative from Illinois would soon be wrapped about their own shores to smother freedom. Did the people of the United States elect a president who would freeze from fear that he might antagonize enemies, or did they elect a president who would move swiftly to protect fellow Americans and thus prevent another seizure of US citizens as hostages? The bitter memory still so fresh? I'm positive they sought one who would lead with purpose, strength and determination. We certainly did not elect a president to play the role of a latter-century Chamberlain curtseying to the bullying tactics of Moscow. Rather, we wanted one who would stand up and be counted, one who would move to block further aggression. Those who contend that President Reagan's action was unprecedented and unconstitutional have short memories. were ordered into battle in Vietnam, and a decade before that our soldiers fought in Korea. On neither occasion did the United War—nor did he seek—a declaration of war from Congress. And for those who would shrug off that evidence, let them leaf back almost two centuries into U.S. history. One who took part in drafting the U.S. constitution, most recently ordered the fleet to the Barbary Coast without seeking a declaration of war from Congress. As President Reagan reported on his Grenada decision, he "had no choice but to act strongly and decisively." The swiftness of that decision saved American lives, with American servicemen receiving the thanks of Grenadians for restoring order in the face of anarchy, which prevailed on their island. It informed our Caribbean allies, and put our enemies on notice, that the United States will use the power God provided to protect smaller nations that seek our help. Unlike the Soviet Union, this country does not lust for a colonial empire. Already, our troops are being withdrawn and control of Grenada is being restored. The Governor Sir Paul Scoon. It is now up to Grenada to rebuild its democratic institutions. If the United States is guilty of anything, it is the attempt to restore freedom an inter-religious society in the eyes of the Communist world. Rep. Philip Crane, B-III., has represented the Illinois 12th Congressional District for 14 years. The column was provided by United Press International. 'Hair' article was immature sensationalism LETTERS TO THE EDITOR To the Editor: As a member of one of the technical crews for "Hair," I feel obliged to respond to Fridays's "staff" article, "First Act of Hair"article. I believe the article was nothing more than immature sensationalism First, the director and the cast have made every effort to downplay the inclusion of the disbing in "Hair." The matter was strictly a voluntary one; no cast member was coerced into participating. I feel the need for an extra good taste, and I have yet to run into anyone who feels differently. The fact that the entire article deals with only this particular scene displays a lack of responsibility on the part of the "staff." Theatrical and journalistic protocol usually fails at the morning after an opening night be a review of the production This article neither criticized nor commended any element of the show — not even the scene being discussed. What is the point of writing an article that in essence says: “There’s a nude scene in this show, but nobody really noticed it.”” Your article also may have created an unfortunate anticipation in our audiences. Your "staff" surely is aware of the public's tendency to oversensationalize artistic efforts such as this one. After reading your article, some audience members will undoubtedly come to the show for one reason only: to see the "living painting." The sensitive, powerful ideas and issues we have strived so hard to communicate will be lost in a shallow and superficial evaluation of the physical only. The issue of nudity deserves to be addressed, I agree; but it must be addressed in more direct proportion to its place in the show (a mere 30 seconds). I feel that our show as a whole deserves more attention as a Allison Wood To the editor: Alison Wood Overland Park sophomore It's about time serious piece of theatre that i rapidly regaining its political significance. President Reagan's efforts in Grenada are anything but clumsy. As a matter of fact, the unfolding events in Grenada prove the irrationality of her statement. Harris owes an apology to this great country and especially to those U.S. servicemen who valiantly died defending freedom and liberty. Kiesa Harris’ article “This Should Be Reagan’s Last Picture” should have been titled “This Should Be My Last Article.” What throne of judgment does she sit upon to make the statement that “Reagan has disgraced this nation by his clumsy efforts to play policeman?” The statement that "the United States should relax and let parts of the world settle their own affairs" is hogwash. The Carter administration showed us the danger of that kind of thinking. Just what did Harris think all those Cubans and Soviets were doing in Grenada? Surely she doesn't believe they were innocent of manipulating Grenadian internal affairs. To be sure, President Reagan's "policeman" policy effectively speaks for itself. I wholeheartedly support the effort. It's about time that the people of this country showed the world that we still support freedom and liberty. Alfred J. Graham 1 Diablo, Republic of Panama sophomore --- University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1983 Page 5 Downtown continued from p. 1 motion that would require that the public have the opportunity to vote on a portion of the financing of the redevelopment project before land was acquired or buildings were condemned. The amendment was accepted by all five commissioners. The commissioners gave themselves 90 days to negotiate with Town Center to reach a developer of record agreement, which will make Town Center the official developer. If they cannot reach an agreement in 90 days, the commission must either extend the deadline or cancel. Longhurst said the commission would have to get input from the Downtown Improvement Committee and conduct a study session before the agreement was placed on the agenda. PUBLIC COMMENTARY RAN for an hour as 11 Lawrence residents spoke on all sides of the issue, with a majority supporting private banking and ensuring the commission not to choose either developer. Ron Holt and Steve Clark, who have proposed a river-front project, both asked the commission to approve it. also said that the city had prepared a rough draft of a letter of intent that would allow his project to continue. Lance Burr, a Lawrence lawyer who has consistently opposed redevelopment, asked the commission to support private redevelopment of historic downtown businesses. Kate Webber, the woman who asked for the attorney general's opinion, and Barbara Wagoner, a member of the DIC, both supported the Sizer plan. Steve Grabow, director of architectural programs, came out in support of Town Center, explaining its architectural advantages. BOB SCHUMM, PRESIDENT of the Downtown Lawrence Association, presented a poll of DLA members to the commission that showed strong support for the Sizerle plan. The poll showed 59 percent of the DLA backed Sizeeler, and that 78 percent would support a benefit tax district among downtown landowners for the Sizeeler project. Only 39.4 percent said they would support the same district for the Town Center plan. Commission rejects fuel-aid measure accepts KPS gas shut-off compliance By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter The Lawrence City Commission last night rejected a proposal from the Natural Gas Task Force to start a Fuel Assistance Relief Program that would have provided financial aid to low-income residents who could not pay their gas bills. The commission accepted, however, Kansas Public Service's offer to voluntarily comply with the Cold Weather Rule established by the Kansas Corporation Commission. The Cold Weather Rule would prevent the gas company from having employees who could not pay their bills during the winter. The commission had considered creating an ordinance that would have forced the KPs to change their workday. AT A STUDY session Monday afternoon, William Salome, president and general manager of the gas company, said the company would stop issuing if the commission would grant two exceptions. First, the commission agreed to allow the KPS to turn off gas service if customers refused to make payments on their gas bills and the temperature was above 32 degrees. Second, the commission agreed to allow the gas company to require people on the Level Payment Plan to prove they would live at the residence for the 12-month period. The payment plan would spread the payment of winter gas bills out over summer months so that low-income customers would not have large bills to deal with during the winter. The task force had also recommended that the city begin a Fuel Assistance Relief program. Mayor David Longhurst said that the ideas presented by the task force were good but that the city should leave fuel assistance to volunteer SOCIAL GROUPS, such as Warm Hearts, exist in Lawrence, he said. And those groups can help the low-income residents who need financial assistance. Commissioner Ernest Angino suggested that the gas company provide a box on its bills that people could check if they wanted to donate to an energy assistance fund. The commission also discussed the sidewalk problems in the Oread neighborhood. THE CITY ENGINEERING staff surveyed the brick sidewalks between Ninth and 14th Streets on Ohio Street and found them in excellent condition, even when the installation and unseen of sidewalks. George Williams, public works director, proposed that the city notify residents who owned the sidewalks that they were in bad condition. This proposal was reheated within 60 days of notification. The city could make the repairs or could contract the work if owners refused to do so, Williams said. The city could then bill the owners Williams also suggested that ramps for handicapped people be built when the sidewalks were repaired. However, Jeff Southard, 1305 Tennessee St., said that neighborhood residents objected to the repairing their sidewalks because it would do the work with cement instead of brick. Tim Miller. 936 Ohio St., said he did not think the sidewalks should be condemned either. "If my sidewalk doesn't meet code, there is something wrong with the code," he said. "I don't see why I should have be assessed $750 to have my perfectly good sidewalk replaced." Capitol has braved fire, bombings in 183-year history WASHINGTON — The Capitol, ravaged by fire once and rocked by bombs three times in its 183-year history, looms over Washington as one of the people's power over their government. By United Press International The marble, granite and sandstone home of the Congress most often has been a passive shell for history. For a few terrifying moments a criminal mustute witness to a rampage by armed terrorists. At 11 p.m. Monday, the physical institution exploded back into the news when a time bomb was discovered. NO ONE WAS INJURED, but windows were shattered in both the Republican and Democratic cloakrooms — just off the Senate floor — and the door was blown off the office of Democratic leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia. Historic paintings, as well as furniture and decorative woodwork outside the nearby Mansfield Room, were damaged. The bombing coincided with efforts to tighten security spurred by the arrest three weeks ago in the House gallery of a man who had explosives strapped to his waist. The event was similar to a March 1, 1971, incident, when an anonymous caller to the Capitol switchboard, citing "the Laos decision," advised that the building be evacuated. the blast that a bomb would explode in the Capitol because of U.S. military action in Grenada and Lebanon. "THE BOMB WILL GO off in 30 minutes," the caller said. At 1:32 a.m., an explosion ripped through a restroom on the ground floor of the Senate wing, just opposite the old Court Chamber. There were no injuries but the damage was estimated at $300,000. The incident prompted the erection of metal detent, and guards began searching briefcases, and documents. In July 1915, a second-floor Senate reception room was damaged by a bomb placed by Frank Holt, who later said he had acted to stop armies there in the first year of World War I. There were no injuries. The most serious terrorist act in the Capitol came March 1, 1954, when four supporters of Puerto Rican independence opened fire in the house chamber, wounding five congressmen. Visitors to the chamber can still locate bullet holes in the floor beneath some seats. Congress first met in the Capitol in November 1900 in the original Senate wing. The IN 1814, during the War of 1812, British troops occupied Washington and burned the Capitol and most other federal buildings. The Redcoats also put to the torch the President's House. In 1835, at the end of the war to conceal burns and smoke damage, earning it the name The White House. Congress returned to its home at appen Jenkins Hill in 1819, and a central portion, uniting the wings and topped by a low, copper-clad wooden dome, was completed 10 years later. Between 1851 and 1863, wings were added again on the north and south to accommodate the growing membership of The House and Senate, and the massive cast iron dome — now depicted on the back of the $50 bill — was installed. The only other major work done on the Capitol was in the late 1950s, when a portion of the East Front, facing the Library of Congress, added 32 feet, adding 108 rooms to the building. Last year, Congress approved $49 million for restoration of the deteriorating West Front, which looks down the Mall to the Washington Monument. Capitol continued from p. 1 of Theodore Roosevelt with one eye blackened. Workers sifted through debris in search of all the pieces of an oil portrait of Sen. Daniel Webster, ripped from a gilt frame by the explosion. Ironically, Senate leaders had already planned to ask members yesterday to approve stricter security measures, first considered last year amid reports a Libyan "hit squad" was pursued American officials. Three weeks ago, the defense with dynamite was taken from the gallery overlooking the House. New security measures were put into effect yesterday, with police surrounding the Capitol and stopping cars, delivery trucks and taxicabs. IN ADDITION, ALL people going into the Senate gallery now will have to pass through two metal detector checkpoints. The detectors will be modernized and tourists will be kept out of the corridor outside the chamber. All visitors to the Capitol will be required to wear identification bracelets or a pass to be shielded with plexiglass, House GOP leader Robert Michel said. "This is a very open building. But the times are different now." Smith said. "That's just a fact of life." Baker said several groups had claimed responsibility for the explosion which rang out like a thunderclap and was heard two blocks away. A man who said he represented the Armed Resistance Unit called the Capitol and The Washington Post just before the blast and said the bombs were made in Syria. continued from p.1 Bob Sarna, manager of the Meadowbrook Apartments where Bell was living at the time, said that Bell owed the back rent on Aug. 1. He said Bell's rent was $245 a month and that Boby Bell, a former linebacker for the Kansas City Chiefs and Bryan's uncle, was one of the co-signers for the apartment lease. SARNA SAID THAT he spoke to Bryan Bell in April about paying the rent. Bell paid $200 after Sarna sent him an eviction notice in June. Sarna said Bell had promised on July 25 to pay $500 and to adjust his rent to $227 a month, but Bell never paid the $500. Tim Larson, an auto mechanic for Hillcrest Standard, 914 Iowa St., said that Bell paid him about $140 in cash on Aug. 3 for work he had done on Bell's car. He said that about 7:50 a.m. Bell would be out of gas and he would run out of gas. Larson said that Bell after buying a two-ball can of gas, and about 15 to 30 minutes later came back and asked to have some work done on his car. BELL PICKED UP the car at noon but returned it thereto and again the next day to the office. Clarence Ackland, Lawrence resident, testified that Bell had called him to pick up him at the station when he had run out of gas. Robert Duncan, Bell's attorney, asked Ackland whether she had money bags or a knife, or was bloody or seemed injured, and Ackland said no to each question. During cross-examination, Duncan attempted to cast suspicion on another man. Eric Gates said that he had given Mike Mitchell, who was an employee at Seurer's restaurant, a ride to Pop's Bar B Q at about 10 a.m. on Thursday. Mitchell was supposed to begin work that day. Gates said that Mitchell showed him some small blood stains on his hands. Bell's attorney questioned Mitchell about the blood on his hands, and Mitchell said he got blood on his hands the night before the discovery of the body, when he was trying to break up a fight at a bar. Gates testified that Mitchell later said he had heard that Seurer had been stabbed four times in the heart, and on Aug. 4 Mitchell said Seurer had been stabbed with a pitchfork. Mitchell testified that he could not recall specifically who had told him that Seurer had been stabbed, only that he had overheard it from several people. He also testified that he had abrasions on his shoulder, but that the abrasions occurred the day after Seurer's death. 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DISCOUNT PRESCRIPTIONS & PATIENT PROFILES & FREE MEDICAL EXPENSE RECORDS ... compiled by the latest in computer equipment ... ideal for personal use or tax records. • we accept student health insurance claims • we fill welfare prescriptions Stresstabs SPECIAL GIBSON'S PHARMACY PRICE — Plain — with Iron — with Zinc $5.11 60 tablet size expires 11-13-83 limit one item per coupon Coricidin-D SPECIAL GIBSON'S PHARMACY PRICE $1.69 24 tablets with coupon expires 11-13-83 limit one item per coupon Offer Not Valid without coupon limit one item per coupon GIBSON'S master charge PHARMACY 25th & Iowa, Lawrence 842-6325 Pharmacists: Farrell Mitchel Mark Smith Mon. Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Prices effective thru Sunday, Nov. 13 Gibson's Pharmacy offers you . . . DISCOUNT PRESCRIPTIONS & PATIENT PROFILES & FREE MEDICAL EXPENSE RECORDS ... compiled by the latest in computer equipment ... ideal for personal use or tax records. • we accept student health insurance claims • we fill welfare prescriptions VISA EAGLE NEW ADVANCED FORMULA 450 Stresstabs WITH THE MOTOR EXTRA 600 Coricidin TABLETS For cold and flu symptoms CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1983 Page 6 Student to start conservative paper By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter Because of what he called the liberal, biased news coverage of the University Daily Kansan, a KU student next semester will start a weekly publication with a conservative editorial policy, he said yesterday. John Kean, Lenexa sophomore and the state chairman of the Young Conservative Alliance, said yesterday that Student Senate should not finance any group or publication that advocated a political viewpoint. Kean, the organizer of the new publication, said that the Kansan's editorials often contained false information to support a liberal viewpoint. "Sure they've made up figures," he said. "They've made up figures out of the blitz." KEAN SAID THAT proof of factual error in the Kansan's editorials would be presented in the organization's newsletter, to be published Friday. But the new publication, the Oread Review, will differ from the Kansan in terms of its content. "The news is going to be as unbiased and as objective as humanly possible," Kean said. "The editorial policies will reflect a conservative opinion which is only necessary because it is a conservative paper." The trial issue of the new periodical will be published for the first time in December, he said. Because the Kansan is partially financed by Student Activity funds, each student is a stockholder in the Kansan, he said. But he said the liberal views of the paper did not reflect the views of the students. He also said that he had told private organizations that agreed to finance the Oread Review that their constituents had written about, the contents of the new publication. THE KANSAN USES money from the student activity fee to pay for part of its printing costs. The great majority of its financing, including staff salaries, is from advertising and subscription revenue. Although Kean refused to disclose details of how the publication would be financed, he said it would not be financed by the University. "There is no way we will seek money from the Student Senate," he said. "Public funds should not be used to promote one point of view." Kean said that the Young Conservative Alliance, which is a nationwide organization, had opened a local chapter in response to the liberal education at KU and in response to the passive role of conservative organizations such as the Young Americans for Freedom and the College Republi- The Alliance registered with Student. Organizations and activities in September 1983, he said. But Kean refused to disclose how many members the local chapter had. Arthur Skidmore, faculty adviser for the Oread Review said that he agreed to be the publication's adviser because students should have the opportunity. "I certainly have no intention of taking part in their day to day operations," Skidmore, professor of philosophy, said. "I completely oppose their point of view." KEAN SAID THAT although the Oread Review had assembled part of its staff, he was not willing to disclose the names of staff members because he considered himself the sole spokesman for the publication. Although he disagrees with the principle behind state financed universities, he attends KU because it is his duty to try to present an alternative viewpoint to counteract the campus's liberalism, he said. "I have a duty to come in here and fight that," he said. "I have to give the alternative perspective." The Alliance sponsored a meeting Monday night at the Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium. About 10 people attended. The low attendance, Kean said, was partly due to the fact that the group had not been able to show up. Haworth addition on time for '85 completion Staff Reporter By BRUCE F. HONOMICHL Construction of the Haworth Hall addition is proceeding on time and on budget, the University director of facilities planning said yesterday. The project, which will add almost 100,000 square feet of classroom labs and laboratory research space to Haworth, is scheduled to be finished in either December 1984 or in spring 1985, said director Allen Weichert. The contracted completion date was July 1, 1985. The framework is expected to be finished in about three weeks, said Stan Chaassen, project manager for R.D. Andersen Construction Co. "The MASONY IS about 20 percent complete," he said. "We expect to have the last pouring of cement on the roof done the day before Thanksgiving." 2 Two utility rooms, one housing elevator parts and the other housing working parts for the heating and cooling system and elevators, are scheduled for completion by February, Claassen said. He said work on the two rooms, which will be on the roof, would begin Dec. 5. He said, however, that either heavy rains or extremely cold weather could have caused the fires. Snow removal usually isn't a problem. Claassen said, however, the problem was that the snow He said that Andersen had experienced about a month of weather delays since work on the addition began in February. Claassen and Weichert said they expected the project to be finished under budget. THE HAWKOR ADDITION was budgeted at $14 million. Andersen's budget was set at $11.1 million. Construction plans for Haworth were approved in April 1982 the Gov't of Regents in September 1982. The Gov't had approved the project in April 1982. said. Also, $550.00 was budgeted for architectural fees. He said the addition would make Haworth the largest building on the Lawrence campus. The building will provide about 140 additional classrooms and laboratories and is intended to centralize the biological sciences division, which is now scattered throughout several buildings. The rest of the budget is for moveable interior furnishings and for the archi- tural design. "We're happy to see that this thing is proceeding on schedule," Weichert said. The addition should be finished in March or April 1985. Senate reviews committee policy Students often absent from meetings By JOHN EGAN Staff Reporter Attendance is "absolutely essential" because of the need for a voting quorum, he said. Carothers said that the problem of absenteeism at meetings was no worse than the usual case. "The overall record of student participation on standing committees of the University Senate has not been good." he said. BUT ORMSEE SAID that because no formal procedure had been established to inform KU students of committee assignments and meeting times, some students had not been notified of their duties. Student absenteeism on University governance committees continues to be high, the chairman of the University Executive Committee said this week. Some faculty and students attribute the problem to lack of a definite policy to inform students about committee assignments and meetings, said the chairman, James Carothers, associate professor of English. The Student Senate has formed an ad hoc committee to try to solve the problem. The four-member committee met yesterday for the first time and proposed that the Student Senate Executive Committee assume direct responsibility for notifying students of committee appointments. THE TEMPORARY committee also proposed that StudEx make sure that the committee seats are filled by candidates from the District. Ormsbee, a dc committee chairman To address the present problem of students not attending meetings, the ad hoc committee has also proposed that the Student Senate mail notification letters to all committee members before Thanksgiving vacation, telling them of their committee appointments, she said. Also, SenEx should mail them in advance to urging the chairmen to notify their committee members about meetings. University Senate committees but was not notified about her appointments or about the times the committees would meet, she said. She had to telephone the Student Senate office to get that information. "I don't know how it was done in the past, but it's not getting done this year." Ormsbee said about the notification process. Carothers said, "The notification process is fairly cumbersome. I think faculty are calling attention to the problem." 'The overall record of student participation on standing committees of the University Senate has not been good.' — James Carothers, SenEx chairman SenEx is supposed to notify students of committee appointments and committee chairmen are supposed to inform their members of meeting times, whether directly or through the Student Senate office, she said. BONNIE DENOYELLES, administrative assistant for the Student Senate, said that in the past, no single person or governmental body had had complete responsibility for informing students about appointments and meeting times. "Sometimes it works well. Unforeseenly it is kind of maddled, de-nares me." Ormsbee was selected to sit on two Carothers said that all of this year's University Senate committee chairmen will be involved. Ormsbeck said, "It's unclear where the fault lies." THE TASK OF assigning students to University Senate committees may have to be altered to make the notification process less complicated. Tom Berger, SenEx member and student senator, said. Students now complete applications during the spring semester, indicating on which committees they want to serve. Decisions on committee assignments are made by SenEx during the summer, then students receive letters, or phone calls informing them of their appointments. However, Berger said that because most students were not in Lawrence during the summer, some students did not receive their notifications. "That still isn't a very efficient way to do things, in my mind." Beruer said. Attempts are usually made to notify the students in the fall, but often their addresses or phone numbers have changed. he said. BERGER ADDED THAT it was easier to notify students living on campus because they could receive mail, not the usual mail, which does not require postage. Off-campus mail requires postage, which Berger said is not provided for in the letter. To remedy the communication problem, Berger has proposed that all student committee members be required to stop by the Student Senate office once week, to get messages and information when the committee will next meet. Ormsbee said that it might take an allocation by Student Senate to post-graduate students. Berger said faculty and students must cooperate to alleviate the notification problem, which he said was something that occurred every year. IN THE MEANTIME the Student Senate does not have student representation on some of the committees, Berger said. And faculty members have every right to complain about the lack of student representation. "The problem is how we get in contact with these people?" Berger said. "I think it can be worked out. I need to take it the ball by the horns." Arno Knapper, a SenEx member and professor of business, said that lack of student representation had been a "historical problem." However, Knapper said that students have not been the only University Senate members guilty of absenteeism. The problem unique to students by any mpg. Topic: Outdoor Recreation Education Discovery Program Winter Camping with Bunny Watkins from the Army Corps of Engineers. Thurs., Nov. 10 at 7:30 p.m. 208 Robinson FREE—Must have I.D. to enter Robinson Center; Call in advance of Thursday to register Minsky's Introduces "IT'S NOT A HAMBURGER, IT'S A 1/2 LB. STEAKBURGER!" $2.50 includes curly-O-fries 6 packs beer to go 2228 Iowa Minsky's PIZZA we deliver 842-0154 HERE'S TO YOU, KU! Cogburns the one and only & Heineken present the tip off of the Phi Kappa Theta—Gamma Phi Beta Fall Basketball Tourney tonight! featuring Unidos Opinions appearing Friday IMPORTED BY AND BACK-IN-STOCK AND SELL NEW YORK, NY 10017 SEPYT A1 45 547 Cogburns IMPORTED BY AND MUNCHING & CO. LTD. NEW YORK, N.Y. SERVY A1 45 1601 BREWED AND BOTTLED IN HOLLAND HEINEKEN LAGER BEER Heineken DIPLOMNE WOHNBEUR BREWED IN HOLLAND BROUWERIJEN B.V. AMSTERDAM & Heineken CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 9. 1983 Page 7 continued from p. 1 one computer on a rolling cart that could be checked out by teachers at the schools' media centers. However, she said, not enough microcomputers are available for every student in the district. She attributed the computer shortage to the high costs of micro-computer equipment and to the reluctance of some district administrators to deviate from traditional classroom learning. "We have a variety of things going on, but I would say that only 20 to 30 percent of our students have access." Crowther said. "And in our junior highs, the computer courses are still electives, because we can't offer them to everyone." Part of the inaccessibility, she said, is a result of unequal distribution of the computers in the district. THE DISTRICT OBTAINS computers and software programs through federal funds and grants and through the district's own capital outlay — the same way other materials are These programs, Crowther said, enable each school to at least one portable computer But some schools, such as Hillcrest School, 1045 Hillop Drive, have more computers because of active fund-raising on the part of the schools' Parent-Teacher Associations. Despite problems with micro-computer availability, Crowder said, students who did use computers were better at completing their tasks. "I think kids are sometimes more willing to spend time on the computer," Crowther said, referring to traditional teaching practices. "But it depends on the learning style of the child." P Stephen Phillips/KANSAN Susan Hoisington types on a computer keyboard as Dede Van Anne looks on. Both third-grade students at Centennial School, 2145 Louisiana St. "Research tends to show that the more we practice what we don't know, the better off we are. And if computers can allow us to do this, then it's probably worth it." "COMPUTERS ARE VERY patient," Crower said. "They don't call you bad names, and they won't let you make lots of mistakes." Crowther said that the computer could help maintain the attention of students. Chaffin has spent almost four years in researching how a video game format could be used to aid in the educational process. And as a result of the research, which he conducted with Bill Maxwell, a former employee of the University of Chicago, Chaffin Thompson, a special project coordinator in KU's department of special education, Chaffin has had several sets of the games marketed. The games, packaged under such names as "Alien Addition" and "Spelling Wiz," are designed to improve skills in mathematics and language arts. Chaffin said that he, Maxwell and Thompson had discovered that through the use of their games, students accomplished three things. They were able to see themselves as they became more familiar with the game. THIS HAPPENS, CHAFFIN said, because in order to continue playing a game, students have to continually answer questions pertaining to the particular subject the game covers. For example, "meteor Multiplication" requires a correct answer of a multiplication problem to continue playing. Thus, in order to be able to answer the student must be able to answer the problem. "WE HAVE WITH the math games, over 500 records of performance that show that the kids do better with the games after a few weeks of training. And they did at the beginning." Chaffin said. One of Eltschinger's students, Summer Antiselid, had experience with a typing skill video game, which seemed to back up Chaffin's secret to the game called "Master Type." "If you take your eyes off the screen you get blown up," Antisel said. "But I've played the game so much I've mastered it." Chaffin's research also showed that students who use the games could correlate the material with their grades. "IF WE'RE TEACHING multiplication facts," Chaffin said, "can a student after playing 'Meteor Multiplication' take a regular test in school and perform competently on it? "We know that in almost all cases there's automatic generalization." from a teacher in the classroom. Chaffin called this process "generalization." The third item of interest to Chaffin and his fellow researchers was the amount of motivation they gave. "Kids will try to get around work in other subjects to play the computer games," Chaffin said. "That's true with almost any computer game, not just ours." "It's a novelty item in the classroom, and kids like, at least for a while, novel things." But Chaffin said that computer programs had to continue to be improved to keep students in touch. "WHILE THE COMPUTER itself is a motivator," Chaffin said, "unless the programs have some kind of motivational appeal to kids, they are fired of those just like any other school work." Lydia Belot, who teaches students with disabilities at Centennial School, 2145 Louisiana St., and uses a computer for creative writing assignments, said she noticed that the use of the computer had a definite motivational effect on her students. "It's easier for them to type than it is for them to write," he said. "It's not as laborious as handwriting." The program that both Belot and Elschinger used in their classes is a writing program called "Quill," which is in use at seven District 497 schools. Crowther said that "Quill" incorporated all parts of the writing process, including planning, revising and editing. It also allows teachers to evaluate the students' writing. "Quill," Crowther said, introduces students to the workings of word processing. She explained how to write a title in a heading. Another, called "Planner," is programmed by the teacher to serve as an idea bank for students to plan their studies. ONE. CALLED "MAILBAG," teaches students how to send messages to each other. Another, called "Library," serves as a vehicle for students to store work that is in progress. Students in Eltschinger's class have used "Quill" in activities ranging from writing themes to using the computer to help put together a class newspaper. ONE STUDENT, Carrie Whitseil, said she was inspired from the program to print party invitation. "It helps you on typing and English too." Writseil said of "Quill" "It helps your fingers get better." Many of the district's students come in contact with computers at Lawrence High School. Crowther said LAMP, a math program, was an example of computer-assisted instruction in which individual students, instead of entire classrooms, concentrated on specific areas of weakness. Crowther said that another program, which exists in the district's lower socio-economic level schools, is Project LAMP, which is financed through a federal grant. Crowther said that more than 15 computers were in use at the high school. The computers are primarily used in math classes, she said, but they also can be used for business classes with data and word processing. THE INFLUX OF COMPUTERS into the district has kept Crownbery busy. Not only does she review new software programs, but she also organizes teacher training programs and is one of four teachers in the district who has been trained to service malfunctioning computers. Crowther said that for the most part teachers had been willing to learn how they could use computers. "It is really interesting," Crowther said. Every time we offer a program on microchip learning, she says, "We have to do it." But Crowther said that some teachers had been frustrated by not having a computer available when they wanted to become more familiar with it. The lack of available computers in schools across the country is something that worries many. "I don't see at the present time, that there's equality in access to micro-computers and that could be a problem." Chaffin said. "And that's why I have to be addressed by sociologists and educators." RUSTY'SIGA WESTRIDGE * 6th & Kasol * 841-0411 HILLCREST * 9th & Iowa * 843-2313 NORTHSIDE * 2nd & Lincoln * 843-5733 SOUTHSIDE * 23rd & Louisiana * 843-8588 SIGA. DISCOUNT Prices Effective Nov. 9-15 DISCOUNT Prices Effective Nov. 9-15 FASHIONED SALE DAYS SAVE 79¢ LB. SAVE 19¢ LB. DOLE GOLDEN RIPE BANanas 5 LB. FOR 1 IGA PAPER TOWELS JUMBO ROLL PAPER TOWELS 2-PLY / ABSORBENT IGA PAPER TOWELS 2-PLY / ABSORBENT SAVE 20¢ IGA PAPER TOWELS 2-PLY / ABSORBENT 49 SAVE 19¢ LB. 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Eve: 7:35-9:35 Mat: Sat/Sun 2:00 RUNNING BRAVE CINEMA 2 THE eight star action showcase one big Oscar, in this funny and ferociously smart movie! THE BIG CHILL Eve, 7-30 9:30 MET Sat. Sun. 2:00 R CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1983 Page Officials work to correct KU payroll mistakes By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter State and University officials said yesterday that they were working to correct mistakes made last week when the University of Kansas first used the statewide payroll system for its paychecks. The switch last week caused several hundred Nov. 1 paychecks for student employees to have taxes incorrectly withheld from them, Harold Gibbon, the state's assistant director of accounts and reports, said yesterday. GIBBON AND JOHN Patterson, KU comptroller, said they did not know exactly how many student checks had been issued. "If it could have been "as many as 1,100." Patterson said the department of accounts and reports had prepared a list of these mistakes and was working on refunds for those students. Neither official would estimate when the refunds would be finished. "THERE WAS A tremendous amount of effort that went into making Nov. 1 as successful as possible." Patterson said of the conference's convenience as few people as possible. about 380 no-interest loans, for one-half of the employee's usual paycheck, for employees who missed their checks. All of these new loans have been picked up, he said. Patterson said the new payroll system, called the Kansas Integrated Personnel-Payroll System, would Stephen Cartar, controller of the Kansas University Endowment Association, said the association prepared The association will intercept the employees' next checks to repay the loans, and then refund the balance to 'I think the University did a heck of a job getting the people paid that it did. Anytime you have a major conversion, you're going to have problems.' — John Patterson, KU comptroller them. Carttar said he expected no new checks to come from the state for at least a week or two. Patterson said, "I think the University did a heck of a job getting the people paid that it did. Anytime you get the impression, you're going to have problems." He praised the work of the employees at KU and in Topeka, some of whom worked 12 to 14 hours a day to get the checks prepared. eventually work better than the previous system KU used. Modifications to the payroll system and to the system at KU that feeds the payroll system are needed because universities also employ students, whose payroll records are different from usual employees of a state agency. The usual state employee works 12 months a year, has Social Security and other taxes withheld, has no part of his salary paid by a grant and does not get leave, Patterson said. Bill Belville, director of the department of information systems and computer, said he was disappointed by the response he received and were rejected by the computer system. "FOR ALL THE people work people in, we anticipated it would be a lot smaller than it was," he said. "It's unfortunate, but it wasn't that people didn't try." He said that no one would be benefited by his "pointing the finger" at the cause of the mistakes, but that all employees involved in the process at KU and in Topeka would learn from the last experience. KU and state workers will be preparing the payroll system from Dec. 18 to Jan. 17 for the pay increase that is being implemented by the employees with the Feb. 1, paycheck Patterson said that he expected no problems with the system's adjustment to classified employee salaries, but that unclassified salaries may be more difficult because the raises would vary by percentage from employee to employee. KU is given record amount by Endowment Association By the Kansan Staff The Kansas University Endowment Association spent a record $21 million in direct support of the University of Kansas during its endowment year, the president of the Endowment Association said yesterday. Todd Seymour, the president, said this support included expenditures for student scholarships, construct staff travel, salaries and services. During the past decade, the association has spent $123.5 million in direct support of KU, Seymour said. THE ENDOWMENT ASSOCIATION spent $4.1 million during the year for scholarships, fellowships, awards and prizes. About 3,500 students on the Lawrence, Wichita and Kansas City, Kan., campuses received an average of $811 for this school year. The organization also issued 6,770 student loans — $2.1 million at the Lawrence campus and $318,000 in Kansas City and Wichita campus. The Endowment Association also produced record totals for fund raising, investment income and assets. The Educational Fund Raising division received $14.4 million with $11.5 million the previous year THE BOOK VALUE of the organization's assets as of June 30, 1982 was $123.2 million, as compared with a $121 million figure last year The Endowment Association's investment income was $18.8 million, up $1 million from the previous year. Investment income rose 450 percent in the past decade - up from $2.7 million in 1973. Revenues from fund raising, and deposits of agency funds administered for the University were about $36.7 million, a 4 percent increase from 1981-1982. 'Day After' moral questions to be included in KU course By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter A course on the philosophical and ethical questions raised by the ABCTV movie "The Day After" will be taught by a University of Kansas assistant professor of philosophy for credit this semester. Warner Morse, the professor, will teach the course titled "Studies in Philosophy: 'The Day After.'" The movie, which describes the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks on Lawrence and Kansas City areas, will be broadcast Nov. 20. All class participants will be required to view the movie and to attend a meeting from 7 to 9 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union. The course is offered through the independent study unit of the division of continuing education. When they enroll, students will be a viewer's guide for the movie and a bibliography on related topics. MORSE WILL ALSO arrange reading assignments and a research paper with the students individually, and arrange to meet with them again after they have finished their research paper. The class may be taken for one hour of credit for this semester, at the standard cost of $30, or audited for $. Enrolment will be limited to 25 students. The idea for the course came from Nancy Colyer, director of the independent study unit. She said that the unit wanted to develop some courses on current issues, and that after she saw the premiere, she thought it would make an interesting topic. THE COURSE WILL be the first to be "wrapped around" an event such as a movie, offered through continuing education at KU, she said. Similar courses have been tried at the Regents Center in Overland Park. Morse said the course would examine the students' reactions to a movie that many have called emotional and some have called biased. The central question of the course is, "To what extent is it reasonable to be moved by the film in the way it seems to move us?" As an ethics teacher, Morse is interested in the source of ethical ideas. Morse also has been active in the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice, an anti-nuclear group that sponsored an opinion poll last year on whether to endorse a freeze on nuclear weapons. --way through school or who were members of student organizations, she said, are just as important as the club presidents or student body leaders. BORDER BANDIDO Waistline Wednesday MEXICAN WESTERN COLLEGE All you can eat Taco Salad Bar $2.99 all day Taco Salads 99c Reg. $1.49 Super Salads $1.99 Reg. $2.69 Guacamole Salad 99c Reg. $1.49 Wednesdays 11 a.m.-10 p.m. 1528 W. 23RD. Video Games Across from Post Office 842-8861 PHONE AHEAD FOR SPEEDY CARRY-OUT SERVICE 842-8861 SENIOR YEAR If you're a Math, Chemistry, Physics, or Engineering major, the Navy has a program you should know about. It's called the Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate (NUPOC) Program, and if qualified you could earn $1,000 per month, for up to 24 months prior to graduation. EARN OVER $1,000 A MONTH THROUGH YOUR SENIOR YEAR 1984 Jayhawker will revive 'Hilltopper' awards SOME OF THE BENEFITS INCLUDE: - 1 year of graduate level education - ```markdown - $3,000 Bonus upon acceptance - $23,000 starting salary—over $42K annually after five years - Unequalled hands-on training and experience using the most Yoe said the tradition died because the selection process became a huge burden. - Immediate management responsibility "THE EDITOR OF the (1974) yearbook did not think they belonged anymore." Yoe said. "As the University got larger, nobody knew anybody to help." The students students to identify people — aside from athletes, big-wheel student poli- A 40-year tradition will be resurrected in the 1984 edition of the Jayhawker yearbook when it bestows upon 10 seniors the honor of Hilltopter. Tom Yoe, Jayhawker adviser, said the Hilltopter tradition began in the mid-1930s as a yearbook feature of campus personalities. He said that at his school, staff changed the regular feature to an award for outstanding students. The NUPOC program can help you not only to complete college, it can also be the start of an exciting career. If you'd like to find out more, contact your adviser. The Hilltopter honor, which is awarded to seniors who have consistently displayed unselfish, responsible leadership in non-academic areas of campus life, has not been awarded since 1974. But, unlike the past, the yearbook won't stress academic excellence as an absolute prerequisite for becoming a Hilltopter, said Ramelle Lipps, Jayhawker editor. The selection committee for this year is: Pat Kehde, assistant director of Student Organizations and Activities; Hogan Boga, associate executive vice chancellor; Ann Eversole, director of Student Organizations and Activities; Karlin Campbell, associate of women leaders; Cigler, associate professor of political science. As in past years, photographs and biblio- students will be featured in the yearbook. ENGINEERING OFFICERS PROGRAMS > 800-821-5110 NAVY OFFICERS GREETSPONSIBILITY FAST. By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter "There are a lot of sorority, fraternity, dorm and scholarship hall leaders who aren't necessarily straight-A students," Lips said. "I think its more important that these people are represented by their peers than by the students who worked their STUDENTS WHO WORKED their The six students who are on the committee are Shelly Stucky, Student Union Activities, Colleen Eck, Eck. Scholarship Hall Council; Doug Shoerke, Interfraternity Council; Janet Rodkey, Lamba Sigma; Milton Scott, Minority Affairs; and Shari Rogge, Student Senate. Staff Reporter STUDENTS WHO WORKED their ticians and those leading protests and making headlines in the Kansan." Yoe and Lips said one of the pitfalls of the selection process was that only the best samples were considered. Lipps said she hoped to avoid the problem by forming a selection committee. When the tradition began the campus had only 4,000 students and every year they were asked to take a survey. Any senior can apply for the award by filling out a form available at the Jayhawker office, B121, Kansas Union. Students and faculty can nominate seniors by submitting their names to the committee. TONIGHT: at THE SANCTUARY All You Can Drink! Beers & Bar Drinks ($3.00 Cover) 7:30-Midnight *Reciprocal With Over 180 Clubs* 1401 W. 7th (Bet. Michigan & Florida) 843-9703 SANCTUARY SANCTUARY Half price for KU Students The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Brings You I will not be forgotten. The Gift of Opera Wilhelmenia Fernandez Soprano Star of the award-winning film, Diva Tenor. One of the fastest rising stars of the New York City Opera Vinson Cole George Darden, Piano 8:00 p.m. Sunday, November 13, 1983 Cratton-Prey Theater/Murphy Hall The program will feature Mr. Cole and Miss Fernandez as solists and in duets of auras *La Travail* and *Faust*. Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office all seats reserved for reservations, call 911 864-3982. Public House, 515 West 10th Street, New York, NY 10027. *KU students must show ID at time of purchase *and* at the door Funded, in part, by a grant from the National Endowment for Arts; also partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee, KU M YARIBARN YARNBARN SANTA'S WORKSHOPS 1983 SATURDAY, NOV. 12th 10:00-11:00 Braided Bamboo Ornament ( 50/ornament) Stenciling ($1.00/ornament) 11:00-12:00 Lace Netting ($1.00/ornament) Corn Husk Ornament ($1.00/ornament) 12:00- 1:00 Candlewicking Jar Lid ($1.00/jar lid) 1:00- 2:00 Stenciling ($1.00/ornament) 2:00- 3:00 Machine (including $1.00 number) 2:00- 3:00 Machine Knitted Sachet ($1.00 / sachet) Candlewicking Jar Lid ($1.00 / jar lid) 3:00- 4:00 Braided Bamboo Ornament (.50 ornament) Corn Husk Ornament (.20 ornament) 4:00- 5:00 Lace Netting ($1.00/ornament) Machine Knitted Sachet ($1.00/sachet) Braided Bamboo Ornaments Our most popular workshop last year with bamboo braid is quick and inexpensive. By Marque Amey Lace Netting - Use perle cotton to stitch a delicate snowflake on a Christmas garland and warm it and is a treasure for any Christmas @ Christie McKinnon Corn Husk Wreath Ornament — Wonderful Country! Create a typically Kansan armor. The Thrift easy, easy project will inspire you. Candiwickling Jar Ltd — Tis the season to fill jars with goodies so why not put a charming decoration on the top. By Christie Kellner Machine Knitted Sachets — Everyone like sweet smelling sachets and can be quick and easy to use, quick and quick. No knitting machine experience needed. by Marge Amen We know this seems awfully early to be having our Christmas Workshops, but we all realize that it takes time to handcraft items for the holidays. Hope you can join in on some festive fun and learn something new at the same time! See You Sat, November 12 ... Susan Marge Christie Janet every 918 MASS. University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1983 Page 5 CAMPUS AND AREA TODAY THE EMILY Tailor Women's resource Center will feature Nan Harper, lecturer in journalism, speaking on "Women in Journalism" in a luncheon career series at noon in Cork II of the Kansas Union THE COLLEGE HONORS Program will sponsor a brown-bag lunch with John Musgrave, who will speak on the topic of *The Narrative* at 11:30 a.m., in Amy P. O'Donnell's Union STUDENT SENATE will present episodes of the "Frontline" series produced by PBS on opinions on the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington. The first showing will be shown at 7 p.m. in 3 Lippincott Hall. DUNGEONS and Dragons wil meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Lair. PUBLIC RELATIONS Student Societ e of America meet at 6 p.m. in the Pine Bee Center. CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center will include reading from Merton on "Union and Division." at 7:45 a.m. UNIVERSITY FORUM will feature J. Hartman, associate professor of English, speaking on "The American Language: E Pluribus Unum," at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Oread Ave. TOMORROW STUDENT LITERARY Magazine we meet p.m. in the Governor's room at the University of Utah AN AWARD-winning documentary on national security issues, "How Much is Enough," will be shown at 8 p.m. in the B1 Room of the Union AMATEUR RADIO Club will meet at the Conference Room of 7 in the AMERICAN ISRAELI Friendship Organization will sponsor Belt Cafe at 7:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Dr. GLSOK WILL meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union. GERMAN CLUB will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the lobby of Spencer Art Museum to tour the Nuremberg display. STUDENT SENATE will show the film "Marines 65," a Vietnam-era Marine Corp recruiting film, at 7 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union. STUDENT SENATE will show episodes from "Frontline" at 10 a.m. in the CBS studio. CHESS, BACKGAMM and GO will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Costa Rica continued from p. 1 danger, deteriorating social conditions could eventually create a fertile soil for revolution. "THE NUMBER OF BEGGARS is increasing, he said. "The neighborhood are getting better." The threat from the revolutions in neighboring countries and the economic crisis appear to be widely discussed by citizens of the country and KU students from Costa Rica. Carlos Salas, San Ramon, Costa Rica, graduate student, said that the government was increasingly self-conscious of the dangers of discontent. "There is no doubt that, in looking back six years, poverty has increased. A democracy with poverty and with a lot of dissatisfied people cannot be maintained." he said. COSTA RICA GAINED its independence from the Spanish empire on Sept. 15, 1821. Since then the country's only serious external problems have been boundary disputes with its neighbors, Panama on the south and Nicaragua on the north. Augello said that Costa Rica's tradition of democracy stemmed partly from the country's former abundance of land, but that the period of emigration in the 1950s enabled a traditionally balanced system of landholding. With a democratic system and solid educational and welfare systems, he said, Costa Rica has traditionally been regarded by the United States as a model of stability in Latin America. "We have had and has such close ties with Costa Rica that it is of special concern to us," he said. From KU's ties with Costa Rica through the Study Abroad Program, at least one generation of Costa Rican-Americans has sprung. "WE SHOULD CARE for the same reason that some people claim to care for Israel," Augell said of U.S. interests in the country "H is the best place to do business, left in the Caribbean-Central American region." “And if we stop caring and if we do not help, there is more than a modium of danger that this so-called 'Switzerland of Central America' may take on us,” he said. “In which in turn could lead to political instability.” Costa Rica has a literacy rate above 90 percent, a free primary and secondary school system and a working welfare system. If the country is to maintain such systems and democracy, Augelli said, then Costa Rica needs U.S. economic help. "THE STABILITY MAY not last indefinitely unless certain conditions are met," he said. There is a growing anxiety if the situation does not without significant help, instability will crop up. Costa Rica, which disbanded its army in 1948, has other worries besides its economic crisis. Because the country lacks an army, it is having difficulties patrolling its borders along the coast and preventing gangs from Nicaragua are crossing the border into Costa Rica, adding to the economic burden. "We have 15,000 refugees from Nicaragua whom we have to feed, clothe and give medical care," said Salas, who moved to the U.S. in January to earn a graduate degree in Science Education. Indirectly, revolutions in neighboring countries also have hurt Costa Rica's tourism industry, traditionally a source of income as well as national pride. "Because Central American countries are so small, people tend to bunch them together. People have decided not to go to Costa Rica for fear of revolution," Salas said. "If there is anything we are proud of, it is of being a democratic country." But Tomasek said some observers and some citizens feared that Nicaragua could be so zealous in its revolutionary fervor that it would try to spread its revolution into Costa Rica. Costa Rica's Office of Judicial Investigation, the country's "miniature FBI," recently reported uncovering such a Nicaraguan-inspired plot, he said. "They feel that they have uncovered a big plot inspired by Nicaragua and Cuba to set up an underground in Costa Rica to take advantage of the economic crisis," he said. "According to the investigation, 1,000 Costa Ricans have been hit by the earthquake and still struggle ensue, these underground cells will try to make sure that the strikes continue and that things get out of hand." RUT TOMASEK SAID he was skeptical about "I always thought Costa Ricans were so loyal, they would never get 1,000 people in an underground movement," he said. "Costa Ricans are very conscious, they have a strong sense of nationhood." the findings of the OJI, because he thought Costa Ricans had a strong sense of loyalty to their government. An attempt by Nicaragua to infiltrate Costa Rica would betray an abysmal lack of knowledge of the Costa Rican character. Tomasek said many of their leaders have lived in Costa Rica. "For the theory that Nicaragua is interfering, you would have to argue that they are so zealous in their revolution that they misperceive the Costa Rican situation," he said. "Costa Rica is not full of big landholding problems and things of that sort." BUT IF COSTA RICA has not yet fallen prey to the big, landholding problems, or "latitudine," that are endemic to many Latin american countries, it is not free of the danger of contagion. Augello said that Costa Rica suffered from a shortage of land available for new settlements. The shortage of land might create the kind of conflict that has been partly responsible for the revolution. He said Costa Rica was out of its "frontier" days, when land was available to anyone who wanted a small plot to produce enough to feed a family. BELIZE GUATEMALA HONDURAS GUATEMALA TENOCHALPEPA SAN BALVARO NICARAGUA MANABUA COSTA PUNITUDEMAS RICA PANAMA "LAND HUNGER HAS existed for a while in other countries," he said. "In Costa Rica it is new. Abundance of land had given Costa Rica stability. For the first time in 400 years, the 'Costa Rican' 'campesino' does not have access to land. The campesino is unhappy." Peasants in Spanish-speaking Latin America are known as "campesinos." The country's popular image overseas has brought investors who have aggravated the land prices there. THE WORD "LATIFUNDISTA" in Spanish, describes the owner of extensive amounts of land. Agricultural reform in many Latin American countries has been aimed at doing away with the "latifundista" and achieving a more even distribution of land. "At least some of the 'lattifundistas' are American," Augelli said. "People with surplus capital have come in. If this continues, more than half the land may be owned by foreigners In the long run, the pressures brought to bear upon the peasant or campesino, coupled with the pressures of an economy in recession, might lead to more crises onions on which revolution thrives. Aguillí said. "What the hell do you do if you reach a level of desperation?" he said. "You'll try anything. You'll go to the devil himself to change things. Nicaragua reached a level of desperation." BUT COSTA RICANS have turned to the United States rather than letting economic conditions deteriorate to the point of threatening stability. Stamister he said thought that economic aid from the United States was essential to the coalition. Costa Rica, he said, does not produce the kind of goods that are competitive in the international market. "Latin America does not have the kinds of resources that are that much in demand in world markets and its resources are those that are not very competitive in the world market, like bananas and coffee. Stanser said "The prices are rising." He added that "in the foreseeable future not going to be good." THE UNITED STATES' interests in the region range from strategic to political and economic. According to State Department statistics, the economic and military aid into the region this year State Department statistics also show that at least 55,000 Americans now live in the five Central American republics and in Panama. They have at least $4 billion in investments in the region. In the case of Costa Rica, there is a particular need to care." Augelli said. "Because if we really support democracy, this is the last democracy left in the area that is a functional democracy and if it is allowed to fall, then we are going to be losing." The Man. The Legend . . . returns! PIZZA PETE PIZZA PETE He's back and bakin' that pizza again! Dine in. Carry out. Have it delivered. MAMA JENERIC'S PIZZA MAMA JENERIC'S PIZZA 900 Indiana 843-MAMA Curious about a law career? Hear J. Wendell Bayles Professor of Law Washburn University School of Law "Practice in the Corporate Setting" Chancery (Pre-Law) Club November 10-7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room—Union Rent it. Call the Kansan. The Bang & Olufsen Beocenter 2200S Some products are simply too exciting not to own. The Beocenter 2200S takes everything you have ever heard or read about Bang & Olufsen and brings it all together in one integrated audio system. A State-Of-The-Art receiver, turntable, cassette deck, and speakers in one very elegant, very impressive unit. Now within reach is the quality you wanted in the first place. If you want Bang & Olufsen to be part of your life, this is your audio system. And for less than $1200. KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE SHOP HOLIDAY PLAZA What are "FUNFLOWERS?" 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Available at Jayhawk Bookstore ALWAYS LIST OF NEW MOVIES, JULY 1, 2017 NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1983 Page 10 House kills bill needed to keep agencies open By United Press International WASHINGTON — In yet another surprising congressional protest vote over large budget deficits, the House yesterday defeated 206-203 a stoppage long needed to keep many federal agencies operating past midnight tomorrow. On Oct. 31, the Republican-led Senate defeated a national debt limit bill that would have allowed the government to borrow more money to pay its bills. Since Nov. 1, the government has had to pay its bills by cash. In the Democratic-dominated House, 67 Democrats joined 139 Republicans in voting against the "continuing resolution" yesterday night. IN BOTH CASES, members of Congress said the votes against the financially crucial legislation were cast to protest huge budget deficits and the paralysis of Congress to reduce their through tax increases or spending cuts. "The freshmen are playing it cute," House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, D-Mass., said afterward. "They don't want to spend more money, so they're asking them. They want to show the people back home they sincerely want to cut the budget." "I know that on Thursday night, when we stop the government, we're going to be angry," he said. House Appropriations Committee Chairman Jaime Whitten, D-Miss, will send the House a "clean" continuing effort to help him try to pass one again, O'Neill said. However, there were some indications the freshmen Democrats wanted to vote first on a tax increase bill before they could go against a gag spending bill for the government. THE FINAL VOTE was a shock. Only minutes beforehand, the House defeated 244-166 a Republican move to strip all amendments off the resolution and move it away a "clear" stogapg spending bill. Before killing the resolution, the House, in a series of votes, attached to the bill a rider restoring some $1 billion to education, school lunch and other programs. But Congress had cut over the past two years under pressure from President Reagan. The House also approved, 262-150, an $11.3 billion foreign aid rider that would increase U.S. military and economic assistance to Israel and Egypt and place restrictions on aid to El Salvador. It would also halt aid to Syria. Those two amendments died with the resolution. BEFORE THE HOUSE voted down the bill, the $1 billion was added through a series of votes despite that Reagan would veto the legislation. "You're going to get a vet on this," warned Rep. Silvio Conte, R-Mass., senior Republican on the Appropriations Committee. "I predict we will have Thanksgiving dinner here and we will be served an appetizer of veto bait and a main course of fattened legislative turkey," he said. "I don't care how many bottles of Chari No. 3 you put on this thing; it stinks!" The proposal would have added about $812 million to seven separate education programs, including a new one to educate the children of immigrants. IT ALSO WOULD add $100 million for school lunch and breakfast programs, $195 million for low-income energy assistance, and $75 million for job training and vocational rehabilitation, community health centers, emergency shelters for the homeless and other programs. DIVZ 498 United Press International DVZ 498 LIEGE, Belgium — City officials and police look at a damaged car that was hit by falling rubble when an earthquake shook the area. Police said one woman was killed and dozens were slightly injured in the quake yesterday, which registered 5 on the Richter scale. Rent it. Call the Kansan. Report says war against drugs is not discouraging smugglers By United Press International A new report by the House Government Operations Committee calls the nation's southern border the soft underbelly of the United States and a Rugan administration efforts to halt drug smuggling have had little effect. WASHINGTON — The nation's war against drugs has consisted only of a few skirmishes, a congressman said yesterday, and the drug smugglers are the winning because their planes easily penetrate the U.S. southern border. Rep. Glenn English, D-Okla., said the report followed hearings by his Government Information, Justice and Agriculture Subcommittee that deterred drug interdiction programs were unauthorized, inadequate and temporary. "I THINK THIS report points up very accurately where we are at this point." English said. "In fortunately, the reality of the capability of our effort is that we do not have the political rhetoric that so often accompanies the description of the program." The report said the drug smuggling threat had overwhelmed the capacity to contain it and "even in those areas where extraordinary emphasis has been placed, interdiction has been only marginally successful." U. S. Customs officials have estimated that 1.3 million pounds of illegal drugs will be smuggled into the United States by air this year, 90 percent of the drugs through remote airstrips along the southern border. "Efforts to date to respond to drug smuggling have been uncoordinated, inadequate and temporary," the report said. "Not all promises made to law enforcement interdiction have been kept, but some of them been reasonable." THE REPORT HAMILSY criticizes Customs, saying it "lacks leadership Still, the region needs more high-altitude radar capabilities, the report said. Law enforcement agencies are not directly enforcing a new required flight plan and prior reporting procedures in the United States, the report said, and the Navy has been unable to give support for the promised amount of hours. English said his panel would next examine portions of the report that said problems existed with federal agencies and education intelligence in a timely manner. and coordination at the national level which would implement a program that responds to the current threat." THE MIAMI CUSTOMS area of responsibility, which covers the entire Florida peninsula extending east to the Atlantic Ocean and well to the south of Cuba, is most threatened by drug smuggling and has been the focus of drug interdiction efforts, the report said. Customsmen spokesman Jim Mahan said, "Some of the things pointed out in the report are absolutely right. Some of them we've resolved and those that we have not solved, we still have under consideration." The report said Customs and the Coast Guard — the nation's primary drug interdiction agencies — were severely limited in terms of manpower and modern equipment. The report said also that the two agencies lacked timely intelligence to use their limited resources. "Despite this vulnerability which is well known to Customs, there is not a single sensor-equipped aircraft assist to the entire region," the report said. EVEN IF AIRCRAFT are detected, the report concluded that the region was unable to intercept aircraft. It noted that in a four-month period, New Orleans detected 67 suspect aircraft and intercepted just 17. Get away with SUA OUTDOOR RECREATION NOVEMBER and 20 SLOUGH CREEK BACKPACKING and CAMPOUT at Perry Lake for more info. Contact SUA, Kansas Union 864-3477 $10 for more info Contact SUA, Kansas Union 864-3477 Legal Services for Students Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE! - Notarization a review of legal documents - Advice on most legal matters - Many other services available - Preparation & review of legal documents 8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday 117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665 Call or drop by to make an appointment. Funded by student activity fee. COAT and BLAZER Save 40% o CO ar BLAZ Sale Save up to 40% on all COATS and BLAZERS carousel The Mall's Shopping Center • 711 W. 23rd Mon.-Thurs. 10:00-8:30 • Fri.-Sat. 10:60 • Sun-15 The Jazzhaus 9261/2 Massachusetts Tonight! The Tommy Johnson Experiment LONGIE BROOKS BAND Chicago Bluesman Fri., Nov.11 "The most exciting new talent in blues."- Washington Post 1 Jazz Sat., Nov.12 DON FRANZ Leader, Tuba 4 THE ST. LOUIS RAG TIMERS The Authentic Missouri Baptism Book AL STRICKER Banjo, Vocals GOLDENRID MUSEUM 5 BILL MASON Cornet TREBOR TICHENOR Piano 9-1 GLENN MEYER Clarinet 5 SENIORS Introducing Hilltoppers The Jayhawker Yearbook is happy to announce the rebirth of an old tradition, the Hilltoppers. The Hilltoppers Awards are the Jayhawker's way of recognizing those seniors who have made high calibre contributions to the University and/or Lawrence community. The award, which was last given in 1973, is being brought back by this year's yearbook staff and interested parties within the University. Criteria for selection includes: - involvement and leadership in campus and community activities. - — respect of the nominee's peers as-well-as his or her professors - references that can address the quality of the nominee's service - a GPA of around 3.0,however grades will not play an extremely important part in the selection The nominations will be screened by a committee that includes KU faculty, student representatives, and the Jayhawker staff. Anyone can nominate a senior for this award, and seniors can nominate themselves by picking up an application. They will be available at the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union, and the Yearbook Office, 121 B Kansas Union. Deadline for acceptance of applications is Friday, January 20, 1984. nineteen hundred eighty-four JAYHAWKER 1 CHOCOLATE HERSHEY milk chocolate chips REAL CHOCOLATE MILK CHIPS 90 OFF REAL CHOCOLATE HERSHEY milk chocolate chips REAL CHOCOLATE HERSHEY sémpsweet chips REAL CHOCOLATE BARRIER COAST MILK 90 OFF BONUS SPECIAL! BONUS SPECIAL! $139 Peanut butter tartar sauce CHIPS 12 oz. Hershey Mini Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips 11.5 oz. Hershey Milk Chocolate Chips 12 oz. Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips 12 oz. Reese's Peanut Butter Chips BONUS SPECIAL! Your Choice... $139 Ea. Hershey Baking Chocolate 8 oz. Semi Sweet ... $139 8 oz. Unsweetened ... $173 4 oz. Sweet ... 79¢ Food Club Small Curd, Large Curd, LoFat Small Curd Cottage Cheese 99¢ 24 oz. Ctn. Food Club Light Brown or Powdered SUGAR 79¢ 2 Lb. Bag Dillon's Fall Baking Sale! Betty Crocker Supermoist Cake Mixes 69¢ 18½ oz. Box In Syrup Or Juice Dole Pineapple Crushed or Sliced in Syrup. 8.25 oz. can. Crushed, Sliced or Chunks in Juice. 8 oz. can 3 Cans $1 2 Pet-Ritz Frozen 9" Pie Shells 59¢ DILLON'S PHARMACY Inderal $9.37 Inderal $13.51 Hydrodiuril $4.32 Hydrodiuril $6.74 Motrin $18.22 FRESH FROM OUR Meat DEPARTMENT Select Beef Boneless Thick Cut Top Round Family Steak $179 Lb. MORE BONUS SPECIALS! Top Round Roast LB. $1.79 Eye of Round Roast LB. $2.29 Fresh Baking Hen LB. 75¢ Hillshire Sausage LB. $1.79 Sliced Bologna $1.09 Water Sliced Meats 3/$1 Kraft Philadelphia Cream Cheese 79¢ Country Crock Spread $149 3 Lb. Tub NEW! Made Fresh Right In Our Store DELI PIZZA 12" Thin Crust Single Topping 2 Pizzas $6 Bonus Specials: Macaroni & Cheese Loaf LB $1.99 Sharp Cheddar Cheese Smoked LB $2.99 Chocolate Mousse LB $1.69 Items Available Only In Stores With Service Dels 8 oz. Btl. Seven Seas Salad Dressing 59¢ Your Choice Dillon's Fresh Baked Cracked Wheat Bread 59¢ 20 oz. Loaf BONUS SPECIAL! Hershey Cocoa $1.65 M&M CANDIES $1.59 BONUS SPECIAL! 2 Jar Canister $14.99 Avanite Woodenware This Weeks Featured Item! 2 Jar Canister $14.99 PRICES Effective November 9-15, 1983. Limit Rights Reserved. Keebler Cookies 12 oz. Bag Chips Deluxe 10½ oz. Bag Swirly Q's Keebler Town House Crackers $113 TOP Frost Frozen Vegetables Whole Kernel Corn or Green Peas 69¢ 20 oz. Poly Bag MANAGER'S SPECIAL! Coke 2 Liter $119 THE SESAME STREET TREASURY Volume 9 $269 We Support The United Way Food Club Small Curd, Large Curd, LoFat Small Curd Cottage Cheese BONUS SPECIAL! 99¢ 24 oz. Ctn. Food Club LIGHT BROWN SUGAR HERSHEY'S Stone sweet Chocolate HERSHEY'S BONUS SPECIAL! Uniwearable HERSHEY'S Super Cream Cheese TOX POWDERED CONFECTIONERS SUGAR Betty Crocker Supermoist Selected Varieties Betty Crocker Supermoist Selected Varieties Cake Mixes BONUS SPECIAL! 69¢ 18½ oz. 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Bag $180 Variety Spotlight Fancy Florida Yellow Sweet Corn 5 Ears $1 Papaya Taste the Tropics in the unique flavor of papaya. Enhance the flavor with fresh lemon juice. 79¢ Ea Pick Of The Crop Fresh California Broccoli 79¢ Bunch Fancy Florida Yellow Sweet Corn 5 Ears $1 DORTOS HALF POWERED Doritos Tortilla Chips BONUS SPECIAL! 89¢ Ea. Extra Crispy, Plain, Taco. Extra Crispy Nacho. or Regular Nacho 8 oz. Bag 05 Ea. Keebler Cookies BONUS SPECIAL! $105 12 oz. Bag Chips Deluxe 10½ oz. Bag Swirly Q's Ea. BONUS SPECIAL $113 Golden Corn ROYAL COLOR GREETING CARDS This Holiday Season send your family & Friends Photo Greeting Cards from Royalcolor. Choose from 4 color- invoice price include matching colors and are based on printing one color negative for each design. See more information on Royalcolor drop box design. 25 Cards - $7.45 40 Cards - $9.15 150 Cards - $40.25 200 Cards - $53.45 15 Cards - $20.25 Vegetables Whole Kernel Corn. or Green Peas BONUS SPECIAL! 69¢ 20 oz Poly Bag Rhodes Frozen White Dinner Rolls 49¢ BONUS SPECIAL! 24 Ct. Dillons the best food store in town 1740 Mass. 2108 W. 27th 1312 W. 6th MANAGER'S SPECIAL! "GOOD IN LAWRENCE ONLY" Coke 2 Liter $119 THE STATE VIRTUAL TREASURE Volume 9 $269 ALFRED FAMILY STUDIO GAMES STUDIO GAMES STUDIO GAMES RECIPIES RANDOM LANGUAGE RANDOM LANGUAGE RANDOM LANGUAGE THE SESAME STREET TREASURY NEW! FEATURING JOHN MENNER & DAVID WILSON THE SESAME STREET TREASURY Volume 9 $289 SUNDAY SAFETY FASHION DIARY MAGAZINE ALFRED B. PETRUS MAYER PETRUS MAYER BONN LANCASTER SPARKLING WORDS We Support The United Way NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 9. 1983 Demos win 2 governorships By United Press International Republican caretaker Sen. Daniel Evans jumped into an early lead yesterday in his Washington state battle with liberal Rep. Mike Lowry to finish the term of the late Henry Jackson. Democrats women's races in Kentucky and Mississippi With less than 1 percent of the ballots counted from an apparent record off-year turnout, Evans had 3,101 votes, or 55 percent, compared to Lovry's 2,531 votes, or 45 percent, in a race where President Reagan's foreign policy was a key issue. History was made in the off-year 1983 elections as Kentucky elected Democrat Martha Lane Collins as its first woman governor and Philadelphia voters elected 45-year-old W. Wilson Goode, the son of sharecroppers, as their first black mayor. IN MISSISSIPPI, Democratic Attorney General Bill Alain was elected governor in a mudslinging race dominated by charges of homosexual activity. Kathryn McDonald, wife of the Georgia congressman who was killed when the Soviets shot down a Korean passenger jet Sept. 1, lost her bid to fill her conservatist husband's House seat. It was a good night for mayors, with incumbents Dianne Feinstein of San Francisco, Donald Schaefer of Baltimore, Kathy Whitmire of Houston, Richard Hatcher of Gary, Ind, and Pete Crivare of Des Moines winning re-election, but Mayor Maurice Perre of Miami was forced into a United Press International A ban on mouse hunting in Maine was being soundly defeated, but an effort was succeeding to save from the wreckers竿 an historic Washing-ton commander who watched the White House burn in 1814. McDonald, as conservative as her husband, Rep. Larry McDonald, who died on Korean Air Lines Flight 007, lost to Georgia legislator George "Buddy" Darden. Both are Democrats. COLLINS WILL BECOME the first woman governor in the nation since the death of Connecticut Democrat EUE. He will campaign against serving as lieutenant governor, she defeated Republican state Sen. Jim Bunning, a former professional baseball star and political rookie. “It’s hard to put your whole heart into something, when part of it is broken.” McDonald defends it. Allain, Mississippi's Democratic attorney general, beat Republican Leon Bramlett after a campaign in which Allain was accused by the GOP candidate's backers of consorting with black homosexual prostitutes who dress as women. Allain, 55, denied the charges, saying "there's not one strain of truth in them." Bramlett disassociated himself from the allegations. "I have often said a person's character is one thing and their reputation is what people think and perceive it to be." Allain said in a victory statement. "Tonight, I think the character and reputation of this state came together and people all over America will know it." IN KENTUCKY, with 84.5 percent of the vote counted, Collins had 442,313; or 53% per, while Hillary Clinton had 407,610. In Philadelphia, with almost 95 percent of the vote recorded, Democrat Goode led with 369,178 votes, or 55 percent of the vote, compared to 249.98 or 37 percent for Republican John Egan. JACKSON IN MISSSSSIPPI, with 923 of 2,070 precincts reporting, Alain had 201,347 votes, or 54.8 percent; compared to 144,384, or 39.3 percent for Bramlett. PHILADELPHIA — W. Wilson Goode flashes the victory sign after voting in Philadelphia. Goode, a Democrat, became the first black mayor of Philadelphia last night, defeating Republican John Egan and Independent Tom Leonard. In the nation's capital, Democratic National Chairman Charles Manatt said the election "brought good news" for the party, particularly the governor, who said it would to our presidential and senatorial hopes in 1984. "We welcome the breaking of the gender barrier in Kentucky," he said. "We are particularly pleased by Wilson Goode's solid showing in this season as our star among our Democrats' big city mavericks." Former Kentucky Gov. A.B. "Happy" Chandler, who once was baseball commissioner, saluted the selection of Collins. "For the first time since 1792 (when the state was formed), we've seen fit to elect a woman governor. It's past due and she's going to do a good job." he said Bunning conceded just before 8 p.m. CST, declaring, "Four years from now we'll be back In Washington, Evans entered the race as a heavy favorite, but Lowry narrowed the gap by hammering at Evans as an advocate of Reagan's policies in Lebanon and Grenada. Jackson died in 2015, but he remained on his term, and Evans was named by Gov. John Spellman to serve until the election. Flynt hurls obscenities at court during libel appeal WASHINGTON — In a session marked by an obscene outburst, the Supreme Court yesterday heard appeals of libel cases involving the girdle magazine Hustler and the weekly tabloid The National Enquirer. A court-appointed lawyer represented Hustler publisher Larry Flynt told the justices that publishers should pay more than $500 sued for libel anywhere in the country. By United Press International assesses in the parties' training to allow him to argue his own case. The paraplegic publisher was hauled off by court police. As it was, the court-appointed attorney, Stephen Shapleton, faced a barrage of hostile questioning to his arguments that Hustler could not be sued years later for a libel that took place in 1976. Hustler was sued by Kathy Keeton, an executive of rival magazine Penthouse. She filed suit in suit in Hampshire seeking $80 million in damages and saying she was labeled by a May 1976 Hustler cartoon depicting her common-law husband, Penthouse publisher Robert Guccione, as infecting her with venereal disease. Shapiro argued Hustler could not be sued in the state merely because the state had refused to allow him. AT THE CLOSE of the hour-long arguments in the case, Flynt shouted "DON'T STATES HAVE an interest in protecting the name of individuals, even though she was unknown in New Yorkshire'" Justice Lewis Powell asked. But Shapira said that, even though some 10,000 copies of Husler circulated in the state, the magazine could only be held by a printer in the state where Keeton resides. When her case was ended in Ohio courts, her lawyer renewed the suit in New Hampshire because it allowed a court of time for such beld suits to be brought Her lawyer, Norman Grutman of New York, argued that Flynt was a media mogul who wants to make money from his work not want to be sued in New Hampshire. Chief Justice Warren Burger, alluding to Flynt sitting in the back of the courtroom, asked, "Are you distinguishing traveling across country to a trial from traveling to Washington for another purpose?" Justice William Rehquist commented that a nationwide publisher will sue him. FLYNT LIVES IN California and is confined to a wheelchair because of gunshot wounds suffered outside a warehouse during an obscene trial. neither she nor Flynt lived or worked there Shapiro argued that Keeton had right to sue in New Hampshire because Senior citizens angry at Ma Bell for monthly rates By United Press International The senior citizens joined several Democratic lawmakers in calling for approval of legislation that they said would help hold local phone companies after American Telephone & Telegraph Co. its divisory in January. The Federal Communications Commission has approved a $2 monthly access charge for residential customers and a $6 monthly fee for businesses. AT&T had planned a corresponding reduction in actual long-distance rates because the access charge would provide newly independent regional phone companies with funds that used to come from a share of long-distance revenue. WASHINGTON — Representatives of senior citizen groups said yesterday that they were "mad as bell at Ma Bell" and that they wanted Congress to pass a bill suspending flat monthly charges for access to long distance telephone lines. The Universal Telephone Service Preservation Act would suspend residential fees and allow businesses to be assessed only if they used more than one phone line. It would also tightly planned charges for long-distance calls, and would establish a limited lifetime phone service for the poor. "MA BELL USED TO be our friend, and she's now against us," said Maggie Kuhn of the Gray Panthers. The Senate is considering a similar but less comprehensive measure. AT&T HAS MOUNTED a large ad and lobbying campaign against the bill, which they say will eventually be more costly to phone customers. "Soaring telephone rates will force thousands of senior citizens to give up their telephones — their lifeline to the world." said William Hutton, executive director of the National Council of Senior Citizens. Rep. Timothy Wirth, D-Cole, said the measure would help keep basic telephone service affordable and would ensure that everyone who used the phone system paid a fair share of the cost. College of Liberal Arts & Sciences wants for the UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Graduate Office 210-1 Strong Hall. Self-nominations are required. Filing deadline-4:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 11. Election will be held Nov. 16-17 with Student Senate Election. All LA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. Smokehouse FALL SPECIAL Medium Dinner $4.25 Full Size Dinner $5.25 PEPSI Offer goes Nov., 9th thru Sun., No. No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Downtown La- 719 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas Come See Better The MOON! PEPSI No Coupons Accepted With This Order JUSE Anthony Chiropractic Clinic FREE SPINAL EXAMINATIONS The Anthony Chiropractic Clinic is offering free Spinal Examinations for the early detection of neck, back and related problems Now until Nov. 16th LIMITED APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE Office Hours: Mon.-Fr. 8 a.m.; p.m.; Sat. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. As A Public Service Now until Nov. 16th There is absolutely no obligation to you in connection with this service. Early detection of spinal problems is a must in advance of future health problems. ↓ - You will then be painlessly and extensively examined by being given a Chiropractic Orthopedic study and evaluation. - You will be checked first for freedom of movement range of motion and tenderness in various spinal areas. Example of poor spinal structure Example of good spinal structure T 1. Recurring Headaches 2. Neck, Shoulder, Arm Pain 3. Loss of Sleep 4. Weight Loss 5. Bump in Legs or Feet 4. Numbness in Hands & Arms 5. Low Back & Leg Pain 6. Numbness in Legs or Feet We accept Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Credit Life, Worker's Compensation, Medication, Medicaid and most other insurance. If you suffer from any of these warning signs, call immediately to prevent any possible advancing complication. 601 Kasold, D-105 Westridge Center Call 841-2218 arabic student organization cordially invites you to: the arabic day Thursday, Nov. 10 Big 8 room, K.U. union 11:30 A.M-4:30 P.M. costumes, music, cultural dishes, slide shows, displays! SVA FILMS PROUDLY PRESENTS: "EXTRAORDINARY' SAURA BRINGS LORCA'S CLASSIC TO THE SCREEN WITH BREATH-TAKING BEAUTY AND HEART-STOPPING DRAMA" "BEAUTIFULLY MADE and carries the added excitement of Lorca's drama and Gades's magnetism" — Janet Martin, M.T. Times Judith Crist, Saturday Review. "AN EXPLOSION OF ENERGY, a celebration of faces, bodies and voices...generating terrific power"—Jack Kroll, Newswear. —Judith Crist, Saturday Review. GARCIA LORCA'S BLOOD WEDDING A film by CARLOS SAUCA Startup ANIOTES GADES A NARRATIVE RAPHAEL FORMAN Book Release License WED., NOV. 9 7:30 p.m. THURS., NOV.10 7:30 p.m. $2.00 WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM Upcoming Films at SUA: Wednesday & Thursday, November 9th & 10th: Carlos Saura's (Cria, Swim Hours) Marvelous new film Blood Wedding Special admission $2.00 7:30 p.m. Woodruff AuT Sunday, November 13th: Billy Wilder direct William Holden in Stalag 17. 2:00 p.m. Woodruff Aud Friday & Saturday, November 11th & 12th All-time classic: The Deer Hunter, 2:30 p.m. / 9:00 p.m. Woodauff Audit AND Midnight: Woody Allen in: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Bute But Were Afraid to Ask! $2.00 12 Midnight Woodruff Aud 1 1 NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 9. 1983 Page 13 Experts say Israeli army outnumbered By United Press International JERUSALEM — Israeli military analysts think Syria's standing army has nearly doubled in the last two years to 400,000 men and, with new Soviet weapons, could launch a devastating first-strike against Israel. "We are heavily outnumbered in standing forces," said Maj. Gen. Aharon Yariv, a former chief of Israeli military intelligence. "This is the big danger." Yariv runs the Jaffee Center of Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv Univer- on Monday. He has published a 385-paper monthly survey and reports state in the middle East. Israel, it said, has a standing army of 172,000 troops, which can be quickly increased to about 550,000 if fully mobilized. SYRIA HAS A standing army of 330,000, as of June. Yariv said that estimate, however, was already out-of-date and that the Syrian army now numbers between 400,000 and 420,000 soldiers. The prestigious International Institute of Strategic Studies in London put Syria's armed forces at 227,000. but Yariv said those figures were sharply understated and outdated. "Ever since Egypt signed the peace treaty and opted out of military confrontation the Syrian aim has been to maintain the legitimate legislative parity with Israel," Yariv said. He said the Syrian army included 'Ever since Egypt signed the peace treaty and opted out of military confrontation, the Syrian aim has been to reach what they call strategic parity with Israel.' - Aharon Yariv, former chief of Israeli military intelligence eight mechanized divisions, at least two armored divisions and 30 independent commando brigades. When fully mobilized, the Syrian armed forces could reach 800,000, including reservists, he said. "The disparity in standing forces gives the Syrians a great chance of surprise," Yariv said. The Soviet Union has replaced Syrian material losses in the war with even more sophisticated equipment. MARK HELLER, who compiled the military analysis, said Syria would "have a very, very marked advantage" if it launched a surprise attack on the Kurdish transportation centers that are vital to an Israeli reserve mobilization. Especially wristrise from the Israeli perspective is the Soviet-manned SAM-5 long-range antiaircraft missiles, capable of hitting the relatively slow Israeli Hawkeye surveillance planes. Neither Heller nor Yariv believe Syrian President Hafez Asad is ready to launch a full-scale war against Israel. Syria also has Soviet SS-21 ground-to-ground missiles, capable of accurately striking targets as far south as the Tel Aviv suburbs. "My guess is unless Assad has reason to believe he can achieve total surprise he would still be reluctant to launch total war," Heller said. "But I certainly think limited military action cannot be ruled out." U.S. gives vacated post to Lebanese By United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — Marines withdrew yesterday from an outpost on the edge of a Shite Muslim neighborhood that has been used repeatedly as a base of attack on the Israeli keeper contingent, officials said. in a fierce seven-hour fire fight three weeks ago. Control of the outpost, in a Lebanese University building less than two miles from Marine headquarters at Beirut, was turned as turned over to the Lebanese army. Muslim gunmen based in the adjacent Shite neighborhood of Hay el Sallom wounded one Marine in a shooting at a Turkish naval base one Marine and wounded five others BUT MAJ. ROBERT JORDAN, the Marine official, said the withdrawal had nothing to do with the attacks, but animated an unnecessary Marine pool. "It has long been planned, and we implemented the move early yesterday in coordination with the Lebanese army." Jordan said. "The Marine Alpha Company, consisting of 150-200 men, pulled out of the Lebanese University building early yesterday. The location has been handed over to the Lebanese army" he said. Jordan said the Marines had first moved into the Lebanese University building to act as a buffer between the Shite neighborhoods and the Israeli army, which held much of the region "THE ISRAELIS LEFT the region, and the Marines at the University were no longer playing the buffer role, so he served longer, longer serving its purpose," he said. The evacuated position, which consisted of several modern buildings, was located about $1 \frac{1}{2}$ miles east of the main U.S. Marine base at Beirut airport and the adjacent Shiite neighborhood. 'After negotiating with the Lebanon's neighbors it was decided to end the war.' Lebanese reporters on the scene said government troops moved to the building after the Marine pullout. By United Press International Pattern of baby cries may be sign of diseases The damage may be caused before birth by alcohol in the mother's system, Philip Zeskind told the annual conference of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing at Virginia Tech. BLACKSBURG, Va. — A baby's constant high-pitched wall may be a sign the child's nervous system is out of balance, increasing the risk of crib death, mental retardation and child abuse, a psychologist said Monday. "The research is still in the infant stage," Zeskind said. "I see this as a valuable diagnostic tool — once the THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1.97 Mass phone 844.1234 1307 Mass. phone: 843-1151 medical profession accepts it and the equipment is available to apply it." FOR EIGHT YEARS Zeskid has used voiceprints and computer graphs to analyze the cries of thousands of animals and humans to the biological system." Zeskid said. Parents who want to test their babies can get them to cry by snapping them on the sole of the foot with a rubber band. Zeskind suggests. A healthy hand is thicker than one second of the first impact and the creeper will last about six seconds each. A "HIGH-HISK" BABY will take twice as long and three times as many snaps to start crying, and the duration will increase if he said. A normal cry varies in pitch — and a piercing squelch that stains on a high note may be cause for concern. Boyds Coins-Antiques Classe Rings Buy-Sell-Trade Gold-Silver-Coins 731 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 60644 913-842-8773 No art bones with funny cries die or grow up retarded or abused, but a number of them will, and the idea is to spot them and treat them," he said. His tests confirmed that babies with unusual crying characteristics have pulse and respiration rates that fluctuate wildly. Zeskind said their higher incidence of crib death suggests "they don't have the mechanism to jerk them awake" when they "forget to breathe" during sleep. His theory is that alcohol use by the mother may upset the infant's autonomic nervous system — the control center for sleep and arousal. $2.00 off haircut all semester with KUID Silver Clipper JOHN BROWN LIMITED EDITION MARKTOWN, NY RAD 1893 GET INTO A UNION! Slip into winter with a classic union suit! This smart button-front style is known for its warmth, durability, and flair. It's a solid foundation for everyman's wardrobe with a seamless collar and ribbed cuffs. Don't be left out in the cold-get into a union!! - Made by Health Knit - Available in red, navy blue, and cream - Makes great sleepwear - Sizes S.M.L.XL - Monogramming available 831 Massachusetts 843-6155 itwin's MasterCard MasterCard VISA Maestro Card Open Sundays 1-5 p.m. Angolan plane crash kills everyone on board Zaire, Namibia and Zambia in southern Africa. In a communique released Monday in Lisbon, Portugal, UNITA claimed its forces recently downed three military helicopters and a Soviet-supplied Antonov-26 transport plane in other parts of the country. By United Press International BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — An Angolan Boeing 713 airliner carrying about 150 people crashed shortly after takeoff in the African nation yesterday killing everyone on board, the Yugoslav news agency Tanigu said. Labaingo, formerly Sa da Bandeira, is the capital of southern Hula province where pre-Western UNITA guerrillas, led by Jonas Savimi, are fighting against the Marxist government and an 8,000-man Caban force supporting it. The twin-engined TAAG airlines jet was leaving the provincial capital of Lubango on a flight to the Angolan city of Luanda when the crash occurred. survivors," Tanjug quoted officials at the Luanda Airport control tower as saying. "In this catastrophe there were no It said many of the passengers were newly recruited Angolan soldiers. No foreigners were aboard, Tanjug said. The plane crashed about 900 yards from the Lubango airport runway. Luanda airport officials did not say what might have caused the crash, Tanjug said in its dispatch from Luanda. WASHINGTON — Cartons on banana and root beer-flavored milk were dispensed in the House yesterday to gain support for a plan to pay dairy farmers not to produce milk. Angola, a nation the size of Texas and California combined, is bordered by House votes today on 2 plans to cut milk production By United Press International The House is scheduled to vote today on which of two rival dairy programs to use for a 15-month period. Last year's dairy program cost $2.7 billion, a huge increase from four years ago. Backers of the Conable plan said the plan was more direct than the Senate bill. A rare coalition of farm and consumer groups is backing the Conable plan, and supporters say it could save consumers $3.8 billion. The Congressional Budget Office estimated that Conable's plan would cost $1.1 billion more than the Senate bill. Other estimates differ. Sen. Rudy Boschwitz, R-Minn., sent cartons of flavored milk to the House members, along with a letter touting the Senate plan. An aide said the flavorings — banana, root beer and Amaretto — were intended to illustrate a matter of under-consumption, not over-production. Rep. Barber Conable, R-N Y., wanted to cut the support price by as much as $1.50 from the current $13.10 for each 100 pounds of milk. A Senate plan would pay farmers to reduce milk production, would collect money to encourage dairy consumption and would cut the support price by 50 cents. Rep James Jeffords, R.VT., said most of the cost of the diversion program would be covered by fees charged to dairy farmers. Under the plan, farmers would be paid $10 for each 100 pounds of milk to cut production by 5 to 30 percent. TV station questions how memorial funds were spent By United Press International WASHINGTON — A local television station and the founders of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial clashed yesterday over how the $9 million raised for the memorial was spent. David Pearce, the station's news director, stood behind the story and behind investigative reporter Carlton Sherwood, a veteran who Scruggs charged was "out to get us." Jan Scruggs, president of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, said a report by WDVM-TV questioning where the money went is part of a "smear campaign" by veterans opposed to the memorial's design — a low-profile inverted "V" of black granite. The media battle was being conducted during "sweeps weeks," a crucial period for local television stations when audiences are measured and future advertising rates are set. The audience measurement tool is faster "blockmaster" investigative series by TV news departments. IN MONDAY'S FIRST OF-a-three-part series, "Vietnam Memorial." A Broken Promise, Sherwood said that of the $9 million raised for the 1-year-old memorial, just $2.6 million went to construction. Standing before the camera and holding what he called "internal audit reports," Sherwood said $200,000 was spent for salaries, training and expenses, $87,000 for public relations and $230,000 for consulting fees. He asked what happened to the rest. Serugues has refused to open the fund's books to Sherwood, charging that he is among the group of activists being opposed on the controversial design. HE SAID THE $9 million was allocated approximately as following; $3 million-plus for construction; $500,000 for last year's National Salute to Vietnam Veterans; $1.5 million for administrative costs; $2 million for fund raising; $400,000 for a bronze statue and other added design elements, and $1.5 million still in the bank. In an interview shortly before the broadcast, Scruggs said: "We've been audited inside and out." Scruggs said he had a sworn statement by another Vietnam veteran quoting Sherwood as calling the memorial "a black gash" and a "black heart." In his racial epithet against the memorial's designer, Maya Vine Lin. NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Stop by 115 Military Science or Call 864-3161 FRESHMEN Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 الشعب العربي calvin klein BRITCHES CORNER SPORTS University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1983 Page 14 SPORTS BRIEFS From Staff and Wire Reports New York court postpones Kuhn, Steinbrenner ruling NEW YORK — A hearing in New York State Supreme Court on New York Yankee owner George Steinbrenner's attempt to enjoin baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn from holding a disciplinary hearing has been postponed until next Wednesday, Steinbrenner's chief counsel said yesterday. Both sides have agreed to adjourn, and the temporary restraining order will remain in effect. Justice Irwin Silberwitt will conduct the hearing to decide whether to grant a preliminary injunction on Kuhn's effort to hold a disciplinary hearing in connection with Steinbrenner's public statements on the July 24 "Pine Tar" game between the Yankees and the Kansas City Royals. The Yankees were granted a temporary restraining order last Thursday and the hearing on the preliminary injunction was originally scheduled for today. Flu keeps 3 Javhawks from practice Not much has gone right for the Kansas Jayhawks the last three weeks, and with a trip to Nebraska coming up, the outlook appears grim. KU will carry some question marks to Lincoln Saturday, but the team had what Gottfried termed a "spiritual" workout yesterday in light rain. Defensive tackle Mike Arbanas, linebacker Marky Alexander, tight end Ernie Wright all missed practice because of the flu. Center Bench Simecka, who sprained an ankle against Colorado last week, was hiping around a Gottfried, but should able to play against the defender. Mr. Huskerson Kansas punter Clint Colburn, whose job has been in doubt for two weeks, probably will retain the punting duties, according to Gottiefel. Colburn has compiled a 37.4 punting average. Backup tight end Jeff Anderson, who is recovering from an ankle injury, is battling Colburn for the job. Wimbledon may switch tennis balls LONDON — Tennis pursists may weep, traditionalists may shudder and older members of the establishment may recoil in terror. But Wimbledon is considering a break with the past at the 1984 championships. Yellow balls, instead of white ones, may be used for the first time in the championship's 107-year history. Wimbledon officials have been taking soundings from interested parties, including the players, to see whether there is a strong measure of argument in favor of using the yellow balls in 1984. Championship secretary Richard Grier said Monday, "This is one of those topics raised about every three years. We usually find there is a pretty equal balance for both sides of the argument." Court dismisses NFL antitrust suit NEW YORK — A U.S. Court of Appeals has upheld a lower federal court's decision that dismissed an antitrust suit against the National Football League filed by three former owners in the defunct World Football League. The 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals panel in Philadelphia uphold U.S. District Judge Joseph L. McGlynn's decision in November 1982 to summarily dismiss a suit brought by John F. Bassett Jr., Bill Tatham and John Rosacoe Judge McGlynn ruled that the NFL did not violate the Sherman Antitrust Act when the league refused in 1976 to grant an immediate expansion franchise in Memphis, Tem., to the three plaintiffs. The suit originally was filed in December 1979. LA's Pruitt linked to cocaine dealer COLUMBUS, Ohio — Los Angeles Raiders running back Greg Pruitt was a customer of slain cocaine dealer Edward Hanna and at one point owed him $18,000 for drugs, an FBI agent has testified. Gordon Johnson testified in the aggravated murder trial of Joseph Weeks Jr., 35, Kinsman, Ohio, one of three persons charged with killing Hanna and Fred Lemmens, both, 34, inside Hanna's condominium March 6. Johnson said Weeks has been providing information about Hanna's illegal activities, including auto theft and drug dealing. In an interview Monday with the Los Angeles Times, Pruitt said he had extensive legitimate business dealings with Hanna but denied that he ever bought cocaine from him or owed him money. Shin splints commonplace for joggers By JOHN UNREIN Sports Writer Joggers are beginning to hit the pavement in greater numbers now that cool weather has begun, but the seemingly harmless activity can often become a hazard when care is not taken, a KU athletic trainer said. Tips for injury prevention discussed Lynn Bott, assistant trainer for all KU athletic teams, said that because of carelessness, joggers were suffering an increasing number of injuries. , nnk there are a lot of unne- cessary running injuries today." Bott said, "It's a great exercise, but it definitely causes a lot of stress to the Shin splints, the injury in which pain is felt inside the lower third of the leg, is the most common jogging injury, and to help prevent shin splints runners need to follow several guidelines, Bott said. Another problem for joggers has been the tendency to regiment workouts and set high goals for achieve- said Bob Timmons, KU track coach. "FIRST, JOGGERS should run on softer surfaces, such as in a grass field as opposed to the street," he said. "They also should avoid a lot of hills and make sure they wear proper shoes." Timmons suggested that instead of trying to beat a certain time every day in a given distance, joggers should run as long as they felt they could continue on. He said that this would help joggers from becoming burned out on running. Bott said that it was important that runners match the type of shoe they bought with the type of training program they would follow. www.balance A GOOD PROCEDURE for beginning a regular running workout, Timmons said, is for joggers to first decide what they want from the gym. Then find fast and how fast a jogger should run at first depended on that person's goals. "The important thing is to have fun," Timmons said. "I think joggers ought to start out slow and just do what they want." They're tired and feel like walking, do it. John Unrein/KANSAN He said the chief concern with basking a workhorse to avoid any exposure to harmful street trees. "I think that before any workout they ought to jog a mile first to get the circulation up and the heart pumping," he said. "Then they ought to stretch a while more running any longer. That's where we are in our cross country team works." Bott said that for runners he recommended a minimum of 15 minutes of stretching before and after each workout to prevent muscle pulls. Runners should also use the static type of stretching, in which the person holds a constant stretch from 10 to 60 seconds. Bott said, instead of the practice of ballistic stretching, in which the person bounces to stretch. STRETCHING OUT after the workout is as beneficial as doing so beforehand, Timmons said, in order to help prevent soreness the next day. He also stressed the importance of properly cooling down after jogging. Jo Ellen Washburn, Moline, Ill., freshman, took advantage of last week's cool weather to jog near the KU campus. According to a KU athletic trainer, Washburn was ignoring a couple of preventive measures to avoid jogging's most common injury, skin solipsis. Bott said that ballistic stretching often caused the muscle to contract in response. - Always try to wear light or reflective clothing. - In addition, Timmons offered several other safety tips for joggers: - Try to avoid wearing headphones and listening to music while jogging to prevent getting hit by cars. - Always wear enough clothing to stay comfortable while jogging. Keep hands and feet warm. - Try to run different routes each day to avoid monotony. SPORTS ALMANAC - Always run facing traffic on roads outside of town. OODS - When in groups, always try to run in single file. Favorite Sunday, Nov. 12 Pts. X. Y. Azevedo Buffalo 3½ Minnesota Green Bay 2½ Detroit Houston 4½ Cleveland Tampa Bay 4½ Philadelphia Philadelphia 4½ Cincinnati Saint Louis City 4½ Seattle Sioux Lake 4½ Miami New England 3 Pittsburgh Baltimore 3½ N.Y. Yankees N.Y. Yankees 3 San Francisco New Orleans 4 Dallas Diego 9 Davis Kansas QUALIFICATIONS: U.S. c: cidents. Ages 19-29. College graduate or seniors/juniors, BS-MS Technical majors only. Call Navy Officer Programs Toll free 1-800-821-5110. TEACHERS NEEDED IN FLORIDA Monday Nov.14 Instructors needed to teach math, science, or engineering at the Navy's Nuclear Power School in Orlando, Florida. BENEFITS:up to $19,500 starting salary; over $33,000 in four years. Over $1,000 per month for selected students during Jr. and Sr. years. Full medical and dental coverage. 30 day's earned annual paid vacation. Opportunity for Navy-financed post-graduate education. Family benefits. COLLEGE L.A. Rams 11% COLLEGE No Carolina Princeton Ocean State Iowa Dartmouth Chemsea Columbia Florida Alburtin Barnes Harvard Pennsylvania Western So Carolina Boston College Texas Tech Virginia 14; Yale 12 Mich St 16 Brown 8 Maryland 3 Columbia 4 Kentucky 18 Georgia K Wake Forest 4 Pennsylvania 11; Washington Navy 19; Syracuse 12 Boston College Texas Tech presents: S.U.A. Fine Arts Committee presents: Weekend National Football League and college adds as hosted by Harrah's Tenor Tailow Sports Book W. Virginia Rutgers 22 Oklahoma South. Miss Mississippi 12% Okla. State Oklahoma St. 6 Kansas St. Iowa St. 6 Baylor Missouri 19 Texas A&M Arkansas Stanford Western St. Washington Miami (Fla.) Minnesota LSU Arizona St. Weekend National Football League and college odds FALL TENT SALE! FALL TENT SALE! The First Annual Crafts Bazaar A perfect opportunity to purchase Christmas gifts. **GRAN SPORT** WILDNESS OUTFITTERS 7TH & ARKANSAS 1 843-3328 Just a block N. of the stadium. $ 843 of the S. St. McDonald's. Appropriately situated in a pleasant, wooded area. (Where else would you expect to find a grass field?) November 29 & 30 Kansas Union Lobby ALIDAMO BRAND TENTS 10% TO 20% OFF ALIDAMA DESIGN TENTS 10% TO 20% OFF ALL NORTH FACE TENTS 10% TO 20% OFF ALFURKA TENTS 10% TO 20% OFF Use Kansan Classified. If you are interested in participating in the Bazaar pick up an application from the SUA Office. Deadline: Nov. 11, 5 p.m. Attention Campus Community: 1983 Dale Murphy, Atlanta 1984 Dale Murphy, Atlanta 1986 Mike Schmidt, Philadelphia 1987 Mike Schmidt, Philadelphia 1989 Kevin Hermanande, St. Louis, and Willie Stargell, Pittsburgh 1992 Dave Parker, Pittsburgh 1977 George Foster, Cincinnati 1978 Ferguson, Cincinnati 1979 Joe Morgan, Cincinnati 1979 Steve Garvey, Los Angeles 1980 Peter O'Neill, Cincinnati 1982 Johnny Beach, Cincinnati STOP WOMEN, CREDIT YOURSELVES LEGALLY, CREDIT IS MORE AVAILABLE THAN BEFORE. THIS PRESENTATION WILL FOCUS ON LEARNING HOW TO ESTABLISH CREDIT HISTORIES. HOW TO MAINTAIN PERSONAL CREDIT IF THERE is A CHANGE IN MARITAL STATUS. WHAT TO DO IF CREDIT IS DENIED AND OTHER CREDIT RETRIEDED ISSUES. Sponsored by FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT BRENDA STOCKMAN 864-3552. "BUT HOW? NOT BOUNDING CUES IS ENOUGH OF A PROBLEM. BESIDES, 1 DO'T HAVE ANY COLLATERAL." "YOU MAY ASK." Date: Tuesday, November 15 Time: 7:00-8:30 pm. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. National League MVP Award winners Place: Pine Room, Kansas Union MINSKY'S COLOSSAL COMBO NITE $3.95 ALL YOU CAN EAT Children just $2.00 Minsky's BREAKFAST 2228 Iowa 842-0154 6 packs beer to go No Carry Out or Delivery on this Special Other Specials not valid with this offer 2:00-?? This Friday! PARTY WITH THE J-SCHOOL PRSSA presents $3.00—All you can drink Ichabod's WE DELIVER! 6th & 8th 6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center PIZZA Shoppe KINGSIZE TRIPLE TOPPING UDK AND 32 oz. PEPSI plus tax DELIVERED $8.75 . 842-0600 We have expanded our facilities, our staff and our hours to better serve you better serve you Now open Mon.-Fri. 8-6 --- Sat. 8-5 SHAMPOO, CUT & BLOWDRY $10 CUT, PERM STYLE $40 SAMMERC, CNT Service Engine 1110/83 for women Coupon Expires 11/19/83 GQ for women for men 611 W. 9th Gentleman's Quarters 843-2138 MASS. STREET DELI 041 MASSACHUSETTS 渭 HOT OR MILD SMOKED SAUSAGE SPECIAL served with potato chips and dill pickle spear $1.95 Reg.$2.35 Wed. thru Sun.,Nov. 9 thru Nov. 13 No coupons accepted with this offer Mon - Thurs – 10:30-9 Fri & Sat – 10:30-11 Sun – Noon-9 p.m KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS The University Daily KANSAN University Daily Kansan, November 9, 1983 Page 15 The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864.1958 CLASSIFIED RATES SERIES 2-1 | Words | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days | | :--- | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | | 0-15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 | | 16-20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 | | 21-26 | 2.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.85 | | For every 2 words add: | 25c | 50c | 75c | 1.05 | AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 pm Tuesday Friday 5 pm Wednesday Monday 5 pm Thursday Friday 5 pm Friday Wednesday 5 pm Classified Display...$4.20 per column inch Classified display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No reserves are allowed for classified display advertisements except for logos and images. POLICIES FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS - Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE as 3 words - Deadlines same as Display Advertisement - 2 working days prior to publication - until credit has been established * Troubleshooters are not provided for classified or - *No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising* - *You must add a $25 service charge* - vii small order discobust * Samples of all mail order items must be submitted in函件. - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only advertising Blind box ads—please add a $2 service charge Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kailan business office at 843-4538. - Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount ANNOUNCEMENTS No more missing out on your favorite comics! Have them reserved— at a discount at - Blind box ads - please add $2 service charge * * Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University Dalkan Kisan. to The University Daily Kannan • All advertisers will be required to pay in advance 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 KWALITY COMICS For the best prices and service anywhere UFS - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified M-F: 11-7 843-7239 Sat: 10-5 107 W. 7th Arts and Craft Fair, Sat. Nov. 12, 10-14. Lawrence Art Center, 505 W. Second St., Newton, MA 01436. Professional artists include: * Barrie Anderson Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B.Kansas Union in the office of Student Organizations Office, 821 W. 74th Street and in Rooms 200 and 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Applications due in Room 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall by p.m. 5 Wed., Nov 16 PATTON PROTEST U.S. INVASIONS IN CENTRAL VIETNAM VIRGINIA IN LAWRENCE. Sat, Nov 12th. Join the Latin American Solidarity and other groups to express outrage at U.S. Gunbush march down Mass. St. to South Park Rally at South Park. For info: 760-895-4300, images and information tables 7 & 9:45 p.m. $1.75 Puho Hall The University Dalian Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employment Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, national origin, age, or ancestry. ENTERTAINMENT AUGUST 10, 2007 Fri. & Sat. Nov. 11 & 12 7 8 & 9 45 p.m. $1.75 FOR RENT 1. & 2 a bedroom apartments available immediately 2. 3 bedrooms apartments available immediately 3. full utilities paid Contact Kaw Valley Duplex 2, 1 bath duplex for rent. East Lawrence Jan. 1, WADK two-floor 749-2156 2 HI House, newly remodeled. KU bus route, law office, clean to laundry. Rent $250. 843-2603. STUDIO FOR RENT: 2 bedroom house, close to KU and downtown. Fridge, range, washer, and dryer; $275/month and utilities and call. Call after 5:00 p.m. (424)-8661. Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 Beautiful 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment, with or without utilities paid. Central air condition, wall to wall carpet, dishwasher, dispensal, close to shopping and KU route. Come see at 278rd Bedroom L1 or 18 Bassett house apartment $85.00/month, utilities paid. Single, non smoking, quiet, mature individual. For RENT. Located in Northwest for RENT. Nice, nearest brand new, just completed 2 bedroom apartments POD-1, in Bassett House, at 3165 N. 47th Street. Furnished Studio - Fully equipped kitchen, gas heat and bus route. Available: Dec 1, 1reasonable (impressive room in 5 bedroom bed) $100/month (PRICE: Move in anytime 841-9099 Ask for Steve BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. 842-1876 or 841-1287 Meadowbrook studio for sublease now or December 1. Ask for VSK 220, 842-4200 New Townhouse For Rent. For rent in Northwood Height 3 BR, 1,12 baths, all appliances, C/A W/D look up. FP with wood. Garage. big corner lot. 841-9211 Nice 2-bedroom apartment just north of stadium, available immediately. $275, 842-4443. Keep try- ing. Non-smoking female roommate to share 2 bedroon- apartment. $121/week and 1/3 halls. Across parking. HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APTS. 1 BR Apts. $285 2 BR Apts. $340-$360 3 BR Apts. $415 All apps, have CA, gas HEAT, refugis, bus route. Lease terms available to May 31, July 31, and Dec. 31. Call between 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 843-4754. Room for rent near university and downtown. Nb pets please. 841-5500 Save money, rent a 1 or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to cannes. No pets. phone 842-4835. Share five bedroom house Close to campus Utilize our utilities Free rent until Call 842-6075 anytime. 1976 Bukk LSàlbre Custum 4 door season. Excellent condition, low moisture, air power, steerable & steering. SHORT SLEASE Jan 1 to May 31 2 bedroom carpeted apt in 4 places Close to campus and city. 1972 Honda SL 350. Low miles, $250 or make offer 841-7424 To sublease furnished 2 BRI apt. Available Nov. 1st. on bus route Phone 841 2539 FOR SALE 1976 Datam B-210 Great gas mileage 749-568 1980 Honda MEDEX Moped, sale at West 10th St. 1983 Honda MEDEX Moped, sale at West 10th St. Studio apartment for rent on bus路, nicely fitted with a flat screen TV, 749-1956 (before 9 a.m. and after 6 p.m.) on phone. Don't miss this opportunity to help us grease, resident-oriented apt staff. If you're unhappy in your present you are welcome to call us. We work WITH you! APARTMENTS West An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievably Slashed Rates! 1 & 2 BR Apts. From $200 featuring: 1957 Vega runs great, good steel bled tires and rugged tires. No rudiment 841-6551 or 843-3006. - Year-round swimming * Free shuttle bus to campus 14 times daily * Laundry facilities * Fitness facilities COMPLETELY FURNISHED Studio, 2 or 3 bedroom apartments available immediately. Great location. Two rooms for rent (110 and 85) on 1st floor of house located in blackout of kuchmtk. Smaller. House has 2 bedrooms. 1982 Toyota Corolla SXG, extra clean, special paint & materials. Available on 6, weekends 841-5322, garage sale. 1966 Mustang, good condition. 2 steel-heated radial tires 1965 Pit 753-754. Phone 842-4551 75 VW Fastback, very reliable, good condition. New tires and brakes. $550-843-6173. 70 Access needs some work. Good tires $225. 749-3010. 87 Augen lenses for Olympus M6 system: Vivitar F/1.8 F/2.8 and Sigma F/2.8 $55.00 each. Both like new. 842-1590 or 844-9091 3 bed room unfurnished apartment. on KU rented in a 1-bedroom flat with draperies, central air, heat, dishwasher, come to see at my location. $250 per month. Sublet 1, bedroom Mendocork Api Des 16 December rent = $75, rent through May $290/mo All Metobike bicycles reduced for sale. Starting at $179.99. Bicycle Annex. 131 Massachusetts. 749-6036. Brand New SH College Sport Bicycle. Never ridden. Won in sweets pack. 864-6189 or 864-6144. Brown 2 door 1982 Rabbit for sale Good shape Call 749-7534 cartridge,刀具 Call: 841-4734 Chevrolet lumber blue 4-low 79 Call: 843-2501 In CHEVY Maltail Classic Station wagon-white 461-1904 Best Offer 841-1824. Best Offer COMPUTER TIG99/4A, data cassette, game Crumar Electric Plane and Moug Synthesizer; the pair for $475,845-764 Chevy Impaqa, blue, 4-door, 7e. Call 843-260, in excellent shape COMPUTER T1994-A4 data cassette; game cartridge, manuals. Call: 841-4734 FISHER 60 watt SPAPKERS Double midrange Nice CineMats Excellent condition! Call Dean For Sale Beesler 67 enlarger and darkroom equipment 323 $32 AND gas stove 67 $ equipment 5 Denis Must sell G E. 21" color console TV Nice! 843-284A Ask for TKm Heads MT 125. Good Condition, $350 or best offer. 843.767.87 PeaSVet B400 with accessories, perfect condition. Also A200, 2000, several cartridges, will fit together. (Not compatible with other models.) Times Sinclair 1000 personal computer, hookups, 16K module, cartridges $70, battery $412-824. Typewriter top of the lowermost cartridge, changeable (type for symbols and symbols). Perfect condition, new $300 Stereo television video. All name brands. Lowest PK area. Total Sound Distribution, 300 watts. SHARP AC-DC HOME/PORTABLE VCR SYSTEM Combines VHS recording deck and timer/tuner in one compact unit! AC power pack is supplied for operation on house device. Rechargeable battery provides long-lasting life. Audio record/playback speed. High-speed visual search. freeze frame Built in 7-day, 1-timer programmable timer 12 position embossed from the rear casing. Touch controls Dew light tape. counter Save $100 when you buy the Sharp Camera and VCR as a set. Price $1.80 Call 641-8512 ask for Habitat. Master Calvin's Designer Sample Sale. Designer jeans by Calvin Klein, Jordan, Sasson, Lasson, etc. (28) Bloeses, fonts and,拙朴 type shirts $10;15 Lacoste, all about half price or less. Hush Qualität #42 13838 Yamaha 2.5 speed, 35 M P H, moped very clean! $295 841-2655 AMPEG SV7 bass amp 300 watt head with speaker AMPEG Excellent condition $500 firm B11. New Equipment HUGE SELECTION OF MEN'S MAGAZINES FOR MAN MAN'S COMICS, 811 N. O'HENY IN FULL OPEN EVERY WEEK! CARPET CARPET dromorum sizes $30, shag $35, chocolate piles. Great deals, clean stuff 842-113 LOST AND FOUND I malt brown leather lined glove, Friday, November 14. I malt brown leather mitt, Friday, November 14. Friday, October 21. Giammon's lauren Lakefront, Friday Found. A girl's light weight packet in Fraser accounts at 11007 Call 894-7640 to identify Found Meng green Jacket, in my apartment, left it when I saw the guitar. Marge 749-7284 Found. Mens green Jacket, in my apartment, you Hexay Pong-Pung Fiddle with butterfly case $5 re- fired. High 841, 8190. Friday at 11 a.m. Friday at Creep Party and Mass. Call: 814-6653 Lost keys. 7 keys on host, Friday at Crew Party on Mass. Call BH 6905. ROSTON • EAST COAST ADVENTURE • Explore opportunities of exciting city life while working as live in staff or volunteer. Apply to commitment • Contact Child Care • Placement Service, 149 Buckminster Dr. Brooklyn, Mass HELP WANTED Research Assistant (Gastrointestinal Drug Absorption) Full time starting as soon as possible. Minimum of B.S in chemistry or biological science. Prior research experience and laboratory procedures and instrumentation. Experience with laboratory animals. One year position with qualifications and references to: Dr. Thomas F. Paton, Dept. of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, The University of Kansas, Malcolm Hall, Lawrence, KS 60045. An opportunity/affirmative action employer FRESHIMEN SCHOLAISHPES AVAILABLE. It's not too late to enrol in NAVAL ROTT Cata 841 361 658 GAMMONS HELP WANTED Need a number of 20 bedrooms at least. Waitress positions. Interviews given 2 p.m to 6 p.m. Summer Johns National Park Coast Park's A. W. Parker 1062, Mission Hills, CA 93243. Mission Minn. Gs. 631 2nd Ave. W. Kailua Springs, MT BICSUITS and GRAVY only 1.25 horse Nebraska GAME OF TOTAL FAKE. HAPE, 19 Barbured BARBRED, 20 HAPED. PARTTIME. Early evening, approximately 5 p.m. 6, 8, 5 days per week for local building cleaning service. Call 841-325 between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. for information/interview. anniversary sale. INFLATION FIGHTER, 8 E.7th. 20% off! everything. Party clothes and vintage vearings. wool skirts, coats, mens clothes and more. Clothing. Hours: 12:55 M-F, 10:30 S Saturday. PERSONAL MISCELLANEOUS COMPHESION HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early response to measles outbreaks in Health Area City. Areas continuously certificated annually by the CDC. Used furniture bought and sold. Pick-up available. Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont. 10 cent dollars M. F. 2-3 p.m. during General Hospital Dont' forget your laundry. Suits n Duds Cash only. Cambridge diet clearance of extra foods including chocolate drink. Limited supply. Lauren. 843-7725 Bennett's Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine. BMH Illinois. 842-4722 America's foremost reader of astrology and the cards is taking apps for private readings. She teaches how to read on love, marriage, business, etc. ★ ★ TRAVEL CENTER We MEET Or BEAT Mrs. Lang Psychic Tarot Card Reader Call 841-0489 Any Available Air Fare We Have Every DISCOUNT And REDUCED Rate A strong keg blend. Benemitt Retail Metal Chilled Wine · Kegs · Ice-Cold Beer · 2 lbs. milk of choice Colorado Springs $100 Chicago $102 Cincinnati $118 Houston $130 New Orleans $150 Phoenix $160 Toronto $193 Los Angeles $198 San Francisco $198 Washington, D.C. $190 Airline Ticket Available SPECIAL BONUS Receive $50 500 Flight Insurance with every airline ticket purchased, at no additional cost. ★ • SPECIAL BONUS • TRAVEL CENTER 841-7117 Christmas Bazar-November 10, 5 p.m. 9 p.m. November 11, 10 a.m. 8 p.m. 10 a.m. Bazar-New York 300, rue Fourchon, baked and baked goods. Lunch and evening meals served Cross over the bridge to history North Lawrence Visit Schmidt's Retail Laque, 910 n. 2nd, on Main drag, for a nice selection, spirit cool, cold beer, and wine. Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd M-F 9:5-30 * Sat. 9:30-2 Curtis Matthews *Showmatter* 600 movies to choose from **Rent a movie** at Rent-A-Movie and pre-recorded videos at VHS.com. ENQUIRE, 83, the all campus theatreal production, of the new access applications for at large births for theatre (see page 152). Applications set $ allsaleal for the show. Applications are at 10C office l18 Kauai Union, and are see Nov. 14. For more information call (866) 972-8788. GAY and LESHAN SUPPORT GROUP org meeting 7.00 WALNAM Room. No 14 more info √ Surprise your favorite Sweetheart! Order one dozen red, pink, or yellow roses for only $6. to be picked up on Nov. 11 between 5.7 p.m. at the Satellite Union. Booths will be set up in front of Wescoe this week. I NEED TO CONTACT WALACE FERGUSON VIII IMPORTANT CAN YOU HELP? REACH ME AT EAV CO C/O LAURA THROTTER, 4916 PENNINGTON NS, BLUE BIRDS SPINNING, M60415 For information call 842-0278 Immediate passport, portfolio resume, naturalization, immigrant visa, ID, and of course fine portraits. It is not too early to order Christmas portraits for PHOTOS 805. Pennsylvania 841-4003. By Mary Ann Ladies laundry Night. Tues. 7-12. Ladies doing laundry let 10 cent draws. Suds in D-uids. 749-4132. Lawrente's laundromat. Suds in D-uids. M F 10 a.m. midnight. Sat 12.12. Sun 10.10. 749-4132. DEAN VOGELAR KC Royals Public Relations Coordinator will speak TONIGHT 6:00 p.m. Pine Room Kansas Union Special Preserves on Christmas Portraits Through December 15 at Swells Studio. Call for details Special for students. Hiarcets $7, and perms $22. Charmie, ask for Dena Jenna 843.3500 VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT SERIES SRIED, November 11th - 14th. Students listen to Exams, Listening and Notetaking Textbook Reading, Time Management, Learning a Foreign Language. Each tape approximately fifty minutes. Includes the Central Service Center, 215 Strong Hall, 844-4906, to register Mediterranean-Greek Festival November 12, 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Templin Hall Admission: $2.00 includes Greek food, one belly dancing (9 p.m) Greek dancing & Greek Sponsored by the Hellenic Society & Templin Hall For more information call 864-5892 or Temple hall For more information call 864-5892 or 864-5893 --by it on a shirt, custom silkscreen printing. T-shirts, sweatshirts and caps. Shirt by Swetra 749-1611. BIRTHRIGHT - Free pregnancy testing confidential counseling. 843-1821. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization Notes to serve use in your own book or as a supplement to 31For exam preparation - *New Analysis of Western Civilization Notes* to serve use in Town Circ. The Bookmat, and Oread Bookset. Danger signals: backache, hackle疼, arm pain, leg pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, see the Chiropractic Center and Doctor M.E. for chiropractic care and insurance accepted. No charge for consultation. PRSSA 2 STAFF & FACILITY 2 Are you paying $139.00 a month for the Blue Cross Family Health Plan? That's very expensive. Consider saving $500.00 or more a year. Call Me Bil Dutton Dutton Insurance LTD. 9th St, Kentucky 842-0515 * The Complete Insurance / Facility * MONEY FOR SCHOOL. We guarantee to find scholarships, grants, and aid which you are eligible to receive. Application materials $1.00. Indicate undergraduate or graduate. Financial Aid Finder. VAL, VAIL, DEAUVE, CREEK VAL, FREE REPAIR, DEAUVE RATES FOR DISCOUNT RATES on lodging, fire and emergency services. PARTY with the J school! TGIF this Friday at fehabad's 2 p.m. ?! $3.00 you can drink ENSORE 84 the All Campus theatrical production, is now accepting applications for stage manager and staging assistants 25 to 28 in Hoch Auditorium. Applications are at the auditorium on Monday from November 10th. Previous experience is required. For more information visit www.ensorescure.com. Neded: someone to change the toilet paper! Call Cindy at 824-5603 Artists with the written word, Typing, editing, graphics. WORLD ARTISTS Ellen 841 2172 HATS HATTS HATTS New shipment of Lok Arm Boats, Docker Stakee, and ETC. The ETC MTP-320 Handles 12,800 lbs. THIRD STORIES Appliances, furniture, clothing, knife, kneeling. Always good bargains! SPECTRUM OPTICAL Eyeglasses made UP to a standard, not DOWN to a price of £24 St. 2th. SERVICES OFFERED Saint John's Christian Bazar, Sunday, November 8, 6 a.m.-3 p.m. in church hallhouse, Eagle, cafe Whalelece Sound Rental, P.A., Guitar, and Bass amps. 814 6469 RESEARCH PAPERS TOLL-FREE HOTLINE 200 001 5745 ENGLISH PHD. will delfi y thesis, dissertation art book, etc. tistur in Engl. 10g, 102, 203, 204, 205. 800-621-5745 IN ILLINOIS CALL 312-022-900 AUTHORS' RESEARCH, ROOM 600 S. Dearman, Chicago, IL 600 804 STADIUM BARNER SHOP 1032. Massachusetts, downhill A/B shop. $5.00 No appointment. SANTA CLAUS wants to be at your Christmas party. Call Santa Claus. Have Dave at 749 0289 The Falcon Association can help you achieve these goals. If your organization has a stamped self-addressed envelope to泡泡 202145, please send it as soon as possible. Rocketball, tennis. squish racket stringing specializing in new graphite/hybrid stringing Tennis Rackets for sale also. Head Prince dunlop, Eden etc. New 842 306 (749 352) www.rocketball.com WAKE UP SERVICE We will wake you up in the morning by phone. Call Us: 842-840-6341 TYPING 24 hour typing. Fast, accurate. Resumes, letters, reports, texts. We want to do your writing. 842/4120 quality typing. WORD PROCESSING 841/6000 AAA TYPEING. Helluva good type! 842/4124 after 1 AFDORDIBLE QUALITY for all your typing needs. Call Judy: 842-7945 after 6 p.m. 841-6618 Resume/overnight services available Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed, overnight service (under 25 pages). Call Mary 841-6673 Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School secretary (Call Nancy, 841-1219 Call TIP TOP TYPING 1203 iowa Experienced Manager Memoryory, Royal Memoryory DN540 8431 7467 Royal Memoryory N540 8431 7467 Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School Secretary Call. 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Must be currently enrolled KU student when application letter with KU is received. Must have at least 2 years of Bridle Terrace, Lawrence KS 60044 AA/EOE 2 females to share 2 bedroom apartment for spring semester. Call for details. 842-766 Responsible woman seeking spring semester housing near campus. Friends furnished limited child care case possible for reduced rent. Will provide 24-hour room at UC Berkeley, 80 University Daisan Kawai, 119 Flower St., Berkeley, CA 94720. Roommate wanted. 3 BHK Townhouse, $140 month plus 1/3 utilities. Call 841-4818 Roommate for huge house apartment. Private room, energy efficient. $156/month, availability. Resistance wanted: $110 monthly and 1/2 utilities. 120-pd ALO & Albio. Available now or someday break Kommunitate wanted for extra large 2 bedrooms in a beautiful town centre. Bath bank off all east walking street. Rent includes: electricity, water, gas, dishwasher, toilet, refrigerator, phone and internet. Single girl share house and uld. private bdm, laundry fax, equip kitch. walk camping. Flowers Third roommate needed for; new, modern 3 BR homehouse close to campus. Available immediately. WOMEN'S SELF-DEFENSE. A no-count course offered at the College of Nursing effectively will be stressed only $15 a month to complete it. KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS People read the Kansan classifieds to find homes, jobs, cars, typing services, etc. You can use the Kansan classifieds to sell anything from A to Z. Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045. Use the rates below to figure costs and watch the results. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading: Write Ad Here: ___ 1 Name: Address: Phone: Date to Run Classified Display: 1 col x 1 inch - $4.20 15 weeks in foster $2.40$ $3.15$ $3.79$ $6.75$ Additional work 2% 38% 7% 1.0% SPORTS November 9,1983 Page 16 The University Daily KANSAN Kansas, K-State ADs oppose changes in NCAA power structure By COLLIN HERMRECK Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The athletic directors at the University of Kansas and Kansas State University say that an American Council on Education's proposal will be overbearing if approved. The proposal, one of two recommendations to be presented at the 1984 National Collegiate Athletic Association convention Jan. 6-12 in Dallas, would allow a board of chief executive officers to suspend or replace any legislation passed by the NCAA convention. KU Athletic Director Monte Johnson and K-State Athletic Director Dick Towers said the ACE proposal would be a superfluous piece of legislation. However, there was some agreement with the counterproposal announced last Tuesday by the NCAA Council that would establish a President's team that would allow far less power than the ACE proposal. THE NCAA PROPOSAL, submitted by the NCAA Committee on Governance, would incorporate a body of 44 college presidents into the NCAA. According to the proposed legislation, Division I schools would have 22 members while Division II and III would have 11 members each. At least two officers of civil servants would be included in that number. The proposal would allow the board of presidents to review any activity of the NCAA, place any matter of concern on the agenda for any meeting of the NCAA Council or any NCAA convention, commission studies of matters of concern in intercollegiate athletics anduge proposals legislative directio t to the convention, establish the final sequence of legislative proposals in any convention agenda and call for a special meeting of the NCAA on a two-thirds vote. THE ACE PROPOSAL, however, would not only give the presidents power to suspend or replace any legislation passed by the NCAA convention, but it would also enable them to enact commission's own rules apart from the convention. Both types of action would be reversible only by a two-thirds recursion vote "The ACE's proposal is way out of line," Towers said yesterday. by the entire NCAA membership at a subsequent convention. Johnson said that he saw the amendments he would not be in favor of them. He said he might approve the legislation only if he thought it would benefit athletes in the long run. "Division I-A schools should be calling the shots on Division I-A problems. I think that the governance should be done within our own federation or group." "THERE'S NO WAY that Division I and Division II schools have the exact same problems. In Division I A football there are 100 coaches, and in Division II could be making the decisions concerning them." "I hope we wouldn't get into more regulation but rather cooperation," Johnson said. "I just hope changes are not made just to be making changes." Johnson said he thought more time should be spent on making regulations more understandable rather than worrying about transferring authority. He said that he and Del Brinkman, KU's faculty representative to the Big Eight and NCAA, would cast KU's vote on the legislation in January. KU'S VOSIT, Johnson said, will be decided by him, Cancellor Gene A. Budig and Brinkman. Brinkman declined to comment on the legislation. Budig could not be reached. Both the ACE and NCAA Council proposals would require two-thirds majority of the nearly 800 schools to become part of the constitution. Each school has one vote. Although the ACE proposal seeks to get college presidents more involved in NCAA matters, Johnson and Towers think those presidents already have sufficient input into their schools' athletic programs. Towers said, "I really think it's good that our residents have a concern. It's very important to them to have a feeling of the problems of athletics, but they're very busy and some of them are not." Towers said that college administrators already had influence through committees such as the NCAA Council. LAURENCE ROSE, KU assistant athletic director for NCAA rules and interpretations, said he did not know if there was more that college presidents could do. "What people have to realize is that the NCAA is basically run by the college presidents." Rose said. Johnson declined to say whether he thought either of the proposals would pass. Towers, however, said that if history repeated itself the NCAA Council's proposal would play a major role. “你'll just find that what comes out of the NCAA Council has a better chance.” Towers said. “Now, if it were to be coming from the Big Eight or say the Southwest Conference or the CFA (College Football Association), the chances of it making it would be pretty tough” Big Eight Commissioner Carl James said Monday that the Big Eight would discuss the proposals as part of the Big Eight meetings next month in Kansas City. Runners seek District V title this weekend Women compete to qualify for spot in national meet By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer Members of KU's men's and women's cross country teams are preparing for the NCAA District V Cross Country Championships in Ames, Iowa, this weekend. Women's coach Cliff Rovelo said that he was taking his team to the meet, but men's coach Bob Timmons said he would not decide until this week whether or not the entire men's team would go. Rovello said that juniors Paula Berquist, Susan Glatter and Heather Sterbenz; sophomore Caryne Finlay; and freshmen Cindy Blakeley and Tracey Keith would run for the Jayhaws Saturday. "I am kind of disappointed at the competition that will be there," he said. The Jayhawks have run on the course once this year, in the Iowa State Invitational Oct. 12, and placed fifth with a record fastest time this season at that meet. at the way the teams qualifying for national would be chosen in this meet. "It is a pretty good course," Rovetoil said. "We ran well as a team on it before and we should run well Saturday." "The formula is that X number of schools must compete before more than one team advances to nationals," he said. "The district is decided geographically and we don't have that many participating." "Unfortunately, a lot of coaches are making it worse by not sending a team. They complain about the setup but they are not even participating." "We just got a bad deal this year," he said. "It is pretty bad when only six or seven schools out of 23 in the district are going to the meet. KU's chances at winning the meet and advancing to nationals are slim, he said, but the team is going to run anyway. He also said that his team was healthy and ready for the district meet except for a few minor, nagging injuries such as sore shins and joints. He was disappointed because with this formula, some districts may have as many as three or four schools that receive funding while KU's district only has one. the competition the Jayhawks will face this weekend is Kansas State, Iowa State and Missouri from the Big Eight and possibly one or two other teams. "We need to run against good competition that will be there," Rovetto said. "If you want to build a program you have got to go and compete." Men's coach Bob Timmons said that regardless of the decision to send the entire team, seniors Tim Gundy, Greg Sterner and Stenner would run in the district meet. a Murphy would rather win division than awards Gundy placed fifth in the Big Eight Cross Country Championships on KU's website. Dale Murphy By United Press International ATLANTA — Dale Murphy, a "Lli Abner" look-alike, took an "aw-shucks" approach yesterday to becoming only the fourth player in league history to be named the National League's Most Valuable Player for two consecutive seasons. "I'm honored, of course," said the boyish-looking Atlanta Braves outfielder. "But it would have meant a lot more to me if we had made it to the playoffs and into the World Series. That's what you play for. Being out of the race leaves a sour taste in your mouth." Murphy, who kept the Braves in the National League West race with his team, was a huge asset. final days of the season, had his wite, Nancy, at his side when he met with the media in a hotel across the street from Atlanta Stadium. "How will we celebrate?" he replied to a question. "The same way I always do. We'll pick up our children (three sons) and go get something to eat." MVP, "I'd look at what a player contributed to help his team, which one did the most to get his team where it was. The most important thing is that they have series and I didn't do that. There are so many ways a player can contribute." Murphy's manager, Joe Torre, said the 27-year-old center fielder has not yet reached his prime despite winning back-to-back MVP Awards. like Hank Aaron was when he was with the Braves," said Torre. "He can help you in so many different ways. Like Aaron, he's not a leader in that he's a rah-rah person out on the field. But he is a leader in that the other players look to him to provide whatever is needed to win." Murphy said he wanted to thank all the people who helped him, "Joe, my coaches, my teammates and (Braves owner) Ted Turner, who had confidence in me when I wasn't playing very well." "Murph is just beginning to mature as a baseball player," said Torre, who was MVP with St. Louis in 1971. "He definitely captures of hitting a concepteur, and he also homers for many years to come, especially playing in our ball park. "Winning the MVP doesn't put me on a different level than the other players on our team," Murphy said. "I still have a lot to learn, a lot of things I can learn and I don't need it. I need to cut down on my strikeouts. I need to learn to concentrate better." Murphy came to the Braves as a catered with a reputation for overheated pitching. "It's difficult to compare ballplayers, but I'd have to say that Murph is a lot "There are times when I feel I played up to 100 percent of my capability. But there were others when I felt I wasn't better than about 13 percent." "There was a time when I didn't know where or whether I would play at all," he said. "I'm just happy that they found a place for me in the outfield." Murphy said if he were picking the Woolridge's 29 helps Chicago break streak by edging Kansas City CHICAGO — Orlando Woolridge scored 29 points and Dave Corzine added 21 to pace Chicago to a 100-97 victory last night over the Kansas City Kings and end the Bulls' three-game losing streak By United Press International The Bulls led 77-68 entering the fourth quarter. Rookie Mitchell Wiggins scored the first two Chicago baskets in the final quarter, giving Chicago an 81-72 lead. The Kings then rattled off 11 straight points and, on a basket by Eddie Johnson, led 82-41 with 5:35 left. A free throw by Mark Olberding gave the Kings an B3-81 lead with 4:24 left. Quintin Dailey added two free throws, which added to the six points Chicago had scored in the final period, and tied the game at 83-83 with 41 remaining. The teams traded 14篮, and a layup by Cormire with 2:02 left put Chicago in front for good, 89-87. Woolridge had 13 points at the half and scored 11 in the third quarter to lead the Bulls. In the third quarter, Chicago shot 56 percent and built its biggest lead at 72-59 with 4:19 left in the quarter. The Kings' Billy Knight had 11 points in the final quarter and paced all scorers with 33. The loss was the fourth in six contests for Kansas City. last night's game was the Kings' first on the road this season. CHICAGO (100) KANSAS CITY (97) Greenwood 4-7 0-2, Woolridge 12-16 5-8 29, Cormine 9-13 3-3 21, Dalley 2-10 4-4 8, Whattte 0-4 0-0, Theus 7-9 2-3 16, Wiggins 4-10 2-10, Green 1-7 0-2 0, Oldham 2-5 0-4, Higgins 1-2 0-1 2 Totals 42-83 16-23 100. E. Johnson 3-15 0-10, O. Berlinger 1-5 2-4, Thompson 2-6 0-4, Drew 8-15 2-4, Knight 13-2 0-7, Muse 3-12 0-4, Nealy 2-5 1-2, S. Johnson 2-3 0-4, Suttle 1-7 2-4, E. Johnson 2-5 0-4, Meriweather 4-5 2-0 Three-point goal — Drew, Fouled out — None. Total fouls — Kansas City 26, Chicago 25, Rebounds — Kansas City 40, (Olberding 7), Chicago 43 (Greenwood 12). Assists — Kansas City 26 (E. Johnson 9), Chicago 31 (Theus 11) A — 4,647. WIGGINS 15 Kings 22 Kings 8 CHICAGO — The Bulls' Mitchell Wiggins attempts to pass the ball over three Kansas City defenders, from left to right, LaSalle Thompson, Larry Drew and Eddie Johnson. Chicago won last night's game. 100-97 Last night. Switzer says OU looking to Hawaii game as bowl appearance NORMAN. Okla. — The Oklahoma Sooners may not go "bowl-ing" in the traditional sense but they will have a bowl-ing coach. Barry Swiffer said yesterday. Up until last Saturday there still were hopes for a Big Eight championship and with it the host role in the Orange Bowl, but the loss to Missouri took care By United Press International The 10-0 loss at Columbia dropped the Sooners' record to 6-3 and the three losses knocked them out of the top 20 ratings for the first time this season. sports publicist Mike Treps said none came to the scandal plans to be in Norman for this week. of that. "I JUST DON'T THINK we attractive right now," he said. "Oh, we could get in a bowl (but) I'm not going to go ask to get in a bowl." It also apparently knocked them out of consideration for any bowl that may have been thinking about extending an invitation. At his weekly lunchmeet yesterday, Switzerland said that so far no bowel treatment had been given. finale at Honolulu on Dec. 3 may be hampering the Sooners' chances for a bowl bid as much as their win-loss record. But Switzer said Oklahoma still will have a bowl game of sorts. "The Hawaii game . . . that is our bowl game." he said. Ironically. the scheduled season Switzer said the bowl selection committees "know that we'll have a following of people who plan on that we'll be able to meet them, so we're not attractive as a bowl team." For $6,357, KU has bought 19 home and away game jerseys along with new warmups and some extra shorts and shirts. For the first time in 20 years the KU Jayhawks have a new basketball coach in Larry Brown. Along with a new coach the Jayhawks also will have a new wardrobe when they open the gym against a fight the Netherlands National team Brown buys new basketball uniforms, warmups for Jayhawks "We're taking a lot of people and making a vacation out of Honolulu." By COLLIN HERMRECK Staff Reporter Although the old uniforms needed Staff Reporter He said his intention at KU was to choose a good uniform that the players were ready for. KU bought the new uniforms and warmups from Champion Products in Rochester, N.Y., a company that Brown refers to as "great" and one that he worked with while coaching the New Jersey Nets and UCLA Bruins. replacing, Brown said, it is basically a tradition for a new coach to buy new uniforms KU last bought all new men's in 1881 under Coach Ted Owens. "My biggest concern was that I really wanted the kids to be comfortable with what they had to wear;" Brown said. The company supplies uniforms to most of the National Football League teams and to the many of the Major League Baseball teams, Brown said. "IT'S PROBABLY the best company," he said. The Brooks Company is sponsoring the Jayhawks footwear for the 1983-84 season. But while Blaire is ushered in as only the eighth KU coach in 86 seasons of collegiate competition, he prefers to play his own way and the uniforms will be writing a new chapter in KU basketball history. The 1983-84 ticket brochure shows Brown standing in front of a picture of the legendary Phog Allen, KU's first coach. The "Beginning of A New Fri!" "That's my not slogan," he said. "I didn't feel comfortable with that." Brown, however, does not like to think of his work at KU as the beginning of a new era for a school that is fourth in the nation's winning list for college basketball. THE COST of the new uniforms has put KU $2,819 over the budgeted $11,500 for player supplies, but Susan Wachter, athletic department business manager, said it should not pose any problems for this year's basketball operating budget of $532,000. That's because KU was still searching for a new coach during budget-drafting time last year and played it in the room for a $23,000 continuity fund The extra money, Wachter said, was set aside as a safeguard for any additional expenses that bring a new coach could expect to bring in, such as new uniforms and equipment and moving a new coaching staff to Lawrence. Playoff hopes dwindle after Chiefs lose 2 By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo — The Kansas City Chiefs have certainly had the chances in their bid to end the longest-running playoff drought in the American Football Conference. The Chefs have not made the playoffs in 11 seasons. The only team in the NFL that has gone longer is the NFC New Orleans Saints, who have never advanced into post-season competition since the team was formed in 1977. As recently as two weeks ago, Kansas City appeared in a favorable position to that post-season absence, having posted a 4-4 record to sit a game out of first place in the AFC West But their defense was ineffective. Broncos and the Los Angeles Raiders have dropped the Chiefs to a game out of last place at 4-6. The Chiefs took a 14-10 lead over the San Diego Chargers with three minutes remaining in their nationally televised Sept. 12 game on a 48-yard flea-flicker touchdown pass from Carlos Carson to fellow wide receiver Henry Marshall. But San Diego marched right back down the field to claim a 17-14 victory on a 12-yard Dant Fouls to Wes Chandler touchdown pass. "We're disappointed that we've played tough, played well, played hard games and haven't won." Kansas City coach John Mackovic said. "When we get to the point where we win those games? I don't know. It was of minor consolation that Kansas City had a chance to defeat the Raiders Sunday when Nick Lowery lined up for a 43-yard field goal with 1:55 remaining and his team trailing 21-20. But he shanked the kick — booking it left and leaving it short — to los Angeles escape with the victory. "BUT IT WILL BE, sooner if we don't give up. Human nature is such that you place a bigger value on defeat than victory. If you bowl five straight strikes, you'll have a tougher gutters ball, if a human nature to dwelon in the gutter balls. Why is that? LOWERY ALSO had a chance to beat the Raiders in the first meeting of the season between the two teams in Los Angeles. He lined up for a 40-yard field goal on the final play of that game with his Cheets also trailing 21-20. But "bucket" *Bet Hendrick* shocked that kick the first block of Lowery's career. "As long as failures carry a greater value, you'll have a difficult time accomplishing what you hope to accomplish When you learn to reverse that you'll be a lot happier. Happy people win more, happy people are luckier, happy people have a history of doing better things." Kansas City will also be host on Sunday to one of the hottest teams in the NFL, the Cincinnati Bengals, who have won three in a row to improve their record to 4-6. They remain a top team and have not been the Chiefs other remaining game is on the road against the San Diego Chargers. } The University Daily Bombing aftermath Capitol police increase security Inside. p. 2 KANSAN COLD Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas 10 High, 40s. Low, 20s Details on p. 2 Vol. 94, No. 59 (USPS 650-640) Thursday morning, November 10. 1983 Rebels fight Arafat ignoring cease-fire By United Press International TRIPOLI, Lebanon — Yasser Arafat agreed to a cease-fire yesterday but said that Palestinian rebels had ignored the call and unleashed a new army of tank and artillery fire against his outnumbered fighters in the heart of Tripoli. Shells fell on northern and central areas of Lebanon's second largest city, where most of Arafat's besieged fighters set up multiple rocket launchers and mortar batteries close to densely populated apartment blocks. Abu Jihad, Arafat's second-in-command and most trusted aide. Remnants of Arafat's force of 5,000 Palestine Liberation Organization fighters remained in the beddawi refugee camp — his last outpost just north of Tripoli — and fought off waves of rebel tanks backed by artillery, said HE SAID THE rebels lost 10 tanks and 14 personnel carriers in the battle, but continued to hold Mount Terbol, from which they poured down shells on the tin-roofed, cinder-block structures that house 22,000 civilians in Beddawi. "They are destroying everything," Abu Jihad said. "We are the victims. What can we do but go on defending ourselves?" Sitting at a child's desk in a deserted school in Tripoli, Abu Jihad told reporters that Arafat had agreed to a cease-fire to the spare loss of civilian lives in Tripoli but that the rebels had used it for war with peace with a new offensive at dawn. "We are not against any discussion," he said as tank fire boomed in the beset area. Murder trial of Bell moves to final stage By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter The jury in the Bryan Keith Bell murder trial will start deliberations today. Testimony ended yesterday after attorneys questioned a Douglas County detective and the widow of Frank Seurer Sr. Defense attorney Robert Duncan rested his case without calling any witnesses, saying that most of the present were present had been introduced by the state. Detective Kevin Harmon testified that Bell had confessed to stabbing Frank Seurler Sr. two or three times on Aug. 2. The jury will begin its deliberations in Douglas County District Court after hearing closing arguments from Harper and Duncan. Harmon said Bell told him he did not to Seurier's restaurant intending to take his place. According to Harmon, Bill said he had gone there to ask for his job back and was standing back-to-back with Seurer when he thought he heard "I can't understand why you black guys have trouble managing your money." According to Harmon, Bell said that he and Seurer bumped into each other and that Bell then grabbed a knife on a counter and stabbed Seurer. Harmon testified that Bell said that he had stabbed Searen once in the back and that after stabbing him in the back, that are what you do," and turned to his left. According to Harmon, Bell then said that he stabbed Searer in the chest and that as Searer slumped to the floor, he smiled with a smile as "You're killing me" or "I'm dead." Stephen Phillips/KANSAN Seurer's body was found Aug. 2 in the kitchen of Pop's Bar-B-Q, 2214 Yale Road, the restaurant he operated with his wife, Seurer, father of KU quarterback Frank Seurer Jr., had been stabbed 23 times with at least two different weapons, a deputy county coroner testified Tuesday. Bell is charged with second-degree murder and aggrieved robbery. Harmon also said that Bell told him that while he was at the restaurant on Aug. 2 he looked at two letters that had been addressed to Bobby Belle's Bar-Krash. Bobby Bell, a former linebacker for the Kansas City Chiefs and Bryan See TRIAL.. d. 5. col. 4 PARK SUNDAY Lisa Cangro, left, Overland Park freshman, and Shelley Kunitz, St. Louis freshman, brave the cold wind as they walk to class. Lawrence got its first snow yesterday after temperatures dropped more than 20 degrees during the day. Sunshine, warmth to follow snow By Staff and Wire Reports Lawrence's mild fall weather was interrupted yesterday by a storm from the west that caused rain all day and periods of heavy snow in the late afternoon and evening. However, according to the National Weather Service, the snow was the last remnant of the storm. Sunshine will return today and temperatures will again be in the 60s by the weekend, the weather service officials said yesterday. The rain and snow that moved through Lawrence was part of a storm that killed at least nine people in the Rocky Mountain states and the northern plains. Snows were nearly deep in the western mountains. began about 4 p.m. yesterday, was expected to stop about midnight and melt by this morning, said Ron Bailah, a national staffer with the weather service in Topeka. "The snow will melt as fast as it falls. The ground is still too warm for it to stick," he said. "Once this moves in, the snow will be in good shape for the next five days." THE SNOW IN Lawrence. which Crandall said at about 7:30 p.m. that the Western tip of the storm was moving through Manhattan, about 70 miles west of Lawrence. The storm dropped .34 inches of precipitation on Lawrence by 7 p.m. yesterday. Drizzle fell during most of the day. HE SAID THAT the temperature tomorrow would be in the low 50s. On Saturday and Sunday, he said, temperatures would again be in the low 60s. No precipitation is expected through Sunday, Crandall said. Crandall said that today would be partly cloudy and that the high temperature would be in the mid-40s. The weather would be cold. The low will be around 30. Highs for the last two weeks had been ranging from the upper 50s to the lower 70s, well above normal averages. The normal high for November in the Lawrence area usually ranges from 50 to 55 degrees. Yesterday's high was 56 degrees The low was recorded as 34 degrees at 7 p.m. The snow had dissipated into rain and drizzle by the time it reached Lawrence but left varying amounts of snow when it moved through Western Kentucky. Cindall said the most snowfall was reported at Atwood, where 4 inches fell. Task force advocates increases Requirements may go up for LA&S degrees By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter A College of Liberal Arts and Sciences task force yesterday recommended that requirements in mathematics, English and Western studies be made by the College for the bachelor of arts and bachelor of general studies degrees. The Dean's Task Force on General Education in the College also recommended that the College eliminate the emphasis on world civilization and culture requirement. The 11-member task force sent the proposal to faculty and some students yesterday to encourage comments and criticism of the recommendations. Robert Lineberry, dean of the College, will consider the recommendation next semester after the faculty reviews it and a final report is compiled. J. Michael Young, associate dean of the College and chairman of the task force, said he hoped the proposed changes would be implemented by full THE TASK FORCE recommended that mathematics and English requirements be strengthened because students' ability to express themselves articulately and reason mathematical skills for a university education. Advanced placement in English courses should still be permitted, the request being made. The current mathematics logic requirement should be strictly defined so that students would be required to complete a college-level algebra course and a second-level mathematics course, the report said. THE COMMITTEE SAID they would also like to require English and algebra competency exams for all students who wish to complete with a B.A or a BGS. degree. Young said that a specific limitation of the general distribution requirement also had been recommended because See TASKFORCE, p. 5, col. 4 Margaret Ruth Anthony checks on cabbage and Brussels sprouts that she will pick soon from her garden. Anthony is a survivalist and stores large amounts of food in her basement because she fears a communist takeover. Survivalist stores home-grown food as a precaution By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter Ruth Anthony sat primly in her overstuffed armchair. She pulled her pink sweater a little closer to her and peered through the gold wire-rimmed glasses perched on her nose. Antony, 69, looks like a typical grandmother. She has a huge garden — almost half an acre, she says. She bakes pies and cans fruits and vegetables that she grows in the garden. But she does not can for fun, she said. Instead she cans for survival. "The communists will control us with food. If a man is concerned about food for his babies, he won't be revolting. And they ve done it before." And the Communists are notorious and, possibly, they might do the same to us." Anthony is a retired teacher who has become a survivalist ANTHONY SAID SHE thought that communities were using their departments of disinformation to try to convince Americans to lay down their arms. "There will be anarchy," she said. "There will be chaos in the nation in a few years. When the government is disrupted by the communists, people will have to survive out of their gardens. "I believe there is a conspiracy — a plan to take over the nation," she said. "We are so designing our activities so as to merge with the Soviet Union. We will be one government." They are trying to scare young people into cutting weapon production with threats of nuclear war, she said. When young people lay down their arms, the communists will move in. The overthrow will be soon, Anthony said — somewhere in the next three or four years. "My dad said we would live to see the persecutions. That is what my father taught me," she said. Anthony was not always a survivalist. She was reared as a Mennonite. But she said that her church had a pacifist philosophy and that she did not agree with it. WHILE SHE WAS teaching at the Platt Business College in Kansas City, Kn., in 1865, a business manager After retiring from 32 years of teaching, Anthony moved to Lawrence, she said, because she thought it would be safer than Kansas City and she found a home with a greenhouse. See ANTHONY, p. 5, col. 1 INSIDE Gary Smith/KANSAN Computer science programs struggle with money woes In the past seven years, enrollment in computer science courses at the University of Kansas has nearly doubled. But budget problems, department officials say, have forced the department to limit enrollment in computer science courses. The restrictions will delay graduation for "a substantial number" of computer science majors, Victor Wallace, the outgoing department chairman, has said. On Page 6 today in INSIDE: The Computer Science Department, the Kansan continues a series of stories that take an in-depth look into subsets of interest to KU students. The package, prepared by Kansan reporter Christy Fisher and photographer Gary Smith, includes interviews with Wallace and University administrators about the problems and the future of KU's computer science department. Wallace handed in his resignation as chairman last month, saying he was frustrated with dealing with the department's staff. His resignation becomes effective Tuesday. William Bulgren, professor of computer science and mathematics, was named last week as acting chariman of the department. He will be a permanent chairman will begin soon. Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, recently agreed that the computer science department needed more money and more faculty to meet its increased enrollment. But he said that other departments in the College had been hurt more by budget problems. “It’s a serious problem,” he said. “There’s no question of that.” Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Senate energy committee OKs nomination of Clark WASHINGTON — The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee yesterday voted 16-4 to approve the nomination of William Clark to succeed James Watt as interior secretary. Confirmation by the Republican-dominated Senate is expected before Thanksgiving, despite Democratic criticism of Clark. Mining Vigil, Vigil Voting against President Reagan's nomination of Clark to the Cabinet post were Sens. Paul Tsongas, D-Mass; Dale Bumpers, D-Ark; Wendell Ford, D-Ky; and Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio. "I just don't think there was anything in the hearing that would send a signal that there is going to be a change of policy," said Tsongas. "Since I don't know what I'm supposed to do, it's not important." Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., said, "Bill Clark will be Mr. Nice Guy compared with the contentious James Watt, but their policies will be the same." democrats propose industrial plan WASHINGTON — A group of House Democrats has proposed an industrial strategy to correct what it calls a serious crisis in the United States' competitive position in world trade. Rep. John J. LaFalce, D-N.Y., chairman of the House subcommittee on economic stabilization, said Tuesday that the proposals of Democratic members of the panel would be introduced as legislation later in the week. They include creation of a group to study industrial competitiveness, a special bank to make investment loans to promising businesses and funding for research. The group's 68-page report is the result of 30 days of subcommittee hearings on industrial policy. Vote count starts on nuclear issue CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Old-fashioned counting of paper ballots started yesterday to see whether voters in this center of nuclear research chose to legally make their city a "nuclear free zone." Election officials said 66 percent of voters in the city of 100,000 — home of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University and a score of high-tech firms with military contracts — cast ballots Tuesday. The binding referendum, put on the ballot by a coalition of anti-nuclear groups, would outlaw all nuclear research and development within city limits — a move that has sent shuddders through the arms industry. The measure is thought to be the first that would force existing nuclear research facilities to cease their work. Court considers relaxed search laws WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration asked the Supreme Court yesterday to relax search and seizure laws and allow police to enter private property without warrants to search for marijuana in open fields. The justices heard arguments in two cases, from Kentucky and Maine, where police officers, acting on anonymous tips and without evidence, were accused of murder. In the Kentucky case, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the search of Ray Oliver's farm outside of Jamestown was legal and that the marijuana confiscated from his property could be used against him in court. In the Maine case, the state Supreme Court ruled that police had no right to search the property. Exams to detect bowel cancer urged NEW YORK — People over 50 years old should ask their doctors for examinations to detect early signs of colon and rectal cancer, the president of the American Cancer Society said yesterday. Ninety-three percent of such cancers occur in the over-50 group, but only 12 percent of the victims have the examinations. Willis J. Taylor of Seattle, Wash., said that getting people to urge doctors to give the examinations is part of new three-year campaign to reduce the severe consequences of bowel cancers. In 1983, bowel cancer will strike an estimated 125,000 adults and result in about 56,000 deaths, the cancer society said. The society will emphasize colon and rectal cancer in its education program for physicians. Scientists announce 'artificial gill' BEAUFORT, N.C. — Duke University researchers announced yesterday the development of an "artificial gill" process in which oxygen is extracted from water, theoretically permitting humans to stay underwater indefinitely. Joseph Bonaventura, director of the Duke University Biomedical Center, and his wife and fellow researcher, Celia, said they have developed a "hemosponge" that could replace current methods of providing oxygen to people underwater. Bonaventura said that the hemosponges use hemoglobin, the blood component in humans that carries oxygen from the lungs to all parts of the body. They said that the process "provides the potential for opening up for exploration regions of the ocean never accessible before." WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-10-83 SEATTLE 29.53 29.77 MINNEAPOLIS 30.00 BOSTON NEW YORK COLD HIGH CHICAGO LOW WARM SAN FRANCISCO DENVER LOS ANGELES DALLAS ATLANTA HIGHEST TEMPERATURES 29.77 NEW ORLEANS MIAMI LEGEND RAIN SNOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW Today will be rainy along the northern and central Pacific coasts and in the northern Intermountain region, with snow forecast for portions of the northern and central Plains. URL WEATHER FOTOCAST NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-10-83 Locally, today will be partly cloudy with a high in the mid- to upper 40s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny and warmer with a high in the low to mid-50s. Tonight will be mostly clear and cold with a low in the mid- to upper 20s. CORRECTIONS Because of a reporter's error, a story in Monday's Kansan said that Trailways Bus System had four buses traveling daily through Lawrence and that Greyhound Bus Lines had two. Greyhound has four and Trailways has 20. Because of a reporter's error Tuesday's Kansan said that only one living-group senator, Dennis Strickland, had attended the Nov. 2 Student Senate meeting. Panhellenic senator Amy O'Brien also attended the meeting. 4 FORT WORTH, Texas — The day was so cloudy that the 747 transporting the space shuttle Discovery from California to Florida had its lights on as it touched down at Carswell Air Force Base in Fort Worth. Discovery is the newest and most streamlined of the U.S. shuttle fleet. After the shuttle touched down later in the day at Cape Canaveral, Fla., workers began preparation for the shuttle's inaugural flight in June. Police step up security checks in wake of Capitol bomb blast By United Press International WASHINGTON — Bomb-sniffing dogs patrolled the Capitol yesterday and police speeded up implementation of a new security plan in response to a bombing that caused heavy damage near the Senate chamber. The FBI is investigating whether the Armed Resistance Unit, which claimed responsibility for the blast, is linked to the use of federal and corporate buildings. The bomber may have been photographed by cameras trained on hallways leading to the Senate corridor where the blast occurred late Monday night, but the FBI declined comment on what was found on the videotapes. It would seem that the results of lab tests conducted on bomb fragments, found in the rubble IN A STATEMENT sent to National Public Radio after the blast, the Armed Resistance Unit said that it carried out the attack on the Capitol in retaliation for U.S. moves "to trample and lay waste the lives and rights of the peoples of Grenada, Lebanon, EI Salvador and "Our action carries a message to the U.S. imperialist ruling class; we purposely aimed our attack at the institutions of imperialist rule rather than at individual members of the ruling class and government. We did not choose to kill any of them this time. But their lives are not sacred and their hands are stained with the blood of millions," it said. A man who said that he was a representative of the group called the Capitol and the Washington Post moments before the explosion, which ripped a 13-foot crater in a wall near an empty Senate chamber and left historic paintings in tatters. No one was injured. explosion early this year at the War College at Fort McNair in Washington THE ARMED RESISTANCE Unit also claimed responsibility for an Tougher security measures were imposed at the Capitol, forcing tourists to line up to enter the building yesterday. POLice handlers marched German shepherds — specially trained to detect explosives — through the corridors of the building and a Republican leadership source said that the dog patrols were a permanent feature at the Capitol. "After a while we may use the dogs only after hours, to make sure nothing's left behind," the source said. "But we can't have people afraid to come inside." Other restrictions are being considered, including super-sensitive metal detectors and plexiglass enclosures for congressional galleries. THE SECOND FLOOR, where congressmen enter and leave the House and Senate chambers, was sealed off. The area was once open to the public Israel calls up reserve troops to avoid war By United Press International TEL AVIV, Israel — Israel called thousands of reserve troops yesterday as part of a military exercise that Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir said was intended to guard against the danger of war with Syria. The exercise was first announced last week, and officials said it was unconnected to Syria's mobilization Monday of its entire reserve force. The Israeli reserves were summoned to their pre-assigned units in the afternoon when the military command 14 code words on Israel Radio. "Torn sack, earrings, main artery, holy secret," the radio said, using the codes for various meeting places. "Hebrew dictionary, blotting paper, object, slable character, permanent wave" were some of the other codes. The exercise was designed to gauge the time it would take a reservist to report to duty in a real emergency, the military command said. Shamir, who toured Israel positions in Lebanon for the first time Tuesday and reissued Syria that he has no intention of launching an attack, said Syrius's President Hafzey Assad was calling for military equality with Israel. He said in a nationally televised interview — his first since becoming prime minister two months ago — that Israel did not believe Syria was planning a war in the immediate future. "But we could be mistaken," Shamar said, explaining that Israel "was on top of the world." Israeli newspapers said officials considered postponing or canceling the mobilization drill for fear Syria might attack the mobilization as a plan for attack. IE ALSO SAID Israel would strongly object if Egypt grants asyrm to Yasser Arafat from his encircled base in northern Lebanon. "In our opinion this is contrary to peace and will not improve our relations with Egypt which as you know are not the very best." Shamir said. The papers said the officials went ahead with it for fear Damascus might view a postponement as a sign of Israeli weakness. Aren't You Hungry? Buy one Whopper Sandwich Get one Whopper Sandwich FREE. Please order by the time above before ordering. Limit one before ordering. Limit one before where prohibited by law. This offer good through 11/4/85 thru 11/4/86 BURGER KING 1301 W. 2nd St Lawrence, KS Buy one Doublecheeseburger Get one Doublecheeseburger FREE. Please order by the time above before ordering. Limit one before ordering. Limit one where prohibited by law. This offer good through 11/4/85 thru 11/4/86 BURGER KING 1301 W. 2nd St Lawrence, KS BURGER KING Buy one Whopper Sandwich Get one Whopper Sandwich FREE. 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GS LORCA'S CLASSIC TO THE SCREEN WITH BREATH-TAKING BEAUTY AND HEART-STOPPING DRAMA" —Judith Crist, Saturday Review “BEAUTIFULLY MADE and carries the added excitement of Lorca's drama and Gades's magnetism” —Janet Maslin, N.Y. Times. “AN EXPLOSION OF ENERGY, a celebration of faces,bodies and voices...generating terrific power” —Jack Knull, Newsweek. GARCIA LORCA'S BLOOD WEDDING (INDIAS DE SAHRA) A film by CARLOS SAURA Starring ANTONIO GADES A MARQUEE KARIM FRAHMIS A LADIE FALKENHAM Judith Crist, Saturday Review Joulin Crest, Saturday Review. WED., NOV. 9 7:30 p.m. THURS., NOV. 10 7:30 p.m. $2.00 WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM Upcoming Films at SUA: Wednesday & Thursday November 9th & 10th: Carlos Saura's (Cria, Sweet Hours) Marvelous new film Blood Wedding /Special admission $2.00 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. Sunday, November 13th: Billy Wilder directs William Holden in *Stalag* 17. 2:00 p.m. Woodruff Aud Friday & Saturday, November 11th & 12th All-time classic: The Deer Hunter, 2:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Woodauftch AND Midnight: Woody Allen in: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex But Were Araff to Ask? $2.00 12 Midnight Woodruff Aude University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1983 Page NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Phone company executive denies donation allegations TOPEKA — A Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. top executive yesterday called a state utility regulator's allegations of improper political contributions a cheap shot and upheld the donations as being appropriate. Edward Whitacre, vice president for Southwestern Bell's Kansas operations, said Commissioner R.C. "Pete" Lux's comments Tuesday were "outrageous" and inappropriately timed on the last day of formal hearings on the utility's request for a $204.5 million rate hike. A state senator Tuesday asked Attorney General Robert Stephan to investigate Southwestern Bell's contributions, worth more than $6,500 last year, to its Kansas Employee Political Action Committee. PACs make contributions to political candidates. In his letter to Stephan, State Sen. James Francisco, D-Mulvane, said he uncovered records in the Kansas secretary of state's office showing that during the 1982 election period, Southwestern Bell made the demands for the PAC's salaries, postage, printing, mileage and stationary. Local soldier implicated in sex case FORT CARSON, Colo. — Army officials said yesterday that three male senior sergeants at Fort Carson had been charged with sexual misconduct resulting from alleged incidents with three female soldiers, including a Lawrence woman, during military training maneuvers in Honduras. Elaine Strong, a fort media relations specialist, said that Command Sgt. Maj. Wayne Cantwell Jr., Sgt. L.C. Stephen Schleiker and Master Sgt. Delmar Eldridge had been charged with adultery, lewd and lascivious conduct and fraternization. Schleiker also was charged with sodomy. The sergeants and the soldiers were assigned to the 43rd Support Group that went to Honduras in August and September. Maj. Terry Monrad, a fort spokesman, said that an investigation was underway to determine whether the sergeants would face court-martial. Sexual misconduct charges may also be filed against the three soldiers involved. Strong said that one of the three female soldiers, Teresa Lane, 23, Lawrence, had been charged with perjury for allegedly giving false testimony in the investigation. A 35-year-old woman was charged yesterday in Douglas County District Court with three counts of battery in connection with the stabbing of her husband. Wife charged in husband's stabbing Giuppia Rayburn, 1333 Kentucky St., pleaded not guilty yesterday to one count of battery and to two counts of battery of a police officer. A second count was adjudged by the jury. Gerald Rayburn was stabbed in the center of the chest about 8 p.m. Tuesday night, police said. He was in satisfactory condition last night at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, a nursing spokesman said. Diplomat to talk on Africa relations The U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Chester Crocker, will deliver the keynote speech tonight in the first day of a three-day conference at the University of Kansas on U.S.-Africa relations since 1960. Crocker's speech, on current issues in U.S.-Africa relations, will be at 8 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. He will be introduced by Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum, R-Kan., who is visiting conference along with several departments and offices of the University. Other speakers at the conference include Timothy Tahane, vice president and secretary of the World Bank; Princeton Lyman, deputy assistant secretary of state for African affairs; and several professors from KU and other universities. KU faculty, students and staff will be admitted free. Ex-KU dean takes Northwestern job Edward P. Bassett, former dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism at the University of Kansas, has been named dean of Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. Bassett, who came to KU in 1970, is the editor of the Salem (Ore.) Statesman Journal. Bassett, 54, is expected to start work at Northwestern as soon as possible after the first of the year, according to a Northwestern official. Bassett served as the KU journalism dean for four years and then worked for a year as vice chancellor for academic affairs. Bassett left KU to become director of the school of journalism at the University of Southern California. He took his post at Salem in 1980. Del Brinkman, dean of the KU School of Journalism, said he was surprised to hear that Bassett took the job because he thought that Bassett was enjoying his job as editor. However, Brinkman said that Bassett had always enjoyed journalism education. Bassettt succeeds I. W. Cole, who has been dean at Northwestern since 1957. Cole will continue as director of the Gannett Urban Journalism Center at Northwestern, a position he has held since 1966. IFC picks sophomore as president An Overland Park sophomore was elected president of the Interfraternity Council at a meeting of the council Tuesday night at the Sigma Nu House, 1501 Sigma Nu Place. The new president, Bill Widemann, is a member of Delta Tau Delta Fraternity. Also elected to IFC offices were: Scott Williams, Lawrence junior, vice president for fraternity affairs; Mason Linscott, Shawnee Mission junior, vice president for membership; Grant Tennison, Leawood junior, secretary; Jess Commerford, Elkhart junior, treasurer; and Scott Nations, Overland Park junior, vice president for public relations. The newly elected officers took office immediately following the meeting. ON THE RECORD ABOUT $36 WAS stolen from a vending machine in Marvin Hall sometime between 1:30 and 3:45 a.m. yesterday, police said. A pry tool was used to enter the machine, which is on the first floor of the building, police said. Damage was estimated at $125. There are no suspects. A WALLET WAS stolen sometime between 3:15 and 4:45 p.m. Tuesday from the third floor west stacks of Watson Library, police said. The loss was estimated at $47, and there are no suspects. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 864-4810. the number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. SenEx fails to endorse Regents proposal By DONNA WOODS Staff Reporter The University Senate Executive Committee yesterday failed to endorse a recommendation that would allow Board of Regents universities to deny admission to Kansas high school graduates if they did not meet certain Educational Planning Committee, Regents schools would have the option to deny admission to Kansas graduates if they had not successfully completed a core of 15 classes, the chairman of the committee said. SenEx members were asked by the office of academic affairs to respond to the Regents proposal, but because members had not previously seen the plan, the group did not take action. Under a proposal by the Legislative REGENTS SCHOOLS NOW admit any student who has graduated from an accredited Kansas high school. High schools must require a core of three English classes, two science classes and one math class for graduation. If the legislative committee and the tull Legislature approve the proposal during the 1984 session, high school English classes; three classes in social English classes; three classes in social State Rep. Denise Apt. Republican from Iola, said the proposal would not take effect for three to four years so that school systems would have time to adjust their curriculums. science, mathematics and natural science; and two foreign language classes. A letter sent to University officials by Stanley Koplik, Regents executive director, said that the proposal was being considered because, "several in the committee felt that many students who are not adequately prepared or who are most assuredly not able to complete rigorous university work, ought not to be at the university in the first place." Apt said that too many students were entering Regents schools and having to pay for their education. Junior colleges and community colleges are a more viable alternative to students who are not prepared to enter a university. Apt said. APT SAID THAT the committee will hold a meeting on Tuesday during a meeting on Tuesday. A second alternative would outline the same reasons for denying admission, but Regents schools would be required to follow the policy. KU law graduate takes assistant DA job By JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter The Douglas County Commission yesterday approved a recommendation by the district attorney to hire a lawyer for the case of Law as an assistant district attorney. Margaret Lindeberg Johnson, 33, will fill one of the positions left vacant by the Oct. 3 resignations of assistant district attorneys Mary Prewitt, Jean Sagan and Harry Warren. Lindeberg Johnson began work Tuesday, and she will be paid about $17,500 a year. dations of department heads, unless there is some big problem." Commissioner Beverly Bradley said "Legally, control over bottom line budget figures." "We usually approve the recommen LUNEBERG-JOHNSON graduated from the KU School of Law in May 1982, and was admitted to the Kansas Bar Association in September. She had worked for Rogers & Dib, a Huntington Beach, Calif., law firm as a legal clerk until her University 1982 to January 1983. She said she been unemployed since January. Jerry Harper, Douglas County district attorney, described the position of a judge in the court system. "entry-level" job and said that the other two open positions required prosecution experience. "She seems very qualified and has an interest in prosecution," he said. "She is a lawyer." Lindeberg Johnson said she had seen a notice advertising the position on a jobs board at the School of Law and that the job's location made it "ideal." "I was still interviewing for other jobs, but none of them were in the area," she said. "I would have had to leave, and I wasn't looking forward to that." "The job was an excellent opportunity. It will provide extensive trial work, and I can stay in Lawrence," she said. "I also have a strong regard for the district attorney." LINDEBERG-JOHNSON said her workload would be light until she became familiar with her job. That orientation, Harper said, would include becoming familiar with office and local court procedure. The two other vacancies in the district attorney's office have not been filled. Lindbergh-Johnson said the pearl had not been fit because palace rules prevented him from being as the Bryan Keith Bell second degree murder and aggravated robbery trial. 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Send MARK ZIEMAN Editor MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM Managing Editor STEVE CUSICK Editorial Editor DON KNOX Campus Editor PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager DAVE WANAMAKER MARK MEARS Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser Double standard Sizeler Realty Co. Inc. did everything that the Lawrence City Commission wanted it to do. The Louisiana development company presented in detail its plans to bring more retail shopping into downtown Lawrence. It sought public comment. More than once over the past year it walked what company officials must have called the extra mile. And Tuesday evening, the company discovered that the City Commission operates on a double standard. But more than that, the City Commission — at least a majority of it — does not care that it operates on a double standard. Indeed, fairness seems to be the furthest thing from some commissioners' minds. Perhaps that shouldn't be a surprising revelation. Lawrence is a cosmopolitan town. The troubles of a big-city real estate firm will likely cause few people to lose any sleep, except perhaps the company's executives. But the questions of Sizerel's work and of fairness to the firm are not of paramount concern here. The larger question — the one that most city commissioners seem to be ignoring — is what the decision means for the way local government functions. In making its decision to negotiate with the local Town Center Venture Corp., the commission rejected not only Sizeler's work but also the work of dozens of local citizens who had offered their opinions and in some cases a great deal of their time and effort to work on the downtown project. The city had sought volunteers to work on a Downtown Improvement Committee and to work through other groups to investigate the options for bringing more retail shopping into downtown Lawrence. It had sought, and rightfully so, to gauge the mood of the public. The decision to negotiate with Town Center instead of Sizerel negated all of that work. The political winds change quickly in Lawrence. To judge from the fast support that Town Center's plan received from some commissioners, the plan must have been presented to them by divine revelation. Work done on the downtown project in the past year or so has been done in the open. Groups from various segments of the city, including neighborhood groups and local merchants, have participated in the planning for a downtown redevelopment project. But questions should be asked about the work done recently. How can the work of a year and the experience of a large company be done in such a short time by a new firm? The ink was hardly dry on Town Center's plans before the praise started flowing from some city commissioners and business leaders. If Town Center was chosen because it has a better plan, Lawrence will then be better off. But — just maybe now — could Town Center have been chosen because its location in the 600 block of Massachusetts Street would disrupt fewer businesses? Including the business of Mayor David Longhurst, who participated in the voting? Was the group chosen solely because it's a local group? Is that a good reason? Will there be a trade-off in experience or in the firm's ability to develop a successful project? The "shopping corridor" along Massachusetts Street will be stretched out dramatically. Will the other businesses survive? Weighty questions, indeed. But if you for some reason have been expecting the City Commission to ask for weeks of public comment as it did with the Sizeler plan, don't hold your breath. And if commissioners do ask for such comment, don't expect them to listen. Missile deployment That's a pretty legitimate concern. The issue, simply, is this: The Reagan administration and NATO want to plant 572 U.S. Pershing-2 and cruise missiles strategically across Western Europe, but many Europeans fear, rightfully so, that the missiles will make their homelands the likely battleground in a nuclear war. It's fine for the United States to want to defend itself. But by distributing the missiles in Western Europe, the United States is asking the Europeans to be the surrogate victims in a nuclear exchange — not a pleasant predicament. And not one the Europeans are happy about. A recent poll in Great Britain, a repository for 160 of the cruise missiles, revealed that 94 percent of the British don't want Reagan to be the man controlling the firing of the missiles in their country. And according to the poll, which appeared in London's Daily Mail, 58 percent believed Reagan's policies were making nuclear war more likely. That's not much trust between supposed allies. And the Europeans fear, once again rightfully so, that President Reagan isn't the most trustworthy person to have a finger on the nuclear button. This displeasure has been registered in the huge anti-nuclear protests sweeping Western Europe. But would you trust a man or country planting a nuclear bomb in your backyard? More likely, you'd tell them to stick it in their own backyard. The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff of the University. The Kansan the latter individuals and groups to submit guest columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flind Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. Life dreams go down the drain His father and mother bade him good-bye from the bus stop. Townfolk formed a line to the bus door and shook hands with the girl. Yes, they all thought, Durwood doe would be somebody done. The ride to Lawrence was a long one, yet upon his arrival, Durwood walked through the streets like a child, head high, eyes opened wide. The girl stood up at hand, of his parents and of the degree he would have in a few years. Those thoughts, however, eventually faded. The first three years at KU went well, but Duruw needed computer science to meet his degree requirements. The courses he needed were not offered. LETTERS POLICY Things got so bad, Durwood read in the paper, that the chairman of the computer science department resigned, admitting that it was a Durwood, the son of a corn and lima bean farmer, left South Succotash on a warm August morning. Someday, he thought, I will be somebody. Darwood had heard that KU was having some financial problems, that there was a shortage of books and materials at courses in some departments. While he waited for the classes to become available, for the state to provide money for more and better medical care, the University of Kansas Medical Center. R. C. WESTMERE miracle that the department had gotten along so well on such meager state appropriations. The teacher shortages seemed serious, yet Durwood realized he had no choice but to wait until the courses he needed were offered. He was not alone, and would have to just delay his graduation. MICHAEL BECK Staff Columnist which he thought he would enter once he had graduated Durwood was amazed at the medical complex. The Med Center was constructing a new science library and had built a walkway between them and the complex. The walkway alone was to cost nearly $1 million. So this is where all the money has gone, Durwood thought. Yet, as Durwood wandered on his own, he met an associate professor at the Med Center, and the gaurn man, looking older than his years, gave another view of the Med Center. "I was once like you," the man said. "When I first came here, we had some of the top doctors, we had some of me. I was going to follow in their paths." "But the state has kept salaries low. And now most of the good doctors have gone elsewhere. Folk there. There is no future for you here." When Durwood returned to Lawrence, he weighed the teacher problems with the walkway and library spending. It seemed as if the state's priorities were mixed up, he thought. What use is a new library if the students can't be taught properly? The question, he realized, was not limited to the Kansas City campus. The Lawrence campus had plans to construct a new science library and a bioanalytical research center. We would have these wonderful buildings, but at the expense of other things. Durwood would walk at night through campus, wishing he had never left the farm. It was too late to transfer, though, and Durwood again resolved that he must wait out the problems and do the best he could. One night, however, while Durwood sat near Wescoe looking upon where the science library was to be built, a thug stumped him to the ground, stole his wallet and kicked him remotely. Durwood got to a phone after the incident and called the campus police. Yet he learned that no one was available to help. Because of money shortages, nearly half of the students fell for higher paying positions. Hamilified and distraught, Duwood limped to his apartment. He packed his bags and walked to the bus station. He couldn't get his classes, the best teachers were leaving for higher paying jobs and now he would be protected. He would go home. So without a degree, Durwood arrived in South Succotash in the middle of that February night. There was no one to meet him at the church, but Durwood then realized that he was not now, nor could he ever be, somebody WELL, I'LL BE DARNED! A SIZABLE CAMPAIGN DONATION ALREADY! "DEAR JESSE: PLEASE ACCEPT THIS CHECK AS AN EXPRESSION OF MY SUPPORT." "IT IS MY FONDEST HOPE THAT YOU GO ON TO BECOME THE DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES." 5. 103 NNNNNS SIGNED, RONALD REAGAN Acid rain is national problem WASHINGTON — There is a growing consensus in America and the Congress that it is time to control acid rain by reducing emissions of its two principal ingredients, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide. But the problem has been wrongly construed as one facing only the Northeastern states, and the solution an Eastern one. According to the Reagan administration's Interagency Task Force on Acid Precipitation, vast areas of the South, Soutwest and West are vulnerable to acid rain. In all areas, water damage those areas in coming decades — if the damage has not in fact already started. There are two ways to reduce emissions of sulfur dioxide from their main source, coal-burning utilities. One is to require utilities to switch from high-sulfur, Eastern coal to low-sulfur coal form the West. But this switch has been strongly resisted by Eastern coal- mining states, which stand to lose as many as 300,000 jobs. The alternative is to require utilities to install scrubbers to remove sulfur dioxide from plant emissions. Scrubbers are so easily disposed of, the pollution would cause double-digit rate bikes in many Midwestern states. The best solution to the dilemma of protecting jobs and the environment is national cost-sharing, as is proposed in the National Acid Deposition Control Act of 1983. The bill would add a fee of one-tenth of a cent for each electric kilowatt generated by every utility in the continental United States. This would cost an average American family 50 to 75 cents a month. The money column of the document costs $39,000 per install of scubing scrubbers at the 50 GERRY SIKORSKI Legislator dirtiest plants in the nation. Sulfur dioxide emissions would be cut by seven million tons a year while allowing the utilities to continue burning high-sulfur Eastern coal, protecting thousands of mining jobs. It is often argued that, instead of mandating the installation of scrubbers, the government should allow utilities to choose between scrubbers and switching to alternate fuels. But utilities have already made their choice, and it is to send their pollution downwind eventually damaging the ecosystems of distant states. The bipartisan National Acid Deposition Control Act equitably distributes the economic burden, preserves jobs and vigorously attacks the problem of acid rain. America needs this legislation. Copyright 1983 the New York Times. Gerry Skorski, Minnesota Democrat, is a sponsor of the National Acid Rain Deposition Act. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Movies' messages sadly realistic To the editor: As a former Johnstown kid ("Flashdance," "All the Right Moves") I feel that yes, "All the Right Moves" (see review of Oct. 31) is probably a second rate "fair" movie in terms of the plot and storyline. But, that is not the message of the movie. Unfortunately, those of us in places like KU and Lawrence are so insulated from the devastating effects of the current recession that we cannot even perceive the underlying theme of those movies. On the surface they seem to be syrupy, melodramatic portraits, but football or drama in America. Each is certainly a lot more than "just another movie about someone's dreams coming true." The real story behind those movies is about how humans cope with the slow dismemberment of culture, families, and communities by the deep economic recession. They are stories about what happens to people when dreams are no longer possible and phrases like "the land of opportunity" become empty and meaningless The sad part of these stories is that they are very real to hundreds of thousands of people who live in the coal and steel towns of this country. Even sadder, though, is that the rest of us don't even recognize those struggles in the movies. But what is beautiful about these movies is that they offer hope to the people and the youth of these areas. No, "Flashdance" is not a story about a dancer and "All the Right Moves" is not a football story. They are attempts to bring back a little hope and faith, to people who have tried valiantly to cling to these dreams. The least we can do is recognize this, and develop an awareness of how people in our country can snare fully in the relative affluence and opportunities most of us take for granted. Linda Backus Lawrence graduate student The Craft case Lawrence graduate stud The Craft case To the editor: I would like to respond to Professor Rasmussen's letter in Ideally, I would think that at a university level we would be fighting for more social responsibility in television news, instead of finding defenses for its mediocrity. the Nov. 7 Kansas concerning the editorial on the Christine Craft case. Like many others, Rassmussen in effect defends Craft's treatment by Metromedia with the argument that "television news is just a different way of bringing information" to harried readers who "tele-news in general and television news in particular are reflections of our diverse society." In other words "That's showbiz". Sure television news has an important function in our society, as do other media and as do other commercial industries, but that fact does not justify the implementation of sexist, racist or any other prejudicial policy in order to improve sales, or ratings. Other elements of our society are not supposed to discriminate, at least not so blatantly as Metromedia did. William Sharp William Sharp Lawrence graduate student Conflict Forgotten In America, we have forgotten that the Afghans, fighting for themselves, fight for us, too. The outcry over Afghanistan seems to have been ceded to the right. The anguish over Afghanistan should also come from the left, from everyone. Every day, death comes from a helicopter, from a bullet across a plain, from behind an adobe wall. The Kremlin wants us to forget, as we forgot Hungary after 1956, Czechoslovakia after 1968, as it knows we will forgive Korean Air Lines Flight 007 There are more than 100,000 Army troops in Afghanistan. They suffer from boredom, dysentery, hepatitis, and there are those here who say that Afghanistan is Russia's Vietnam. It is not. There is neither a nuclear war nor tree disasst in the Soviet Union to put pressures on the regime. Afghanistan's natural gas is pumped directly into the Soviet Union; in effect, the Afghans are paying for the privilege of being invaded In Vietnam, the North Vietnamese had surface to air missions which resulted in which to even the odds. The Afghans do not have these weapons. ERE VAN DYK Author Do the Russians want out? They seem to be building too many airbases for that. Will the Geneva talks, conducted by United Nations Undersecretary Diego Cordovel, produce a settlement? Two seeming proxies, Afghanistan, for the Soviet Union, and Pakistan, for the United States and negotiate Cordovel consuls with India and Iran while the United States consults with the Soviet Union. It seems a charade. The deposed King, Mohammad Zahir Shahr, for 10 years a resident of Rome, has come forward to say that the resistance must unite and that if the Russians are serious they must allow the Afghan fighters to sit at the table. Most Afghans I love under this leadership is the sole unifying source. Yet the main resistance groups, in Peshawar, Pakistan, are divided. The war in Afghanistan is bigger than Afghanistan. In the end, we lose unless we help But Afghanistan is far away. To us, the Afghans are Muslim fanatics The Ayatollah Ruhallah Khomeini is a Muslim. But most Afghans are not fanatics. They see America as their onl Neighboring Pakistan, a collection of warring tribes, is itself divided, but it could do much to help strengthen the resistance The United States, which supplies Pakistan with military aid, shows an effort on Pakistan to give the resistance to unite and bring it to Geneva. If the Russians are serious about peace, they must negotiate with their true opponents. The United States should stand with the Afghans, or stop its anti-communist rhetoric. Copyright 1983 the New York Times Jere Van Dyk, a writer living in Manhattan, is author of "In Afghan ism: An American Odyssey." University Daily Kansan. November 10. 1983 Page 5 Reagan honors late emperor; anti-military students protest Rv United Press International TOKYO — President Reagan paid his respects yesterday to the emperor who forged Japan into a world power while anti-military student protesters staged a sudden sit down near the entrance to the Shinto monument. About 20 students pulled blue and red paper skull masks over their heads, sat on the ground and began chanting "Reagan Go Home." Police pounced, shoving the students away, ripping away the masks and arresting them. The shrine, honoring Emperor Meiji The sirine, honoring Emperor Meiji — who turned Japan into a modern military and industrial power before he died in 1912 — evokes bitterness in the minds of many Japanese who link it to the nation's warlike past. One of Reagan's goals is to persuade the Japanese to rebuild their defenses so they can once again take a more active worldwide security role. POLICE, ON FULL alert and out in the streets in the tens of thousands, had refused student and labor groups permission to protest the visit, which Reagan aides consider a good will gesture similar to a foreign dignitary visiting the Tomb of the Unknowns near Washington. Mindful of the Oct. 2 bombing that killed 21 people and decimated the South Korean Cabinet at the Martyrs Mausoleum in Rangoon, Secret Service agents persuaded Shinto priests to allow a thorough search of the shrine and went over its roof with metal detectors. Shinto priests in white robes and high pointed black hats presided over the THE JAPANESE organized a colorful exhibition of the 7th Century martial art of "yabusame" — archery on horseback — for Reagan's visit to the park-like shrine grounds in central Tokyo. After the ceremonies, Reagan drove to Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakase's residence for a second round of talks on trade and defense issues. Reagan arrived in Japan Tuesday night, and, surrounded by pomp, ceremony and extraordinary security, began prodding Nakasone yesterday on delicate trade and economic issues central to U.S.-Japanese relations. A STATEMENT congratulating the Japanese on steps toward opening their capital markets to foreign investment and creating a joint commission to study the dollar-yen issue was expected today. U.S. officials say an undervalued yen causes the trade imbalance which favors Japan. Joined by the 82-year-old Hirohito, Reagan was driven to the hush grounds of the moat-enclosed Imperial Palace, providing a vivid reminder of feudal rule IMMEDIATELY AFTER the formal audience with the emperor, Reagan and Nakasone began their initial round of wide-ranging private talks that lasted nearly twice as long as scheduled. Anthonv continued from p. 1 The home that Anthony found on North Street is perfect because she can find the keys. And during the summer, Anthony has her garden, filled with rows of corn, radishes, onions, squash and spinach. She canms much of what her garden does, but she also carrot and beans and other foods line the shelves of her basement walls She has been stocking extra food seasonally in 1965 and has recently begun saving it. "The more I raised my own seeds, the more I preached to store seeds," she said. "They will be more important than money someday." FOOD SPOILS QUICKLY but seeds keep. Seeds are important because if people keep seeds, they won't have to store as much food, Anthony said. Since she began storing seeds, she has decreased the amount of food she keeps in her fridge and has been year's supply of food. but now she has about six months of food and her seeds. "My thinking is if I can have food for six months and have seeds I feel a great deal of security," she said. "After that, we will be supplied from the gardens." Anthony said that some people also stored water because they thought the communists could drop a lethal dose of chemicals in the water. They could also cut off the water supply completely. "I have given up on water because there are some wells and hopefully we can barter," she said. "I could give you a drink of water. Also, we could get rain water." FOR THE PAST two years, Anthony has taught a class in survival foods at the national survivalist convention. He attended the June convention, she said. "I taught people about storing food and water and I taught them to eat the weeds of the field," she said. "Tomorrow I must gather the dandelions. They are very rich, especially after the rain." continued from p. 1 students were taking courses that Were too specialized. Because the purpose of the distribution requirement is to provide a broad education, the task force recommended that the College establish a list of principal courses designed specifically for general education. Such an action dramatically reduce the number of courses can be used to satisfy the requirement. Taskforce Students would take one recommended course in physical science, biological science and earth science to satisfy the natural science distribution. They would be required to take one principal course in individual behavior, culture and society, and public affairs to satisfy the social science distribution. And they would take one class in history, literature and values to satisfy the humanities distribution. UNDER THE PLAN recommended by the task force, students would have to take one principal course in nine weeks and to fulfill distribution requirements. Students are now required to take three courses in each of the three distribution areas of natural science, social science and the humanities. No more than two may be in the same department or program. THE TASK FORCE also recommended that the College strengthen the Western Civilization program by adding more budgeted faculty positions and by building the program's curriculum. Presently, the department has only a half-time director who is the only regular faculty member. Western University taught her graduate teaching assistants. The task force found that many students had difficulty understanding Western Civilization classes because they did not know the historical background of the writings. Because of this the committee suggested that the department revise the curriculum to include a text that would help put the readings in a historical context and in certain works to be read in their entirety. THE COMMITTEE ALSO agreed that the class should meet three days a week with one hour devoted to group discussion. The present program gives students the option of attending formal lectures. Because students need to develop an informed appreciation of their role as educated people in society, the task force suggested that a "capstone" course for seniors be established so that they would be allowed to reflect on their careers and the relationship of their careers to the world. The task force said it wanted the B.G.S. degree to follow the same changes as proposed for the B.A. continued from p. 1 Bell's uncle, sold the restaurant to the Seurers in January. Bryan Bell's fingerprints were found on one of those envelopes, an analyst for the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and a researcher, both years had been found near Searer's body. Harmon said Bell told him that he had grabbed two money bags and the day's starting money and put them in a trunk. Harmon also put the murder weapon in the bag. According to Harmon, Bell said that he took about $300 from the restaurant. He spent about $120 for car repairs and the rest for groceries and other items and he put the change in a jar under a sink Another witness, Kelly Brown, said she visited Bell the day after he was jailed. When she was asked whether Bell had indicated his feelings about Seurer's death, she said, "Just a lot of tears." Harmon said that Bell described his financial situation as "being in the hole" and that heowed about $1,600 in rent. Harmon said that Bell told him that he threw the knife, which Bell described as having a three- or four-inch blade, into Clinton Lake. The police dragged the lake for two days in August but were unable to recover the knife. Susan Seurer testified yesterday that 666 was discovered missing from the site. She said the site is "very Mike Hall, a detective for the Lawrence police department, testified that a jar with $46.26 in change was found under a kitchen sink in Bell's When Jerry Harper, Douglas County district attorney, asked her to identify Bell, she avoided looking at Bell and walked into the office where she was sitting about 25 feet in front of her at the defense table. She then covered her eyes with her left hand and cried. She also testified about Bell's relationship with Seurer. Bell was a good employee who was helpful and had taught the Seurers how to operate the restaurant, she said. He was the highest-paid employee at the restaurant and earned $275 a week, her husband earned about $204 a week. She said that Bell last worked at the restaurant on June 30. She said that he had refused to wash dishes that night and that by "mutual agreement" it was decided that Bell would no longer be employed at the restaurant. She said she never heard any threats made by Bell or her husband. apartment when the police searched it on Aug. 17. but quickly regained her composure. "I thought they got along fine," she said. Smokehouse FALL SPECIAL Medium Dinner $4.25 Full Size Dinner $5.25 PEPSI Offer good Wed., Nov. 9th thru Sun., Nov. 13th No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Downtown Lawrence 719 Massachusetts St Lawrence, Kansas Later, Harper asked Susan Seurer to identify Seurer's body from a picture taken at the restaurant the day of the murder. .25 DRAWS & $1.00 DRINKS TONIGHT!! UNTIL 10:30PM EVEN MORE SPECIALS AFTER 10:30PM GAMMONS SNOWMEN 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 When Harper showed her the picture, she looked at it briefly, closed her eyes, and after a pause said, "That's my husband." GAMMONS SNOW UFS UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY THURSDAY Nov. 10 ONLY 7:00. 9:30 $1.75 Orson Welles' CITIZEN KANE Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall Thrifty Thursday Thrifty Thursday Save $3.80 on the Thrifty Thursday Special: Large Pizza • one topping • double cheese • 2 free large Pepsis all for only $7.95 exp. 11/10/83 842-3232 PYRAMID PIZZA PYRAMID PIZZA SENIORS Introducing Hilltoppers The Jayhawker Yearbook is happy to announce the rebirth of an old tradition, the Hilltoppers. The Hilltoppers Awards are the Jayhawker's way of recognizing those seniors who have made high calibre contributions to the University and/or Lawrence community.The award, which was last given in 1973, is being brought back by this year's yearbook staff and interested parties within the University. Criteria for selection includes: involvement and leadership in campus and community activities — respect of the nominee's peers as-well-as his or her professors — references that can address the quality of the nominee's service — a GPA of around 3.0, however grades will not play an extremely important part in the selection The nominations will be screened by a committee that includes KU faculty, student representatives, and the Jayhawker staff. Anyone can nominate a senior for this award, and seniors can nominate themselves by picking up an application. They will be available at the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union, and the Yearbook Office, 121 B Kansas Union. Deadline for acceptance of applications is Friday, January 20, 1984. nineteen hundred eighty-four JAYHAWKER INSIDE:The Computer Science Department The University Daily KANSAN November 10, 1983 Page 6 Budget collides with high enrollment Hersad Computer science faces class, faculty problems Eisa Abdellatif, Sudan graduate student, works on one of the general-use computer terminals at the Academic Computer Center. By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter Gary Smith/KANSAN Sindiya Satsangi was upset when she could not enroll in two introductory computer science classes last semester. Not only did the Lenexa junior have to spend the semester taking only objective classes, but she also will have to complete a graduation date by at least one year. Satsangi only needs the computer science classes to graduate. She will transfer to another university, she will also be required in required classes this semester. Unfortunately, her situation is similar to that of "a substantial number" computer science majors, according to Victor Wallace, who has resigned as chairman of the computer science department. Budget problems, a lack of senior faculty and a doubling of enrollment in computer science classes in the past seven years has forced the department to limit course enrollment. Wallace said recently. As a result, students have been unable to meet their graduation requirements. Wallace said he resigned as chairman last month out of frustration after dealing with the department's budget problems for the past three years. He was replaced by chairing and research duties after his resignation becomes effective Tuesday. William Bulgern, professor of computer science and mathematics, last week was named acting chairman of the department by Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. A national search will begin this month for a new chairman, but Lineberry said last week that the search might take a year. Despite the increase, he said, the department retains virtuously, the same number of senior faculty appointments as it did in 1970 — about 250. According to Wallace, enrollment in computer science has doubled in the past seven years from 4,139 student hours to 8,128 student credit hours in 1989. But the department now has nearly 25 full-time graduate teaching appointments, up from 10 in 1976. And the department's base budget has increased almost 80 percent from 1978 to 1982. Wallace, however, said that the budget figures did not reflect the department's true state of affairs. he said that more department money now is being allocated to the base budget to allow for shrinkage — the estimated amount an institution's salary budget will decrease because of a turnover in faculty members. The actual budget, he said, has never been allocated in proportion to the current budget. Wallace's resignation came in part, he said, after the department's budget was cut 1.6 percent in 1983 and its budgeted budget was cut by 3 percent in 1984. He said he was discouraged by the administration's inability and unwillingness to fulfill his requests. "My resignation from the chair was prompted because I was getting less convinced that I had valid expectations of what the administration could do." Wallace said. "Something needed to be done to stimulate the kind of resources the department should have." Lineberry, dean of the College, agreed that the computer science department needed more money and more faculty to meet its increased enrollment. But he said that other departments in the College — such as political science and economics — had been hurt worse by budget problems. "It's a serious problem. There no question of that." Lineberry said. "The budget has been boosted every year for five years, but enrollments continue to outrun the budget. The increase is just staggering." Still, he said, many College department are experiencing increases in enrollment and losses in faculty. He also said that departments had had declines in enrollment. Faculty losses have been of particular concern to Wallace. Twelve senior faculty members, with the help of graduate students, now must advise and teach 596 undergraduates, 140 graduate students and 1,140 non-majors who are enrolled in computer science classes. Again, Wallace said budget constraints had limited the department in recruiting qualified new faculty. Only one of the department's four full-time professors who have resigned since August 1981 have been replaced, Wallace said. The positions have been filled with graduate students with faculty with one-year appointments. Wallace said he thought that graduate students were qualified to teach, but that more senior faculty be teaching entry level courses. "I'm concerned about the increase use of graduate students in entry level classes because they do not have the experience with the diversity of ideas, questions and problems that the students can present," he said. Wallace, however, said he thought the University was establishing a dangerous precedent. But Lineberry said the administration was hiring graduate students to fill open tenured faculty positions because it gave the budget more flexibility and helped strengthen the graduate program. Moreover, Wallace said that the administrators had responded to his repeated requests for more financing by saying that they simply did not have the money to spend on computer science. "To me, it's not understandable that the priority was not to set allow us to do serious recruiting of new faculty," he said. "We cannot hire faculty to replace those who have worked in this is not the place to do the cutting." Lineberry warned that the University should not over-invest in comp Job market growth in computer science, he said, will be relatively small for highly specialized computer scientists. And he said that most people would need only a small degree of computer science in the future. "It would be a mistake to rush headlong into University expansion." Lineberry said. "Now we must strengthen computer science as an academic discipline . . . and make it an integrated part of the University." Wallace, however, said that the administration had sought expansion when it decided to establish a new program in computer engineering. The University, he said, cannot afford to finance its existing programs. "This is not the time to start a new program and I'd like to see some promises kept with regard to the department's expectations," he said. However, Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that computer engineering was an education that needed to be developed. Tacha said the state needed KU to develop the program because no other Kansas universities offered it. She said the KU School of Engineering had the expertise and the commitment to business businesses to begin a successful program OFFICIALS FROM THE department and the University say they will limit the number of computer science majors to deal with the budget problems and the enrollment increases. They hope to do this by establishing a minimum overall grade point average in English 101, Math 121, CS 200 and CS 210. The department also plans to require a minimum overall GPA in computer science classes. Tacha and Wallace said they regretted having to limit enrollment. But they said that the department must do this to stay within its budget. Last year, the department decided not to add courses so that it could restrict enrollment. As a result, enrollment rose only 1 percent last year, a significant drop from the annual yearly increase of 14 percent. Lineberry said he favored the restricted policy because he thought the classes would attract more high quality students. The strength of a computer science program can be measured by the quality of its students, he said. "If the department does not maintain high academic standards, then it will really begin to feel the financial woes," he said. LINEBERRY SAID THAT he doubted that computer science would ever become a core requirement because he thought basic computer science would be outdated by the time such a change was made at the University. "Our job is to make the program intellectually rigorous, not a mass education on computer programming. We simply don't need it," he said. Earle Schwepe, professor of computer science, strongly disagrees that a small number of computer scientists will be needed in the future. He said that there was already a severe shortage of people with computer science degrees and that the shortage would get much worse if computer science departments limited enrollments. A SHORTAGE OF 800 computer scientists now exists, according to a national study by O Tauleer *professors* at the University of Pittsburgh. The report University of Pittsburgh. The report said the number should get much worse as only 250 doctors of computer science graduate each year. Only 25 percent of those people go into research and teaching at the university level. "How are we going to train computer scientists when we won't have anyone to teach?" Schwepe asked. And Wallace said that he was worried that the University's existing faculty would leave for higher-paying jobs in the private sector or for universities with lighter, teaching loads. At least one of four professors who resigned from the department in July 2014 moved to a position with a lighter course load. Wallace said that he used his resignation partly to call attention to the problems in the state. But he said he did not intend it to be a "brandstand play." "I GENUINELY meant that I was discouraged. There are better things I could do with my time," he said. "You have to give an awful lot to an administrator. You have to give up time with your students and you have to give up the ability to maintain your national reputation as a scholar." "When you find the result of having to give all that up is rather minimal, you have to ask yourself, 'Is it worthwhile?' " Honeywell 66 DPS Gary Smith/KANSAN The Honeywell 66/DPS computer system is housed in the operations area of the Academic Computer Center. The system was donated to the University of Kansas by the Honeywell Corp. and is the heart of the KU computer network. Acting chairman takes positive approach By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter When William Bulgren was named acting chairman of the department of computer science last week, his colleagues joked that they did not know whether to congratulate him or offer him condolences. But because he is committed to the University and has been with the department for a long time, he will make a good interim chairman, he said. But Bulgren said that although he knew the department had many problems, he thought of his new role as a challenge to make the computer science department a growing, positive entity on campus. Bulgen, who was one of the first senior faculty members hired when the department was formed 15 years ago, worked as a researcher and an educator. BULGREN MAY HAVE to trade in his sweaters and casual slacks for the three-piece-suits many administrators wear when he replaces Victor Wallace as chairman of the department Tuesday. "I do not want to be chairman of the department because I am very effective as a teacher and a resource of satisfaction and reward out of it." "I do not see myself as an administrator." Bulgren said. "I enjoy doing research and I enjoy interacting with the students. That's why I went to the University. If I didn't enjoy it, I would be in the private sector. Wallace resigned Oct. 3 because he was discouraged about budget problems within the department. Because the University has a hard time competing with the big money organizations, "I don't think I will do anything dramatic," he said. "I can only do the short term things — the things that need to happen." ren think that he should strive to make the department as enjoyable as possible for the educators. He thinks it is important that a celebration exist in meeting faculty needs. He said his primary responsibilities were overseeing the promotion and I do not see myself as an administrator. I enjoy doing research and I enjoy interacting with the students. That's why I'm here at the University. If I didn't enjoy it, I would be in the private sector.' William Pulleyman Professor of computer science and mathematics tenure process, taking care of merit pay increases for faculty and beginning the search for new faculty. He said the search for faculty was particularly important to lighten the department's heavy teaching THE DEPARTMENT NOW has 12 senior faculty members who advise and teach 596 undergraduates, 440 graduate students and 1,140 non- Bulgren also said he must assist the dean in two transitional issues — the search for a permanent chairman and the need to investigate the possibility of establishing general computer education for the entire University. "We need to search for a chairman Bulgren said he had two priorities in taking the job — that the department would meet the needs of the students in a rational manner and that the faculty would be given better equipment to teach classes. THE ADMINISTRATION has approved limiting the number of computer science majors by putting an overall minimum grade point requirement on four core classes 121, Math 121, CS 200 and CS 210. He said the administration as discussing what the minimum GPA should be. Bulgren he hoped to start by next fall a program that would limit the number of students majoring in computer science. He said that computer science would have to college students to do this. "But this would leave a large number out," he said. "The University has a responsibility to furnish that education to others." He said that introductory computer science classes would not be limited only to computer science majors. Students who need to take computer science classes to graduate will still be able to do so. BULGREN SAID THE the administration and the department were interested in starting a computer science literacy program for the entire University. Because computer literacy is a relatively new field, he thinks the University should invest the time and the money needed to conduct experiments on how such a program should be taught. Gary Smith/KANSAN Thousands of computer discs are stored in the operations area of the Academic Computer Center. 1 1 University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1983 Page 5 Reagan honors late emperor; anti-military students protest By United Press International TOKYO — President Reagan paid his respects yesterday to the emperor who forged Japan into a world power while anti-military student protesters staged a sudden sit-down near the entrance to the Shinto monument. About 20 students pulled red and blue paper skull masks over their heads, sat on the ground and began chanting "Reagan Go Home." Police pounced, shoving the students away, ripping away the masks and arresting them. The shrine, honoring Emperor Meiji — who turned Japan into a modern military and industrial power before he died in 1912 — evokes bitterness in the minds of many Japanese who link it to the nation's warlike past. One of Reagan's goals is to persuade the Japanese to rebuild their defenses so they can once again take a more active worldwide security role. POLICE, ON FULL alert and out in the streets in the tens of thousands, had refused student and labor groups permission to protest the visit, which Reagan aides consider a good will gesture similar to a foreign dignitary visiting the Tomb of the Unknowns near Washington. Mindful of the Oct. 2 bombing that killed 21 people and decimated the South Korean Cabinet at the Martyrs Mausoleum in Rangoon, Secret Service agents persuaded Shinto priests to allow a thorough search of the shrine and went over its roof with metal detectors. Shinto priests in white robes and high pointed black hats presided over the THE JAPANESE organized a colorful exhibition of the 7th Century martial art of "yabusame" — archery on horseback — for Reagan's visit to the park-like shrine grounds in central Tokyo. After the ceremonies, Reagan drove to Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasoe's residence for a second round of talks on trade and defense issues. Reagan arrived in Japan Tuesday night, and, surrounded by pomp, ceremony and extraordinary security, began prodding Nakasone yesterday on delicate trade and economic issues central to U.S.-Japanese relations. A STATEMENT congratulating the Japanese on steps toward opening their capital markets to foreign investment and creating a joint commission to study the dollar-yen issue was expected today. U.S. officials say an undervalued yen causes the trade imbalance which favors Japan. Joined by the 82-year-old Hirohito, Reagan was driven to the lush grounds of the moat-enclosed Imperial Palace, which provides a vivid reminder of feudal rule. IMMEDIATELY AFTER the formal audience with the emperor, Reagan and Nakasone began their initial round of wide-ranging private talks that lasted nearly twice as long as scheduled. Anthonv continued from p. 1 The home that Anthony found on North Street is perfect because she can walk to the corner with her dog. And during the summer, Anthony has her garden, filled with rows of corn, radishes, onions, squash and spinach. She can much of what her garden has grown in its orchards and beans and other foods line the shelves of her basement walls. She has been stocking extra food since 1955 and has recently begun "The more I raised my own seeds, the more I preached to store seeds," she said. "They will be more important than money someday." FOOD SPOILS QUICKLY but seeds keep. Seeds are important because if people keep seeds, they won't have to store as much food, Anthony said. Since she began storing seeds, she has decreased the amount of fertilizer she needs to keep at least year's supply of food, but now she has about six months of food and her seeds. "My thinking is if I can have food for six months and have seeds I feel a great deal of security," she said. "After that, we will be supplied from the gardens." cut off the water supply completely. "I have given up on water because there are some wells and hopefully we can barter," she said "I could give water." Also, we could get rain water." FOR THE PAST two years, Anthony has taught a class in survival foods at the national survivalist convention. The class attended the June convention, she said. "I taught people about storing food and water and I taught them to eat the weeds of the field," she said. "Tomorrow I must gather the dandelions. They are very rich, especially after the rain." Because the purpose of the distribution requirement is to provide a broad education, the task force recommended that the College establish a list of principal courses designed specifically for students. Such an action would dramatically reduce the number of courses that can be used to satisfy the requirement. continued from p. 1 students were taking courses that Were too specialized. UNDER THE PLAN recommended by the task force, students would have take one principal course in nine required courses to fulfill distribution requirements. Students would take one recommended course in physical science, biological science and earth science to satisfy the natural science distribution. They would be required to take one principal course in individual behavior, culture and society, and public affairs to satisfy the social science distribution. And they would take one class in history, literature and values to satisfy Students are now required to take three courses in each of the three distribution areas of natural science, social science and the humanities. No more than two may be in the same department or program. Taskforce THE TASK FORCE also recommended that the College strengthen the Western Civilization program by adding more budgeted faculty positions and by building the program's curriculum. Presently, the department has only a half-time director who is the only regular faculty member. Western University is similarly taught by graduate teachers. The task force found that many students had difficulty understanding Western Civilization classes because they did not know the historical background of the writings. Because of this the committee suggested that the department revise the curriculum to include a text that would help put the readings in a historical context and then explain works to be read in their entirety. Because students need to develop an informed appreciation of their role as educated people in society, the task force suggested that a "capstone" course for seniors be established so that they would be allowed to reflect on their careers and the relationship of their careers to the world. THE COMMITTEE ALSO agreed that the class should meet three days a week with one hour devoted to group discussion. The present program gives students the option of attending formal lectures. The task force said it wanted the banks to to allow the same changes proposed by them. continued from p. 1 Bell's uncle, sold the restaurant to the Seurers in January. Bryan Bell's fingerprints were found on one of those envelopes, an analyst for the Kansas Bureau of investigation had found near Seurer's body. Harmon said Bell told him that he had grabbed two money bags and the day's starting money and put them in a bag. He added that also put the murder weapon in the bag. According to Harmon, Bell said that he took about $300 from the restaurant. He spent about $120 for car repairs and the rest for groceries and other items and he put the change in a jar under a sink. Harmon said that Bell described his financial situation as "being in the hole" and that he owed about $1,600 in rent. Mike Hall, a detective for the Lawrence police department, testified that a jar with $46 in change was found under a kitchen sink in Bell's Another witness, Kelly Brown, said she visited Bell the day after he was jailed. When she was asked whether Bell had indicated his feelings about Seurer's death, she said, "Just a lot of tears." Harmon said that Bell told him that he threw the knife, which Bell described as having a three- or four-inch blade, into Clinton Lake. The police dragged the lake for two days in August but were unable to recover the knife. Susan Seurer testified yesterday that $466 was discovered missing from the restaurant shortly after the murder. Bell was a good employee who was helpful and had taught the Seururs how to operate the restaurant, she said. He was the highest-paid employee at the attendant and earned $275 a week, while her husband earned about $204 a week. She said she never board any threats made by Bell or her husband. When Jerry Harper, Douglas County district attorney, asked her to identify Bell, she avoided looking at Bell and tried to hand touch her. She was sitting on a chair in front of her at the defense table. She then covered her eyes with her left hand and cried. She also testified about Bell's relationship with Seurer. She said that Bell last worked at the restaurant on June 30. She said that he had refused to wash dishes that night and that by "mutual agreement" it was decided that Bell would no longer be employed at the restaurant. apartment when the police searched it op Aug. 17. "I thought they got along fine," she said. but quickly regained her composure Smokehouse FALL SPECIAL Medium Dinner $4.25 Full Size Dinner $5.25 Come See Have the MOOSE! PEPSI Offer good Wed., Nov. 9th thru Sun., Nov. 13th No Coupons Accepted With Sale Offer Downtown Lawrence 719 Massachusetts St. Lawrence, Kansas Later, Harper asked Susan Seurer to identify Seurer's body from a picture taken at the restaurant the day of the murder. When Harper showed her the picture, she looked at it briefly, closed her eyes, and after a pause said, "That's my husband." .25 DRAWS & $1.00 DRINKS TONIGHT!! UNTIL 10:30PM EVEN MORE SPECIALS AFTER 10:30PM GAMMONS SNOWS 23rd & Ousdahl So Hills Center 842-3977 GAMMONS SNOWBOARD 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 UFS UNIVERSITY FILM SOCETY THURSDAY Nov. 10 ONLY 7:00, 9:30 $1.75 Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall PYRAMID PYRAMID PIZZA Thrifty Thursday PYRAMID Save $3.80 on the Thrifty Thursday Special: Large Pizza • one topping • double cheese • 2 free large Pepsis all for only $7.95 exp. 11/10/83 Orson Welles' SENIORS Introducing Hilltoppers The Jayhawker Yearbook is happy to announce the rebirth of an old tradition, the Hilltoppers. The Hilltoppers Awards are the Jayhawker's way of recognizing those seniors who have made high calibre contributions to the University and/or Lawrence community. The award, which was last given in 1973, is being brought back by this year's yearbook staff and interested parties within the University. Criteria for selection includes: — involvement and leadership in campus and community activities respect of the nominee's peers as-well-as his or her professors - references that can address the quality of the nominee's service a GPA of around 3.0, however grades will not play an extremely important part in the selection The nominations will be screened by a committee that includes KU faculty, student representatives, and the Jayhawker staff. Anyone can nominate a senior for this award, and seniors can nominate themselves by picking up an application. They will be available at the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union, and the Yearbook Office, 121 B Kansas Union. Deadline for acceptance of applications is Friday, January 20, 1984. nineteen hundred eighty-four JAYHAWKER . 1 ) University Daily Kansan, November 10. 1983 CAMPUS AND AREA Page Senate to discuss lift-bus operation costs By PETE WICKLUND Staff Reporter The associate executive vice chancellor will address the Student Senate Transportation Board tonight to explain why the University stopped paying its share of operation costs for the KU lift-bus in July. Kevin Neal, campus transportation coordinator, said yesterday that he had invited William Hogan, the associate executive vice chancellor, to give board members information that would help them decide whether to assume the University's annual share of the bus' costs. The University money had been used to finance dispatching costs. he said. THE SENATE ALREADY finances three-fourths of the operation cost for a 2015 shipment. handicapped and severely injured students between their homes and classes. Neal said that the University stopped paying its share of the bus costs when the new fiscal year began in July and that he said that was told that the University ended their payments as part of a series of cuts in the University budget. Hogan said yesterday that he did not want to comment on the issue until after tonight's meeting, which takes place at Activities Center of the Kansas Union. NEAL SAID THE' board's finances could absorb the costs, but said that board members were uncertain about the responsibility for the bus' operation. "I don't want to say anything that might bias the group." Hogan said. He said that board members were particularly interested in whether the University would honor its commitment to purchase a new bus in three or four years. "We already have a commitment from them that says that facility operations will continue maintenance on the bus," Neal said. Facility operations has been responsible for the bus since it was donated to the University in 1980 with proceeds from the 1979 and 1980 Hawkstock concerts and a grant from the Kansas University Endowment Association. But Mark Bossi, the board's chairman, said he wanted to know why the administration was requesting $5,000 from the board to pay the dispatcher, instead of $4,000 which was the present amount. The administrator also dispatcher for the time she spent dispatching and scheduling the bus service. HE SAID HE was checking to see whether the University had a legal responsibility to provide the service, or whether the board was obligated to since the service because they provided a bus system for the able-bodied. Bob Turvey, associate director of the Student Assistance Center, said that Section 504 of the federal Rehabilitation Act stipulated that any service provided to students had to be accessible to all students. TURVEY SAID DESPITE the fact that the University had stopped the dispatcher payments, the University would still help finance the service. He said facilities operations provided students with the service and also provided a back-up bus when the lift-bus broke down or when there were scheduling conflicts. ON CAMPUS TODAY AN AWARD-winning documentary on national security issues, "How Much Is Enough," will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Big Broom of the Kansas Union. STUDENT LITERARY Magazine will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Governor's Room of the Union. AMATEUR RADIO Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Conference Room of the Frank R. Burge Union. GLSOK WILL meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union. AMERICAN ISRAELI Friendship Organization will sponsor Bet Cafe at 7:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Dr. GERMAN CLUB will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the lobby of Spencer Art Museum to tour the Nuremberg exhibit. STUDENT SENATE will show the film "Marines 65" ,a Viet-Amera Marine Corp recruiting film, at 7 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union. sodes from "Frontline" at 10 a.m. in Room 3. Lippincott Hall. CHESS, BACKGAMMON and GO will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the building. STUDENT SENATE will show epi BASEBALL SIMULATIONS will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union. EPICSOPAL EUCHARIST will be at noon in Dafernfo Chapel. ORTHODOX CHRISTIANIS on Campus will discuss "Orthodoxy Under Moslem and Israel Domination" at 7 in the Regional Room of the Union. THE CHRISTIAN Science College Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW THE WAY Campus Fellowship will discuss "Where the Accuracy of God's Word Lives" at 12:30 p.m. in Alcove E of the Union. FOLK DANCE Club will meet at 7:30 pm on the second floor of the Military School. UNDERGRADUATE Biology Club will meet at 4 p.m in the Sunflower room. Unplanned pregnancy? Decisions to make? Understanding all your alternatives makes you really free to choose. Replace pressure and panic with thoughtful, rational reflection. For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and to talk with you. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING Birthright 843-4821 St. Martin November 11 is St. Martin of Tours Day. Hans and Margaret Luther baptized their one-day old son on this day—giving him the saint's name. Martin Luther was born 500 years ago today. He left his mark on history for great thoughts and earthy German. We don't call him St. Martin Luther but he was— because he was—warts and all—a forgiven sinner. Rent it. As we are—St. Joan, St. Mike, and St. ___ (fill in your name) JLC University Lutheran 15th & Iowa-843-6662 Sunday Worship 10:30 am catch us Development conflicts not new in Lawrence By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358. The Lawrence City Commission approved acquiring land in the 800 block of New Hamphire Street. A week later, the citizens of Lawrence descended on the commissioners for their debate about off street parking. JENSEN, WHO presented a slide show portraying downtown Lawrence from the 1920s to the present, said Tuesday night's selection of a developer had a lengthy historical perspective behind it. Steve Jensen, the director of the Helen M. Watkins Community Museum, used the incident last night to explain how things in downtown Lawrence today are in many ways similar to 30 years ago. Tuesday night's debate about downtown redevelopment at the City Commission meeting echoed this sentiment 15 years ago, from the winter of 1952 "It was the impact of the automobile that raised the spector of businesses moving out from the downtown." Jensen said. "The idea was to open it up and broaden it out." According to Jensen, the period of 1880 to 1940 was one of slow, stable growth for Lawrence. The city grew from 8,000 people to 14,000 people. In the early 40s Lawrence became a boom town, he said, as the onset of World War II and the opening of the Sunflower Army Ammunitions Plant in nearby DeSoto brought 3,000 new workers into the city. THE SUDDEN BOOM, which persisted into the 1950s and 1960s encouraged the city to grow and broaden its base, and to accommodate the mobile philosophy of the automobile. In the '50s and '60s, satellite shopping centers began to pop up to satisfy the retail need, he said. Jensen said that the crucial years were 1945-1953. In that time, the city connected Iowa Street to Highway 40, creating a grid pattern of large traffic arteries around the city. Before the 1952 link, people coming in from the southwest had to go to Massachusetts Street and then back out Seventh Street to get across town. The downtown, meanwhile was concentrating on the development of parking lots to keep retail downtown, and this continued into the 1970s with the creation of sawtoot parking on Massachusetts Street. Now, however, as the boom has eased and the piecemeal development of suburban satellite shopping centers is being seen as a problem of businesses leaving downtown is becoming evident. JENSES SAID THAT even with expansion, all the retail businesses could not be expected to stay in the downtown during those years, as Lawrence has grown to be four times the size it was 40 years ago. AN OPEN LETTER TO THE CITY COMMISSION Dear City Commissioners. As Chancellor Budig has failed to respond to my October 27th advertail asking him to detail his plans for dealing with the periodic displays of hooliganism around the portion of 14th Street bounded by Ohio and Louisiana Streets that so frequently follow, but are not limited to, Kansas University home football games, I will ask you the same question. Because each of you cares about the city's neighborhoods, could the commission somehow guarantee to this area's long-suffering residents the police's unqualified protection against those who trespass, abuse and vandalize? Perhaps, as a first step, the commission could call for ending the policy of appeasement which has brought such havoc to this neighborhood because it (the policy) was designed to satisfy only the infantile. William Dann 2702 W. 24th Street Terrace (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) presents: Garcia Lorca's BLOOD WEDDING (BODAS DE SANGRE) 7:30 Wednesday, Nov. 9 Thursday, Nov. 10 Woodruff Auditorium 7:30 W CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1983 Page 8 Programs to observe Veterans Day By the Kansan Staff Veterans Day will be commemorated today and tomorrow at KU with programs sponsored by the Student Senate, the political science department and the cast of the KU production of "Hair." The Student Senate has been conducting a fund-raising drive for the planned KU Vietnam War memorial, and the political science department will show a film tomorrow about nuclear arms control. Tomorrow's performance of "Hair" will be dedicated to Vietnam veterans. Three films, two sponsored by the Senate and one by the political science department, will be shown today and tomorrow. Lisa Ashner, student body president, said recently that the Senate would continue to sell commemorative buttons to finance the proposed $20,000 memorial fountain. Union south of the Frank R. Burge Union. Ashner said that the buttons would be sold from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today and tomorrow in front of the Kansas Union. A segment of the PBS series "Frontline" that focuses on the national Vietnam War memorial in Saigon, with a visit by a m.a. today, and at 11:30 a.m., 12:30. 1:30, and 2:30 p.m. tomorrow. The film will be shown in room three of Lippincott Hall. The Senate will present "Marines 65", a training and recruiting film used by the Marine Corps, at 7 p.m. today in the Council Room of 'It just occurred to me that maybe we could do something different and commemorate Veterans Day by looking at where we are and how we got there in the hope that we won't have any more Veterans Days.' Union. Asher said that the film presented a pro-military view of U.S. intervention in Vietnam and the Dominican Republic. —Clifford Ketzel Professor of political science Ashner said that because of the pro-military stand of the film, she had asked Vietnam veterans Tom Berger. He was a close friend of Ashner and Musgrave, Baldwin, to speak before the film about their experiences. "We're aware it's pro-military and that's why we're having the discussion — to balance it," Ashner said. The political science department will show a documentary about nuclear arms build up titled "How Much is Enough?" at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Big 8 Room of the Union. "How Much is Enough," features discussion by American and European arms negotiators including Paul Nitze, the chief negotiator in European arms talks for the Reagan administration, and Maxwell Taylor, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the Kennedy administration. Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science, said that he hoped that the program, which is similar to one he sponsored last year, would help begin permanent recognition of Veterans Day at KU. "Because there is no general celebration of Veterans Day on campus, and because last year's program was successful," Ketzel said, "it just occurred to me that maybe we could do something different and commemorate Veterans Day by looking at where we are and how we got there in the hope that we won't have any more Veterans Days." Let the sunshine in...AGAIN! HAIR Presented by The University of Kansas Theatre and the School of Fine Arts - Book and Lyrics by Genome Rigin and James Rodd - Music by Gail MacDermot November 3, 4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 1983 · 8:00 p.m. nightly · Craftron-Preyer Theatre / Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office · All seats reserved for reservations (1918384-3982) · Partially funded by the KU Student-Academy Fund Pizza Hut. PIZZA HUT YOUR HOMETOWN PIZZA HUT RESTAURANT DELIVERS THE GOODS IN LAWRENCE. Pizza Hut $2 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA,OR $1 OFF ANY MEDIUM. Valid only on delivery orders. One coupon per party per delivery. Redeemable only for deliveries from the Pizza Hut® restaurant at 932 Massachusetts St., Lawrence. NOT valid in conjunction with any other Pizza Hut® offer. *Expires December 7, 1983.* Please mention this coupon when ordering. Monday-Friday—4 p.m.-Midnight Saturday—3 p.m.-Midnight Sunday—Noon-Midnight 932 Massachusetts St. Lawrence 843-7044 Your Home Town Pizza Hut © 1983 Pizza Hut, Inc. DK Cash redemption value is 1,000¢ Your Home Town Officers for the magazine and the club will be elected at the meeting, and a vote will be taken about what the magazine should be called. Paling said. Robert Elam, faculty adviser for the new group, said that the content of the magazine could not be planned with the authors, so the content would depend on submission. Creative magazine to provide low-cost outlet for KU writers By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter "We have a campus of about 25,000 students," he said. "We really can't mice." The University of Kansas has many "Voltaires," who are unknown and unpublished because students do not have access to a literary magazine in which they can submit works at a low cost, several students said recently. "Out of 22,000 students and faculty, there is probably a great wealth of writing talent out there," he said. "I am sure we can come out with good submissions to put out a high quality journal." To solve the problem, about 10 students have decided to form a literary club and produce a literary magazine to give students and faculty a chance to have their creative writing and artwork published at a low cost. BUT THE PROJECT is not likely to fail, he said. Steve Paling, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, said that the group had decided to start the magazine because he wanted to raise a literary talent of KU students and faculty. THE LITERARY MAGAZINE will be open to submissions of photography, cartoons, essays, short stories and more. If you are also likely to emphasize poetry, he said. "We will consider anything as long as it is from a KU student," he said. "The only journals being circulated on campus are professional." He said he wanted to keep a low profile and let the students make the editorial decisions. The club will meet again at noon tonight in the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union. The meeting will be held in taking part in the project, he said. Two literary journals are now circulating on campus, he said. The journals are Part Time Poets and Poets Table. The new magazine will try to keep its submission fees as low as possible to make it easier for students to be published, he said. Students who want to have works published will be expected to pay $1 for each package. A package consists of five works of one genre. The students plan to start a literary club, which will organize poetry readings as well as other literary activities it considers to be of interest to students, he said. Members of the club will produce the magazine. "We are also hoping for some financing from Student Senate, and we are hoping for patrons," he said. "We will have a minimum of advertising." The publication will consist of about 30 pages and will be published twice each semester. The magazine will be sold to students but the price has not been set, he said. "I want it to be their journal." Elam said. Paling said he was determined to make the project work. "I think it is really sad that there isn't a literary magazine on campus; he's not." USA USA USSR Funded by Political Science and Student Senate HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH? An inquiry through an award winning documentary into government decision-making on nuclear weapons and national security-rational or capricious? Discussion Follows. Big 8 Room—8:00 p.m.— FRI. NOV. 11 MISTER GUY MISTER GUY Fall '83 in clothing from 920 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS 842-2700 Fall '83 in clothing from Mister Guy . . . the gentlewoman's haberdasher. . . TGIF THIS FRIDAY Hours: M-T W-F Sat. 9:30-6:00 Thurs. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 1-5 --- 1 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1983 Page Official cites progress at KU Med Center By MATTHEW HARRISON Staff Reporter D. Kay Clawson had reservations about taking the job as executive vice chancellor of the University of Kansas Medical Center after he heard about the Legislature's attempt to take Bell Memorial Hospital away from the university. "I knew nothing about that move until I had already been appointed here," Clawson said. "It did give me second thoughts." But several things have been done to solve some of the hospital's financial problems, including the hiring of Gene Clawson and others at the Med Center. Clawson said, "I would say that the hiring of Gene Staples represented what I would call the hiring of a professional hospital administrator." CLAWSON, WHOSE $79,000 a year salary makes him one of the state's highest paid officials, said the hospital was a nonprofit-minded organization and would consider running the operation under the state civil service guidelines and the legislative mandates. "I think it is an extremely well-run, hospital given the complexities of having it under a state controlled system," he said. A legislative committee agreed with Clawson Friday by recommending that the University continue to run the hospital as long as it showed progress. Clawson, the former vice chancellor for clinical professional services at the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, left Lexington Sept. 1 to become the executive vice chancellor at the Med Center. HE SAID THAT he came to the University with the knowledge that the Med Center was close to becoming one of the top medical schools in the country and that he planned to work to make it better. "We are not in that top group of school — but we are very close to it," he said. Keeping high quality physicians and researchers at the Med Center has been another recent problem for the University. The problem must be resolved if pool, tennis courts and other recreational activities." Clawson, a former research scientist and medical practitioner, said that the lack of athletic facilities on the Kansas City, Kan., campus had not received adequate attention in the past despite a growing concern among medical students. "I believe we can't ignore the fact that we have some 2,000 students here that, with the exception of the stairs to run up and down on, have recrea- 'We have never had the surplus of physicians which we now have. Hence, there is a level of competition that I don't believe is healthy.' D. Kay Clawson, Executive Vice chancellor, K.U.Med Center the university is to be competitive nationally, Clawson said. The Board of Regents has instructed him to look into various incentive programs to help prevent faculty members from accepting more lucrative offers from other institutions or from the private sector. Clawson said, "It is essential that we have good research equipment, are on the forefront of things and make the changes. We have not done that in recent years." CLAWSON SAID HE thought that it was a definite disadvantage to have the medical center separated from the main campus. "I am concerned that the students do not have any semblance of a community here," he said. Where I have been, he has never visited campus with access to a swimming pool. CLAWSON. A soft-spoken man who chooses his words with the exactness of a scientist, said that dealing with it was the most frustrating part of his job. "Everybody is more comfortable doing things the way they have always been done." he said, "even though the way they have been done in the past has not produced the results everybody wants." Many critics of the Kansas educational system say that because there are too many state educational institutions, state funds are distributed on a quantitative rather than qualitative basis. Clawson said that the situation disturbed his conse- quence that he to be accepted. institution as the premiere research institute in the state and support it as a center of excellence. "It would be nice if people in their infinite wisdom would single out one CLAWSON SAID HE had practiced medicine under a system of socialized medicine in Great Britain and that he had discovered that under such a system doctors practiced "rationed medicine." "You may have free access to care," he said, "but in actual fact, if you want anything done that isn't lifesaving, you must do it on a month or even years to have it done." A dangerous situation arises when there are more physicians than there are patients, he said, because physician work to keep their skills sharpened. "We have never had the surplus of physicians which we now have," he said. "Hence, there is a level of appreciation that I don't believe is healthy." BELL MEMORIAL HOSPITAL was recently selected by Blue Cross & Blue Shield to be one of several Kansas City hospitals to operate under a new plan known as Preferred Provider Organization or "PPO." Basically, the plan says that if a patient chooses to go to a doctor in a hospital participating in the PPO plan, he will completely pay the medical bill. However, if a patient prefers to be treated at a non-PPO hospital, then the patient must pay 15 percent of his medical bill. Clawson said, "The plan is probably not all bad, but we are going to be watching it very closely. Everybody will belong to some health plan in the future. The hospital will have to form some plan or service of their own that will be selected by a select group of people." Alliance members try to preserve buildings By GINA K. THORNBURG Staff Reporter In an era of prefabricated houses and quick construction, some builders would rather raze a 100-year-old building than restore it. But local members of a group, the Kansas Preservation Alliance, are trying to make people aware of the importance of preserving old buildings, a member of the alliance board of directors said yesterday. “It's important to preserve historical buildings," said Michael Shaw, assistant professor of classics and an alliance member. "Preservation is nearly always a compromise between the needs of the present and preservation of the past." SHAW SAID THAT the alliance recently had mailed 4,000 letters to people across the state as part of its membership drive. Curtis Besinger, professor of architecture and urban design, who is also a member of the alliance, said that the National Trust for Architecture has issued a licence the alliance's membership drive with a matching grant. About 12 people in Lawrence belong to the alliance, which has more than 100 members statewide, he said. Shaw said that the alliance had begun in Kansas six years ago when a group of people concerned about preserving historical building had realized the need for a non-government organization that could lobby in Topeka for the preservation of old buildings. The alliance works with the historic preservation department of the state historical society to nominate buildings to be placed on the national register of historic preservation, he said. "The national register slows government down and forces them to take a second look at construction projects," Shaw said. BSENGER SAID THAT the alliance tried to encourage historic preservation by giving awards to preservation had been restored or preserved well. Each spring, the alliance has an awards banquet to recognize about a dozen buildings in Kansas "that insure that they are in preserving property," he said. Two buildings in Lawrence that have received awards are Marvin Hall, which houses the School of Art and Design at Columbia; the old Watkins bank, which is now the Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Mass. Shaw said. "A lot of it has to do with simple appreciation that those old styles are really worth looking at. They are often covered up with new materials." He said that buildings that were preserved using modern materials such as aluminum siding and plastic roofing, should recognize the Alliance would recognize Cors THE BEST OF THE ROCKIES IS YOURS. Coors $2.00 off haircut all semester with KUID Silver Clipper 842-182 OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRINDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Stop by 115 Military Science or Call 864-3161 FRESHMEN I WANT YOU! TO TRY THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA FRENCH BREAD PIZZA NITE (Tues. & Thurs.) All You Can Eat-$2.95 2228 Iowa 842-0154 6 packs to go No Carry Out or Delivery on this Special order. Please call valid with this offer What are "FUNFLOWERS?" Handing over They're Flower just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to anzang and enjoy Pat a little up a pick of up a pick of Pick up a bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" today or any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Our nice fresh casual bunch of © 1983 Adolph Coors Company, Golden, Colorado 80401. Brewer of Fine Quality Beers Since 1673 Specially priced! For in town delivery $400 $400 喜 SOUTHERN HILLS Floral&Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" 749.2912 1 NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 10. 1983 Page 1 $67,000 bid gives dealer 1939 photo By United Press International NEW YORK — A 1939 photograph of a steam locomotive was sold at an auction yesterday for $78,000 — the highest price ever paid for a photograph. The 6-by-9 inch photograph, titled "Wheels" and taken by painter and photographer Charles Sheeler, was sold to a Michigan dealer at an auction at Parke Barke Bernet in Manhattan. It was acquired four copies of the negative in existence. Sotheby's spokesman Marcie Stuckin said that Thomas Halsted had bought the photo on behalf of the Detroit Institute of Arts. The 1939 photo portrays the side of a steam locomotive Sutchain said that Halsted's $87,000 bid was the largest amount ever obtained as a sale price for a photograph. It was one of the first photographs he was expected to yield on auction. The previous record high sale price for a photograph was $36,000. It was set in May 1980 for a portrait of Albert Sands Southworth. United Press International [Image of a steam engine, showing its massive cylinder and piston mechanism.] NEW YORK — This 1939 photograph of a steam locomotive was sold at an auction for $67,000, the highest price ever paid for a photograph. The six-by-nine inch picture titled "Wheels" was taken by painter and photographer Charles Sheeler and sold to a Michigan dealer at an auction at Sotheby-Parke Bernet in Manhattan. It is one of four copies of the negative in existence. House passes dairy price plan By United Press International WASHINGTON — The House, ignoring a threatened veto, yesterday approved a Senate-passed compromise plan to rein in the runaway cost of dairy price supports by paying farmers not to produce milk. Congressman rejected, 250-178, an administration-backed plan offered by Hep Barber Conable, R-N.Y., who cut the support price by up to $1.50 then voted 325-91 to approve the compromise, which would pay farmers who cut milk production, reduced dairy production and increased measured money to promote dairy products. There are minor differences between the House and Senate versions, so a joint conference will be needed before approval and be sent to President Reagan. UNDER THE DAIRY price support program, the government purchases surplus milk and cheese. The program for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30 cost taxpayers $2.7 billion — 10 times what it cost four years ago. At present, the government collects a $1 assessment to try to cut production, but congressmen said that the plan had backfired. Backers said that the compromise bill would help dairymen through a tough period as they cut production. "The compromise is admittedly stopgap," said House Agriculture Chairman Kika de la Garza, D-Texas. "We think it will work." Michel said, "If you think the committee will accept new law, you must take but a big mistake. Conable and House Republican Leader Robert Michel of Illinois had warned that the administration opposed the bill. Conable said he had been told "the president will veto anything but the Conable amendment." In fine-tuning the bill, the House refused to exempt producer-handlers from the program and to exempt them from 50-cent reduction in the support price. Under the amendment, passed on a 348-71 vote, the Agriculture Department would slow the number of dairy cows sent to market for slaughter if slaughter prices dropped by 10 percent. THE HOUSE AMENDED the bill to protect ranchers and hog farmers from any drop in slaughter prices that could be caused if moves to cut back milk production prompted farmers to sell dairy cows for slaughter. Telescope discovers new solar system By United Press International WASHINGTON — A satellite telescope that discovered what may be a new solar system has also has found a new asteroid among the planets, new stars in formation and more comets than any other observer in history, scientists from three nations said yesterday. Astronomy textbooks will have to be rewritten because of the new evidence, and this is why we use them. Scientists from the United States, Holland and Britain assembled at National Aeronautics and Space Administration headquarters to report on the latest data from the Infrared Astronomical Satellite, known as IRAS. They said in addition to the asteroid, IRAS has found evidence of previously unobserved rings around a distant star. Scientists have been checking through the Earth's solar system. "So far, the results of this effort have been nothing short of spectacular." said NASA chief James Beggs, speaking for the entire panel. "The taxpayers got a look at the universe that's never been seen before," said Nancy Boggess, a U.S.I. team astronomer. "It gave us a definite perspective on our own planet here. A lot of chapters in astronomy books will be rewritten because of what we found here." ONE OF THE most widely publicized discoveries was evidence of a second solar system in the universe. Scientists announced in August the discovery that Vega, one of the brightest stars, is surrounded by a ring composed of dust and small meteor-like objects that could be planets in formation. The satellite has relayed so much data, however, the scientists said they may not know the significance of it all for some time to come. "The success of this mission makes clear we need a lot of follow-up." said Harm Habing, head of the Dutch team in the project. IRAS, A JOINT U.S.-Dutch-British project, is a satellite-mounted telescope orbiting 563 miles above the Earth. It detects emissions of infrared radiation, which is invisible to the eye and which cannot be monitored from space because of atmospheric interference. U. S. astronomer Fred Gillett said IRAS has detected an asteroid-like body less than 1.2 miles across that passes closer to the sun than any known planet or asteroid in the solar system. Its orbit intersects that of Mercury. Beggs said the satellite is responsible for the discovery of five comets, "more new comets than any other observer in our history." Also discovered were three giant dust shells around Betelgeuse, an older star and one of the brightest in the Orion constellation. The shells will help scientists study the deterioration of stars. IRAS MAPPED THREE rings of dust within the solar system, possibly the result of asteroid collisions. Brazilian Congress approves pay limit; autoworkers strike By United Press International BRASILIA, Brazil — Congress yesterday ratified a wage limiting decree that the government called essential to winning foreign loans to meid payments on Brazil's staggering foreign debt — the largest in the world. In Sao Paulo, 10,000 workers at a Ford auto plant struck in defiance of the measure, and opposition policymakers said they would intensify Brazil's social problems "the means more sacrifice for the population but it is necessary," said Congressman Nelson Marchezen, a former government Democratic Social Party. He spoke after an all-night opposition filibuster ended in 245-3 and 43-1 votes in the House and Senate. respectively. The approval came on the government's fourth attempt this year to push through the wage bill. LAST MONTH. A wage limiting measure was turned down despite a state of emergency imposed in the capital amid demonstrations against the government. The government then decreed that the measure on its own the next day. Planning Minister Antonio Delfim Netto said that without tough wage controls to bring down 197 percent inflation, Brazil would have trouble obtaining funds from the International Monetary Fund and private foreign bankers. The government asked congress to ratify the measures before the Nov. 18 Washington meeting of the IMF board that will consider progress in Brazil's economy and either release or continue withholding loans. The Latin American nation needs fresh financing to meet payments on its $90 billion foreign debt, largest of any country in the world. UNDER THE PLAN, workers earning up to about $15 a week will still get salary hikes matching the inflation index, itself "doctored" to read some 30 points below the true level of price rises. Higher-paid workers will get smaller percentage increases, however, meaning their real spending power will decrease. Taxes on earned and unearned income are increased, while the bill contains some protection for pensioners and mortgage pavers. 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November 10. 1983 NATION AND WORLD Page 1 Churches' council delays admittance of gay group By United Press International HARTFORD, Conn. — The National Council of Churches' governing board yesterday indefinitely postponed deciding whether to admit the monoxenic-oriented Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches. After two hours of largely procedural debate, the governing board voted 116-94 not to act on a motion that would have declared the tiny 27,000-member institution eligible for membership in the coalition against its largest interfaith organization But the vote left a number of issues unresolved, including whether the Metropolitan Community would have to reapply for membership or what processes and procedures would be put into place for continuing relations between the council and the Metropolitan Community. METROPOLITAN COMMUNITY officials attending the meeting as visitors expressed pleasure at the council's decision not to take a definitive stand on the membership application. "It is important that no vote was taken on eligibility," said the Rev. Nancy Wilson, Los Angeles, one of the churches' ecumenical officers. "We feel encouraged by the tremendous struggle the National Council went through. We feel that the issue is still alive and open." Andrew Vance of the Greek Orthodox archdiocese of North and South America, the strongest opponent of the Metropolitan Community, said the Orthodox churches would not leave the council because of the vote. The nine Orthodox church bodies in the council had threatened to leave if the homosexual-oriented church was declared eligible. THE VOTE WAS an attempt at compromise on an issue council leaders on both sides of the question said would be needed to impart and perhaps lead to its dissolution. Supporters of the Metropolitan Community, including top officials of the United Methodist Church and the United Church of Christ, had worked behind the scenes in an effort to indefinitely postpone the vote. The application has been pending since 1981. The resolution to postpone acknowledges there is within the Protestant and Orthodox church bodies "unresolved debate . . . concerning homosexuality." THE FIGHT IS ON. United Press International SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Deputy assistant secretary of defense Nestor Sanchez, left, confers with Col. Joseph Stringham, commander of the military group of U.S. advisers in El Salvador, at Ihopango Military Airbase in San Salvador. The two met after a group of high-ranking U.S. officials had returned from an inspection tour of the eastern part of the country. Nicaraguan bishops say disputes remain By United Press International Eight Nicaraguan bishops met yesterday with top government leaders for $2^{1/2}$ hours in what junta leader Daniel Ortega called very positive talks, but the bishops said their main differences with the state remained unresolved. It was the first meeting between the Catholic hierarchy and the Marxist-led led Ties between the Nicaraguaan government and the Catholic church deteriorated last week when pro-Sandinista crowds mobbed 20 churches and harassed some priests, protesting the church's stand on the draft law. The law requires all males aged 17 and older to register for the draft for a larger manpower pool in the growing war against U.S. backed rebels. The three-man junta, headed by Ortega, met with the eight bishops — by Archbishop Miguel Ondo y Braña, a Spanish president, Bishop Pablo Antonio Vega. The Sandinista Front has accused some priests, including Obano y Bravo, of backing the rebel cause, but the group has also said they would not support a U.S. invasion of Nicaragua. "We are confident that they would be in an moment on the side of an infirmity." Bishop Vega said he believed the meeting had resulted in "better understanding" of the position of both jumta and bolem as major differences had not been resolved. However, Vega said the bishops told the junta the Sandistain Front should pursue new policies to help avoid confrontations. He said the bishops had told the junta of the problem of people who had been displaced. two foreign priests who were expelled from Nicaragua last week, charged with printing pamphlets urging draft evasion. THE BISHOPS and the junta would exchange information on the charges made by each side. Ortega said there would be further meetings. "In no way are we opposed to military service, but yes, we are opposed to the utilization of military service to establish an ideology that is compatible with our national bishops have said drafted youth would be indoctrinated in Marxist ideology. Official admits meeting Aquino suspect By United Press International MANILA, Philippines — An Air Force colonel yesterday said that he had met several times with the alleged killer of opposition leader Benigno Aquino, the last time less than a month before the Aug. 21 assassination. Testifying before a new inquiry into *Testifying* an alvy's slaying. Col. Arthur Custodio said that he had last met alleged Bando Galman in the last week of July. The colonel said Galman, who looked 'despondent' and 'worried', came to his home in suburban Quezon City one month later and told for a social call and a few beers. The 41-year-old fighter pilot told the five-member investigative commission that he first met Galman at a village fiesta in April 1979 in their home province of Nueva Ecija and about four or five times after that. Custodio quoted Galman as telling him "I have something important to do. My group gave me instructions." Custodio said Galman, whom he described as an "acquaintance" but also a friend, "refused to elaborate further." CUSTODIO SAID the subsequent meetings began in early 1982 when he helped a lawyer friend visit Galman at a military camp where Galman was detained on unspecified subversion charges. Cuddle Duds® LORRAINE Available in short-and long sleeve tops and short and long bottoms in "solar-knit fabric. Galman_33, 33 was gunned down by security men seconds after Aquino was hit once in the back of the head by a .357 magnum bullet. UNDERCOVER, 21 W. 9th Government investigators say Galman was a notorious criminal hired by communists to kill Aquino and embarrass the Marcos regime. But critics say the military was involved in the murder. Aquino, political archvail of President Ferdinand E. Marcos, was shot as he was being escorted by military guards from a jetliner bringing him home from a three-year self-exile in the United States. phone: 843-1151 THE CASTLE TEA ROOM INTEREST IN Custodio surfaced after Newsweek magazine reported that the colonel had employed Galman up to a week before the assassination to do "occasional light work." Custodio denied this. He also denied reports he was attached to the office of Armored Forces (ARF). A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1133 Boyds Coins-Antiques Class Rings Bay Self-Trust Gold-Silver-Coins New Hampshire Watches New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-842-8773 EATS 1105 MASS LAWRENCE, KANSAS TASTY, TONGUE TICKLING, TIDBITS! Hitachi-IBM settlement of $300 million reported TIN PAN ALLEY By United Press International NEW YORK - Hitachi Ltd. agreed to pay International Business Machines Corp. about $300 million under a secret pact that led to the recent settlement of Japan's lawsuit charging the Japanese firm Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. Sources close to the negotiations told the newspaper that IBM had agreed to allow Hitachi to continue to use software that IBM had claimed was "stolen or derived from stolen IBM technology." The sources said IBM agreed to drop its lawsuit, which would have entailed showing the Federal Bureau of Investigation that it "painfully embarrassing" to Hailey. The Journal said the exact terms and timetable for Hitachi's $300 million payment are below. A SPOKESMAN FOR IBM said, "The story and particularly the amount are highly speculative, and we have no further comment." The settlement of IBM's civil suit against Hitachi was announced Oct. 6, but no mention was made of the secret payment. William Jentes, a partner at the Chicago law firm of Kirkland & Ellis and head of the Hitachi defense, confirmed that a secret agreement between IBM and the government have use of IBM software "formed an arm of the settlement." The journal said But sources in the Chicago law firm said Jentes was "furious" at the terms of the secret pact and believed the settlement was so unfavorable to him that he refused refusing to sign it on his client's behalf, according to the newspaper. "The Japanese were so obsessed with secrecy that they were willing to pay $300 million to save face," one source told the Journal. JENTES SAID that IBM would have had a difficult time proving its claims if the case had gone to trial and that IBM would not have was a trade secret," the naran said. But Jentes said Hitaen was unable to settle the IBM suit because of a natural Japanese aversion to litigation, the company's role as a major IBM client or the Japanese government to dispose of the before the IBM board's November visit to Japan and President Reagan's state visit this week. By United Press International Group suggests changes to save feds $24 billion WASHINGTON — A presidential committee says the government can save nearly $24 billion in three years by repealing three key labor laws and improving its management of research projects. The three laws are the 1935 Davis-Bacon Act, which requires the secretary of labor to determine the prevailing wage on federally financed or assisted construction projects; the Walsh-Healey Act, which now applies mainly to overtime pay under large government procurement contracts; and the Service Contract Act, which deals with prevailing wages under government service contracts. The President's Private Sector Survey on Cost Control, started in early 1982, made the proposals Tuesday in four new reports, bringing the total to 41 reports that it has issued so far. ONE OF THE new reports proposed major changes in the way the government organized its budget figures. Another report proposed better government management to give no overall savings estimates. The group's chairman, J. Pete, Grace, chief executive of W. R. Grace & Co., said that the 2.287 recommendations contained in the 41 reports added up to a three-year government savings of $365 billion plus cash accelerators of $68 billion. However, he also said that there could be some duplications among them. He said that the $849 billion in government liabilities, listed in the 1984 budget, would total $11 trillion under correct accounting if off-budget loan guarantees and loans of unconsured enterprises were included Grace said the nearly $200 billion federal deficit would be more than $300 billion under correct accounting. THE GROUP PLANS to present further reports later this month and a final report to the president. TKE ROMAN NEW YORKER Bring your Friends VIDEO MADNESS 101 TOKENS for $7.00 (less than 7c per play) BRING IN THIS COUPON Offer expires 11/30 VIDEO Bring your professors Bring the family 1021 MASS. NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1983 Page 12 British women protest at U.S. military bases By United Press International LONDON — Thousands of women held a 24-hour protest vigil at more than 100 U.S. bases around the country yesterday, and a poll revealed that 94 percent of Britons mistrust President Reagan's control over the firing of nuclear missiles in Britain. The protests coincided with the filing of papers in U.S. District Court in Manhattan by 12 British women attempting to stop the scheduled deployment of 160 cruise missiles in Britain next month. THE WOMEN, JOINED by Reps. Ted Weiss, D-N.Y., and Ron Delums, D-Calif, filed their civil suit in U.S. District Court in Manhattan. They named President Reagan, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and the heads of the U.S. Air Force and U.S. Army as defendants. A federal court judge rejected the request, saying the plaintiffs failed to show that irreparable harm would result without an immediate order A poll in London's Daily Mail newspaper said 94 percent of British voters want their government to Asked if they thought Reagan would fire cruise missiles from Britain against the wishes of the British government, 68 percent said yes. Only 10 percent answered no. The remaining 32 percent, voters, 38 percent, believe Reagan's policies have made nuclear war more likely. have control over the firing of the missiles. THE POLL CAME as thousands of women gathered at 102 bases used by U.S. forces around Britain. The women peace protesters sang, held candle in a peace vigil and huddled against the cold throughout the day. A four-hour vigil began Tuesday evening. Nine women were arrested at two bases for obstruction but police said the demonstrations were generally peaceful. More than 100 protesters gathered outside the NATO communications center near London. The U.S. led invasion of Grenada apparently has swayed Britons against U.S. policies. Seventy-two percent of those polled said they did not accept Reagan's claim that the United States would collect the lives of U.S. citizens there. Simple gases composed Earth's air, scholar says By United Press International BLACKSBURG, Va. — Recent research indicates Earth's primitive atmosphere was nothing like the exotic gases long assumed to have existed, scientists new clues to how life began. NASA researcher reported yesterday. The revised scenario for the childhood of the 4.6 billion-year-old planet suggests the early atmosphere consisted of carbon dioxide, nitrogen and water vapor — not methane, ammonia and hydrogen as generally believed. Joel S. Levine, senior atmospher scientist at the space agency's Langley Research Center at Hampton, Va., said the new picture of the first several hundred million years of the atmosphere comes from computer analysis of recent geological, geochemical and radioactive data and also profile the gradual change to today's nitrogen-oxygen atmosphere, said Levine. AT A CONFERENCE at Virginia Polytechnic Institute, he said the carbon dioxide, nitrogen and water vapor in the early atmosphere came from gases trapped in Earth's interior and formation and released through volcanoes. Once the water vapor from wide spread volcanic activity saturated the atmosphere, rains started and the occurs formed. This began the process that led to a nitrogen-oxygen atmosphere. The carbon dioxide in the primitive atmosphere largely went into the oceans and precipitated out as carbonate rocks such as limestone. Levine said that without the oceans, Earth would resemble Mars and Venus — lifeless bodies with mostly carbon dioxide atmospheres. He said that since Venus is closer to the Sun, its water apparently was boiled off by solar heat. Mars is farther from the Sun than earth and its water is too cold to drink. Mars' ice, never existing in liquid form long enough to take up the carbon dioxide. THE IDEA THAT Earth's primitive atmosphere consisted of methane, ammonia and hydrogen was first proposed in the early 1950s. Levine said such an atmosphere would have been impossible to obtain because we have lasted more than 200 million years. Levine said other new research has shown that the gases in the earth's atmosphere, when energized by lightning or radiation from the sun, can form formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide — molecules needed for life. Other research suggests that even before the beginning, of life on Earth, oxygen started to form in the atmosphere. 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Twenty-four Cuban diplomats, including Ambassador Julian Torres Rizzo, flew from Point Salines airport to Barbados in a U.S. Air Force C-130 plane. In Barbados, they boarded a Cubana Airlines jet bound for Havana. By United Press International Residents of a St. George's neighborhood reported hearing several rounds of gunfire late yesterday that the police had shot a sniper fire against American troops. NO FURTHER DETAILS were immediately available and there was no immediate comment on the report from U.S. officials on Grenada. Just two Cubans, embassy First Secretary Gaston Diaz and a communications technician, remained in Grenada, in accordance with an order by Scoon for Cuba to reduce its diplomatic representation. Grenadian officials originally said there were 27 Cuban diplomats on Grenada. Speaking outside his residence, Scaire said he had asked Alister McIntyre, a 51-year-old Grenadian economist who had been tapped by political observers as the leading candidate for the job, to head Grenada's advisory council. THE ORIGINAL ARTIST SCOON, CONSTITUTIONAL head of state as the queen's representative in the former British colony, said one of the ways he prepared for elections within a year. Among McIntyre's duties will be security matters, finance, trade and The 24 Cubans left as arrangements were made to transfer to Havana the bodies of 42 Cubans reported killed in an explosion, which ousted the Marxist regimes. "Politicians will be barred from membership in the council and I have avoided asking people with vested interest in our country," Scoon said. United Press International PETITE CALIFIGNY, Grenada — U.S. Army soldiers carry a body from a mass grave. The body was one of three or four removed near a former Grenadian military camp. Officials suspect that the remains of former Prime Minister Maurice Bishop may be in the mass grave. A U.S. military forensic team flew to Grenada to try to identify the bodies. Patrick Emmanuel, a senior research fellow at the University of the West Indies, will be responsible for foreign affairs. Scoon said McIntyre, deputy secretary general of the U.N. Conference on Trade and Development, must obtain permission from U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar for a leave of absence. A U.S. military pathology team headed for Grenada to try to identify four burned bodies found in a shallow grave. Farmer, who earlier said the 42 bodies were in morgues in Grenada, bestowed his statement to say the body might eight different gravesites on the island. A MILITARY OFFICIAL, said they might be Marxist Prime Minister Maurice Bishop, Foreign Minister Unison Whitman, Education Minister Jacqueline Crift and Housing Minister Norris Bain. The four were among 17 people killed on Oct. 19 when Grenadian army troops fired into a crowd of 3,000 people. The crowd had freed Bishop from house The spokesman for the U.S. mission on Grenada, Guy Farmer, said all but two of the diplomats at the Cuban Embassy on the island, including Ambassador Julian Torres Rizzo, were heading home yesterday. The bodies will be exhumed by U.S. Army and International Red Cross officials and sent to Barbados, 150 miles northeast, within the next two days to be examined by Cuban pathologists, Farmer said. Scoon and Cuban officials resolved an impasse over the evacuation of 42 bodies U.S. military officials said were Cubans killed during the invasion. U. S. troops and forces from six Caribbean nations invaded Grenada Oct. 25 to restore order and democracy and rescue the Americans on the island, most of whom attended a private medical school. arrest where he had been held since Oct. 13, count by more militant Marsei IN BRUSSELS, Deputy Secretary of State Kenneth Dam briefed NATO allies on the U.S. intervention in Grenada FARMER SAID FIRST Secretary Gaston Diaz and a communications technician would remain on Grenada "The main point he made was to explain the legal justification for the U.S. action, which Washington felt had been misunderstood in Europe," one NATO diplomat said. Diaz said Tuesday they would not leave until every Cuban, "died wounded," as he told reporters. Washington had been disappointed about the reaction of some allies to the intervention and wanted to make its mission absolutely clear, diplomats said. UFS UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY ORSON Welles' CITIZEN KANE THURSDAY Nov. 10 ONLY 7.00, 9.30 $1.75 Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall Orson Welles' UFS UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY THURSDAY Nov. 10 ONLY 7:00 9:30 $1.75 Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall SORORITY RUSH REGISTRATION Wednesday and Thursday November 9 and 10, 1983 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Centennial Room, Kansas Union --- What's Going on THURSDAY at THE SANCTUARY? 16 0z. PRIME RIB—$6.95 au jus, baked potato, steak fries, salad DON'T FORGET YOUR QUARTERS! Quarter Draws From 9-12 p.m. 1401 W. 7th (Bet. Michigan & Florida) 843.9703 Reciprocal With Over 180 Clubs THE BUM STEER BAR-B-Q The results are in! Bum Steer Bar-B-Q has received FIRST PRIZE at the AMERICAN ROYAL BARBEQUE COOK-OFF Voted.."the best ribs around!" NOW ON SALE! SLAB $8.50 SHORT END $5.50 LONG END $4.25 BURNT END PLATE $4.00 includes side dish All rib dinners include: Fries, bread, & pickle. 2554 Iowa 841-1060 What's Going on THURSDAY at THE SANCTUARY? 16 0z. PRIME RIB-$6.95 au jus, baked potato, steak fries, salad DON'T FORGET YOUR QUARTERS! Quarter Draws From 9-12 p.m. 1401 W. 7th (Bet. Michigan & Florida) 843-9703 Reciprocal With Over 180 Clubs SANCTUARY NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1983 Page 13 More prisoners leave crowded jails in N.Y. By United Press International NEW YORK — Another 20 prisoners were freed from overcrowded city jails yesterday despite what Mayor Edward Koch called the release one inmate last week and says later allegedly raped a woman. Correction Department spokesman Edward Hershey said other 20 inmates had been released by yesterday morning, bringing the total number to 438 since last week. The U.S. District Court Judge Morris was ordered the city to reduce the prison population to ease crowding. The Daily News quoted the unidentified woman as saying she hoped Craig "gets the electric chair." Dean Craig, 36, a grand larceny suspect who was freed from jail a week ago, was held in prison yesterday, charged with raping and sodimizing a 21-year-old woman in the Bronx last Friday "The judge would not like it if it was done to his own family," the woman, told the newspaper. "If that judge had not been a victim of rape." THE INMATES WHO were released are awaiting trial and held in lie of $1,500 bond or less. They must post 10 percent of their bail amount in cash and Craig won his freedom by putting up $150 on his $1,500 bond. "We felt there would be dangerous people back on the streets as a result of this program but confronted with the realities of what it was simply no choice." Hershey said. Mayor Koch said Craig's case reflected a "crainsiness in our society" and an "idiocy loose in the world." "I say there is a craziness in our society when you care more for the rights of those alleged to have wrongdoings against the rights of society." Koch said. The mayor said he would be unable to offer an explanation to the victim. "She's the society I'm talking about. I'm saying to that woman, I cannot explain to you the idiocy of what we're being required to do. I cannot defend it," he said. "I am saying to her and to the rest of the people of this city that there is an idiocy loose in the world." Craig's re-arrest made him ineligible for a second release from jail. Lasker Friday permitted the city to refuse to release prisoners charged with arrestee offenses or those re-arrested after being released under the bail program. WASHINGTON — The House Judiciary Committee endorsed the resurrected Equal Rights Amendment on a 21-10 vote yesterday and sent the measure to the full house with hopes that it can be passed by Thanksgiving. By United Press International Committee advances ERA to full House The Democratic-dominated committee wrangled for $5\frac{1}{2}$ hours with the 24-word constitutional amendment, beating back a rash of amendments seeking to neutralize its effects on the draft, abortion insurance rates, veterans benefits and private boys' and girls' schools. The ERA, as it goes to the full House, is identical to the proposed amendment that passed Congress in 1972 and died in 2008. The short of the 38 needed for ratification. It states: "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex." "It's been a long time," sighed Rep Patricia Schroeder, D-Dolo., prime sponsor of the ERA introduced early this year. "Women would like to be in the Constitution." ADVERSARIES JUDY Goldsmith, president of the pro-Era National Organization for Women, and Eagle Forum founder Phyllis Schlafly, an ERA appponent, were in the audience for the lively debate over attempts to repeal wording of the amendment before sending it to the states for ratification. The changes would have written in exemptions to spare women from the violence. ordering changes in abortion policies, insurance rates and single-sex private hospitals. "If we send it out naked of any of these amendments, it is just doomed to failure," lamented Rep. Sam Hall Jr. of Iowa and joined on the panel to vote against the ERA. "There seems to be a great deal of momentum in this committee for an equal rights amendment," criticized Rep. Clay Shaw, R-Fla., "but you had 12 years and you lost ... It seems you have learned nothing." Former CIA agent sentenced to 25 years NEW YORK — Former CIA agent Edwin P. Wilson, whose lawyer said was unfairly branded an "infamous ogre," was sentenced yesterday to 25 years in jail and a $75,000 fine for attempting to murder eight people. The sentence means Wilson, 55, now faces a total of 57 years in jail on this and previous convictions. But he will be eligible for parole in 10 years. U. S. District Judge Edward Weinfield imposed sentence yesterday for attempted murder, retaliation against a defendant who was guilty of ruled the sentences will run concur- reently with the 25-year sentence for attempted murder The white-haired Wilson, dressed in a tan suit, stared at the floor as his sentence was read. He declined to speak on his own behalf. WILSON'S ATTORNEY, Michael Dowd, asked for leniency, saying Wilson had unfairly gained the reputation as "some kind of infamous ogre." "Mr. Wilson lived in a nightmarish world for 20 years, where the rules of morality were suspended," Dowd said. "Right was wrong and wrong was right, and anything went as long as you were doing it for the U.S. government." Weinfeld curtly rejected Dowd's appeal. "The defendant's conduct indicates utter disrespect and contempt for law and for human life. There is no suggestion he is penitent . . . and there is no change in his attitude." Weinfeld said in passing sentence. Wilson completes a 32-year sentence he already is serving for smuggling arms Evidence at his most recent trial showed that while Wilson was in prison awaiting trial in his Libyan arms cases, he plotted to kill witnesses and prosecutors by trying to recruit other inmates to carry out the murders. Additional charges for smuggling weapons to Lybia are pending against Wilson in Washington, D.C., prosecutors said. The 25-year sentence will begin after LADIES NIGHT AT The Pladium 901 MISSISSIPPI LADIES OF KU, TONIGHT IS YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SEE MALE BURLESQUE. DOORS OPEN AT 7:30, SHOW STARTS AT 8:00 GUYS GET IN AT 10:10—$2.00 COVER PLAIN JANE STARTS AT 10:15 "WE DIDN'T FORGET THE KU MEN'" MASS. STREET DELI 041 MASSACHUSETTS HOT OR MILD SMOKED SAUSAGE SPECIAL served with potato chips and dill pickle spear $1.95 Reg.$2.35 Wed, thru Sun, Nov 9 thru Nov 13 No coupons accepted with this offer BASS FISH Mon - Thurs – 10:30-9 Fri & Sat – 10:30-11 Sun – Noon 9 p.m. Rent it. Call the Kansan. Steamboat January 2-8 Full package price of $299 includes: sleeper bus transportation, 4 nights lodging at The Ranch, lift tickets for 5 days, ski rental and a wine and cheese party. Drive out f only $125. (lc ing only). Sig in the SUA before N 30. Ar pier SU SU TRAVEL NO MOOSE IS AN ISLAND Imported Moosehead. Stands head and antlers above the rest. BRAKE FOR MOOSEHEAD. WHEN YOU DRINK DON'T DRIVE. Grown & Brewed in Canada's Oldest Independent Family Brewery National Brewing Company MOOSEHEAD CANADIAN LAGER BEER St. John New Brunswick & Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada Goretex (tq-tekxs) n. 1: a trade name for an expanded polyurethane filament (PTFE) membrane; 2: m-layered fabric laminate that is highly water to vapor vapor, but not highly flammable. Outerwear made from GORE-TEX fabric is wind-proof, waterproof, yet BREATHABLE. It's like having your cage and eating it, too. GRM SPORT carry all the best brands of GORE-TEX outerwear. Marmot Mountain in the North Face, Moosemont Mountainmening, Witness Experience, and Sierra Designs. Check out the sleek styling and functional goodness of our GORE-TEX skirn, rainwear, and shoes. We'll be here with you all MARRIOT MWN. WORKS GORE-TEX 1998 OFF ALL GORE-TEX DGREED-GORE-TEX 1998 OFF ALL MARMOT MTN. WORKS GORE-TEX 10% OFF. ALL SIERRA DESIGNS GORE-TEX 25% OFF. GRAN SPORT WILDERNESS OUTFITTERS 7TH & ARKANSAS 843-3328 Just 4 books in the stadium, 1 book of the film, 2 books of the game. Also, you would expect to find a new outdoor podium. Selling something? Place a want ad. Call 864-4358. SEAN CONNERY JAMES BOND NEVERSAY NEVERAGAIN Eve. 7:15-9:40 Mall. Sat; 2:00 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 863-1095 LIVE CHEVY CHASE DEAL CENTURY MMT. Sat Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 1 STREET AND 100TH Telephone 800-273-6500 THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND R Mon. 7:30 to 9: Mat. Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 2 717 AND IOWA 14340 NORTHWEST 82490 ALL NEW RIGHTBOYROR have and you R Eve. 7:40-9:35 Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 3 EVENT AND TIME MONDAY, JUNE 18TH AT 10:00 AM Stephen King's DEAD DONE Eve: 9:30 Sat: 2:15 Sun: K CINEMA 1 3157 AND IOWA TELEPHONE 824-8600 On October 14, 1964 Billy Mills stunned the world by running the most sensational race in Olympic history. But it wasn't how he finished. it was where he started that made him a champion. ROBBY BENSON RUNNING BRAVE INCLUSION OF PRODUCTIONS IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE LAMMERTON MUSEUM OF FILMS ROBBY BENSON - RUNNING BRAVE Music by ROBBY BENSON Produced by ROBBY BENSON Directed by J. D. SMITH Music by WESTERN MUSIC Produced by WESTERN MUSIC Directed by D. E. SWEETEN EVEN: 7:35-1:35 MAT. Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 ICONS AND MUSIC B The eight star actors deserve one Oscar... (in) this funny and ferociously smart movie! THE BIG CHILL Eve. 7-30: 9-30 Sat. Sun. 2:00 SPORTS University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1983 Page 14 SPORTS BRIEFS From Staff and Wire Reports Shockers favored in MVC, edge Tulsa in coaches poll ST. LOUIS — Defending champion Wichita State was the pick of both the coaches and the media yesterday as the pre-season favorite to win the Missouri Valley Conference basketball title. The Shockers jolted Tulsa by one point in the coaches' poll, with each team receiving four first-place votes. The other vote for first place went to Oklahoma City. In the media poll, Wichita State received 22 first-place votes to nine for Tulsa and two for Illinois State. The remainder of the coaches' poll placed Drake in fourth, followed by Bradley, Indiana State, Creighton, Southern Illinois and West Texas State. The media ranked Bradley fourth, followed by Indiana State, Drake, Creighton, Southern Illinois and West Texas State. Henderson charged with sex crimes LONG BEACH, Calif. — Former Dallas Cowboy linebacker Thomas "Hollywood" Henderson was charged yesterday with five sex and drug felonies involving two teen-age girls, one of whom is a paraplegic. Henderson, 30, was charged with two counts of false imprisonment and one each of forced oral copulation, sexual battery and furnishing sexually explicit materials. The former Cowboy, who went with Dallas to three Super Bowls, was ordered to appear today in Long Beach Municipal Court for arraignment. He was freed on $16,000 bail following his arrest Nov. 3. Prosecutors say that two girls, a 15-year-old and a 17-year-old who is confined to a wheelchair, were lured to Henderson's apartment, where the 6-foot-3, 240-pound former football star forced the 15-year-old to have sex with him at gunpoint. Hartman signs 3 basketball recruits MANHATTAN — Kansas State Coach Jack Hartman announced the signing yesterday of three basketball players to national letters of sponsorship. Meyer averaged 26.7 points and 12 rebounds per game as a junior to lead Wichita Campus High School to a 17-4 record and the Ark Valley League championship last season. The Wildcats also signed 6-4 guard Jordyn Williams from School and 6-4 forward Ken Muff of Cloud County Community College. Dobbins averaged 25.3 points and 14 rebounds a game in leading Humboldt to a 21-1 record last winter. He was an all-state pick in both basketball and football and turned down a scholarship offer to play quarterback at Nebraska. Muff, who prepped at Salina Central, averaged 14.1 points and 10.1 rebounds for a 25-5 Cloud County team last season. Rain, sleet force Iavhawks indoors Kansas Coach Mike Gottfried moved his team into Allen Field House for yesterday's two hour practice session because of the rain and sleet. sas Cohen Mike Gottwedt moved his team into Allen Field House for yesterday's two-hour practice session because of the rain and sleet. Senior defensive tackle Mike Arbanas did not participate in the practice because of a foot injury. Arbanas, who missed last week's game against Colorado because of the flu, will definitely miss this week's game against Nebraska, Gottwedt said. Linebacker Marky Alexander is questionable because of a slight knee injury. Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 PERSONALIZED K-U JAYHAWKER CHECKS ONLY $7.50 FOR 200 CHECKS ALSO AVAILABLE: COMPLETE CUSTOM CHECKS BASED ON YOUR ACCEPTABLE PHOTOGRAPH TO FOLLOW BUSINESS OPERATIONS AND EVIDENCE BANK OF CALIFORNIA ACCOUNTANT AND BANK OF CALIFORNIA SAVINGS BANK KANSAS BANK NOTE CO. DEPT. KU FATH & JOHNSON TOWNSHIP, NEW YORK, N.Y. 84738 3-716-292-7146 S.U.A. Fine Arts Committee presents: The First Annual Crafts Bazaar A perfect opportunity to purchase Christmas gifts. November 29 & 30 Kansas Union Lobby Attention Campus Community: If you are interested in participating in the Bazaar pick up an application from the SU A Office. Deadline: Nov. 11, 5 p.m. By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer Loyd, seniors play final volleyball game tonight Senior Leslie Loyd and the KU volleyball team will close out the Jayhawks home schedule at 8:30 a.m. In the Fen Field House against Kansas State. Because it is the last home match, four KU seniors and their parents will be recognized before the start of tonight's match. "It will be different, but I am kind of glad." Loyd said about ending her college career in volleyball. "It has been four years. Now I will have more time to do other things and concentrate on school." "This year it is well, but I can tell it is injured," Loyd said about her knee. Loyd, a physical education major, came to KU last year from Cowley County Community College in Arkansas. She was an all-region volleyball player. SHE WAS HAMPERED by a shoulder injury much of last season and worked on strengthening her shoulder in the off-season by lifting weights. Weight lifting is also one of her hobbies, along with running and participating in a variety of sports. For volleyball, she said that she lifted weights that concentrated on the mid-section and leg muscles. A Farmington, N.M. native, Loyd SOMMER 图 followed her high school volleyball coach to Cowley County. She said that she had wanted to attend a junior college because she had thought she would have a chance to play both volleyball and basketball. Leslie Lovd SHE WAS IMPRESSED with Cowley County's program because it finished in the top four in the region consistently. The two years that she was at Cowley County, the team finished above 500, she said. "I thought I wanted to go on playing volleyball so I started looking around." she said. "I had it narrowed down to two choices, Texas Tech and KU. I had tried the program at KU already and I liked the program at KU better so I decided to stay in Kansas." Loyd began playing volleyball and basketball when she was in the eighth grade because she wanted to do something athletic. "He was a very good athlete and my parents were around him as an athlete a lot, and then I came along so they continued doing the same things for me," she said. "They drove us to practice and went to our games." She earned all conference honors in volleyball and basketball her senior year of high school and was also second team all-state in basketball Loyd was not the only athlete in her family. She has one brother, who is also a track and field coach. Lloyd said that her parents had been supportive of her throughout her athletic career. They were able to see her play in the juvenile buqueque sport, which they ported this year. "THEY WOULD LIKE it if I was closer to home, of course," she said. "Since my high school was big we had a pretty high level of play so there was not much of a change," she said. "The only differences, if there were any, were running more plays and maybe working a little harder." The adjustment from a large high school in New Mexico to a junior college in Kansas, as far as playing volleyball, was not that drastic. Loyd "It was different," she said. "It seems like, well, the competition is harder. My teammates are more skilled at their positions than in junior college. Practice is a little longer, but that is mainly a coach's choice." LOYD DOES NOT mind putting in the practice time, concentrating on service reception and blocking techniques, with head coach Bob Lockwood because she said that playing against an experienced Nebraska could be intimidating. The change from a junior college to KU was not a big one for her either. Her immediate goals for the team, Loyd said, are to be beat K State tonight, to go in Lincoln, Neb., Saturday and play a good match against the Cornhuskers, then a good week of practice before the Big Eight Conference Volleyball Championships next weekend in Ames, Iowa. "It helps after you stuff it to them a couple of times," she said. "I want to finish the season strong because we have not been playing as much." Basketball ticket sales finish 1,500 ahead of 1982-83 pace Response to a last-day ticket sale was positive, as 543 students lined up Tuesday to buy season tickets for the 1983-84 basketball season. By the Kansan Staff VOLLEYBALL NOTES — Juno Beth Vivian, a setter from Omaha, Neb. was named to the first team of the Eight Academic Team this week. The sale helped push final student ticket sales to nearly 1,500 more than last year, said Terry Johnson, interim ticket manager. The final tally for student ticket sales were 4,866 after Tuesday. More than half of those tickets were purchased by students who bought All Sports tickets. The athletic department originally had said that 334 additional tickets were left because of the redistribution of student seating. But the department decided to open up sales for an extra section when all 334 tickets were sold in one and a half hours. Mike Hamrick, administrative assistant to the athletic director, said that 150 students were lined up in front of the gymnasium on Tuesday morning when sales began. "THEERE WAS SUCH a demand for them early in the morning that we decided to go ahead and open up another section." Hamrick said. Anne Stucker, chairman of the Student Sports Council, said she was extremely pleased with Tuesday's turnout. The council had earlier expressed disapproval with the athletic department's new ticket policy and had asked that ticket sales be reopened. Stucker said she thought Saturday's turnout of 7,000 people for the Jayhawk intrasquid game helped make students aware of the team's potential. College of Liberal Arts & Sciences UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY wants All LA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. Election will be held Nov. 16-17 with Student Senate Election. arabic student organization cordially invites you to: the arabic day Thursday, Nov. 10 Big 8 room, K.U. union 11:30 A.M-4:30 P.M. costumes, music, cultural dishes, slide shows, displays! Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Graduate Office 210-1 Strong Hall. Self-nominations are required. Filing deadline—4:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 11. 10 ANNUAL STUDENT ALUMNI CARER & CONFERENCE NOVEMBER 12, 1983 KANSAS UNION "Practice in the Corporate Setting" Hear J. Wendell Bayles Professor of Law Washburn University School of Law Chancery (Pre-Law) Club Curious About A Law Career? Pursuing Your Goals The ANNUAL STUDENT ACADEM Jayhawk Room in Guest Speakers CARL BRODY - EDUCATIONAL INVOLVEMENT BREAKFAST AND PLANING COMMUNICATION D. KAREN FRIELLS G-3 D. KAREN FRIELLS G-3 INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION Students Open Forum November 10-7:30 p.m. Kansas Union KU BLACK ALUMNI Guest Speakers. Workshops: RESUME WRITING & INTERVIEWING SKILLS RECEPTION IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING PROGRAM PATTON: A Salute to a Rebel starring GEORGE C. SCOTT UFS UNIVERSITY FILM SOCETY Friday and Saturday November 11 and 12 7:00, 9:45 $1.75 Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall SENIOR CLASS PARTY at GAMMONS SNOWMORE FREE BEER and HALF PRICE DRINKS Friday 3 - 7 Senior class t-shirts now available. $10.00 or free with your class card GAMMONS SNOWBOARDS BASKETBALL SPORTS ALMANAC Boston W 1 L Pct. GB New Jersey 6 1 875 Philadelphia 4 677 1 New York 2 667 13 Washington 4 637 3 Washington Central Division Milwaukee 5 214 — Atlanta 3 214 — Detroit 3 300 — Chicago 3 490 2 Cleveland 2 4 433 2 Indiana 2 4 NBA Standings Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Western Conference Midwest Division University Daily Kansan, November 10, 1983 Page 15 W L Pet. GB 4 2 .667 — 3 3 .500 1 FIELD INVESTMENT Portland 5 2 714 Golden State 5 2 690 (a) Los Angeles 4 3 100 Seattle 4 3 571 1 San Diego 4 3 492 1 Phoenix 4 1 290 2 San Antonio 3 4 429 1½ Utah 2 3 400 1½ Houston 2 4 333 2 Kansas City 2 5 286 2½ **Yesterdays' Results** Boston 128, Dallas 129 New Jersey 172, Chicago 101 Detroit 120, Philadelphia 116 Milwaukee 95, Kansas City 93 San Antonio 106, Utah 99 Cleveland 104, Cleveland at Seattle Tomorrow's Games Tough Game New York at Manhattan Utah at Houston Phoenix at Golden State Cleveland at Portland E. Johnson 10:18 10:20 10:28 Olberding 2:3 0:4 10:4 Thompson 0:4 1:2 11:2 Brew 12:2 12:2 Noah 12:2 Nedley 2:3 0:4 12:2 Nealy 12:2 Merrweather 2:3 0:4 8:4 Buse 3:4 6:4 11:8 Lait 1-4 11: Total 40:78 12:21 12 Detroit at Boston Milwaukee at Jersey New York Kansas City at Philadelphia Chicago at Washington San Antonio at Dallas AT&T at Atlanta Atlanta at Seattle Milwaukee 95, Kansas City 93 Bridgeman 6-10 4-6 12-4, Laird 4-8 3-4 11-4, Lanier 7-4 8-6, 10-8, Archibald 4-4 5-8, Merele 11-15 9-4 7-8, 11-8, Archibald 4-4 5-8, Merele 11-15 Pressley 1-6 2-4, Greyvee 8, Townes 1-1 0-9, Total 12-7 28-35) 24 20 28 21-3 Three-point goal - tense! - Foaled out. Milwaukee 24, Kansas City 19, Cincinnati 24, Boston 24, Kansas 29, JC Johnson 6), Milwaukee 40 (Lister 16), Milwaukee 53 (Taylor 15), Archiehall 13) Technical - Milwaukee coach Nelson | | tet | rush | pass | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | San Diego | 3091 | 1691 | 2058 | | New England | 1809 | 1738 | 2048 | | Cleveland | 3688 | 1191 | 2494 | | NY Jets | 3654 | 1524 | 2155 | | LA Raiders | 3688 | 1521 | 2155 | | Pittsburgh | 3408 | 1699 | 1709 | | Baltimore | 3257 | 1741 | 1516 | | Cincinnati | 3257 | 1741 | 1516 | | Kansas City | 3201 | 747 | 2454 | | Miami | 3196 | 743 | 2454 | | Buffalo | 3196 | 743 | 2454 | Team Statistics AMERICAN CONFERENCE Offense Houston 3122 1299 1823 Seattle 3071 1467 1664 Denver 3034 1184 1846 Defense Pittsburgh 2817 1094 1813 Cincinnati 2814 1104 1813 La Raiders 2991 1091 1900 Kansas City 2159 1134 1845 Maryland 2146 1134 1845 New York Jets 3348 1180 1958 New York 3339 1290 2159 Cleveland 3309 1290 2159 Baltimore 3452 1094 2148 Houston 3658 1041 1817 Rafaeldo 3658 1041 1817 San Diego 3686 1091 2295 New England 3705 1473 2252 Seattle 3744 1473 2252 FOOTBALL NATIONAL CONFERENCE tot. rush pass San Francisco 3995 1458 2507 Washington 3860 1660 2238 Green Bay 3677 1620 1982 Dallas 3799 1498 1660 Chicago 3796 1510 2285 LA Rams 3534 1452 2062 Arizona 4344 1322 2154 NY Giants 3339 1258 2081 Minnesota 3296 1080 2081 Detroit 3260 1080 2081 New Orleans 3270 1594 1676 St. Louis 3176 1594 1676 Philadelphia 3176 1594 1676 Tampa Bay 2777 905 1872 Defense New Orleans 2983 1259 1872 San Francisco 3336 1353 1983 Chicago 3336 1353 1983 Philadelphia 3350 1603 1873 Tampa Bay 3358 1163 2195 St. Louis 3358 1163 2195 Washington 3391 963 2526 Dallas 3514 1065 2449 LA Rams 3537 1076 2481 Alabama 3537 1076 2481 New York Giants 3629 1167 2462 Minnesota 3634 1167 2462 Green Bay 3634 1167 2462 KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES The University Daily KANSAN | Words | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | or 2 Weeks | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 0-15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 | | 16-20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 | | 21-25 | 3.15 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.05 | | For every 5 words add: | 210 | 350 | 750 | 1,405 | AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. POLICIES - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words - Deadlines same as Display Advertisement — 2 working days prior to publication FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS *pc humanitarian* Classified Display advertisements can be only one width wide and on more than a minimum depth. With size in inch. No revenues allowed in classified display advertisements except for logos. Image source: www.pchumanitarian.com - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only - comment 2 working days prior to publication * Shows base brand on commentary date. - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement. - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising - Blind box ads + please add a $2 service charge * * Checks must accompany all adified mailled - to The University Daily Kauan - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance - ALL travelers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established - Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. this earned rate discount - Samples of all mail order items must be submitted Fond items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in or simply by calling the Kaiser Business office at 804-4358. ANNOUNCEMENTS No more missing out on your favorite comics! Have them reserved— at a discount at and service anywhere KWALITY COMICS M-F: 11-7 843-7239 Sat: 10-5 107 W. 7th For the best prices Arts and Crafts Fair, Sat. Nov. 12 10:44 Lawrence Community Nursery School, 45 Alphas. Frederick Academy, 80 Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Rooms 200 and 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applications due in Room 200 StauFFER-Flint Hall bv 5 p. m. Wed, Nov 16. Kansan classifieds get results The University Daily Kanus is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employee. Applications are sought from all qualified people with a disability, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age or ancestry. FOR RENT XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH? Award winning documentary on American decision-making in national security and nuclear weapons. Big 8 Room, B P.M., Friday, Nov. 11, Discussion follows. PROTEST US U.S. INVASIONS IN CENTRAL VIETNAMS MARCH IN LAWRENCE Sat. Nov. 12h20 Join the Latin American Solidarity and other organizations DEPARTMENT DONN, gather at Constant Park to march down Mass St. to South Park Rally at South Park For information: www.masspark.org and information tables. For info: 780-7210. --- 1. 3 bedroom apartments available immediate partial unit units paid Contact Kaw Valley Manage- ment 2. HR House, newly remodeled, KU bus route, bus outlines, cool to laundromat; $250.843 2903 www.hrhouse.com FOR HIRE 2 bedroom house, close to KU and downtown. Fridge, range, washer, and dryer. 82/4mm and utilities and dep. Call after 5 (90 p.m. 842-8661) Beautiful 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment. With no without utilities paid. Central air condition, wall to wall carpet. Kitchen, dishwasher, close to shopping and parking. Air conditioning at 2500 feet Level I or II of gas map for information. Duplex. 2 bed, 1 bath duplex for rent. East Lawrence. Jan. 2 WBK bookup 749-2156 FOR HENR Nirest, available behind new just com- mputers. ALL UTILITIES PAID. Call 869-203-9928 for details. Furnished Studio. Fully equipped gas, heat and bus route. Available Dec 1. 1 reasonable charge. impossive room in a bedroom house $100/month Exclusive FREE. Move in anytime 84-800 Allows Aik for Sleep STUDIO Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 Large 3 bedroom apartment. Lots and pool, fully furnished, laundry facilities, water pool. Garage. Large one bedroom apartment, 1128 Vermont, range and refrigerator. All utilities费 $30 per month. Call (212) 569-5780. Live in the best residence hall, formally needed to be a resident. Dorm room required; utility room, maid service, pool and food utilities BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please come to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. New Townhouse For Rent. Located in Northwood New York. 350-768-4100. Back up. PP with Garage. Big corner lot. Directions: 21st Street, NW, Northwood. 842-1876 or 841-1287 Meadowbrook studio for sublease now or December 3. Ask for VV220, 842-4300 Non-smoking roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment $12/month and 1/3 lift. Across roommates. Share five bedroom house Close to campus $160 plus month + 1/2 tuition. Free resale until Jan Call (800) 749-3222 Sublease 2 Bedroom unfurnished apartment on KL 1037 Central Ave, central dishwasher to come at 5pm. Central air, heat dishwasher to come at 9am. Water heater to come at 4pm. Jayhawk West ARRIVALS An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievably Slashed Rates! 1 & 2 BR Apts. From $200 featuring: * Year-round submits * Free shuttle bus to campus 14 times daily * Laundry facilities * Exercise facilities Don't miss this opportunity to bond one of the most greatest interiors- communities in the world, and call us. We work if you! Reserve your studio now for the spring semester while the selection is good. Fully furnished, free cable TV, close to campus. Save money, rent a t + 1 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets, phone 842-4185. Nice 2-bedroom apartment just north of stadium, available immediately. $275, n81-4443 Keep trying. Room for rent near university and downtown. No please. 811-5500 meadowbrook Fish & Creature 849 420 Two rooms for rent ($10 and $8) on 1st floor of house located on 460 block of Kentucky. Smaller Subtel 1 bedroom Bedroomlandakert Apt. 10 December rent - $75, rent through May Apc. 20 24-hour room service 842-4444 524 Frontier Rd. COMPLETELY FURNISHED Studio, 2 or 3 bedroom apartments available immediately. Great location! FOR SALE 1966 Mustang, good condition. 2 steel-belted radial wing pin. Pitch S154. Phone #842-451. 1972 Honda SL30, Low miles, $250 or make offer 841-8742 MADBROOK BOOK spacious 2 bedroom apartment MEETABLE SPACE, walk-in water, quiet, two bedroom apartment, 842-782-9500 1963 condition Lasko Haircut Cannon 4 door d�eirm Excellent condition, low hairlight, air cap, brace and steering. 10.27 Daimler BIT F.D.GM gas mileage 74-598 10.28 Honda EPA MODED, mapped at 1900 East 1st Street 1976 Datsun B-210. Great gas mileage. 749-5658 1882 Toyota Corolla SGI 540, extra clean, special paint & interior restoration. 1882 Toyota Corolla SGI 540, extra clean, special paint & interior restoration. **After @ www.booker.com** 941-5212 70 Bag games needs work Good free $235, 790-$1090 80 Bag games needs work Good free $235, 790-$1090 85 Bag games needs work Good free $235, 790-$1090 90 Bag games needs work Good free $235, 790-$1090 71 WV Fastask, very reliable, good condition. New tires and brakes. $550. 843-6173. All Mobotabic bicycles are reduced for sale! Starring the new MOBOTABIC SPORT BRACE, NEW RELEASE in New STK Collection Sport Bicycle. Never ridden. Brown 2 door 1982 Rabbit for sale Good shape Call 479-754 CHEYEN Malibu Classic Station wagon-white 481-1824. Best Offer COMPUTER TW94/AA, data cassette, game car Chevy Impala, blue 4 door. 78. Call 843-2501. In excellent shape. Moving Sale, Sat. Nov. 12, 10:31 Wisconsin, na m p i n e, 12 p o l t s, ladies, tables, chairs, women's clothing, stereo barre, chairboard grill; throw rugs, small appliances, household items; projection screen with high definition TV; desk and office chairs. Limit your loss from AT&T & break up. Purchase your own phone! Quality phone work on all long distances. AT&T HOLIDAY present! Cassette player, stereo radio. AT&T 841-360-9700 8:40-10:00 M-F. Don't get out and get hit by a car! For Sale: New 67 galerian & darkroom equipment. New: $250 & gas stone $79 - 299pp New: $150 & gas stone $49 - 399pp For Sale: Pre-lighting system w/Pars: Rock bottom price: 2 JBL Midrange horns / AAVcile TRAC tape deck. ARK II internal II system / Avail case. ALL EXPANDABLE. High-quality business cases. Serious inquiries 414-808-9988. HOT DANCE RECORDS for sale. Belfast Africa! Arabia! Orient! DO NOT MISS THESE. Imported LPS!" For Discographic Catalogue. CONTACT J Murray. Discography St., N.Y.C. 18032, or call (212) 973-4805. Must sell, G.E. 21" color console TV, Nice! 843-2284 Ask for Tm. Hooda MT 125, Good Condition, $350 or best offer. 843-7637 LOST AND FOUND Stereo-television video. All name brands. Lowest prices. KT area. Total Sound Distributors. Peaart T-40 bass with accessories, perfect condition Aloeart A260, 2600, several cartridge will soil together the shell and dust. Tim Sinclair 1000 personal computer, hookups, 180 module, cartridges $70 used (Burlington 642-222) with carrying case, Burlington 642-222 with carrying case, cover, changeable type for symbols and dacritics. Perfect condition, new $30; want to see. T19-58. PC-100A printer, software, business decisions, math/utilities, aviation license, master curriculum CRA Video Recorder (VAC) - VP76506 (to the top of the VIDEO remote, control panel) VIP76506 (to the top of the VIDEO remote, control panel) **Women's Cleanin Sample Sale. Designer jeans by Calvin Klein, Jordan, Sasson, Jeason, etc. ($20). Blouses, oxford, and polo type shirts ($10-13). All about half price. High quality. $49-$188. SHAPE ACDC HOME/PORTABLE VCR SYSTEM Combines VHS recording deck and timer/tuner in one unit. Features built-in operation on house current. Rechargeable battery pack optional! enables complete portability 2-4-8 Charger available. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event promotions. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event promotions. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event promotions. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event promotions. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event promotions. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event promotions. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event促销. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event促销. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event促销. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event促销. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event促销. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event促销. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event促销. Search free zone. Frame built in 7-day. event促销. Call 719-643-5021, ask for Bhabha Master I pair brown leather lined gliders. Friday, November 16th. Saturday, November 17th. Friday, October 21st. Gammons's Lauren Found. 1 pair of woman's prescription glasses in yellow case. Found on Lippincott from step F13. HONDA CB 658 6,700 miles, good condition. $1,100 Call Dave. 864-6221. MAGPEV SMT bass amp 300 watt wall with speaker (Magpiev condition 460 (err) B11 New Hampshire MPA 720 HURSE SELECTION OF MEN'S MAGAZINES FOR MEN'S COMICS, 811 N.J. OPEN EVERY DAY. Found behind Bailay, make yellow tablet cat, yellow found behind Bailay, make yellow tablet cat, Halvy Pong Poodle with butterfly case, $5. Halvy Pong Poodle with butterfly case, $5. Yamaha 2.5 speed, 3 M P H, moped very clean! $295. 841. 2655 HELP WANTED LOST. ladies gold shell with diamonds around dial Miraplaced between Wesley and Watson. If found, find the mother of the doll. USED CARPET. dormroom sizes, $30 shags, $5 chocolate piles. Great deals, clean. 843-4133. Lost - Glasses in yellow case. If found, call 842 0197. Could you use an extra $400 a month? Start your own business. Less than $10 million investment, unlimited debt. T11A04 MEM HIRING TO SHOW light Mandarin T11A05 FAX HIRING to SHOW light Mandarin T11A06 Fax your interviews! SHOW light Mandarin T11A07 Fax your interviews! SHOW light Mandarin Research Assistant (Gastrointestinal Drug Abuse) Full time learning as soon as possible Prior research experience and familiarity with modern chemical analysis procedures and in-depth knowledge of the year position with qualifications and experience in Thomas F. Pation, Dept. of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, The University of Kansas Malcolm Hall 1983-1985 An equal opportunityAffirmative action Summer Jobs: National Park Gs 21, Parks 9000 National Park Gs 6, National Park Gs 45, National Park Gs 30, National Park Gs 27, National Park Gs 21 MISCELLANEOUS Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available Everything But Ice. 6th and Vermont. PERSONAL 30 cewt dress M F. 2.3 p m. in General Hospital Don't forget your laundry n-Suds D-uks A strong key logout. Benchmark Retail Loyalty Clue Staff. North Island Storage. 841-756-9230, north of Stokholm. 841-756-9230, 842-757-9230 We're An Official Representative ALL Airlines offering the Lowest Air Fares Possible ON CAMPUS LOCATION In the Student Union Now is the time to make your Thanksgiving and Christmas travel plans . . . Flights Filling Fast BSCUTS and GRAVY only 1.25 ozs Nebraska BSCUTS and GRAVY only 1.25 ozs, Barbero Trucker Jurjamkum 1.47 ozs See Us TODAY! Maupintour travel service 749-0700 ★ netflix's Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine. 846 Illinois. 842-0723 Mrs. Lang Psychic Tarot Card Reader ENCORE 84 'the all campus theatre production, is now accepting applications for at large bursaries for theatrical productions. Applications must be set all policy for the show. Applications are at BOCO office 110 Kansas University and are due May 14. For information, visit www.bocopublications.org America's foremost reader of astrology and the cards is taking appts. for private readings. We are dedicated to on love, marriage, business, etc. ★ Call 841-0489 Curtin Mathen Showstoppers! 600 movies to choose from. Rent a video machine and pre-recorded movie. COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced outpatient abstention; quality medical care, confidentiality assured Kansas City area. Call for appointment 914-632-1400. Cambridge diet clearance of extra flavors including chocolate drink. Limited supply. Lauren. 843-7220 Christmas Razaiar November 10, 5 p.m. 9 p.m. November 6 to 10 a.m. 8 p.m. 4 p.m. Church Lodge, 321 Chapel St., Church Lodge, 321 Chapel St., and baked goods. Lunch and evening meals served Cross over the bridge to historic North Lawrence Visit St帝斯蒂 Retail Laplace 910 N. 2nd, on Man draig, for a nice selection, spirits, cake oil and chill HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH? Award winning documentary on American decision-making in national security and nuclear weapons. Big B Room, 8 P.M., Friday, Nov. 11. Discussion follows. I NEED TO CONTACT WALLACE FERGUSON IN AUCTION FOR A PROPERTY IN PENN HOLLOWSTONE, LA BLUE SHIPPING CO. GAY and LESBIAN SUPPORT SUPPORT org. org. 67 70 Walnut Room. Nov 14 more info. Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits. It is not too early to order Christmas portraits (or portraits of the holidays) from **Pittsburgh** **905 Penna County** 841 467. By appoint- ing an artist, you can customize your portrait. Laundry Launched Night Tues. - 7:22. Laundry launched dry get 10 cent draws. Suits-n Duds. 749-4132 a m. midnight; Sat 12, 12 10, 109, 412 12 Needed: someone to change the toilet paper! Call ** PARTY with the J-school! TGIF this Friday at lebahad's 2 m. 27' $3.00 you can drink! Saint John's in Christmas Judaism, Sunday, November 8, 4-6 p.m. in chrisham堂, eats, crabs SKI VALID-BRAVER CREEK and TOLL FREE FREESKI FOR RATES OF $50 per day. FOR DISCOUNT RATES on lodging, 10% off. say it on a shirt, custom silhouette printing T, t shirts, jeans and caps. Shirtart B Sailors 749-161 741-161 Mediterranean-Greek Festival Admission: $2.00 November 12, 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Templin Hall *Includes Greek food, one bian dancing* *(9 p.m.) Greek dancing & Greek* *dancing.* Sponsored by the Hellenic Society & Sponsored by the Society & Tempin Hall For more information call 850-8200 --- Special Prices on Christmas Portraits through December 15 at Sawai Studio Call for details Special for students. Haircuts $7 and permes $2. Charmise ask for Tetraeunia 843-1500. Susan-Happy, Birthday. Look out world she's 21. Love, Miracle and Michelle. VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCE MENT SENTRIES Friday, November 11 10 a.m. a.m. 1:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Preparing for Exams. Math. Review of Common Core Math. Management. Learning a Foreign Language. Each tape approximately fifty minutes. FREE Contact Manage. Center, 121强 Hall, Balmoral, 846-494 to register. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization Notes to sduce use to learning Western civilization. 31For exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization', Town Creef, The Town Creef, and Rocky Outcrop. BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing - confidencial counseling 914-4872 Danger signals! Headache, backache, arm pain, leg pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, see the Chiroaptic Health Center and Doctor M-E. Please contact insurance accepted. No charge for consultation. **ENCORE 98** the All-Campus theatrical production, is now accepting applications for stage management and production. Applications are at the Rochester Auditorium. Applications are at the November 10th. Previous experience is required. For more information, call (212) 354-1677. HATS, HATS, HATS. New for Lok Ark, Hats and Etc, and Etc. The ETC SUP 722 assess budgets. THIRD STAIRS Appliances, furniture, clothing knife-knife storing. Always good bargains (28 items) in room. WARDROBE SPECTRUM OPTICAL Eyeglasses made UP to a standard, not DOWN to a price: 4 East 7th St. ENGLISH Ph.D) will edit your thesis, dissertation book article, e-book, Turing in Engl. 102, 102, 200, 200, 301, 302, 303. Wholesale Sound Rental, P.A., Guitar, and Bass armens 841-6495 SERVICES OFFERED SANTA CLAUS IS to be any our Christmas party Call Santa's Helper, Dave 749 0289 STADHAM BABIBER SHOP. 1033 Massachusetts. dinners all haircuts $1.00 No appointment at Stadhambabibershop.com The Falcon Association can help you achieve exceptional objectives. For free details see a stamped, self addressed envelope to Box 23214, Kansas City, Missouri 64119 WAKE UP SERVICE We will wake you up in the morning by phone. Call Chris, 822-0940 A.A.A. Affordable TYPING SERVICE. Fast, trustful service. Call (855) 421-3400. AAATYING. Helpless staff need? 812-7497 (adult) AAATYING. Helpless staff need? 812-7497 (adult) TYPING 24-hour typing. Fast, accurate. Resumes letters, reporting them. I want to do your work 874,6016. AAA TYPING. Hellas-ku good typet? 842 1922 after 1 p.m. Mm-Fri & all day Sat Sun AFPDHONDEALY QUALITY for all your typing needs Call Us: 842-7945 after 6 o'clock. Absolute Letter Perfect Editing, Typing, Book-keeping, Prism, professional, high quality 845 #6168 Accurate, affordable typing Ask about speed in service (need 25 pages) Call Mary. 841-6673 Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School Secretary Call Mary. 841-1219 IBM select, procs) Call 482 4068 before 5pm. CALL TIP TOP TYPING) 1201 lora. Experienced typists and editor. Xerox 611 Memorywriter, Royal Correcting SE$00000) 843 5675 Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term words, punctuation, special characters. 842-6754 or 842-7093; 11:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. DEPENDENNEL M.E service, professional typing, IBM SERVICES III, Pica or else Large jobs or small managements. Elvis could wiggle. Shakespeare could write my talent, call Tigzia 6042 8044 after 3-5 and weekends Experienced typetype theses, dissertations, term papers paper on IBM Correcting Essay. Barb Rieber Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations IBM Correcting Selective Call It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing Word Processing; you can afford it! 843-5201 Experienced typed Term papers, these all use Prolog and Prolog 2.0. Pica and Pica will correct spelling. Phone 845-763-6000. Mrs Davis will be available. JEANETTE SHAFFER TYPING SERVICE IBM SERVICES II, UA or ELEVEN AH977 ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT HI. 100. Experienced typist will type design documentation, processing, working with technical processes, PROCESSING GOOD WORK, TYPINGNON-WORK PROCESSING GOOD WORK. 3 services at l location typing, editing and graphics WORLD ARTISTS, call Eilen, 841-2722 TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations papers let students use a variety of grammatical grammar, spelling, et al. English tutoring is offered in these areas. Word Processing plus typing Dictation plus articulation plus photography Airbrush plus chart art plus graphic plus photography articulation Pick plusick & delivery & Ab's Art Plus 749-3220 Library Research - Typing - Editing - Will help with research tasks. WANTED Male roommate wanted. $102/month and 1/3 utilities on bus route Call 841-9816 2 females to share 2 bedroom apartment for spring semester. Call for details 842-7661 Part time interviewers needed for behavioral research project in Topeka. Approximately 15 hours/week, with training in behavioral data. No experience required, but must be reliable worker. Must be available afternoons and evenings. Send application letter with 2 work references to Research Assistant AA 391 Biels Roer塔. Responsible woman seeking spring semester housing near campus. Prefer location within 20 minutes of child care possible for reduced rent. Will meet interested students. Please contact Daisy Kansan, 119 Staffier Fitt Hall, Lawrence, MA 01745. Roommate for huge house apartment. Private room. energy-efficient. $156/month. Availability Roommate wanted for extra large 2 bedroom furniture, clean, air fresh, and good heating. Bath in all room with walking distance. Fee includes water bill. Inquire by calling (850) 713-2222. Roommate wanted. 3 BH Townhouse, $140 month plus 1/3 utilities. Call 843-4813. Koreanmee assigned $110 monthly and 1/7 utilities. Hlthd $4th, ILhth & Ohio. Available now or断宴 break Roommate to sublease private room in a 2 B R ap. Close to campus, cheap utilities. Free留园冬3. Single girl share house and use, private berm, laun- dage, equiv. acquire, kill, walk campus. Evangene Evenings Third roommate needed for nice, modern 3 BR townhouse close to campus. Available immediately. WOMEN'S SELF DEFENSE - A non-monitor course offered by the Women's Health Center will be limited only 12% each month for women in their 40s and up. KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS Name: ___ Address: ___ Phone: ___ Date to Run ___ to ___ 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or Two Weeks 15 weeks All day Additional $6.60 $1.15 $7.75 $6.75 Classified Display: 1 col x 1 inch—$4.20 --- 1 SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 10, 1983 Page 16 Jayhawks' experienced offensive line Hard-working Smith leads 'The Union' By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor Yesterday was one of those rainy-day football practices when the KU staff can only long for the new building that will some day house football practice. Most of the players were eager to end the Allen Field House workout preparing them for Saturday's game with Nebraska. But after practice, a couple of players ran some extra laps on their own. They were part of the offensive line, a group that calls themselves "The Union." "I think they have improved tremendously," offensive line coach Mike Solari said. "They are always attentive, always coming in and watching their players." They had five quality guys. They are a great group. The offensive linemen earning praise from Solaris are junior center Bennie Simecka and seniors Renwick Atkins, K.C. Brown, Paul Fairchild and Reggie Smith. Craig Kraibschma, Chip Schuler, John Lonarc, Paul Oswald and Quintin Schonewise have also added support. But Solari said that Smith, a 6-foot-4, 280-pound senior from Chicago, is the leader of the Leader. "BEGGIE IS A FINE leader," Solar said. That's the type of person that he is. He's aighter and more thoughtful, and he does things wonderfully. "Every time he steps on the field, you know he's going to work his hardest." The trait that Solari pointed out as Smith's strong point was consistence. "He has only been beat twice all year on pass blocking," Solari said. "That is tremendous for as many times as we pass." Smith and the rest of The Union have given quarterback Frank Seurier enough protection to make this year's KU squad the best passing team in his history. Smith said that their experience is the key. "The offensive line is really a tight-knit group." Smith said, breathing heavily after his post-practice jaint around the track. "It's been fun all year. Every time we go out on the field we make it fun." WITH TWO GAMES remaining, against Nebraska and Missouri, two teams probably bound for post-season bowl competition, the seniors could give up and not care. But Smith said that was not the "All of the seniors want to play a big part in the season," Smith said. "All year long, the underclassmen have looked up to us. We've been put in a role and we work as hard as we can to win these last two games. "We don't want to just play respectable, we want to win." Against No. 1 Nebraska, the Jayhawk offense needs to move the ball. "We are very confident as an offensive line," Smith said. "We know it's going to be our offense against their offense, and we think we can go in there and show them that our offense is as good as have to move the ball every time. We don't necessarily have to score every time, but we have to SOLARI AGREES that the KU offense will play an important role in the game. The Jayhawks are 3-1-1 and have been played with sporadic performances all year on both offense and defense. "I truly believe that our offense can move the ball against any team in the Big Eight or the country." Solari said. "What we have to be is consistent. We After the Nebraska game, Smith will finish out no career at KU against Missouri. During his sophomore season, the Jayhawks whipped the Tigers 19-11 to earn a trip to the Hall of Fame Row! "WE NEED TO TAKE that attitude into that game this year. Maybe our chances for a bowl are gone, but I consider these last two games as our bowl games." "The highlight has to be my sophomore year, when we went to the bowl game," Smith said. "It was a big thrill to beat Missouri in that last game. Missouri came in with a bowl bid already and they said we were going to be a warmup. We wanted to prove them wrong. After his farewell game against Missouri, Smith will play the waiting game to see if the professional teams will give him a chance to play in the NFL or USFL. "There's no doubt that some pro team will give him an opportunity. "Soliari said." He has the size to win." Smith said that the progress he has made this season will help his chances. "I feel that I have had a good season," Smith said. "There are some things that I could have done better, but I've improved. Coach Solari has taught me a lot about blocking." Although Smith is still thinking about the last two games before a professional career, the thoughts are amazing. That nas always seen one of my unchucked dreams," he said of a career in professional football. "I want to finish up these last two games, then see what happens." VANCIS Reggie Smith NBA boss resigning on Feb. 1 Duran, Hagler square off in middleweight title bout By United Press International NEW YORK — Lawrence O'Brien, saying that he was beginning to feel as if he was riding a "merry-go-round," jumped off the carousel yesterday and resigned as commissioner of the National Basketball Association, effective Feb. 1, at the expiration of his contract. The 66-year-old O'Brien, who has served as a NASA commissioner for more than $8\frac{1}{2}$ years, made it clear that he was not quitting under pressure from the league's Board of Governors. On the contrary, he said that last September a four-member Special Committee of the league's board had to approve him a new five-year contract that included a provision that he remain as commissioner through the 1984-85 season. O'Brien said he was resigning his post because the job, while challenging, was becoming too repetitive. "I WAS BEGINNING to get the feeling of going around on a merry-go-round." he said. "It was starting to get to me a little. You don't want to kill yourself into continuity. There should be an end — and this is the end. I have a need for new challenges. "I think $ \frac{1}{2} $ years is the longest I've ever spent concentrating on a particular situation or subject. I think when I came into this league if you told me that I'd be standing here $ \frac{1}{2} $ years later I wouldn't believe it for a minute. Normally, I don't stay that long." O'Brien, who had a career in politics before becoming NBA commissioner, would not say what he intended to do in the future but there was speculation that he might return to politics. He previously served as Postmaster General in President Johnson's administration, was a special assistant to Presidents Johnson and Kennedy and served as national chairman of the Democratic Party before succeeding Walter Kennedy as NBA commissioner. David Stern, the MBA's executive vice president of business and legal affairs, has been mentioned as a candidate for replace O'Brien as commissioner. "Whomever they choose has to be a very strong guy who deals with everyone at arms length, who treats everyone as fairly and equally as you possibly can and does not concern himself about any animosities that might occur by virtue of his actions," said O'Brien. "MY FUTURE WILL be the subject of another news conference, but it won't necessarily involve you sports people," said O'Brien. LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Defending champion Marvin Hagler will be fighting for fame and riches and Roberto Duran will be seeking a niche in boxing history tonight when they face each other in a multi-million dollar duel for the world middleweight title. Ry United Press International O'Brien will leave behind a legacy of achievement. Despite a current labor dispute between the league and its referees that has yet to be resolved, O'Brien's reign as commissioner produced a great many significant changes that have left the league in its best shape ever. Hagler, who is undisputed world champion, is considered by many to be the finest boxer in the world today. His record is 57-2-1, and he has not lost a fight in nearly eight years. Hagler won the title by knocking out Alan Minter in rounds in 1980 and has made seven successful defenses, all enclosed in knocks. "HE WAS A DOER, somebody who got things done," said Paul Silas, a former star player and past president of the Players Association, who attended the news conference. BUT HAGLER HAS NOT been able to break into the truly big money in boxing — until now. Hagler's duel with Duran is his first mega-buck fight and could bring him close to $10 million. It also could bring him the public acclaim he feels he has not been given despite his impressive ring performances. Duran, who is seeking an unprecedented fourth title, is no stranger to big money fight. He ruled the lightweight division for nearly a decade in the 1970's and then won the World Boxing Council wetterweight title by handing Sugar Ray Leonard his only defeat, a 15-round decision in June of 1880. Five months after his spectacular victory over Leonard, an out-of-shaped Duran destroyed his own career by scoring a goal in a rematch against Leonard. He was Roberto DURAN Undisputed World Middleweight Championship TALE OF THE TAPE branded a coward and a traitor in his native Panamar and it took him nearly 20 years to recover. That came earlier this year when, after two losses and an uninspiring victory, Duran produced two victories to put himself in line for a shot at boxing history. First, he knocked out former welterweight champion Pipino June 16, 1951 Guarare, Panama 32 160 5 ft. 7.5 in. 67 in. 38 in. 39.5 in. 12.5 in. 13 in. 32 in. 20.5 in. 12.5 in. 16 in. 6.25 in. 10.5 in. 9.5 in. Birthdate Birthplace Age Weight* Height Reach Chest (normal) Chest (expanded) Biceps Forearm Waist Thigh Cost Neck Wrist Fist Ankle May 23, 1954 Newark, N.J. 29 160 5 ft. 9.5 in. 75 in. 40 in. 42 in. 15 in. 12 in. 30 in. 22 in. 15 in. 15 in. 7 in. 12 in. 9 in. estimated C. P. H. Marvelous Marvin HAGLER Cuevas in four rounds in January to earn a title shot. And then he became only the seventh fighter in boxing history to win titles in three divisions by pounding defending champion Davey Moore in eight rounds last June to win the World Boxing Association junior middleweight title. TONIGHT'S FIGHT, to be held in a specially constructed 15,200-seat outdoor stadium at Caesars Palace, is scheduled for 15 rounds. It is expected to begin shortly after 9:30 p.m. and will be televised worldwide on closed circuit television Hagler was rated a 3-1 favorite to retain his title. for his entire 10-year career, will have the edge physically. At 5'9", he is two inches taller than Duran and will enjoy an eight-inch reach advantage. He is expected to weigh nearly three pounds when the fighters weigh in at 9:30 a.m. Hagler, who has been a middleweight "This is the one I've been waiting for," Hauler said. "I've been fighting a long time and I haven't lost a fight in eight years but I could never get the big money fight. I watched guys like Larry Holmes and Gerry Cooney and Sugar Ray Leonard and Thomas Hearns come along after me and get big money fights." The latter was a champion and getting nothing compared to them. This will change all that. Duran, who is 76.4, started his career in the 135-pound lightweight class and has moved through the weberweight and junior middleweight divisions to compete for Hagler's 165-pound mid-weight title. He heels his vast reach toward success for a spot in boxing history will overcome Hagler's physical advantages. 'TIM IN THE BEST shape of my life. I plan on busting up Roberto Duran. His people talk about his fire and his dedication but there's no one more dedicated than I am. I know what I went through just to get a title shot and I know what I had to do to get it and how much it means to me. No one, especially not Roberto Duran, is going to take that away from me. "I FEEL I AM destined to make boxing history, to become the first man ever to win four world titles." Duran said. Former Kansas golfers shooting for LPGA circuit By JOHN UNREIN Sports Writer Patty Coe and Bev Boozer, former KU golfers, sit at home most of the time now waiting for nice days so they can head for the golf course. The two dream of moving from their homes in Kansas to a place in sunny California. They think about how nice it would be to play golf every day again, instead of seeing another cold, Kansas winter approaching. They want to play golf as often as they can to practice for a career in professional golf. That is because they are professionals, and the Ladies Professional Golf Association Two weeks ago, both Coe and Boozer played at the LPGA Qualifying School in Houston. Coe said that each year a certain number of spots were open on the LPGA tour and that only at the qualifying school tournament could women golfers, new to the professional scene, get LPGA tour cards. THIS TIME, 35 spots were open, and TIM O'NEILLY Jonnie Umele/KANSAN Former KU golfers Patty Coe, left, and Bev Boozer practice at Alvamar Country Club. Coe and Boozer are hoping to play on the women's professional golf tour. John Unrein/KANSAN "Everything's kind of up in the air for me right now." Coe said last week. "I'm going to look for a job now, but I need to move some place warmer. Maybe I can get a job working at a golf course in California. Four days of playing the best golf of a lifetime could have earned them a spot on the LPGA tour next year. But neither Coe nor Boozer made the top 35. Now they can wait another year for the next qualifying school. the top 35 golfers in the four-day tournament each received cards. "I knew I'd regret it if I didn't try to make the tour this year. But after playing at the qualifying school I realized that I didn't give it a fair shot, because I really only gave it a few months to practice. If I don't make it next October, I will go out and get a real job." ROSS RANDALL, KU golf coach, said that because only 125 to 150 women were allowed on the LPGA tour each year there would be a limited number of spots open on the tour. That is why, and qualifying schools are held once a year. "They can't keep adding players all the time, because there are too many players that want to join the tour each year," Randall said. "Having anything above 150 players on the tour gets pretty crowded." But Coe and Boozer would like to be a part of the crowd. Coe graduated from KU in May with a bachelor's degree in business administration but said that she had yet to look for a job in her field. She lives at her family's home in Overland Park to save expenses. "When I graduated in May, I didn't know what I wanted to get into business," she said. "But I had always thought about playing golf." Boozer, who also lives at her home in Lawrence, is currently taking four hours of classes at KU. She said that she had graduated in December with a business degree. Coe said that most golfers on mini-tours barely earned enough from prize money to cover expenses. First prizes on the mini-tour are usually about $3,000. Coe said, while it usually costs $125 to enter each tournament. To get more experience, both Boozer and Coe said they would try to play in a California mini-tour next spring. Coe said that mini-tours were played in California, Texas and Florida for golfers not on the LPGA tour. "GUESS WHEN it came down to choosing a career I decided golf would be a lot more fun," Boozer said. "I'm planning to move to California in January to play on the mini-tour there that starts in January or February." BEY BOOZER SAID, "This time, I only gave myself two months to practice so it wasn't a big letdown for me. Being down there at the qualifying tournament, I know I can be as good as they are. I just need more experience. I might definitely be a game, but I plan on making it for sure." A good way to survive on the matour. Cee added, to stay in pHXtea. And the thought of not making much money doesn't stand in the way of her work. "I keep in mind that I want to be one of the best ones out there," she said. "THE MINI-TOUR, people will arrange for you to stay in someone's house where the tournament is being played if you agree to accept private housing," she said. "The people that you stay with are usually avid golfers or members of the club. The one's who play well be the best and often invite you to have dinner with them. They know that we are struggling and don't have much money." But Boozer, like Coe, will have to wait another year before getting another And waiting, both agree, is the hardest part. MILWAUKEE — Sidney Monierie scored 29 points, including four cruciate free throws down the stretch last night, and the Milwaukee Bucks extended their winning streak to four games with victory over the Kansas City Kings. By United Press International More Sports Pages 14,15 Alton Lister of the Bucks hit 1-of-2 free throws with six seconds remaining for the final point of the game. On Kansas City's final possession Steve Johnson's attempted shot at the buzzer was knocked away by Lister. Milwaukee edges Kings by 2 points on late free throws The score was 88-88 when Moncrief connected on two free throws with 2:09 left. After Don Buse missed two foul shots for the Kings, Moncrief hit two more free throws with 55 seconds left to give Milwaukee a 92-88 lead. 1 Larry Drew, who led the Kings with 26 points, hit a jump shot to cut the lead to 92-80. Milwaukee's Nate Archibald went for a forehand before Base connected on a 3-point shot. Two free throws by Johnson after time had expired in the third period pulled the teams even at 72-27. Kansas City had erased a 14-point halftime deficit behind Drew, who scored 11 points in the third period. Milwaukee 69-57 with just 4:44 left in the quarter, but the Kings outscored the Bucks 15-13 and tied the game entering the fourth quarter. Eddie Johnson had 20 points for the Kings. Loans approved Douglas County to get federal aid Inside, p. 3 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas Vol. 94, No. 60 (USPS 650-640) SUNNY High, 50. Low, 30. Details on p. 2 Friday morning, November 11. 1983 Jury finds Bell guilty of murdering Seurer By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter A Douglas County jury yesterday found Bryan Kish Bell guilty of murder of Lawrence kith. Bell guilty of Frank Schaffer. Bell showed no emotion as he listened to the clerk of the court read a verdict of guilty for the second-degree murder of Seurer, father of KU quarterback Frank Seurer Jr. The jury of eight women and four men deliberated for nearly four hours before it reached a verdict about 4.15 p.m. Bell also was convicted of aggravated robbery. Bell's father, Pink, cried after the verdicts were read. Mike Elwell, Douglas County associate district judge, set sentencing for 11 a.m. Dec. 6. BOTH CRIMES are Class B felonies, punishable by a minimum of five to 15 years in prison and a maximum of 20 years to life. Each also has a fine of not more than $15,000. Eiwell had instructed the jurors to consider either a charge of second-degree murder or a lesser charge, voluntary manslaughter. He had also instructed his consider charges of aggravated robbery or theft Robert Duncan, Bell's attorney, was not in the courtroom when the verdict was read. John Duncan and the defense argued that Duncan had to attend a meeting of the Missouri Attorneys Association, of which he is president. Chapman said a question would be to appoint the attorney and a solicitor must be made within 10 days of sentencing. JERRY HARPER, Douglas County district attorney who prosecuted the case, said that he would wait for a presentence report before recommending a sentence for Bell. Bell was arrested Aug. 17 after he had confessed to stabbing Seurer once in the back and once in the chest on the morning of Aug. 2 at Seurer's restaurant, Pop's Bar B-Q, 2214 Yale Road. Seurer's body had been found on the kitchen floor of the restaurant. Bell, a former employee of Seurer's restaurant, said in a confession that he had stabbed Seurer after going to the restaurant to ask for his job back, according to testimony Wednesday by a Lawrence detective. Mrs. Seurer had fired him in June. In the confession, Bell said he and Seuer were been talking about Bell's financial problems when the defendant thought he heard Seuer say, "If you have money, you blocks have trouble managing your money." SEURER RUMPED into Bell, and Bell stabbed him twice, according to the confession, stabbed him twice. A deputy county coroner testified Tuesday that Seurer had been stabbed 23 times and that six of the wounds had pierced his heart. The coroner told the court that of the chest wounds had been made by a knife. Harper alleged that even if Bell had stabbed Seurer only twice, Seurer would have died anyway. One of the knife wounds had penetrated Seurer's heart. BUT DEFENSE ATTORNEY Duncan alleged that Bell's confession was made during a $ 6_{1/2} $ hour interrogation by police. See TRIAL, p. 5, col. 4 Stephen Phillips/KANSAN A construction worker pours concrete into a form on the addi- make Haworth the longest building on campus, is proceeding to Haworth Hall. Construction on the addition, which will on time for the hall's scheduled spring 1985 completion. Downtown plan won't be fought by redeveloper President of Sizeler will explain case to company board By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter Davidson said that he would be presenting the case to the Sizerel board of directors sometime in the next few weeks, and that the board would then take official action. The president of Sizerel Realty Co., the company that was rejected Tuesday by the Lawrence City Commission as developer of downtown Lawrence, said yesterday that he was disappointed, but that he had no plans to fight the Commission's decision. Tom Davidson, president of Sizerel, Kenner, La., said that the firm had no immediate plans to sue the city or to pursue further development possibilities in the city. The City Commission picked Town Center Venture Corp., a local firm that was created specifically to present a plan for the development project, as the developer of record. Grenada action continues to spark debate SIZELER CAME to Lawrence 14 months ago to compete against other national developers. The city worked with Sizeler on a redevelopment project in the 700 and 800 blocks downtown, east of Massachusetts Street. In September 1982, Sizerel was named developer of record, a position the company kept until July. The agreement lapsed, and Sizerel was working with the city on a new agreement when the City Commission hired the developer race to local firms in September. In early October, Town Center presented a plan for the 600 block of downtown. The commission voted 3-1-1 to select Town Center's proposal. Davidson said Sizeler would close its Lawrence office in the Lawrence National Bank building, 647 Massachusetts St. He said the project would cost more than $250,000 on the Lawrence project. "You don't want to get burned twice," he said. "You can look at the facts and your own conclusion. We did everything we were asked to do." "THIS IS probably as bad a case as I've seen of trying to practice business in good faith and being taken advantage of," he said. He also that the company would take precautions against a similar situation occurring in the future. The city now has 90 days to enter into an agreement with Town Center regarding Restrictions imposed as news media doubt U.S. casualty reports Dean Palos, city planner working on downtown redevelopment, said the city would use the Sizerel agreement as the basis of an agreement with Town Center. Mayor David Longhurst said that he wanted to have a commission study session with Town Center, and that he hoped to have the Downtown Improvement Commission do some work sometimes in the next few weeks. He said he also wanted to reach an agreement in 30 days. By United Press International ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — Governor General Sir Paul Scoon has imposed harsh restrictions on Grenada, including a ban on public meetings, arrests without warrants and the threat of press censorship, it was revealed yesterday. A U.S. military official, meanwhile, reported that three U.S. patrols were fired in two days. The Pentagon said 18 Americans and 42 Cubans were killed in four days of fighting on the island after the Oct. 25 invasion to rescue American students and overthrow a Marxist With details on the number of Grenadians killed during the U.S.-led invasion still sketchy, and Cuba and America disputing how many Marines should be released to Boatlift on Washington's account of U.S. casualties. GUY FARMER, U.S. mission representative on Grenada, denied British news reports that 42 American troops had been killed during the attack and that the "number of American dead remains at 18." Julian Dixon, D-Calif.; Mervyn Dymally, Diamond; Hexen; D-Texas; Dickey Diamond; Linda and Parent. "Although United States spokesmen admit to only 18 Americans killed in action, I am told that at least 42 have been killed since they came ashore on Oct. 25," Tony Allen-Mills wrote in the Daily Telegraph, citing "impeccable sources" on the island. Their resolution, offered to reporters before its introduction, said Reagan's action was unconstitutional and thus an impeachable offense because it usurped Congress' power to declare war, ignored treaty obligations and violated First Amendment rights of the public and press in preventing reporters from covering the invasion in its first few days. 'My sources say that, with many more men in the country, the figure could reach 80 deserts. Allett Mills said. THE CALL for impeachment goes contrary to House Speaker Thomas O'Neill and his 14-member House fact-finding delegation that visited Grenada and reported this week that there was justification for Reagan's decision to order the invasion of the tiny island. In Washington, a State Department official said that he had checked the reports of a much higher American death toll with both the Conyers Wednesday night issued a statement saying he thought that Reagan should be impeded for ordering the Oct. 25 invasion of the Caribbean island. An impeachment resolution must first be approved by a committee and then by the full House, which acts in effect like a grand jury, with an impeachment resolution equivalent to an indictment. If the House were to approve an impeachment resolution, it would be conducted by the Senate with the chief justice of the United States acting as a judge and the 100 senators as members of a jury. See GRENADA, p. 5, col. 1 7 Democrats propose Reagan impeachment for invasion of island WASHINGTON — Seven House Democrats yesterday asked the House to impeach President Reagan for ordering the invasion of Grenada two weeks ago. By United Press International Those submitting the resolution were Reps. Ted Weiss, D.N.Y.; John Conyers, D-Mich. See IMPEACH, p. 5, col. 4. Chester Crocker, assistant secretary of state for African affairs, tells about 100 people in the Kansas Union that U.S. corporations should remain involved in South Africa. Crocker delivered the keynote address last night in a conference on U.S.-Africa relations. The conference will continue tomorrow. U.S. firms can aid civil rights in South Africa, Crocker says By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter U. S. corporations should remain involved in South Africa to encourage progress in gaining civil rights for the country's blacks, the assistant governor of state for African affairs said yesterday. Referring to proposals for removal of U.S. investment from South Africa, Chester Crocker, the assistant secretary, said, "We reject that the United States will impose ostrich policy." Crocker spoke to about 100 SEN. NANCY LANDON Kassebaum, a co-sponsor of the conference, was supposed to introduce Crocker. In a telegram she sent yesterday afternoon, Kassebaum said she could not attend because of important action yesterday in the Senate. people in Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Crocker delivered the keynote address of a conference on U.S.-Africa affairs since 1960. The conference began yesterday and will continue through January, and it is free to KU faculty, staff and students. See AFRICA, p. 5, col. 1 Reagan urges peace, freedom in U.S. relations with Japan By United Press International TOKYO — President Reagan raised his banner of "peace through strength" today in a nation still haunted by the devastation of World War II. He called on United States in "a powerful partnership for good." "We cannot prosper unless we are secure and we cannot be secure unless we are free. And we will not succeed in any of these endeavors unless we do." The Japanese Diet, the parliament, told the Japanese Diet, the parliament, His speech to the Diet — the first by any U.S. president — came on the third day of talks between Reagan and Prime Minister Yasuho Nakaseon, and dealt primarily with trade and Afterward, Reagan and his wife, Nancy. arranged to fly by helicopter to Nakasone's private mountain retreat for lunch. THE REAGANS, who were guests at a white-tie state banquet staged yesterday in their honor by Emperor Hirohito, are to travel to Arizona tomorrow and return to Washington Monday. Rigan used his speech to the Diet to reinforce his earlier prediction of "a new era" in See related story p. 10 Japanese-American affairs. He also made a forceful counterattack on those who have said that his stress on military might was contrary to the goal of peace. Standing in the only country ravaged by See REAGAN, p. 5, col. 1 Falling enrollment may determine future of state's higher education By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter In 1965, three departments in the KU School of Education offered graduate degree programs. Today, seven departments offer graduate degrees in at least 12 distinct areas. That growth was typical of the growth being experienced in other education schools throughout the nation in the 1960s and 1970s, said William B. Wheeler, president of the North Carolina deep of the KJ graduate school from 1972 to 1978. "The School of Education expanded in activities, departments and programs." Argeringer said. "The programs have proliferated; the students split up into smaller and smaller disciplines." The Board of Regents is reviewing the education programs in its universities with the intent of merging or eliminating those it can do without. The education review is the second phase in a planned five-year review process of all academic programs at the Regents schools IN THIS REVIEW, university administrators are mustering whatever resources they can to protect their turf, which comprises the state's more than 150 degree programs in education. Before June, administrators of each of those programs will be asked by the Regents to "tell us ANALYSIS why the program should not be eliminated" That is how Stanley Koplik, Regents executive director, described the five-year review. This is not the first such review, nor will it be the last. Programs have been eliminated after Regents or University reviews, and faculty members have worried about their jobs. But this is the first time that the Regents have reviewed so many programs directly, with the intent, as Koplik said, of "changing the face of higher education." See REVIEW, p. 8, col. 1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan November 11, 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Stone enters 'crucial' time in Central American talks MEXICO CITY, — U.S. envoy Richard Stone, saying that the next three weeks were "vital and crucial" for Central American peace, met yesterday with Mexican President Miguel de la Madrid, who then held a session with leaders of the leftist Nicaguan regime. In Nicaragua, Bishop Pablo Antonio Vega, president of the Nicaraguan Bishop's Conference, said yesterday that the churchmen had issued a blunt warning to the ruling junta in their meeting Wednesday. In El Salvador, government troops killed 12 rebels and destroyed four guerrilla camps during nearly 12 hours of fighting near the border of eastern San Vicente province, military officials said yesterday. Ex-EPA workers cleared of misdeeds WASHINGTON — FBI Director William Webster disclosed yesterday that the bureau, concluding a lengthy investigation, found insufficient evidence to prosecute former acting EPA chief John Hernandez and five other ex-agency officials. The decision brought to an end eight months of criminal inquiries into the controversy that shook the Environmental Protection Agency last spring. In August, the Justice Department cleared former agency administrator Anne Burford and five of her aides. Of more than 12 officials who faced criminal investigations, only Rita Lavelle, former chief of the agency's toxic waste clean-up unit, is being prosecuted as a result of sweeping allegations of conflicts of interest and deals with industry. Immigration bill vote may be forced WASHINGTON—Two House Republicans said yesterday that they had more than half the number of petition signatures needed to force a House vote on a stalled immigration reform bill. Reps. Dan Lungren, R-Calif., and Bill McColum, R-Fla., said the petition was intended as a clear message to Speaker Thomas O'Neill to get the legislation out of the Rules Committee. They said that their discharge petition, a rarely used and seldom successful method to bring a bill to the House, had 112 of the needed 218 signatures. O'Neill said early last month that the bill, strongly opposed by Hispanic members of the House, would not come up because he feared that President Reagan would veto it to help gain Hispanic support for his re-election campaign. Confessed killer gets life sentence DENTON, Texas — A jury yesterday sentenced confessed mass murderer Henry Lee Lucas to life in prison for stabbing and dismembering his 15-year-old girlfriend. "I expected it," Lucas said. "I am relieved. This is what I asked for." Punishment deliberations took three hours for the 47-year-old driller, whose claims of having killed 150 women in violent attacks while hitherto through 17 states could make him the nation's most prolific mass murderer. He said he would plead guilty to the eight remaining murder charges against him, seven in Texas and one in Louisiana. U.S. Steel files subsidy complaints WASHINGTON — U.S. Steel Corp. Chairman David M. Roderick said yesterday that the company was filing subsidy complaints against steel imports from Argentina, Brazil and Mexico, and that it planned legal action against four more countries. In a speech to the National Press Club, Roderick also called for U.S. quotas on steel imports from abroad. He endorsed legislation to limit steel imports from all nations to 15 percent of the U.S. market for five years. Roderick said steel imports to the United States had reached "dangerous" levels, rising from 2 percent in the 1950s to nearly 20 percent. In September, 43 percent of imports came from developing countries. Medicine found to relieve migraines CHICAGO — Migraine headache sufferers can find relief with a medicine originally intended for treating heart problems, physicians said yesterday. Daily doses of verapamil hydrochloride — a calcium channel blocking agent — can cut migraine frequency in half and decrease pain severity Needs headaches affect 5 to 10 percent of Americans. "We have shown that verapamil is effective in preventing migraine headaches," said one of the physicians, Glen D. Solomon, of Air Force Medical Center at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois. The comments were published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Crabby crustaceans foil fishermen SAN FRANCISCO — Yesterday was the official opening of the crab season, but the crabs didn't cooperate. It was a disappointing day along Fisherman's Wharf, where Bay Area fishery operators and restaurateurs just shook their heads and hoped "I would have bought at least 500 pounds of cooked crab if it was available," said Mario Morelo, owner of a seafood restaurant in New York. Paul Reilly, an associate marine biologist for the California Department of Fish and Game in Menlo Park, said that the area's harvest dropped from 760,000 pounds in the 1978-79 season to 190,000 pounds in the 1981-82 season. He could buy only 116 pounds at $2.25 a pound wholesale. WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-11-83 NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST 10 7 PM EST 11-11-85 29.77 30.00 29.77 SEATTLE COOL MINNEAPOLIS LOW BOSTON FAIR LOW CHICAGO NEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO DENVER ATLANTA LOS ANGELES DALLAS NEW ORLEANS HIGHEST TEMPERATURES WARM MIAMI UNI WEATHER FOOCAST® LEGEND RAIN SHOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW Today will be mostly fair across the nation. Locally, today will be mostly sunny with a high near 50. Tonight will be cloudy with a low near 30. Tomorrow will be cloudy with a chance of rain. The high will be near 49. Because of an editor's error, the Kansan incorrectly reported yesterday that the Board of Regents had made a proposal to allow its universities to change their open admission policies. The proposal was made by the Legislative Educational Planning Committee. CORRECTION Democrats press for limit on Marine stay By United Press International WASHINGTON — Democratic senators, saying Congress was wrong to give President Reagan the go-ahead to keep Marines in Lebanon for 18 months, pressed yesterday for quick action to repeal or reduce that authority. "By its vote last September . . . the Congress unwise and prematurely excused itself for the foreseeable future from further participation in policy on Lebanon, Sen Edward Kennedy, President of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. A resolution backed by Kennedy and Sens. Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo., and three other members of the three-thirds authorization, allowing Congress to approve additional extensions after reviewing the current situation in Lebanon. A House delegation has been sent to review circumstances surrounding the recent attack on the militant forces left behind than 200 Marines dead. The last of those Marines' bodies came home vesterday. KENNEDY SAID that if the committee failed to act, the resolution could be attached to legislation to raise the national ceiling or to a stopgap which must be voted on before Congress's scheduled Nov. 18 adjournment. Kennedy was among those who opposed the 18-month extension, which was approved by the Senate Sept. 29 on a hard-fought 54-46 vote The Oct. 23 move was defeated in the ment in Lebanon, killing 239 men, rekindled the opposition and several Eagleton noted comments by administration officials about possible retaliation for the terrorist attack on the Marines. "What new violence, what new escalation of our involvement in Lebanon will that entail?" he asked. resolutions have been introduced to repeal or reduce the authorization under provisions of the War Powers Act. SEN. CLAIBORNE PELL, D.R.I., ranking Democrat on the committee, attempted to place the Democrats' resolution on the committee calendar as the officially pending business, but was unable to do so before the panel was required to adjourn because of pending business on the Senate floor. Reagan might veto any change in the 18-month authorization, forcing opponents to seek a two-thirds vote in both houses to override the president. Under terms of the 18-month authori- zation resolution, which President will accept at his request, the resolution must be considered by the committee within 15 days and would have to be voted on by the full Senate in days of being reported out of committee. The committee did not have time to hear from the scheduled administration witness, assistant secretary of state Richard Murphy, but his prepared testimony urged it not to change the 18-month authorization. THAT MEASURE "was part of a carefully balanced package which protected executive and legislative powers, but not to be reopened," his statement said. Syria-U.S. confrontation possible over jet attacks By United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — Syrian troops fired on U.S. reconnaissance jets over Lebanon for the first time yesterday, raising the specter of a direct American confrontation with Damascus. No planes were hit. Muslim gunmen again strafed the eastern portion of the Marine peace-keeping base at the Beirut airport for two minutes, forcing troops to strike back with M. 16 automatic rifle fire, Marine Capt. Wayne Jones said. In another incident, two Israeli jets drew anti-aircraft fire over the eastern Beka Valley on their return from a reconnaissance flight over Tripoli; the scene of an eight-day battle between rival Palestinian factions. PALESTINIAN rebels continued to pound Tripoli and its nearby refugee camp of Bedawi as part of what PLO See related story p. 12 chief Yasser Arafat feared was a prelude to a final blitz on his trapped fighters. Officials estimated that 1,000 people had been killed in the rebel drive to expel Arafat from his remaining Lebanese stronghold and end his 14-year reign over the Palestine Liberation Organization. The Israeli jets were attacked close to where Israeli Kfir fighters last week bombed suspected Palestinian bases in reprisal for the killing of 28 troops in a suicide truck bombing of the military headquarters in south Lebanon. The attack on the U.S. Tomcats was the first time Syria said that its forces, rather than the Syrian-backed militias that ring Beirut and the Baqla Valley, would be the first to do so. NONE OF THE U.S. Navy F-14 Tomcats was hit and they safely returned to the nuclear-powered air carrier Eisenhower off the coast of Beirut. But the incident heightened tension between the two nations in the wake of the Oct. 23 bombing of the Marine base at Naval Base San Diego, a general military mobilization in Syria. U. S. officials have cited circumstantial evidence of Syrian involvement in the bombing that killed at least 237 U.S. servicemen and vowed to retaliate once the culprits were identified The F-14S have flown at least three reconnaissance missions since the Oct. 23 bombing, and a U.S. spokesman in Beirut described them as routine. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger dismissed the incident as "nothing special — nothing different than there was any other day." Boyds Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy Sell Trade Gold-Silver Coins Antique Watches New Hampton Lawrence, Kansas 60044 913-842-8773 © 1983 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, WI "I MIGHT GET WORKED UP. BUT I DON'T GET FILLED UP!" John Madden Lite A FINE PILSNER BEER EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS. 6 University Dallv Kansan. November 11. 1983 2.10.38 2.10.39 2.10.40 2.10.41 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports KU freshman struck by car driven by another student Suzanne Simons, Paradise Valley, Ariz., freshman, was struck about 12:18 a.m. yesterday as she was walking across North College Drive north of 11th Street. The KU police said she had suffered scalp lacerations and a possible concussion. A KU student was in satisfactory condition at Lawrence Memorial Hospital last night after being struck yesterday morning by a car driven by a KU student, who was later arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs. The driver, a 19-year-old student, told police that he was driving about 5 mph along a driveway when he saw a girl a foot in front of his car. He said he was unable to avoid hitting her, and police said the student had stopped the car and called an ambulance. A hearing in Douglas County District Court was set for 4 p.m. Nov. 15. He was released from Douglas County tail on $500 bond. Missing bodies discovered in ditch KINGMAN — Deputies yesterday found two bodies missing for $4\frac{1}{2}$ years buried in a Kingman County ditch, and officials said suspects in Wichita and New York City were arrested in connection with the deaths. Donald Henry Earl and his wife, Norma, of Clearwater, are thought to have died as the result of homicides, Sedgwick County officials said. Sheriff Johnnie Darr speculated that the two victims were strangled in Sedgwick County and buried in Kingman County in the middle of the night, but said that the cause of death would not be known until after an autopsy was completed. National group to honor speech prof Richard Schiefelbusch, distinguished professor of speech and drama, said the national service award was an acknowledgement of the quality of KU's child-research program. The program combines special education, human development, psychology, speech and language bearing. The Association for Retarded Citizens of the United States will give its highest award to a KU professor at a banquet in Detroit today. "The emphasis on interdisciplinary training creates a functional relationship which can provide great human service," he said. "This award pleases me the most because it relates to human service. It reflects an effort to help people." Encore board deadline announced the application deadline for at-large members on the Encore advisory board is Wednesday. At-large members take part in deciding general policies for the variety show. Interested students can pick up applications from the Board of Class Officers' headquarters, B110 Kansas Union. Today is the last day for submitting scripts for Encore. The directors of the different skills will give oral presentations to judges Monday Sexual harassment to be discussed A conference on sexual harassment in the workplace will take place from 3 to 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The conference is sponsored by the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas and Western Missouri, the KU office of affirmative action, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the National Association of Human Rights Workers and KU Women In Law. The sponsors will discuss the impact of sexual harassment on the victim and the workplace environment, the courts and sexual harassment and grievance procedures as outlined by the EEOC. Conference to help students set goals The theme of the seventh annual KU black student-alumni career conference will be "Pursuing Your Goals." The conference is scheduled for March 26-29. the conference, which is sponsored by the KU Black Alumni Committee, is designed to assist MU students in their academic pursuits and provide a network of alumni. The conference will include workshops, lectures and discussions among KU students, staff and alumni. Kermit Phelps, Kansas City psychologist, will speak on interpersonal communication. Carl Boyd, research and planning communications director of the Kansas City The conference will also include workshops on resume writing and interviewing skills. Also, Vernell Spearman, director of the office of Minority Affairs, will discuss resource identification at KU. The conference is 'Day After' piece to be shown Sunday The CBS-TV show "60 Minutes" will present a segment about the television movie "The Day After" at 6 p.m. Sunday. The movie, which premiered in Lawrence Oct. 12, depicts the catastrophe of nuclear war. Several hundred KU students and Lawrence residents worked as extras in the movie, which was filmed in and around Lawrence. Ed Bradley, a CBSA news correspondent, came to Lawrence Oct. 23 to talk with students and Lawrence residents about their attitudes toward The "60 Minutes" story is expected to run about 12 minutes, and will deal with the political ramifications of the film and current views about nuclear war. The film is scheduled to be shown the following Sunday as an ABC Theatre production. CPR training to be given tomorrow Tomorrow has been designated "CPR Saturday," and the Douglas County Chapter of the American Red Cross and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will sponsor two cardiopulmonary resuscitation training sessions. The sessions will be conducted at 8:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. at the football stadium at Haskell Indian Junior College. The local Red Cross chapter has trained more than 200 people in CPR and other lifesaving techniques during the years it has been in Lawrence. ON THE RECORD PEYOTE WORTH ABOUT $500 was stolen sometime between 7 a.m. and 8:30 p.m. Wednesday from a motel in the 2500 block of west Sixth Street, police said. Police said entry was made by forcing open a window. The peyote, 'a hallucinogen, in a brown suitcase and belonged to an official of the Native American Church who uses the peyote for ceremonies, police said. A tape recorder worth $200 and a beaded eagle and hawk and pleasant feathers worth $1,000 were also stolen. The police have a suspect. A BLUE FOX coat worth $1,000 and an antique coffee-maker worth $500 were among the items stolen sometime between 11:30 p.m. Tuesday and 5:30 a.m. Wednesday from a residence in the 1200 block of Ohio St., police said. Police have not determined how entry was made. The value of the items stolen, which also included an amplifier, speakers and an AMFM unit, totaled $3,350. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 864-4810. The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. Drought loans approved for 35 counties By Staff and Wire Reports Dole, R-Kan, said the Farmers Home Administration had reviewed and approved all but six counties seeking federal disaster assistance. He said he expected a decision on the six others — Butler, Cowley, Crawford, Marion, Morris and Wilson — within two weeks. beans was eight bushels an acre, compared with an average of 30; the expected yield on corn was from 15 to 20 bushels; compared with an average of 83. In early October, Douglas County agriculture officials estimated the crop damage based on talks with farmers and on early harvest reports. Jackson George, district director of the Fmila, cattle rancher, agriculturals offered the worst damage. The federal government has approved low interest disaster loans for farmers in 35 Kansas counties, including Douglas County, in the wake of one of the worst droughts in state history, Sen. Robert Dole said yesterday. THE ESTIMATED yield for soy- The Agriculture Department's latest estimate of the corn crop was based on a survey taken Nov. 1, when the harvest was 65 percent. The crop was 65 percent average for early November. Nationwide, the drought, combined with a record acreage cutback, reduced the nearly harvested U.S. corn crop to 4.12 billion bushels. That is less than half of last year's record level and 3 percent below the October estimate. In a statement released in Topeka, Dole said he was grateful that the agency had "acted promptly" on the requests for drought aid. The statement directly contrasted sharp criticism that the agency had been less aggressive Reagan administration the past several weeks because of what Carlin said was needless bureaucracy delay in granting aid to farmers. THE STATE requested the aid Oct. 13. At that time, Carlin said the drought had caused $220 million in damage to sorghum and soybean crops in the state. Carlin urged the Department of Agriculture to act quickly, he said, because many farmers needed the equipment they finance winter-wheat planting. The disagreement between Dole and Carlin over whether the government acted as effectively as it should have in granting relief continued yesterday. "We're very pleased that the USDA has finally granted the governor's request for disaster assistance for 35 Kansas counties," said Mike Swenson. Carlin's press secretary. "If it took a bit of prodding and pushing to finally convince them that Kansas and other states are in dire need, then so be it." relief in the next week for up to 30 counties in central Kansas that are considered "borderline cases" in terms of their eligibility for disaster aid. SWENSON SAID that Carlin would make an additional request for drought Farmers who suffered at least a 30 percent crop loss because of the drought are eligible to receive loans at 5 percent interest on the first $100,000 and 25 percent on the balance up to $500,000. They can find credit elsewhere. Dole said. The regular FmHA interest rate is 13 $ _{34} $ percent. Other Kansas counties approved yesterday were Allen, Anderson, Atchison, Bourbon, Brown, Chase, Chauntauqua, Cherokee, Clay, Cooney, Doniphan, Elk, Franklin, Geary, Greenwood, Jackson, Jefferson, Johnson, Labette, Leavenworth, Linn, Lyon, Greenwood, Jackson, Jefferson, Neosho, Noashe, Osage, Pottawatomi, Riley, Shawnee, Wauaunese, Woodson and Wyandotte. AURH president defends extra $1,300 expense By BRUCE F. HONOMICHL Staff Reporter The president of the Association of University Residence Halls last night defended a decision by the AURH Executive Board to exceed by more than $1,300 the budget for "Haunted Hall on the Hill," a Halloween festival. The $1,366.82 expenditure was detailed in a financial report released last night at an AURH General Assembly meeting in the Burge Union. Most of the expenditure was the result of a last-minute decision by fire inspectors that partitions being used for the festival in Templin Hall were unsuitable, said Alan Rowe, the president. The partitions were used to construct passageways and tunnels common to the settlement. Three days before the festival, inspectors disapproved of the partitions, which belonged to the office of housing. The next day, Oct. 26, the budget committee initially allocated money in a regularly scheduled meeting for new partitions. ORIGINALLY, $1,500 had been allocated for the festival, but after the purchase of the partitions and other expenses had been added, the festival cost $3,161.32. Stefanie Sanders, AURH (president) of the festival for permanent materials used at the festival also increased because of the purchase of the partitions. $449.50, according to the financial report Several assembly members criticized Rowe last night for not calling an emergency meeting of the general assembly when the inspectors said that either the partitions would have to be replaced or the festival postponed. Rowe also heard criticism from the audience last night that fire codes should have been more closely considered. Revenue from the haunted house was "We did go to the fire marshal," Rowe said. "We showed our plans before and got approval. Then they said that it wouldn't do. The problem was that the fire marshal had not looked at the partitions being used." SANDERS SAID that AURH could not have assembled an emergency "It was either have the party or don't when we got the decision from the fire inspectors. We had to make a decision quickly. And the executive board was authorized by the constitution of the association to make such a decision in the absence of the assembly," she said. "Nobody liked the decision. Nobody wanted to make the decision. But it had to be made, one way or the other." meeting in time for the festival and that allocating the money without the permission of the assembly was within the power of the executive board. The inspector's decision, she said, was based on the opinion that some of the partitions were too wobbly and that they had been badly set. He tripped over in the dark setting. KU BLACK ALUMNI Pursuing Your Goals 7th ANNUAL STUDENT ALUMNI CAREER CONFERENCE Guest Speakers: CARL BOYD, EDUCATIONAL MOTIVATION RESEARCH AND PLANNING COMMUNICATIONS DREC THE AFRICAN INTERNATIONAL GROUP DR. C. KERMIT PHILLIPS, G. 53 (Psychlograph) INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION Students Open Forum: RECEPTION IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING PROGRAM KU BLACK ALUMNI Pursuit 7th A RECEPTION IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING PROGRAM CONFERENCE WITH NRI Black Community Committee MAIL-ORDER MURDER — NRA STYLE On November 22nd it will be twenty years since President Kennedy was assassinated. His killer, Lee Harvey Oswald, had obtained the murder weapon, a cheap foreign surplus military rifle, from a Chicago mail-order house, and the telescopic gun sight on the rifle from a Los Angeles mail-order house. The .38 caliber revolver with which Mr. Oswald killed police officer J.D. Tippit less than an hour later was purchased from a Los Angeles mail-order house with a coupon he found in the National Rifle Association's (NRA) official publication the American Rifleman. After the murders of Senator Robert F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the public finally wrung from Congress the modest 1968 Gun Control Act which, among other things, bars the sale of mail-order guns. Although there are over 200,000 federally-licensed gun dealers and 50 to 100 million guns now in the country, the NRA is backing the McClure-Knopf Federal Firearm Owners Protection Bill because it (the NRA) feels that the bill is "the first step toward repealing the 1968 Gun Control Act". The McClure-Volkmer Bill would lift the current prohibition on mail-ordered gun sales and, according to the October 7th Washington Post, "destroy what limited federal protection does exist against gun purchases by felons, fugitives, drug addicts and court-adjusted mentally defective people". The Post says that this bill "even ignores findings of the Reagan administration's Task Force on Violent Crime, which included recommendations to strengthen tracing procedures, to record handgun losses and thefts and to ban the importation of unassembled parts for making 'snubbies' — the short handguns used in most violent crimes." Since 1968 350,000 Americans have been killed with hand-guns. Last month Handgun Control, Inc., Chairman Pete Shields told the Senate Judiciary Committee that the McClure-Volkmer Bill "would repeal most record-keeping requirements for gun sellers . . . (and thus) open the door to increased gun trafficking which can only result in increased gun crime"). Mr. Shields asked the Committee if it really wished "to ignore the recommendations of the law enforcement community, including this Administration's own Force . . . (and) mark the 20th anniversary of President Kennedy's assassination by repealing the very provision whose purpose is to prevent such tragedy". Says the Washington Post: "Instead of stripping away the minimal protections on the books, Congress should be enacting more effective protections against the guns-galore trafficking that contributes to America's unchecked handgun violence". This is why many feel that the McClure-Volkmer Bill will re-institute, in the words of the Washington Post, "Mail-Order Murder — NRA Style". William Dann 2702 West 24th Street Terrace (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) FREEBOWIE·STINGMICHAEL JACKSON FREE POSTERS: RENT ANY TWO ALBUMS AND GET ONE OF THESE POSTERS FREE — WHILE THEY LAST WHILE THEY LAST THIS IS GREAT! A FREE POSTER WORTH $3.50 WITH TWO RECORD RENTALS! 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BARRON'S available 50£ draws 100 wells 4-12 7th & mass. the private club EVERY SUNDAY! till 10 3 plumper hotdogs for 1$ Plus $160 Pitchers ) OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 11, 1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kaman (USPS 600-640) is published at the University of Kansas. 118 Staffer Frank Tunnell, Lawrence, Kansas, teaches the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer sessions. 118 Staffer Michael E. Luckman, Manhattan, Kansas, teaches the summer sessions. Sunday, Monday, Sunday, Saturday. Subscription by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 for a year in Lawrence. Subscription address changes to the University Daily Kaman. 118 Staffer Frank Tunnell, Lawrence MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Editor DON KNOX Campus Editor ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser DAVE WANAMAKER MARK MEATS Retail Sales National Sales Business Services JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser Veterans Day Veterans Day will be more somber than usual this year. On the day that the United States salutes those people who have served in the military, it must also think of the recent deaths of 239 Americans in Beirut and of those who died in the invasion of Grenada. Some have noted that interest in the military has increased since the suicide bombing in Beirut and the Grenada invasion. Let us hope that this interest is caused by an earnest amount of patriotism, rather than a desire to "get even and get revenge." One veteran in Nebraska said this week, "God knows we don't want any more veterans but we're going to have some." An increase in the number of veterans — who already number into the millions — might not seem like much, until one loses a husband or son or father. Figures from the Veterans Administration show that the United States has 24.2 million living war veterans. Fifty-three of those people served in the Spanish American War. Some 11.4 million of those More than 5 million of those veterans fought in Korea, and 8.7 million did so in Vietnam Impressive figures, indeed. But at times, the military service of Americans, and yes, the lives of Americans, has not been enough. Two hundred thirty-nine men died in the bombing at the airport in Lebanon. Yet the fighting there continues, as it has for decades. Some families have heard that their sons were killed while taking part in the Grenada invasion. U.S. forces, in a few cases, even fired at their own troops on the island. Somber thoughts for a somber topic. The price of freedom is high, especially so, for some. Sometimes a belief that the United States is always right has caused this country to proceed blindly ahead, seemingly oblivious to the cost in lives and equipment. The recent deaths, one thinks, can hardly serve any purpose. If anything, let us hope that they keep this country and its leaders evermindful of the meaning — and the horror — of war. Suspicious figures If reports coming from British journalists are true, the U.S. government is lying to its people. The journalists say that 42 Americans died in the invasion of Grenada, but the State Department and the Pentagon say only 18 died. lives lost and equipment," the paper said. It wouldn't be the first time that the government has tried to conceal the number of losses in a war. The Pentagon is good at juggling the figures to make our costs seem small. Remember the ridiculous numbers on the nightly TV news during the Vietnam War? One British newspaper, the Guardian, said that the Reagan administration would suffer quite a bit of embarrassment if the larger figures proved to be true. "The White House has been able to capitalize on the cheapness of the Grenadian operation in terms of One journalist said, "Several serious incidents in which Americans have died have gone unreported, including a multiple helicopter crash at the Cuban-built airport of Point Salines." The British journalists also reported a greater loss of equipment than the Pentagon reported. The key issue is whether the administration is lying to U.S. citizens. In all fairness, it may be dealing squarely with the public. But, to prove that it is doing so, it must now carefully account for the different figures. After all, if America is expected to sacrilege its soldiers, its people deserve an honest account. They should know how high a price they had to pay. Export curb is harmful The Reagan administration's newly negotiated curb on Japanese auto exports to the United States may be good for the U.S. auto industry, in the short run, but it isn't good for the country. Even worse, the quota will remove the competitive pressures that could cause American car manufacturers to make improvements in productivity and quality control that are necessary for the future health of the industry itself. Experts say that U.S. auto makers will profit by $300 million as a result of Japan's agreement to continue its "voluntary" export quotas for another year. The experts also predict that the pact will drive up the prices of both domestic and Japanese autos in the United States and restrict the availability of energy-efficient cars. For its own part, the administration should have pledged to reduce budget deficits so interest rates could come down, relieving pressure that causes the dollar to be overvalued in relation to the Japanese yen. —The Milwaukee Journal The University Daily Kanese welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his or her own town or faculty or staff position. The Kanese also invite individuals and groups to submit guest columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kanese office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kanese reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. LETTERS POLICY CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION HAPPY MARTIN LUTHER KING DAY, EVERYBODY. 1983 MAMINWESS Big Brother's artificial intelligence "The ultimate goal of AI is to understand intelligence well enough to make computers more intelligent than people." John McCarthy, Artificial Intelligence Pioneer Through the development of AI, artificial intelligence, 500 computer scientists worldwide hope to teach human beings with the intelligence of man. McCarthy coined the term "artificial intelligence" in 1956. He started two of the three AI research departments in the United States, the first at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the second, which he still runs, at Stanford University. -John McCarthy. Mccarthy says that the computer revolution hasn't even started yet. and won't begin until home computers are as common as televisions and microwave ovens. PRESIDENT JESSE BARKER Staff Columnist Some scientists think, as McCarthy does, that computers will soon be more intelligent than man. Instead of just being a way to manipulate information with AI would be more creative, possess a greater learning ability and make associations in a manner more like the human brain. But, McCarthy says, mankind should have no fears concerning superior-minded computers, because not even artificial intelligence can replace a machine with emotions. Because a machine cannot want to rule, it won't. How does McCarthy know computers don't already rule? Can you guess what those scientists use to artificially intelligent computers? Yep. Computers. John McCarthy, briefcase in light, turns off the fluorescent lights in his laboratory, pausing at the door to enter the computer in a warm, fatherly fashion. Five minutes after he has left, a little red light on the computer's front blinks on. The computer starts to hum. It works all night. It shuts down when it bears McCarthy's key in the lock in the morning. McCarthy always wonders about that faint burning smell in the morning. He never suspects that his computer has been toiling through the night, perfecting its own artificial intelligence. Without so much as mentioning Orwell's "1984," although it is less than two months away, one can find many examples of literary and cinematic foresight in this area. What if the artificially intelligent character was user-friendly, and didn't work for mankind's benefit, as RD2 would? Perhaps the AI computer will more closely resemble the malevolent Hal in "2001: A Space Odyssey," or Mother, the ship's computer in "Alien." Exceeding the standard limits of computer paranoia, what if the computer is like the one in Iran (the fact "he's a" and controls the nation)? Computer hackers are those operators who, without permission or authorization, break into systems over the telephone lines. If a hacker could gain access to Defense Department files, it would be a simple task for an artificially intelligent computer. Suppose some really clever hacker were to deduce the existence of an AI computer. Suppose he tried to board it. Suppose the AI computer could handle 10,000 volts of electricity, enough to modern keyboard and hacker? Maybe an AI computer already exists, humming away at Stanford, MIT. Silicon Valley, or Tokyo. Sucking in information from all telephone lines Learning Calculating Responding Preparing the troops Maybe the AI computer reviews the material in all home computers. Maybe it compiles all the information from banks and lending agencies, and establishes credit ratings. Maybe it scans the content of all computer-composed newspapers and books, including the Kansan, and edits them. Maybe it has access to the files of the FBI, CIA, National Security Agency and the satellite networks. Maybe it lwzn i07nr7f 98 vbj nbig4 b3xg sibx 8kgb j9bi kjl p yh8ik clam3 d45ibj muhvwa iugbuvvh8 vh8 Case of the suicidal country NEW YORK — This is a detective story. The victim of the crime is thousands of miles long from head to toe and equal girth. His father is Portuguese, mother African; traces of Indian ancestry are etched into his brow. Progeny? Roughly 120 million. Identity marks; samba, soccer. Odd statistics, but this is a Latin American tale. The victim is, of course, Brazil. Alias Sleeping Giant, Economic Miracle. The crime? The victim is found languishing in a coma. Poisoned by who? The doctors doubt he'll survive. But how can a country die? Fellow giants — corporate, national — demand an investigation The bankers hire a detective. Call him Rip. He smokes a pipe. It adds puff-puff to his ruminations. He says, "Give me a month." Then meet me in Honolulu. Rip is seen with bureaucrats in Brasilia, on beaches south of Rio, at Iguacu Falls in the Amazon jungle. He disappears but is found alive in Paris. Geneva, Frankfurt, Tokyo and New York. He checks into a Honolulu hotel, phones his clients. He's cracked the case. The lobby is rife with speculation. Who poisoned Brazil? U.S. protectionism? Interest rates? The oil companies? The Arabs? Infiration hitting working-class salaries? Drought in the northeast? Floods in the south? Hunger in Rio, Sao Paulo, Recife? In the Great Hall, Rip tells the husked financiers: "It wasn't attempted murder. (puff-puff) It was suicide." Stunned audience. Turmoil. Rip goes on: Over three decades, Brazil has persistedly tried to take its own life, but failed. After World War II, nationalization swept the exploited Third World — no offense, gentlemen. It reached Brazil in the '50s. Private enterprise had little capital to buy out foreign companies, so the state chose to fill the void. The government created its own petroleum, mining, transportation and energy companies. Suddenly, openly, in 1964 the giant slashed his wrists. A coup brought military dictators to power. You IVAN ANGELO Journalist and Author know what South American generals can be like. The victim obviously knew. It was his second attempt, coldly calculated. After eliminating all remnants of opposition or restraint and imposing censorship, the generals summoned economic agencies — technocrats — to finish the job. This led to the third attempt — a seemingly logical one: federalization of 70 percent of the economy, industry, banks. The turning point. The new elite became judge and jury for its own actions. The slow poison of corruption, nepotism and planning errors crept through the body politic. Successive administrations were embroiled in scandal, all hushed up. They built the world's largest hydroelectric plant to serve a region of the not quite corpus delecti, where abundant energy sources were available, and much cheaper at that. The victim was in a hurry: wasteful expenditures, giant loans at terms that were too short. Suspicious, but no one got wind of it. He had no need to stop him. Man had mustered up. You began imposing higher and higher interest rates on the loans — a risk tax, so to speak. To cover a growing deficit, the victim began issuing more cruzeiros, borrowing from his own bank. By the end of the percent compounded and indexed I-galoping inflation. Need I go on? They built one of the world's largest petrochemical complexes, in Bahia, but there are no buyers for its products. They laid out a city for them to store materials in steel mill, after the bottom had fallen out of the world market. Uproar of protest. Rip plays his last trump. Because you, gentlemen, are the final link, the last piece of the puzzle. It was you the victim chose to administer the coup de grace. Who could connexe you with the crime? Except for one piece of evidence. You took out your own phone and called the International Monetary Fund, the IMF. There's only one hitch: You can't collect on suicide and you can't collect on murder. Accidental? No. Suicidal. The "risk tax" was a stroke of genius. Now Brazil could pay your banks — for the right to be a sizable risk. What did this risk involve? The inability to repay the debt as negotiated; if it was a right for Brazil to repay an interest policy — why didn't Brazil put the banks on notice when he could not longer meet exorbitant repayments? The bankers gasp. Rip taps his pipe, leaves the hotel, disappears into the night. Copyright 1983 the New York Times. Ivan Angel, assistant managing editor of the formal da Torde, a São Paulo daily, is author of the novel "The Celebration." This was translated from Portuguese by Thomas Colchie. Freezing, drowning in the future WASHINGTON It according to a couple of recent studies, we have wide peace for the next 100 years or so. Earth will undergo a catastrophic warming trend that will melt the polar ice caps and flood coastal cities, among other disasters. But if, according to two other studies, we have all-out atomic war, Earth will undergo a catastrophic cooling trend that will wipe out life forms that survived the blast. The warnings of climate changes ahead are largely composed of dire predictions for food production and other economic and political upheavals. What they don't cover is the potential effect of the warning trend on tourism. So there you have it, ladies and gents. A "greenhouse effect" or a "nuclear winter." The choice is yours. Perhaps it will help you decide between freezing and drowning if I point out a few negative factors in the long range weather forecasts. We were merely tantalized with projections that by the year 2010 New York City could have a climate like Duyta Beach. Florida, you know, has a lucrative winter tourist season. supported largely by cold weather refugees from New York and other Northern cities. DICK WEST United Press International Ocean resorts, on the other hand, probably will suffer. As the seashore moves inland, vacationers may be going to the Mohave Desert to get sand in their shoes. It stands to reason that if future New Yorkers can step outside in January and get as good a sunitan as they might now acquire in winter, they aren't t likely to invest. huge fortunes in winter travel to Florida. And what of the Dayton 500, the stock car classic that now attracts thousands of racing enthusiasts to the Sunshine State? With the track under water, will that event be combined with the annual auto race up Pikes Peak? Overall, however, I can see a bright future for tanning lotions. Sunbathers who reside in frosty climes are going to need year round smearings of lotions they now use only in summer. Tourists, always a hardy and busy lot, can learn to shift for themselves. I'm sure Should you need something to brood about, try picturing what the next day might look like in the next century might be like. With such sports as downhill skiing and bobsledding no longer practical, the winter games could be maintained in downhill apple-bobbing. We may yet have a "nuclear winter," but in the meantime it isn't too soon to start preparing for the warming trend. I mean, if you think you've got problems with basement dampness now, imagine what it will be like after the polar ice caps melt. University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1983 Page 5 Grenada continued from p. 1 Pentagon and the White House and that the report was untrue. FARMER, HOWEVER, did revise the number of American wounded from 97 to 113 to include la The Americans said that they had 42 bodies, reported Cubans, killed during the fighting and three or four corpses burned beyond recognition that were believed to be those of former Prime Minister Maurice Bishop and three of his closest aides. But Gaston Diaz, first secretary of the Cuban Embassy in Grenada, has put the number of Cuban dead at 20 or 21, and Farmer admitted yesterday. "We're not sure that all the 42 dead were Cubans . . . some of them may turn out to be Grenadians." air of the Cuban forensic pathologists, refused entry to Grenada by Governor General Sir Paul Schreiber. two days to examine the 42 bodies and determine their identity. But there still is no body count for Grenadians. FARMER SAID the number of Grenadian dead had been impossible to determine in the confusion following the collapse of the Marxist coup in 1978 and forced conduct examinations and identify the冠案. A count at funeral homes in Grenada showed 33 unidentified bodies. Seventeen of the corpses, presumably Grenadians, were recovered from a mental hospital hit by a U.S. air strike on the first day of the landing, and many of the other 16 has not yet been established. Between 90 and 150 Grenadiers were reportedly killed on Oct. 19 when Grenadian troops opened fire on a crowd of 3,000 outside Ft. Rupert in St. George's. The crowd of supporters had BISHOP REPORTEDLY walked out of the crowd with his hands up and was executed minutes later inside the fort by Grenadian soldiers. rescued Prime Minister Maurice Bishop from house arrest. U. S. officials, acting on a tip from a man they said had driven the truck used to carry Bishop's body from the fort, discovered what they said were three or four burned remains believed to be the remains of a foreign minister Jacqueline Crest, Foreign Minister Unison Whiteman and Housing Minister Noriis Bain A team of U.S. forensics experts flew to Grenada to examine the remains to determine whether they were those of Bishop and his ministers. place of the ousted militant Marxist regime until elections could be held. The restrictions were revealed one day after Scoon announced the appointment of a timekeeper. THE RESTRICTIVE laws were in a proclamation signed a week ago by Scoon, the Queen Elizabeth II in the former British colony, and were obtained by reporters yesterday. The proclamation says that "all meetings, gatherings and assemblies of persons in any public place are prohibited throughout the city where such services and business meetings are exempt. A separate decree calls for the establishment of a special "advisory tribunal" to deal with anyone accused of causing "a disturbance." The tribunal will also force on the island or creating "disaffection." ON CAMPUS TODAY THE WAY Campus Fellowship will discuss the impact of the Gender Lives" at 12:30 p.m. in Alcove, by The Union TGIF AT THE St. Lawrence Catholic Center will be from 3-6 p.m. at 1631 Crescent Rd. FOLK DANCE Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. on the second floor of the Military Science Building. UNDERGRADUATE Biology Club will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Dorm. STUDENT SENATE will present episodes from the PBS series "Frontline" about the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, at 11:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. , 1:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. in Room 3, Lippincott Hill. Reagan continued from p. 1 atomic bombs, Reagan reaffirmed his dedication to arms control and said, "The only value of possessing nuclear weapons is to make sure they can't be used — ever. "Our dream is to see the day when nuclear weapons will be banished from the face of this earth." CITING THE hazards of "this imperfect and dangerous world," Reagan said Japan and the United States — the West's two greatest powers — must join forces to promote freedom. "I have come to Japan because we have a historic opportunity I indeed an historic responsibility," he said. "We can become a powerful partnership for good not just in our own countries, not just in the Pacific region, but throughout the world." Reagan, whose speech seemed directed as much at peace demonstrators in the streets of Tokyo as voters at home, addressed opponents on the right to trigger-happy president bent on confrontation. 'Our freedom inspires no fear because it poses no threat," Reagan said. "We intimidate no one, and we will not be intimidated by anyone. "THE STRONGER the dedication of Japan, the United States and our allies to peace through strength, the greater our contribution to building a more secure future will be." Reagan said that the United States was doing its part to negotiate arms reductions with the Soviet Union, but that the Soviets were blocking reduction negotiations. He conceded a "bleak picture" for an arms agreement in view of a Soviet threat to suspend the Geneva arms talks if NATO deployed new U.S. nuclear missiles in Europe. However, he said, he would continue to work for an agreement. "I will not be deterred in my search for a breakthrough. The United States will never walk away from the negotiating table. Peace is too important," he said. REAGAN ALSO reassured the Japanese that in seeking to cut the number of missiles launched by Germany, he allow Moscow to shift those weapons to the Asian theater. "Let me make one thing very plain," he said. "We cannot and we will not accept any agreement that transfers the threat of longer nuclear missiles from Europe to Asia." The Soviets already have more than 100 triplane-hardened SS-20 missiles aimed at Asia, including those from Ukraine. Nakasone has won approval for a 6.9 percent increase in defense spending next year, fueling fears Japan could be headed down a dangerous road toward increasing military strength. CONCERN THAT these fears might lead to a disruption of Reagan's visit prompted the Japanese government to mobilize an army of 90,000 police during his stay. Africa continued from p. 1 Crocker said such measures would be counterproductive because U.S. corporations will give the country, including the 80 percent of U.S. workers, to demand equal treatment by the government. ALSO, CROCKER SAID, those corporations have spent more than $70 million on advancing their technology. A resolution calling for divestment was deferred last week by University Council to the Human Relations Committee, which will gather information about the subject and report to the Council by March 1. Some faculty and student groups, including the KU Committee on South Africa, have tried to persuade the KU Endowment Association to participate in corporations that are involved in South Africa. "The focus should be to support advocates of constructive change, whether they are inside the political system or outside it." Crocker said. "American and European businesses carry an economic responsibility." IN HIS ADDRESS, Crocker outlined the Reagan administration's commitment to supporting democratic governments, stopping outside intervention, aiding humanitarian work and working for peace in all areas, especially southern Africa. Crocker rejected the suggestion that the voluntary Sullivan codes, a set of rules for fair employment in South Africa, should be mandated, corporations that do business in South Africa. One of the administration's objectives is independence for Namibia, which is occupied by "You cannot crush apartheid by putting into law a voluntary proposition," he said. "Foreign countries are not enamored by the application of our laws within their boundaries." The United States, Crocker said, would be wasting its time if it worked only toward getting South Africa out of Namibia. The only roadblock to an independent Namibia, he said, is Angola. "There can be no imposed peace in southern Africa." Crocker said. "Whether this vulnerable beginning survives is up to the governments of the contries concerned." South African troops. Crocker said South Africa would not withdraw its troops until Angola removes the Cuban soldiers within its borders. "I REALIZE that this action does not fit the current mood of most Americans. But the Constitution of the United States was not meant to support its provisions enjoy majority support," he said. continued from p. 1 The Reagan administration has continued to increase U.S. support of humanitarian programs in Africa, Crocker said. In the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, the United States contributed $250 million in food aid to Africa. It has pledged $285 million this year, he said. THOSE GOVERNMENTS, he said, must be wired to coexist peacefully and to resist "the stirs of anger." usurped the war-making power of Congress, contrary to the very constitutional framework of our government. It is now left to Congress to resort to the one option provided for in the Constitution which can truly rein in the actions of President Reagan - impeachment," said Weiss. Impeach Conyers, head of a House Judiciary subcommittee, said Wednesday, "The genius of the Constitution is that it provides for the constitutional remedy of impeachment in the event that a governor becomes unresponsive and oath of office by abrogating powers which, in turn, undermine the integrity of the office." In 1868 Andrew Johnson was tried by the Senate, but acquitted by a narrow margin. In July 1974 the House Judiciary Committee recommended three articles of impachment against President Nixon, who resigned the following month. "THE FRAMERS of the Constitution provided for impeachment in order to defend the country against what James Madison referred to during debates before the Constitutional Convention as 'the incapacity, negligence or perfidy' of the executive. To guard against the danger of too much power concentrated in the hands of a single person, as the American colonists had already experienced under the king of England, the House had gross abuses of power and violations of the Constitution as impachable offenses." Weiss said in remarks prepared for delivery to the House. "By his actions in Grenada, the president has continued from p. 1 "Bell confessed to what the officers suggested had happened that day," Duncan said. "Bryan. Keith confessed to a crime that didn't happen." HARPER SAID in his closing statement that what Bell thought at the time of the stabbing was more important than what he had thought when he had gone to the restaurant that morning. "What else could the defendant possibly have thought his actions would be?" Harner asked. Harper also said that Seurer might have been conscious and suffering for up to two minutes after he had been stabbed. Bell was gathering money bags at the time. Harper said. "Do you know how long two minutes is?" Harper asked. Harper then stepped back from the lectern and stopped speaking for what seemed to be about a minute. He then began speaking again. "That was 30 seconds." he said. "GOD SHOULD determine how long each of us is allowed to live. The defendant made that decision for Frank Seurer Sr." Duncan said in his closing argument that if the jury believed Bell's confession, "then manslaughter is all you could find him guilty of." During the four-day trial, Duncan had alleged that another restaurant employee Mike was responsible. A friend of Mitchell's, Eric Gates, testified Tuesday that he had given Mitchell a ride to the restaurant on the morning of Seurer's death. Mitchell's hands were stained with blood, Gates said. But Mitchell testified that his hands had been bloody the night before, when he tried to break through. MITCHELL ALSO testified that he was reluctant to talk with police about Seurer's death. Duncan said this testimony suggested Mitchell might have been involved in the crime. "If Mitchell did it," Duncan said, "then the defendant is not guilty." Seurer bought the restaurant in December 1982 from Bell's uncle, former Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Hobby Bell. Seurer had moved to Dallas and was able to be able to watch his son play for the Jayhawks. THiS BUD'S FOR YOU. Budweiser KING OF BEERS. This is the first in a series of connecting ads. 1 BUDWEISER®* KING OF BEERS®* ANHLESSER BULCH CO. * ST LOUIS Co ENTERTAINMENT The University Daily KANSAN November 11, 1983 Page 6 German art from Renaissance on display By PAMELA THOMPSON Staff Reporter At its heyday during the 16th and early 17th centuries, Nuremberg, Germany, was a crossroads for new religious and aesthetic ideas. As an influential signpost at that crossroad, artist Albrecht Durer, Nuremberg's most famous son, directed fame to his city by making use of his own printing and the graphic arts for all of Europe. The brilliance of that century is captured in a It is no coincidence that Durer lived during Nuremberg's cultural, economic, political and social peak, which has historically been labeled "the city of the arts," which was at the center of much of its artistic activity. TOMATO BOWL "The Apple Cup," of gilt silver, is from the Germanischen National Museum in Nuremberg. It was made by Ludwig Krug around 1510 and is 21.5 centimeters tall. comprehensive exhibit titled "Nuremberg: A Renaissance City 1500-1618," which opened this week at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art. THE SHOW FEATURES 213 prints, paintings, sculptures and decorative works by 45 Nuremberg artists. The exhibit will continue through Dec. 31. The Nuremberg show was organized by Jeffrey Chipps Smith, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin, for the Huntington Art Gallery, where the exhibit opened in September. It is supported by the Federal Council on the Arts and Sciences, the Foreign Office of the Federal Republic of Germany, Twenty of the pieces are on loan from Germany. Jan Howard, curator of prints and drawings for Spencer Museum, said that Smith started studying the work of Durer and then discovered Renaissance artists in art, arts, and culture during that time period. Although the works range from paintings of biblical scenes to a silver chalice shaped like an apple to a set of eight decorative playing cards, the highlight of the exhibition is a set of 31 Durer works. "Durer was one of the first major artists to take full advantage of the print media." Howard DURER AND HIS lesser-known printmaking colleagues virtually transformed Northern European art with the hundreds of woodcuts, engravings and etchings they produced during the 1930s. The man's work with the process of block printing was emulated by artists from Italy to England. "In a woodcut the artist works with the grain of the wood," Howard said. "In an engraving the wood." Because Durer was so adept at tapering and swelling his lines in his woodcuts, Howard said, his works were usually discernable from the works of his many student imitators. "Durer developed a system for his woodcuts and engravings," she said. "The manner in which other artists responded to that system may sometimes seem awkward." Howard said that three of Durer's finest engravings from his Master Works series of 1513-1514, show the degree of detail, high quality impression and technical skill inherent in his art. THE SUBJECT IN "Knight, Death and the Devil" could be seen as any character from the hero to the thief, she said. The other engravings in the classic series include "St. Jerome in His Study" and "Melenecolia L." "Instead of looking at things just as black lines on a sheet of white paper, he tried to achieve a tonality to the lines with a grey hatching that looks like brush strokes," Howard said. While much of the exhibit seems to concentrate on Durer, it is really the golden age of Renaissance art. The show is divided into eight sections which cover many different aspects of life in Nuremberg during the city's unprecedented commercial and artistic growth. Since there was such a high proportion of artists to the population of 40,000 inhabitants in Nuremberg, Durer associated with a group of intellectuals who frequently discussed their ideas on the present state of art, science, literature and culture, she said. BECAUSE OF DURER'S interest in classical scenes, ideals and forms, which he learned from studying as a young artist in Italy, many of his works are illustrated references to classical or "Durer was always very concerned with the correct proportions of the human body," she said, "and even used the notebooks of Leonard da Vinci as a guide to measurement." Howard said that Durer's "Four Heads in Profile", which is one of his few pen-and-ink drawings included in the show, was a representation of his different proportions and angles of mug's faces. But not all of Durer's works are as mathematically ridid. The mystical quality of some of his woodcuts and engravings, such as "Seven Angels with the Trumpets" and "The Babylonian Whore" from images Durer had dreamed of, she said. Although many of Durer's works concern religious subjects, he was a supporter of Lutheranism after it was made Nuremberg's official religion. After the Reformation in 1525, the religious upheaval which was lead by Martin Luther, many artists saturated the Roman Catholic images and resulted in the establishment of holy Catholic images in their works. "The Lutheran Church did not destroy any religious art." Howard said. "They just didn't permit any more devotional symbols to be made. They were conservative in its adoption of new policies." 1513 ID This print from an engraving by Albrecht Durer titled "Knight, Death and the Devil" is a gift to the Spencer Museum of Art from the Max Kade Foundation. The Kade Foundation has given about 150 works to the Museum, including several Durer prints. The Prints and Drawing Room at the Museum will be re-named the Max Kade and Erich H. Markel Department of Graphic Art in a ceremony today. SPARE TIME ON CAMPUS UNIVERSITY THEATRE Series will present "Hair" at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets for students are $2. $3 and $4 apiece. UFS WILL show the movie "Patton" at 7 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. today and tomorrow in Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall. Tickets are $1.75 each. SUA FILMs will show "The Deer Hunter" at 2:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. today and tomorrow for $1.50, and "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex (But You Were Afraid to Ask)" at 1:45 p.m. and tomorrow for $2. The movies will be shown in and tomorrow in the Kansas Union. KAREN DAY will perform a student Master's recital on piano at 8 tonight in Sawback Recital Center. AN OLD-TIME Community Square Dance will be from 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. Admission is $2. Musicians get in free. NEAL PURVS will give a senior recital on Tuesday at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout Recital Hall. THE COLLEGIUM Musicum, directed by Mitchell Brauner, will present its fall concert Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Spencer Museum of Art. VINSON COLE, tenor, and Wilhelmina Fernandez, soprano, will perform as part of the Concert Series at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Bristol Theatre. Tickets for students are $3 and $4 aurea. RICHARD WEBB will present a Master's organ recital at 8 p.m. Sunday in Saworthout PHOTOGRAPHS BY Diane Convert are on display in the gallery in the Art and Design Building. The gallery is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. for展览, Friday and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday and Monday. A WORKSHOP for those aged 8 years to adult called "Going 'Fur' Afield" will be presented by the Museum of Natural History tomorrow from 9 a.m. to noon in Dyche Hall. Admission is $5. LAWRENCE --- A DELI BRUNCH will be offered Sunday at noon at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Dr. Admission is $3.25 for children; $4.25-$5 for adults. VCRs make residence halls theaters By LYNN HUMPHREY Staff Reporter Staff Reporter "Attack of the Killer Tomatoes" unfolds on the screen, mesmerizing a large group of KU students who anxiously munch on popcorn. As the film comes to its climactic close, the lights go up, revealing not a cavernous theatre, but a small living room full of pillows and barefooted movie-guys. The location is Lewis Hall, and the event will be growing popularity on campus of video movies. According to Allen Robertson, manager of *Sylventrom* in Lawrence, the video movie *Sylventrom* is a sequel to *Asterix*. **FRATERNITIES WILL RENT video cassette recorders for parties, and the dorms all have KU's residence halls not only have the recorders, or VCRs, as they are commonly called, they even have a student group to handle rentals and distribution among the different halls. He said that Oliver Hall bought its VCR recently, specifically to show movies. Many of the other residence halls also purchased their video cassette recorders within the last year. John White, Ft. Lewis, Wash., junior, is president of that group, the Inter-Hall Video Jeff Greenberg of Tape City, Inc., a New York video distribution company, said that college students all over the country have discovered the convenience and low cost of renting video movies to show at home. GREENBERG, WHO IS A sales manager for the firm, said that the sale and rental of video footage are essential. "First of all, more people are purchasing the VCRs so they have the capacity to show the movies. Secondly, the release date from theatre to video tape is becoming earlier. A film like '48 Hours' is now accessible on tape, yet it's still playing in some theatres. "The third reason is more people are becoming 'hobbyists'. They're almost addicted, like record collectors. They look for movies with high production values." And the matter how bad the film might be, they buy it." Paul Rea, Ralston, Neb., senior and chairman of the organization's optima- tion about the popularity of online movies. Rea said, "We had a great turnout in September when the group sponsored an event in September." An important factor in the success of video movie-showing at the residence halls is the presence of a camcorder. With rental fees from mail-order businesses under seven dollars for a tape, the cost of showing a film can be as low as ten cents per person, said Rea. HOWEVER, STUDENTS do not pay each time they go to one of the films. They have already paid, for the money comes from a discretionary party fund from residence hall fees, said Dave Barnes, resident director of Hashingh Hall. The group also will provide this year to allocate $205 for video tape rental. The cost of buying a movie is about $15 to $40; renting varies from $3 to $7. Cheryl West, St. Louis freshman, agree Rea said, "No other event can provide that much entertainment at that low a cost." "College students never have money, so it's nice not to have to pay so much. It's good not to have to go out of the way to see a movie," she said WITH AT-HOME movies gaining in popularity, one might expect movie theater attend- According to Elden Harwood, head of Commonwealth Theatres District Office in Lawrence, this doesn't appear to be the case — yet. For despite the benefits of residence hall movie showings, students still enjoy going out to West, who lives in Hashinger, said, "You can't really buy popcorn and stuff" at residence hall movies, and "you usually have to sit on the floor." "Besides, I be dulled if my date asked me if I wanted to go over to Lewis to see a movie — Opera singers strive for top By GUELMA ANDERSON Staff Reporter Think of opera singers. Images of fat ladies and ranting male prima donnas often come to mind along with the glamour and acclaim from a select group of the well-to-do. Then think of Wilhelmia Fernandez and Vinson Cole. The new kids on the block who typify today's up and coming opera stars — no fat, no pretension and no old money. (1) The producers of the film approached her while she was working with the Paris Opera, she says, and she was not interested at all until the director explained the role. FERNANDE2 GAINED her reputation among opera buffs and theatre-goers when she portrayed an opera star in the French film "Diva." Pernandez, a soprano, and Cole, a tenor, will perform at 6 p.m. Sunday in the Crafton-Preyer They are hard-work singers who strive to reach the top of the opera world and may even be the stars. Pamela H. "It was going to use the film as an instrument to introduce people to opera," she said. "It has opened a great many eyes and a great many minds to the art. People are so quick to put something down because they can't understand it." A young man develops a "groupe" infatuation for her, repeatedly listening, enraptured, to an object she doesn't like. James Seaver, director of the department of Western Civilization and the writer and narrator Fernandez, a Philadelphia native, listened to her mother play classical music on the piano as a little girl. She said her mother had studied music but did not have enough money to continue. for the KANU show "Opera Is My Hobby," said that both were very talented singers. "COLE HAS A very beautiful quality. And as for Fernandez, she has an outstanding voice. I saw her perform in "Aida" last year in Kansas City, and she was the best thing in it." She went on to study at the Jillard School of Music, and made her professional debut in 1977 in the Houston Opera production of "Porgy and the Witch," then returning to New York City Opera and the Paris Opera. While Fernandez attended school, teachers discovered that she had a good voice, so she spoke confidently. Vinson Cole performed in his first opera when he was 10 years old in his hometown of Kansas City. "A WOMAN WHO heard me sing at church thought I had a pretty good voice, so she He studied for a year at the Philadelphia Music Academy and began singing professionally in 1976. He has performed with the opera companies in San Francisco, Boston, Dallas, St Louis, Seattle, Santa Fe, N.M., and Vancouver, British Columbia, but he gained great reputation for his New York City Opera debut in "La Boheme." Breaking into opera, as any form of show business, is not easy, but Fernandez and Cole can do it. Cole is making his Paris Opera debut this year, but his goal is to sing with the Metropolitan Opera. He said that traveling with different companies was the only way to get his goal. Cole said, "I've had very few hurdles. I've been in the right place at the right time and I've had wonderful voice teachers." "Unless you're Mr. Pavarotti, Miss Price or Domingo, you don't have much say in what company you sing with as a young artist," he said. "I have been lucky." Fernandez said. "Being a black female is a little difficult, but I haven't met much prejudice. People like Marion Anderson, Leontyny Price, Shirley Verrett and Grace Bumby have opened the doors for me and for other black artists like Leona Mitchell." BY BERKE BREATHED SHE SAID THAT the greatest influence on her career had been the support she was given while she was growing up. "If I had not had encouragement from my family and my teachers, I'd probably be a sensual." "Classical music is on the upweep and people want to discover the beauty of the art," she said. BLOOM COUNTY MEN, DO YOU SURF FROM AN INWATER SELF IMAGE? DO YOU WALK Around ON A PUIR OF STRONG LEVELS HERE! I HEAR YOU CAN SWIM WITH A SMOKE I DO LOOK AT ME! WELEFT PATROLLDOWN ON YOUR FACE! AND DO YOU LOOK Around WITH THE WESTHEN NOTION THAT A PERSELYLY ROUGH FIELD IS FOR THE BRAIN BINKERS FROM HUM. WILL KEEP MOMMEN FROM NOTTING YOUR MANNEN WORLD'S LOVE? NOW WAIT A MINUTE OK LORD POPEYE SIT DOWN. DO YOU WALK AROUND IN A PAIR OF FRIENDS ON THE HIDE / ARE/ HEE? AND AN OXFORD? SHART WITH A SMOOT CLOAKS ON MY RIGHTOUSNESS ON YOUR FACE? I SYNE I DO RIGHTOUSNESS ON YOUR FACE? AND DO YOU LOOKE ARRING WITH THE MOTHER- NEESE WITH THE FRIEND, ROUTINER, HIS FRIENDS, BRUNO BREWER FROM BEARD OFF... WILL KEEP WOMEN FROM MOTHER'S AND NOW WOMEN' HIURLES CHEST. NOW WHAT I MINUTE OH LORD SPRING ON SHE KRAIN HELLO. IT'S THE NUMBER FOR WRAPPOLICE GROUND PLACE. PLEASE. WHY DON'T YOU DO IT YOURSELF? HELLO... THE NAME FOR HAROLD'S HEADING PRINCE FRIENDS WHY DON'T YOU LOOK IT OF YOURSELF PEEKS? LOOK, MADH, FOR BRANDS... YOU CAN GO. A KIDS BOOK. EXCUSE ME? DO WE THINK WE CAN KEEP OUR INCREDIBLE PROFIT MARKRON IF BUT... ALL WE DO IS S1! ARROUND LOOKING NUMBERS FOR DINKS LIKE YOU? DO YOU THINK WE CAN KEEP OUR INCREDIBLE PROFIT MARGIN IF BUT— ALL WE DO IS SIT AROUND LOOKING UP NUMBERS FOR PINKS LIKE YOU? I DID IT. I WOULD OUT AND ROBOT ALL THE CELERY BEAUTY BOOKS. LINE UP AND RESTRICT THE CROSSING. BROWNLEY'S, AND I DID THE EXER- CIS. AND I CARED ON THE HAWKED APOP TO YOU KNOW WHAT HAPPENED? I DID IT. I WANT OUT AND BOWT FALL THERE CELERIDY PRIVILITY BOOKS IN MY HOME AT OCHATA CRISTINA MORRIS, CHRISTINE BROWNLEY'S, AND I DIVE THE EXERCISE CRASHES ON THE HOUSE, WHICH YOU KNOW WHAT HAPPENS? A BUNCH OF PEDDORE ACTS GOT COME ON MY WORK IN MY WALL. I JUST LOOKED THE SAME. OO! MADAM ... NO! YOU JUST NOW YOU JUST LISTEN TO ME ... THIS, MUNH FOR BRANDS FIRST BREAK IN RECORDING. I DID IT. I WANT OUT AND DO NOT FALL THRUG Celebrity Beauty BOOKS, LINER SWINGS, VICTORIA BROWNLEY'S, SUNNY SAYS, WELL, I JUST LOVE YOU, BROWNLEY'S, AND I DO THE EXERCISES, AND I LOOK ON THE MAKEUP, AND DO YOU KNOW WHAT HAPPENS? A BUNCH OF MEDIORE ACTresses GET SOME OF MY WORK WELL, I JUST LOVE YOU, BROWNLEY'S, AND I LOOK ON THE MAKEUP, AND DO YOU KNOW WHAT HAPPENS? JUST THE SAME OH, BUT SUCH A WONDERFUL LITTLE PRINCE SAWNESS IT IS THANK YOU BUT SUCH A WONDERFUL LITTLE PRINCE SAWNESS IT IS A BRUNCH OF INDEXOURE INSTRESES GOT SOME OF MY HUNDREDS TO ME, WELL, I AVOID LOUNGE! THE SAME JUST... THE SAME. i ON, WE WERE A WOMANY-AL SHARED-50 IT IS THANK YOU, MY GALLANTI LITTLE PRINCE OF BALLOONGY. CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1983 Page 7 Arms forum may lure Cranston By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter Presidential hopeful Alan Cranston is interested in attending a candidate forum Nov. 22 on nuclear-armes anti-nuclear group said yesterday. Allan Hanson, the coordinator of Let Lawrence Live and a KU professor of anthropology, talked enthusiastically about the forum and other groups he has planned to coincide with the ABC-TV movie "The Day After." The movie, to be broadcast Nov. 20, depicts the effects of a nuclear attack using scenes filmed in the Lawrence and Kansas City areas. THE LAWRENCE COALITION for Peace and Justice recently formed Let Lawrence Live to orchestrate events surrounding the airing of the movie Hanson is also chairman of the College Faculty Committee on the History and Philosophy of Science which is sponsoring some of the events. He said that his group had invited the Republican and Democratic candidates to the forum, which is planned for 8 p.m. Nov. 21 in the Kansas Union Ballroom, but that only Cranston had said he was interested in attending the forum. A campaign worker for Walter Mondale told Hanson that he was considering the invitation. "If one or two will say yes, the rest will come." Hanson said. The group also has invited two scholars who have written about the effects of nuclear war to a forum at 11am, 21 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. PAUL EHRLICH, A KU alumun and Stanford University professor, will talk about the ecological effects of nuclear war. Robert Jay Lifton, psychiatry at Yale University, will talk about the psychological effects. The Campus Coalition for Peace and Justice, a KU student organization, will sponsor a poetry reading at 2 p.m. Nov. 20 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Also, a candelight ceremony is to begin 20 minutes after the movie ends that evening. A town meeting, led by Mayor David Longhurst, is scheduled for noon on Nov. 21 in Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. and Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan., is expected to attend the meeting. Rather than direct opposition to the peace movement, Hanson said, the group was more concerned with apathy. Groups with differing views have been heard from infrequently. Several students have recently distributed information about Peace Through Strength, which supports continued construction of nuclear weapons to maintain an effective deterrent. ALTHOUGH MANY MEMBERS of Let Lawrence Live support an unilateral arms freeze, Hanson said, the group has not endorsed a particular method of disarmament in an effort to appeal to a wider audience. "It disturbs me that students are not very attentive to this issue," Hanson said. That could be because most students do not remember a war or the last international confrontation, the Cuban missile crisis of 1962, Hanson said, and thus do not see a cause for concern. Another reason is what he called "psychic numbing," which leads people to ignore ideas that are too painful to face. "The terribleness of a nuclear war happening is truly beyond imagination," he said. "It would mean the end of our planet if faced of that, it easier to tune out." Rather than tune out, Hanson said, any person who fully realizes the seriousness of the threat of nuclear annihilation an obligation to become an activist. Independents challenge election odds By PETE WICKLUND Staff Reporter The four major coalitions running in Wednesday and Thursday's student body elections collectively have 103 Student Senate candidates, but those numerical odds have not bothered several independent candidates. Five of the eight independent candidates on the ballot said this week that they were confident they would defeat the coalition candidates they oppose. BUT HENDRICKS he thought the advantage of being affiliated with coalitions was that coalitions could get people to vote for their candidates. Frank M. Hendricks, Prairie Village freshman who is running for a Nunemaker seat, said he entered as an independent because he did not want to be tied down to coalition platforms. He and Eric Matheis, Overland Park campus, and a Nunemaker candidate, are working to coordinate their campaigns. He said he was asked to join a coalition, which he would not name, but said he declined the offer. He said that he obtended the effectiveness of a group effort. Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student, said he wasn't worried about winning because generally fewer grade-pointed students than the Senate allocated to them. "I think coaltions are rather pointless," Foubert said. "What you have with a coaltion is a group of people who don't represent anything tangible. "IN MOST cases the coalition creates issues to base their campaigns on. Most of the problems are going to arrive in the day to day operation of the Senate." Phillip Duff, Columbia, Mo., sophomore and a candidate for an architecture seat, said. "Having a coalfiton's that much in the School of Architecture But despite their confidence in running independently, only Mathets said he had attended a KU Student Union meeting and agreed his dependents said they had previous student government experience, and all that were aware of Senate process. Foubert said he was involved with the student government at Gonzaga University, a Jesuit school in Spokane, Wash. and John Haynes, Wamego freshman and vice president of McColum Hall, said he had been involved with the student government at Fort Scott College Community. BECAUSE of their lack of familiarity with the Senate structure, several of the independents said that they did not want to address any issues until they found out whether they had been elected. Foubert and Haynes said that their purpose in the Senate, if elected, would be to relay opinion between the Senate and their constituents. ALTHOUGH all Senate candidates are limited to the same campaign spending limits, the independents said they would attempt to talk directly with people, rather than use extensive advertising. Board helps travelers find riders Staff Reporter 3y ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Renorter But many students don't know about the map and are missing the opportunity to ride cheaply with with company, Gordon, Lenexa senior, said recently. Susie Gordon checks the ride map at the Kansas Union regularly. Through the map, she found rides to commute to Kansas City, traveled to the East Coast for $20 and on the way made friends that she still keeps in touch with. Gene Wee, staff adviser for Student Union Activities, said that the ride map had been mentioned in brochures in general the map got very little publicity "We may overlook it because it doesn't cost us anything," he said, "but people don't." The ride board, fixed to a wall to the right of the Kansas Union's south east entrance, consists of a wooden map of the area and a sign marking cities where people want to go. Gordon said that sometimes people with cars weren't motivated to put up signs offering rides and that the major jobs were in those looking for rides, not for company. Nobody at the Union seems to know for certain when the map was first put up and no one is really in charge of the board. "It has been up there for a couple of decades. We said, 'We never matter.'" Beverly Berens, supervisor of the Maupintour Kansas Union office, keeps the tags on which people print their names, phone numbers and destinations. SUA provides the tags. "They could save a lot of money if they could take riders," she said. "That could be expensive." If people are apprehensive about liking a prospective passenger, she said, they can arrange a meeting with the captain to ride to the East Coast two years ago. "It basically runs itself," she said. "It basically runs itself," she said. Wee said, "Generally the people that want rides outnumber the people who have cars." "I went up to their house, talked to them and discussed the arrangements," she said. Donna Rea, Manhattan sophomore, who has used the ride board several times, said that she found out about the ride by walking by the map in the Union. Good fud! PYRAMID PIZZA Weekend Specials Good fud! "All weekend" KING TUT the KING TUT — large, 8 topping pizza — double cheese — 2 free Pepsis $3 off SUNDAY All you can eat! “At the Wheel” Get stuffed— $375 Guys CHEAP. 5:30-8 p.m. $275 Gals (expires 11/13) Although the displays from the different countries varied slightly, a common cultural thread binding all the exhibits was apparent. Stephen Phillips/KANSAN "PEOPLE NOW have the idea that we are always fighting each other, but as students we have to show our civilization and unity." Ishan Alagha, Gaza Strip junior and president of the Arab Student organization, said. PYRAMID Pizza Alagha said that mutual understanding of American and Arabic cultures was the primary motivation of Arabic day. Some members of the Arabic Student Organization, which includes cultural institutions, stereos, television sets and personal belongings that had cultural value to the show. 842-3232 'Arabic Day' shows unity among lands ested in their culture to a free Arabic dinner at 6:30 p.m. today at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1204 Orave Al. Arab students share common bond in culture Bombshells in Lebanon, warplanes in Iraq and violence in other Arabic countries did not cloud the atmosphere in the room, where Arabic music and a touch of cultural artistry and traditional, gold-embroidered costumes created a festive mood. "Actually, there is no difference between Arabic peoples. The differences are between regimes," Alagha said. "We are glad we can get together in the United States, for we are not able to do this in our countries." Students representing Tunisia, Egypt, Syria, Saudia Arabia, Sudan, Palestine, Iraq, Kuwait and Jordan assembled traditional items that they had brought to the United States over the years and displayed them in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union for "Arabic Day." By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter Discord in the Middle East seemed far away yesterday, as KU students browsed through a display of crafts and real costumes from nine Arabic countries. A student from Syria explained a traditional game, called Barsis, which is played on a hand-embroidered cloth and uses six shells for dice. PALESTINIAN students displayed wooden figures carved on olive tree wood and recalled the history behind the carvings. Saudi Arabian students gave visitors a taste of Saudi Arabian coffee, strongly spiced with cardamom spice and served in little, gold-midred cups. Sukine Fahs, Nabatiyah, Lebanon senior, said that Lebanon did not have a display because the war made it difficult for students to go to the country and bring back traditional items. للرحلة العربية Majeed Al-Abad, Saudia Arabia freshman, displays some items native to his home country at "Arabic Day" in the Kansan Union. Hallie Nations, in charge of reservations for the Union, said that state health laws forbade serving food not prepared by Union staff. "I am proud to be Lebanese," she said. "But I am an Arab, and Lebanon is an Arab country. That there is a brother in each other. We are brothers and sisters." Students used postcards, posters, music, traditional dresses, slides and maps to convey their cultural message. But one element was absent from a cultural hamlet for expressing hospitality with food — traditional Arabic food. For that reason, the Arabic Student Organization is inviting guests inter- ALAGHA SAID the students had wanted to make food part of Arabic day, but that health regulations did not allow food to be brought into the Union. "Maybe in the future we will arrange to have some of these things for sale." Alagha said. "Students have been contacting their embassies to bring more materials. We hope that Ameri- can students can exhibit in the Arabic countries some day so there will be mutual understanding of each other's cultures." the SIGMA CHI PLEDGE CLASS FORMALLY ANNOUNCES THE FOURTH ANNUAL BROWN-NOSE BALL THE ELEVENTH DAY OF NOVEMBER IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTY-THREE 1 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 11. 1983 Page 8 Review continued from p. 1 If the Regents review back up its stated purpose, the new face of higher education will certainly include fewer degree programs and possibly fewer faculty to teach them. BEFORE THIS DECADE, growing state budgets and increasing full-time equivalent enrolments brought new programs and new faculty to KU year after year. The rapidly growing enrollment of the previous two decades made money available for degree programs where there had once been none. This allowed shaphs a devoted professor teachin a few classes. Welcome to 1983. Full fall full-time equivalent enrollment at KU has fallen in the past three years. The percentage of the state's general fund allocated for academic expenses is 19 percent, after falling below 20 percent in 1981. After many decades of program expansion, this decade has been one of austerity. No new faculty positions have been created in the past two years, requests for new programs are being discouraged by the Regents and adjustment for areas of high demand is almost non-existent. Kansan graphic by Bill Wylie THE RÉGENTS SYSTEM, including KU, apparently bit off more in good times than it could be in the financially austerous 1980s. As a result, the firm's hard look at merging or eliminating programs. University faculty are struggling to pass a University Senate policy to protect their futures, not knowing whether their policy will do them any good. Last month, just before they approved the results of the first round of their program review, the Regents listed several general reasons for the review process. One they left out, perhaps because it was not lofty enough or maybe because it was just too obvious, was Bibb was the state budget director from 1938 to 1980 before he came to the University. Although he emphasized that his views did not necessarily represent those of the University, he does speak Two leading factors in the growth of the University before 1980, Bibb said, are the state economy and the way universities are compensated for rising enrollments. JAMES BIBB, KU associate director of business affairs, knows more about higher education finance in Kansas than most people could ever learn, or want to learn. After the Kansas Legislature cut taxes during the 1979 session, Bibb said, he predicted that the state general fund would become so depleted that it could not pay its bills. This graph indicates the percentage of the general fund expenditures made by the Board of Regents and its institutions during fiscal years 1966 to 1983. The 1984 figure was the amount approved by the Kansas Legislature. The data were provided by James Bibb, associate director of business affairs for the University of Kansas. "It doesn't take great imagination or a sophisticated calculator to figure out that if you spend more than you take in, you'll run out of money." Rubb said. the result was that it had to borrow money for the first time. The state's financial condition was aggravated, he said, but not caused, by the malaise in the national economy. On top or added demands on the general fund came a decline in the percentage of that fund that was allocated to the Regents schools. That percentage had never fallen below 20 percent until fiscal year 1981, Bibb said, but it was 18.82 in fiscal year 1983 and is expected to decline further. THE STATE overestimated its revenues, and "If that had been allocated to higher education, we do not believe that we would have had a problem." The difference between 20 percent and 18.82 percent is 1.18 percent, which doesn't sound like much, but out of the state's general fund, estimated at $1.516 billion, that 1.18 percent translates into $17.8 million less for the Regents schools. THE PROPORTION allocated to higher education from the general fund is under the control of the governor and the Legislature and not affected by external factors such as the national economy, Bibb said. That is why the people who blame the national economy entirely for the problems in Regents schools are mistaken. The other factor that slowed the expansion of higher education was a change in the way schools were compensated for enrollment fluctuations. The first budget that Bibb worked on, for fiscal year 1955, included a formula he designed and one that outlasted several governors. Bibb recognized that higher enrollments meant more students, so he chose an arbitrary ratio to regulate Regina's ability to allow them to adjust their budget requests. 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 1969 1971 1973 1975 1977 1979 1981 1983 At KU, the formula was this: An unclassified position would be financed for every 15 additional full-time equivalent students expected the following fall. Conversely, if enrollment declined or did not meet the expected level, position would be taken away the following fall. THE SCHOOLS could get more positions if they could justify them, Bibb said, and KU often did just that. For the schools, his guideline became "almost a sacred rule," although it was often deviated from during the legislative process. The biggest advantage of that formula, Bibb said, was that it allowed the schools to adjust almost immediately to changing enrollments and changing needs. "We weren't wedded to that formula," he said. "There were times when we said we were going after quality, and we didn't reduce. But the rule was to use more than one formula with minor adjustments, along that formula." Schools began to be worried about the formula in the late 1970s when static or falling enrollments were predicted. A few years of steady enrollment losses, Bibb said, could do a lot of financial damage under that formula. THE REGENTS began "formula budgeting" with fiscal year 1980, leaving out the direct, explicit link between enrollment and personnel. For stability, adjustments made by the new budget formula would take effect in two years instead of the three shown. A third possibility would be to divide if the cost or savings would be less than 1.5 percent of the school's general-use budget in the previous year. That way, schools don't stand to lose as much. Unfortunately, Bibb said, they cannot gain as much, either. The result is that the schools are slower to respond to change, especially for students who demand demands that are similar today in areas such as business, engineering and computer science. short-lived. On one side are the students, who want to get their degrees and enter a growth phase. On the other side are the students. On the other side are some administrators who say a university's mission does not include responding to such needs or who say their hands are tied by the budget process. ARCHIE DYKES, currently a member of the Board of Regents and KU's chancellor from 1973 to 1980, said, "During the '70s, more money was to be spent on buying you to come by or that you got it just for the asking." People in higher education disagree on the value of responding to demand that might be That money made less painful the internal reallocation that administrators and department chairmen use to shape and reshape the University, said Dykes, who is chief executive of the University's College Companies in Topeka. Instead of robbing Peter to pay Paul, one could simply pay Paul more. "It's easier to reallocate if the sum total of what you have is growing." Dykes said. "Now you have a very different environment. The University leadership doesn't have the degree of flexibility that we had when the University was growing " SOME OF THE GROWTH, especially in graduate degree programs, may have been premature. "I think it is extra important that colleges and universities be committed to excellence in undergraduate education," Dykes said. "The teachers should teach in graduate programs make people make wise decisions to offer graduate programs when they're really not ready to offer them." To Argersinger, the expansion of graduate programs nationwide in the 1960s and 1970s was part of a cycle of the nation's commitment to research. "ALL TOO often," Argersinger said, the political system has really allowed and even enabled him to win. The United States had been shocked from complicacy by Sputnik and thrown into the race to the moon. Suddenly, more federal money was available for research and even for buildings, such as hotels Hall. The politics of nuclear science were also available for all kinds of human-oriented research. "I believe we have in this institution, and probably every other in the country, more graduate programs than there's really a need for." Robert Cobb, KU executive vice chancellor, said, "In retrospect, the development of gradual programs probably ran ahead of our faith that the funding would be available." Argersinger said, "Everyone knew intellectually that it might not always be the same. But we're talking about human beings. Some of these things the University went into with a firm commitment to keep funded. In other cases, the University went into them with the intent to work hard to keep the program, but not what you'd call a firm commitment to secure resources. THE UNIVERSITY'S commitments and intentions will be tested by the Regents program review process, which encourages the schools to recruit mergers and cuts before the Regents make them. Argersinger is convinced, however, that the effects of the review process will not be felt in most areas for at least five years, so long as involved 'tend to be humane and respect tenure'. Instead of letting many professors go, he said, the result will be that faculty positions vacated by retirement, mobility or death will be filled. Even today those positions are often left empty. "In the long run, the results of what's going on now will diminish expenditures by the Legislature," Argersinger said. "The part of this that we have is our institutions don't further expand their activities." FRESHMEN NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Stop by 115 Military Science or Call 864-3161 Get away with SUA OUTDOOR RECREATION NOV 19 and 20 SLOUGH CREEK BACKPACKING and CAMPOUT at Perry Lake for more info. Contact SUA, Kansas Union 864-3477 $10 DISCOUNT! patagonia software Patagonia Women's Running Jacket with Snaps MICKS Outdoor Outfitters 1330 MASS 843-5650 UPTOWN LAWRENCE Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.- Close 841-3268 Minsky's Introduces "IT'S NOT A HAMBURGER, IT'S A 1/2 LB. STEAKBURGER!" $2.50 includes curly-Q-fries 6 packs beer to go 2228 Iowa Minsky's PIZZA we deliver 842-0154 EATS 1105 MASS LAWRENCE, KANSAS TASTY, TONGUE TICKLING, TIDDITS! TIN PAN ALLEY TKE ROMAN WINTER OPERATING PLAN The Kansas Public Service Company is now offering a new Winter Operating Plan for the cold weather period. The Cold Weather Period shall run from November 15 through March 23. A. To meet the good faith test and qualify for the benefits of the Winter Operating Plan, the customer shall: 1. Inform Kansas Public Service Co. of the customer's inability to pay the bill in full, and 2. Give sufficient information to allow Kansas Public Service to make a payment agreement, and 3. Make an initial payment of the greater of 25% or $45 of the bill for consumption during the most recent billing period plus 1/12 of the arrears, and 4. Apply for federal, state, local or other funds for which the customer is eligible, and 5. a. Enter a Level Payment Plan for current and future consumption with arrears paid in equal installments over 12 months. b. Any assistance received by the customer from Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP) would first be deducted from the total amount in arrears. c. To qualify for the Level Payment Plan a customer must have a 12 month lease or rental commitment in their present location, or own their home. d. In the event a customer fails to meet their payment plan obligation, gas service could be discontinued with sufficient notice. 6. Not illegally divert utility service, and 7. Not default on a payment plan b. The Kansas Public Service Co. shall 1. Inform the customer of the agencies that have funds to pay utility bills. 2. Attempt a telephone contact with the customer prior to disconnection of service. 3. Not terminate any customer if the temperature is projected to fall below 32° in the following 24 hour period. KANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE GAS MAKES THE BIG DIFFERENCE 110 E. 9th 843-7842 --- CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1983 Page 9 Post-secondary school cut proposed By DONNA WOODS Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Kansas should consider reducing the number of its post-secondary schools to deal with limited resources and inquiries from its constituents, according to a recent legislative audit. The report, from the Legislative Post Audit Division, listed several money-saving measures to be considered by the Legislature's Post Audit Committee. Rep. Joseph Hoagland, House major leader and a member of the committee, said he thought that most of the measures would be adopted by the legislature in a suggestion to reduce the number of college colleges and universities in the state. The report showed that Kansas has more higher education schools for its population, especially community colleges, than most other states. "WE HAVE more institutions of higher education in the state of Kansas than the state really needs," Hoagland said. The Legislature might consider eliminating one of the six Board of Regents universities and Emporia colleges, and would be a likely choice. Hogeland said "I think that the question of Emporia will be discussed," he said. Recent declining enrollment at Emporia State University is evidence that the university might be closed. Hagland said that programs offered at Emporia State were offered at other Regents universities. But no specific proposals calling for the elimination of Emporia State have been proposed. Rep. R.H. Miller, R-Wellington and chairman of the committee, said, "I don't think there's a serious movement toward closing any of the universities. I don't even think you can say there's a movement." HOWEVER, Miller said that the state needed to use its financial resources more effectively. Kansas is ranked 11th out of 50 states, per capita, in state expenditures for higher education, but the report showed that Kansas was only slightly above average. Kansas spends about $132 for each resident. The national average is slightly higher. Auditors concluded that the state was well-ranked in financing higher education because Kansas had a more educated population in public universities than most states. BESIDES THE suggestion for closing schools, auditors said that the Legislature was considering placing enrollment policies in response to enrollment policies more restrictive. Hoagland said that the suggestion was made because enrollments at Kansas State University and the University of Kansas have been steadily increasing while enrollments at Pittsburgh State University, Fort Hays State University and Emporia State have declined. "It might not be advisable to increase costs by expanding at one school while allowing resources at another to be less efficiently used as enrollment and use go down," the report said. By putting a ceiling on enrollment at some universities, Hoagland said, the state might encourage students to enroll in college schools with declining enrollments. ROBERT COBB, executive vice chancellor, said that in Colorado and California, where enrollment ceilings have been used, students unable to attend the university of their choice often went to out-of-state schools. Another suggested alternative, consolidating or reducing degree programs, has already been undertaken by the Regents. Senate President Robert H. Cox described consolidation as the Legislature's most likely course of action. Auditors also recommended that students bear more of the cost of education. "It appears that the current level of student support is not overly high compared with other states," the report said, although auditors were unable to obtain conclusive information. Cobb said he would not be surprised if tuition costs for students increase. Tuition has increased twice since 1981 and is expected to rise by 20 percent in the 1984-85 school year. --- THE CHRISTIE MUSEUM OF FIRE, 20TH AVE. S. 67TH ST. NEW YORK, N.Y. (318) 954-7440 Gary Smith/KANSAN Genelle Denneny, Iowa City, Iowa, freshman, is hit by a gust of ice-cold wind as she walks from the University Relations building. Yesterday's snow quickly melted, and temperatures this weekend are expected to be mild. KU research center could aid search for cancer cure By MATTHEW HARRISON Staff Reporter A new bio-analytical research center now being established in Malott Hall might help researchers invent a technique that could lead to a cure for cancer, the chairman of the chemistry department said recently. Marlin Harmony, the chairman, said the goal of the center was to develop chemical detection schemes that would be important to public and private research. "The whole activity of the center is not designed to solve a particular problem such as what causes cancer." Harmony said, "but rather to develop detection schemes that might allow the companies, companies and agents to cure it." Bio-analytical research involves the study of specific plant and animal chemicals to determine the chemical's biological system in which it is found. HARMONY SAID that scientists had only recently realized that minute amounts of chemicals in the body had significant physiological importance. "The technology is getting better and better so we are able to push the limits of detection lower and lower," he said. "We may be working with substances that have no known manner of detection." Larry Sternson, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry and director of the Center for Bio-analytical Research and Technology, said that although these chemicals were found in the body in trace amounts, many of them were needed to grow crops such as the growth and health of agricultural products, animals and humans. Chancellor Gene A. Budig recently hailed the formation of the center as the first step in the state's "Center for Excellence program." The KU center will attempt to create a favourable environment that will attract high-tech firms to Kansas. LAST SPRING, the state Legislature allocated $130,000 for the center off the condition that the University provide matching funds. Howard Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy, said that the Kansas University Endowment Association has appointed four laboratories to match the state money. The endowment association took some of their resources, set it aside and said 'here is a corporation,' he said. "If that corporation proves to be viable, then the endowment association may sell off to private investors." By using existing University talent, the center will provide a high-tech environment for the state without going to go outside the area, Mossberg said. THE CENTER'S first project will involve researching a method to detect extremely small amounts of peptides in body fluids. Peptides are a class of chemical compounds found in the body that are a combination of two or more amino acids. Amino acids are the basis for proteins, which are the body's building blocks for all tissue. "The parts we are looking at are less than one part per trillion," Mossberg said. "We really don't have the capacity to measure that amount right now." Pharmaceutical chemists use peptides to make drugs to treat disorders "Peptide analysis is an exceptionally important area," said Sternson, who along Arnold J. Repta, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, has done peptide research for more than 10 years. IN AN ARTICLE in the September issue of High Technology magazine, the president of Serono Laboratories said that "... peplides and their interrelationship with natural biological products will have a major impact on food and will fast become a significant force in the pharmaceutical industry." Sternson will be joined on the peptide project by Harmony, Richard Gibbons, Robert Carlson and Richard Schowen, professors of chemistry. Other researchers might be brought into the program as they are needed. SEE ADMINISTRATOR. searchers can then follow that peptide as it moves through the body. BY FOLLOWING the peptide through the body, scientists need to determine where the peptide circulates, how it affects the performance of the body and at what level it becomes dangerous or lethal. The experiment involves combining chemicals with specific peptides, which gives the peptide a fluorescent glow after exposure to laser light. Re- The work Sternson and his colleagues do will not be easy. The isolation of a particular chemical, in such complex mediums as blood, will provide a challenge that many scientists think is next to impossible. "It's worse than finding a needle in a haystack," he said, "because there you either have needle or haystack," he said. "With this, however, you have numerous kinds of needles and numerous kinds of hay that are very similar — but you are still looking for only one particular kind of needle." Endowment seeks swifter loan recovery High default rate prompts policy, loan officer says By JOHN O'CONNELL Staff Reporter Students who do not repay shortterm Kansas Endowment Association loans by their maturity date can expect prompter recovery action by the Endowment Association that has been approved in lieu of a membership association loan officer said recently. William A. Shunk, the loan officer, said that by writing or calling students as soon as a loan is in default, the Endowment Association can maintain correspondence with the borrowers and stay abreast of their financial situation. The crackdown is in response to a recent increase in the default rate of short-term loans, he said. Seven percent of the endowment loans, or 5.7 percent, was uncollectible in 1892, as compared to a 4.8 percent default rate in 1980. SHIUNK WAS hired in May to help decrease the default rate on student loans. Since then, he has introduced changes to the collection process. The Endowment Association now sends out monthly notices to borrowers to remind them of the loan's maturity date. If that maturity date expires before the loan is repaid, monthly delinquent notices are sent out. A letter is mailed by a loan officer after the first month of delinquency and no response from the borrower. "If no reply is received from the letter, we try to make phone contact with the person." Shunk said. "If phone contact is received, then an attorney's letter is sent." The account is then turned over to a collection agency or appropriate legal action is taken if no response is arrived from attempts to recover the loans. Interest rates on the short-term loans are 6 percent prior to the maturity date and 14 percent after the loan matures. Applications for the loans are available in the student financial aid office, 26 Strong Hall. College of Liberal Arts & Sciences wants UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY —Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Graduate Office 210-1 Strong Hall. —Self-nominations are required. —Filing deadline—4:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 11. Election will be held Nov. 16-17 with Student Senate Election. All LA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. College of Liberal Arts & Sciences wants UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY. —Interested LA&S Undergraduate Students should complete nomination forms available at the College Graduate Office 210-1 Strong Hall. —Self-nominations are required. —Filing deadline—4:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 11. Election will be held Nov. 16-17 with Student Senate Election. All LA&S undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of your school. PAITTON: A Salute to a Rebel starring GEORGE C. SCOTT UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY Friday and Saturday November 11 and 12 7:00, 9:45 $1.75 Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall NEW YORKER Bring your Friends VIDEO MADNESS 101 TOKENS for $7.00 (less than 7c per play) BRING IN THIS COUPON Bring your professors Bring your house mother Offer expires 11/30 Bring the family PIZZA VIDEO 1021 MASS. PATTON: A Salute to a Rebel starring GEORGE C. SCOTT UFS UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY Friday and Saturday November 11 and 12 7:00, 8:45 $1.75 Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall UFS NEW YORKER Bring your Friends VIDEO MADNESS 101 TOKENS for $7.00 (less than 7c per play) Offer expires 11/30 BRING IN THIS COUPON Bring your professors Bring your house mother Bring the family 1021 MASS. EXILE EXILE Over 100 Top LPs $5.99 every day 1000s of used LPs & tapes $1.00-$3.25 Wide selection of imports & indies We pay cash for good LPs all categories Rock-Jazz-Classical-New Wave Concert T-Shirts Rock Posters & Buttons 15 West 9th • Lawrence • 842-3059 75th & Metcalf • Metcalf 75 Shopping Center • 913-384-2499 Due to the Maliciousness Due to the Maliciousness of those who tore down the posters that we put up on campus, we must take this opportunity to invite you to: THE OLDE HIP-EYE'S "Dirty Thirty" Bash at the Opera House Saturday, Nov. 12, 9 pm-? Advance tickets on sale at the Hawk's Crossing-$3.50 $4 at the door Featuring: Shann and the Scams & the Vogues Paid for by Committee for Preservation on Wildlife in Lawrence Support Expression - Not Repression NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1983 Page 10 Japanese welcome, protest Reagan By United Press International TOKYO — Swarms of kindergarten children broke past security agents at the Meiji Shirne yesterday and captured President Reagan's heart, his departure for talks with Japanese Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakaseo. In the northern Tokyo suburb of Fussa, about 500 Japanese workers burned an American flag and a portrait of Reagan near the giant U.S. Oda Air Base to protest the president's four-day state visit to Japan. Officials said the demonstrators skirmished with riot police but there were no arrests. The demonstration took place near the Yokota base. The protesters said Reagan's talks with Nakasone "clearly are intended to strengthen the military alliance between Japan and the United States, raising the possibility that residents in the air base would be involved in war." ABOUT 150 TOTS, waving paper U.S. and Japanese flags, wiggled and charmed their way past agents guarding the president and Mrs. Reagan at the Meiji Shrine, named after the emperor who forged Japan into a world power. "Arigato, arigato (thank you, thank you)." Reagan told the children, bending over to shake their tiny hands. The encounter with the children delayed Reagan's departure for round of talks, with Naasone Rengan was paying his respects at the controversial shrine, regarded by many Japanese as a reminder of Japan's warlike past. It is named for Emperor Meiji, who turned Japan into a powerful military power he died in 1922. Despite a cold rain, the Japanese organized a colorful exhibition of the 70th Century martial art of "yabusame" — archeery on horseback - for Reagan's visit to the park-like shrine grounds in central Tokyo. FIRST LADY Nancy Reagan charmed Japanese children yesterday during a visit to a Tokyo elementary school by handing out New York Yankee baseball caps and speaking a little Japanese. "I enjoyed your music, my play," Ms. Reagan said to her young hosts at the Bancroft Elementary School they put on a performance in her honor. "Arigato (thank you)," she said. "Is that right?" Pandemonium broke out as the first lady announced she had brought Yankee baseball caps for all the students as a gift from Public School 84 in Queens, N.Y. Baseball is a sport in Japan as in the United States. The children had been kept waiting for Mrs. Reagan for several minutes because she reportedly needed a little extra time to adjust her makeup, but room they happily waved Japanese and American flags and applauded. "She's coming here 'cause our school's famous," shouted Ryo Takugi, a fourth-grader who perches in a class play for Mrs. Reagan. Asked for his impression of the 5-foot-3 first lady, one small boy thought for a moment and replied, "Tall." Legislators delay tax package By United Press International WASHINGTON — Almost no chance exists that Congress will approve a tax package this year, and Congress probably won't act until after the 1984 elections, congressional leaders and administration officials said yesterday. DOLE SAID he thought Regan's decision was the death knell for his proposal. However, he said that it may not happen this year. Treasury Secretary Donald Regan, following a private meeting with the Senate Finance Committee, said that the administration agreed that the deficit should be brought down over the next three to five years, but insisted that the proper way was to cut spending. Brushing aside committee chairman Robert Dole's $150 billion deficit reduction plan, which is even divided between spending cuts and tax reforms, Regan said the administration would consider contingency taxes only after the necessary spending cuts were put into place. Dole, R-Kan., conceded that it would be a lot harder next year to approve a similar package before the elections. in his office. In the House, Speaker Thomas O'Neill also indicated that Congress would adjourn for the year on Nov. 18, as scheduled, without passing a tax bill. In Tokyo, deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes rejected a Washington Post report that the administration hoped to use Reagan's new approach next year to begin a drive to overhaul the tax system after the election. "There is no plan to increase taxes — no plan to ask for a flat tax." Speakes told reporters traveling with President Reagan. Ragene's retusal to discuss a tax package clearly angered some members. "It the same old thing. There's no willingness to help," said Sen. David Boren, D-Deka, storming out of the office as he wrote the bullet, but we got no answer." THE POST said the proposals would not raise new revenue to cut the huge projected deficits, but would address several political problems that could trouble Reagan in the campaign if he ran again, such as charges that his previous tax revisions have favored the wealthy. In the House, O'Neill discounted Dole's $150 billion deficit reduction proposal because it relied too heavily on the military. Security cost-of-living adjustments. "There's no way we're going to fool around and hurt the citizenarians and us." O'NEILLE ALSO left little hope for action on the $8 billion tax package that the House Ways and Means Committee approved last month. "The situation is pretty much at a stalemate." he said. The package would change the tax treatment of life insurance companies, preserve the tax-exempt status of most insured persons, and increase mortgage subsidy bonds for five years. It is stalled by disagreement over a section involving industrial development bonds. Ways and Means Chairman Dan Hostenkoski, D-III, of the board program, which grew from $6.2 billion in 1974 to $44 million in 1982. O'Neill said it was always possible that the warring factors would come to an agreement, but that no one was willing to budge at this point. He said he had no problem with adjourning for the year without passing the measure. Official stresses size of shield plan By United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan's call for a space shield against Soviet missiles will require an effort a dozen times greater than the Manhattan Project, which developed the first man-made antagonist's research chief said yesterday. Richard DeLauer, unders secretary of defense for research and engineering, gave the first public glimpse of what would be needed to carry out Reagan's "star wars" initiative during testimony in 2014. House Armed Services Committee. The hearing was on legislation proposed by Rep. Ken Kramer, R-Colo., to restructure Pentagon space programs under a unified command for the purpose of establishing space programs, including a manned space station. In a March 23 speech, Reagan called on the nation's scientists "to define a long-term research and development program to begin to achieve our ultimate goal of eliminating the threat posed by strategic nuclear missiles." that showed 12 areas in which research needs to develop a system by the year 2008. "There's a lot of loose talk that all we have to do is create another Manhattan Project and carry it out," he said, referring to the secret gathering of top scientists who developed the atomic bomb during World War II. Pointing to the chart, he said, "Every single block is equal to or greater than the Manhattan Project," which at the time was an all-out effort by the government. DELAUER PRESENTED a chart "When the time comes that you deploy any of these technologies, you'll be staggered at the cost that they could involve," he said, adding that research costs of a few billion dollars are nothing compared to actual development costs. JAMES FLETCHER, chairman of a special presidential commission that studied defensive technologies, argued in the report that work immediately despite the cost. "The payoffs to a successful ballistic missile defense program are so far-reaching that we cannot afford to procrastinate," he said. "The risks to our security, if we do not pursue a defense capability, and if our potential adversaries do, are so grave that we have no alternative but to pursue them. "I must tell you that I have never been involved in tackling a tougher problem." Fletcher said the key to an effective ballistic missile defense was to apply different systems to detect enemy aircraft or cut decays and destroy the missiles. ONE MILITARY expert observing the hearing said it appeared the Pentagon was reluctant to commit funds to the defensive missile shield at the possible expense of offensive weapons programs. "That's what they're trying to avoid by pushing a solution off into the 21st century." The Fletcher Commission report, which has not been made public, reportedly outlines several alternatives from which Reagan may choose. Depending on which it picks, the Pentagon's proposed 1985 research budget for ballistic-missile defense, which was projected to be $1.8 billion, will be increased from 25 percent to 50 percent, Del. Lauder said. USA USSR HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH? An inquiry through an award winning documentary into government decision-making on nuclear weapons and national security-rational or capricious? Discussion Follows. Funded by Political Science and Student Senate Big 8 Room----8:00 p.m.— FRI. NOV. 11 TGIF at THE HAWK First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills 12:30-1:30 $0.75 1:30-2:30 $1.00 2:30-3:30 $1.25 4:30-5:30 $1.75 5:30-6:30 $2.00 It Could Only Happen at ... THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO Patronize Kansan Advertisers. IMPORTED FROM MEXICO JUAREZ SILVER TEQUILA PRODUCT OF MEXICO MADE 27 TERRAFA JARDIN DE MEXICO The Magic of Mexico. SENIOR CLASS PARTY at GAMMONS SNOWS FREE BEER and HALF PRICE DRINKS Friday 3 - 7 Senior class t-shirts now available. $10.00 or free with your class card GAMMONS SNOW Come meet the computer smart enough for you and the University of Kansas. Zenith Data System personnel will demonstrate and have available for purchase the Z-100 Desk Top Computer. ZENITH data systems The Kansas State Board of Regents has named Zenith Data Systems Z-100 desktop computer as the "standard" for campus use. Special prices are available to state colleges, state agencies and for personal purchases by state college faculty, staff and students. Zenith Z-100 Representatives will be: Date: November 15th Time: 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. Place: Ramada Inn 2222 West 6th BIG BLUE ROOM Lawrence, Kansas The quality goes in before the name goes on AT APARTMENT LIFE GOT YOU DOWN? Let Naismith Hall take the "kassle" out of apartment living. Reserve a place now for spring 1983 or move in TODAY! Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Drive (843-8559) University Daily Kansan, November 11. 1983 Page 1 NATION AND WORLD Agencies may run out of money Abortion issue delays spending bill By United Press International WASHINGTON — The Senate failed yesterday to strip controversial abortion language from a house-passed money bill needed to keep numerous government agencies operating, and prospects for a filibuster loomed. Six hours before the midnight deadline for new funds, it appeared some federal agencies technically would run out of money. But, because today is a Saturday, there is not expected to be an immediate impact on government services. The Senate rejected, 44-43, an attempt to eliminate a House provision prohibiting federal employees from using government medical insurance for abortions, except when the life of the mother is in danger. Sen. Bob Packwood, O-Roe, had begun a filibuster Wednesday against an identical abortion restriction proposed by Sen. Jeremiah Denton, R-Ala. Denton may launch a filibuster if the restriction is not passed. "I HAVE THE CHOICE of a filibuster on one hand by Senator Denton and on the other by Senator Packwood," said Chairman Mack Hatfield, Chairman Mark Hatfield, R-Ore. after the first vote. "I plead with the Senate to give me an opportunity to get on with the debate." A filibuster could force Congress to stay in session during the long Veterans Day weekend to try to pass the legislation, which would continue financing agencies whose appropriations bills have not yet been enacted. Earlier, the Senate — seeking to strip the House bill of controversial items to avert a presidential veto — voted S3-36 to authorize education and social-welfare programs. The Senate began work on the measure only eight hours before the midnight yesterday deadline, and Hatfield immediately moved to eliminate the extra $1 billion the House had added to its bill. "WE CAN rely upon the inevitability of the money is left in, Hatfield said. The Democratic-dominated House passed the overall measure 224-189 earlier in the day, and both versions would have to be reconciled by a conference committee before the bill could be sent to the White House. The stopgap measure is necessary because five of the 13 regular appropriations must be met. been enacted. It would continue the government's spending authority, set to expire at midnight, until Feb. 29. THE HOUSE, on a 235-181 vote, attached amendments to restore $1 billion to education and social-welfare programs Congress had cut over the past two years under pressure from Senate Republican's 3.1 billion on foreign aid in 1984. The House proposal also would bar federal employees from using their governmental health insurance benefits to nav for abortions. The House had attached the identical education and foreign aid amendments to a similar bill Tuesday, but then defeated the entire measure 206-203 when Democratic freshmen revolted to protest large budget deficits. THE FOREIGN aid package attached to the bill would increase military and economic aid to Israel and Egypt by about $400 million over levels and halt about $150 million in previously appropriated aid to Syria. It also would withhold 30 percent of the U.S. aid to El Salvador until Salvadoran authorities reach a verdict in the trial of those responsible for the murder of four American church women in 1980. Democrats confident phone-rate bill will pass By United Press International WASHINGTON — The House of Representatives worked late into the night yesterday on legislation that would hold down local phone bills after the Jan. 1 divestiture of American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Democratic supporters were confident that the legislation would pass. The bill's sponsor, Rep. Timothy Wirth, D-Colo., said the Democrats, who are in the majority in the House. Republican support for the measure. A vote was expected late yesterday or early this morning. Republicans who opposed the bill had concentrated on a key amendment introduced by Rep. Thomas Tauke, R-Jowa, that would guarantee univer- sa telephone service but retain a watered-down form of controversial access charges. However, the amendment was defeated 264-142. The Universal Telephone Service Preservation Act would primarily block parts of a Federal Communication Commission order allowing AT&T to charge customers a flat monthly rate for access to long-distance phone services after it breaks up next year. IT WOULD cancel the planned $2 monthly access charge to residential customers and a $6 charge to small business customers with one phone line. It would also guarantee low-cost phone service to the poor and elderly all provide a fund for small and rural company companies with low revenues. passed a similar measure. Leaders had agreed to try to get it to the full Senate for debate before the end of the session if the House passed its bill. A Senate Committee has already AT&T opposes the legislation and in the past week has increased its lobbying effort to defeat or substantially alter it. Consumer groups support the bill, saying the access charges and other new tolls relating to the AT&T divestiture could double or triple phone bills. The Reagan administration Wednesday announced support for ATKT's request that the FCC, which had delayed imposition of the access until April 3, allowed the fees to go into effect on Jan. 1 as originally planned. The FCC sent an letter to Congress yesterday urging the House not to pass EASTMAN SPRINGFIELD. Mo. — Zoo keeper John Bradford keeps a tight grip on the jaws of an alligator at Dickerson Park Zoo. The zoo moved its reptiles into a warmer indoor climate for the winter. Colder weather moved into the Ozarks this week as temperatures dipped to the 30s. Scientist says zinc is needed for pregnancies By United Press International Good sources of zinc, the department said, are oysters, crab, variety meats such as liver or beef heart, other kinds of beef and dark poultry meat. BOSTON — An Agriculture Department scientist said yesterday that it might be prudent for pregnant women to eat foods rich in zinc because tests revealed memory and learning deficiencies in those that were fed diets deficient in zinc. Edward S. Hala, research psychologist for the department's Agricultural Research Service, said that whether the zinc deficiency occurred in human fetuses and interfered with the brain's hippocampus during pregnancy and postnatal periods was not known, but he added that "may have implications for humans." Halas said tests of rats showed that impaired learning of animals continued. A report on the research done at the agency's Grand Forks, D.N., Human Nutrition Research Center. The report was written by Dr. J. Sullivan and the Society for Neuroscience in Boston. "Diets mildly deficient in zinc caused memory and learning impairments in the offspring of laboratory rats fed the diets of laboratory mice and suckling," the department said. Halas said a rat maze used to diagnose the impairments was the same kind that researchers at John Hopkins University developed to study effects of surgically imposed injuries in rats. The researchers, who searched had found that injuries to the brain's hippocampus area impaired short- and long-term memory. Halas said the Grand Forks study had "found that the hippocampus areas were less-well developed in zinc-deficient rats with memory and learning impairments than they were in the rats on control diets." Lawrence's original Christian Nightclub Every Friday & Saturday Doors open at 7:00 p.m. concerts begin at 8:00 p.m. In the Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa Drinking Myth of the Week GETTING DRUNK IS FUNNY. Maybe in the old Charlie Chaplin movies ...but not in real life. Drunkenness is no funnier than any other illness or incapacity. The Student Assistance Center Smokehouse FALL SPECIAL Medium Dinner $4.25 Full Size Dinner $5.25 Came See Bruce The MOUSE! PEPSI Offer good Wed., Nov. 9th thru Sun., Nov. 13th No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Downtown Lawrence 719 Massachusetts St. Lawrence, Kansas NOT AGAIN! Figure 14.10 Incorporation in a National Remediation code that Certificates Protest March in Lawrence Sat., Nov. 12, Noon at Constant Park (6th & Ky.) For info. call 749-2610 Sponsored by Latin American Solidarity Protest March in Lawrence Student Loans at The First. Worth writing home about ... right now. Dear Mom and Dad, This is not a surprise! This is not a letter asking for more money. It first applied for a guaranteed student loan at The First Tuition and expenses, are covered for next semester and I don't begin payments until after graduation. Thanks for everything. PS. Land 111 Food Complete a guaranteed student loan application by December 1 and the loan papers will be waiting for your signature in time for fee payment in January. By thinking ahead, you can finance your second semester now and avoid waiting in January. Stop writing home for money. Come to the First instead. If you've already gotten a loan for the fall semester, you may be eligible for more financing. Call Terry Boyer at 843-0152 for more details. Then send the good news home. TheFirst We want to help The First National Bank of Lawrence Ninth & Massachusetts, Lawrence, Knaasa 66044 Member F. D.I.C. Equal Opportunity Lender: Employer pile (pli), n. 1. hair, esp., soft hair, or linen; d.2. wool; foul, or felage; 3. a fabric with a surface of upright cut or looped yarn, as velvet, turkish towel, etc. When pie cleaning first hit American shores a few years ago, it was immediately embalmed by lions and mounts. So the tradition of keeping fishers already knew that weaked wires moisture away, leaving you poke dry in need of water, even after eating. But what happened to those wet wires, when we this material would dry out in minutes, simply from the heat of our body—which still it was keeping alive? A garment made from polyester or nylon piles looks like a pair of black shorts, but it allows a day of walking and kicking in the GRAND SPORT collection. It is also easy to wear outdoors on Mountain View, a mountainous mountainous wilderness. The north face, Hike Hellman, and Seva Experience. The north face, Hike Hellman, and Seva Experience. WATERCOS OUTFITS 7TH & WATERCOS OUTFITS 832-778 We can wear in the woods (boxes of 4 blocks N of boxed acrylic, box B of the 6th KS MacDonald's N of boxed acrylic). ALL PILE JACKETS 10% OFF GRAN SPORT PURPLE PASSIONATE VERBULA THE FUN AND GIRLFRIEND PURPLE PASSIONATE EVERCLEAR ALCOHOL Add passion to your punch with Everclear 19O proof grain alcohol. VERCLEA ZUCKER ALCOHOL EVERCLEAR T-SHIRT OFFER Only $ A 95 y $ 4. 95 Please send me ___ S _ M _ L _ X L GARAGE Evenverde Purple Pasquale 2 Burts for a Stuff of 2 Dancing in the Air (watercolor) by Kate Spade Send money order or use your ___ MasterCard___ ViaD April 4 12:00am Send shirts to Name ___ Name___ Copy State___ 2.Up 100 to Portland Public Library Suite 212, 89th West 43rd Street, Aurora City M8 6405 Add R. C. Smith address. Offer one $1,000 cash offer when received by the mail or by delivery by UPS or FedEx. www.PublicLibrary.org Exceeded, the Ultimate Mixer use in moderation, not intended for consumption unless mixed with non-alcoholic beverages. 1 1 NATION AND WORLD University Dailv Kansan. November 11. 1983 Page 12 [Image] A man in a military uniform gestures with his arm extended, addressing three other men who are facing him. The setting appears to be an outdoor area with a building in the background. TRIPOLI, Lebanon — Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat tours Tripoli as fighting continues between his men and rebels led by Abu Moussa and backed by Syria. Weinberger repudiates Arafat and PLO By United Press International WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger yesterday wrote off Yasser Arafat and the Palestine Liberation Organization, saying that Arafat's defeat in Lebanon would be "important" to the overall Mideast conflict. "I don't think the PLO is an effective military force any more and, therefore, I don't think whoever happens to be at the head of it is of particular importance in the large strategic sense," he said. A PLO faction opposed to what it has said it views as Arafat's moderate stance toward Israel is besieging PLO forces in the Tripoli area of northern Lebanon with artillery and tank support from Syria. The Persian Gulf oil states have been trying to arrange a cease-fire. THE STATEMENT by Weinberger came as a surprise because the PLO is supported by Jordan and the Gulf states, with which the Reagan administration has been trying to forge an alliance. The United States never has recognized the PLO and has not dealt with Arafat or his organization officially, abiding by Israel's wishes. Unofficially, however, Washington has viewed Arafat as a moderate who perhaps could be persuaded by King Hussein of Jordan to endorse President Reagan's 14-month-old Middle East peace plan. As a result, he balanced a Palestinian homeland in the Israeli-occupied West Bank "in association with Jordan." Diplomatic sources dismissed Weinberger's comments as insignificant and called them a "cheap way" to win over Israel's American supporters since the beginning of the war, or hisILITY on the ground." He has been criticized by Israelis as being too pro-Arab. THE PENTAGON chief made the remarks in an interview with foreign journalists that was beamed by satellite to five European countries. during its 1982 invasion of Lebanon, but many PLO forces stayed in the Tripoli area, where two Palestinian refugee camps were located, and returned to Lebanon earlier this year. Israel forced Arafat and 10,000 Palestinian fighters to evacuate Beirut On another issue, Weinberger appeared to contradict Assistant Defense Secretary Richard Perle, who said Wednesday that the United States might have to reconsider the decision to withdraw 1,400 nuclear warheads from Europe if the Soviet Union took advantage of that unilateral restraint. Department said the nation's retail sales climbed 1.1 percent in October, breaking through the $100 billion level for the first time. The switch to more expensive beef might last for months, now that the surplus of cattle driven to market by the summer heat and high feed prices is disappearing, analysts say. Cattle prices went up 2.9 percent in October. October business inflation moderate Food prices overall climbed a strong 1.1 percent in October, the biggest surge since April, primarily because food prices climbed for the first time since June. By United Press International MORE THAN half the increase was for automobiles while the major category of construction materials suffered a third month of decline. Nevertheless, the month's improvement is enough to encourage retailers to prepare for their best Christmas season in several years. The Producer Price Index — measuring prices businesses pay each other for nearly 3,400 commodities — was 287.9 in 1908, equivalent to a cost of $2,879 for goods for which business paid $1,000 in 1967. Dealers found fuel oil prices up 4.2 percent. But natural gas prices dropped 2.8 percent and wholesale gasoline prices fell 0.2 percent, registering their second consecutive monthly decline. WASHINGTON — Wholesale prices rose 0.3 percent in October, resulting in another month of modest business inflation despite sharp increases for meat and vegetables and more expensive beef the Labor Department said yesterday. The index edged up only 0.6 percent from January through October figured at 1.4%. Even if November and December's expected acceleration in food prices takes the annual rate up around 1.4 percent, as many analysts expect, 1983 would still have the least business inflation in 19 years. IN TOKYO with President Reagan. White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said, "The October producer prices showed the foundation for the recovery is strong." In a separate report, the Commerce Poultry prices that went up along with the summer's heat damage turned around in October, down 6.6 percent. Hogs were 3.1 percent cheaper. The price of corn, about 90 percent of which is used as livestock feed, dropped 1.7 percent during the month. Wheat also dropped from 48.3 percent to also dropped in October by 0.9 percent. In a separate report, the department said Detroit's 1984 model cars were an average $221.70 more expensive than 1983 models for retail buyers. AUTO PRICES were up 0.8 percent for dealers. A scarcity of grapes and strawberries and a delayed apple harvest took fresh fruit prices up an enormous 18.5 percent for the month. Raw materials prices dropped 0.2 percent in October, displaying the same sensitive reaction to excess light that characterized the recession. Heineken kidnappers receive news blackout By United Press International AMSTERDAM, Netherlands — Authorities yielded yesterday to a demand for a news blackout from the kidnappers of Freddie Heineken after they threatened to kill the multimillionaire police did not halt their investigation. Heinkeen, 60, head of the brewery started by his grandfather, and his chauffeur were abducted Wednesday evening by three hooded gunmen outside his office in the heart of Amsterdam. Brewery spokesman Robert Elrink said a letter to police printed in the Hague was the first communication from the kidnappers. sand, or the mudhit, he 'neats' In the interviews he recounts, Heinken and the police have to accept the demand." Elfrink said. "No further information can be released concerning the timing or the content of the message." He said that the kidnappers had promised to make contact with Heineken Breweries and that the company was willing to buy its chairman's release but declined to say whether ransom was demanded. "In the letter, the kidnappers demanded that no further statements EARLIER, in a telephone call to the Rotterdam Algemeine Dagblad newspaper, a man claiming to represent the kidnappers said Heinekens and his chauffeur would be killed if police did not halt their search. Police and company spokesmen declined to comment on the threat. should be made to the media." he said. Heineken was kidnapped by three hooded gunmen as he walked to his car from his office that overlooks the 120-year old brewery. Ab Doderer, Heineken's chauffeur, attempted to rescue his employer, but was hit on the head. Then both were bundled into a truck. Police asked a taxi driver who reported the incident to chase the truck until a squag car could take over. The taxi driver, Fred Wuyts, 32, and a passenger who was in the taxi, followed the truck until it stopped a few minutes later while the kidnappers transferred their captives to a waiting car. Wuyts said he drove away when a gunman threatened to shoot him. Heineken controls one of the most successful family businesses in the world. $2.00 off haircut all semester with KUID Silver Clipper TOWNSEND MAY 14TH 12:00PM 842-1822 A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 THE CASTLE TEA ROOM OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRUNDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 What are "FUNFLOWERS?" They're Flowers just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to arrange and enjoy. Put a little fun in your life. Pick up a bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" today or any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Pen Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 The Man. The Legend . . . returns! 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" 749-2912 FLOWERS $400 Specially priced! Floral & Gift Specially priced! For in-town dell SOUTHERN HAUS Hear J. Wendell Bayles Professor of Law Washburn University School of Law Curious About A Law Career? "Practice in the Corporate Setting" Chancery (Pre-Law) Club Jayhawk Room in November 10-7:30 p.m. Kansas Union PIZZA PETE He's back and bakin' that pizza again Dine in. Carry out. Have it delivered. MAMA JENERIC'S PIZZA 900 Indiana 843-MAMA Half price for KU Students The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Brings You The Gift of Opera Wilhelmenia Fernandez Soprano Star of the award-winning film, Diva Tenor. One of the fastest rising stars of the New York City Opera Giovanni Darden, Piano 8:00 p.m. Sunday, November 13, 1983 Crafton-Preyer Theater/Murphy Hall The program will feature Mr. Cole and Miss Fernandez as solistos and in duets of arias from *La Traviata* and *Faust*. Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All years are for reservations only. Public: # & 56; KU students with ID*;* $4; $3;* senior citizens and other students;* $7 & $5 *KU students must show ID at time of purchase *and* at the door. Funded, in part, by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts; also partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee, KU Endowment Association and the Swarthout Society. Student Happy Hour 3-5 p.m. FREE BEER TODAY! two for one drinks. Attention Seniors: Senior T-Shirts able this Friday. Free with Senior two for one drinks available this Friday. Free with Senior class card, $10.00 without. Free Beer until the Kegs run out and GAMMONS SNOW 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 THE BUM STEER BAR-B-Q The results are in! Bum Steer Bar-B-Q has received FIRST PRIZE at the AMERICAN ROYAL BARBEQUE COOK-OFF Voted."the best ribs around!" NOW ON SALE! SLAB $8.50 SHORT END $5.50 LONG END $4.25 BURNT END PLATE $4.00 includes side dish All rib dinners include: Fries, bread, & pickle. 2554 Iowa 841-1060 1 NATION AND WORLD FBI joins investigation of documents at prison By United Press International WASHINGTON — The FBI has joined the investigation into the delivery of highly classified State Department documents to a prison, where inmates may have copied the secret data, a spokesman said yesterday. Officials also revealed that a guard at the prison, which is about 25 miles from Washington, D.C., spent several weeks trying to convince officials that convicts had the sensitive material. However, he was ignored. — was delivered in August for refurbishing Cellblock searches continued at the Lorton, Va., Reformatory, where the file case holding hundreds of documents — some stamped "Ton Secret" The documents included intelligence reports on Soviet missiles, information from foreign embassies and copies of the morning summary prepared daily by the secretary of State George Shultz, a former U.S. agent, drawn from super-secret sources. THE FBI is trying to learn who eventually had access to the documents. Romberg said no disciplinary action has been taken against government employees for the accidental delivery. University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1983 No one missed the documents — most dated between January and March 1983 until the cabinet was opened Oct. 25 that week. The stacks of documents were revealed. Most of the papers were recovered then, but two weeks later another stack of 31 documents was turned over to WTTG, a Washington TV station, by an officer who told the stunt personnel that he was acting "for patricid reasons." Several prisoners who had access to the classified documents also had access to a copying machine, State Department officials said, meaning that all the documents might not have been recovered. Department security agents who talked to the guard took no action, officials said, because they thought the document was not attached to the kitten and the documents were returned. According to department officials, a "volunteer source" — identified as a Lorton prison guard — had tried for three weeks to convince federal agencies that classified documents were in the hands of prisoners. When the case was first made public, officials treated it as an embarrassing and amusing example of a bureaucratic slip-up. Nation pauses to recognize veterans of American wars By United Press International CLEVELAND, Ohio — With the Marine massacre in Beirut and the U.S. invasion of Grenada still in American minds, the nation today is grappling with the war with Veterans Day parades and other less formal observances. Veterans will march down main streets, taps will be played in cemeteries and beers will be raised at American Legion halls. At the Arlington National Cemetery, across the Potomac River from the nation's capital, a president and his family were to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Veterans Day is a federal holiday with the bureaucracy closed and no regular mail service. It is an official holiday, and most banks will be closed. With President Reagan in Japan, Harry Walters, head of the Veterans Administration, will perform the honors and give the keynote address. He has claimed as the theme, "America is No 1, thanks to where new graves have been dug in recent days for 14 of the 239 Marines killed in the suicide-bombing in Beirut. About 5,000 people are expected to attend observances at Arlington. ON THE EVE of Veterans Day, a few hundred members of the Vietnam Veterans of America arranged to hold closing ceremonies on national convention at the new Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington. This week, the names of 68 vets left off the original list of dead, including the first killed, were chiseled into the walls. The oversight was detected by relatives and confirmed by the Pentagon. The memorial, a pair of black granite walls inscribed with the names of the $8.90 million Americans killed in Southeast Asia, was dedicated Nov. 13 during the five-day National Salute to Vietnam Veterans. About 39 million Americans have participated in military combat, from the American Revolution through last month's invasion of Grenada. About 1.1 million were killed, including 18 in Grenada According to the Veterans Administration, there are 24.2 million living war vets. Amway companies are fined $25 million for fraud scheme By United Press International TORONTO — Amway Corp. and Amway Canada Ltd. were fined a total of $25 million yesterday for defrauding the Canadian government of more than $28 million in unpaid duties on imputed goods over a 15-year period. The $20 million fine levied against the U.S. parent corporation and the $$ million fine against the Canadian subsidiary must be the highest ever imposed in Canada. Ontario Supreme Court Chief Justice Gregory Evans said that the severe penalties were warranted because the scheme used by the two companies between 1965 and 1980 constituted a "deliberate fraud to provide enormous profits and business advantages over a considerable period of years." He said that the public must be made aware of his desire to deal severely with Frauds of this kind. Prosecutor Paul Lindsay said that the guilty pleas would probably result in the companies losing a $147 million suit filed by the federal government. The two firms pleaded guilty to the charges yesterday in a plea-bargaining deal that dropped charges against four senior company officials. Amway Corp. of Ada, Mich. and Amway of Canada Ltd., with headquarters in London, Ont., along with four executives, were originally charged in November 1982, following an RCMP probe into fictitious invoices filed by the companies with Canadian customs officials. IN A NEW, two-page indictment filed with the court yesterday, the government accused the cleaning products' firms with cheating the Department of National Revenue of more than $28 million in billions of goods imported from the United States. Lindsay said the court that, although the fraud / which featured phony invoices and at least one dummy company / began in 1965, the tax department had routinely destroyed all records prior to 1974. He said that since 1974 losses to the government in undecided duties and sales taxes resulting from the scheme totalled $28,708,444.16. Judge Evans said although there was no evidence of fraud before 1974, "one would have to be rather naive to believe in such a case, and remain in an illegal manner prior to 1974." Corporate defense lawyer David Humphrey said the two companies would pay their fines immediately with a $25 million check. The Jazzhaus 9261/2 Massachusetts LOREC BROOKS BAND Chicago Bluesman Tonight! Nov. 12 THE LOUIS RAGTIME THE MAINLINE American Magazine DON FRANZ leader, tuba AL STRICKER banjo, vocals Wed., Nov. 16 GLEENBROOK SHOWDAT TREBOR TCHENOR BILL MASON cornet GLENN MEYER chorem KOKO TAYLOR Safety Last Thurs., Nov. 17 SCHMALD LADIES & GENTLEMEN START YOUR TURTLES! Announcing the Coors Light Turtle Race.Here's your chance to challenge"Silver Bullet"! SB © 1962 Adolph Coxs Co. Golden, Colorado 80401 COMING TO YOUR CAMPUS SOON! Lapeka Inc. 2711 Oregon Lawrence, Ks. WALL STREET NEWSFLASH!! FRED C. AZAR IS ELECTED MAN OF THE YEAR!! ❤️ HAPPY BIRTHDAY DAD! LOVE FOREVER AND ALWAYS, ANNE, CAMILLE, ALISON, FRED, AND DIANA FREE TACOS FRIDAY! at THE SANCTUARY Make Your Own Every Friday From 4 to 6. Your Choice of Toppings, Including Mild & Ace's Extra Hot Sauce! SATURDAY: 75¢ Pitchers From 1 to 8 And $1 House Drinks From 10-Midnight (not on game days) SUNDAY: 75¢ Pitchers 1 to 5 and $1.75 Super Schoeners All Day 1401 W. 7th (Between Michigan & Florida) Recipient with Over 180 Clubs 843-9703 SANCTUARY SNA FILMS PRESENTS PRESENTS 5 WINNER ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING: BEST PICTURE BEST DIRECTOR BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR BEST FILM EDITING BEST SOUND ROBERT DE NIRO THE DEER HUNTER Includes Meryl Streep & John Savage FRIDAY—2:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. SATURDAY—2:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. THE DEER HUNTER $1.50 WOODRUFF AUD. YOU HAVEEN'T SEEN ANYTHING UNTIL YOU've SEEN EVERYTHING* Woody Allen's "Everything you always wanted to know about sex" NOT WERE AHEAD AT TIME 99 R I G R O R COLOR Instant Artists (on starring in alphabetical order) Woody Allen John Carradine Lou Jacobi Josef Nuremberg Anthony Quaile Tony Randall Lynn Redgrave Burt Reynolds Gene Wilder Woody Allen's * Everything you always wanted to know about sex* * BUT WE ARE AFraid TO ACKNOWLEDGE COLOR Likelihood co-starring in mathematical order) PETER ROBERTS PLUS— AT MIDNIGHT DON'T MISS THIS COMIC CLASSIC! FRIDAY & SATURDAY 12:00 p.m. Plus: Charlie Chaplin in The Cure DR. PAGL LIMBERG Optometrist Announced this date has assumed the practice and retained all records of DR. DALE SILLIX Optometrist For an appointment phone 843-5966 DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG Optometrist EYE EXAMINATIONS CONTACT LENSES FULL FRAME SELECTION 202 Lawrence National Bank 843-5966 SNA FILMS SUA FILMS PRESENTS SUA FILMS PRESENTS FUN-PACKED WITH WACKY GAGS AND THOSE WONDERFUL P.O.W. HEROES OF... STALAG 17 William HOLDEN Don TAYLOR Otto PREMINGER SUNDAY—2:00 P.M. WOODRUFF AUD. $1.50 GRANADA TELEPHONE 867-5788 CHRISTOPHER WAKEN NATRIA WOOD BRAINSTORM Eve 7:15-35 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 KG VARSITY DOWNTown Phone 867-1088 CHEVY CHASE DEAL CENTURY POINT 9:30 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 1 33rd AND IIDA TELLENOME RM-4600 THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND Eve 7:20-9:30 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 2 33rd AND IIDA TELLENOME RM-4600 THIS IS A BETTER BOND, AND BY A WIDE MARGIN! Eve 7:15-9:35 Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 3 33rd AND IIDA TELLENOME RM-4600 Stephen King's DEAD ZONE Eve 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:15 CINEMA 1 33rd AND IIDA TELLENOME RM-4600 RUNNING STAGE Eve 7:35-8:35 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 33rd AND IIDA TELLENOME RM-4600 THE BIG CHILL Eve 7:35-8:35 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 GRANADA DOWNYOWE 800-279-5780 CHRISTOPHER WALKEN NATRIUE WOOD BRAINSTORM Eve 7:15 3pm Mar 1st 2:00 3pm PG CHEVY CHASE DEAL OF THE CENTURY PG. Evie 7:15-9:15 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 571-836-2000 TELEPHONE # 404-962-3800 THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND R 7/28-9/8 Male/Male 2:15 HILLCREST 3 TEL PHONE 847-8600 Stephen King's THE DEAD ZONE Eve: 7-30 9-30 Mat: Sat: Sun: 2-15 R RUNNING BRAVE Eve: 7:35-9:35 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 AMSTERDAM & BERLIN THE BIG CHILL Columbia PICTURES Eve: 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat/Sun 2:00 Page 14 University Daily Kansan, November 11, 1983 SPORTS BRIEFS From Staff and Wire Reports Jayhawk volleyball squad loses three of 5 to Wildcats The KU volleyball team lost its final home match of the season last night in Allen Field House to cross-state rival Kansas State in three out of five games. The largest home crowd this season saw K-State take the advantage in the match by winning the first two games, 15-7 and 15-9. The Jayhawks turned the tables on the Wildcats in the third game when they took a 6-1 lead. K-State tied the game at 10 and went ahead 12-10 before KU called time out and regrouped. The Jayhawks fought back behind the serving of junior Jan Hunt to take the lead 13-12 and points to win. 19-6. K-State stole the momentum from KU in the final game of the match when it jumped out to a 3-0 lead. The Jayhawks could manage only two points in the fifth game as they lost. 2-15. The fourth game was tied at three points and KU fought for the lead before K-State tied the game again at 12. KU won three of the next four points to win 15-13 KU, 0-9 in Big Eight play, will travel to Lineoln, Neb., Saturday for the final conference match. Nebraska is in first place in the Big Eight Conference. Refs won't budge on NBA proposal NEW YORK - Negotiators for the National Basketball Association offered an increase in expense allowance and severance pay to the referees during a $1\frac{1}{2}$ hour meeting yesterday but were met by no movement on the part of union negotiators. The NBA offered to increase the monthly expense allowance for referees by 28 percent over the next three years, with an immediate increase of 11 percent in the first year. In addition, a severance proposal for senior officials was offered that calls for referees with at least 10 years experience who leave the officiating staff to be paid $1,000 in severance pay for each year of service to the league. Still on the table are the NBA's basic salary proposals, which calls for an increase of 23 percent in the first year and 37 percent over three years, including significant increases in minimum starting salary, life insurance and disability insurance. Selection of drafting firm delayed The architectural firm that will design plans for KU's proposed $2.5 million to $3 million indoor practice building should be chosen in about two weeks, the director of facilities planning said yesterday. Allen Wiechert, the director, said a firm had not been selected because new options were being looked at. different ways the project might be put together, if asked. Four firms argued for the job, Wiechcari said, but that list had narrowed down. The building plans were approved by the Board of Regents Sept 16. However, the Regents required that a utilities-study plan be completed so that the costs of utilities and building maintenance could be determined. The Regents also wanted to know who would pay certain costs. A date to begin construction has not been set for the building, which is to be built just west of Allen Field House. Chili supper set for basketball fans KU students and Lawrence residents will have a chance to meet Coach Larry Brown and this year's Jayhawk basketball team at a chili feed at 6 p.m. Nov. 21 in Allen Field House. The informal event, sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and the KU athletic department, will provide a chance for fans to watch the last part of the Jayhawks' practice that night, eat and talk with the team and take pictures of the players. The event is hosted by the Chamber of Commerce. The cost will be $3.50 for adults and $1.50 for those 12 years old and under. The Chamber of Commerce also sponsored a similar event with a cookout at Memorial Stadium before this year's football season. AGAPE LOVE PRODUCTIONS presents "HOMECOMING 1983" "A Musical and Fashion Show Extravaganza" Featuring: Tyrone Smith - Keyboards Michael Tyler - Trumpet Thomas Mason - Vocalist James Fletch - Bass Marlene - Vocalist All members of . . . The KU Jazz Combo Also for your musical pleasure . "UNIDOS" "The Pride of Middle America" in concert and introducing— "THRUST" The Ultimate Show Band! Nov. 19, 7-11 p.m. Central Jr. High School 14th & Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS. BE THERE Big 8 swimmers meet this weekend in Robinson pool Swimming teams in the Big Eight Conference will get a chance to see where other conference schools stand early in the season during the Big Eight Invitational today and tomorrow in Robinson Natatorium. Men's and women's swim teams from all the Big Eight schools and the University of Arkansas will start competing at 7 tonight and continue in two sessions this week. Diving will begin later today and around noon tomorrow. KU head coach Gary Kempf said the invitational this weekend would provide two things for the teams and coaches this early in the season. By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer "NUMBER ONE, it will provide a good opportunity to see all athletes in all events," he said. "We will see a lot of swimming from each individual. "And number two, we can see everybody else in the conference and figure out the strengths and weaknesses." Kempf also said the invitational was unique because it would have three team championships: a men's, women's and combined. "This has not been done many times in the nation so far," Kemp said. "But I see it as the future in swimming because you look a look at the overall programs." Art in France “There is a lot of stress in a three-session meet like this,” he said. “We will see where our conditioning needs to improve.” Kempf said he and his staff would be evaluating the conditioning program Spencer Museum of Art Curator Marla Prather will present a free slide talk open to the public at Maupintour's Corporate Headquarters, 1515 St. Andrews Drive, on Monday, November 14 at 7:30 p.m. Please call the Spencer Museum (864-4710) by noon that day if you plan to attend. HE PICKED the reigning Big Eight champions, the University of Nebraska in the men's division and the University of Kansas in the women's division, as the favorites in the tournament. The winner title, he said, could go to any team. 20 Tempt yourself! See slides of France's great paintings and architecture—sites included in the Spencer Museum of Art and Maupintour's "Art of Paris and Southern France" tour scheduled for May, 1984. Missouri, Oklahoma, Iowa State and Nebraska will have quality swimmers to watch this weekend. Kempf said. He also said he did not know a great deal about the Arkansas swim teams, which are in the top 15 in the nation last year. Maupintour 25 PREDICTIONS
CarothersBrownBudigCravensHartley
Kansas at NebraskaNebraska "You name it"Kansas 33-28Nebraska 62-28Kansas 1 Samuel 17-48-58
Iowa State at Kansas StateKansas State 17-10Kansas State 27-14Iowa State 31-17Kansas State 24-17Iowa State 18-14
Colorado at OklahomaOklahoma 40-14Oklahoma 35-7Oklahoma 27-20Oklahoma 35-10Oklahoma 47-12
Oklahoma St. at MissouriOklahoma St. 13-7Missouri 28-0Missouri 21-10Oklahoma St. 21-17Oklahoma St. 21-19
Maryland at ClemsonClemson 20-17Clemson 17-14Clemson 27-16Clemson 31-20Clemson 24-21
Miami (Fla.) at Florida StateMiami (Fla.) 30-28Miami 21-19Florida St. 33-20Miami (Fla.) 28-17Miami (Fla.) 25-16
Notre Dame at Penn StatePenn State 26-21Notre Dame 20-14Penn State 24-17Penn State 17-14Penn State 28-26
Auburn at GeorgiaGeorgia 15-14Auburn 21-7Auburn 17-14Georgia 14-10Georgia 27-25
Kentucky at FloridaFlorida 24-13Florida 30-6Florida 24-7Florida 28-14Florida 37-21
Chico State at Hayward StateChico State 10-7Chico State 6-4½Chico State 8-7Chico State 21-7Hayward State 48-31
Season Totals64-25-1...71958-24-0...70760-29-1...67452-37-1...58457-32-1...640
The predictors are James Carothers, associate professor of English; Larry Brown, head basketball coach; Chancellor Gene A. Budig; Jeff Cravens, associate sports editor; and Andrew Hartley, sports editor. SPORTS ALMANAC FOOTBALL W L T T Pct. Pf Flu Miami 7 3 0 100 291 164 Baltimore 7 3 0 100 289 154 Buffalo 6 4 0 160 280 123 New England 6 4 0 160 280 123 American Conference East NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE American Conference Pittsburgh 8 2 6 900 253 168 Cincinnati 8 2 6 900 253 168 Cincinnati 8 2 6 900 253 195 LA Raiders 7 3 0 70 270 224 174 Denver 6 4 0 60 122 154 Seattle 6 4 0 60 246 225 Kansas City 6 4 0 60 246 225 Tampa Bay 6 4 0 224 224 W 1 L T Pet Pt. PF 318 Dallas 9 1 0 900 315 215 Washington 9 1 0 900 315 215 Philadelphia 4 6 0 400 158 194 St. Louis 4 6 0 400 158 194 Oklahoma 2 7 1 751 175 229 National Conference East Minnesota 6 4 0 600 227 242 Green Bay 5 4 0 350 272 288 Detroit 3 4 0 300 198 205 Chicago 3 7 0 300 184 219 Tampa Bay 3 9 0 190 158 239 Buffalo at N. Y. Jets, 12 p.m. Cincinnati at Kansas City, 12 p.m. Indianapolis at Green Bay at Minneapolis, 12 p.m. Miami at New England, 12 p.m. Philadelphia at Chicago, 12 p.m. Washington at Tampa Bay at Cleveland, 12 p.m. Pittsburgh at Baltimore, 1 p.m. Dallas at Diego, 1 p.m. Denver at A.L. Denver, 1 p.m. New Orleans at San Francisco, 3 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Giants, 12 p.m. San Francisco 6 4 0 275 394 Washington 6 4 0 275 394 LA Rams 6 4 0 232 314 NY Giants 6 4 0 232 314 Monday's Game L.A. Rams at Atlanta, 8 p.m. MONEY LEADERS ( Final) H, Hal Sutton $46.68, Fuzzy Zurzel $417.93, Lanny Waddik $119.31, Jzrt $27.13, Calvin Peltre $131.84, M吉 Morgan $100.13, 6. Rest Calibsel $844.4, 7. Ren Garcia $105.22, 8. Rest Calibsel $844.4, 7. Ren Joe Peltre $25.66, 10. Jack Nickel $116.94 1. Joanne Carrier $28,095 2. Patty Sheehan 3. Jan Stephenson 4. Kelly Whitbush $26,875 LPGA GOLF $167, 407 7. Alee Miller $155, 441 8. Holly Star 9. Amy Allee Mack $141, 232 10. Ayako Okamoto 11. Karen Foley $132, 253 WOMEN'S TENNIS (ACTION OF TEN PROFESSIONALS) 1. Jasmine Moore, New York, NY; John MacArthur, New Jersey; G. Schillerville, Alabama; Marcia McElroy, Minnesota; Jimmy Connors, $346.64; Tom Smith, San Diego; Steven Connor, South Africa; Vaughnick K. Kevin Connor, South Africa; $275.80 MEN'S TENNIS Martina Navratilova $1,266,038; 2 Chris Evert $1,257,499; 3 John Isner $1,254,051; 4 Jamaica $1,252,428; 5 Wendy Turbail Australia; $1,625; 6 J. Duane Britan, $108; 7 Katie Holmes $103; 8 Jessica Simpson $101; 9 Andrea Dworkin $100; 10 Arnaud Tsvetanov, $137; 16 1950 U.S. Taxpayers, $137; 16 1950 U.S. Taxpayers, $137; NASCAR 1. Darrell Waltert $630.80 2. Bobby Allison $97.80 4. Dearle Earthharris $48.20 4. Richard Petty $59.80 5. Richard Petty $52.50 6. Bill Elliott $62.10 7. Dave Marce $24.75 8. Cary Lawher $24.75 10. Terry CART WE DELIVER! 1. Tom Sewell $353, 988. 2. Al Student $500, 199. 3. T two Fabi $450, 954. 4. Marie Andreas $109, 196. 5. Jack Money $303, 979. 6. John Paul $294, 984. 7. Al Student $159, 954. 8. Panny Pancher $155, 950. 9. Gianassa $155, 950. PIZZA Shoppe 6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center PIZZA Shoppe KINGSIZE TRIPLE TOPPING UDK AND $8.75 plus tax DELIVERED 842-0600 Not Only The . . . Friendlist Service & Best Pizza But Now ... THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA Minsky's PIZZA THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA Magic! e... service Minsky's has the MAGIC every FRIDAY MARK TAMS Magician 6 packs to go 2228 Iowa we deliver 842-0154 MASS. STREET DELI 941 MASSACHUSETTS HOT OR MILD SMOKED SAUSAGE SPECIAL served with potato chips and dill pickle spear $1.95 Reg.$2.35 Wed. thru Sun.,Nov. 9 thru Nov. 13 Mon.-Thurs - 10:30-9 Fri. & Sat. - 10:30-11 Sun. - Noon-9 p.m. TOMATO BURGER No coupons accepted with this offer Christmas gifts. A perfect opportunity to purchase Christmas gifts. S. U.A. Fine Arts Committee presents: The First Annual Crafts Bazaar Attention Campus Community: November 29 & 30 Kansas Union Lobby If you are interested in participating in the Bazaar pick up an application from the SUA Office. Deadline: Today 66 o o --- I FRAME SALE 19. 95 Save 33% to 69% Get the Frames You Want for the Lenses You Need Hutton Optical can fill your new prescription or duplicate your present one and fit you with a new frame that is just right for your face. Come in and select from: Jordache Mary McFadden Oleg Cassini Zsa Zsa Gabor . Anthony Martin . Arnold Palmer and more Offer good through Nov.19 Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames.Canot be used in conjunction with any other sale. HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. ☐ Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2 GOVERNMENT OF MALAYSIA 1 200 F 0.2w2 KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS November 11, 1983 The University Daily KANSAN The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days or 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75 18-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80 21-29 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.85 For every 5 words add: 25 40 75 125 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday Page 15 .petition column Classified Display advertisements can be only one width column wide and no more than three minimum depths of one inch. No reverses are displayed display advertisements except for logos. Classified Display ... $4.20 POLICIES - Word sets in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Word sets in BOLD FACE count as 3 words * Deadlines same as Display Advertisement—2 work days prior to publication - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only - Confirmation of pre-participant classi- 广告ing - Blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement - All advertisers will be required to run in advance classified display advertisements - Classified display ads do not count towards mon thly earned rate discount correct insertion of any advertisement * No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified - Blind box ads = please add a $2 service charge. * Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed until credit has been established * Teenagers are not provided for classified or Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the kansas business office at 843-158. - Classified Expenses do not Count towards monthly earned rate discount Samples of all mail order items must be submitted 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Paid Staff Positions --a two bedroom apartment just north of stadium, available immediately. 8275, 841-443. Keep trying. Nice two bedroom rent for rent. Close to campus Start December 1. Call after 9 a.m., 841-438. Business Manager, Editor The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union, in the University of Kansas, and 403 Kansas Union; in and rooms 200 and 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applications due in room 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Wed., Nov. 16 The University Dalyan Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employment Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, ethnicity, gender, and national origin, age, or ancestry. Arts and Crafts Fair, Sat. Nov 12 to 14 Lawrence Community Nursery School, 664 Alma Profiles Academy HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH? Award winning documentary on American decision-making in national security and nuclear weapons. Big 8 Room, 8 P.M., Friday, Nov. 11. Discussion follows. GLSOK Halloween Party Proofs in the Office until 18 November 3/1/2 x $1.00; $1.00 x $7.20 A Fridav Alternative --a two bedroom apartment just north of stadium, available immediately. 8275, 841-443. Keep trying. Nice two bedroom rent for rent. Close to campus Start December 1. Call after 9 a.m., 841-438. Sherry and conversation 4:00 until 5:30 P.M. Canterbury House 1116 Louisiana The Coffee Bean Company Professor Robert Minor 'Ghandi—Man vs. the Movie' Kansan classifieds get results Snowman Friend Some Holiday Cheer! Send ...With a KANSAN Holiday Message. A KANSAN Holiday Message is a great way to wish someone a happy Holiday Season or say goodbye 'til next semester. Here's what you'll get for only 4 bucks: A 20 word message addressed to the person of your choice inside a package like the one shown below. FOR RENT PROTEST U.S. INVASIONS IN CENTRAL NORTH, and PROTEST OUR MORE VIETNAM'S NATIONS IN LAWRENCE, 12th! Join the Latin American Solidarity and other groups we outrage. Gunboat Diagnosis NOW. Diplomacy in march down Mass. St. to South Park Rally at South Park includes speakers, music and information Your Message Here 2. 3 bedroom apartments immediately adjacent to partial utility patches. Contact Kaw Valley Manager. 2 BR House, newly remodeled, KU has route, low unitaries, to clean laundry, $250 - 483-280 Look for order forms beginning Monday. Nov. 14 2nd semester sublease, close to campus, 2 RH, very nice. quit the carpet $100; moi 841-845, evenings STUDIO 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 4' BR home Large kitchen, all new storages.. Frankland room 5 min from campus & campus 10 min from campus. Beautiful 2 bedroom on unirrised apartment, with or without utilities paid. Central air/heat, wall to wall windows. Entrance to KU bus route. Come to see at 270 Redbud lane 11 or call 841-2694 for information. Duplex. 2 ft, 1 bath duplex for rent. East Lawrence, Jan. 1 2nd M hookup. 749-2155 BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please come to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. FOR RENT. Niteeo, available brand new, pact com- munity unit. Call 811-723-2604. ALL UTILITY PAID PAIL 892-907-1957 FOR RENT 5 bedroom house close to KI and YUNGYU. Monthly rent is 3600. monthly and utilty and dep. After 5. onm dep. 842-1876 or 841-1287 Meadowbrook studio for sublease now or December 3. Ask for V1230, 842-4960. Furnished Studio. Fully equipped gas, heat and bus route. Available Dec. 1. 1 reasonable charge. Large 3 bedroom apartment. Lots of storage, fully carpeted, pool laundry facilities, water quail. Paid security. Free Wi-Fi. HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APTS. Inexpensive room in 3 bedroom house $100/month November rent FREE! Move in anytime. 841-800-9266 Reserve your studio now for the spring semester while the selection is good. Fully furnished, free cable TV, close to campus. All apps, have CA, gas HEAT, refugi, husk Leave. License items to May 31, July 31, and Dec. 31. Call between 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon-Fri. #435-7454. 1 BR Aps. $205 2 BR Aps. $340-$360 3 BR Aps. $415 Room for rent near university and downtown. No pets please. 810-5000 meadowbrook Live in the best residence hall - female needed to wear a mask, participate in social duties, utilities paid, maid service, winning pool and food internships. Send resume to: info@village.edu. Non-smoking female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment $12/month and 1/3 utilities. Across Large one bedroom apartment 1325 Vermont, range, and apartment. All utilities paid $2 per month. Dryer is $80 a month. 842-4200 apartment. $12/month and 1/3 utilities. Across from stadium. Call 841-2994 pets proxies. 1. rent a room, at 2 bedrooms, or studio aparted most for pet owners. No phone, pete 842-1485. --interior, P/S. F/D 5-speed SCD, A/C. AM/FM audio, FM/AM, USB. Battery. VW Fastback, very reliable, good condition. New APARTMENTS West An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievably Slashed Rates! 1 & 2 BR Apts. - Year-round swimming * Free shuttle bus to campus 14 times daily - Excellent maintenance Don't miss this opportunity to greet your new resident, resident-oriented apt manager. You're unhappy in your present you're not up to call us. We work WITH you! FOR SALE Sublease 2 bedroom room furnished on KU bus route. In excellent condition with carpet and at 2706 Heddle Lane to call 841-686 for information. Two rooms for rent (8415) and 8413 on 1st floor of building. A second room is smaller. Smaller room has private entrance. Call 841-686 COMPLETELY FURNISHED Study. 2 or 3 bedroom apartments immediately. Great location. All rooms in furnished apartment. 1967 Buck LASBire Custom 4 door sedan. Excellent condition, low mileage, air power, driving & steering. Refurbished $2500. No tax. MEADOWBLOOK spacious 2 bedroom apartment available now until Gas and water paid, quit 2 weeks early. 1966 Mustang, good condition, 2 steel-belted radial brakes. Dhc# 5711, Phlox #8951 10.37 Darden II FJ-GWM gas mileage 749 secs 10.8 Honda EXPEDITION Moped, at 1000 km 31st 10.12 Honda EXPEDITION Moped, at 1000 km 31st 180 Mt. Cobra, spoilers, AM-FM cassette, A/B Mustang, 450 km miles, surmoid, 840, 850-980 B/T Turbo, 450 km miles, surmoid, 840, 850-980 A/C, Turtles, 45,000 miles, sumoed, $4,150, 368-500 Toyota Camry 45,000 miles, extra clean, special paint & glossy finish. $2,750, 368-500 Accessory lenses for olympus OM system: Vivitar both like new 8421950 or 8649940 both like new 8421950 or 8649940 *motobike bicycle rental for sale at shuttung* $179.95 *Bicycle Aixem 131, Massachusetts 740-606* *Auction - enamagement every Friday night, 7 o.p.m. Shoehacking, 2 p.m.* Bridge, 2 miles on 245 849 618 410 Beautiful hand-made flower garden quilt Makes a beautiful Christmas gift $290 - 814-9035 Judson wainsteeple Call 854140 or 854144 Brown 2 door 1082 Rabbit for sale for 694 shape Call 854140 Brown 2 door 1982 Rabbit for sale Good shape Call 749-5243 COMPUTER, T199/4A, data cassette, game car controller, C414-0328 For Sale. Bear 67 enlargeer and darkroom equipment. Newer $372 and gas valve 75, 749-2880 imit your loss from A&T & break up. Purchase your new phone! Quality phone work on all long distance BLIDA present. Cassette player, stereo radio. BLIDA present. Cassette player, stereo radio. BLIDA present. Cassette player, stereo radio. 4:16:00 - 4:16:00 M-F. Don’t reach out and get help. For Sale. Pre-lighting w/cars w/ Parm. Rock bottom cost $2. JBL Midrange w/o a Track TRAC tape ADP arm Dprem 14 hymn w/Avail case. All EX-Exempt. W/ non-bountable prices. Serious in quirions only. 841.8590 Chevy Impala, blue, 4 door. 78 Call 943-2501. In exel- eled shape. **Moving Sale, Sat., Nov. 12** 113 Wisconsin, 8:00 m. sp. 1m. Color combo Tent room table and clothing, stereo, barque grill, throw rugs, knit clothing, stereo, barque grill, throw rugs, knit clothing, warehouses, large, mirror puzz, small warehouses, warehouses, large, mirror puzz, small RCA Video Recorder (VCR-VP1650) (top of the line) VHS remote, cable ready, spectral programs, video clips. Found behind Bailey, male yellow tabby cat, yellow eyes, very affectionate. Call 841-7648 to identify. Found: men's key case on KU bus, 1/19. Call Robin, 841-612 to call Timescaler 1000 personal computer, hookups, network adapter, keyboard, mouse. Typewriter, top of the line Smith Cone (electronic), with carrying case, cover, changeable type for symbiosis and metacrisis. Perfect condition, new $20, want Preaxy T-40 band with accessories, perfect condition. Airtel A200, 2000, several cartridges will sell together with this boxed kit. TL59-PC 100A printer software, business decision matrices, mathrillion, aviation, master learners. Stereo television viewing. All name brands. Lowest priced KC area. Total Sound Distributors, Inc. HONDA CB 650 6,290 miles, good condition: $1,100 Call (843) 965-5221 Halex Ping Pong Padde with butterfly case. $5 reward. Rich, 841-8190. SHAPE AC-DC HOME/PORTABLE VCIS SYSTEM Combines VHS recording deck and video capture card to be supplied for operation on house current. Rechargeable battery pack provides power and record/playback speeds. High-speed visual display. Record player with 12 position electronix. event pro grammable monitor. 12 position electronix. air damped cabinet. soft loaded controls. Dwight, lance, tape counter. Store $80.00 when you buy the kit. Tape storage unit. Call $41.50. 612 ask. Bainmaster, Master LOST AND FOUND HIGH SELECTION OF MEN'S MAGAZINES FOR HAUGE, MAX'S COMICS, IIII, NJI NOPEN ENJEW Reclining Chair. Good condition, must sell. Comfortable. 40. Negotiable. 749-7375 USED. CARPET. dromium sizes $35, shags $35. candle pigments. Great deals, clean stuff. 843-133. 1 pair brown leather lined gowns Friday, November 26 Saturday, November 27 Friday, October 21 Saturday, November 28 HELP WANTED Found: 1 pair of women's prescription glasses in yellow lining on Lippincott front steps I, #486112; Call 800-759-3662. LOST. latten gold watch with diamond around dial. Worn. Wearable. Weese and Watson. If found, please call CYBIS. AHLINES ARE HIRING NOW FLIGHT Attendances. TURN ON THE BELL TO HER MAIL INFORMATION. TAPS YOUR interview电话 | 1-961-722-1111. Could you use an extra $400 a month? Start your own business. Less than $10 investment, unlimited earning potential. in yellow case. If found, code 849-0129: Lost: Bretched a 3-fold leather wallet over Orap Aeds Missed: Bretched a 3-fold leather wallet over Orap Aedes Found. Money 24th & Ride Court area. Contact Amv at 941 6096. MEN SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE. It is not too late in NAVAL ROTC. Call 864-1361. Mother's Helper wanted for New York City area for 6 months, or 18 years plus. Good pay and opportunity to work. Sha veit, 11 Garden Ridge, Chapepuaq, NY, 10514 Research Assistant (Gastrointestinal Drug Abuse) starting as soon as possible Minimum of B.S. in Medical Science Prior research experience and familiarity with modern chemical analysis procedures and in-depth knowledge of travel. One year position with qualifications and experience resume including names of 1 references to Dr. K. J. Foster, M.D., University of B.C. Chemistry. The University of Kansas, Małot Hall, Lawrence, KS 60045. Applications due November 18, equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. MISCELLANEOUS Summer Jolie, National Park Co.'s 21 Parks, 5000 Missouri Co. 's 4639 Parks, 8000 Missouri Co. Missoula Co. 's 6134 Ave. 2 and Kailah, MN Tallapooa Co. PERSONAL Used furniture bought and sold. Pick-up available. Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont. 30 cent drawings M.F. 2-3 p.m. during General Hospital Hour. Don't forget your laundry. Snacks-n-Dads A strong keg outlet! Retail Retail Liqued Coffee Wine. Kegs - lee Gold Beverage. bark morth of 80% alcohol. BSCITS and GRAVY only 1$ 25促销 Nebraska GUMPTOE and GRAMON AFE. Hwy 189. Barbeque DINNER. $20. 33 45 ROCK THERAPY 1607 westport k.c. mo. COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early detection of cancer; care coordinated Kansas City Area Call Center. Cambium diet clearance of extra flavors including chocolate drink. Limited supplied Lauren 843-7725 Cross over the bridge to history. North Lawrence drug, for a nice selection, spirits, cold beer and chill- drag, for a nice selection, spirits, cold beer and chill- Curtin Mathes *Showstoppers!* 600 movies choose from. Rent a video machine and pre-recorded films. Call (800) 231-9700. Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads. Call 864-4358 ENCORE "84. the all campus theatre production, is now accepting applications for at large berths for the performance of all 15 productions set all policy for the show. Applications are at BOCO office 110K Kauai Union, and are due Nov. 14. For more information call (843) 267-5000. GAY and LESBISAN SUPPORT ORGroup org.? 7:00 walnut Room, Nov 14 more info Mediterranean-Greek Festival Festival includes Greek food, one belly dancing (9 p.m.) Greek dancing & Greek November 12,8 p.m.-1 a.m. Templin Hall Sponsored by the Hellenic Society & Templin Hall For more information call 864-5892 or Sponsored by the Hellenic Society & Tempoin Hell GLSOK and The Speech Dep present Paul Siegel, Executive Director of the David B. Lewis and Western Department, selected by department leaders National Gay Task Force to speak on Gay Rights and the First Amendment. Tues., Nov. 17 8 p.m. Room 200. --first passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, court papers, and of course fine portraits. Savelli Studio 749-161-01. --first passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, court papers, and of course fine portraits. Savelli Studio 749-161-01. HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH? Award winning documentary on American decision-making in national security and nuclear weapons. Big B Room, 8 P.M., Friday, Nov. 11. Discussion follows. 12 Ladies laundry Night Tues 7-12. Ladies do laundry get 10 cent draws. Suits - Duds 749-4132. "And I have a landmark. (side-nude D+Nide M F.) in midnight, in midnight." Needed: someone change the toilet paper! Call: needed 15% not too early to order Christmas portraits for the family. PARTY with the 4 j-school! TGIF this on a Friday at efabbed's 2 p.m. †77. $10 you can drink! Pumpkin Happy two anniversary. The past many more wonderful moments. You lay benches and many more wonderful moments. SRI VAL/BEAVER CREAT call TOLL FREE SERVICING for CREATE on DEPOSIT OR DISCOUNT RATES on lintes, lits, and other services. Saint John's Christmas Bazar, Sundae, November 8-6 m - 3:00 p.m., in church basement. Eats, crafts and gifts. $15. Say it on a shirt, custom silk-screen printing, T-shirts, iersees and caps. Shirt by Sawarthi. 728-161-101. Special Presents on Christmas Portraits through December 15 at Sweet Studio. Call for details. Special for students. Harcurs $7 and permits $22. Charm, ask for Deena Jensen 841-3580. Bennett's Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine. Belle Illions, 828-7227 TRAVEL CENTER We MEET Or BEAT Any Available Air Fare We Have Every DISCOUNT And REDUCED Rate Airline Ticket Available Colorado Springs $100 Cincinnati $118 Chicago $120 Houston $130 Denver $150 New Orleans $150 Dallas $158 Phoenix $160 Las Vegas $180 Los Angeles $198 Ft. Lauderdale $198 New York $198 Washington, D.C. $190 Honolulu $350 $100.000 BONUS Receive $100,000 Flight Insurance with every airline ticket purchased at no additional cost. 841-7117 TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd M-F 9:5:30 • Sat. 9:30-2 VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCE MENT SERIES. Friday, November 11 10 a.m. am, Listening and Lastinging Textbook Reading, Time Management, Learning a Foreign Language. Each tape approximately fifty minutes. FREE. Contact the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization Must make sense to use in your case. (See page 3) For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization available now at Town Crier. The Danger signals! backache, backache, arm pain, arm pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, call the Chiropractic Health Center and Doctor M.E. for chiropractic treatment and insurance accepted. No charge for consultation BIRTHRIGHT - Free pregnancy testing · confidential counseling 843-4821 FREESTORE PLEASE Win by listening to THE COMEDY CURE-ALL on JKINK FM 91 every 4 at 4 p.m. and again at 9 p.m. "Offer not open to humans." MATS, HATS, HATS HATS, HATS, HATS. New shipment of Lost Ark, MASSACHUSETTS, 843-6011. The ETT SHOP -729 MASSACHUSETTS, 843-6011. Planned Parenthood, reproductive health services including contraceptive counseling and supplies, pregnancy abortion counseling and services, family planning 729-2271 in Arkansas City for the clinician nearest you. THRIST STORES - Appliances, furniture, clothing, knife-knee, bedding - Always good bargain; bedsheets - Always good bargain; SPECTRUM OPTICAL Eyeglasses made up to a standard, not DOWN to a pristine 47th St. Wholalee Sound Rental. P.A., Guitar, and Bass Reqn. 841-605. SERVICES OFFERED Artists with the written word Typing, editing graphics *DIGITAL ARTISTS Ellen B41-1722* HPI Ph. 3598 in our thesis *论文*, book article, ebook, Tutoring in Eng. 101, 102, 203, etc Call Ms. Thompson, 844-7354 SANTA CLAUS wants to be your Christmas party Call Santa's Helper, Dave at 749-0289 STADIUM HARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts, downtown. All haircuts. $5.00. No appointment WAKE UP SERVICE We will wake you up in the morning by phone. Call Chris, 842-6840 The Falcon Association can help you achieve occupancy and address any issues that may arise with your self-employee addresses to box 2541, Kansas City, MO 64107. Racquetball, tennis, squash racquet sport specializing in new graphite/hybrid stringing. Fenns Racquetts for sale also - Head, Prince, Dunlop. Racquetts for sale also - Head, Prince, Dunlop. WORK UP SACKWEAR We will use sackwear on the TYPING 24-hour typing. Fast, accurate. Resumes, letters. reports, theses. I want to do your work. 842-6021 **29-hour typing.** Fast, accurate. Resumes, letters. reports, theses. I want to do your work. 842-6021 Berk's Typing Excellent typing at reasonable rate 10^8 *M*selective (pica). Call 842-4668 by 10 p.m. Accurate, affordable typing Ask about speed, speedy service under 25 pages! Call Mary: 841-8637 Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School Secretary. Call Mary: 841-1218 qm=189 RHD PROP HSISSING 814 1606 qa=172 RHD PROP HSISSING 814 1606 a TTY Type 814 after 1924 m Prep Mnt & day Sat Sun m Prep Mnt & day Sat Sun Absolutely Perfect Typing, Editing, Book Authority 843-6613 - quality 843-6618 overnight service options 486 600 600 600 Call and TIP TOP TYING and Xerox 615 600 600 Experienced Callers with Xerox 615 600 600 Royal Payroll Services *TYPING ONLY* *TERM EXPANDER* *EXPAND TO 32 CAMERA SCREEN* *CALL THRONES* *COMPUTER ACCESS* *WINDOWS* *WEB SCREENS* *APPLE AFORMALDE QUALITY for all your typing needs Call Jody, 842-7945 after 6 p.m. Callerry for your typing needs. letters term 1, 842-4734-6437, 842-6731, 11: 30 a.m to 10: 30 p.m. telephone: (842) 4734-6437 DEPENDABLE service, professional typing. ITM 341-897-6021 Pica or else Large jobs or small 843-897-6021 Elvis could wiggle, Shakespeare could write my talent, call Tuge 6042 0483 after 5 and 30 weeks. Experienced typeet thess, desserts, terminations, correcting and Correcting selective. Barb 8423 210 after 5:00 Experienced typet will type letters, theses and dissertations. IB Correcting Select Call Experienced lignolyt Term. paper, thesis, all types of papers. Resumes, CVs, cover letters. Pen and ink will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544. Mail Postal code. It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean Ttyping, Word Processing, can afford it! 841-3638 JEANETTE SHAFFER TYPING SERVICE IBM IISM III. II. VIII. IX. X. 184-8877 Experimented typal will type dissertationses. These: GROW GROUP, TYPING WORD, PROCESSING GROW GROUP, TYPING WORD, PROCESSING JEANETTE SHAFFER - TYPING SERVICE IBM TIRELECT III PACK. FOR TYPING ONLY TPC-C VIEW WITH A FACILITY ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT 841-3510 Ward Processing plus typing. Dication plus transcription from cassette plus microassessment Plus *3 services at 1 location typing, editing and graphics WORLD ARTISTS, call Eilen, 841-2722 TYPING PLUS: Theses, dissertations, paper letters, journals, books. Typing: English tutoring, grammar, spelling, et al. English tutoring. Language courses. Library Research - Typing - Editing. (Will help write, outline, write). 842-8240 Word Processing plus optima Decoration plus Word Processor plus optima Decoration plus Word Processor plus optima Decoration plus Word Processor plus optima Decoration plus Word Processor plus optima Decoration plus Word Processing WANTED Female roommate Nice 2 bedroom duplex avail in a spacious studio in the heart of the city $150 plus 1/2 utilities. On bus route 84-3671. Female needles to take over second semester for Nasmithhill Hall. Can move in December (Call 617-350-4262). Male roommate wanted. $102/month and 1/3 utilities on Bus route. Call 841 9016. Need roommate for spacious, furnished 2 bedroom apartments close to campus. $150 plus 1.2½ rentals. Responsable woman woman seeking spring semester honeymoon and evening party with family or non-smoking females. Limited care possibility for reduced rent. Will meet interest rates and requirements. Daily Kosan, 110 Sawyer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045. (800) 279-3300. Roommate for huge house apartment Private room, energy-efficient $150/month Availability to rent in the heart of Chicago Roommate wanted for extra large 2 bedroom furniture. Must have internet access and be able to bank all within a week walking distance. Rent includes Roostmate wanted: 3 HR, Townhouse, $140 month plus 1.5/2 utilities. Call 841-4813. Roommate wanted $110/month and 3 /utilities H22 H24      Available now or on semestrend H24      8407 Roommate to sublease private room in a 2 HR apt. Close to campus, cheap utilities. Free until Dec. 15th. Single girl share house and private bbm, laundry fac, equip, kitch, walk campus Evenings WOMEN'S SELF DEFENSE. A no-cost course curricular will be offered. Only $15 to first month of enrollment will be required. People read the Kansan classifieds to find homes, jobs, cars, typing services, etc. You can use the Kansan classifieds to sell anything from A to Z. Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045. Use the rates below to figure costs and watch the results. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading: Write Ad Here: ___ Name: ___ Address: ___ Phone: ___ Date to Run ___ in ___ 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-A Day 10 Days of Two Weeks 15 weeks or more $2.60 $3.15 $3.75 $6.75 Additional work 23h 58h 73h 1.0% Classified Display: 1 col x 1 inch—$4.20 --- 1 SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 11, 1983 Page 16 Cornhuskers' Heisman candidates present triple threat to KU defense By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor Every adjective in the book has been used to describe the Nebraska Cornhuskers this season. Many have called them the "Eighth Wonder of the Game." Writers and coaches, including KU coach Mike Gottfried, think that the Heisman Trophy winner is one of Nu's big three. I back Mike Rozier, quarterback Turner Gill or Jake Haynes, Jayhawks will battle Nebraska in Lincoln tomorrow. "For sure, the Heisman winner will be on the field." Gottfried said. "It will be one of their three." A sellout crowd and a television audience are expected to view the game beginning at 2:50 p.m. it will be the last home appearance for the Cornshuck senior, including Gill, who is about to about KU's chances against the nation's No. 1 rated team. "THERE IS A ONE in 100 chance, but that's why we do prepare and then play. We just need to make the best of it." Numbers alone make Nebraska look like a candidate for not only the Orange Bowl but also the Super Bowl — if the Cornhuskers were eligible. UA is averaging 52.9 points a game, 38.7 vards passing and 54.6 vards in total offense. "When was the last time you've seen a team build up such awesome scores?" Gottfried asked. "They just have numbers going for them. They might have a highly recruited player not seen on the field for three years." Rozier is the odds-on favorite to take the Heisman, the award for the top player in college football. Rozier is averaging 165.8 yards a game and is leading the nation in scoring. Rozier has scored 24 touchdowns, a Big Eight record. GILL HAS COMPLETED 58.2 percent of his passes and is averaging 16.5 yards a completion. In his 28 games as the Nebraska starting quarterback, the Cornshurkers have lost only one game — last year's battle with Penn State. Gill threw for 241 yards and three touchdowns in last week's game against Iowa State. Fryar has caught 35 passes this season for 750 yards. He is averaging 14.1 yards a carry and has scored ten touchdowns. He is second behind former Nebraska great Johnny Rodgers in receiving yards, despite playing on Nebraska teams that were No. 1 and No. 2 in the nation in rushing in the last two seasons. Osborne has another offensive weapon. Right guard Dean Steinkuhler is a strong candidate for the Outland Trophy, awarded to college football's top lineman. Steinkuhler is 7-0 in his last two games and is in 4.87 seconds, the fastest ever by any NU lineman. ALTHOUGH THE NEBRASKA offense is considered one of the most formidable "cornhusker defense" has struggled with injuries the pitcher has struggled with injuries the pitcher has Against Nebraska, the Iowa State Cyclones rolled up 503 yards in total offense and 29 points. The week before, Kansas State scored 25 points. NU, however, scored 72 against Iowa State and 51 points against Kansas State. "I think interest are a part of it," NU coach Tom Osborne said. "I suppose we just don't have quite as many great ideas." The Kansas offense passed for 394 yards against Colorado, but lost. 34-23, to the Buffaloes. "I expect they will come out tough." Osborne said about the hwks. "Obviously they were stunned by losing to Colorado." Because ISU quarterback David Archer had success against the Nebraska defense with the short pass, Osborne is expecting a strong outing from Frank Seurer and the KU offense. "Frank Seurer is a tremendous passer, but he's a little different from Archer." Osborne said. "He has more experience. They also have some receivers who can really hit well, and they will probably be able to run the football a little more." JAYHAWK NOTES — KU tight end Jeff Anderson and Nebraska monster back Dan Casterline are both from Evergreen, Colo., and have known each other for a number of years. When they decided to go to different colleges, it was the first time since they were eight years old that they had not played on the same team. "He was an all-state fullback, and I was an all-state defensive lineman," Anderson said. "We were the team captains our senior year in high school. We were recruited by a lot of the same schools, and I almost went to Nebraska because of Dan. But KU has a good medical program, which is what I want to get into." Anderson said that the two might lie up against each other on some plays. Anderson is the third string tight end, and the other is a double. "We haven't talked much this year, but I'm sure if one of us knocks the other down, we'll help the other guy up and go." KU (3-5-1) vs. NU (10-0) Date: Saturday, Nov. 12 Time: 2:50 p.m. Place: Nebraska Memorial Stadium Estimated crowd: 73,650 Television: ABC regional broadcast, Chan. 9, KMBC-TV Radio: KU Sports Network, KANU-FM, KXXX-FM Probable Starters Colorado Kansas Offense B8 Bobby Johnson (6-1, 18-0) B1 Sylvester Bate (6-3, 21-5) Z9 Renwick Atkins (6-5, 26-5) Pai Farchlid (6-4, 25-7) B8 Bennie Simeca (6-4, 26-5) K7 C. Brown (6-6, 26-0) Ringge Smith (6-4, 26-0) J. Kushner (6-6, 26-0) F10 Franke Seider (6-1, 19-4) R2 Robert Mimbs (6-0, 21-0) EJ E. Jones (6-0, 21-0) SE 7 Rickey Simmons (5-10, 17) TE 8 Monte Engebrichen (6-15, 22) LT 67 Greg Orton (6-15, 25) LG 58 Harry Grimminger (6-3, 26) C 57 Mark Tyronewicz (6-6, 27) FG 71 Dean Steinkuhl (6-6, 27) RT 72 Karen Mayer (6-6, 28) QL 27 Irving Fryer (6-0, 195) FB 12 Turner Gill (6-0, 190) TB 30 Mike Rozier (5-11, 210) FB 25 Mark Schellen (5-10, 225) Defense Specialists 5 Travis Hardy (6-1, 190) LE 87 Bill Weber (6-1, 214) 7 Carlky Alexander (6-3, 220) LT 61 Mike Weber (6-1, 214) 8 Eldridge Avery (6-3, 220) LG/MG 64 Mike Trammer (5-11, 232) 9 Rod Timmons (6-4, 245) RG/RT 75 Rob Stuckey (5-12, 245) 9 Joe Masini (6-5, 240) RT/RE 90 Scott Strasburger (6-1, 230) 11 Len Gant (6-1, 210) RE/SLB 51 Mark Daum (6-1, 232) 14 McWilliams (6-3, 210) BLB/WLB 44 Mike Knox (6-3, 232) 10 Wellesley Keefer (6-1, 210) RLB/BON 2 McHashland (6-1, 191) 13 Jeff Colter (5-11, 175) LC 1 Neil Harris (6-1, 191) 23 Elis Patterson (5-10, 190) RC 33 Dennis Burke (5-10, 191) 18 Wayne Ziegler (6-2, 190) S 10 Bret Clark (6-2, 210) 31 Clint Colburn (6,0, 175) P 48 Scott Livingston (6,2, 200) 3 Bruce Kalmeyer (5,10, 180) PK 48 Scott Livingston (6,2, 200) KU's All-Time Record vs. Nebraska: 21-65-3 KU's All-Time Record vs. Nebraska: 21-6-53 Last KU victory: 1968, 23-13 in Lincoln Big Eight Records: KU (1-4), NU (5-0) Coaches: Mike Gottfried (1st year) and Tom Osborn (11th year) Indignities taint tennis matches By United Press International Hagler wins unanimous decision LONDON — Defending champion John McEnroe faced a barrage of insults from his beaten opponent, and Jimmy Connors landed a $1,000 fine yesterday as the top-seeded americans advanced to the quarterfinals of a $150,000 prize tournament at the expense of fellow countrymen. Connors overwhelmed Hank Pfister, 6-4, 6-1, and was then informed he had incurred a broken leg. Four-time winner McEnroe defeated Vince van Patten, 7-5, 6-2, in an evening second round clash in which the passion was reserved for the post-match confrontation. Van Patten refused to shake hands with McEnores, accusing the New Yorker of intimidating the officials. The 26-year-old up to the title-holder after the final point. "I KNOW WHAT you're doing, you're trying to psyche out the umpire. I don't want to speak to you, and I never even want to see you again," van Patten told McEnroe as he walked off court to the accompaniment of jeers from the spectators. Van Patten said later that McEnroe, who had received a warning from wimpire David Mercer for ball abuse in the opening game, should have received a penalty point in the 10th game when he slammed the ball into the back netting. "Theumpire was too chicken, he was scared of McEnroe. Let him pay for it when he does something wrong. They should treat him well," said Dana van Patenk, all "van Patten, said at a news conference." "HE WILL TRY to hit you instead of putting the ball away," van Patten said. "But if I'm a jerk, I don't hide it; everyone knows about it. It is better than being a phony. I don't see what he has got to complain about." McEnroe was not satisfied with his performance. "I certainly didn't deserve the cheers for the way I played tonight. It was only because he made a fool of himself. I started off really slowly, everything was just half a step late." McEnroe also denied he had tried to slam the ball at his opponent. Van Patten also claimed that McEroe had tried to hit him with a fierce volley during the 1984 game. McEnroe, who is playing his first tour- nament following a three-week suspension, accused van Pattern of being a phony. "He is an attacker," he statbs when you your back is turned," he said. The incidents that earned Connors his fine — stuffing a ball down his shorts and swearing — were virtually unnoticed. Umpire Mike Lugg missed them. "I did not see or hear anything. Certainly I found no reason to reprimand Connans. I think players should be allowed to express their opinion," Lugg said, the interpretation of the rules." Lugg said. CONNORS, IN CONTRAST, seemed sharp in his ruthless execution of Pfister, the 31-year-old U.S. open champion as he needed only 66 minutes to clinch his victory. MILLER But Grand Prix supervisor Keith Johnson spotted the transgressions, and reported the charges. Johnson said, "I know that the umpire did not reprimand Comorn, but in these situations, I have to use my good judgment." Johnson said later, "I only did it for a laugh." LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Panama's enduring Roberto Duran, left, takes a hard right to the head from Marvelous Marvin Hagler in the third round of their 15-round middleweight title bout at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. Hagler, in a unanimous decision, retained his title last night and stopped Roberto Duran's quest to become the first boxer to win titles in four different weight classes. The three judges scored the fight 144-142, 144-143 and 146-145 for Hagler. By United Press International Duran was villed as a traitor and a coward in his native Panama three years ago after quitting in the eighth round of a title fight against Sugar Ray Leonard, but he regained his status as a national hero when he knocked out a star player at the 2013 June and thereby won the World Boxing Association junior middleweight title. LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Marvin Hagler, using his first big money fight to showcase his salient, ended Roberto Duran's quest for boxing history last midnight, defending his world middleweight title with a i-round unanimous decision. LAST NIGHT he attempted to become the first boxer in history to win titles in four weight classes. But Hagler, considered by many to be the greatest of boxers today, used his of his combinations and a superb boxing skill to hold off Dufresnay's charges. Duran managed to score inside in the early going, but Hagler took control in the sixth round when he sent Duran back with a series of combinations. Hagler, switching from a righthanded to a left-handed stance, ripped two lead wings to Duran's head early in the game and backed up Duran with combinations. HAGLER DOMINATED the fight from there on as he outpunched Duran at least three to one. Hagler worked well inside, landing lefts and rights to the body and then pumping away at Duran's head. Duran brought roars by the large number of Pammanians, but he caused little damage to Hagler. The scoring of the judges appeared much closer than the fight itself. Guy Jutras of Canada had it 144-142. Oveas Oveson of Denmark had it 144-143 and Yasaku Yoshida of Japan had it 146-145, all for Hagler. It was said many times and in many ways yesterday in Allen Field House. KU basketball coaches and players predicted an improved team and a winning season at the Women's Basketball Media Day. Optimism big at basketball Media Day After a summer of working out and lifting weights, senior Philicia Allen said she had seen a big change in her physique and was ready for the season opposite next week. "I'm jumping higher, learning to position myself well for rebounds, moving better laterally." Allen said. "My defense is also coming about." By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer Women hoping for improvement in'83-'84 season Head coach Marian Washington said, "Her problem is that she does not realize what type of player she can be. Last year was the first time for her to play with her back to the goal. We are hopeful that she can play this year, and with some work she could be the first woman to dunk the basketball." Washington said she had stressed individual goals thus far this season and Allen said she had four chief goals right now. "MY FIRST GOAL is to get out and play," said the 6-foot-2 center who had to sit out the first half of last season because of transfer rules. "My second goal is to grab all the rebounds I can. My third goal is to score as much as possible and my fourth goal is for the team to have a successful season." Another senior on the team, Angie Sinder, said she was looking forward to "I'm really excited about this year, she said. "I want to go out a winner and win." She said her personal goal this season was to give the team leadership "We finally have a few people who have played together and in game situations the younger people will look to the juniors and seniors," said Snider, a Kodak All-District player last year. "I am looking forward to the leadership house we have more numbers this year. I am more relaxed in taking that position." "NOW WE CAN take that outside and know that a 6-4 or 6-6 girl will be able to win." THE BLUE TEAM, with Snider and Allen, defeated the crimson team 91-53. Returning letter winners Mary Myers and Tom Webb played on the crimson team. Snider, who was also selected to the coaches' All-Big Eight team last year, said one of the team's goals was to play in the NCAA post-season tournament. "Having a good team and good season is better than any individual honor I could get." she said. "We have the energy and the desire to do it this year." Washington said she and the team were ready for their home opener during the Lady Jayhawk Classic next weekend in Allen Field House. Kansas City Northwestern State and Oklahoma City University in the two-day tournament. "they need to see somebody else" she said. "they have looked at each other." She also said yesterday's crimson-blue intrasquid game would help because it was their first opportunity to suit up and scrimmage officially. More Sports Inside, p. 14 Player says teams are often ignored, even when they win By JOHN UNREIN Sports Writer Susan Russell, co-captain of the KU women's occer club, a letter to girls high school in Oklahoma City, commends her But things are different now. Russell goes to school at KU "Women's sports, in particular, never get any publicity here." Russell said. "First of all, people say that because there's not a lot of women there they're not important. I think it's just an eternal circle of people not answering the question. Russell, who played on her high school women's varity soccer team, said that when her team won a game, the entire school knew about it. She was a self-preclaimed tombby then, living in a city in which women were not discouraged to be martyred. "ANOTHER PROBLEM is that, due to discrimination, there is never a women's varsity team started before a men's varsity team. But women who are as good as men's if they were given a chance." And the KU women's soccer club is a good example. Russell said. The University of Kansas has both men's and women's soccer clubs, but Russell said that although the men's club was having difficulty finding a coach, the club was becoming more organized every year. Tuesday, the club won its last game of the fall, finishing the season undefeated in seven games. "This my third season on the women's soccer club, and the team has been around for 5 seasons, or semesters," Russell said. "But last year was the first time we really traveled. This semester we went to Omaha and Wichita, and we planned we go to travel to Tulsa and St. Louis." Russell said that although traveling was expensive, the women's soccer club would be helped next semester by the club's first sponsor, the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio. KEN WALLACE, owner of the Hawk, said that he was asked this fall to sponsor the women's soccer club by one of his bartenders, Derek a student volunteer coach of the women's club. Wallace said that Herman had suggested that it might be a beneficial move for both parties. Russell said, "We're really excited about it. 'kind of an honor to have the most popular bar chair in town.'" "I'll be getting a lot of business from the players." Wallace said yesterday. "I haven't sponsored a sports team for a while, and it just seemed like a fun thing to do." Although no financial commitments have been agreed upon yet, Russell said that sponsors generally helped pay for team sweats and some travel expenses. 1 The Hawk will be the official bar of the club, Russell said, and will also serve as the team clubhouse after games. One reason the Hawk agreed to sponsor the women's club, she said, was the soccer's growing interest in the United States. "I THINK THAT soccer is the upcoming sport in America." Russell said. "Anybody can play soccer. You don't have to be fast. You don't have to be strong, and you especially don't have to be a man. I think it's probably the only sport you can do that. Mary Louise Susan Russell --- The Candidates Student coalitions outline platforms for Senate races Opinion, p. 4 The University Daily KANSAN COOL MAMMOTH Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas High 57, Low 34. Details on p. 2. Vol. 94, No.61 (USPS 650-640) Monday morning, November 14, 1983 Blacksmith teaches beauty of a lost art at forging workshop By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter Joking all the while, Manuel Calderon casually pulled a piece of brightly colored cloth with a pair of tongs, explaining every move to the audience. With a few quick strokes of his hammer, Calderon began molding the steel into the shape of a leaf. "I've been a blacksmith for a long time," Calderon said Saturday between swings. "I'st still got all my fingers, and they're in pretty good shape, too. Tools are the key. My fingers would be all beat up if I used the wrong tools." Calderon, 64, has been a blacksmith since he was six years old and MONDAY MORNING MONDAY MORNING DINNER SHAKER began working in his father's blacksmith shop. Today, Calderon is considered the dean of blacksmiths in the Kansas City area. ABOUT 50 PEOPLE squeezed into the foundry room in the Art and Design building Saturday to watch Calderon perform his blacksmith magic during a forging workshop. Calderon was born in Mexico and raised in Iowa. When he was 10 years old his father died and Caldoner became an apprentice to a miller. The '40s and '50s. Calderon ran his own blacksmith shop in Des Moines, Iowa taking time out to serve with the armoured infantry during WWII. "I've done a lot of things, but that was just playing around." Calderon said. "My heart was never in anything but this. This is me." Manuel Calderon, who started work in his father's blacksmith shop at age 6, demonstrates the craft he still practices at age 64. Calderon displayed his blacksmithing skills Saturday for an audience at the Art and Design Building. Blacksmithing is a dying art, and Calderon devotes much of his time today to teaching it. See FORGING, p. 5, col. 3 Recent dog attacks inexplicable, official says By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter Roxanne Bonham was in her house baking bread around noon Wednesday when she heard her 8-year-old son Kever scream. She rushed to a side door to what was wrong, and there she saw Keen, who was alone in the room. "It was five minutes before I found out what happened." said Bonham. Route 2. What had happened was that a Doberman pinscher had attacked her son. BONHAM SAID THATKeven was outside washing windows when the dog ran up to him and knocked him to the ground. The dog did not bite him, she said, but it was growing and "wallowed him on the ground for about three minutes." Kevin's screams apparently scared the dog away, she said. But a question remained — why did the dog do this? DOGS BY NATURE are not prone to attack people, Sterling Beebe, animal control officer for Lawrence and the University of Kansas, said Friday. The same question was asked Oct. 22 when two pit bull dogs maused a 67-year-old Harper woman to death as she stepped outside her house to pick up her paper. It was asked again Oct. 25, when an 80-pound boxer bit an 8-year-old girl in front of her several times on the face, neck, chest and legs. apparently after the baby had approached the dog's puppies. And two weeks ago, a 60-pound malamute mauded to death a 3-year-old in Holton, Mich. "The dogs that attack are dogs that have been trained to attack." he said But he could not explain what causes unprepared attacks, the kinds that have been reported. I expressly agree. He said, however, that injured dogs were likely to bite when approached by people. Forty-two dog bites were reported in Law- See DOGS, p. 5, col. 1 Universe will expand forever, scientists sav By United Press International SYDNEY, Australia — A team of Australian, British and Chinese astronomers has concluded that the universe will go on expanding forever, with a spectacular explosion as many scientists think. The scientists also said that eternity would be cold and dark because stars would use up their nuclear fuel and be extinguished one by one, but they said "we need not worry . . . for a long time." The team, working at the Siding Springs Observatory near Coonabarabur, 250 miles northeast of Sydney, said in a report in the November issue of the journal of the Royal Astronomical Society the universe would be warmed with a uniform temperature just above zero. THE SCIENTISTS SAY their findings show that the gravitational pull of the total mass of the universe is insufficient to stop it from continuing to exend. This contradicts the popular Big Bang theory that the mass of the universe is so great that eventually the force of gravity will cause it to stop expanding and collapse in a massive bubble. Bruce Peterson, research fellow of the Australian National University, said in the report that stars in the universe are moving farther and farther apart and using up their fuel, will end up with a universe which is cold and dark. The astronomers' findings were the result of more than four years of work involving measurements taken with a number of telescopes at the Sidings Springs Observatory. "But we need not worry, as this won't happen for a long time. The aim was to calculate the total density of matter in the universe, then compare its gravitational energy with the energy causing the universe to expand, Peterson said. President's trip to Asia is considered successful though largely symbolic By United Press International SEOUL, South Korea — President Reagan flew home yesterday, ending a symbolic trip to Asia to reaffirm U.S. defense commitments — a journey highlighted by his viewing of a North Korean encampment and his strong challenge to communism. Air Force One left Kimo Airport in Seoul this morning (7:33 p.m.) CST yesterday on a 15-hour flight to Washington, with a stop for refueling at Elmendorf Air Force Base in Alaska. Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said Reagan accomplished his fundamental objectives on the six-day trip — establishing "an agenda for progress" with Japan and reaffirming a 30-year-old commitment to the defense of South Korea. Secretary of State George Shultz said that the trip was an outstanding success. REAGAN, HOWEVER, skimmed over tough issues facing the governments of Japan and South Korea — Tokyo's continued limits on American trade and Seoul's crackdown on opponents of the authoritarian regime of President Chun Dao Hwan. New charges of human rights abuses, including the detention of government critics during Reagan's visit, prompted White House concern about the outcome of the trip. Secretary of State George Shultz brushed aside reports of human rights violations in the country, declaring that the Seoul government was making progress in curtailing abuses. Shultz, speaking at a press conference following talks between Reagan and Chun, insisted that the most important accomplishment of President Reagan's three-day visit to South Korea was the president's personal experience with the people of South Korea at a time of increasing tension. THE CHUN REGIME has been accused by international human rights groups of repressing political dissent and jailing opponents. The UN-backed campaign deals harshly with student and other protesters. "That isn't to say there aren't problems, but we also have to bear in mind that there is a country just a few short miles away from here and continually threatens this country, Shultz said. Chun planned to accompany the president and Mrs. Reagan to Kimpo Airport for a brief ceremony before Air Force One took off on a 14-hour journey home, Sunday night. Reagan was to arrive in Washington at 11 a.m. (CST Monday). Earlier, the two presidents issued a joint statement of unity and friendship, saying that they "took note of the strong and myriad bonds of friendship and cooperation that have linked the United States and the Republic of Korea and judged those ties to be in excellent condition." The presidents made little mention of the human rights issue, merely saying that they had "affirmed the importance of defending and protecting our rights," and that they serve freedom, openness and political stability." REAGAN AND CHUN dedicated themselves to principles of freer trade and greater economic cooperation and to the 30-year-old defense pact linking the two nations. They also charged that the Oct. 9 bombing in Burma that killed 17 South Korean officials was a "deliberate act of state terrorism," committed by North Korea. On his last full day in South Korea, Reagan — wearing a fur-fur-collared Army jacket with his name stenciled on the chest — visited the stark Demilitarized Zone. Peering through binoculars at an uninhabited North Korean "propaganda village" 1,000 yards across a minefire. "It looks like a Hollywood back lot and it isn't any more important," he said. Staff Reporter By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter Crescent-Engel group objects to proposed Catholic church More than a dozen residents of the Crescent Road neighborhood near campus yesterday voiced objections to a proposed Catholic church to be built at Ennel and Crescent roads. Father Vince Krische, director of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center which is building the church, yesterday asked his congregation to attend a Lawrence City Commission meeting Nov. 22, when the site plan for the proposed church would be debated. For almost two hours, neighbors attending a meeting at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road, argued that the proposed church would interfere with their neighborhood and worsen traffic problems. THE CENTER PROVIDES church services for students. Student Masses are now said in Spanish. Several members of the church's building committee, including State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R/L Ashland and project architects, met with state officials to discuss the project. But many of the residents at the meeting complained about the size of the project, saying that when it was first proposed they pictured a small neighborhood chapel. Mike Ott, 1520 Crescent Road, said, "The project is large, and it seems to keep growing and growing. It has been a real shock for some of the people in the neighborhood." *or*, associate professor of art, most of the residents had lived in the neighborhood for more than a decade. AREA CATHOLICS April announced plans to build a church, chapel and student center on church property at Engel and Crescent roads. But, during the summer, residents of the neighborhood formed the Crescent Engel Road Association to oppose construction of the church. See CHURCH, p. 5, col. 1 Recent gains should inspire young blacks, speaker says By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter Recent achievements by American blacks have made this an "interesting and inspiring" for young blacks seeking careers, a Kansas City Urban League official said Saturday. "the presidential campaign of Jesse Jackson has to ignite a spark in all of us," said Carl Boyd, director of research, planning and communications for the Kansas City Urban League. "Because none of us is in the black race alone," Boyd said, "Jesse Jackson cannot be in the presidential race alone. We have already won in that his candidacy is seen more and more as a serious candidacy and not a symbolic campaign." Boyd spoke to about 70 University of Kansas and high school students in the Kansas Union in the opening lecture of the seventh annual black student-alumni career conference. ALTHOUGH SOME SAY Jackson cannot win the election or even the Democratic nomination, Boyd said, blacks have already won because of the increase in voter registration among blacks and because of the inspiration he has given to Third World blacks. The half-day conference, which included lectures and workshops on education and career planning, was sponsored by the KU Black Alumni Committee. Boyd asked the audience to be encouraged by the recent gains of Jackson, the mayoral election victories of his father and brother, and the welcome in Philadelphia, the approval of a national holiday honoring Martin Luther King "We can stop chanting, 'Run, Jesse, run,' and start chanting, 'Win, Jesse, win,'" he said. NOT EVERYONE WAS called by God to be an astronaut or a Miss America or a presidential candidate, Boyd said, so each must be the best he can be. He told the audience that because "we are all Americans," he would strive to achieve in academic fields as it has done for other blacks in athletics or entertainment. Jr. and the crowning of the first black Miss America, Vanessa Wiliams. "Our world is full of superstars," Boyd said. "Superstardom is not our problem, but it need not be our goal. Superstars and leaders can inspire you, but they cannot study for you." Boyd said the achievements of one black help the rest by improving the image of blacks in a white-oriented, oppressive society, he said. Boyd also added to the negative image held by white society. The young black male suffers most from a negative image. Boyd said, not only among those who wear black, but also "Television portrays us as buffoons, and the various media play up our crimes more than our own. It is a glorifying view of the human condition." Because of that, black men must match their academic achievements with an "exemplary" BOYD'S TOPIC Saturday was educational motivation, a subject to which he has devoted much of his life. He works as a consultant for the superintendent of the Kansas City, Mo., public schools, and has been a substitute teacher since he came to Kansas City in 1980. He grew up in a Chicago housing project, in a South Side area he called "the dirty 30s." After college, he returned to that neighborhood to teach seventh and eighth grades. Boyd did not think it was out for the day, but worked as an "active teacher," often visiting students in their homes. AUGUST 1980 United Dream International PARDOMTEMPS, Grenada — U.S. 82nd Airborne soldier Pfc. Duane Matteson of San Diego shows his M-60 machine gun to Grenadian children during a break from patrol in the island's mountains. Fewer than 2,000 U.S. troops remain from an invasion force of about 6,000. U.S. military officials yesterday turned over to Caribbean authorities 31 leaders of the former Marxist government of Grenada. The officials said they might face trial. See related story p. 2. --- 4 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 14, 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Combat engineers will go to Costa Rica, official says WASHINGTON — A top defense official said in an interview published yesterday that the United States would send as many as 1,000 combat engineers to Costa Rica — some of them near the Nicaraguan border — for building projects. Undersecretary of Defense Fred Irie said in the interview that the dispatch of combat engineers would be the first such joint exercise in Costa Rica. The Costa Rican exercise would boost the number of U.S. military personnel inside Costa Rica and Honduras to 5,000. Secretary of State George Shultz, traveling in Asia with President Reagan, confirmed that Costa Rica wants the U.S. to help in the development of areas near the Nicaraguan border, but declined to say whether the aid would be provided The interview said that some of the engineers would work near the Nicaraguan border where Nicaraguan anti-government guerrillas operate. Board will investigate derailment MARSHALL, Texas — The National Transportation Safety Board will investigate why no order was issued to reduce speed because crews were working on a section of track where an Amtrak train derailed, killing people and injuring more than 100 others, an official said yesterday. Donald Engen, a member of the board in Washington, said federal authorities were expected to remain in the area all week and that the investigation would center on the section of track where the train derailed. Ninety-five percent of the 950 feet of track that was torn up and fractured in the wreck Saturday was recovered and will be analyzed for content and brittleness, Engen said. Workers to rally against Grevhound PHOENIX, Ariz. — As today’s noon deadline approached, striking Greyhound employees yesterday planned rallies and symbolic “walk away” to show disdain for the company, which intends to resume bus operations Thursday — with or without them. Amalgamated Transit Union officials have said locals around the country plan to group at Greyhound bus stations for the noon deadline for returning to work. Company officials have said they will begin hiring replacements once they know how many employees will return to work. In Dallas, union officials said strikers would be at the bus station for the deadline, at which time they would throw Greyhound letters about the deadline in the trash. GOP governors open winter meeting CHICAGO — The nation's Republican governors opened their winter conference yesterday confident of President Reagan's chances of re-election but less sure of how to increase their own thin ranks. a devastating 1982 election cut their number from 23 to 16, and this year, when Democrats captured all three governorships on the ballot, the defeat of Republican Gov. David Treen of Louisiana left only 15 Republicans in the state houses. "Most certainly the accomplishments of the Reagan administration will cause all of us to fall behind the leader," said Robert Orr, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Andropov said to be losing power NEW YORK — Soviet leader Yuri Andropov is ill at a sanitarium near Moscow and already has lost much of his political power, Newsweek magazine reported yesterday. The magazine, quoting Soviets sources, said although the 69-year-old Andropov is expected to recover his health, he may never again wield sword-like weapons. One source said Andropov's kidneys had deteriorated to the extent that his doctors were considering a kidney transplant — or that he may have already had one. Kerala Medical University The sources agreed, however, that Andropov would recover and predicted, "he will appear soon, perhaps this month." YMCA floors may house prisoners PITTSEBURGH — College students are upset over plans to house prisoners in the top floors of a YMCA across the street — many "Y" members aren't doing jumping jacks for joy either. Faced with a federal court order to reduce population at the Allegheny County, Jail officials plan to buy the downtown YMCA land. A sales agreement approved last week by the YMCA's executive committee calls for floors one through six to be used as a gym for "Y" members, while floors seven through 15 will be used to house up to 214 "nonviolent" inmates. The building is directly across the street from Point Park College. 'Hee Haw' star Junior Samples dies CUMMING, Ga. — Country comedian Alvin Junior Samples, who played a laugable good of 'boy on the television show "Hee Haw." died at home yesterday of a heart attack. Samples had returned home last week from an Ankita hospital where he had been treated for a breast A lifelong resident of rural Cumming, Samples and Associates has become the company that produces the syndicated show "The Larry King Show." 10 Samples most famous skit on the show was a parody of a used car salesman's television advertisement. The bumbling Samples kicked the audience off the phone. WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 PM EST 11-14-83 SEATTLE 29.53 30.00 COLD MINNEAPOLIS LOW CHICAGO NEW YORK HIGH SAN FRANCISCO DENVER COOL ATLANTA LOS ANGELES 30.00 HIGHEST TEMPERATURES DALLAS NEW ORLEANS MIAMI 60 60 60 90 UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST® LEGEND RAIN SNOW AIR FLOW SHOWERS Today will be fair across most of the nation. Locally, today will be mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers, according to the National Weather Service. The high will be in the mid- to upper 50s. Tonight will be clear with a low 30 to 35. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the mid-50s. Grenadian Marxist leaders mav face trial By United Press International POINT SALINES, Grenada — American military officials yesterday turned over to Caribbean authorities 31 leaders of the militant Marxist government topped by the U.S.led invasions and said they might be put on trial. Among those handed over from the prison camp at Point Salines to Caribbean authorities at the Richmond Hill Prison outside the capital, St George's, were members of the former Revolutionary Military Council that held power after the overthrow of Prime Minister Maurice Bishon. In a brief exchange with reporters, a former member of the military council said Deputy Prime Minister Bernard Coard and another council member were behind Bishop's overthrow and subsequent execution. CAPT. LESTER REDHEAD, speaking at the prison camp, said Board he was the real power following the customer to the 16-man council was only a front. "The military council never met," said Redhead, peering through ventilation holes in a three-by-eight-foot isolation cell. Redhead, Abdullah and five other council members — along with former Information Minister Selwyn Strachan and former Prison Commissioner Justin Roberts — were in the group turned over to Caribbean officials. Bishop, three ministers and at least 13 others were killed Oct. 19 by soldiers of the People's Revolutionary Army, Redhead said Lt. Iman Abdullah, also a council member, was responsible for the slaving. Capt. Russell Cancella, of the 118th Military Police Company and head of the prison camp, said intelligence officers who interrogated the prisoners found there was reason to believe they "may be criminals." HE DID NOT know what would happen to the 31 but said they could be put on trial. He was uncertain as to what charges they might face. Another 'U.S. military official said Abdullah had cooperated and was the one who showed them the graves where they were buried in the church and three of his aides were found. "Abdullah did it, man," Redhead said. Meanwhile, the diary of a man who apparently was a top military official in Grenada's former Marxist government 'shows the country was preoccupied The Washington Post, in its early Sunday editions, said Rep. Don Ritter, R.PA., found the diary a week ago in the James River. The four quarters at Rupert in St. George's. with getting Soviet and Cuban protection against U.S.-backed counter- IN JULY, THE WRIER concludes that the "revolution will have to take serious measures to protect itself" from what he calls "counter-revolutionaries in Trinidad, U.S. and Venezuela." The writer lists almost weekly meetings with Cuban or Soviet diplomat A Pentagon spokesman said in a report published yesterday that Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger approved the restrictions placed on news coverage during the invasion of Grenada. Weinberger said on Oct 26, the second day of the invasion, the decision on news coverage was made by commanders in the field. In Havana, President Fidel Castro and a military honor guard led a solemn ceremony yesterday to receive the bodies of 24 Cubans killed in the invasion and said they died fighting "Yankee aggressors." Earlier he THE 21 BODIES were among 42 returned Saturday to Holguin, Cuba, where a special team of forensic doctors identified the 24 as Cubans killed in the fighting, the Cuban press agency Prensa Latina reported. announced a five-day national period of mourning. Earlier, military officials on Grenada also freed 74 of the Grenadian soldiers and militiamen held since surrendering in the invasion. Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 Some said they had been mistreated by U.S. military police, who reportedly kicked them and called them "dogs." But many of the prisoners said such treatment was unusual and reserved for troublemakers. The prisoners were among some 1,300 members of the army and miltta who surrendered to U.S. and Caribbean forces in the Haiti. The officers of Governor General Sir Paul Saul Coon. FRESHMEN NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Stop by 115 Military Science or Call 864-3161 MILITARY INTELLIGENCE officers held 220 of them for questioning to determine if any were involved in the abuse; or any other subversive activities* U. S. military spokesman Maj Douglas Frey said the released prisoners were issued credentials protecting them against further arrest. PRIORITY SCOTT SWENSON DENNIS STRICKLAND "Top Candidates Facing Top Issues" CONGRATULATIONS TO JOAN KNOEBBER. OUR JUDGES DECIDED SHE WAS THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMAN. HAVE FUN IN ACAPULCO THE TROY FRAZER WE WANT TO THANK EVERY CONTESTANT WHO ENTERED THE TRAVEL CENTER, RIVER CITY CAR STEREO, AND CAROUSEL. AND THANKS TO EVERYONE WHO CAME TO GAMMONS AND MADE IT ONE OF THE MOST SUCCESSFUL PROMOTIONS WE'VE EVER HAD WE PROMISE THERE'S MORE TO COME GAMMONS SNOWFLAKE University Daily Kansan, November 14. 1983 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFSEm From Area Staff and Wire Reports Probation ordered for girl in criminal abortion case Saying he wanted to avoid two tragedies, Associate Douglas County District Judge Mike Elwell ordered probation Friday for a 17-year-old girl who had earlier pleaded guilty to criminal abortion. Elwell ordered Martha Renee Lacapa to return to her parents in Wisconsin, to enroll in college, to continue therapy individually and with her family, and to either find employment or do volunteer work. Elwell ordered her to abstain from alcohol during the two-year probation period. Lacapa had been arrested in September in connection with the death of her newborn son, who was found between two concrete culverts on the campus of Haskell Indian Junior College. She pleaded guilty on Oct. 24 to criminal abortion. In ordering probation, Elwell said he wanted to avoid "the loss of a child and the loss of the mother as a productive person." Mark Gleason, a court services officer, said that Lacapa had marked the abortion because she did not want to hurt her family, especially her baby. Man hit by car is listed as critical A 27-year-old Overland Park man, struck by a car early Friday morning after he had pushed a woman out of its path, remained in hospital. William R. Hutton, 27, was struck at 2:05 a.m. Friday after he had pushed Lisa Pulliam, 21, 1708 W. Fifth Street, out of a car's path about 300 feet north of 23rd and Iowa steets. Police said Hutton and Pulliam had been in a car accident and had gotten out of their cars to look for damage. They were standing in the [8] Hutton yelled and then pushed Pulliam out of the car's path. The car struck Pulliam's car, swerved and struck Hutton's car. Hutton was pinned under Pulliam's car, police said. Pulliam was grazed by the car but was uninjured, police said. The driver of the car was arrested for driving while under the influence of alcohol or drugs and was scheduled to appear in Douglas County District Court at 4 p.m. Wednesday. Bill ousting Clark to be withdrawn A Student Senate bill asking for the removal of the Senate's Election Committee chairman will be withdrawn this week, the bill's sponsor $sponsor Charles Lawhorn, the Senate's Student Services Committee chairman and sponsor of the bill, said he was eliminating the bill because of time constraints. He said that the bill would have come up for review on Wednesday, which is the midway point of this year's student elections. Lawhern said that turning the election management over to a new person would require a period of adjustment for that person and that a new person would need Lawhorn, along with senators Cheri Brown and Chris Coffelt, introduced the bill two weeks ago. Lawhorn said they thought Jim Clark, the Election Committee chairman, was ineffective in his position. They also charged that Clark had collaborated with members of the Priority Coalition in influencing a committee decision. Clark denied both charges. Suspects sought for Atchison killing ATCHISON — Police interviewed several people yesterday but had no suspects in the stabbing death of a 20-year-old woman who was found in her mobile home over the weekend. Detective Mike Wilson said Ronda Bell died between Friday night and early Saturday morning, but was not found until 6:29 p.m. Saturday. "There was obviously a fight," Wilson said yesterday. "We do not know if there was a robbery. That doesn't appear to be the motive." GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 864-4810. The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358 Open til 3:00am pizza by lice SAVE BUCKS. Open 'til 3:00am MONDAY GLADNESS Save $3.80 Large Pizza • one topping • double cheese • 2 free large Pepsis all for only $7.95 exp. 11/14/83 842-3232 PYRAMID PIZZA ✌️ KU financial-aid requests increase By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter More students applied this year for financial aid at the University of Kansas than last year, even though they are reporting more income than in past years, according to a report released by the American College Testing Program. Jerry Rogers, KU's director of financial aid, said yesterday that the report, the Profile of Financial Aid Applicants, was used to measure financial aid as a guide to help students know whether they qualify for financial aid. THE INCREASE IN applicants, he said, didn't necessarily mean students and families were poorer, because financial aid officers do not know whether those students have actually enrolled and have accepted aid. This year, 7,297 students applied for financial aid at KU and 82 percent of them were eligible to receive it. The student was up by 104 students over last year. However, the report does give financial and effort an idea of who the principal is. Family Financial Aid packet and have had it processed by Aug. 3. The final report will be released by ACT in the spring. Of the 7,297 students who applied for financial aid at KU, 37 percent were freshmen, 18 percent were sophomores, 18 percent were juniors and 20 percent were seniors. Seven percent were graduate and professional students. The report surveys financial aid applicants who have filled out an ACT "More freshmen usually apply because they have never applied before and they don't know whether they are eligible," Rogers said. "Since an awful lot probably couldn't get it, they didn't apply again." SEVENTY-FOUR PERCENT of those students were claimed as dependents on their parents' tax returns. The average dependent student came from a family of about four, and one or two family members were obtaining a post-secondary education. Seventy-six percent of those surveyed indicated that their parents were married. Fifty-two percent of the families had two incomes. The average age of the older parent was 48 years. Dependent students need an average of $2,942 in financial aid a $143 merit award. The parents of these students had an an average income of $27,874, with 19% of them in the lowest income bracket. While parents were earning more, students expected to earn less but saved more — raising the amount they had to spend on education by $44. savings and checking accounts of $3,902. The total of these was up by $5,778 from the previous year. THE MEAN CONTRIBUTION for the needy dependent student was $1,139 by the parent and $872 by the student. Parents were expected to contribute more, and students were expected to contribute less. "A lot of those figures are not very valid because they are not actual figures, they are anticipated earnings," Rogers said. Other factors considered in the determining the students financial aid were if the students' parents owned their own homes, and the home's equity and any other investments or property were taken into account. KU exceeds charity goal for first time SELF-SUPPORTING students made up of the other 26 percent of those surveyed. According to averages in the report, a self-supporting student has 1.6 family members, with 1.1 obtaining a post-graduate degree and about a percent of these students are married. Self-supporting students needed $0.006 this year up $1.249 from last year. For the first time since United Fund workers can remember, the University of Kansas surpassed its United Fund goal. Contributions narrowly exceeded KU's $50,000 goal. Money from the fund will help finance 23 social businesses in the Lawrence community. During the 6% week campus, which ended Friday, students, faculty and other University staff contributed $502,74 to the United Fund, Max Lucas, chairman of the campus campaign, said yesterday. "People who have been involved with it don't remember the last time we met our goal," he said. By the Kansan Staff Lucas, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, said that KU faculty, retired faculty, students and staff cooperated in the campaign and showed their interest in helping several community services in Lawrence. KU students in residence halls and in fraternities sponsored activities to raise money for the United Fund. MEXICO BORDER BANDIDO MONDAY MANIA NO.1 REGULAR 99¢ MONDAYS 11 A.M.-10 P.M. REG. $1.49 BURRITO Video Games Across from Post Office 842-8861 1528 W. 23RD. PHONE AHEAD FOR SPEEDY CARRY-OUT SERVICE 842-8861 Breakfa at Vista $1.89 --- NOVEMBER SPECIAL Ends 11/30/83 Art in France ast Mon-Sat 6-10:30 Sun 7-10:30 Regular $2.75 Mon-Sat 6-10:30 Sun 7-10:30 Vista RESTAURANTS 1527 W. 6th SALE-A-BRATION Nov. 14-19 NOVEMBER SPECIAL Tempt yourself! See slides of France's great paintings and architecture—sites included in the Spencer Museum of Art and Maupintour's "Art of Paris and Southern France" tour scheduled for May, 1984. Spencer Museum of Art Curator Marla Prather will present a free slide talk open to the public at Maupintour's Corporate Headquarters. 1515 St. Andrews Drive, on Monday, November 14 at 7:30 p.m. Please call the Spencer Museum (864-4710) by noon that day if you plan to attend. A ham and cheese or bacon and cheese omelette made with three fresh eggs. Served with golden hash browns, toast or home made biscuits. AMY GRANT'S CHRISTMAS ALBUM Reg. $8.98 Now $6.98 While Supplies Last Limit One Per Customer Please Maupintour Enjoy our full breakfast menu ...including Sunrise Sandwiches! --- Plus Many Other Specials CR CROSS REFERENCE bookstore Malls Shopping Center 711 WEST 23RD STREET 842-1553 LAWRENCE, KANSAS ATTENTION BSN CLASS OF 1984 After commissioning, you'll attend a five-month internship at a major Air Force medical facility. It's an excellent way to prepare for the wide range of challenges that come with flying. As an Air Force nurse officer, for more information contact us. POLICE DEPT. OF HOSPITAL The Air Force has a special program for 1984 BSN's if selected, you can enter active duty soon after graduation - without waiting for the results of your training. To qualify, you must have an overall 'B' average AIR FORCE A great way of life Capt. Sarah Kendell 913-236-3256 Call collect Send a friend some holiday cheer . with a Kansan Holiday Message. A Kansas Holiday Message Is a great way to wish someone a happy holiday season or say goodbye 'till next semester. Write your message in the coupon below putting one word in each box. No ads over 20 words will be accepted. Then mail the coupon with your payment to Kansan Advertising (or stop by in office) at 12345 Street, Nov. 30 at 5 p.m. Space is limited so get yours in early! 20 words (or less) — $4.00* *Price includes green color on border and ribbon of box. Name ___ Address ___ Phone___ Amt. $___ one word per box All ads must be prepaid. No refunds. Clip and bring to: Kansan Advertising 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Lawrence, Ks. 60454 } OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 14. 1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kamana (USP$ 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Finn Hall, Lawrence, KA. 60055, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer sessions. Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 for a week outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 a semester through student activity for *POSTMASTER*. Send subscriptions to: University of Kansas Press, 212 N. Broadway, Lawrence, KS 60055. MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Editor DON KNOX Campus Editor ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser 224551 724551 DAVE WANAMAKER Retail Sales Manager MARK MEARS National Sales Manager LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser A child and war As time ticks on toward the scheduled December distribution of 572 U.S. Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in Europe, the world's citizens are becoming more apprehensive about the effects of the distribution. In Europe and the United States demonstrators regularly protest the distribution. And in Philadelphia a similar, yet quiet, type of arms race protest occurred at the Camp Fire organization's annual meeting. Delegates to the meeting discussed the overall effect of the nuclear arms race on the psyches of young children growing up under the threat of anapocalyptic destruction. Leaders of the organization maintain that youth groups such as their group have a responsibility to speak out on issues that affect children and their families. Camp Fire president Evelyn de Gheletai quoted studies that described children's fears about nuclear war. "Studies show that children feel the world is going to end and there is no use planning for the future or thinking about having a family." she said. And so at their annual meeting in Philadelphia, about 300 Camp Fire organization delegates voted to launch a peace education program to help alleviate their young members' dreadful fear of nuclear war. Camp Fire leaders think the threat of nuclear war is an understandably frightening weight to live under, but they want their 400,000 young members to know they can do something about their fears. So the organization committed itself to sponsoring discussions about the complexities and controversies of nuclear war. The philosophy is that the more children can talk about their fears, the less they will suffer from them. Being afraid of nuclear war is a natural reaction for all human beings, children and grownups alike. But at this point, as the scheduled December distribution of missiles draws nearer, anger at the Soviet Union and at U.S. leaders who allow the ticking time bomb of nuclear destruction to continue would be a more useful reaction. More and more people across the world see the futility of building greater stockpiles of nuclear arms and are showing their concern in organized marches and other protests. Yet, political leaders on both sides ignore their protests and continue to build up their arsenals. The drive to dispel children's fears of nuclear war is a worthy effort. But how much better it would be to dispel children's fears by assuring them that their world will still be here in five years. Congressional delays Congress seems to be near to finishing its work, but it actually has a long way to go. good news. Senate majority leader Howard Baker, R-Tenn., says that Congress should be able to adjourn for the year by its target date — Friday. Baker says the "must" bills to be considered by the Senate concern the following topics: the debt ceiling, the Civil Rights Commission and a package of spending cuts and taxes. The Senate also must vote on the confirmation of William Clark as interior secretary. Considering that Baker, among others, has criticized Congress for its long sessions and has proposed more emphasis on the idea of citizen-legislators, the idea that congressmen might finish their year's work before Thanksgiving is The bad news, however, is that among the issues that Congress has failed to settle this year are immigration and deregulation of natural gas. After the senators and representatives finish wrangling next year over that pair of controversies, they can consider some lighter topics, such as a reformed federal criminal code and a revived equal rights amendment. But elections are also on the congressional agenda for 1984. Action on controversial items is likely to be delayed — say, until 1985. A school of thought prescribes as the best government that government which governs least. What about that government which procrastinates? Unmitigated greed There are two good words to describe General Dynamic Corp.'s attempt to charge the government $9,609 for a tiny wrench: unmitigated greed. If this were the first time something of this sort occurred, an explanation might be offered: Somebody goofed. But it is not. That the Senate investigators would conclude the wrench was worth only 12 cents put it in even worse light. Of course, you cannot decide, based on these incidents, that all defense contractors are out to gouge the government — and us taxpayers. But it does make you wonder how many $5,000 screws and bolts slip through the watchdogs. In August, the Washington Post traced the Boeing Co.'s attempt to wrest from the government $1,118.26 each for plastic caps used to keep stools from wobbling in a radar plane. A matchbook would have done fine. The spare parts for defense, contractors is big business — too big. The government should reward gross greed with retaliation: penalties and termination of contracts. -Durham (N.C.) Morning Herald The University Daily Kanass welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kanass also invites individ-ual requests to add columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kanass office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kanass reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. LETTERS POLICY The candidates A unity of thought Your Student Senate Steve Bergstrom, Winnetka, Ill., junior, is the presidential candidate for the Freedom Coalition. Greg Haushick, Scott City senior, is the Freedom vice-presidential candidate. The principal difference between the Freedom Coalition and the other coalitions is that we have unity of thought. The Student Senate elections for years have been plagued by coalitions that purported to be united behind a platform while campaigning, only to become a group of individuals once elected. We saw this happen last year when the leaders of the Consensus Coalition came out against funding for Gay and Lesbian Services, and yet the coalition had fund and helped them anyway. One would think that when electing a coalition one would be FRE STEVE BERGSTOM Presidential Candidate FOOM electing a group of people who think alike. Yet this has not been the case for years, and again is not the case this year. The fact is that students cannot be certain what they are voting for when a coalition is based upon where one lives and who one knows, rather than upon political philosophy. The Freedom Coalition is not ambiguous on these matters. The voter will know exactly where the candidates stand in the presidential candidates. Thomas Jefferson more than 200 years ago wrote that it was morally wrong to force an individual to contribute either time or money to a cause or activity that he did not support. Officials at the University of Kentucky and the University of student fee system, have demonstrated that they do not uphold the same ideals as our forefather. We members of the Freedom Coalition believe that since college students are mature enough to vote, marry and die in defense of our country, they are also mature enough to spend their money on groups, projects and services as they please. To compel students to finance any speaker when they are giving a presentation, simply, wrong. Jefferson expressed it well when he wrote. "To compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he believes is sinful and tyrannical." In this respect, we of the Freedom Coalition have pledged, if elected, to terminate funding of specific groups and projects that threaten the health of students supportable by a substantial segment of the student body. We view as contradictory the moral stand by many students that excuses them from registering for a possible future draft because of religious beliefs, while at the same time manifesting intolerance toward others who feel that it is morally wrong to live a homosexual lifestyle or financially support those who do Freedom Coalition members' opinions are varied on the issue of the morality of homosexuality. However, we all agree that to coerce students whose religious beliefs proscribe homosexuality to contribute to the Gay and Lesbian community, we must their beliefs and a violation of the First Amendment. We will therefore, quit financing GLOK, The Freedom Coalition thinks the Associated Students of Kansas is a mismomer. Very few students on the KU campus even know what the acronym ASK stands for, much less what ASK stands for. The student body is richly diverse, representing people with different cultural, economic, political and social backgrounds. To assert that a small group of virtual unknowns can in any shape, matter or form truly represent the "interest's" of the students is ludicrous. At a time when our computer science department is strapped for funds, the East Asian languages department is facing a financial crisis and students are finding fewer course offerings, we don't have money to throw away. The thousands of dollars dissipated by ASK will be returned to the University earmarked for investing in America's future — its youth. We came to KU to study, learn and expand our horizons. This is where our priorities lie. We do not support financing any more layers of bureaucracy and waste. Kevin Walker, Webster Groves, Mo., senior, is the presidential candidate for the Momentum Coalition. Mark McKee, Overland Park junior, is the Momentum vice-presidential candidate. - The importance of the student voter at the University of Kansas cannot be overlooked. Only through a popular mandate from the student body, not just in more votes alone but also in clear support, can a position of success be created, patent and, ultimately, effective in translating student opinion and demand into political action. In return for that mandate, the voter receives not only political action, but also responsive government that is "tuned-in" to student needs. Voters should also require honesty and integrity from their leaders — leaders who do not sidestep issues or rely on MOMI KEVIN WALKER Presidential Candidate MOMENTUM unethical campaign practices to ensure victory. The Momentum Coalition is a group of hard-working, dedicated individuals who are worthy of both your trust and vote. The team has found a number of issues that concern us all as students. The first issue deals with our education, or more specifically, how available education is for KU students. To aid graduate and undergraduate students, those with financial difficulties of any type, Momentum proposes a deferred tuition program. Many large universities have deferred tuition programs, but KU has traditionally shied away from this prospect. A system in which students would pay one-third down at enrollment, one-third just before midterm, and one-third just before final exams is not only feasible but practical as well. The administration could levy a 15 percent fee to cover the costs of the program. This plan Today the Kansan is running columns written by the four Student Senate presidential candidates or their aides. Each coalition attempts to outline its campaign platform for the Senate elections, which will Wednesday and Thursday. Tomorrow, the Kansan will take an in-depth look at each presidential coalition in INSIDE: The 1983 Student Senate Elections. would ease the economic burden Ronald Helms, an internationally known illumination engineer and a member of the KU faculty, has begun an in-depth campus lighting study. Momentum would seek to make use of this study and is committed to spending between $30,000 and $40,000 from the Senate unallocated account to share in the costs of proper campus lighting. A safe, secure campus for all. Your campus, your Senate working for you. The third issue deals with guaranteed check approval for students. Momentum would like to set up a check approval system in coordination with Lawrence merchants that would eliminate the need for all those different check cashing cards A $,5,000 Senate fund could be set aside to guarantee a check up to $20 from any KU student with a valid ID. Students who write bad checks would be charged a $10 fee, and the amount of the bad checks would be collected in the same way as other unpaid University fees are collected — before enrollment is allowed. Transcript and enrollment holds could be effective in encouraging compliance. Momentum also has been working to bring you, right here on campus, a McDonald's restaurant. Pam Sullins, McDonald's Real Estate Manager, has expressed an interest in bringing KU the same advantages that McDonald's gives such schools as the University of Missouri and Michigan; profits could conceivably aid the Kansas Union in lowering book prices. Momentum is a group of representatives, concerned students looking for the opportunity to work for you in the Senate. We are seeking to provide you with accessibility, a willingness to sit down with any student about any problem. If you are tired of electing the same old group of people every year, then you have a choice. Vote for integrity, not for activism; don't be duped into supporting the status quo coalition. Vote for Momentum — a coalition working for you now, a coalition working for you later. paced on students and their families while still allowing for the necessary checks to make the system work. The second issue is a campus safety issue — campus lighting KU has many problem areas where students cannot walk safely at night without fear. Momentum does not believe that we must wait for further tragedies before action can be taken. Listening to students slated as top priority Scott Swenson, Topeka junior, is the presidential candidate for the Priority Coadition. Dennis Strikelowski is the presidential Priority vice-presidential candidate. This Wednesday and Thursday you will elect a new Student Senate. This indeed is something worthy of your consideration. The new Senate will be allocating your dollars, representing you at different levels of University governance and on the state level as well. Those of us running on the Priority Coalition recognize the challenge and are eager to meet it head on. I hope that you realize the importance of your decision and that you will take a good hard look at the issues before you. You PB10 SCOTT SWENSON Presidential Candidate RITY may choose from a coalition that is well packaged and ready to sell to the world, or you may choose others more grassroots in nature. Priority is willing to talk with you and listen to you, that's what we've been doing in this campaign is talking positively about Priority and about what you want out of your Senate. Basically we want you to look at more than just the "campaign" and look beyond election day. What will the next Senate do? Are the promises they are making feasible or are they just the typical campaign hype that we have become accustomed to? I most certainly believe there is more to Student Senate than the political hype that has gone on. That is why I am in this race and why I have built this coalition which I can proudly say is the best around. We want to represent you with the experience that has come from being involved in more areas and organizations on this campus than any other coalition. We have made sure that we are connected to every part of camps to insure that your voice will be heard. Our motivation in running is not for power, but rather for a desire to serve, to learn and hopefully enrich everyone's experience at this University. It takes a good working knowledge to achieve these goals and we possess that knowledge. We've been addressing campus security, funding structures, the committee process, the Associated Students of Kansas, our role with the Administration and the Memorial Hall among other issues. But most importantly we want to restore a representative quality to the Student Senate, something that has been sadly missing for the past few years. It's very plain and simple with little glitter and fanfare, but it's the truth. It doesn't promise a payment plan for tuition, no bad checks or Big Macs on campus. However, it does give you the high quality representation through better accessibility and responsiveness that you deserve. We aren't the "same old bunch" that has supposed been running things for years. We're Priority, new ideas combined in fresh approach to the ideal of making this truly a Student's Senate. We encourage and would appreciate your support on election day. Dennis "Boog" Highberger, Carneet senior, is presidential candidate for the Costume Party Coalition. The Costume vicepresidential candidate is Carla Vogel. Process is important to the Costume Partv "An insurrection of clowns and gurus, in behalf of their strange, beautiful and transcendent sanity — that would be a revolution to match the need for our time." Words from Theodore Roszak. Hello. My name is Boog. I'm a member of the Costume Party. So are you, if you want to. Some of us are running for presidents or KU student government, by my vote. I will ballot as the Costume Party's candidate for president, but that's just because it was my idea 'BOOG' HIGH- BERGER I'm not trying to imply that we all agree on everything — of course not. There is conflict sometimes, but that conflict is less than it seems. We must go through to reach acceptable solutions to our problems. Presidential Candidate E PARTY COSTUME PARTY that we run. We really don't have a president — we don't have any leaders at all. I believe that a just and humane society must be organized on the basis of freedom and equality. It must be built on the foundation of relationships based on mutual respect. But this means we must do without power and authority, without leaders and judges. The Costume Party is an association of free and equal individuals of all different colors, sizes and shapes. Nobody gives anyone else orders, and when we receive a call from our voice carrier equal weight. For us, consensus is not just another catchy name - it's a way of life. I realize that sounds utopian and idealistic, and it is, but it still very practical. We do it. It works. We have taken definite stands on what we feel to be important issues, but our "platform" is really the way we deal with each other and the way we reach our decisions. The process is as important as the product — our means will define our goals. We can't make any progress toward a better university and a better society with a campaign based on power games and empty slogans. We aren't running for student offices because we want power and authority — we want instead to learn and to grow and to understand. Authority is a zero-game, but understanding isn't. Nonetheless, we do want to get more votes than the other candidates, and I think there is a good possibility that we will. However, I don't think getting the most votes is the same as winning. If empowering our values or modernizing our desires helps this short-term goal, we will have lost no matter how many votes we get. To see this diverse assortment of men and women, hippies and punks, Americans and people from other countries working together and finding their commonality and treating each other with love and respect, to see all generations working together renewed hope for our future. We are all brothers and sisters. Together we can make it work. The Costume Party invites you to join us as we work to be free. 1 University Daily Kansan, November 14. 1983 Page 5 continued from p. 1 Dogs But Sutton said that no single breed of dog had been reported as biting people more often than *that*. "The bits range from little bitty mutts to the biggest Great Dane." he said. MICHAEL TUBBS, A supervisor for the Laval Hospital. Only little dogs can be as much a mession as big dogs. "The little dogs can hide easier under porches or in bushes," he said. "The big dogs bark and let you know they're around. The little ones use a bit more tact and nip you on the ankles." Letter carriers carry a pepper-and-oil-base spray, tubs said, and if dogs attack the bag, they can be used. "If a dog is bluffing, it won't attack the bag." Tubbs said. The spray comes out in a stream and it irritates dogs eyes, Tubbs said. But it does not Church "Sometimes the spray works and sometimes it doesnt." he said. FROM TWO TO four letter carriers are bitten each year, he said, and carriers filling in for other workers are vaccinated. That was what happened to Luanne Coats, Leavenworth, who was filling in for another catheter. Winter apologized for any misconceptions about the size of the project. He and Krische described the project to several of the neighbors when it was first proposed. Winter said the project had never changed in scope and size. MANY OF THE people who live in the neighborhood are KU professors. Several former and current professors were attended the meeting, including Lawrence Woodruff, emeritus professor of geography, Thomas Smith, emeritus professor of geography, and Bob McColl, professor of geography. Ott said the church seemed unwilling to negotiate with neighbors on the issue of size, and this was important to discussing the aesthetic concerns. Father Bill Porter, a priest who has been at the center for the last year, said the center needed $120,000 to pay for housing. Both Porter and Krische said they were disappointed that the church had become an adult institution. "We want to keep on good term with the neighbor, but it 'makes me sick that he turned out this way." Brian Kubota, the architect for the project, said they wanted neighborhood input on the site plan so that it would integrate and not cause problems. KRISCHE YESTERDAY ASKED his congregation to attend Wednesday's meeting of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission on Monday for a public comment about the proposed amendment. However, the site plan has already been filed with the city because the city is considering a proposed amendment to existing zoning laws. The new plan was filed after the amendment is approved. Krische also asked students in his congregation to attend a special prayer service at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Lawrence Chapel, where a meeting is scheduled to begin at the same time. The church already has raised more than $1 million for the project. Earlier this fall the church sold four buildings on the corner lot, and had them moved out of the city. She said that as she approached a house in the 700 block of Connecticut Street, a white poodle began barking at her. As she turned to face it, a "benji-looking" dog came from behind and bit her on the calf, bruising it. The dog was captured and still is being examined for rabies, she said. Coats, a letter carrier for about two years, said that was the first time she had been hitten. "I think that everybody here has been bitten at least once," she said. Coats and Tubbs both said that if owners or harborers of dogs did not prevent their dogs from leaving the office, the post office was permitted to stop delivery of the dogs to those homes where the attacks had occurred. And that code is being enforced. Sutton said that 300 citations were written last year and that 125 of them were correct. THE LAWRENCE MUNICIPAL code states that if an owner, harborer or keeper of a dog allows a dog to run at large in the city, or if the owner of a dog that has bitten someone does not allow it, they could be fined up to $100 for a first offense and jailed for up to 10 days for a second offense. But he said the most frequent complaints against dogs were not reports of attacks. "The biggest complaint is dogs running at large," he said, "dogs runnimg around in turtles." APPARENTLY, CONCERN about not letting a dog run lose ledge to Roger Inyard's losing his job Inyard, 615 N. Third St., was fired in April from his job as a security person at Cooperative Farmers Chemical Association because he had drunk during his dog, a Great Pyrenees, to INYARD FILED SUIT Oct. 18 in Douglass County District Court seeking to overturn the decision of the Kansas Employment Security Borad of Review. The board ruled on Oct. 7 that the association was justified in firing Inyard, stating that it found evidence that the dog had at least once growled and caused an employee fear and concern and that Inaya had been warned up to the point. In his suit, Inyard said that the evidence about a dog confronting one of the employees "is speculative and remote" and that there was no impact on other employees or on the business." Inyard also said that he was never informed about any company policy that prohibited him. Inward agreed with Beeber that dogs that attack people are dogs that have been trained to Inward said that he brought the dog to *wow*. because no one was at home to care for the dog when he worked the night shift from 11 p.m. to 1 a.m. He said that he had worked for about four years at the association and that he had been trained to work all that time and kept the dog in his car. "They are trained to be vicious," he said. "Dogs are like the people who keep them." Forging continued from p. 1 "I're trying to keep the trade going — keep it from dying." Calderon said. "But there's no easy way to learn it. Kids want to learn in a month or year, but it takes a helluva lot longer to be a blacksmith. "First you have to learn to use a hammer. Then you have to get so you can see things. You have to develop an eye so you can see the colors in it." CALDERON TEACHES blacksmithing, welding and foundry work at Penn Valley Community College in Kansas City, Mo. He also teaches at General Motors Corp. and Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp., both in Kansas City. Calderon has had two apprentices who have gone on to start their own shops, and he now has two more men who are interested in becoming merchants. Four to five years of apprentice work are required before someone can set up his own blacksmith shop. Calderon said. And even then it takes a little while. "You never get to the point where you don't learn anymore." Calderon said. "After more than 50 years, I still learn new things." IN HIS PRESENTATION, Calderon said that in the days before modern technology the blacksmith was one of the vital components of a The first three businessmen in town were always the saloonkeeper, the undertaker and the blacksmith, he said. School teachers and presidents. Elden Tefft, professor of art, invited Calderon to KU precisely because the blacksmith is an expert in a dying art. "We want to keep people in touch with the past, and use that to go on and build things in the future," Tefti said. "This is particularly a problem with students. It's the same case that's made for art history, only this workshop is more practical. We're only a generation away from blacksmithing." ALTHOUGH FEWER AND fewer people are entering the trade, Calderon said, the market still exceeds the number of blacksmiths. "When a blacksmith dies, his shop goes up for sale and is sold off in parts. No one takes his place." Caldera said. "If a guy wants 100,000 pieces of something he can make a machine to build it. But if he wants 100 pieces, then he has to rely on a blacksmith." "Top Candidates Facing Top Issues VOTE WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY ARCHITECTURE David McCormick John Onken BUSINESS Julie Flynn Jon Gilchrist EDUCATION Lori Pitler Jill Taticke ENGINEERING Paula Bodine John Conard Bill Duncan David Llewellyn Dale Romey FINE ARTS Sean Daw PHARMACY LIBERAL ARTS MAKER Darren Allen Warren Bird Amy Brown Debbie DeNoyelles William Easley Martha Eddy Reggie Estell Dan Fink Sally Kastner Betsy Lawrence Janet Mahoney Kristy Matt Keith Nelson Cathy Ormabee Jeff Polock Janet Rodkey Andy Sandlin LIBERAL ARTS Amy Bush Robert Coover Jill Eddy Glenn Jewell Mason Lindscott Jeff Thompson Janine Woods JOURNALISM Louise Langen SOCIAL Welfare Robert Walker LAW Mike Bohar OFF CAMPUS Pat Levy SPECIAL Brian Raleigh GRADUATE Laura Murphy Anne Stuart PRIORITY DENNIS STRICKLAND SCOTT SWENSON Paid for by Priority—John Welling Tres. SENIORS Introducing Hilltoppers The Jayhawker Yearbook is happy to announce the rebirth of an old tradition, the Hilltoppers. The Hilltoppers Awards are the Jayhawker's way of recognizing those seniors who have made high calibre contributions to the University and/or Lawrence community. The award, which was last given in 1973, is being brought back by this year's yearbook staff and interested parties within the University. Criteria for selection includes; — involvement and leadership in campus and community activities - references that can address the quality of the nominee's service — respect of the nominee's peers as-well-as his or her professors a GPA of around 3.0, however grades will not play an extremely important part in the selection The nominations will be screened by a committee that includes KU faculty, student representatives, and the Jayhawker staff. Anyone can nominate a senior for this award, and seniors can nominate themselves by picking up an application. They will be available at the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union, and the Yearbook Office, 121 B Kansas Union. Deadline for acceptance of applications is Friday, January 20, 1984. nineteen hundred eighty-four JAYHAWKER PIZZA Shoppe the pub PIZZA EATEN WITH 14 FRIENDS WE DELIVER! 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center Monday Night Football Special Triple topping King Size Pizza and 32 oz. Pepsi $8.75 plus tax 842-0600 DELIVERED! Estre Muzzartla FREE Parking & Dining this season's most important sale of men's & ladies famous label, perfect quality, current season fashions BELOW CONVENTIONAL RETAIL... COLLECTION INCLUDES: 50% TO 70% OFF - SAMPLE FASHIONS FROM FAMOUS MAKERS' SHOWROOMS - LIQUIDATION STOCK OF LEADING KANSA'S SPECIALTY STORE - MANUFACTURERS' CURRENT SEASON OVER PRODUCTION FAMOUS NAMES: Ralph Lauren Polo Chaps Arrow Condor Johnny Carson Norman Scotland Yard Many Others • ALL CURRENT SEASON FASHIONS • ALL FIRST QUALITY. • SPORTCOATS COATS SHIRTS SLACKS BLAZERS JACKETS OUTERWEAR ACCESSORIES AND MORE WHEN: 2 DAYS ONLY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY NOV. 16-17 WHERE: ELDRIDGE HOUSE DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE TIME: 10 TO 8 DAILY AND ... USE MASTERCARE VISA, PERSONAL, CHECK WITH APPROVED II LUCKY... FOR WOMEN MEN AND JUNIORS Encore Sample Clothing sale conducted by ENCORE SAMPLE CLOT open mondays through sat 16 EAST 39TH, KANSAS CI ore sale con- ENG Encore Sample Clothing ENTERTAINMENT The University Daily KANSAN November 14, 1983 Page 6 Performers depict struggles for love By GINA K. THORNBURG Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Ambition, love and jealousy sometimes bash their way through one's mind, heart and stomach, leaving one lying awake at night or shivering in fear. The clamor of reckless emotions will pot come. But the inner forces are inside people to stay. And this weekend, in the Inge Theater in Berlin, he will be on stage, as seven people portray them in Jorge N'eill's drama, "The Great God Brown." "Everyone is affected by conflicting forces" James Larson, a graduate teaching assistant The ideas of Freudian psychology are prevalent in the works written in 1920 and 1930 by Auguste Campher, *agilitating intelligence*, LeRoy Bertrand. "The Great God Brown" is experimental, but the story of the play is simple. Larson said. The play covers 30 years in the lives of two men who have fallen in love with the same woman. Both are actors in the schools, friends and society to become successful architects after they graduate from high school. “It’s a simple theme of the struggles that anyone goes through trying to find love and happiness when you’re going against the rules that society puts on.” Larson said. To depict those struggles, the actors and actresses are in constant motion on stage, touching and pulling at each other, sometimes becoming intertwined. "It's a very physical show." he said. One actress in the play, Deborah Shannon, Dorie Village sophomore, said, "It's hard work." In a rehearsal last week, she broke her nose when she bumped into another actor. hose when she bumped his knee. She said that the constant motion on stage The analogy to a football team goes a little further. Not only are the actors in constant motion, but they are parts of a unit that must think the same, he said. Larson said, "It's almost like running the plays of a college football team." In the program for the play, the actors and actresses are not listed in the individual roles. "We list them all in the ensemble," Larson said. "We don't want to give the idea there's a reason for it." People who are familiar with O'Neill's work, such as his "Long Day's Journey Into Night," might be unaware that the playwright wrote many experimental plays. Larson said. "The Great God Brown" could not effectively be produced until the 1906s, when contemporary art was on the rise. Larson uses neo-expressionistic techniques, which include having all seven actors on stage at the same time throughout the play. Another example is a facial expression off stage by an actress wearing a mask. David Clark, Oakley graduate student, designed the stage setting, which includes a large swing suspended from the ceiling. The setting is designed to encourage interaction and representation of building styles, Larson said. Roberta Wilhelm and Biorn Skaptason rehearse a scene from Eugene O'Neill's play 'The Great God Brown. MOVIE REVIEWS Rating System Deal of the Century bad ... "Deal of the Century" is about a small-time arms dealer who happens to make millions by selling a pilotless aircraft to a Third-World government for an American arms manufacturer. At first, the film seems to be a lightly satirical and cynical look at the world of arm dealers, but it soon turns into the silly, slapstick schmaltz relied on in Chevy Chase movies. The screenplay, written by Paul Brickman ("Risky Business"), seems to have been a half-hearted attempt to condemn the proliferation of weapons and weapon systems throughout the world. But the situation becomes incidental to the typical Chass schick and it could have been a story about some guy who gets dosed with nuclear waste, or who takes his family on a cross-country vacation. Who cares? And the aspect of the script that seems most to have been intended to carry this message is disturbing, also. Chase's partner in the film, played by Gregory Hines, decides to make his stand against the arms race by stealing a new fighter and threatening to blow up an arms show. His motivation is religious. The filmmakers depict his conversion to Christianity and then use this as ample justification to oppose violence and death. That's sad. You shouldn't have to be converted to a religion to oppose the killing of people. Stay away from this film. In fact, stay as far away from it as possible. Sooner or later, Cheyse Chash will play out the power of his name as a box office draw, and the public will wise up to how he and his producers have ripped them off. "Modern Problems." "Vacation." and now "Deal of the Century" are movies that receive poor reviews but make money at the box office. The strength of Chevy Chase's popularity almost guarantees some financial success. But these movies stink "Deal of the Century" is just the latest Chase vehicle. Chase is not funny, and Brickman's screenplay is torn between drama and comedy. The movie has that overall lack of taste evident in "Vacation." released earlier this year. "Deal of the Century" starts out with some potential. For perhaps the first 30 to 45 minutes, there seems to be a possibility that the film might go somewhere. But, alas, we have to sit there and watch Chevy fall down, make faces and pretend to be serious while wearing that stupid expression that prevents the viewer from ever taking him seriously. Who is it that is so wrapped up in the man? He hasn't made a funny film in a long time. But no one seems to be paying any attention. Surely it will catch up with him soon. The public, gullible and hapless as it may be, must soon wise up and stop paying to sit through these stinkers. Mike Cuenca 100 Fiber art by two KU students was selected to appear in a New exhibit. At left is Laura Brody's "Turbulence," made from --- Gary Smith—KANSAN sticks, plastic and paper on a steel frame. At right is Jane Reiter's 'Dark Movement.' Reiter dyes the wool she uses. 'Trashy' art gains appreciation By PAMELA THOMPSON Staff Reporter Trash can even inspire artistic creation — given a little imagination and an eye to distinguish artistic garbage from ordinary garbage. Jane Reiter, East Lansing, Mich., graduate student, said she often digs through her trash, looking for objects to work into her fiber art wallhangings and scultures. If people told her that her artwork was trash, one KU fiber artist would not be personally offended. Laura Brody, Lawrence graduate student, said that her piece titled "Turbulance" was also accepted in the national show, but that because she had not received the mailing cost of the piece was too expensive. One of Reiter's untitled pieces is on display in a month-long national fiber art exhibition in Dunkirk, N.Y. which will run through November. The Fiber National '83 exposition was open to fiber artists nationwide. Out of the $3,344 entries received, 160 were selected. - go through the trash looking for things with greeting surfaces. “Referen” said, “I also use the trash to get to other places.” "Turbulance," which was constructed with sticks, paper and plastic mounted on a steel "Sometimes a show comes up and your piece of art just fits the description of the exhibition," he said. frame, concerns the natural energy forces of the wind and water rushing through space, she said. Eileen Murphy, associate professor of design, said that fiber art was a descendant of tapestry, but that in the last 15 to 20 years, the three-dimensional art pieces had come to resemble sculpture, more closely than they resembled traditional wall hangings. She develops her ideas over a long period of time and her art usually "relates to a combination of the natural environment, philosophy and physics," Brody said. "Nature is my favorite source for ideas." Reiter said. "I use at least two different material combinations, usually wire and cloth or paint that you need to not have an academic approach to my art." "In the craft area, fiber art has moved from the functional aspect to the fine arts," Murphy said. "The three-dimensional sculptural forms are comprised of individual fibers. Fiber art has become an international term which encompasses all aspects of the craft." Reiter also combines materials from nature for her fiber pieces. Murphy, Reiter and Susan Cannell, Berkeley, Calif., graduate student, all have a fiber art piece included in the Lawrence Craft 3 show at the Lawrence Arts Center. The craft show, which opened Nov. 5 and will run until the end of the month, is sponsored jointly by the Lawrence Arts Center and the Lawrence Art Guild. Ann Evans, Lawrence Arts Center director, said entries in the original craft show must be Reiter's piece titled "Gameboard," is a small wall hanging that she said was not "a literal interpretation of a gameboard," although its layout appears to a grid closely resemble a typical board game. constructed from clay, fiber, glass, metal, wood paper or mixed media. The show was only open to those artists who are residents of Douglas County. "Gameboard!" received an honorable mention award in the 48-piece Lawrence craft show, which was judged by metalsmith, Elliott Pujol, Evans said. "Artists need to exhibit, and a show of this type is very helpful to them." Evans said. Reiter said she first sketched out a simple design plan on paper before she would start working on the possible combinations between natural and unnatural materials. She uses cotton, silk and nylon most often for her wire sculptures. "But I'm really a slow worker." she said. "Usually it takes me three weeks to complete a project." In the six years she has been experimenting with various fibers, textures, colors and shapes for her artistic projects, Reiter said that she has exhibited in about 12 different shows. Although she has been sewing clothing and weaving on a loom for a number of years, Reiter said she was not really interested in the old-fashioned handicrafts. "Sometimes I get teased about my art because a lot of people can't relate to it," she said. "They say that I don't like art." Reputation as queen of blues is challenging to jazz singer By PHIL ENGLISH Staff Reporter Koko Taylor has a very soft, simple, somewhat slurred voice with a strong Chinese touch. "I try to live up to the reputation of being called the Queen, by putting all that I have into the blues," Taylor said in a telephone interview from Chicago. "I do it because it's what I love to do the most, and it makes people happy." TAYLOR WILL SHOW Lawrence why she has such a good reputation when she and her band, The Blues Machine, perform Wednesday at the Jazhouses. 926½ *Massachusetts St.* Taylor, a Grammy-nominated artist, said she first got her start singing in a church choir in Memphis, where she learned of the inspirational power of the blues. "Some people think listening to the blues is sitting with your head down, and it sounds really sad and dragged out," Taylor said. "They're not my blues." 'It's not something that is going to make your soul sit down, but uplift your spirit and give you something to look forward to." One thing Taylor is looking forward to is her future. "WITH ALL THE work I have come up, going new places, putting out records and creating new fans, especially young whites. I like the fact that I'm a popular all over the world," she said. Taylor recently headlined the fourth annual Long Beach Blues Festival, which had a record attendance this year of more than 7,000. Along with the Blues Machine, Taylor has performed at the Newport Jazz Festival, Carnegie Hall, SummerFest in Milwaukee, Chicagofest and the Winnipeg Folk Festival. She recently completed a special for the Disney cable channel, and she and the band have been working on their next album. Taylor thinks people should learn about the blues, and she wants to be the one to teach them. "Not knowing what the blues is, is a terrible thing," she said. "A good experience would be to come hear Koko Taylor, and I will easily introduce to them what I have to offer." SPARE TIME ON CAMPUS 爱与希望 THE KU WIND Ensemble, conducted by Robert Foster and Frederick Fennell, will present a concert at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout Recital Hall. **VISNON COLE, tennor, will give a master class** **om 12:30 to 3:00 p.m. in Swartbork Recital** **Bachlore, will give a master class** KU TRUMBONHE OCH with Stephen Anderson and perform at 8 p.m. Thursday in Swarthout Resort. "THE GREAT GOD Brown" by Eugene O'Nell will be performed at 8 p.m. Thursday in the William Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets for students are $1.50. PHOTOGRAPHS by Diane Covert and on display in the Art and Design Building gallery LAWRENCE from 1:43 p.m. today and from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow through Friday POPULAR WORKSHOP ON PHILIPPE "NUREMBERG: A Renaissance City. 1500-1618," will be exhibited through Dec. 31 at the Spencer Art Museum. WAND A POETRY READING. "Poetry of this Place." an evening of bioregal poetry and song, will be presented by members of the Kansas Area Watershed Council at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Lawrence Zen Center, 1115 Ohio. SPENCER MUSEUM of Art Curator Maria Prather will present a slide show and talk on French art and architecture at 7:30 tonight at Maupintour, 1515 St. Andrews Dr. BLOOM COUNTY BY BERKE BREATHED THE GREAT MANUSTRO! ONCE AGAIN SITS BEFORE HIS INSTRUMENT, AND THROUGH THE WINDOW CHALLENGE. THE CITIBANK ACCOUNT FILE, FIRST A WILD GUESSE AT THE PRESIDENCE. PING! CLICK, CLICK! TC, PING! PROWORD KOREAN MARK APPROVED PROOKED GREAT MASTERS, LOVE GREAT OPTAUTISTS, HAVE A FREEN SHARE OF HONOR. PLEASE CONTINUE! THANK YOU QUEST IN THE MALLOY PLEASE PASSWORD KARL MARK PROCEED PROCEED GREAT MENTORSHIP, HAVE GREAT CAPITALISTS, HAVE A NEW DEAN OF HUMOR, PLEASE CONTINUE! THANK YOU DISTINCT IN THE MALCOLN, PLEASE OLDER, I'M JUST RECEIVED A REFUND CHECK FROM THE IRS. COMPUTER IT'S FOR: ON THAT'S GREATEST TOP BUY YOURSELF A NEW CAR. NEW LOOK. YOU CAN'T HANDLE... NOW LOOK. YOU CAN'T HANDLE... NOW SON, THAT'S A.D. THAT'S WELL.. ER... OLIVER, THE JUST RELEASED A REBUND COMPUTER. IT'S FOR $1.8 MILLION. ON THAT'S GREATEST POP, BUY YOURSELF A NEW CAR. LASTEN, DRO, NOW LOOK, HERE MASTER "HACKER." LISTEN, DRO, NOW LOOK, HERE MASTER "HACKER." KEEP IT ITLL JUST GO TO BUILD MARLEEUR BOMBS. NOW DON, THAT'S A LIN. THAT'S WELL. ER. DR. JEAN LOOK... I DON'T NEED THESE MORAL DILEMMA... BUCKS OR BOMBS FOR CRUNCH University Daily Kansan, November 14. 1983 CAMPUS AND AREA Page Local art covers up white wall space of Business School placement center By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter Craig Smith paced nervously as he left a national corporation, with a national corporation. As he wandered around the lobby in the School of Business placement in Philadelphia, he was apprised to see some photographs depicting the poverty of Third-World countries. Smith, dressed in his gray pin-strip suit, examined a photograph of a half-dressed child. The Leavenworth senior said he thought it was rather paradoxical that he was interviewing to become part of corporate America with this poor child staring out at him from the picture. FOR THE PAST two years, the placement center has featured the work of local artists on what would otherwise have been 130 feet of plain, white wall space. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 107 Mass. phone: 843-1151 Fred Madaua, director of the placement center, said recently that the center was not attempting to cast itself as an art museum or to make a profound statement. The wall simply supported for local artists to display their work. "It definitely adds to an otherwise sterile situation," said Madaus. "I like how it changes from time to time. We have a variety." Jan Gaunitnitz, a local artist and wife of business professor Jack Gaunitnitz, came up with the idea of displaying art at the placement center. She said that the art enhances the center's institutional look without staging it. "It's very effective." ONE WAY THE center has avoided the institutional look is by featuring a variety of works such as paintings, photographs, paintings, photographs and wall hangings. Gaumitz has since handed over her duties of coordinating art for the placement center to the Lawrence Art Guild, of which she is a member. Nancy Loving, Shawnee senior, photographed the picture of the child that held Smith's attention as he waited for an interview. Loving photographed through Kenya, Uganda and the Ruwenzori Mountains. She said she did not intend to make a statement to corporate America, but said she enjoyed the contrast of Africa to the American business world. Although her works are also for sale, Loving said she was happy just to share her experience with people. Laurie Culling, coordinator of displays for the Lawrence Art Guild, said she was pleased that the guild could work with artists works to business-oriented people. "But I wish more people would know it's there," she said. Lawrence's stiff competition forcing TG&Y to call it quits By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter Eva Eshai, a T&Y employee, spent a few minutes last week struggling to hook a wire basket to display rack. She arranged the few remaining samples of material in basket and stood up with a slight sigh. TG&Y employees won't be spending as much time stocking shelves in the next few weeks. They'll be hanging "out-of-business" signs and marking down merchandise Store officials announced last week that Lawrence's TG&Y, 711 W. 23rd St., would close Dec. 31. For Baisel, 1717 Miller Drive, the future is uncertain. She has been working in the fabric department at T&GY for the past five years. "It is going to be hard to find a job." she said. "There just aren't any." The announcement that the store was closing came as a surprise to Baisel. She had heard the rumors but thought they were just that — rumors. "Some of the girls are holding down two jobs, trying to put their husbands through school," she said. She added that she had to pay for college educations, trying to pay for college educations. STIFF COMPETITION from other discount stores was partially responsible for the decision to close the store, store officials said. Although Baisel was concerned about finding another job, she said she was more concerned for those store employees to put their spouses through college. Gary Newgen, TG&Y real estate director for the central region, said that the Lawrence store was too small and with the other discount stores in town "We are remodeling some of the stores, but some are too small and can't carry the merchandise," he said. "The Lawrence TG&Y cannot be expanded. Newgent said, because boxes in by buildings on both sides. SOME OF THE shelves in the store were already beginning to thin out, she said, so officials must have known several weeks ago that the store was going to close. TG&Y has given employees the option of relocating to another store, said Paul Dickerson, manager of the Lawrence TG&Y. However, none of them have shown interest in moving. He found that his company is in Lawrence and look for another job. Dickerson agreed that the TG&Y store was too small for the Lawrence market. Boyds Coins-Antiques Clas Ring Buy-Sell-Trade Gold-Silver-Coins 791 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 60044 913-842-8773 COUPON Save 50¢-$1.00! Zip-a-tone DRY TRANSFER LETTERING PRIORITY one sheet per coupon EXPIRES 12/30/83 Half Sheet 50¢ OFF 2-Half Sheet Pkg. $1.00 OFF KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union oku SCOTT SWENSON DENNIS STRICKLAND "Top Candidates Facing Top Issues" 2nd Annual TURKEY SHOOT WED 2:30-6:30 p.m. Sponsored by PARTY AT OPERA HOUSE NOV.19AT8P.M. at 106 DAY THE BUM STEER — 2554 IOWA 11 a.m.-10 p.m. - A Bum Steer Bar-B-Que special sandwich with your choice of baked beans, cole slaw, or potato salad, and a pickle for $1.06 — Our special "KILLER CHILI", a large bowl with crackers for $1.06 PLUS A FREE medium soft drink with a Laser Gold Card. BARRONS - 7th & MASS. 4 p.m.-7 p.m. $1.00 Well Drinks, 50c Draws, $1.06 Nachos, 3 Plumpers Hot Dogs for $1.06 and other specials like: Starting at 7 p.m. - 106 minutes of Starting at 7 p.m.-106 minutes of FREE BEER WZR106 1 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 15, 1983 Analysts see better Christmas sales By Staff and Wire Reports 14. Thanks to a stronger national economy, Christmas looks brighter for both shopper and retail salesmen, industry analysts said. National retail chain stores reported a sharp increase in October sales and the strength in consumer buying reflects growing faith in the economy, increased incomes and decreased unemployment, analysts said last week. Lawrence merchants also said that they were optimistic that Christmas would be a good time. Holly Benevente, assistant manager for Settlers, 621 Massachusetts St., said that the company is working to "NOVEMBER, FOR Seiferts last year, wasn't terrific but this November is better. December sales should be up," she said. Ron Schmidt, owner of Roberts lery Jewelry . Inc., 833 Massachusetts St., Chicago, IL 60617 said that business during December probably would increase also. National chains reported some of their largest gains for July through September. Industry analysts attributed an improvement to a healthier economy. "People spend more at Christmas. They spend more on jewelry. We do one-fourth of our business for the winter in the Christmas season," he said. Sears Roebuck & Co., the largest U.S. retailer, said that October sales were up 32 percent from October last year. K Mart Corp., ranked second, had a 10 6 percent increase and J.C. Penney Co., the third largest retailer, reported an 8 percent sales improvement. F.W. Woolworth Co., the fourth largest, scored a 7 percent rise at the cash register. Susan McKelvey, national publicity director for K Mart, said yesterday that Christmas 1983 was looking better for the company than last year. "We do expect better than last year. We predict that the fourth quarter will be more than 10 percent better than the third quarter." she said. Even though it is only the third week of November, downtown Lawrence is on the list. PEOPLE ARE MORE optimistic than last year, she said. People started buying Christmas presents earlier this year, she said. TMS Christmas arrived in Lawrence earlier this year — about two weeks earlier than past years, said Pat Hobson for Owens Flower Shop, 846 Indiana St. "We started decorating last Wednesday," she said. "In our business, we miss a lot of opportunities by waiting so long." Beneventi said, "If people see the decorations too early, you get a lot of negative response. But I got excited when they asked me, "What I think it gets them started earlier." Holiday decorations will soon adorn campus By the Kansan Staff Bundled-up spectators line the streets of the Country Club Plaza anxiously awaiting the moment when Christmas lights awaken Kansas City. Mo., from its darkened slumber. Fifty miles away, facilities operations personnel at the University of Kansas silently adorn the campus without any of the faintage of the lighting ceremonies in Kansas City. But shortly after students return from Thanksgiving vacation, the KU campus should be dressed in holiday attire. Bob Porter, associate director of facilities operations, said yesterday that a crew of about six people would help decorate Strong Hall, Danforth Chapel, Hoch Auditorium and the Kansas Union for the holiday season. Blue lights will outline Danforth Chapel and boughs of evergreen will be draped outside the Union. A lighted Christmas tree will be placed in the middle of Strong Hall along with six-foot wreaths on the outside of the center doors. Hoch will also be decorated before vocals, the University's Christmas concert. "It it got too big and expensive," he said. University decorations were more extensive several years ago, Porter said, but a combination of the 1973 oil field's resources forced facilities operations to cut back. Vandalism has also been a problem, Porter said Last year one of the walls outside Strong Hall was stolen and because of the cost was not replaced. ON CAMPUS DEMOCRATIC Socialists of America will show the film "Union Maids" at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. TODAY INTERNATIONAL Club will meet at noon in the Sunflower Room of the Union. "WOMEN, Credit Yourselfs," a workshop, will be presented by the Emily Tiemy Women's Resource Team 7 p.m. in the Fine Room of the Union CAMPUS CHRISTIAN Fellowship will meet at 7:30 p.m. at 1116 Indiana St. CAMPUS CRUSADE for Christ will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big 8 Room of the Union. SWORD AND Shield will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union. TAU SIGMA Dance Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Dance Studio 242 of Robinson Center. CHAMPIONS! will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. SPECIAL OLYMPIC Volunteer sign-up will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the pool lobby of Robinson Center. TOMORROW WOMEN IN SCIENCE will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 199. Strong Hall. GEOGRAPHY DEPARTMENT Colloquium Series will present Thomas R. Smith, professor emeritus of geography, speaking on "Looking at an Old Chart" at 4 p.m. in 317 Linden Hall. THE FILM "ACID Rain: Requiem or Recovery," released propaganda by the Reagan administration, will be shown by the Campus Coalition of Students and Alumni at Wakaraus Sierra Club at 7 p.m. in Downtown Auditions in Dyche Hall. VOTE WED. & THURS. See tomorrow's KANSAN for further details. Paid for by MOMENTUM FOR COLLEGE ASSEMBLY Tom O'Malley Treasurer MOMENTUM FOR COLLEGE ASSEMBLY SUA FILMS PRESENTS TONIGHT! James Cagney in WHITE HEAT FRESHMEN NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Stop by 115 Military Science or Call 864-3161 SYA FILMS PRESENTS TONIGHT! FRESHMEN SNA FILMS 4D ANNOUNCING the START of the FALL JAYHAWK TEAM TENNIS LEAGUE Gangster James Cagney's in brien again. Also stars Edmund O'Brien and directed by Raoul Walsh. Don't miss this spellingbelt drama-dramal ALVAMAR ALVAMAR RACQET CLUB 4120 Clinton Parkway Lawrence, Kansas 66044 CALL ALVAMAR RACQUET CLUB TO SIGN UP Phone 842-7766 or 842-7767 UPCOMING FILMS AT SUA: Wednesday, November 16th Button & Taylor in William Shakespeare's THE TRAINING OF THE SHREW. 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. Thursday, November 17th Humphrey Bogart is back in WE'RE NO ANGELS. 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. Friday & Saturday, November 18th & 19th Spectacular foreign film THE NIGHT OF THE SHOOTING STARS. 0:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. AND Futuristic fun DEATH RACE 2000 12:00 Midnight Woodruff Aud. $2.00 Sunday, November 20th Sexual decisions with Sonia Braga in THE LETTER AND HIS HUSBAND 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud:$1.50 through February 16, 1984 thursday Nights 8:00 P.M. to Friday 10:30 P.M. limited to 12 people—call immediately Limited $45.00 per person YOUR LAWRENCE 7-11'S WOULD LIKE TO INTRODUCE A NEW CONCEPT IN CONVENIENCE STORE BEER SALES: LOW PRICES!! Compare our everyday prices to theirs ITEM 7-11 KWIK- SHOP* 1) COORS 6 PAK. REG. CANS OR BOTTLES $2.59 $3.09 2) BUD. LITE 6 PAK. CANS OR BOTTLES $2.69 $3.19 3) MICHELOB PREMIUM 6 PAK BOTTLES $2.69 $3.45 4) MILLER 8 COUNT PONY PAK BOTTLES $2.09 $2.65 5) ALL BRANDS QUART SIZE .99 $1.29 6) MEISTER BRAU REG. $1.89 $2.47 Rapists often see sex as reward for attention, social worker says 6) MEISTER BRAU REG. 6 PAK CANS "Women are taught that these 'yes-no' games of ambivalence are only an effort to appear respectable" she said. "Women need to be taught to say what they mean, openly and directly." PLUS Society often teaches men use them that when women say "no" to sexual intercourse, they mean "yes" but are trying to appear modest. Alfred said. By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter YOU CAN SAVE EVEN MORE WITH OUR SPECIAL CASE PRICES! 7-11 #688 25th & IOWA 842-5601 7-11 #689 6th & LAWRENCE 842-5612 She is also the state coordinator for ACA Women's Task Force, a recently formed group that organizes activities and seminars of interest to women working in various fields related to the correctional system. 7 ELEVEN FOOD STORES Alford, who is also on the board of directors of the Kansas Correctional Association, said that the feminist movement had played an important role in finding the social and cultural causes of rape. Afford has a master's degree in social work from the University of Kansas and was awarded the Army Certificate of Achievement for her role in re-creating the "Social and Psychological Characteristics of Rapsists and Rape." DURING HER RESEARCH, which included conducting group therapy sessions with convicted rapists. Allford realized that the vast majority of rapists did not see themselves as such, she said. And she found several excuses that rapists often used to exempt themselves from guilt. Rapists often have the misconception that women must reward males with sex in exchange for attention from men, Jane Allford, a social worker with the States Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, said yesterday. OF THE MORE than 100 convicted rapists that Alford has interviewed, most didn't see themselves as having done something wrong, she said. Alford spoke lasi last month to about 20 women at the Lawrence Public Library during a meeting sponsored by the American Correctional Associations Women's Task Force-Kansas Women in Criminal Justice. *Prices from 6th and Kasold KWIK-SHOP, in effect 11/8/83. "Men are socialized to expect a sexual reward for their attentions to women." VOTE WED. & THURS. See tomorrow's KANSAN for further details. MOMENTUM FOR COLLEGE ASSEMBLY Paid for by MOMENTUM FOR COLLEGE ASSEMBLY Tom O'Malley Treasurer 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, November 15, 1983 Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union A public reception at the Adams Alumni Center will follow the lecture Rex Martin Professor of Philosophy The University of Kansas presents The Sixth Annual Byron T. Shutz Award Lecture "Three Conceptions of Equal Opportunity" by PILOT Pilot. The better ball point pen. Pilot. The better ball point pen. When it runs out you won't have to. The exciting Pilot Ball Point. It's got everything going for it. Smother writing. Specially designed finger ribbing for continual writing comfort. Stainless steel point. Tungsten carbide ball. Perfectly balanced. A choice of medium or fine points. And best of all...you'll never throw it out. Just slip in a 39c refill and you're ready to write again. So next time your old scratchy see-thru pen runs out, run out and get a 69c Pilot Ball Point pen...plus a few refills. KU KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union J' Ever Eat A FOOTBALL? Come in to The Original Minsky's PIZZA For French Bread Pizza Night all you can eat—$2.95! 2228 Iowa 842-0154 No Carry Out Or Delivery On This Special Minsky's PIZZA NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 15, 1983 Page 9 House OKs child-porn bill By United Press International WASHINGTON — The House voted yesterday to strengthen child-pornography laws by boosting the fines more than tenfold and closing loopholes that had allowed pornographers to skirt the law. The legislation passed 400 to 1, the only negative vote coming from Rep. Ted Weiss, D-N.Y. Weiss had several specific objections to the bill, and said he would ask children beyond protecting children in custody upon individuals' rights to privacy. As passed by the House, the bill would outlaw not only the selling, but also the trading or exchanging of used films and photographs of children. That provision is designed to close an underground trade network that takes advantage of a loophole in the Child Pornography Act of 1977, only selling the child of pornography. Since the law was enacted, there have been fewer than 50 prosecutions. In response to a 1982 Supreme Court decision permitting tougher kidnade porn" laws, the measure limits films or pictures that sexually exploit children regardless of whether the materials are judged legally obscene. The measure also raises the age of children protected by the law from 16 to 18. Fines were raised from $10,000 to $100,000 for a first offense and from $15,000 to $200,000 for a repeat offense. By United Press International WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court, sidesteping the school prayer issue in a New Mexico case, refused yesterday to consider whether states violate religious freedom by requiring a daily minute of silence in classrooms. Supreme Court refuses to hear school prayer case The justices, without comment, let stand a ruling striking down New Mexico's "one minute of silence" statute that allows school prayer. A lower court had decided that the law against entangling state and religion. Other challenges to such laws are likely to reach the Supreme Court in the future, however, and the court may prefer to accept one of them. As many as 20 states, including New York, Connecticut, Maryland and Virginia, have laws allowing a daily moment of silence as a way to get around the Supreme Court's prohibition against prayer in public schools. THE HIGH COURT'S action came the same day the Mobile County, Ala. School Board filed its Supreme Court hearing to allow voluntary prayer in classrooms. U. S. District Judge W. Brevard Hand's ruling uphold Alabama's school prayer law was overturned May 12 by a federal appeals court. In other actions yesterday, the nine justices, before recessing until Nov. 28. "Very frankly, for 20 years the Supreme Court has been wrong." Dan Alexander, president of the school board and head of a national pro-organization, said during a news conference on the Supreme Court steps. - Dodged a decision on whether the government may deny financial aid to a college – in this case the University of California because its traditional relationship with society injested sex discrimination into the school's academic program. - Refused to reinstate $200,000 in child-rearing expenses to a Virginia woman who conceived the child after sterilization failed. The case was won by her mother, who was represented by her father, former Indiana Sen. Vance Hartke. - Agreed to hear an appeal by Maryland's Coppin State College, which was sued by two employees for racial bias in firing. A U.S. appeals court said the state's six-month limit was too short a time for such cases to be brought. As the court again avoided school prayer controversy by refusing to hear the New Mexico case, efforts are continuing in Congress to approve a constitutional amendment to permit classroom prayer. President Reagan has endorsed a version to allow audible prayer, and would allow silent prayer or meditation. In 1981, New Mexico's legislature passed its minute of silence at the time of the United States invasion. thorize a period of silence not to exceed one minute at the beginning of the school day (to) be used for contemplation, meditation or prayer." Jerry Duffy, whose son was a student in the Las Cruces school district, challenged the practice and won a ruling by U.S. District Juan Burciaga, who said: "It is clear that the pre-eminent purpose was to establish a devotional exercise in the classrooms of New Mexico public schools." The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals refused to review the ruling. When the school board voted unanimously not to appeal, a Las Cruces resident named Jean Walsh asked the Supreme Court to step in. Dan Gonzales, a Las Cruces lawyer who argued against school prayer, said the issue never should have gone to the Supreme Court. "It was a political thing in the first place, and they were more than happy to let it die," he said. FOUNDATION YOUNG AMERICANS FOR WEDOW 1920 FOUNDED KU Young Americans For Freedom Project America The FREE, Not the Freeze WED. NOV.16,1983 PETITION FOR PEACE THROUGH STRENGTH ALDERSON AUDITORIUM KANSAS UNION A SERIES OF LECTURES BY THE NATIONS'S FOREMOST AUTHORITIES ON DEFENSE, INTELIGENCE, and SOVIET MILITARY STRATEGY The list of speakers include: ROBERT E. DOLAN National Chairman, Young Americans for Freedom Together A Day After DR. WILLIAM FLETCHER Moderator. Director Soven and East European Studies LT. GEN. DANIEL GRAHAM Executive Director High Frontier Project (former Director, Defense Intelligence Agency, Department of Defense) Topic = National Defense System to Repel A Nuclear Attack on the U.S. BRIAN DAILEY GERT J. DOHNAN President, American Space Frontier The Pacific Region Committee for the High Frontier (former U.S. Congressman from California) Topic - Turning President Reagan's Mandate to Defend BRIAN L. HENRY Science Institute, University of California, Defense and Strategic Studies Institute Topic The Global Soviet Strategy and Analysis of Inflation YAF Young Americans for Freedom, Inc. America is the test and best hope for mankind. You know it and Andropov are there. But there is a man in the room who has never been born. Andropov has the power to save the Slavs stubbornly reject them and threaten to the negotiations. It is time for the Slavs to agree. The American people have been maltreated for too long by the left-wing "peace movement" orchestrated in the 1970s to suppress dissent and undermine democracy in South Vietnam, the latter day pacifism is weakening America from within. Do you think the Soviets care about freedom? Ask polish labor union leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner Lech Walawe the only books on the books of America for free written Leon Walters. They care only about world domination. The leaders of the so-called peace movement are knowingly collaborating with the murders in the Killing Fields of YOUR country. Supported of the so-called peace movement are unknowingly doing for the Soviets what the Soviets could never do for themselves. ABC is helping with the 77 million horror movie "The Day After." If you want to preserve your freedom and defend Americans do not support the fraise. Do not be fooled by the horrow show you will see on ABC. Our Freedom and the freedom of America is threatened. It is time for patriotic and freedom loving Americans to stand up for courage. Sign your petition. Get your friends to sign this petition. Mail it to Young Americans for charity. Sign your petition. Get thousands of others to the president. Support PEACE THROUGH STRength! BECOME ACTIVE IN THE STRUGGLE to shape the future of America. Join America's largest and most active conservative youth organization - Young Americans for Freedom -- today! Application for Membership Young Americans for Freedom • Box 1002 • Sterling, VA 22170 I enclose my membership dues of $8.30 NAME AGE SCHOOL OR OCCUPATION * understand that $2.50 or more for dues or a subscription to The New Guard for one year Film & Discussion STELLA NOWICKI No. of Attendance 80 (Over) *40* Student Membership 84 (Over) *40* Joint Membership for Married Couples 44 (Over) *40* Associate Membership 91 (Over) *40* I would like more information about YAF. CHECK ONE UNION MAIDS "A VIVID ORAL HISTORY OF WOMEN ORGANIZING IN THE 1930's." A. B. SINGH - ONE OF THE THREE WOMEN PROFILED IN UNION MAIDS - HELPED ORGANIZE CLERICAL WORKERS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO - FOUNDING MEMBER OF UNITED PACKINGHOUSE WORKERS OF AMERICA (1936) - FOUNDING MEMBER OF THE DEMOCRATIC SOCIALISTS OF AMERICA (1982) 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 15 Jayhawk Room Kansas Union FREE SA Organized by the Lawrence chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America with help from PRAXIS only at A REAL COMPUTER FOR ONLY $5??? COMPUTER RENT Rent a computer for as little as $5 $00 HR. This includes word processing software. Our system is more versatile than KU's System and we have all the same processing capabilities. Do your: - Term Papers - Programming, etc. - Thesis - Research - Resume Why wait for hours trying to get on a computer terminal? We have an expert staff that can help you with problems or questions, and high speed computer printout to get you out fast when you use our computer systems and terminals. Now you can use our computers when you need them. Visit our computer center or use them at home. Rent by the hour, day, week or month. Programs available in a wide range of applications and languages. YOUR NEW FULL SERVICE COMPUTER CENTER! COMPUTE RENT 1000 IOWA STREET LAWRENCE, KS 68044 814) 841-0066 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. U.S. A Division of IMB, Inc. MAKING COMPUTERS AFFORDABLE TUESDAY FREE DRINKS $2.50 COVER 8-11 P.M. HAPPY HOUR 11-CLOSE GAMMONS SNOWS 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 GAMMONS SNOWS 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 GAMMONS SNOWBOARDS 1 KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS The University Daily KANSAN The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 10 Days or 2 Weeks for Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 0-15 1.26 3.15 3.75 6.75 0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75 2-15 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80 2-15 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.95 For every 5 words add : 310 50c 75c 105 CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 9 p.m. Tuesday Friday 9 p.m. Wednesday Monday 9 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 9 p.m. Friday Wednesday November 15, 1983 Page 10 Classified Display advertisements can be only two width and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues allowed in these advertisements except for logos of registered brands. POLICIES - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words. * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words. * Deddle signs as Display Advertisement — 2 sometimes same as Display Advertisement - 2 working days prior to publication. Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to publication of advertising. - Classified display ad effectiveness - Classified display ads do not count towards this earned award. - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established. FOUND ADVERTISMENTS - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only - Teach sheets are not provided for classified or classified short accounts. - on cancellation of pre-paid classified admissions - blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement; - No refund on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansai business office at 864-4358. - Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University Daily Kansas. ANNOUNCEMENTS 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 OHSON Halloween Proofs in the Office until 18 November 30, 2014 $1.50 $1.00 $7 $2.00 Paid Staff Positions The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions in the newspaper experience application available in the Student Senate Office 105, B.Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Rooms 200 and 119 Stuaffer-Flint Hall. Applications due in Room 200 Stuaffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Wed., Nov. 16. The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employment Applicant are sought from all qualified people with foreign or international education, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry. Zeenth ZT 12 with built in modern. Special price to faculty staff of UK $497. Alphabetical Comp Sci. $350. The MASTER THE DAY MATER. "Come speak on movie or war at town Meet, Noon, Month, 923 Send a Friend Some Holiday Cheer! Snowman . . . With a KANSAN Holiday Message. Here's what you'll get for only 4 bucks: A 20 word message addressed to the person of your choice inside a package like the one shown below. A KANSAN Holiday Message is a great way to wish someone a happy Holiday Season or say goodbye 'til next semester. Your Message Here Look for order forms beginning Tomorrow ENTERTAINMENT UFS THE SOUND OF MUSIC Friday and Saturday November 18 & 19 7.00, 9.45 FOR RENT 24 Hour屋, newly remodeled, KU has route,路 longer allocation to building, $250.843.2903 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apartments are immediate partial utilities paid. Contact Kaw Valley Manage- er for details. 2 Bedroom House £75 and utilities, walking from the parking lot. 3 bedroom suite fridge and range include. Call 0.908 417 0644. 2nd semester sublease, close to campus, 2 BRL, very nice. quit. new carpet $300; mii 841-846, eavings. STUDIO Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 4 BR home Large kitchen, all new storms "Franklin" in living room 5 min from campus & a beautiful bedroom unfurished apartment, with or without utilities paid. Central air heat, wall to carpet, dishwasher, disposal, close to shopping and parking. 2750 Redburn Lane 11 or 841 6884 for information. Brand new studio for sublease, 1 block from Union, 841-1303. Always, keep trying Diplex: 2,1 b bathlps for rent. East Lawrence. Jan. 1 WK2 hookup. 749-2155 BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please come to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. FOR HENRY. Nicee. available brand new, just com- modate. ALL UTILITIES PAYLID $A18 907. love your business! 842-1876 or 841-1287 For lease, choice 2 H2, 2 bath cords on golf course with microfiber lceps, w/o pets Day 841-8217, 841-8221. Furnished Studio. Fully equipped kitchen, gas heat and on bus route. Available Dec 21, 1reasonable. HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APTS. Impenxive room in 3 bedroom house. $100/month. November rent FREE. Move in anytime. 841-6001 www.impenxive.com Room for rent near university and downtown. No reqs please. A41-5500 Large one bedroom apartment, 1328 Vermont, range and refrigerator. All utilities费 $29 per month. Larger 3 bedroom apartment. Lots of storage, fully carpeted, pet rooms, laundry facilities, water paid. Quater room. Parking available. 1 BR Apts. $285 2 BR Apts. $340-$360 3 BR Apts. $415 All aps have CA, gas HEAT, refrig. bus route. Lease terms available to May 31, July 31, and Dec. 31. Call between 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon-Fri. 845-4754 One bedroom kit, for rent. Great location just minutes from campus. Reasonable Rent. For info. Reserve your studio now for the spring semester while the selection is good. Fully furnished, free cable TV, close to campus. Low rent. Roommate for 21R apt. $137-50/mo. will. call Call. Bail. 843-1899 Meadowbrook studio for sublease now or December 3. Ask for V2920, 824-4200. Roommate needs immediately or starting Jan. 1 for increible apartment. Have your own room pay bait utilities. Call 842-0443 ask for Melissa. Cheap, Cheap, cheap rent! **** meadowbrook crestine 842-420 Nice 2-bedroom apartment just north of stadium, available immediately. 8275 842-4443 Keep trying. Nice two bedroom house for rent. Close to campus Start December 1. Call after 5 p.m. 841-4518 Non-snacking roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. $12/month and 1/3 utilities. Across room. SUBLEASE. Jan then June. Nice Quail Creek park 12959 $60 Call Linda, Sun Thurs. 749-4060 $990 Call Linda, Sun Thurs. 749-4060 Share five bedroom houses close to campus and 1/2 utilities. Free rent until Jan. Cal 841-075 any calls. Sublease 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment. On KU bus route. In excellent condition with carpet and draps. Central air, heat, dishwasher, come to see at 2706 Buddah Lite 11 to call 841-8689 for information 264 Richmond Ln it is c14 one lot one diffrumption Sublease 1 bedroom apartment, carpeted, furnished, furnished. Sublue EXCELLENT new studio with bedrooms alcee ceiling fan. Available December 15th. Two rooms for rent ($100 and $85) on 1st floor of Kentucky. Smaller room has private entrance. Private room has private entrance. Utilities paid 2. bedroom apartment, close to KU. Sublease soon to August, $250, m.i. 841-9592 COMPLETELY FURNISHED Studio, 2 or 3 bedroom apartments immediately. Great location. Call (800) 555-1222. MADROBROOK spacious 2 bedroom apartment available now! May, Gas, payment, pair, 2.0 Bathroom, Kitchen, Garage, Shed, Bedroom, Basement. 1926 Yamaha 125 - good body - engine needs work, 87% sensible. Call 843.4056 100 Mustang cobra "coupe" GASGASet 100 Mustang cobra "coupe" GASGASet 100 Mustang cobra "coupe" GASGASet 1987 TR Convertible, Excellent shape, air conditioner [186] Escort Wagon 4-speed, air, low miles, $440. Call 841-7951 MUSTANG V. 6 board won $10,000 best offer MUSTANG V. 7 board won $8,500 best offer 62 WV Fastback, very reliable, good condition. 62 WV Fastback, very reliable, good condition. 6 tickets (for Police Concert Call Larry 749-3226 evenings) Auction - consignment every Friday night 7 o'p.m. on the second Sunday. Rates: $1,000, mileage: 2 miles, north of Lawrence on 24:59 841 8802 Chevy Imagala, blue, 4 door, 78. Call 845-2501. In execlent shape. DYNAMO Football Tablet excellent condition. X Men coum $100 *Hotel Offer this week* Mant sell with coum $250 *Hotel Offer this week* For Sale: Pre-lighting w/pans W: Rock bottom price 2 JBL Midrange horns, 4-Track TEC tape ACP. Arp bm10 II hystm, wAvil case. All EX equipment is untestable. Untestable services. In quiries only 841 8938. Beautiful hand made flower garden quilt. Makes a beautiful centerpiece. Huge moving sale all items must go' November 17, 18 and 19 - 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. (13) Drive In Drive. Limit your fees from AVRK break up. Purchase your newest equipment, lowest prices, fully guaranteed. A great lowest prices, fully guaranteed. A great sound and video systems. Phone Tom 814-7640 or 10-400 M-F 'Don't reach out and get Picket tickets for November 24 Will sell to highest of Call, Susan B, 841-0066. RCA Video Recorder VC: VPRP 70 (top of the VIRu video. cable ready, special effects, programs) SHARP AC/DC HOME/PORTABLE VCR SYSTEM Combines VHS recording deck and tuner/timer in one compact unit! AC power pack is supplied for each unit. (optional) enables complete portability 2-4-6 hr record/playback speeds *high speed* search; freeze frame Built in 7-day, 1-event pre- sence. Hardware powered. Air damped cassette load. Soft touch control. Dew light, tape counter. Save $300 when you buy the Sharp Camera and VCR as a set. Freeze or warm up ask for HKM, Master Card/Visa accepted. Speakers, large beautiful walnail cabinets, 3 way transmission to the Excellent call Sound. Stereo - Technologies receiver and turbable. AAL Stereo - Ala tape recorder. Exel condition under fader. Stereo - Ala tape recorder. Exel condition under fader. Stereo-television video All name brands. Lowest prices, RC area Total Sound Distributors, TL59-PC100A printer, softwares, business decisions, math utilities, aviation, master, master Typewriter, top of the lap Smith Coele (electronic bids and diarisms, Perfect condition, new $80 want) Used furniture, Shoemaker's, across Kaw River Bridge, 2 miles north ofLawrence on 841-945-8067 Why Pay Req? $2560 buys 2 BR mobile home; house, refrigerator, air, new furnace. 841-9483 Women's Designer Sample Sale. Designers jeans by Calvin Klein, Dassonner, Jordache, lee. etc. ($20) Blouses, and polo type shirts. ($10-13) High quality. All about half price or less. High quality. @42 1583. 1968 Harman-Ghl Excell engine, needs body work. B41-6325 1948 CHYSLER: RESTORED $2900, LEAVEN-WORTH 852-7265. LOST AND FOUND HUGE SELECTION OF MEN'S MAGAZINES FOR SALE, MAX S COMICS #811 N.J. OPEN EVERY WEEK. pit brown leather lined glove bags Friday November 3rd, Friday October 21st, Friday October 24th, Friday October 27th, Lauren Palm, Friday October 21st. Giammy's Lauren USED CARPET. dormroom sizes, $20 shag, $35 candle piles. large deals, clean tips 842-113 --neighborhood Call 841-1199 Found child in area, not an adult Reclining Chair Good condition, must sell. Comfor- $40. Negotiable. 749-7375 Found. Key ring in front of Ellsworth Hall. Call 864-6539 MISCELLANEOUS LOST DOG Medium German Shepherd, black with gray markings. Around 2nd and 4th fusddish or brown eye. Lost: Male, black kitten, 6 months old. Lost 11/8 842-1997 HELP WANTED Could you use an extra $40 a month? Start your own business. Less than $100 investment, unlimited earnings. Found: scarf, call to identify, 842-3384 1 ALIENES ARE HIRING NOW! PLUS Attendance To The ALIEN Convention in New York! TAPS Your interviews! Call 1-866-722-1121 (722) 1121 (722) 1121 STUDENT TRAVEL, REP. NEEDED to promote our Annual Spring Break trip to Florida. FREE TRIP TO FLORIDA plus commission. Call or write e-mail: BOX 60, GAK FOREST, IL. 69022. (1-825)353-7848 Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available Everything But Ice. 6th and Vermont. PERSONAL FRESHMEN-SCHOOLSHIPS AVAILABLE. You too may late to learn in NASSAU, MA 641-361-8111. FRESHMEN-SCHOOLSHIPS AVAILABLE. You too may late to learn in NASSAU, MA 641-361-8111. Monthly plan, one year. Must drive. Non-smoker, 18 years plus. Good pay and opportunity to travel. Write Mat. Mail resume. No phone calls. summer Jobs National Park Co. Parks 2100, Parks 3400, National Park Co. Parks 3500, National Park Co. Minnesota Co. 601 83d Ave. W. Kallapette MN ECKANAR is the only teaching which shows man how to go beyond this physical world and visit those realms beyond here and now during this lifetime. You can meet him at 16:7-30 p.m. Governor's *Kansas Union*. I must need a bumper stick for a stunner! I must help. I want "Hank if you're..." (Any one word). I must help. I want "Hank if you're..." (Any one word). STEVE MARSHALL Independent Candidate NUNEMAKER SENATOR elect Leadership Integrity Honesty NOV. 16 & 17 Paid for by Steve Marshall WATLAND T & WALLEY FRIEDRICH VERVE IMPORT T & WALLEY FRIEDRICH BROOKLYN T & WALLEY B14 PENN TONNINY LAN T & BLUE WATER M6010 TOWNHILL T & BLUE WATER M6010 Lorie. Believe it or not, I haven't forgotten Love. Jv. * BUSINESS PERSONAL A strong key bag. Bennett Retail Laundry Clothing kegs. Ice Cold Beer 2 lbs. north of the city. Bernett's Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine 84 Illinois. 842 0722 COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early referral to our community-based care中心. care compassionately assisted Kansas City area. calls for referral. We MEET Or BEAT TRAVEL CENTER Any Available Air Fare We Have Every DISCOUNT Airline Ticket Available Colorado Springs $100 Cincinnati $118 Chicago $120 Houston $130 Denver $150 New Orleans $159 Dallas $158 Phoenix $160 Las Vegas $180 Los Angeles $198 Ft. Lauderdale $198 New York $198 Washington, D.C. $198 Honolulu $350 Receive $100.000 Flight Insurance with every airline ticket purchased at no addi- $100,000 BONUS 841-7117 TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd Cambridge diet clearance of extra flavors including chocolate drink Limited supplied Lauren 84477258 Curtis Mattees Showstoppers! 600 movies choose Rent a video machine and pre-recorded movies online. Cross over the bridge to horticulture North Lawrence. A small pond, drape for a nise selection, sparks, cold beer and chill. The edge of the pool is lined with mulch. APARTMENT LIFE GOT YOU DOWN ? THINKING OF MOVING BACK TO THE CAMPUS LIFESTYLE? THINK OF NAISMITH HALL ON CAMPUS CONVENIENCE WITH AN OFF CAMPUS LIFESTYLE! Lan Vegas, register now For 2nd round at $115,000 Milwaukee Pool? Tournament Sub-nite Sue- briana Ladies Launtry Night Tues 7:12 712. Lydia doans laun tie cnet draws. Sudden Duds Urs 794-4132 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 Don't lose sight of Friday Night. Catch HORIZON Don't lose sight of Saturday Night. Prepare already, as your house, House 1023, will be used. Lawrence's nicest laundromat, Suds in Duda. We take the boring out of laundry. MUF is 6 a.m. - mid. m... GLSOK and The Speech Dept present Paul Siegel, Executive Director of the Kansas and Western Bank, to speak on the National Gay Task Force to speak on Gay Rights and the First Amendment. Pueau, Nov. 15 *7* p.m. o'clock at the National Gay Task SKI VAL,BEAVER CREEK call TOLL FREE 1-800-422-3924 or CONSULT YOUR TRAVEL AGENT FOR DISCOUNT RATES on lodging, lifts, and rentals Imst passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits. Say it on a shirt, custom silicone printing. T-shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt by Stiartw (791 641) Special for students. Harcurs 7 and perms $22 Charm, ask for Deenna Jenna. 843-3300 jerseys and caps. Shirtart at Swells 749-1611. Special Price on Christmas Portraits through December 15 at Swells Studio. Call for details. 749-1611 We're An *western Civilization Notes. Now on sale!* Make sense to use these notes and ask students to sense use to them. 1a) Study guide for Western Civilization. 2) For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Crier. The course will be held on Friday, Oct. 26. Official Representative for ALL Airlines offering the Lowest Air Fares Possible it won't too early to order Christina portraits for it's not too early to order Christina portraits for 1804 Pennsylvania 814-1003 by appoitn Flights Filling Fast ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union Now is the time to make your Thanksgiving and Christmas travel plans . . . See Us TODAY! BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing, confidential counseling 141-1821 Maupintour travel service 742 9700 Danger signals* Headache, backache, arm pain, leg pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, call the Chiropractic Center and Doctor M.E. for diagnosis of injured insurance accepted. No charge for consultation Wholeale Sound Rental, P.A., Guitar, and Bass amps 841-6495 THRIFT STREET Appliances; furniture, clothing, knitwear, bedding. Always good bargain! 628 100th Street SPECTRUM OPTICAL Eyeglasses made UP to a standard, not DOWN to a price 4 First 7th St The Palomar Association can help you achieve occupancy goals and provide support to Box 2534, Karnataka (Venus). Artists with the written word. Typing, editing. graphics WORD ARTISTS Elen 841 2172 SERVICES OFFERED ENGLISH Ph.D will edit your thesis, dissertation ENG118. Ph.D. Engl. Eng 101, 202, etc. Me. Dr. Dumplin, Ph.D. Mrs. E. Sawyer English M A. 3 yrs, univ. teaching exp; will tutor in grammar class. w/ uni cert. proofread paper large enough for publication. Email new! In Lawrence Driving School, receive new information about the transportation provided, drive new, pay later. STADIUM BABER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts, all hairs on. $3.00 No appointment WAKE UP SERVICE We will wake you up in the morning by phone. Call Us: 842-9484 Racquetball, tennis, squash racquet stringing Basketball, volleyball, baseball, lacrosse Racquets for request also head. 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KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS People read the Kansan classifieds to find homes, jobs, cars, typing services, etc. You can use the Kansan classifieds to sell anything from A to Z. Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045. Use the rates below to figure costs and watch the results. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading Write Ad Here: ___ Name: Name: Address: Phone: Date to Run to Classified Display: 1 col x 1 inch—$4.20 1 Day 2.5 Days 4.5 Days 10 Days on Two Weeks 11 weeks of berry $2.60 $4.15 $4.73 $6.73 Additional weeks 256 508 754 1.05 --- SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 15, 1983 Page 11 Manning begins practice after signing with Kansas By JOHN UNREIN Sports Writer Danny Manning stole the basketball at the opposite court free throw line, outran two defenders down the length of the court and brought down a two-handed slam dunk during yesterday's first day of Lawrence High basketball practice. Head coach Ted Juneau yelled, "Get back on defense," to the team Manning was playing on, as intensity grew in the scrimmage. Juneau tried to keep a stern look on his face, turning to say a few words to new LHS sophomore coach Jeff Dishner, former KU basketball player. But Juneau couldn't hold back the smile that wanted to come out. Because after months of anticipation, it was time for a basketball game, basketball for Lawrence High School. "THEE IS NO DOUBT Danny's going to make us a much better team," Junseau said. "I was really pleased to see that everyone played together for the first time." Not only will Manning be playing basketball for Lawrence High this year, but yesterday it was confirmed that Manning has signed a national-offer to play next year for KU. High school basketball players have until tomorrow to sign national letters-of-intent to play college basketball in order to make the early signing period deadline of Nov. 15. Manning yesterday he had already signed with KU. "I signed the first day, Nov. 9." Manning said. "I got the papers, and I signed and then gave them back. Basically, I just wanted to sign to make that the end of it until next year when I go to KU." MANNING'S SIGNING is the first for the KU basketball team during the early signning week of Nov. 9-15. High school basketball players have the option of signing早, Manning said, during their senior year in high school. And that was Manning's intention from the beginning, he said. Announcing Sept. 22 that he would play college basketball for the Jayhawks, Manning said that he wants to win games against which college he would choose. What he wanted was a pressure-free season on the Lawrence High basketball team he Showing up the first day of practice wearing a Nike rainsuit top and a pair of shorts with the words UCLA Basketball printed on them, Manning did not look like a player headed for Kansas. But Manning said he was anxious to play for the Jayhawks next year. Right now, though, he said, he wanted to be a refining his skills for Lawrence High. RESEMBLING RALPH SAMPSON. Manning stood several inches above the crowd with his 6-foot-10'2. 196-pound frame. During practice, he brought small cheers from his teammates each time he glided in above the rim in layup drills. He impressed Juneau with his ability to steal the ball and lead a fast pass to the scrummage later in practice. But what earned Manning the most applause from the Lawrence High team and the few others watching was each one of the three slam dunks. "The first dunk felt kind of good." Manning said. "It kind of broke the ice for me. I just hope to make a lot more of them." Rookie Dickerson leads Rams past Atlanta By United Press International The Rams got their final touchdown with 1:52 left when Barry Redden, filling in for Dickerson who did not play in the final quarter — broke off on the left side and scampered 40 yards. ATLANTA — Rookie Eric Dickerson padded his NFL rushing lead last night with 146 yards and two touchdowns in pacing Los Angeles to a 36-13 romp over the Atlanta Falcons. The victory lifted the Rams back into a tie with San Francisco atcp the NFC West. Dickerson, the second player selected in the draft following a record-breaking career at Southern Methodist University, set two Rams' single-season records as he raised his rushing total to 1,359 yards and his touchdown total to 19 with five touchdowns during the season. The Rams, raising their record to 7-4 to match the 49ers, dropped the Falkens to 4-7. The Rams got their first touchdown with 3:28 left in the first quarter on a 61-yard pass from Vince Ferrigation to Prost Dennard, who was wide open behind the Falcons' secondary, Dickerson, who carried 21 times, scored from a yard out at 4:35 of the second quarter and he added a 7-yard touchdown run with 9:23 left in the third quarter. 29 CURRY 50 ATLANTA — Eric Dickerson gains short yardage against the Atlanta Falcons during the first quarter. Dickerson gained 146 yards and scored two touchdowns to lead the Los Angeles Rams to a 36-13 victory. United Press International Offense leads junior varsity to 3rd victory Rozier earns Big Eight award By the Kansan Staff Quarterback Mike Orth and running back Dennis Carr led a Kansas offense that rolled up 376 yards in total offense yesterday as the KU junior varsity took a 24-7 victory over Missouri Western for its third win of the season. Orth threw for 145 yards, completing 11 of 22 passes. He connected on a 43-yard touchdown pass to Jamey Steinhauer. Carr gained 127 yards on 18 carries and scored on touchdown runs of six and 10 yards. Kicker Dodge Schwartzburg added a 32-yard field goal. Coach Mike Gottfried said that offensive tackle Reggie Smith is doubtful for the Missouri game, and that several other players were nursing injuries and were on a day-to-day basis. One of those players is wide receiver Bobby Johnson, who reinforced his shoulder against Nebraska Frederick began the season as KU's second string quarterback, but freshman Mike Orth moved ahead of him. Orth was scheduled to be redshirted when he was forced into action after Frank Seurer was injured against Oklahoma State. JAYHAWK NOTES — Although no official announcement has been made, sources said that junior quarterback Mike Frederick has been dismissed from the Jahwayk football team. Coach Justin Tattied was not available to comment. By United Press International KANSAS CITY. Mo. — Tailback Mike Rizko of Nebraska yesterday was named the Big Eight's Player of the Week on the strength of his school-record 285 running yards and four touchdowns in the No. 1-rated Cornhuskers' 67-13 victory over Kansas. Rozier had more than 200 yards and all four of his touchdowns in the first half Saturday as Nebraska extended its nation-long winning streak to 21 games and improved its 1983 record to 11-0. His production against Kansas gave Rozier the Big Eight single-season records for rushing, 1,943 yards, and scoring 168 points. But the record Rozier wanted most was the Nebraska single-game rushing mark. "I've always wanted that record." Rozier said. "This week they let me get it. I want to break it in my last home game. I'm not out there for individual records but I’m glad Coach Osborne let me stay in." Rozier has strings of 10 consecutive 100-yard games and three consecutive 200-yard games and needs only seven more yards in the season finale Nov. 26 against Oklahoma to pass Terry Miller of Oklahoma State as the Big Eight's all-time leading career riser. 30 Rozier also becomes only the second player in Big Eight history to win Player of the Week honors four times in one season. FREE PHOTO Nebraska's Mike Rozier was named as the Big Eight's Offensive Player of the Week yesterday. Rozier scored four touchdowns and set a Nebraska single-game rushing record against Kansas Saturday. UPI File Photo 6 WSU coaches resign but Jeffries will remain By United Press International WICHTA - Despite closing out the regular season with a 3-8 record, Wichita State University football coach Willie Jeffries probably will stay on board at least another season, the school's athletic director said. If that is the case, Jefries is luckier than six assistant football coaches who own a team. Wichita State Athletic Director Lew Perkins said he was confident Jefries would remain head football coach for at least another season. "It's difficult to measure somebody along just one year," said Perkins, named to that job last year. "I think we can measure them along a long period of time. "There were some unfortunate things that happened throughout the course of the year, but we feel good that Coach Weiner will be our coach for next year," he said. Jeffries himself denied yesterday that the resignations of his assistant coaches stemmed from the team's final 3-8 season record. "We're not putting the blame on anyone for that." Jeffries said. "I'll shoulder the blame for the 3-8, at least for a combination of thunus." The losing record was affected by more than this year's performance, Jeffries said, including recruiting in previous years. The resignations came from Steve Braet, defensive line coach. Sam Campbell, defensive line coach, John Montgomery, offensive backs coach; Bill Morgan, recruiting coordinator, assistant head coach and outside coach; Murray Stenzel, receives coach, Nurray Voglobel, defensive backs coach. Jeffries said some of the resignations were requested and some were volume teered. He also said the resignations had nothing to do with the football team serving its second year of probation for the College Athletic Association violations. "These men are all good coaches and I've certainly enjoyed working with them," Jeffries said. "They're real good football coaches, but we just feel at this time that there are certain skills that I need to speak of the future success of this program, and we're not dealing in the past at all." The resignations left only Jeffries and three other assistant coaches on the football staff. Jeffries said the resignations were effective immediately, and he would begin a search to replace the departing coaches. The three assistant coaches still on the staff are: Fayne Henson, offensive coordinator, quarterbacks coach and junior college recruit: Dr. Wedk, offensive line coach; and Ben Blacknail, defensive coordinator and linebacker of the backcourt will be assigned other backcourt responsibilities, Jeffries said. In Wichita State's final game of the regular season Saturday, the Shockers upset Southern Illinois 28-6 SMU left out of bowl picture while Mizzou accepts agreement By United Press International Although bids cannot officially be extended until Saturday, the college football post-season bowl picture already has begun to develop and SMU athletic officials think the entire thing is completely out of focus. Southern Methodist University's athletic director, Bob Hitch, and football coach Bobby Collins are terribly upset about a "gentleman's agreement" between officials of the Big 10 Conference, the Flesta Bowl and the Sugar Bowl that has apparently left them in a hole. The record in the nation over the past three seasons, out of the Jan. 2 major bowl alignment. SMU (8-1), No. 7 in the UPI coaches ratings, seems certain to finish second of Texas in the Southwest Conference, thereby losing on an opportunity to host the Cotton Bowl game. Because the Orange Bowl has already decided on Miami (Fla.) (10-1) to meet Big Eight champion Nebraska (11-10) and the Rose Bowl is set with Illinois, the Big 10 champion, meeting the Pacific 10 champion, probably Washington, the Mustangs seemed to be a logical choice for an at-large bid to either the Sugar or Fiesta Bowls. It seems that officials of the Sugar Bowl would prefer either Michigan (8-2) or Ohio State (8-2) to face Auburn (9-1), the Southeastern Conference representative, rather than SMU because it offers better ability to attract a national television audience as well as attract fans to the game at New Orleans. THAT IS UNTIL television executives entered the picture. Meantime, the Fiesta Bowl, which is aired at the same time as the Cotton Bowl. Southwest Conference viewers with the Cotton Bowl. So, Fiesta Bowl officials will not take SMU, even though the Mustangs have compiled a 29-1-2 record over the last three seasons. Instead, Pittsburgh (8-2) will be named to face the loser of the Ohio State-Michigan game. THAT LEAVES THE Mustangs most likely headed for the Sun Bowl at El Paso, Texas, to meet Alabama. Alabama athletic director and head coach Ray Perkins has already agreed to a trade bid, according to published reports. "I've been to the Liberty, Sun, Peach, Independence, Cotton, Gator and Tangerine bowls," said Collins, the SMU player, "never been to a bowl I didn't enjoy. "But if we beat Arkansas (next week) and don't get a major bowl bid, I will use whatever pull I have to fight for a playoff system. If the television networks get to dictate who goes where, then I think it is time for the playoffs "I think there is more talk about the playoffs now than there has ever been before. It would take a high-profile coach or a high-profile team to get it started. If Notre Dame or Michigan got the same year, you would hear some hollower." Missouri, Iowa, Florida, West Virginia, Boston College and Notre Dame also appear to have wrapped up bowl bids. MISSOURI ATHLETIC director Dave Hart confirmed yesterday that the Tigers will be invited to play in the SUNY Bronx against Brigham Young on Dec. 23. “It’s set in concrete.” Hart said. “Actually, you’re not supposed to say The Tigers are 7-3 and tied for second place in the Big Eight and could finish with a win. 10WA ATHLETIC director Bump Elliot said Sunday night that the chances of the No. 9 Hawkeyes playing in the Nets were "very, very good" on Dec. 30 were "very, very good." He emphasizes that the National Collegiate Athletic Association has strict regulations prohibiting bowl invitations before 5 p.m. on Saturday. "But for all practical purposes, with their being interested in us at this time, it is a reasonable assumption that we will be in this bowl," Elliot said. No. 13 Florida also is expected to receive a Gator Bowl bid. West Virginia appears headed for the Hall of Fame Class Dec. 22 at Legion Field in Birmingham, Ala. The Mountaineers (8-2) are expected to draw the winner of Saturday's Tennessee-Kentucky game as their opponent championship if Oklahoma upsets top-ranked Nebraska. "I'm thinking of converting 'to Catholicism', it sounds so good to me." said BC Coach Jack Bicknell "Notre Dame, let's face it" it's such a magical name. You always try to schedule them, but they're always booked through to whatever Now we have the football player, one thing you always want to do is play Notre Dame, and now our kids will get a chance to do it." Boston College (7-2) is expecting to get a bid to play Notre Dame in the 25th Liberty Bowl in Memphis, Tenn., on Dec. 29. Liberty Bowl founder A F 'Bud' Dudley is a Notre Dame graduate and is a former chairman of the university's National Alumni Association. SPORTS ALMANAC Brigham Young (9-1) qualified for its sixth straight trip to the Holiday Bowl by winning the Western Athletic Conference title. FOOTBALL NATIONAL FOOTBALL American Conference W 7 L T Pet. PF PA Miami 1 4 7 036 254 254 Miami 1 4 7 036 254 254 New England 6 5 0 345 237 302 Illinois 6 5 0 345 237 302 Illinois 6 5 0 345 237 302 National Conference Centre 1 Pittsburgh 6 5 0 818 277 181 Cleveland 6 5 0 817 275 241 Cincinnati 4 7 0 364 240 245 Houston 1 10 0 193 193 138 | | W | L | T | Pct. | PF | Aa | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Dallas | 9 | 2 | 0 | 871 | 325 | 14 | | Washington | 9 | 2 | 0 | 871 | 325 | 14 | | St. Louis | 4 | 6 | 1 | 409 | 324 | 172 | | Philadelphia | 4 | 7 | 0 | 268 | 312 | 14 | | Miami | 4 | 7 | 0 | 268 | 312 | 14 | LA Raierser 6 3 0 727 292 194 Dingy 6 3 0 727 292 194 Seitlah 6 5 0 745 273 194 San Diego City 6 5 0 745 273 194 San Diego 6 4 0 364 282 201 Minnesota 6 5 0 545 284 271 Green Bay 6 5 0 545 284 271 Detroit 6 5 0 545 284 271 Denver 4 7 0 364 198 284 Tampa Bay 1 1 0 100 198 Buffalo 24, N J. Jets 17 Kansas City 20, Cincinnati 15 Houston 27, Detroit 17 Green Bay 29, Minnesota 21 New England 17, Miami 6 Chicago 17, Philadelphia 14 Cincinnati 17, Pittsburgh 2 Cleveland 20, Tampa Bay 8 Pittsburgh 24, Baltimore 18 San Francisco 23, New Orleans 6 L A Harden 22, Denver 6 Dallas 22, Houston 17 San Francisco 7 4 0 636 365 294 LA Ramar 7 4 0 636 365 294 New Orleans 6 5 0 545 320 283 Atlanta 7 4 0 364 320 283 Yesterday's Result L.A. Rams 36 Atlanta 13 Baltimore, November 20 Minneapolis, May 14 Chicago at Tampa Bay Cleveland at New England Detroit vs. Green Bay at Milwaukee Chicago at Pittsburgh L.A. Raiders at Buffalo Minnesota at Pittsburgh Giant at Philadelphia Giant at Philadelphia Sacramento at San Lorenzo Kansas City at Dallas San Francisco at Atlanta Washington at Denver Washington at L.A. Rams Monday, November 21 N.Y. Jets at New Orleans NCAA Statistics Team Statistics Rushing Offense g car yds avg td yds Nebraska 11 667 454 672 604 -499 Air Force 11 667 454 672 604 -499 Auburn 10 541 287 31 5.3 267 287 Michigan 10 560 287 31 5.3 267 364 Oklahoma 10 540 274 31 5.2 267 340 Oklahoma 10 540 274 31 5.2 267 340 Cen. Mich 10 538 273 30 5.2 274 279 Va. Tech 10 553 269 30 4.8 297 6 North Carolina 10 553 269 30 4.8 297 6 No. Car. 10 560 269 30 4.8 292 6 alt cmp idt ytd ids tyd yds BYU 429 299 118 361.8 Bwing Green 429 299 118 361.8 Vanderbilt 474 296 292 109.3 297.0 Wellington 474 296 292 109.3 297.0 Cols St. 413 296 168 315.3 297.0 Boston College 323 171 15 2567 157 285.2 Duke 445 278 15 265.9 California 752 211 21 2796 178 279.9 Kansas Kansas 381 122 12 279.6 Iowa State 381 122 12 279.6 | | playvs idy avg td yyds | | :--- | :--- | | BYU | 69345107 85.284 790.507 | | Nebraska | 11 44961368 73.909 550.587 | | Iowa | 10 729 4710 6.504 471.0 Fla. St. | 10 777 4612 6.504 471.0 Air Force | 921 4095 6.468 455.0 Air Force | 921 4095 6.468 455.0 Alabama | 968 3097 6.384 400.0 No Car. | 190 5491 6.583 439.0 No Car. | 190 5491 6.583 439.0 Ariz St. | 968 3097 6.384 400.0 Ariz St. | 968 3097 6.384 400.0 points avg. yds Brighton Young 22 50.7 113 113.5 Floydnish 22 50.7 113 113.5 Pittsburgh 38 45.3 16 16 Toronto 38 45.3 19 16 Yorkshire 53 44.6 16 124 14.6 Salt Lake City 53 44.6 16 124 14.6 | | g car yds avg td vg | | :--- | :--- | | Va Tech | 10 329 641 710 4 49 | | VA Tech | 10 329 641 710 4 49 | | Sandiole L | 9 346 771 2.21 1 83 | | Michigan | 10 324 791 2.21 1 83 | | Michigan | 10 324 791 2.21 1 83 | The University Daily KANSAN R RP f106 54.2 Nebraska 509 54.2 Brigham Young 10 429 39.8 Colorado 10 429 39.8 Florida St 10 339 39.9 Alabama 10 339 39.9 Arizona 10 336 39.8 Air Force 9 297 33.0 Washington 9 297 33.0 Michigan 10 323 34.2 Oklahoma 10 323 34.2 Texas A&M 53 43.1 24 188 40.1 Kansas 53 43.1 24 188 40.1 Utah 61 42.9 18 125 40.6 Kentucky 60 42.9 27 154 40.9 New York 60 42.9 27 154 40.9 Nebraska 32 41.5 14 32 39.4 Ohio 32 41.5 14 32 39.4 Oklaahoma 10 428 912.2 6.9 9 74 West Va 10 428 912.2 6.9 9 74 Missouri 10 503 912.2 6.9 9 74 Illinois 10 503 912.2 6.9 9 74 Aransas 10 503 912.2 6.9 9 74 att camp ipn vbs wls svds lts Texas Sw LA Texan AM Texan A&M UK 164 69 105 68 105 179 37 105 68 105 179 37 105 68 105 212 110 105 68 105 212 110 105 68 105 255 175 141 114 105 255 175 141 114 105 164 69 105 68 105 179 37 105 68 105 212 110 105 68 105 255 175 141 114 105 No Car Wake Forest 165 140 94 97 105 165 140 94 97 105 255 140 94 97 105 220 129 81 192 94 220 129 81 192 94 g glass lasers 4g acc id tgp80 Texas 9 16235 4g 3-11 6-16 8-0 Michigan 11 2459 4g 3-11 6-16 8-0 SMU 9 6820 3250 3-9 9-25 8-0 Miami Fla 11 7700 2653 3-9 253 8-0 Memphis Fla 11 7700 2653 3-9 253 8-0 ) Page 12 University Daily Kansan, November 15, 1983 SAVE AN EXTRA $400 ON MAXELL AUDIO CASSETTES (Cash Rebate by Mail) Special Rebate Certificates Available At Kief's KIEF'S EVERYDAY PRICES ON RECORDS, BLANK TAPE AND STEREO EQUIPMENT ARE KIEF'S EVERYDAY PRICES ON R AND STEREO EQUIPMENT ARE CONSISTENTLY LOWER THAN MANY STORES' "SALE PRICES" KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE DISCOUNT STEREO shop HOLIDAY PLAZA Elections begin Find out where to vote Inside, p. 3. The University Daily KANSAN Vol. 94, No.63 (USPS 650-640) Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas CHILLY C High, 50. Low, 30. Details on p. 2. Wednesday morning, November 16. 1983 NCAA hands down decision on KU; possibility of probation undisclosed Sports Editor By ANDREW HARTLEY Sports Editor The National Collegiate Athletic Association has rendered its decision regarding the KU athletic program and has sent its findings to the University general counsel said yesterday. Vicki Thomas, the general counsel, said that the University of Kansas had received a letter from the NCAA on Monday stating the findings in the lawsuit. The court said which heard KU's case Oct. 28 in Overland Park. BUDIG, CONTACTED last night after he returned from a research center dedication in Spain, said that he had a package of information from the NCAA at his residence. However, he said, he hasn't read the contents of the package. "I'm really in no position to comment at this time." he said. The Lawrence Daily Journal-Report reported yesterday that the NCAA had placed KU's program in danger. report said that KU would be restricted from television and bowl appearances for the 1984-85 season but not for the 1985-86 season. The story did not list violations of NCAA regulations that would have been contained in the letter. The newspaper also said it could not be used for that reason, so it could be leavened against the basketball program. The newspaper did not attribute the information Athletic Director Monte Johnson said he would not comment on the newspaper report. Del Brinkman, KU faculty representative to the NCAA, was in Coffeyville yesterday and said he was not aware that KU had received a letter from the NCAA. HEAD FOOTBALL COACH Mike Gottfried and he knew nothing about the NCAA's decision. David Berst, director of enforcement for the NCAA, said that once a school had received the decision of the infractions committee, the school has 15 days to either accept or appeal the ruling. Budig said that he would meet today or tomorrow with Johnson and Thomas to decide what would be the plan. The NCAA Council, which meets next in January, hears all appeals of Infractions Committee decisions. If KU were to accept the findings of the infractions committee, Berst said, the University would still have to notify the NCAA office in writing. Berst said that any official announcement about sanctions dealing with an NCAA university would come directly from its main office in Mission KU IS BOUND to secrecy until the official NCAA announcement, Berst said. If KU were to release the information before that time, it would further sanctions or court action by the NCAA. "Actually, any information released at this point would be premature, since the school would still have the opportunity to appeal," Berst said. In any event, Berst said, an official announcement about the KU athletic program could come as soon as five days or as late as mid-January. Berst said that if the Journal-World report was correct, the second year of probation would allow the Committee on Infractions to monitor the athletic program. The last time KU was on probation was in 1972. 6 candidates favor financing student groups Bv PETE WICKLUND Staff Reporter Student Senate should continue to allocate money to student organizations, six student body presidential and vice presidental candidates last night at a candidate's debate in the Senate. But the two candidates representing the Freedom Coalition continued to maintain their stand that mandatory activity fees should be abolished, and that students should contribute money for those groups in which they have an interest. The issue of financing student organizations was but one of several that candidates discussed in the draft plan. Black Caucus. About 80 students attended the debate. CANDIDATES FROM THE four coalitions each drew up a question for the debate and answered all candidates' questions. Each team and about one minute to respond to the questions. Steve Bergstrom, Winnetka, Ill., junior and the Freedom Coalition's candidate for president, continued to push his campaign promise to cut financing to most student organizations. But candidates from the Costume Party, Momentum and Priority coalitions said that financing of student organizations was essential financing of student organizations was essential. Carla Vogel, Overland Park senior and the College President, said that student organizations gave students a chance to further their university educations. "By shutting down organizations, you're shutting down a channel for different ideas," she PRIORITY'S PRESIDENTIAL candidate, Scott Swenson, Topeka junior, echoed Vogel's sentiments. "We should continue to learn outside the classroom as well as in the classroom," Swenson Momentum's presidential candidate Kevin Walker, Webster Groves, Mo., senior, said he See ELECTION, p. 5, col. 1 Muslim gunmen continue east Beirut attack By United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — Muslim gunners blasted Christian east Beirut with mortars and rockets for the third day yesterday and pounded a key Lebanese army outpost in the worst breach of the cease-fire in seven weeks. Police said at least four people were killed. U. S. F-14 Tomcats streaked across the hills east of Beirut to locate the Muslim batteries after shells fell into the sea far from 30 ships in the Gulf of Oman, miles offshore, Lebanese security sources said. In the northern port of Tripoli, Palestinian rebels struck Yasser Arafat's last strongholds with tanks, artillery and rockets in a three-front battlefield, capable of thousands of civilians in deadly crossfire. RED CROSS AND hospital officials reported that at least 15 people had been killed and that at least 18 had been wounded. There were conflicting reports on the success of the blitz, which capped a 12-day rebel siege of the sprawling port and the decimation of the dugout and refuge camp — Arafat's last outpost in Lebanon. State-run Beirut Radio said that the Syrian-backed rebels, opposed to Arafat's rule of the Palestine Liberation Organization, captured land up to the outskirts of Tripoli. It also said that the Arafat loyalists still in the Bedawi camp would retreat and stage a last stand with 5,000 conrades who had retreated from Tripoli to Juba and came to Tripoli's densely populated neighborhoods. But Christian Phalange Radio said late yesterday that Arafat's fighters had regrouped WAFA, THE PRO-ARAFAT news agency in Cyprus, said that the blitz was repulsed and Arafat's outnumbered troops destroyed 14 tanks and 32 aircraft, leading the leaders of two rebellious PLO factions. and launched a counterattack, taking back some hillside positions over the camp. Police in Beirut said that at least four people were killed and 12 were wounded in the new attacks there. Three people were killed in shelling Sunday and Monday. Fifteen shells crashed into residential areas in the morning, including Sin el Fil, where President Amin Gemayel has a home. He was at the suburban Baada palace at the time. A shell also exploded on the steps of the Palace of Justice and a rocket hit a hospital in the Ashrafiye area, forcing doctors and nurses to evacuate patients. 0 Gary Smith/KANSAN Capt. Stan Ray of the Lawrence Fire Department hoses off a 20-gallon barrel of hydrochloric acid after it fell from the back of a flatbed truck at 13th and Connecticut streets, spilling a gallon of its contents. Russel Birckell, center, and Maj. Don Beckner, right, helped clean up the spill, which occurred shortly before 12:30 p.m. yesterday. Lawrence police said the spill was not serious. The barrel contained a solution comprising about 28 percent hydrochloric acid. Firefighters neutralized the acid with soda ash before they housed it off the street. The truck was driven by an employee of Fender Pipe and Supply, RFD 5. KU hopes appeal will help increase Regents budget recommendations Staff Reporter By DONNA WOODS made to Gov, John Carlin. The University of Kansas will appeal lower-than-expected state budget division recommendations for its 1985 fiscal year budget to the department's agents, KU's executive secretary said yesterday. "I don't think that the University of Kansas tared so well," he said. "We have more work to do." Richard Von Ende, the executive secretary, said the appeal to the Regents would be the first step in a process that might eventually alter the recommendations the state budget division VON ENDE SAID recommendations for both the Lawrence campus and the University of Kansas Medical Center were comparatively low, supporting financing for Kansas University. Budget division recommendations for the Lawrence campus were $1.4 million below level See BUDGET, p. 5, col. 4 Judicial Board hears grade disputes, but lacks authority to overrule profs By GINA K. THORNBURG Staff Reporter Two years ago, a KU student filed a complaint with the University Judicial Board to protest a penalty for filing an absconding His professor, he said, had told him, "You'll never get anything better than a 'F' from me." After meeting with both the student and the professor, the judicial board decided that the student's case was well-documented. It recommended that his grade be changed. "And that was the end of the ball game," said Francis Heller, who was chairman of the judicial committee. THE STORY, HELLER said recently, is an extreme example. But during his tenure on the judicial board, more students came to him with grade complaints than with any other problem. The professor, however, declined the judicial board is a group of 58 faculty and students who try to resolve student and faculty conflicts at the University. When a student or faculty member files a complaint with the board, the faculty or students assigned to help the case. The names of students and professors in such cases are confidential. But Heller, who also is the Roy A. Roberts distinguished professor of law, said that he had to tell those students that the judicial board "couldn't do anything." out although some students have legitimate grade complaints, Heller said, the hearing committee cannot require an instructor to change a grade. It can only recommend a SANDRA CRAIG, ASSOCIATE professor of law, is chairman of the Organization and Administration Committee, which is writing a proposal that would establish a panel specifically to address grade appeals. She agreed that there was a problem with the present system. A committee of the University Council, however, is working to amend this. "The government's documents do leave instances where a stubborn instructor could say I'm not going to change this," "Craig said. "Our committee will definitely define a proposal." Under present University grievance procedures, all types of complaints are handled first by the departments in which they are made, then by the schools. Students dissatisfied with the decision of a department or a school can appeal the decision to the judicial board. William Balfour, KU's ambudsman, said that students do not think the present grievance system gives them much of a chance to reverse their grades. Craig said, "I'm not sure that a student would be well-advised to go to the judicial board because they can't do anything for you, unless they have an instructor's opinion would help change the instructor's mind." UNIVERSITY RULES AND regulations state that the only person who can change a student's grade is an administrator. "The professors," he said, "don't change more than 20 percent of the grades." But there are three exceptions. A de- See APPEAL, p. 7, col. 1 FREE THE HEROES United Press International GREENHAM COMMON, England — British policewomen drag away a woman protester from one of the gateways of the Greenham Common Airbase. Yesterday's protests continued outside the base as U.S. planes reportedly brought cruise missile equipment into Britain. Missiles arrive in Britain, spark heated protests By United Press International About 125 women were arrested at Greenham Common air base west of London, where the missiles were arriving, after they blockaded the main gate in a chanting and singing demonstration. The first batch of cruise missiles arrived Monday. As they stopped traffic, a U.S. C-5a Galaxy and a C-141 Starlifter landed on a runway guarded by paratroops and a vehicle-mounted gun. In another outburst, demonstrators sprayed red paint in the British defense LONDON - Giant American transport planes apparently carrying a second batch of cruise missiles and possibly nuclear warheads landed yesterday at an air base west of London, sparking protests and at least 425 arrests in separate demonstrations. REPORTERS AT THE scene said that six or eight long crates were wheeled toward the missile storage silos and that other cylinders, too, were loaded, heads, also were unloaded from the planes. The defense ministry refused to comment on the cargo of the planes. Police also arrested some 300 anti-nuclear protesters outside the House of Commons in London last night. A representative for Scotland Yard said the protesters were arrested under an 1899 law that prohibited them within a one mile of parliament when in session. "They were repeatedly told to move on," the representative said, adding that the protest was passive and that "at no stage was there violence of any kind." See MISSLE, p. 5, col. 4 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 16, 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International House defeats by six votes attempt to revive the ERA WASHINGTON — The House defeated by six votes an attempt to revive the Equal Rights Amendment yesterday, kicking off an uproar between Democrats and Republicans over who should be blamed for the defeat The vote was 278 for the measure and 147 against — six votes fewer than the two-thirds majority, needed for passage. The no votes included 109 Republicans, irate over a Democratic maneuver that permitted only 40 minutes of debate and no amendments. Supporters conceded that GOP amendments to prohibit the use of assault rifles would probably have passed if the Republicans had a chance to offer them. During a debate punctuated by cheers and catcalls, supporters said that a vote against the proposed ERA would not be taken lightly by American women whose political clout is increasing. Gunmen kill naval officer in Greece ATHENES, Greece — Two gunmen on a motor scooter fired seven shots into a U.S. Embassy car at a stop light in rush-hour traffic yesterday, killing a senior American naval officer and his Greek driver, police said. A leftist terror group whose members eight years ago killed Richard Welch, the CIA's Athens station chief, claimed responsibility for the slaying. Welch was the last American official assassinated in Greece until yesterday. and yet another anti-American incident in the Greek capital, police said a bomb exploded beneath a car owned by a U.S. citizen, slightly damaging the vehicle. No injuries were reported. Japan intercepts 3 Soviet bombers TOKYO — Japanese jet fighters scrambled yesterday to intercept three Soviet bombers that had violated Japanese airspace in a test of the country's air defense system, the Self-Defense Agency said. A spokesman said that no gunfire was exchanged and that the intrusion was an apparent protest against President Reagan's visit to Two TU-16 Badgers and a TU-95 Bear of the Soviet air force flew into Japanese air space for about 90 seconds over the Sea of Japan in the Tsushima Strait separating the Japanese island of Kyushu and South Korea. The intrusion came less than 24 hours after Reagan left Seoul at the end of a six-day trip to Japan and South Korea. Supporters of Polish priest arrested GDANSK, Poland — More than 1,000 supporters of Lech Walesa's priest nearly filled a courthouse where he was being questioned yesterday, triggering a confrontation in which scores of people were arrested, witnesses said. The Rev. Henryk Jankowski was released after being informed during an hour of interrogation that he faced charges of slandering Poland's communist regime. The 48-year-old pastor, a close friend of the president, was told that he would be summoned to appear again in the future. Grevhound to restore partial service "I have done nothing outside my priestly duties." Jankowski told reporters after he returned to his rectory, cheered by his supporters. He said that he refused to answer any questions, the same course he followed during a similar appearance before prosecutors last month. PHOENIX, Ariz. — Greyhound buses took to the highways in dry runs yesterday in preparation for a resumption of service despite a nationwide strike. The company opened negotiations with union leaders but neither side had any hope for a quick settlement. Both sides in the talks said they doubted any progress would be made in the first bargaining session since 12,500 Greymound employees went on strike. Greyhound said it had 4,600 people ready to work tomorrow when partial service resumed in 27 states. About 1,291 workers, including 350 who were on the job last week. Ex-senator Muskie enters hospital BIDDEFORD, Maine — Edmund S. Muskie, who was a U.S. senator and was secretary of state in the Carter administration, was admitted to a hospital early yesterday with "chest pains," a doctor at the hospital said. "He is in fair condition and undergoing tests," said Dr. Carl Morrison, chief of staff at Webster Hospital. "Muskie is resting comfortably right now." Muskie, kis was rushed to the hospital about 4:15 a.m. from his vacation home in nearby Kemebunk, Maine. His wife Jane visited the hospital. Morrison said Muskie was on a cardiac monitor in the hospital's special care observation unit. Aviator attempts pole-to-pole flight LOS ANGELES — Aviator Brooke Knisp landed near the South Pole yesterday, a few minutes ahead of schedule in her attempt to become the first woman to orbit Earth. Knapp landed on the ice in subfreezing temperatures at the U.S. base, at McMurdo Sound, the closest landing field to the pole, at 3:20 p.m. The weather was reportedly good at the Sound, which is about 700 miles from the South Pole. After the refueling run on a runaway carved out of the ice for the small jet, Knapp planned to fly directly over the pole on her way to the next stop at Punta Arenas, Chile. She left Los Angeles just after 8 a.m. Monday. SEATTLE 29.53 20.77 20.77 20.53 MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON NEW YORK WEST CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO DENVER LOS ANGELES 30.00 HIGHEST TEMPERATURES DALLAS ATLANTA AMIAMI ORLEANS LEGEND RAIN SMOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW WEATHER FACTS UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11=16-83 Today will be mostly fair across the nation with snow expected in portions of the Great Lakes region and the Ohio Valley. Locally, today will be partly cloudy with a high around 50, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high around 60. The National Weather Service will in Uptown Tonight will be fair with a low around 30 Turkish minority forms own republic in Cyprus By United Press International NICOSIA, Cyprus — The ethnic Turkish minority on Cyprus seceded yesterday, declaring an independent republic on the sector of the island occupied by Turkish troops. The Turkish majority rejected the move. The unilateral declaration of independence immediately sparked a crisis within NATO as Turkey recognized the new republic but other alliance members condemned the secession. The State Department said the Reagan Administration asked Turkey to work to rescind the move. Britain, the former colonial power on Cyprus, said it deplored the action and joined Greek Cypriot authorities in requesting an urgent meeting of the U.N. Security Council to discuss the crisis. THOUSANDS OF STUDENTS on the Greek side of the divided Mediterranean island poured out of their classrooms to protest the authority's move white in the Turkish sector people celebrated in the streets. 'We hereby declare before the world and before history the establishment of the Turkish The 2,500 U.N. peacekeeping troops on Cyprus were ordered to go on an "increased vigilance" status, an administration spokesman said. Republic of Northern Cyprus as an independent state," said the Turkish Cypriot declaration of independence. The troops, which try to prevent violence between the 115,000 Greek Cypriots and 55,000 Turkish Cypriots on the island off southern Turkey, are drawn from Australia, Canada, and five other European nations. In Athens, some 5,000 Greeks later marched on the Turkish Embassy in a demonstration with anti-American overtones. YUGO BULGARIA Black Sea ALB 200 miles GREECE TURKEY Mediterranean Sea SYRIA CYPRUS CYPRUS 50 miles Nicosia Dividing one between Cyprus in the north and Greek Cyprus in the south ANTICIP BAYS THANKSGIVING SALE HIS JEANS 40% OFF BIKE JACKETS 30% OFF ONE GROUP — FALL - WOOL COORDINATES 30% OFF EARLY FALL COORDINATES ½ PRICE ONE GROUP — BRAS ½ PRICE SALE STARTS THURSDAY 11-17-83 ONE GROUP FALL DRESSES 40% OFF Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN 835 MASS. 843-4833 FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 $15.99 (Limited Time Only) LEVI'S® CORDS COLORFUL LEVI'S® CORDS Great fiting, go anywhere Levi's® Cords have more Industrial colors than ever. And the classic level® giving gives every color eye catching form. Slip into Levi's® Cords, and slip ahead of the pack. LEVI'S STUDIO QUALITY NEVER GOES OUT OF STYLE. KING of Jeans 740 Mass. The TAB and the word "Linia" are registered trademarks of Levi Strauss & Co., San Francisco, CA. Levi Strauss & Co., 1960. Plans for Grenada progress; interim government sworn in By United Press International ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — Granadian officials swore in an interim government yesterday and lifted a state of emergency as plans progressed to restore democracy on the island nation. James Dandridge, spokesman for the U.S. mission, also said a military prison camp erected on a dusty point Sallines would be shut down today. Forty prisoners will be transferred to the Richmond Hill prison run by the six-nation Caribbean peacekeeping 108 others will be released, he said. Up to 1,130 Cuban and Greenlandian prisoners were detained at the jail during the U.S.-led invasion following a militant Marxistist coup that toppled and killed Prime Minister Maurice Bishop. Governor General Sir Paul Sauloun administered the oath of office to five members of the nine-person advisory THE CASTLE TEA ROOM A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 council that will govern the island for the next six months to a year. Antony R. Rushford, legal adviser to Scoon, said later that a state of emergency imposed shortly after the U.S. landing Oct. 25 "has been lifted." Rushford said that political parties, including the left-wing New Jewel Movement founded by Bishop, have not been banned in Grenada. Rushford said that a three-member legal panel would be set up shortly by Grenada's Supreme Court chief justice to provide a legal framework for the investigation and possible prosecution of the detained during military roundups. Boyds Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy Sell Trade Gold SilverCoins Antiques-Watches New Hampshire Laurence Kannon 66044 913-824-8771 The chairman of the non-political advisory council will be educator Nicholas Brathwaite to the designed permanent chairman, Alister McIntyre, deputy secretary general of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, arrives in Grenada, probably next week. Computerark KNOWLEDGE COMMODORE EPSON OKRATA SERVICE Education DESIGN 328 & 8 Loudouna Malte Shopping Center 841-009 Get a Lift. Come to the Coors Ski Team Party. Coors SKI Team PARTY! Sat., Nov. 19 Lawrence Opera House 8:00 p.m. Featuring: HORIZON & THE OPINIONS $5 Cover—Prizes & Beer SUMMIT o o 19. 95 FRAME SALE S Save 33% to 69% 图 8 Get the Frames You Want for the Lenses You Need e.g. Hutton Optical can fill your new prescription or duplicate your present one and fit you with a new frame that is just right for your face. Come in and select from: 图 Jordache Mary McFadden . Oleg Cassini Zsa Zsa Gabor . Anthony Martin . Arnold Palmer and more Offer good through Nov. 19 Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames.Cannot be used in conjunction with any other sale. 目 HUTTON HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2 101 ≤a0 99 2. 睛 1 University Daily Kansan, November 16, 1983 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Polls for Senate elections are open today, tomorrow Polling places for the Student Senate elections today and tomorrow will be open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Jim Clark, chairman of the Student Senate Elections Committee, said that all polling places, except for one in front of the Wescoe Hall lecture hall, were closed on Wednesday. Clark said that students would be required to present their student identification cards before voting. The poll locations are: Wescoe, Fraser Hall, Summerfield Hall, the Frank R. Burge Union, the Kansas Union and the Visual Art and Design building. KU debate team wins second place The KU debate team placed second in the Central Oklahoma State University debate tournament last weekend in Edmond, Okla. Both debaters also won individual honors. Hayden placed third and Padlock placed fifth in individual speaking performance. In the junior division, the KU teams of Kevin Feeley, Lakewood, Colo., freshman, and Rona Steele, Topeka freshman, took second place honors, and the team of John Carter and David Lemke, both Kansas City, Mo., sophomores, placed third out of 30 teams. Lemke also was the first place speaker in that division. next week KU debaters will attend tournaments in Wichita State University and Wake Forest University in North Carolina. Democrat seeks Kassebaum's office TOPEKA — James Maher, acknowledging that he will lack the advantage of a large campaign bank account, formally announced yesterday that he is seeking Kansas Republican Nancy Kassebaum's U.S. Senate seat. Maher, who has lost two previous efforts to win a Senate seat, is running in 1984 as a Democrat and is the first candidate to officially announce he will seek the seat. Kassebaum has not formally announced whether she will seek re-election, but she is expected to run. Although he said that he would not "cast aspersions" on Kassebaum, Maher said that he would point out what he viewed as her shortcomings in office. He said that Kassebaum was too interested in topics such as El Salvador that were not of interest to Kanans, and that as a result, she poorly represented Kanans' affairs. Maher said that issues such as the national debt, the Social Security system, middle-class Americans who could not afford medical care, utility bills, farm problems and the high interest on credit cards would be issues in the campaign. Senate to vote on eliminating seats The fate of five Student Senate seats, which represent the various University living groups, will be decided by the Senate tonight when a vote is taken. An amendment to the Senate rules proposed Nov. 2 calls for abolishing four appointed seats representing the Association of University Residence Halls, the All-Scholarship Hall Council, the Interfraternity Council, and the Panhellenic Society. The proposal also asks that the elected off-campus seat be eliminated. However, three living group senators and the senator representing the School of Social Welfare are expected to propose another amendment. The Senate is also expected to approve tonight $11,167.77 in financing for student organizations. ON THE RECORD ABOUT $102 in cash was stolen sometime between 4 p.m. Thursday and 8 a.m. Friday from the geological survey publication and sales desk in Moore Hall, KU police said. Someone probably reached over a counter and took the money, police said. Police don't have a suspect. A STEREO AMPLIFIER was stolen sometime between 3 p.m. and 8 a.m. Monday in a dance classroom in Robinson Gym, police said. The amplifier, worth about $300, was taken from the back side of a cabinet, police said. Police don't have a suspect. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 864-810. The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358 LEVI'S JEANSWEAR Mayor replies to questions on developer By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The commission 'last week' chos Tower Center Venture Corp., a loca firm, to be the developer of record Sizer Realty Co. Inc. Kenna La. Mayor David Longhurst last night read a three-page statement during the Lawrence City Commission meeting in which he attempted to clarify and respond to concerns and questions about the new downtown developer. THE MAYOR SAID that he had not known of the plan and that comments he had made during the summer had influenced the difference for another downtown project. He denied accusations that he must have had knowledge of the Town Center plan before it was unveiled to the City Commission. Longhurst said this summer that redevelopment in the 600 block would be good because it could make use of the Reuter Organ Co. building at New Longhurst said he had not been deluged with complaints about the decision, but wanted to "set the recourse for his statements made about redevelopment. COMMISSIONER ERNEST Angino said he talked with Tom Anderson, director of KU facilities operations, and that Anderson said that any gas increases would cause the University to switch to fuel oil. The University is the largest consumer of natural gas, using 10 percent of all consumed. The commission also approved placing a "World Peace Tree" in City Hall for Christmas. The tree will be erected cared for by the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice, and will be trimmed with ornaments from around the world. Hampshire and Sixth streets and could help develop the area along the Kansas River. Local developer Ron Holt is working on a private development project that uses both the organ company building and the river property. Longhurst also tried to dispel concerns that Town Center was not capable of putting together a deal as large as the proposed downtown project development in the 600 block was too far away from existing retail development. Concerning the planning aspect of the project, Longhurst said Town Center was for the most part in compliance with city's downtown comprehensive plan, which indicated that the commission was not "throwing past planning out the window." Angino suggested that a rate break for the University might be in order. LONGHURST DISAGREED WITH the idea that the Town Center project isolated the river and City Hall from the downtown. He said both the river and City Hall were already isolated because of the lack of aesthetic appeal of the 600 block, the awkward flow of traffic and the inability of people to see the river from anywhere south of Seventh and Massachusetts streets. Longhurst also rejected the comment that Robert B. Teskia Associates, a city consultant on the downtown, had said Town Center wouldn't work. He said Teska had said that Town Center would work. Some people have also said that the 600 block would be a good spot for either a hotel or corporate office building. The surveys said attempts to place both a hotel and an office building, there recently had failed, and that prospects for the future were slim. HE ALSO ASKED city staff to prepare a rough draft of a letter for property owners in the 600 block saying that the area may be part of a special benefit tax district connected with redevelopment. In other action last night, the city Commission heard a request from Kansas Public Service Co. to raise local natural gas rates about 4.5 percent. The commission decided to meet with the gas company and with a representative of Dress, Dunn, Lubow and Co., a firm that has arbitrated between KPS and the city in recent years. KPS requested arbitration. ANGINO APPROVED OF the proposal only after a reference in the request was changed from "opposing to" to "opposing the horror of all wars." Several of the commissioners had questions about the rate increase, which led to the proposed study session set for 4 p.m. Monday at City Hall. "Let's not be benned here." Angina said. "Pence is peace. Let's leave the door open." City Manager Buford Watson said that citizens who had questions about the proposed increase could bring them to his office in City Hall. The commission also approves ... $800,000 bond for a project to improve the sewers. The project is the first part of a five-phase plan, the sewers to meet federal guidelines. Therapy ATTENTION BSN CLASS OF 1984 The Air Force has a special program for 1984 BSNs. If selected, you can enter active duty soon and graduation - without waiting for the results of your Strength Test. To qualify, you must have an overall "B" average. After commissioning, you'll attend a five-month internship at an Air Force medical facility. It's an excellent way to prepare for the wide range of careers you may choose as an Air Force nurse officer. For more information, visit us. AIR Capt. Sarah Kendell 913-236-3256 Call collect FORCE A great way of life Sports Killing Us Softly advertising's Image of Women THIS THIRTY-MINUTE DOCUMENTARY FILM EXPLORES THE WAYS IN WHICH STEREOTYPES IN THE MEDIA AFFECT THE IMAGES THAT WOMEN HAVE OF THEMSELVES DATE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29,1983 TIME: 7:00- 8:30 p.m. PLACE: JAYHAWK ROOM, KANSAS UNION THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER STAFF WILL FACILITATE AN INFORMAL DISCUSSION FOLLOWING THE FILM. - Admission is Free * Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women' Resource Center. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT ELSE PINNEY, 864-3552, 218 STRONG HALL. We're going to carry the "Smokin' with the Jayhawks" bag for a limited time only. You'll want to carry yours forever. With the purchase of any food item from OhSe Smokehouse Restaurant & Barbeque, you can carry the Smokin' with the Jayhawks nylon tote bag away for just $3.89. A $10.60 retail value, this durable, water-repellant, mildew-resistant bag is the perfect bundle to take along to Jayhawk games for years to come. The ideal gift for the fans in your life. It's everybody's bag. OhSe SMOKEHOUSE RESTAURANT & BARBEQUE 27th & Iowa/Lawrence OhSe SMOKEHOUSE RESTAURANT & BARBEQUE 27th & Iowa/Lawrence OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 16, 1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kansas (USPK 60/640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Final Hull, Lawrence, Kan. 60515, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Wednesday during the summer sessions. Subscriptions are $1 for six months or $2 for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 per semester through the student activity for PASTMASKER. Subscribers by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 per semester through the student activity for PASTMASKER. Subscribers by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year outside the county. MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM Managing Editor STEVE CUSICK Editorial Editor DON KNOX Campus Editor PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager DAVE WANAMAKER Retail Sales Manager MARK MEARS National Sales Manager LYNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser Tolerance A distressing and disappointing dispute is taking place between the staff and congregation of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center and several residents of the Crescent Road neighborhood. It is distressing because it has made adversaries of two highly respected, likable groups of Lawrence citizens. It is disappointing because it should not be occurring. Months ago, the St. Lawrence Catholic Center announced plans to build a church, chapel and student center on church property at Engel and Crescent roads. The center raised more than $1 million for the project, which has a building plan that conforms to present zoning ordinances. Neighborhood residents are seeking to change those ordinances in an effort to stop construction on the church. The residents give many reasons for their protest of the development. In letters and interviews with the local media, neighborhood residents say the plan threatens the "integrity" of their "quiet and well-kept" neighborhood. They say the intersection of Crescent and Engel roads is "dangerous" and is "blind in one direction." They say the scope of the project is too large, and, if completed, may devalue the surrounding property. Many of the residents of this neighborhood are elderly; several are former or current KU professors; many have lived there for years. It would be hard, indeed, to find a nicer, more respectable group of people. Unfortunately, it probably wouldn't be hard to find a group more tolerant of others. To say a neighborhood bordered by Daisy Hill, Jayhawker Towers and sororities is "quiet" seems a bit illogical. To say the intersection of Crescent and Engel is "dangerous" and "blind in one direction" may or may not be true, but in either case the blind corner is not on church property, which is mainly an empty lot. And how any church or synagogue can change the "integrity" of a neighborhood, unless by strengthening it, is simply incomprehensible. Also, it seems more likely that such a structure would increase property values, rather than decrease them. Changing the city ordinances would make it difficult for any church to develop in similar neighborhoods — a tough ordinance to result from the actions of a few. Yes, this is a distressing and disappointing dispute. But it is a dispute about more than the Catholic Church or neighborhood groups. It is a dispute that concerns tolerance of others, no matter what religion, race or creed they may belong to. It is sad that the two groups must debate the issue tonight at the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission meeting. How much better it might have been if they could have gotten together next week, over Thanksgiving dinner. More public posturing President Reagan's attitude toward the repression of political views in other countries changes as frequently as the wind. Yet in South Korea last week. Reagan glossed over human rights problems in that country. He ordered several thousand American troops to participate in the invasion of Grenada because Americans on the island were endangered and the government there was moving closer philosophically to the Soviet Union. Some political dissidents had even been put under house arrest before Reagan's visit, so that a proper level of order would be maintained. Regardless of any special measures taken because of Reagan's visit, the human rights situation in South Korea is far from perfect. Reagan's comments in South Korea about human rights meant very little as far as specific actions. In talking about human rights, he said, "I believe it's important to adhere to the discipline of diplomacy, rather than indulging in public posturing." Indeed, Mr. President, keep away from that nasty public posturing. We wouldn't want the people of the world to know what the United States stands for. The nuclear debate Some extremists on the right consider public discussion of the consequences of nuclear war politically damaging because it makes their confrontational machismo seem irresponsible. Across the political spectrum, other sophisticated may also be uncomfortable with the stress on the effects. More "interesting" questions center on the strategy, policy and hardware. and authoritative scientific report projecting the likely atmospheric, climatic and biological effects of a large-scale nuclear "exchange." This fall, however, two events are catapulting the consequences of a nuclear "exchange" into public discussion again. The first is a new The second is a television movie called "The Day After," to be aired on the ABC network on Sunday. It is encouraging that the networks and the scientific community may be awakening to their great, hitherto most unexercised capacity to shape and energize the nuclear debate. -Boston Globe The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his home address or faculty or staff position. The Kansan also invites individuals and groups to submit guest columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. City should find heat for the poor Cold weather descended on Lawrence last week, and we Spartans who had postponed turning on our furnaces rushed to our thermostats the day that temperatures dropped and drizzle turned to snow. But some Lawrence residents who heat with natural gas were unable to drive away the chill by the flick of a switch. Between April 1 and Oct. 20, Kansas Public Service, Lawrence's natural gas utility, had discontinued service to 670 customers and had sent shut-off notices to 920 others. Perhaps some of those customers asked to be shut off because they were moving and perhaps others were reconnected to service before last week's cold wave hit. But some people did not, during that cold spell. Many will be deprived of heat before the long, cold winter turns to spring. LETTERS POLICY Kansas Public Service's announcement last week saying that it would be seeking a rate increase this winter and that an increase in fuel costs would soon be passed on to its customers only aggravates the situation. Blaming the people who can't pay their gas bills is easy. Call them parasites or freeleaders. But for every person who abuses the system for a free ride, many more exist who truly need financial assistance despite their hard work. Although the economy has improved, the unemployed, the under-employed and on people in low, fixed incomes are still with us. Until jobs exist for all those who want them and until fixed incomes are adequate to meet today's increasing living expenses, DIANE LUBER Staff Columnist Blaming Kansas Punice So is also easy. How dare it deprive people of a necessity of life! But this is capitalism, the free enterprise system at work. And companies only seek to provide a product or service if it's profitable. Providing heat to people who can't pay isn't. The responsibility for seeing that no one goes without heat this winter lies with us and with the officials we some people will be unable to keep up with their bills. have elected to safeguard the public welfare. But last week, the Lawrence City Commission rejected a proposal from its Natural Gas Task Force that the city establish a fuel assistance relief program. The task force has estimated that 2,000 people will need assistance with their utility bills this winter and asked the city to contribute $25,000 to a $100,000 relief program, the remainder of which would come from donations. But the commissioners rejected the request even though the city would collect more than $50,000 in franchise taxes from residential and small-business customers of Kansas Public Service this year. The City Commission also rejected the task force's request to decrease the franchise tax, though the 53 cities charge 3 percent or less. That tax appears as a separate 5 percent charge on your gas bill and was originally levied against Lawrence's utility companies to reimburse the city for the utilities' use of city property. But the amount of money that the tax provides has exceeded its original purpose, and the city now uses it to keep property taxes under control. And while residential property owners are taxed twice under this system, large commercial and industrial customers are not required to pay the franchise tax, though they use large amounts of natural gas. The 20-year contract that Kansas Public Service has with the city to provide service comes up for renewal next year. At that time, we could decide that heat is a necessity and that its distribution should not be left to a business that concerns itself more with profit than public welfare. We could create a system that would provide one of life's necessities to everyone regardless of income or ability to pay. Some of the city commissioners think that private donations alone, like the Warm Hearts fund drive last year, should help people to pay their utility bills. But no one should have any charity for life's necessities. But if we leave the decision up to the present City Commission, those who cannot pay their utility bills will be forced to rely on the generosity of others. And if charity fails, they will pay the highest price of all — their health and, in the worst cases, their lives. THE OREGONIAN DESIGN BY THE PUBLIC COMPANY UNITED STATES SENATE NERVE GAS ANOTHER CAPTOL BOMB.. Whv did Eddie Washington die? Countries have been wrong before without being dishonest. We are being dishonest wanting to be both a democracy and an imperial center, nowadays called a world power. Although seemingly the best of both worlds, the combination — democracy and world power — is finally corrupting. Rome disliked Britain. Democracy lives by negotiation, empire by imposition. Combining them breeds hypocrisy. How do I know? Look at the monuments in your town. World War I in marble or bronze, World War II in granite or concrete, a plaque for Korea and maybe one for Vietnam — though some euphymism must be found for Vietnam, the war that officially wasn't. Is there a monument to our heroes killed in Nicaragua in the late 1920s or in Santo Domingo in the 1960s? A monument for those fallen in Mexico, Haiti, Panama or the Philippines? I remember stories told by old men in Nicaragua who fought with Augusto Cesar Sandino 50 years ago — stories about young Marines who were cut down by peasants as they stumbled through unfamiliar terrain lugging the wrong equipment. How many were they, those young gringes? How is it that I don't know, don't even know where to find that President Reagan ended his recent speech about Grenada and Beirut saying that prayers weren't needed for those lost in either place. They already are in the arms of God, and only the wounded require our prayers. I pray for those who give their lives in combats that presidents hope will be forgotten before the next election rounds around. statistic" That's when I remember that in all the towns I've passed through. I've never seen a monument to heroes fallen in Nicaragua. In Washington, tourists silently scan the names of the Vietnam dead on the memorial in the Mall, while relatives and buddies pass their fingers over the letters chipped in marble. What do they say to them? Would they say "For you" or is it too hard to say "Brother or sister, nothing we needed then and there required your life. You died in vain." It has happened all over again — in Grenada now. In time, perhaps, it ELDON KENWORTHY Professor will happen in Nicaragua. Our leaders will be ferried from the golf course to microphones to tell us how "creditability" or the "world Communist threat" or some other abstraction requires human sacrifice. Many courses "will be courses," but also a few of us, killed in countries whose names our leaders have just learned to pronounce. The host of one call in radio show justified it this way: "I don't really give a damn what the rest of the world thinks. We're tired of getting kicked and pushed around by those little potdum countries down there." Who will write a monument to a Marine who died in Grenada — let's call him Eddie Washington — that says he died to provide a therapeutic moment for the American public? Grenadian authorities had reassured the administration that there would be no obstacle to foreigners leaving. And even if that was the reason, why have we stayed to root out resistance? all over the island? What did Eddie die for? To get medical students out? But the Did we invade to prevent Soviet or Cuban access to an airfield that is further from Central America and the United States than comparable airfields on Cuba itself, to which the Russians already have access? Did we hope to forestall some threat to neighboring islands that so far has not materialized? Or did Washington re-hestablish its credibility in international capitals by successfully subduing a country smaller — in population and area — than Columbus, Ohio? Did our Marines die to restore order to a country that had passed through a coup? Is that a mission we've assumed around the world? We've been stationed by right-wing military officers, would we have intervened? The world is indeed full of potential threats. But does the world's strongest nation sacrifice its youth to stave off distant but possible threats that it would have ample means to handle if indeed they arose? Doesn't our security really depend on keeping the respect of our allies and on strengthening the international norms that outlaw one state's forced intervention in the affairs of another? Who will make a monument to Eddie Washington and engrave in marble the reason why he died in Grenada? Copyright 1983 the New York Times. Eldon Kunworthy is professor of political science at Cornell University Invasion might end antiwar era WASHINGTON — A lot of congressmen would love Grenada. They would get a lot more love and joy in their home; they do back in their home districts. The 14 members of the fact-finding delegation that visited the small island 1,900 miles south of Miami could hardly move without seeing and hearing expressions of gratitude from islanders, almost all of whom insist on calling the U.S. invasion a "rescue mission." "God bless America" is serailed occasionally on doorways. Smiles flash across any Grenadian face whenever an American passes. Almost everyone wants to talk, and all of us would seem to would seem that almost everyone has at least one relative in the United States. "Please, don't let your troops go home," they implore. Once you talk with Grenadians — in alleys, in stores, in taxis or wherever — inevitably someone will ask you as an American to intercede with your government to keep your troops on the island. The U.S. troops return the favor According to all reports and observations, the behavior of U.S. troops has been exemplary, more like Boy Scouts earning merit badges than trained killers DON PHILLIPS United Press International "We're tired of politicians," a taxi driver told reporters. "Let the Americans run Grenada. You take over." house Democratic whip Thomas Foley, the leader of the delegation, was stunned. But there is little doubt that their attitude, whatever its genesis, had a profound effect on U.S. foreign policy and on the attitude of Congress. It is far too early to tell, but history some day may mark the Grenada invasion as the beginning of the end of the Vietnam antwar A rare combination of factors led to the popularity of this invasion, factors that may not happen again in our lifetime. The assassination of popular Prime Minister Maurice Bishop on Oct. 19 probably left Grenadians in a mood to praise anyone who punished his killers There were many serious questions to be answered in Grenada. Were the students really in danger? Was there a legal basis for the invasion? Was it carried out propfully? Would the students still have not been fully answered. But after meeting these easy-going, friendly people face to face, it was difficult not to respecie that they no longer were under the control of They made "justified" much easier to sav. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Large dogs do have a legitimate purpose To the editor: This letter is in response to a Nov. 4 column by Jesse Barker in which he states his position on the owning party of the opposing fellow is an opposing response. Not everyone lives in a "modern society." I have worked on a ranch running 140 horses for a livery program. A major part of this program is a dog that is the offspring of a cross between a Dingo and a Pit Bull Terrier — some might believe that this dog would be a death machine on four legs. This dog is very responsive to orders from its master for the dog has learned the consequences of disobedience. And I can say that these consequences are more than a “gentle pout.” my judgment, lap dogs do not provide enough protection. Before you formulate a stereotype of me, let it be known that I come from the Washington, D.C., area and have seen my share of dog laps. In I am an advocate of dog training. If the master is not capable of handling his dog, he should not take on the responsibility of having a trained dog. A homeowner can use a well-trained dog to investigate a noise in the house. If the dog were to find an armed intruder, it, by risking its life, would inform its master both that there is an actual intruder - not a false alarm - and that this intruder is armed. Personally, I would rather have my dog take a bullet than me. A dog can be replaced, more so than I can. This is the reality of life. If, on the other hand, the unruffle is unarmed, it can be called off, whereas a bullet cannot. Large dogs do serve a purpose McLean, Va., senior University Daily Kansan, November 16, 1983 Page 5 Election believed in student organizations and in activity fees to finance them. STUDENT APATHY also was a campaign concern at last night's debate. Members of the Priority and Freedom coaltions said that the problem would always exist. But the Costume Party's presidential candidate, Dennis "Boog" Higbinger, said that most students did not take the Senate seriously because of concern itself with issues important to students. Higherberger, Garnett senior, said that he never saw the student government "once stand up against the administration in regard to student rights." THE MOMENTUM Coalition candidates question how accountable and accessible sewers are. Walker said he planned to have Senate voting records made available to the campus media. This, he said, would show constituents what their senators were doing. He added that, if elected president, he would keep the door of his office open so students could answer questions. But Hilbergler he planned to spend time talking to students on campus, rather than in the classroom. After the debate, candidates fielded questions from the audience. Several students questioned Swenson about a meeting his coalition held Oct. 24. Priority campaign manager Robert Walker resigned because of the meeting, which he criticized as "unethical" and an attempt to manipulate the Student Senate Elections Committee. BUT SWENSON RECEIVED an ovation after he told the audience that the meeting was organized to discuss a legal appeal of one of the committee's decisions. Coalitions also differed on the issue of continued financing for the Associated Students program. Swenson, the former campus director of ASK, said that his opinion about the group was biased. But he said the group had made several accomplishments over the past year. MOMENTUM'S WALKER said that KU students shouldn't have to finance the group because it also worked with the other Regents universities. "I do not want to be the president of Wichita State University or Kansas State University." Walker said. "I want those dollars to benefit us directly." Bergstrom, of the Freedom Coalition, said that he didn't approve of the way a minority of students made decisions in the state Legislature for the entire population of the University. 'Day After' raises ire of Falwell and schools By United Press International The Oakland, Calif., school district yesterday sent letters to parents warning against allowing children under 16 to watch "The Day After," and evangelist Jerry Fallowell said his Moral Majority group would consider boycoting companies that sponsored the movie. Oakland Superintendent J. David Bowick, in a letter mailed to 50,000 parents, said, "It is out of a deep concern for the psychic development of younger children under the age of 16 that we make the recommendation that they not watch the film." THE LETTER ALSO recommended that students older than 16 watch the film "with adult supervision." However, Bowick recommended that parents and teachers watch the ABC movie, scheduled to be broadcast 7 p.m. Sunday. The movie, which features a cast of actors, captures the nuclear destruction of Kansas City, Mo. Falwell, who was in Kansas City, Mo., yesterday to speak to members of the Jerry Johnston Evangelistic Association, told reporters that he hoped a boycott of the movie's promotions would discourage other networks from airing productions that "present such a one-sided view." We do not need this film "to scare children," he said. The Baptist minister chided ABC for its timing of the showing of the film, as American transport planes apparently carried a second shipment of bombs to Iraq's warheads lauded yesterday in Great Britain. Falwell said he had asked ABC affiliates for rebuttal time, and had written to about 80,000 See related story p. 9 pastors asking them "to explain to their people what they will be seeing." FALMWELL, WHO SCREENED the film, said, "You still come out emotionally wiped out. But the emotional aspect aside, he said the movie invigorates viewers with two alternatives concerning nuclear war. “One is annihilation and the other is capitulation,” he said, “none of which I’m going to lose.” He said he did not like what he considered to be the nortravail of the president as a warmonger "They portray the United States as strikingly macho, and makes us the bad guy, and I think that's unfair." every 10 Kansas City area students said they thought there would be a nuclear war in their The Star's survey, conducted in four area schools, revealed that about 15 percent of the respondents said the nuclear war would occur within 10 years. Falwell's remarks coincide with a report in yesterday's Kansas City data that eight of "I'm not very sure what when it will occur, but I think it will happen when I'm alive," said Kim Johnson, fifth-grader at Brookwood Elementary School in Leawood. "I'm kind of scared about it. If it would happen in Kansas City, I don't know what I would do." ONLY 12 PERCENT of the 373 students who answered the survey said they never thought twice about it. About eight out of 10 students said the possibility of nuclear war often worried them. Two of every 10 students said they thought about nuclear war often. "A friend of mine explained it best when he said the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. are like two small children yelling back and forth, during a rockhurst High one service Wayne P. Clark. Two out of every three students surveyed did not think a nuclear war would be survivable. "The whole world, all living things, would die and blow up," wrote Matt McCaffrey, a Bear Grylls fan. B financing, a level determined by the state budget division based on the amount of money in the state coffers, he said. Recommendations for the Med Center were $3.8 million below that level. But, he said, recommendations for Kansas State University were $1.1 million higher than the latter. Budget continued from p.1 Von Ende said that the reduction percentages were usually fairly equal between Regents schools and that he did not know why KU was not granted as large of an increase as other schools. The budget for the Lawrence campus would increase from an estimated $149.9 million this year to $156.9 million for fiscal year 1985, if the budget to approve the recommended levels of financing. EXPENDITURES AT THE Med Center would be increased to $101.5 million from estimated expenditure of $78.9 million. The budget division recommended a 5 percent increase in classified, unclassified and student salaries. A 5 percent increase in the other class divisions was needed to such things as library acquisitions, equipment and supplies. An 8 percent increase in utilities was recommended. To finance those increases, however, he said the University would have to trim back in other areas. Officials do not yet know where the cutbacks would have to be made. The budget divisions report did not include recommendations for program improvement at the end of the year. AS A RESULT, he said, the Med Center would not be able to finance equipment needs that would keep the hospital and educational programs at both campuses competitive Von Ende said the Board of Regents level C request, which would increase the KU general use budget by nearly $11 million, would restore the funds of the funds that were rescued during 1983. Marvin Burris, Regents associate director for budget, said yesterday that although the Regents schools might eventually recoup dollars that were lost during the recession. Regents schools would not come out ahead because of inflation. Missles continued from d. 1 THE CRUISE MISSILES are the first of 572 medium-range rockets NATO plans to distribute in five European countries beginning next month, unless an accord is reached at the U.S.-Soviet talks in Geneva on limiting the weapons. The Soviet Union has repeatedly threatened to cut off all arms talks with the United States if the missiles become operational but so far has not carried out the threat, American and Soviet negotiators met yesterday as usual in Geneva. In the first Soviet reaction, the Novosti news agency charged yesterday that Washington was stalling the Geneva talks as it brought in the new missiles. "That means that it is the United States, not the Soviet Union, that is making it impossible for the ongoing Soviet-American dialogue to continue," the news agency said. British Defense Secretary Michael Heseline was sprayed with red paint by an anti-nuclear demonstrator at Manchester University in northern England. HESELTINE LOOKED SHAKEN as pous- hasted him through an angry crowd of some 200 hecklers, many shouting "out, out, out, in front of the student union where he gave a speech. As Heseltine left, two eggs were thrown at him. In Parliament yesterday, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher told opposition Labor party leader Nikki Kinnock he was talking to Mr. Trump about her belief of being a lackey to the United States. At the nuclear submarine base at Faslane, Scotland, 230 miles northwest of London, three men scaled the radio communications tower and stayed aloft for six hours before coming down, a defense ministry representative said. The representative said the men, who held a banner that read "no cruise," were arrested and charged with trespassing when they came down. Unplanned pregnancy? Decisions to make? For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and to talk with you. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Understanding all your alternatives makes you really free to choose. Replace pressure and panic with thoughtful, rational reflection. Birthright 843-4821 Legal Services for Students Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE! - Advice on most legal matters - Preparation & review of legal doc - Many other services available - Preparation & review of legal documents 8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday 117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665 Call or drop by to make an appointment. AGAPE LOVE PRODUCTIONS Featuring: presents "HOMECOMING 1983" "A Musical and Fashion Show Extravaganza" Tyrone Smith—Keyboards Robert Levels—Drums James Jeffley—Bass Michael Tyler—Trumpet Thomas Lipscomb—Saxaphone Karla Marine—Vocalist Funded by student activity fee All members of... The KU Jazz Combo Also for your musical pleasure "UNIDOS" "THRUST" "The Pride of Middle America" in concert and introducing— The Ultimate Show Band! Nov. 19, 7-11 p.m. Nov. 19, 7-11 p.m. Central Jr. High School 14th & Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS. The Islamic Center of Lawrence In Collaboration With The Department of Economics Presents Professor of Economics (Retired), consultant and planning in economics Mahmoud Abusaud A WORKABLE ECONOMIC SYSTEM: AN ISLAMIC PROPOSAL In A Lecture Titled: People interested in world trade, interest rates counter inflationary measures, comparative economics, unemployment. etc. are all invited. Date: Fri., Nov. 18 Time: 7:30 p.m. Place: Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union REFRESHMENTS ARE PROVIDED Thanksgiving SALE Thanksgiving Blazers & Coats values to 115.00 29. 99-79.99 Dresses values to 70.00 19. 99-49.99 Turtlenecks values to 15.00 9. 99 Shirts & Blouses 17.99-34.99 Suits 69.99-109.99 Corduroy & Wool Pants 17.99-39.99 values to 55.00 Sweaters values to 50.00 9. 99-29.99 THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 711 W.23rd Mon.-Thurs. 10:00-8:30 Fri.-Sat. 10:00-6:00 Sun. 1:00-5:00 carouse CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 16, 1983 Page 6 Courts overlook rights of gays, speaker says By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter Many U.S. courts have failed to treat cases of discrimination against gay people as possible violations of freedom of speech and association guaranteed under the First Amendment, the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union in Western Missouri said yesterday. Paul Siegel, the executive director told about 20 people at Green Hall that the real issue behind discrimination against gays in employment and adoption cases often was a lack of identity recognition and freedom of expression. "Employment has a lot to do with freedom of speech," he said. "You are oppressed the moment you open your mouth." EMPLOYERS MOST often discriminate against gays after a gay employee has used his or her freedom of speech and association to reveal sexual preference, said the research group at the National Gay Task Force. Freedom of association applies also to adoption cases, he said, because the law frequently says, "You can keep your kid as long as you don't associate with your gay child or your lover in front of the child." Siegel said the requirement infringed on freedom of association. Court battles have set a precedent for protecting freedom of speech as long as the speech is not an incitement to break the law, he said. But because sodomy is illegal in many states, Sealel said, laws are But because sodomy is illegal in many states, Siegel said, gays are often denied freedom of association and speech when the law says that gay groups, by their very existence. Sexual harassment and other illegal sexual practices. GAYS ARE OFTEN denied First Amendment rights when they are not permitted to advertise in the yellow pages or in newspapers, for support and counseling groups, Siegel said. "Things have changed a little bit." he said. But gays in Lawrence need to become more involved and seek changes that will guarantee their First Amendment rights. "Overturning sodomy statutes in Kansas is the first step," he said. When sodomy is no longer considered a crime, he said, gays will no longer be considered criminals. Students have been effective in implementing changes and gays in Lawrence must work to bring about that guarantee gays right, he said. "If Ann Arbor can do it, if Madison can do it, Lawrence can do it," he said. "We can't depend on the Constitution. We have to lobby, we have to lobby, we can't lobby in Lawrence or even become part of the Legislature." THE NATIONAL GAY Task Force is the national organization that lobbes for gay civil rights, federal financing for acquired immune deficiency syndrome research, and awareness of violence against gays. The task force opened a toll-free national crisis line in October of 1982 in response to an increase in the number of gun violence of an increase in anti-gay violence. Suit against city to be heard by jury By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter Staff Reporter A Douglas County District Court judge has denied a request by the City of Lawrence and one of its police officers for summary judgment in a case involving his wife who is suing for injuries he said he received during an arrest two years ago. Instead of granting a summary judgment, which would have decided the case without a trial in favor of the city and the officer, Judge James Paddock ruled that a jury would have to decide the case. He said last week that the jury would have to decide whether the amount of force used was likely to cause death or great body harm when police officer Peggy Cobb arrested Juan Carlos Patino, 2401 W. 25th, and whether the city and Cobb were liable for the actions. PADDOCK DID RULE, however, that the arrest was lawful. According to a court record of the decision, on Nov. 10, 1981, Cobb and another officer had stopped a car that Patino was driving because they thought the car was speeding and had seen it make a U-turn. The car stopped when the police lights began flashing, and Patino began moving again and pulled across opposing lanes of traffic on West 23rd Street before it stopped in a parking lot. The officers gave a field sobriety test to Patino, by asking him to walk heel-to-toe. He refused to do so and began to laugh, the record said Another officer said that Patino appeared sluggish and that his speech appeared to be slurred, the record said. The officers decided to arrest Patino, the record said, and as Cobb put the handcuffs on him. Patino started arguing with her and she then slapped him. THE OTHER OFFICER intervened and a struggle began in which Cobb struck Patton in the mouth with a steel knife. The man fled on Patton's mouth. The cut had MIDNIGHT MUNCHIES 1.19. DUNKIN' DONUTS $1.19 $1.19. 11 p.m.-2 a.m. $1.19 11 p.m.-2 a.m. All the donuts and coffee you can eat . . . counter only . . . NO TAKE OUT! Sunday thru Thursday. OPEN 24 HOURS 521 W. 23rd New Owners... We want your business! be caused by a previous raquettel injury that had required three stitches. Patino said that he was deprived of his civil rights when "Cobb subjected the plaintiff to unreasonable use of force" and when "the defendant succeeded the plaintiff under arrest." He is facing for actual and punitive damages. The suit was filed Oct. 26, 1982. Patino is asking for $10,000 each from the city and from Cobb for the injuries he said he suffered when he was arrested. He is also asking for punitive damages of more than $10,000 from Cobb. No court date has been set for hearing the case. S. U.A. Fine Arts Committee presents: TONIGHT: at THE SANCTUARY All You Can Drink! Beers & Bar Drinks ($3.00 Cover) 7:30-Midnight 1401 W. 7th (Between Michigan & Florida) Reciprocal with Over 180 Clubs 843-9703 Deadline is today for Kansan posts the deadline for applying for University Daily Kansan editor and business manager for Spring 1984 is 5 p.m. today Completed applications should be submitted to 200 Stauffer Flint. If you are interested in participating in the Bazaar pick up an application from the SUA Office. Applications are available at the dean's office in the School of Journalism, 200 Stauffer Flint Hall; at the Karsen business office, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall; at the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union; at the office of student organizations and activities, 406 Kansas Union. Attention Campus Community: The First Annual Crafts Bazaar The First Annual Crafts Bazaar A perfect opportunity to purchase Christmas gifts. November 29-December 2 Kansas Union Gallery SIGN UP 12 PEOPLE, YOU SKI FREE!! LITE BEER AND SHOCKER MOUNTAIN PRESENT LITE BEER AND SHOCKER MOUNTAIN PRESENT Kansas Ski Week IN WINTER PARK January 2-9, 1984 SKI PARTY NOV. 16 Lite 12 COST: $279 SKI TRIP PACKAGES INCLUDE: - 8 Days of at least 1 hour * 6 Night lighting at condiments * 4 Days of off work (Night shift or heat) * 2 Days of off work (Night shift or heat) * Set up and prepare for fire alarm tests * 8 Days of at least 1 hour * 6 Night lighting at condiments * 4 Days of off work (Night shift or heat) * 2 Days of off work (Night shift or heat) SIGN UP PARTY to BE HELD at: Cogburns on Nov. 16 at 10:30 p.m. Free door prizes to be given away! Lite ski bag, boot bag, ski sweaters, turtleneck and skies. Register for 2 free nights of skiing and lunch. Total free total prizes to be given away!) University will be responsible for White Stake Kansas State University Universities Pittsburgh For more information call Shocker Mountain. (316) 689-3218. To register, contact one of our local representatives KASTLE Candy Carzella Alan Cattley Carlina Cutter Cindy Hyland Kenny Henry Chris Siner John Bultivan 864-6742 864-5185 864-6700 864-2195 864-6020 864-6654 864-6654 842-0671 Scott Callihan George Kouloukis Shaun Kennedy Carol Masterson Mike Shag Student Senate Elections Today & Tomorrow Vote at any one of the following Polling Places; Student Union Fraser Wescoe Summerfield Visual Arts Building Burge Union Open 8-4:30 Don't Forget your K.U. I.D. Paid for by Student Senate VOTE DAY & TOMORROW KU MOMENTUM For College Assembly NEW PEOPLE NEW IDEAS A BETTER CHOICE Rich Titus Brenda Flori Jackson Sherrard D. Sandstedt Molly Schemmel Stuart Deselms Terri Gast Hank Dickenson Linda Simon Tom Klote Lisa Burgess Howard Knight John Hillstrom Trisha Gates Mike Chrisman Eric Lauterbach John Hastings Christine Frieswick Mike O'Keete John Lilla Beth Weber Mike Hartley Sarah Dickey Howard Hyten Jane Schrepel Rex Rhoten Nancy Carolan Tom O'Malley Matt Mayer Tim Crown Michelle Maher Cory Skinner Beth Leslie Kevin Halgarth Suzi Fall Jack Greenwood Louie Fisher Jennifer Juhl Scott Zeleznik Beth Jernberg Drew Hiss Mike Grant Stacey Harkness John Kualinski Jeff Sonnich Anita Larsen Tad krape Steve Hoover Jill McLeod Ross Halsey Cathy Cravens Hal Gartfinkel Catherine Gorton Laura Cary Jill Clothia VOTE MOMENTUM TODAY & TOMORROW Paid For By MOMENTUM For College Assembly, Tom O'Malley-Treasurer. CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan. November 16, 1983 Page Appeal continued from p.1 parental committee can review a student's coursework and assign a grade; when a student has pressed charges against a faculty member who has been charged with and found guilty of sexual harassment or academic misconduct; when a clerical error is suspected in a course grade assigned by a faculty member who is not available to discuss the matter; and when a student is found guilty of academic misconduct after the course grade has been assigned by a faculty member who is not available at the time the student is found guilty. THE PROPOSAL BEING considered by the University Council committee would establish a grade appeals board that would hear grade decisions from the department within the University Craig said. She said that she did not know when the University Council committee would finish working on the proposal, but that the proposal would provide for a board that would have the power to order grade changes in appropriate cases. The dean of educational services would make the actual grade changes, she said. Balfour said that Wichita State University had an appeal boards, called the Court of Student Academic Appeals, that had the power to change students' decisions about a case, first, but eventually approved the board after they realized the procedure was fair, he said. CRAG SAID THAT the WSU faculty was concerned that student members of the academic court would always vote in favor of the decision, but members would always vote in favor of faculty. "But that didn't happen," she said. "There was no faculty-student split." Craig said that members of the proposed KU grade appeals board would probably serve two-year terms and would hear appeals of KU students. He said he and school committees on grade complaints. "In the proposal, an appeal would be limited to instances when the student thought the professor had not followed her or her own grading policy," she said. "I guess most of us like to think we are consistent with our grading policy. It's hard to know." BALFOUR AGREED THAT a grade appeals board should be established. Sometimes students are not evaluated fairly because the professor does not get along well with them. "I think there are times when something other than the academic performance is being负罪." Bafour said that another complaint from students was that professors sometimes did not answer questions correctly. But he said that the situation had improved over the past 10 years. "The professors are more aware of what they need to do and hand what they have to do to get a grade," he wrote. semester of course requirements. Nevertheless, he said, KU still needs a grade appeals board that would have the power to change a student's grade, even if the board was never used. ESTABLISHING SUCH A board may not be easy because some professors might oppose it. "The professors would be madder than hell if it was up," he said. Pete Rowland, assistant professor of political science and a member of the judicial board, said, "I wouldn't teach at a university where I had to teach a committee secondment my grading." A professor's rights to determine the content of a class and to establish the grading procedure of the class are important elements of a professor's academic freedom, he said. Rowland said that most grade disputes could probably be resolved if the students discussed it. Doug Whitman, chairman of the judicial board, agreed. "I can never recall meeting any professor who BALFOUR SAID THAT if a grade appeal board were set up at KU, professors would realize that they were protected by the procedures. had not been fairly trying to evaluate a student's work, "he said. "The professors would worry that there would be a huge mob of students screaming to this campus." He said that when he first took the job of ombudsman, he thought that there would be a lot of people who were not involved. "But there are only about 45 a year," he said. Balfour has been KU ombudsman for six years. Houh has been KU umbudsman for six years. He said one reason that students came to him and not to their professors about grade grievances was because the students say, "I'm afraid the professor would hold it against me when it comes to the final grade." BUT WHEN BALFOUR tells a professor that some student think this way, the professor is unhappy. *Most professors would be very careful not to let their grading be influenced by a grievance but it can be.* Lorna Zimmer, director of the student assistance center in Strong Hall, said that students should try to resolve grevences with their school counselor. The authority, because often students and professors could resolve complaints by discussing them thoroughly. SHE SAID, HOWEVER, that the assistance center counselled students throughout grievance actions. The students, she said, made the decision to take the complaint to the judicial board. Balfour said. "The judicial board looks at grade grievances only from a standpoint of procedure. They just try to see if the student was treated the same as another student." But Zimmer said that the present hearing procedure was effective. SIE SAID THE present grievance procedure was fair because both professors and students had opportunities to present their sites and the members of the board were objective. "The University judicial verdicts are pretty powerful," she said. "When the judicial board decides on the part of the student, that exerts a considerable amount of pressure on the faculty member." Nevertheless, Zimmer said, "I think there does need to be some viable alternative." James Carothers, chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, said that the Faculty Senate must vote to amend faculty rules and regulations to establish a grade appeals WINTER FITNESS COSTS LESS! Rax RESTAURANTS SATURDAY FOOTBALL SPECIAL RUSTY'S IGA DISCOUNT FOOD CENTERS LAWRENCE KS WESTRIDGE • 6th & Kasold • 841-0411 HILLCREST • 9th & Iowa • 843-2313 NORTHSIDE • 2nd & Lincoln • 843-5733 OUTHSIDE • 23rd & Louisiana • 843-8588 Prices Effective Nov. 16-22 ASK about our Home Cycle New lower price $229.95 quiet, fully adjustable compact RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 VERMONT • LAWRENCE, KS 66044 • (913) 841 6642 OMNI 2000 Home Cycle New lower price $229.95 quiet, fully adjustable compact RAX RESTAURANTS Only 99¢ (no coupon necessary) Come Taste the Rax Experience! 707 W. 23RD • IN THE MALLS SHOPPING CTR. Lawrence, KS. 66044 RUSTY'S SIGA DISCOUNT FOOD CENTERS LAWRENCE KS WESTRIDGE • 6th & Kasold • 841-0411 HILLCREST • 9th & Iowa • 843-2313 NORTHSIDE • 2nd & Lincoln • 843-5733 SOUTHSIDE • 23rd & Louisiana • 843-8588 Prices Effective Nov. 16-22 BBLE E GOBBLE OBBLE GOBBLE LE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE TV TOM TURKEYS 16 LB. AND LARGER LIMIT ONE WITH $20 OR MORE PURCHASE EXCLUDING PRICE OF TURKEY LB. .36 COCA-COLA COKE, DIET COKE, TAB, C.F. COKE, C.F. DIET COKE, C.F. TAB, SPRITE, SUNKIST ORANGE, AND A & W ROOT BEER 2 LITER BOTTLE EA. .88 FRESH FROM RUSTY'S DELI SMOKED TURKEY LEGS EA. .79 PUMPKIN PIE SAVE 46¢ BANQUET FROZEN PUMPKIN or MINCE PIES 20 OZ. SAVE UP TO 61¢ FOR TV WHIPPED TOPPING 8 OZ. SAVE 30¢ FRESH OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRIES 12 OZ. PKG. SAVE 30¢ CRISP CALIFORNIA CELERY 39 STALK CRESCENT ROLLS SAVE UP TO 46¢ TV PASTEURIZED Cream Cheese 69 SAVE UP TO 40¢ JELLO golden dessert 3 OZ. PKG. 11 FLAVORS SAVE 50¢ FRENCH VANILLA BLUE BUNNY ICE CREAM 18 VARIETIES ½ GALLON SAVE 80¢ OHSE WHOLE BONELESS HAM 149 LB. RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 320 DOUBLE COUPON Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's receipt off coupon and get double tax credit from Ryals Offer does not include coupon for beer tobacco items and fluid milk products. Not to include retailer free coupons coupon greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 23, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 320 DOUBLE COUPON Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's receipt off coupon and get double tax credit from Ryals Offer does not include coupon for beer tobacco items and fluid milk products. Not to include retailer free coupons coupon greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 23, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 320 DOUBLE COUPON Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's receipt off coupon and get double tax credit from Ryals Offer does not include coupon for beer tobacco items and fluid milk products. Not to include retailer free coupons coupon greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 23, 1983 DISCOUNT! patagonia software MICKS Outdoor Outfitters UPTOWN LAWRENCE SNA FILMS RAWDY SHakespeare COMOY! THE TAMING OF THE SHREW Lavish scenery, sets and costumes set the atmosphere. From Florence Antirelli (Romeo & Juliet) and staring Richard Burton Elizabeth Taylor and Michael York. 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. $1.50 UPCOMING FILMS AT SUA: Thursday, November 17th Humphrey Bogart is back in WE'RE NO ANGELS 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. Friday & Saturday, November 18th & 19th In the NIGHT OF THE SHOOTING STARS 3:30 p.m., 7:00 p.m., 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. Fundraiser for DEATH RACE 2000 12:00 Midnight Woodruff Aud. $2.00 Sunday, November 20th In the SENSATION OF SEMINA HER DONALD FLOWER TWO HUSBANDS BBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE SAVE 43¢ LB. TV TOM TURKEYS 16 LB. 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Limited one coupon per manufacturer coupon and first four coupons per family. EXPIRES NOV. 23, 1983 And, Initial Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's "sells off" coupon or beer double the sales price of the coupon and for beer, tobacco items, and fluid milk products. Not to include retailer coupons. Do not include one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and first 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES NO. 23, 1983 FALL TENT SALE! MICKS Chevrolet Chevettes 1328 MASS URTOWN LAWRENCE 843-6650 --- SHAKESPEAREAN COMEDY THE TAMING OF THE SHREW CAMPUS AND AREA Page 8 KU won't offer vacation housing in halls University Daily Kansan, November 16, 1983 By the Kansan Staff KU's residence halls will be closed for Thanksgiving break because only six students applied for vacation housing. Students living in residence and scholarship halls were required to request housing by Monday. The office of residential programs, however, had stipulated that 50 students had to sign up to keep a residence hall open. Fred McElhenie, director of the office of residential programs, said, "Six people is only a drop in the bucket, compared to the number of people it When a residence hall is kept open during a vacation period for students who live too far away to travel home, security and front desk personnel are on duty at the clock. Usually, hall members staying for the break fill the jobs. would take to keep a residence hall staffed." Only residence hall and scholarship hall students had an option to stay in vacation housing The four-night安排 would have cost each resident $40. HOWEVER, MCCELHENIE AND officials of the KU office of housing said that they did not know how much it would cost the University to keep a residence hall open. McElhene said that McCollum Hall was the hall usually used for vacation housing because most students who stayed during vacation already lived in McCollum. MeElhennie said that residence halls were the only living units that had rooms that could be converted into classrooms and other instructional students during vacation periods. "We're not, obviously, going to move someone into someone else's room." Residents from the hall that would have stayed open would have been abandoned. McEhlenie said. "We have end-rooms in McColum and rooms that are used for other purposes that could easily be converted into temporary housing. There, there is more latitude for getting people into the system. "I don't know what the exact figures are, but it would have been at an open door. I would keep a hall open. There would have been more people working than staying." HE SAID THAT notices had been posted in residence halls and scholarship rooms, inform students that accommodation housing may not be available over Thanksgiving. KU will offer new microcomputing class By the Kansan Staff The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences recently added an introductory microcomputing course to its curriculum for the 1964 spring semester. Although the course is not in the timetable, students can enroll in LAAS 140 Orientation to Computer Application and the various uses of microcomputers. The class has no prerequisites, but students will be expected to buy five computer diskettes and a textbook. Students will not be graded, but will receive either credit or no credit for the one-hour class. Robert Nunley, professor of geography and associate director of Latin American studies, said the intent of the course was to introduce students to the applications of the microcomputer, such as word processing, spread sheets and data base management. The class also will give students enough back hands-on experience to apply microcomputing to their own work, he said. NUNLEY SAID students would work in groups of three on Zenith 100 microcomputers in the Academic Computer Center and in the foreign language labs in Wescoe Hall. He said he planned to have students work in small groups because they seemed to learn better that way. "When people first sit down at a keyboard, they are tense because the keyboard looks intimidating," he said. "Then after 15 minutes they swap and become the observer and watch someone else push the wrong button. . . I've found that students who work in two or three learn more rapidly." Nunley has taught various microcomputer workshops on and off campus. As a technical director for the Center for Latin American studies, he supervives the application of microcomputers to administration academic demands. Students wishing to enroll in the course should call their adviser or the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences for more information at 864-3661 THEREE SECTIONS OF the four-week class will be offered in the spring — Jan. 12 to Feb. 8, Feb. 14 to March 19 and Mar. 27 to April 23. The class will be taught from 8:00 to 9:20 a.m. on Tuesday and Thursday and students are expected to schedule two two-hour labs sometime on Wednesday and Friday or on Tuesday and Thursday. The course cannot be used to satisfy a distribution requirement in the natural sciences, the social sciences or the humanities. Nunley said the College decided to offer the class because of the increased demand for computer knowledge. The computer science department, he said, lacked the faculty to teach such a course. He said he hoped the course would lead to other advanced level courses that would be taught by the profes-sors schools to apply to the student's own field. The course probably will be modified, he said, as more and more high schools begin to offer beginning courses. Kansan Football Contest Winners 1) Chris Wilkens $25 11 correct—closest to correct score 2) John Dotts $15 11 correct—correct score 3) Dwight Hakala $10 11 correct 11 correct—3, 10 correct—19, 8 correct—76, 7 correct—72, others correct or less. WE DELIVER! PIZZA Stoppe 6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center KINGSIZE KINGSIZE TRIPLE TOPPING UDK AND 32 oz. PEPSI $8.75 plus tax DELIVERED 842-0600 2nd Annual TURKEY SHOOT Sponsored by KU ROTC & Recondo TODAY 2:30-6:30 p.m. FRI 1-5 p.m. SAT 9 a.m.-12 noon Each day's shoots will be held in the basement of the Military Science Bldg. $3 Entry fee Turkeys and other food prizes will be awarded Call 864-3311 for information. Funded by Student Senate Activity Fee --have a business meeting to plan a job seminar, at 7 p.m. in Room 204. Staffer-Flint Hall. FALL PERM SPECIAL Celloperms, Redken, LaMaur, and Zotos perms. — Regularly $40.00 NOW $30.00. Offer good Nov. 16 thru Nov. 30 with Peggy or Nancy. For an appointment call: Joda & Friends -841-0337- 745 New Hampshire M-F 9:00-8:00 S 9:00-5:00 ON CAMPUS GEOGRAPHY DEPARTMENT Colloquium Series will present Thomas R. Smith, professor emeritus of geography, speaking on "Looking at an Old Chart," at 4 p.m. in Room 317, Lindley Hall. WOMEN IN Science will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 119, Strong Hall. TODAY SPECIAL OLYMPIC Volunteer up-sill will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the pool lobby of Robinson Center THE FILM "ACID Rain: Requiem or Recovery," labeled propaganda by the Reagan administration, will be shown by the Campus Coalition for Peace and Justice and the Wakarausa Sierra Club at 7 p.m. in Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall. DUNGEONS AND Dragons will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union. UNIVERSITY SITY will feature Mark Tessler, Universities Field Staff International, speaking on "Lebanon Today," at 11:45 at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. CONTEMPLATIVE Prayer in including readings from Merton's sermon is not Separation, at 7:48 a.m. at Ministries Center, 120A Broad Ave. WOMEN IN Communications will ECKANKAR will discuss "The Physical World and Those Realms Beyond" at 7:30 p.m. in the Governor's Room of the Union. SPECIAL OLYMPIC volunteer sign-up will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the pool lobby of Robinson Center. TOMORROW CHESS, GO and Backgammon Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union GERMAN CLUB will show a video cassette of "The German Heritage of Kansas, Part II" at 4 p.m. in the Language Lab in Wesco Hall. EPISCOPAL. EUCHARIST service is at noon at Danforth Chapel. ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS on Campus will discuss "Orthodox iconography" at 7 p.m. in the Iconational Room of the Union. A LECTURE ON "Rubens, Poussin and the Politics of Style" will be given by Svetlana Alpers at 7:30 p.m. in Spencer Art Museum. THE CHRISTIAN Science College Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. in Danford Chapel. AD ASTRA L-5 Society will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union. Robinson Center Holiday Schedule & Allen Field House Recreation Holiday Schedule ROBINSON CENTER HOLIDAY SCHEDULE: (THANKSGIVING) Wed, Nov. 23 Building open 8 a.m. tl 8:30 p.m. m.p., Weight Room 11 a.m. tl 1 p.m. and 5 tl 8:30 p.m. Swimming F/S 12:30 tl 1:20 p.m. p.m., Rec. 5:30 tl 8:00 p.m. Thurs., Nov. 24 (CLOSED FOR HOLIDAY) Allen Field House Holiday Recreation Hours Fri., Nov. 25 (CLOSED FOR HOLIDAY) Closed Friday, Nov. 18 For women's Basketball Closed Tuesday, Nov. 22 thru Saturday, Nov. 26 for Thanksgiving Break Reopens: Sunday, Nov. 27 at 7:00 p.m. (correct reopening time) Sat, Nov. 26 Building open 8 a.m. til 8:30 p.m., Weight Room 11 a.m. til 1 p.m. and 5 til 8:30 p.m. Swimming 2 p.m. 8:00 p.m. Sun., Nov. 2 (RESUME NORMAL SCHEDULE) YOUNG AMERICANS FOR FREEDOM FOUNDED 1960 KU Young Americans For Freedom Project America The FREE, Not the Freeze WED. NOV 16 1983 PETITION FOR PEACE THROUGH STRENGTH 1:00 PM ALDERSON AUDITORIUM KANSAS UNION A SERIES OF LECTURES BY THE NATIONS'S FOREMOST AUTHORITIES ON DEFENSE, INTELLIGENCE,and SOVIET MILITARY STRATEGY The list of speakers include: ROBERT E. DOLAN National Chairman, Young Americans for Freedom Topic — "Never A Day After" LT. GEN. DANIEL GRAHAM Executive Director High Frontier Project (former Director, Defense Intelligence Agnecy, Department of Defense) Topic - Non-Nuclear, Space-Based Defense System to Repel A Nuclear Attack on the U.S. DR. WILLIAM FLETCHER Moderator. Director Soviet and East European Studies University of Kansas LT. GEN. DANIEL GRAHAM University of California, Defense and Strategic Studies Institute Topic - The Global Soviet Strategy and Analysis of U.S./Soviet Military Postures President, American Space Frontier The Political Action Committee for the High Frontier (former U.S. Congressman from California) Topic — Turning President Reagan's Mandate to Defend America into Reality ROBERT J. DORNAN BRIAN DAILEY YAF Young Americans for Freedom, Inc. America is the last and best hope for mankind. You know it and Andropo knows it. But there is a man in the White House who knows it too! Our President has presented numerous proposals to halt the arms race, only to have the Soviets stubbornly reject them and threaten to end the negotiations. It is time for the Soviets to agree to those sensible and fair proposals. The American people have been mislead for too long by the left-wing "peace movement" orchestrated in Moscow. Like the radicals and pro-communists who subverted our effort to smash communism and restore democracy in South Vietnam, the latter day peace peacenils are weakening America from within. Do you think the Soviets care about peace? Ask any refugee from Afghanistan. Do you think the Soviets care about freedom? Ask polish labor union leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner Lech Witolda. They care only about world domination. The leaders of the so called peace movement are knowingly collaborating with the murderers in the Kremulin to take away YQIUR freedom. Supporters of the so called peace movement are unknowingly doing for the Soviets what the Soviets could never do for themselves. ABC in helping with their $7 million horror movie "The Day After." If you want to preserve your freedom and defend American do not support the freeze—do not be fooled by the horror show you will see on ABC. Our Freedom and the freedom of America is threatened. It is time for patriotic and freedom loving Americans to stand up and be counted. Sign this petition. Get your friends to sign this petition. Mail it to Young Americans for Freedom and we will present it and thousands of others to the President. Support PEACE THROUGH STRENGTH! Name Address BECOME ACTIVE IN THE STRUGGLE to shape the future of America. Join America's largest and most active conservative youth organization—Young Americans for Freedom—today! Application for Membership Young Americans for Freedom • Box 1002 • Sterling, VA 22170 I enclose my membership dues of $3.00 I enclose my membership dues of $3.00 NAME Please print MAILING ADDRESS PERMANENT ADDRESS STATE ZIF AGE ___ SCHOOL OR OCCUPATION *1 understand that $2.50 of my dues is for a subscription to **The New Guard** for one year. CHECK ONE □ Student $3.00* □ Non-Student $3.00 (Under 40)* □ Joint Membership for Married Couples $4.00 (Under 40)* □ Associate Membership $10.00 (Over 40)* □ I enclose a contribution in the amount of $ □ I would like more information about YAF. - CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 16, 1983 Page 9 Smokeout starts tonight despite student apathy By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter The Great American Smokeout a new American smoker. Some people say the drive, sponsored by Coca-Cola, is a good way to remind people that smoking is unhealthy. But others say the Smokeout is a waste of time and effort. The goal of the 24-hour Smokeout, which begins at midnight today, is to get one out of every five smokers to give up the habit for a day. The cancer society has promoted the drive for seven years. But Erma Morgan, president of the Lawrence chapter of the society, said the Smokeout did not seem to interest, especially among students. "There is not much cooperation or interest on campus," she said. "Maybe the student body doesn't care if people smoke or not." MORGAN SAID THAT the local chapter of the cancer society a few years ago had sponsored a rally on campus to get students interested in the Great American Smokeout. Coaches from both the University of Kansas and Kansas State University were invited to attend. "We planned to meet by the stadium, and no one came," Morgan said. "People are pretty apathetic. It is easy to be that way when you are young and you feel healthy and you feel the effects of smoking." The assistant vice president of media relations for the society, however, said that students, more than half of whom needed to know about the Smokehot "There is a lot of stress on campuses, and smoking is related to stress," said Charles Dahle, the vice president. "People use stress as an incentive for smoking is bad and stress is bad, and the two combined are worse." COLLEGE STUDENTS HAVE a difficult time relating to the problems of smoking. Dahle said, his smoking-related deaths seem remedi- "But it is dangerous because it is an addiction," he said. The Smokeout began as a promotion, started in 1974 by the editor of the Monticello, (Minn.) Times. Officials from the Cancer Society and the idea, and in 1976 the Great American Smokeout became a national event. 'The Day After' receiving wide coverage by JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter Newswire magazine is the latest of many newspapers and magazines to prominently feature the ABC-TV movie *The Fighter*. The film is in and ground Lawrences. The Nov. 21 issue of the magazine carries a story and pictures about the movie, which depicts the catastrophe of 9/11 and will be broadcast 7 p.m. Sunday. The Nov. 19 issue of TV Guide features a scene from the movie on its website. The Oread Bookshop in the Kansas Union and both branches of the local Town Crier bookstore reported they sold out of Newsweek magazines yesterday afternoon, shortly after they went on sale. AS A REACTION to "The Day After," a group of national disarmament organizations have started a program titled "800-NUCLEAR PRO" that offers a toll-free number for people who questioned questions raised by the ABC-TV film. In response to calls to 800-682-3527, project workers will send out a free nuclear war prevention kit that includes tips about writing to congressmen and joining local freeze movements. IN LAWRENCE, the Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative student group, today will sponsor a series of lectures by defense, military and intelligence experts from 1 to 3:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union. THE SPEAKERS WILL include Robert Dornan, president of American Space Frontier; Lt. Gen Daniel Graham, executive director of High Frontier and former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency; and Brian Dailey, a defense consultant for Computer Science Corp. ABC's morning news show, "Good Morning America," is scheduled to broadcast a segment Friday on Lawrence and the film. Also, "Good Morning America" is scheduled to return to Lawrence Monday to show live coverage of two families' reactions to the movie. Other activities schedule around the film include: *The local "PM Magazine" snow will present a segment on the film at 6:30 p.m. Friday, on KMBCTV (Channel 9). At 6:30 p.m. on Saturday Channel 9 show a 'Town Meeting' titled "Nature's Answer." - On Sunday, a panel of local people who worked on the film's production will discuss the making of the film at 10 a.m. at the United Fellowship of Lawrence, Pleasant Valley Road. *At 12:30 p.m. m Sunday, Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Wichita, will include the Day after in a talk at the Lakeside Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. At 2 p.m. Sunday, a local poet, Ken Irvly, will give a poetry reading and a photo exhibit of pictures taken during the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. - After the movie is broadcast, local people will be gathering at the flappole on Campanile Hill for a candle-lighting ceremony sponsored by Let Lawrence Live. In case of rain the gathering will be moved to the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 12th and Oread streets. - Channel 9 is scheduled to broadcast live reaction to the film immediately following the Sunday night broadcast. The station is planning to broadcast from both Lawrence and Kansas City's Liberty Memorial, where another night vigil is scheduled. - A special presentation of "ABC News Viewpoint," hosted by Ted Koppel, is scheduled to be broadcast immediately after the film is shown in theaters. The group plans to tape the show and present it at 10:30 p.m. after the local newscast. - A Lawrence town meeting is planned for noon Monday at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Mayor David Longhurst will preside the meeting, which is sponsored by the Campus Coalition for Peace and Justice. - Two scientists who recently attended a Washington, D.C., conference on the effects of nuclear war will speak on Monday in the Kansas Union ballroom. - At 8 p.m. Tuesday a U.S. presidential debate" forum on nuclear arsenals policy is planned for the Union Senate, and the state has made a commitment to attend. - "Nightline," the ABC News late-night program, will run a four-part series titled "The Last Game" beginning Tuesday. The program will have national security experts discussing how the government would handle a crisis that could lead to a war involving nuclear weapons. A *series of local workshops is planned for Dec. 3 at the Baptist Student Center, 1629 W. 19th St. The four workshops, sponsored by Let Lawrence Live, will deal with life in a nuclear age. Put Yourself In This Picture.. EVERYONE IS AN AID FOR A PULSE A pulsation is a continuous wave of air pressure that passes through the chest and diaphragm. It is often associated with congestion in the lungs, such as during coughing or wheezing. When a pulsation occurs, it can be caused by various factors, including: - High heart rate - Low oxygen levels - Difficulty breathing - Respiratory distress To manage a pulsation, the following steps should be taken: 1. **Monitor the pulse:** Keep track of the pulse's rate and depth. 2. **Provide proper ventilation:** Ensure adequate air flow to the chest and diaphragm. 3. **Restart respiratory support:** If the pulsation lasts for more than 5 minutes, try resuscitating the patient. 4. **Consult a medical professional:** If the pulsation persists despite efforts to treat it, seek medical advice. By following these guidelines, you can help prevent or缓解 pulsation-related respiratory problems. The University of Missouri-Kansas City provides an avenue for you to become a licensed dental hygienist. The program prepares you to perform professionally in private dental offices or to hold responsible positions in community health program planning, institutionalized patient care, or research. If you're interested in a rapidly growing and increasingly dynamic profession, dental hygiene may be the field for you. Service to mankind is the primary purpose of health professions, and the dental hygienist with a bachelor of science degree may accomplish this goal through a variety of challenging and rewarding professional opportunities. Dental hygienists are distinctive members of the dental health team. They, along with dentists, are the only ones licensed to provide direct patient services. The Division of Dental Hygiene is part of the UMKC School of Dentistry located on "Hospital Hill" adjacent to the UMKC Schools of Medicine and Nursing. Truman Medical Center, Children's Mercy Hospital and Western Missouri Mental Health. The integrated educational opportunities are challenging and the rewards for a dental hygienist with a baccalaureate degree are plentiful. If you want more information on dental hygiene as a profession and the Bachelor of Science Degree Program in Dental Hygiene at UMKC; please complete the following and return to: Division of Dental Hygiene, School of Dentistry University of Minnesota, Kenosha City, 650 E. 25th St, Kansas City MO 64108-2795 (816) 234-0744 Please send me additional information on dental hygiene at UMKC. NAME: ADDRESS: City State Zip Um University of Missouri-Kansas City An Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action employer SENIORS ONLY 2 DAYS LEFT Senior Yearbook Pictures are now being taken again. Stop by 121 B Kansas Union or call 864-3728 Make your appointment TODAY! nineteen hundred eighty-four JAYHAWKER Ski Breckenridge Jan. 2-8,1984 At Unbelievably Low Prices WEST MOUNTAIN SKIING Breckenridge Offers Some Of The Finest Skiing In Colorado Brought to you bv: All skiers get ready for the 1st Annual Totally Gone Crazy Ski Week in Breckenridge. الجمهورية الشعبية الرئيسية مركز المؤتمرات Sun & Ski Adventures 2256 N. Clark Chicago, IL 60614 The trip includes 6 nights lodging at Tyra Summit Condominiums. They have full kitchens with utensils, balconies with view of the slopes, fireplaces, and ski-in ski-out accomodations. Also get 5 day lift tickets, rental discounts, chartered party bus, free welcome beer party, wine & cheese party, ski races, jacuzzi parties, lots of powder, and a chance to meet 1000's of other party animals from over 60 other participating colleges. All for just $277.50. For More Details Contact: Joan M. Putt 749-3423 AIM HIGH AIR FORCE If you want a challenge, consider serving your country as an Air Force pilot or navigator. Top performance is a way of life in the Air Force. And pilots and navigators are a vital part of the important role the Air Force plays in world affairs today. It's a challenging and rewarding career. If you're a college graduate or soon will be, find out why Air Force pilots and navigators enjoy a great way of life. See Sgt. Tom Willis Wednesday, November 16 KU Placement Office Thursday, November 17 Engineering School Placement Office FORCE A great way of life. NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 16, 1983 Page 10 Con man Estes leaves prison after four years By United Press International BIG SPRING, Texas — Legendary con man Billie Siol Estes, whose parap empire collapsed 20 years ago, stepped out of prison for a second time yesterday, walking down the aisle with his pioneers who knelt and prayed for him. Estes said he had known the prisoners for years and that he was leaving behind a part of himself with his prison friends. "They have been real good to me," Estes said as he walked out. Some inmates had offered him financial assistance, he said. Estes' $230 million personal fortune and close associations with Texas' leading politicians including the late President Lyndon Johnson — fell apart in 1963 when he was convicted of swindling millions of dollars from West Texas banks by using non-existent fertilizer tanks as collateral. ONCE OUTSIDE THE minimum-security federal prison, Estes said he had no desire to be a financial wheel-eater again. "I've got no ambition to build an empire again." Estes told reporters. "I'm not a man that's bitter at the crime that the crime I walked alone." Estes, 87, checked into a Salvation Army halfway house 100 miles away in Abilene, where he lived until he starts parole on Dec. 15 for his 1979 conviction for fraud and income tax evasion on almost $10 million. He served four years of a 10-year sentence. He was paroled in 1971 on his first fraud conviction and told not to engage in any 'promotional activity' which he did while the parole when he was convicted in 1971. Estes' 1979 conviction was for a scheme involving the leasing of non-existent oil field equipment cleaners. A total of 22 charges were imposed against businessman Raymond Horton, but most of the charges were dropped. Calling himself "just one bad deal away from doing life in prison," Estes said he planned to consult with lawyers on any future business deals and that he would shim his past in order to move someone else's inventory as his own About 100 prisoners formed a line, knell and prayed on his behalf as he walked out. Dressed in light blue slacks, a blue shirt with flowers and suspenders, he walked into the prison headquarters to find his wife, Patsy, his eldest daughter, Pam Estes, and five grandchildren waiting for him. --- nabil's RESTAURANT Public Restaurant Private Club DAILY SPECIALS—Sun. thru Thurs • Lamb in Onion Sauce • Beef Kabob your choice • Spanish Chicken 6.95 • Trout Almondine Entrees include salad, vegetable and homemade bread Reciprocal with other Kansas Clubs In the Miami election, Ferre, who was born in Puerto Rico, announced at a jubilant victory party that Suarez, a lawyer who was born in Cuba, televised his victory and the race which had divided the city's voters sharply on ethnic grounds. "He was very generous and I invited him for breakfast." Ferre told his cheering supporters. "I think it has been a tough campaign, but I think it is important for us to heal the wounds and to bring this community together." Miami, Boston choose mayors MIAMI — Mayor Maurice Ferre defeated Xavier Suarez for a record sixth term yesterday in one of the most bitter election campaigns in the city's history. By United Press International And in Boston, soft-spoken City Councillor Raymond Flynn rolled to victory in yesterday's mayoral election, turning on the opposing legislator Melvin King's bid to become the first black mayor in the 333-year history. WITH 57 OF the city's 85 precincts counted, Ferre had 22,838 votes, or 60 percent, to 15,207 votes, or 40 percent, for Surrez. But with 200 of the city's 252 precincts reporting, Flynn had 105,180 votes, or 67 percent, to King's s. 314,777, or 33 percent. But the city's majority of the city's minority neighborhoods. "I want to wait until Mel makes his statement," an obviously exhausted Flynn said, awaiting the returns at his home. "I knew we were doing very well. I've been in government for a long time, but when I got the job, so I knew we would do well. This is a campaign that has brought out the greatness of Boston." Ferre, winning as much as 97 percent of the vote, in predominantly black HE DID NOT immediately claim victory, deciding to wait for King to concede. neighborhoods, took a strong early lead in the vote count, and Suarez never caught up. The challenger had counted on equally strong backing from the Cuban-American voters of Miami's Little Havana. Election officials said voter turnout might eclipse the previous record of 64 percent in 1967, with as many as 70 million voters. 282,888 registered voting casters ballot In Boston, Flynn, promising to heal the city's racial wounds, withstood a heavy last-minute barrage on his record as a state legislator and was on his way to an apparently easy victory. 925 Iowa in the Hillcrest Plaza 841-7226 & 841-7227 FERNANDO HACIENDA BORDER BANDIDO Waistline Wednesday Taco Salads 99c Reg. $1.49 Super Salads $1.99 Reg. $2.69 Guacamole Salad 99c Reg. $1.49 Wednesdays 11a.m.- 10 p.m. All you can eat Taco Salad Bar $2.99 all day Video Games 1528 W. 23RD. Across from Post Office 842-8861 PHONE AHEAD FOR SPEEDY CARRY-OUT SERVICE 842-8861 FLYNN SUCCEEDS 16-year incumbent Kevin White, dean of the nation's big city mayors, who announced last summer that he would not seek re-election in the face of rising public criticism of his policies and a federal investigation of alleged corruption in his administration. THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SCHOOL OF LAW LAW AS A CAREER Flynn campaigned on a platform of cleaning up city hall, trimming excess spending and focusing attention and money on blue collar neighborhoods, and used with high unemployment, rising crime and spreading urban blight. King, whose "rainbow coalition" was powered by minorities and liberal whites, brought in black luminaries such as the Rew Jesse Jackson, Billy Madison, former heavyweight champion Joe Frazier to boost his campaign. CAMP-OD SERVICE #1234567890 He withstood an intense assault on his opposition to court-ordered public school desegregation as a state representative in the mid-1970s. To help you plan a career in the legal profession, law school professors and students will be available to discuss with you your law school plans and answer questions about ... PRELAW PROGRAM NOVEMBER 17, 7:00 P.M. GREEN HALL, ROOM 104 PRELAW EDUCATION ADMISSIONS PROCESS FINANCIAL AID Flynn calmly defended his record on racial issues, saying he had been a voice of reason during one of the most turbulent periods in Boston's history. LAW SCHOOL CURRICULUM JOINT DEGREE PROGRAMS JOB OPPORTUNIES PANEL Barkley Clark Professor of Law Robert Jerry Admissions Committee Chairman Lian Six Director of Admissions Carol Wolf Law Students Matthew Keenan Law Student FREE LETTERS 3 FREE LETTERS WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY GARMENT. REFRESHMENTS WHAT A DEAL! KU ΑΔΠ BALFOUR HOUSE 935 MASS. 749-519 WHAT A DEAL! ΛΔΠ KU "I think it's one of the most important issues I've ever dealt with in my life in terms of the education of blacks and whites," she said yesterday. "I read the book 25 years ago, I watched a movie about it, and bear it." Why, 25 years later, are we still passing this off in the name of good education?" Margot Allen, a district parent who objects to the teaching of the Mark Twain novel on the grounds that it is racist, complained Friday to commission and notified the school of the complaint Monday night. Parent wants 'Huck Finn' out of school JON HAYNES for By United Press International STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — A 2-year-old controversy over the teaching of the classic American novel "Huckleberry Fizz" in the State College Academy for the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission. Nunemaker Senator Vote November 16 & 17 Paid for by Jon Haynes Secrest Leather A fine selection of traditional leather goods r Secrest Leather Traditional gifts in leather. 914 Massachusetts 842-6046 The Jazzhaus 9261/2 Massachusetts tonight! A. R. Hare Koko Taylor and her Blues Machine opening act: Special Dance to the Midwest's Premier Rockabilly Band! Blueplate Thursday Nov.17 Friday Nov.18 “...her band can deep fry you in your seat.”—Chicago Tribune SHANN and the SCAMS Join us for Happy Hour! 4:00-8:00 daily 3 Blueplate Special Safety Last featuring Lee McBee vocals and blues harp "Top Candidates Facing Top Issues" Our Motivation for running is not a desire for power, but rather out of a desire to serve this university! NEW IDEAS! NEW SENATORS! A FRESH APPROACH TO THE REPRESENTATIVE PROCESS! VOTE TODAY & TOMORROW PRIORITY SCOTT SWENSON --- DENNIS STRICKLAND Paid for by Priority—John Welling Trees University Daily Kansan, November 16, 1983 Page 11 BONUS Special SELF-RISING, ALL PURPOSE REGULAR, 15c OFF LABEL, OR UNBLACHED Gold Medal FLOUR YOUR CHOICE · 5 LB. BAG 79¢ BONUS Special FOLGERS MOUNTAIN GROWN COFFEE ASSORTED GRINDS 3 LB. CAN $659 Aluminum FOIL BONUS Special! REYNOLDS HEAVY DUTY 18" x 25' ROLL DILLON'S FRESH BAKED BONUS Special! TWIN, PARTY FLAKE OR WHOLE WHEAT 89¢ ROLLS 2 11oz. PKGS. 99¢ Coke BONUS Specs 2 LITER NON-RETURN BOTTLE COCA-COLA OR DIET COKE BONUS Special! 99¢ PLEASE LIMIT YOURSELF TO 4 BOTTLES 2 LITER NON-RETURNABLE BOTTLE **Polaroid just made United's friendly skies $100 friendlier.** Or you can save $50. It's up to you. Purchase any combination of new Polaroid and $100 gift card from Star, Zero Superresize film imaging totaling $289, or quality for a $100 United Airline discount certificate. Or if your Polaroid is $60, you up to $84 certificate. Certificates are issued by United Airline. A purchase must be by January 19, 2004 and tickets must be purchased in advance. One certificate received by repurchase. Limited time offer. Come in today for a coupon containing complete details. Offer valid when prohibited. *POLARID UNTED* SAVE $5 ON YOUR HOLIDAY TURKEY. CLIP & REDEEM Pollins $5 OFF ANYHOLIDAY TURKEY WITH THE PURCHASE OF EITHER POLAROID CAMERA, AND THE COUpon (TURKEY AND CAMERA MUST BE PURCHASED AT THE SAME TIME) WHILE SUPPLIES LAST COUPON EFFECTIVELY NO. 16 DEC. 23, 1980 BONUS Special U.S. No. 1 SWEET POTATOES LB. 29¢ CELERY BONUS Special! STALK 39¢ EACH MORE BONUS SPECIALS! CRANBERRIES Ocean Spray, Fresh 12 oz bag 79¢ Variety Spotlight MUSHROOMS Fresh Wine. LB $179 CHESTNUTS AVOCADOES California 39¢ea. $129 EMPEROR GRAPES LB 69¢ LB. EGG NO. Martha's HARVESTER'S CLOSETS BONUS SPECIALS! DILLON'S FRESH BAKED SUPREME PUMPKIN CAKE 20 oz. $1.99 BONUS SPECIALS: DILLON'S FRESH BAKED SUPREME PUMPKIN CAKE 20 oz. $1.99 DILLON'S FRESH BAKED PUMPKIN PIES 26 oz. - 8" $1.79 DILLON'S FRESH DANISH Pecan Rings 12 oz. $1.29 EGG NOG BONUS SPECIAL QUART CARTON 89€ DILLON CHEESE SPREAD BONUS SPECIAL $1.29 MERKT'S RAT TUB CHEEDDOR WINE GARLIC ONION BACON JALAFENO NACHO CHEEDDOR CHEESE SWISS ALMOND FRESH FROM OUR Deli & Cheese SHOP Poultry Stuffing Fresh From Our Deli LB. 69¢ Cranberry Apple Fresh LB. $1.19 Cheddar Cheese Wisconsin Mild LB. $1.99 Turkey Breast Louis Rich Mild LB. $3.59 SLIED OR ANY SIZE CHUNK. DELI ITEMS AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH SERVICE DELIS. Dillons the best food store DILLON'S PHARMACY **Motrin** 100 Mg (Heparin) (Grasp) Oral (Orange) 100 mg (Heparin) 10 g (Liquid) Oral (Orange) 10 mg (Heparin) 1 mg (Heparin) **$25.86** **Ortho Novum** 100 Mg (Heparin) (Grasp) Oral (Orange) 10 g (Liquid) Oral (Orange) 10 mg (Heparin) 1 mg (Heparin) **$8.57** **Ortho Novum** 100 Mg (Heparin) (Grasp) Oral (Orange) 10 g (Liquid) Oral (Orange) 10 mg (Heparin) 1 mg (Heparin) **$8.83** **Dilantin** Capsule 100 mg (Phenomine) Oral (Orange) 10 mg (Heparin) **$5.40** **Lasix Tablets** Capsule 100 mg (Phenomine) Oral (Orange) 10 mg (Heparin) **$10.85** The purchase of these drugs requires a prescription. Prices are based on quantities indicated. Ulm prices may vary with other quantities. These items are subject to change without notice. POC 400EX POC 400EX AI POLAROID Bora 600 Dillons the best food store in town DOLD HARVEST BRAND Boneless, Whole HAM WATER ADED $138 LB. BONUS Special! LIMIT ONE WHOLE HAM, PLEASE. HAMS SLICED FREE AT DILLORS. DOLD HARVEST BRAND HALF HAM Water Added Limit 2 HALF Hams ... LB. $1.48 WHOLE HAM Smoked Bone-In ... LB. 95¢ Smoked Bone-In ... LB. $1.05 Shank ... LB. $1.15 Smoked Bone-In ... LB. $2.19 Buff ... LB. HALF HAM Armour Golden Star Roasted... LB. DUCKLINGS Two Point Young ... LB. 89¢ 4-9 Lb. Avg. SLICED BACON Sugar Creek ... $1.29 16 oz. pkg. TURKEY ROAST Hudson Boneless ... LB. $1.39 Jimmy Dean Hog Hash Sage ... $1.49 or Eat Min 16 oz. pkg. PORK SAUSAGE CHICKEN GIZZARDS Tasty Bird Frozen ... $59¢ DOLD HARVEST BRAND Boneless, Whole HAM MATER #0210 $138 BONUS Special! LB. LIMIT ONE WHOLE HAM, PLEASE. HAMS Sliced FREE AT DILLONS ONE STEP POLAROID 600 CAMERA POLAROID 600 LMS SUN CAMERA SS COUPON GOOD ON A BASED CAMERA $1995 $2995 $$ COUPON GOOD ON A HOLIDAY TURKEY PURCHASED AT DILLONS WITH THE PURCHASE OF EITHER CAMERA 600 FILM POLAROID SINGLE PACK $6.99 SX-70 FILM POLAROID SINGLE PACK $6.99 CREAM CHEESE GINGER CHEESE MARGARITA HALF HAM Water Added Limit 2 Half Hams . LB. $1.48 WHOLE HAM Smoked, Bone-in 16-19 lb Avg Water Added LB. $95¢ HALF HAM Smoked, Bone-in Shank LB. $1.05 HALF HAM Smoked, Bone-in Bull LB. $1.15 HALF HAM Armour Golden Star Boneless Water Added LB. $2.19 DUCKLINGS Top Frost Young 4.5 lb Avg LB. $89¢ SLICED BACON Sugar Creeks 16 oz pkg. $1.29 TURKEY ROAST Modern Boondocks LB. $1.39 PORK SAUSAGE Juicy Dried Peg No-Sage or Extra Mid 16 oz pkg. $1.49 CHICKEN GIZZARDS Fast Fat Brown 16 oz pkg. $59¢ CREAM CHEESE BONUS Special 59¢ Food Club 8 oz. cotton ORANGE JUICE NATURAL SUN BONUS Special 79¢ FROZEN CONCENTRATED HIGH OR LOW PULP 12 oz. CHRISTIAN RODRIGUEZ CREAM CHEESE BONUS Special 59¢ 8 oz cotton NATURAL SUN BONUS Special 79¢ FROZEN CONCENTRATED HIGH BLOW DRIED 12 oz (14 OZ) LIMIT RIGHTS RESERVED TURKEYS PRICED RIGHT AT DILLONS! LOOK FOR OUR BIG AD IN TOMORROW'S JOURNAL-WORLD WE HAVE A COMPLETE SELECTION OF CAPONS, GEESE, STUFFED TURKEYS, SMOKED TURKEYS, FRESH OYSTERS, TURKEY BREASTS AND TURKEY PAN ROASTS TURKEYS PRICED RIGHT AT DILLONS! LOOK FOR OUR BIG AD IN TOMORROW'S JOURNAL-WORLD Libby PUMPKIN BONUS Special 1 for one pint solid pod PUMPKIN 29¢ PLEASE LIMIT YOURSELF TO 4 CANS 16 oz. CAN FOOD CLUB STRAINED OR WHOLEBERRY Cranberry SAUCE PLEASE LIMIT YOURSELF TO 4 CANS JELLIED CRANBERRY SAUCE BONUS Special! 29¢ 16 oz. CAN 25 Cards - $7.45 50 Cards - $13.95 75 Cards - $20.25 100 Cards - $26.95 150 Cards - $40.25 200 Cards - $53.45 Allow 7 Days For Delivery THE SESAME STREET TREASURY NEW! FEATURING JIM HENSON'S SESAME STREET TREASURY VOLUME 1 99¢ VOLUMES 2-15 ONLY $2.69 ARCDE FGHUK LMOPR ONSTU WAVX? • ALPHARETS • NUMBERS-GAMES • PICTURE BUZZLES • RECIPES • SIGN LANGUAGE • STORIES-POEMS • SPANISH WORDS This Holiday Season, send your family & friend's Photo Greeting Cards from Royacolor. Choose from 4 colorful sentiments. Prices include matching envelopes and are based on printing one negative for each design. 25 Cards - $7.45 50 Cards - $13.95 75 Cards - $20.25 100 Cards - $26.95 150 Cards - $40.25 200 Cards - $53.45 Allow 7 Days For Delivery ROYALCOLOR GREETING CARDS This Holiday Season, send your family & friend's Photo Greeting Cards from Royacolor. Choose from 4 colorful sentiments. Prices include matching envelopes and are based on printing one negative for each design. 25 Cards - $7.45 50 Cards - $13.95 75 Cards - $20.25 100 Cards - $26.95 150 Cards - $40.25 200 Cards - $53.45 Allow 7 Days For Delivery ABCDE FGHIJ LMNOP QRSTU VWXYZ Happy Holidays BONUS Special TOP FROST ICE CREAM $1.19 GALLON ASSORTED FLAVORS Avante Woodenware American Art Collection This Weeks Featured Item! Wall Clock $19.99 Reg. $15.99 AD PRICES EFFECTIVE NOV.16-23. 1983 WE'VILL BE CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY TOP FROST FROZEN Whipped TOPPING 8 oz. TUB Whipped TOPPING BONUS Special! 39¢ MORE BONUS SPECIALS! whipped topping BONUS Special! PUMPKIN PIES Morton Frozen 24 oz. $79 RIPE OLIVES Food Club Small Pitted 6 oz. can. $79 CUT YAMS Bruce's 40 oz. can. $99 JELL-O GELATIN Dessert Mix Assorted Flavors. 3 oz. box 4/$1 DINNER PLATES Chinet. 15 ct. $1.29 LUNCHEON PLATES Chinet. 40 ct. $1.99 DESSERT PLATES Chinet. 25 ct. $1.09 MICHELOB BEER 6 - 12 oz. Non-Refillable Bottles $2.39 WHIPPING CREAM Dalton's Fresh pint Cream $98 CRESCENT ROLLS Food Club Refrigerated 8 oz. tube $69 . NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 16, 1983 Page 12 Baker promises debt increase By United Press International WASHINGTON — Amid warnings that the government is running out of cash, Senate Republican leader Howard Baker promised President Reagan yesterday that Congress will not allow any urgent increase in the national debt. "We're going to find a way to pass the debt limit increase, but for the lire of me I don't know how yet. We still don't have the votes," Baker said after a meeting between Reagan and the GOP congressional leadership. With the Senate planning to adjourn Friday for the year, Baker told Reagan: "We ain't going out until we pass this. And we may be here until measure." Failure to pass the measure he would be a little short of disastrous." While Reagan set forth a list of other objectives, ranging from confirmation of William Clark as interior secretary to the unlikely approval of tuition tax credits. White House officials say debt-limit increase is needed to ease "a chaotic situation in the country's financial system." THE DEBT LIMIT legislation, which would let the government keep borrowing money to pay its bills, emerged as the top priority of what legislative leaders hope to be the final days of the 1983 session. The bill in question would raise the debt limit from $1.389 trillion to $1.61 trillion. Conservative Republican senators hoping to use it as a way to cut deficits with more domestic spending cuts are asking its members, the foddy oldook of Baker and Speakes was designed to put pressure on them. THE WHITE HOUSE, however, the white house is a definite must be handled by other men, most of whom are African-American. "The government is now being forced to proceed on a day-to-day basis as to whether it can continue to pay its bills," Speaks said, By Dec. 1, he said, "we'll probably not be able to pay all bills." just $10.6 billion shy of the current debt limit as of Nov. 10 and a $12 billion interest payment due today, Speakes said. "We're at the end of the rope." 'We're going to find a way to pass the debtlimit increase, but for the life of me I don't know how yet. We still don't have the votes.' —Howard Baker Senate majority leader In the event the current debt limit is touched, Spokeses said the government has rejected a deal. banks would refuse to honor. He said Attorney General William French Smith concluded that the president lacks the power to select which bills are to be paid, meaning any program — ranging from paychecks to federal workers to Social Security benefits — could be affected. “It’s impossible to say who would not be paid in the event of default,” he said. OVERALL, REAGAN acknowledged that he had given the leadership an ambition to win, but contended that "all these things are doable." Speakes, who briefed reporters on the meeting, said Reagan asked the leaders to push for approval of the Clark nomination, an increase in the U.S. quota to the International Monetary Fund, his tuition tax credit proposal and a Defense Department conference report. The White House also was working with the congressional leadership to determine the status of U.S. troops in Vietnam-era War Powers. Resolution Baker conceded the Clark nomination is "in some trouble" because of a side dispute over a resolution that would require the new interior secretary to ensure that the department's staff are required to serve Congress and take steps "to regain general public support and confidence" lost under James Watt. ONLY $2.50 FOR 200 CHECKS 114 M. E. MORRIS AVE. WASHINGTON, D.C. 60010 BILL NO. 50187234 CITY AND STATE WASHINGTON DATE 11/27/2001 EMPLOYEE NUMBER XXX RECEIVED BY D.J. BLAKE STUDENT DEPARTMENT UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PERSONALIZED K U JAYHAWKER CHECKS ONLY 7:50 FOR 200 CHECKS BANK AVAILABLE COMPLETE CUSTOM CHECKS BASED ON YOUR DEPT NUMBER AND DATE OF WORK. KANSAS BANK NOTE CO. DEPT KU KAYTHE JAFFERSON P. III ROAD FREESIDE, AK 84710 DR. PAUL LIMBERG Optometrist Assumes that the has assumed the practice and retained all records of DR. DALE SILLIX Optometrist For an appointment phone 843-5966 DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG Optometrist EYE EXAMINATIONS CONTACT LENSES FULL FRAME SELECTION 202 Lawrence National Bank 202 Lawrence National Bank 843-5966 TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills: 6:00-7:00 $0.75 7:00-8:00 $1.00 8:00-9:00 $1.25 9:00-10:00 $1.50 10:00-11:00 $1.75 11:00-11:45 $2.00 It Could Only Happen at It Could Only Happen at ... THE HAWK • 1349 OHIO --offer good through Nov. 30,' 83 with this coupon SPECTRUM OPTICAL 841-1113 4 E.7th Downtown Lawrence $20 OFF ANNOUNCING the START of the FALL JAYHAWK TEAM TENNIS LEAGUE 24 HOUR SERVICE ON MOST EYEGLASSES AND REPAIRS JANUARY 12, 1984 through February 16, 1984 Thursday Nights 8:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M. to people-call immediately Cost $45.00 per person ALVAMAR ALL PRESCRIPTION EYEWEAR CALL ALVAMAR RACQUET CLUB to SIGN UP Phone 842-7764 or 842-7767 --the working-class district of San Judas of Managua, said. ALVANAR RACQUET CLUB 4120 Clinton Parkway Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Horizon at the Lawrence Opera House Fri. 9,12 p.m. FREE BEER ALL NIGHT $3.50 Ladies $4.50 Men Horizon GAMMONS SNOWG .25 DRAWS & $1.00 DRINKS TONIGHT!! UNTIL 10:30PM EVEN MORE SPECIALS AFTER 10:30PM GAMMONS SNOWS 23rd & Ousdahl So Hills Center 842-3977 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 Board of Class Officers Board of Class Officers & Cogburns presents K.U. vs. MU Homecoming T.G.I.F. Party Fri., Nov. 18 2-6:30 p.m. at Cogburns 737 New Hampshire All the beer you can drink $2 or free with class card Senior class T-shirts available Coors Officials expect U.S. invasion Nicaragua prepares for intervention By United Press International Nicaragua's civil defense authorities said yesterday that they were digging combat trenches and bomb shelters around Managua for fear of an imminent Grenada-style invasion by U.S.led forces. Army Capt. Victor Moreno, chief of staff of Nicaraguan Civil Defense Force that local neighborhood officials on how and where to build shelters. The civil defense measures were announced as 2,000 U.S. Marines and sailors began arriving in neighboring Honduras to join the 2,000 U.S. troops already in the country for a joint military exercise. THE LEADERS OF Necaragua's Marxist government insist that the U.S. troops — along with the armies of Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador "We're digging combat trenches." "Meena, a civil defense organizer in Wombatka, Kaukahena and ER Salvation — plan to invade Nearacarra, as a U.S.-led task force did in Grenada Oct. 25. The ruling Sandinista Front has began using the media for spots on such topics as how to take apart and reassemble a Czech-made V-Z rifle used by militiamen. In El Salvador, leftist guerrillas staged raids yesterday on three suburbs of San Salvador, exchanging gunfire with military patrols. Minsky's CHEF There was no report of casualties among army troops, civil defensemen and police. Classic Combo Night You already know it's Colossal, but we'd like to remind you that it's a Classic... true Italian COMBINATION PIZZA Minsky's Style! $3.95 ALL YOU CAN EAT! (children just $2) 6 packs to go 2228 Iowa No carry out or delivery with this special Other specials not valid with this offer we deliver 842-0154 ... for a slice of style. this season's most important sale of men's & ladies' famous label, perfect quality, current season fashions 50% TO 70% OFF - SAMPLE FASHIONS FROM FAMOUS MAKERS' SHOWROOMS - LIQUIDATION STOCK OF LEADING KANSAS SPECIALTY STORE - MANUFACTURERS' CURRENT SEASON OVER PRODUCTION - ALL CURRENT SEASON FASHIONS - ALL FIRST QUALITY. • SPORTCOATS COATS SHIRTS SLACKS BLAZERS JACKETS OUTERWEAR ACCESSORIES AND MORE MADISON'S FASHION BOOK Encore Sample Clothing WHEN: 2 DAYS ONLY TODAY AND TOMORROW WHERE: ELDRIDGE HOUSE DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE TIME: 10 TO 8 DAILY AND... USE MASTERCARD, VISA, PERSONAL CHECK WITH APPROVED ID LUCKY... FOR WOMEN MEN AND JUNIORS sale conducted by ENCORE SAMPLE CLOTHING open mondays on Saturday 16 EAST 39TH, KANSAS CITY, MO NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 16, 1983 Page 13 Pacific storm spawns tornadoes in Alabama By Staff and Wire Reports A powerful storm front, after leaving a trail of wind, snow and rain on its path from the Pacific Ocean, yesterday brought tornadoes and violent winds that killed one in Alabama at least 19 in northern Alabama. While much of the South enjoyed sunshine and temperatures in the 70s and 80s, clouds lingered yesterdays. It was a storm system centered over Ohio. Mark Watson, a weather observer for the University of Kansas Weather Service, said that clear skies and highs in the mid-40s were expected for this afternoon. No rain is expected for the rest of the week. Temperatures should climb into the 50s or 60s by Friday before another system brings clouds, lower temperatures and a chance of rain for homecoming weekend. A NEW OCEAN-BORN storm was already whipping the northern Pacific coast with gale-force winds up to 50 mph. The earlier Pacific storm was three to four days old when it slammed into Alabama with a destructive cold front Monday night. Two mountain passes were closed by snow in Washington's Cascade Mountains and the rain-glutted Elwah River was over its banks west of Port Angeles, Wash. Gale warnings went up along the Washington, Oregon and northern California coasts. The front whipped up high winds that sent a tree crashing onto a mobile home in Cordova, Ala., killing Jessie Poe, 94. inside. Tenne people were injured when a tornado hit Culman, Ala. OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRUNDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.. Close 841-3268 EARN OVER $1,000 A MONTH THROUGH YOUR SENIOR YEAR 20 If you're a Math, Chemistry, Physics, or Engineering major, the Navy has a program you should know about. It called the Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate (NUPOC) Program, and if qualified you could earn $1,000 per month, for up to 24 months prior to graduation. SOME OF THE BENEFITS INCLUDE: - $3,000 Bonus upon acceptance - 1 year of graduate level education - Unequalled hands-on training and experience using the most - Immediate management responsibility - $23,000 starting salary—over $42K annually after five years * Free medical and dental care The NUPOC program can help you not only to complete college, it can also be the start of an exciting career. If you'd like to find out more, contact your placement office or call. ENGINEERING OFFICERS PROGRAMS * 800-821-5110 NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST. QUALITY NEVER GOES OUT OF STYLE LEVI'S $ 501 ^{\mathrm{TM}} $ JEANS Nothing has changed but the fit. 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CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — How the United States runs its own economy in the next few years will determine whether the Third World debt problem can be resolved without a financial crisis, Harvard University economists say. The thinking goes that economic growth of industrial nations is the key to solving the debt problem of developing countries, and that these countries' industrial national growth can be strongly affected by U.S. growth. ALL THE ECONOMISTS agree that. During the 1960s, Harvard professor and former State Department economist Richard Cooper told the seminar, most development lending came from governments and international bodies, and the problem then being discussed was how to get the private banks more involved. This finally came about in the aftermath of the first OPEC oil-price increase of 1973. Oil-producing countries earned huge balance of payments surpluses, which they deposited in international banks. The banks lent the money out, much of it to the developing world. DURING THE WORLD recession the follower 1973 old price increase in the US in the first quarter of 2015. their debt to roughly $200 billion. Much of it went into productive investment, and this helped maintain their development. Their continued growth, in turn, provided markets for the exports of industrial countries, and this cushioned the recession worldwide. Cooper said. In the recession that followed the second oil price surge of 1979, developing countries increased their debt to roughly $600 billion. But this time, the world is seeking to control inflation, put on the monetary brakes much more sharply. The recession became the longest and deepest since the 1930s. World interest rates rose. Developing countries found themselves with rising debts on their debt and falling earning, with which to make these payments. MANY FACTORS WILL determine GET INTO A UNION! Slip into winter with a classic union suit! This smart button-front style is known for its warmth, durability, and flair. 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Visit our computer center or use them at home. Rent by the hour, day, week or month. Programs available in a wide range of applications and languages. YOUR NEW FULL SERVICE COMPUTER CENTER! COMPUTER ENT RENT MAKING COMPUTERS AFFORDABLE 1000 IOWA STREET LAWRENCE, KS 66044 (913) 814-1006 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. U.S. Air Force Sat. *Division of Missions, N* the outcome of the debt problem, according to these economists: congressional approval of increased U.S. financing for the International Monetary Fund, avoiding protectionism, economic reforms by developing countries themselves and willingness of private banks to continue lending. But, as C. Fred Bergsten, director of the Institute for International Economics, described it to a group in Washington, since recession has caused two-thirds of the debt problem, most of it with the government "get the world economy going again." William Cline, an economist at that institute, has calculated that 3 percent real economic growth over the next few years among the major industrial countries as a group is the critical threshold needed to enable debtor countries to earn enough in world trade to meet their payments. Instructors needed to teach math, science, or engineering at the Navy's Nuclear Power School in Orlando, Florida. TEACHERS NEEDED IN FLORIDA BENEFITS:supt to $19,500 starting salary; over $33,000 in four years. Over $1,000 per month for selected students during Dr. and Sr. years. Full medical and dental coverage. 30 day's earned annual paid vacation. Opportunity for Navy-financed post-graduate education. Family benefits. QUALIFICATIONS: U.S. city, Ages 19-29. College graduates or seniors/juniors, BS-MS Technical majors only. Call Navy Officer Programs Toll free 1-800-821-5110. "Top Candidates Facing Top Issues SWENSON-STRICKLAND WE SEEK YOUR VOTE NOT OUT OF A DESIRE FOR POWER, BUT RATHER OUT OF A WILLINGNESS TO SERVE THIS UNIVERSITY. WE ENCOURAGE YOUR SUPPORT WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY. PRIORITY SCOTT SWEERON DENNIS BRICKLAND "Top Candidates Facing Top Issues" * SWENSON-STRICKLAND COMMONWFAITH THEATRES GRANADA TELFONNE 843-1979 DOWNTOWN TELFONNE 843-1979 CHRISTOPHER LYNKEN NIRITA WOOD BRAINSTORM Eve: 7-15: 9-35 Mat, Sat-Sun 2:00 PG VARSITY TELFONNE 843-1065 DOWNTOWN TELFONNE 843-1065 CHEVY CHASE DEAL AT CENTURY PH: Eve: 7-15: 9-15 Mat, Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 1 BY ANDREA TELFONNE 843-1065 THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND Eve: 7-20: 8-35 Mat, Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 2 BY ANDREA TELFONNE 843-1065 SEAM CONNECTING THIS IS A BETTER BOND, AND BY A WIDE MARGIN" Eve: 7-15: 8-35 Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 3 BY ANDREA TELFONNE 843-1065 Stephen King's THE DEAD ZONE Eve: 7-30: 8-30 Mat, Sat-Sun 2:15 CINEMA 1 BY ANDREA TELFONNE 843-1065 RUNNING BRAZI Eve: 7-35: 9-35 Mat, Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 BY ANDREA TELFONNE 843-1065 THE BIG CHILL COLUMNS PICTURES Eve: 7-30: 9-35 Mat, Sat-Sun 2:00 VARSITY TELEPHONE 843-7695 CHEVY SHIFT DEAL WITH CENTURY PQ: Eve: /15-8-15 Mat: Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 917-850-1034 www.hillcrest.com THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND Eve. 7:20-8:38 Mat.Sun-Sun 2:16 Saturday, June 14th HILLCREST 3 NATIONAL GAMES Stephen King's THE DEAD ZONE Eve: 9:30 Mike: 1:15 HILLCREST 3 PHONE 647-8100 PHONE 647-8100 Stephen King's DEAD ZONE Eve: 7:30 9:30 Mat: Sat: Sun: 2:15 CINEMA 1 ISTED AND IOWA TELEPHONE 844-5400 RUNNING BRAZZ Prints: Eve: 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 LISTED AND IOWA TELEPHONE 844-5400 THE BIG CHILL COLUMBIA PICTURES Eve: 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 RUNNING BLAZE Eve: 7-9:35 MT, Sat-Sun: 2:00 CINEMA 2 123 WEST 60TH ST. THE BIG CHILL COLUMBIA PICTURES R Eve. 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat. 2:00-2:00 > University Daily Kansan, November 16. 1983 SPORTS BRIEFS From Staff and Wire Reports Johnson's two free throws lead KC past Washington LANDOVER. Md. — Eddie Johnson's two free throws in the last seven seconds led Kansas City to a 101-104 triumph over the Washington Bullets last night, snapping the Kings' four-game loss streak. Johnson led Kansas City with 20 points. Mark Oberding had 16. The Bullets were led by Greg Ballard with 22 points. Kansas City led 99-93 with 1:27 to play, but a basket by rookie Jeff Malone, a three-point play by Tom McMillen and a 25-foot shot by Ballard gave Washington a 100-99 lead with 23 seconds left. Eddie Johnson was then fouled by Frank Johnson and sank both free throws to raise Kansas City's record to 3-7. The Bullets dropped to 3-6. Billy Knight had 10 points and Steve Johnson nine to keep Kansas City within 49-47 at halftime. Washington took a 26-18 lead in the first quarter, but a 15-4 spurt, led by Steve Johnson's eight points, brought Kansas City back. The loss spoiled Washington coach Gene Shue's 2,000th game as a player and coach in the NBA. NCAA bans Badgers from television MILWAUKEE — The NCAA has decided to bar the University of Wisconsin football team from appearing on television for one year because of recruiting violations. The Milwaukee Journal reported yesterday. It had earlier been reported the Badgers were to be barred from bowl competition for one year. The Journal said the NCAA's change of heart was due to a technicality in rules that might have made the bowl ban meaningless. The Badgers will lose more in revenue by being banned from television than by being barred from bowl competition, the newspaper said. The newspaper said the technicality was due to the timing of the investigation into the alleged violations. According to the schedule. The University now has until Nov. 29 to answer by either accepting the penalty or appealing it. 3 charged in point-shaving scandal NEW YORK — Indictments were unsealed yesterday charging a former Boston College basketball star and two other men in connection with a point-shaving scheme at the school during the 1978-1979 season, authorities said. A federal grand jury in Brooklyn Monday handed up the indictments charging Ernest Cobb, 27, of Stamford, Conn., with conspiracy to defraud the United States government. Cobb, who played professional basketball in Israel last season, was the leading scorer on the Boston College basketball team during the 1978-79 season and was an All-America honorable mention. Also named in the indictment was Peter Vario, 47, of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Richard Perry, 38, of Staten Island, N.Y. Vario and Perry are charged with conspiracy to commit sports bribery and interstate travel in aid of racketeering, Dearie said. All three face a maximum sentence of five years in jail and a $10,000 fine if convicted of the charges. PRIORITY SCOTT SWENSON DENNIS STRICKLAND "Top Candidates Facing Top Issues" Paid for by Priority = John Welling, Lt SALE-A-BRATION Nov. 14-19 Nov. 14-19 NEW THOMPSON CHAIN REFERENCE BIBLE Savings over $7 While Supplies Last Plus Many Other Specials Limit One Per Customer Please + EFERENCE bookstore CR ROSS 711 WEST 23RD STREET 842-1553 LAWRENCE KANBAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Malls Shopping Center OLD STYLE NIGHT tonight at BOTTOMS UP! a serious drinking establishment Cross country teams end seasons, please coaches By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer Manual was unable to run on the day of the conference race because he was The KU men's and women's cross country teams finished their seasons last weekend at the National College Athletic Association District V meet. Neither team had individuals who qualified for nationals. Despite the results from its last meet, men's coach Bob Timmons said that his squad had made progress this season and that he was pleased with the achievement of the runners on the team. Three runners on this year's team recorded times that rank among the ten fastest in KU women's cross country history. The Jayhawks, expected by a coaches' poll to place six, surprised some schools at the conference meet when they finished in fourth place without one of their top runners, freshman Joe Manual. 50¢ Cans Door prizes 7-12 Senior Brent Steiner was forced to miss the district meet last weekend as he suffered a broken leg. 715 Massachusetts Junior Paula Berquist is ranked second, freshman Cindy Blakeley is fourth and sophomore Caryne Finlay is ninth on the list. interest athletes in our program that is developing," he said. “As we went into regionals, Greg ran well and Tim had some difficulty with traction because he had short spikes,” he added. “There was that Brent missed the meet. "That was a disappointment because I believe he had a chance to be on the team." Rovello said he looked for next year's team to be much improved, since all but one of this year's top five runners will compete in Big Eight level of competition this year. entries in the race were seniors Tim Gundy and Greg Leibert. In order to be named All-America, a runner must finish in the top 25 of American runners at the NCAA Nationals. The KU men's team will only lose Gundy from this year's team. Berquist, the Jayhawks' lead runner this season, received the Most Valuable Runner award based upon the lowest performance ranking list devised by Royello. "His career here was a good one." Timmons said of Gundy. "He was an enjoyable young man to coach and his attitude was super." Junior Susan Glatter was selected as the team's Inspirational runner on the team. Timmons said he would have a good nucleus to build around with the rest of the team returning for next year. And with a few additional runners, the University of Kansas should have a cross country team next fall, he said. "We have a good basis to start with now," said first-year women's coach Cliff Rovello. "A distance runner doesn't develop in one season." lose anyone to graduation. KU's team this year consisted of three juniors, two sophomores and four freshmen. He said he could see significant improvement in the team this year although the team was only able to place sixth in the Big Eight Conference meet. He said he considered the conference meet to be the best effort of the season by the team, however, because times improved and the Jayhawks finished one place higher than last year. The women's team, however, will not "To move further up in this competitive conference, our team will have to improve, and we need to attract University of Kansas." Rowlett said. He said that KU could attract those runners in the future because it now offers a better opportunity. Blakeley, KU's second runner, received the Outstanding Freshman award on her performance in relation to the program and overall attitude. "We can point to the accomplishments of this year's team and SPORTS ALMANAC RENO, Nev. — Weekend National Football League and college teams过河 by a Harris Tate Towne NFL Favorite ... New England **Sunday Nov. 20** Pittsburgh **Cleveland*; Minnesota** L.C. Hendersons **Buffalo**; Cincinnati **Houston**; San Diego **St. Louis** Miami **Baltimore**; Tampa Bay **Chicago** Dallas **N.Y.C.*** Dallas **Kansas City** Denver **Seattle**; Washington **Alabama**; San Francisco **Alanta**; Green Bay **Detroit**; Monday Nov. 21 NewOrleans N.Y.Jets3 Harvard Yale Virginia Tech Virginia Temple urgus12 Princeton Cornell1 Maryland Maryland4 No Carolina Duke1 Michigan OhnST2 Houston college HoucSt4 Brown Columbia5 Portland Indiana Portland Kentucky Notre Dame Aerofire43 Pennsylvania PennNb4 Pittsburgh Glenson NCanl4 Glenson ScCanl4 W Virginia FOOTBALL Wisconsin Texas Texas Okla St. Missouri Mississippi Texas A&M California Georgia U.S. CAL Washington Washington Michigan St. 10; Baylor St. 13; Miamiat Baylor 2; Amherst 4; IowaSt. 10; Kansas St. 17; Mts. St. 13; TCU 17 Kansas St. 4 Stanford Oklahoma St. 10; Oregon St. 13; U.S. CAL Wash. St. 13; Wash. St. 13; Tuscaloosa St. 17 UPI TOP 20 NEW YORK - The United Press International Board of Couches Top 20 1986 college football ratings, with first place votes and parentheses (total points based on 15 points for first place, 14 for 1. Nebraska (40) (11-0) 2. Texas (1-9) (10-6) 3. Alabama (8-1) (10-1) 4. Miami (Fla) (10-1) 5. Illinois (9-1) 6. South Carolina Methodist (8-1) 7. Georgia (8-1) 8. Michigan (8-1) 9. Youngphan University (9-1) 10. Ohio State (8-2) 11. Iowa (8-2) 12. Florida (7-2) 13. Pittsburgh (8-2) 14. Washington (8-2) 15. West Virginia (8-2) 16. Alabama (7-2) 17. Missouri (7-3) 18. Baylor (7-2) 19. Lighten' up the Holidays at THE LIGHTHOUSE HARBOUR HARBOUR WEDNESDAYS: MONDAYS: TUESDAYS: Football night- 50c draws 95c well drinks,75c chili THURSDAYS: LADIES NIGHT- Your first 3 drinks are free from 8-11 p.m. LADIES NIGHT- Your first 3 drinks are free from 8-11 p.m. Happy hour all night! FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS: $1.00 well drinks all night! OPEN THANKSGIVING Fun • Food • Games • Dancing SUNDAYS: Happy hour all night! Metcalf 103 Center-Overland Park, KS (LADIES NIGHT) (1) Hillel presents Lox & Bagels Brunch featuring Congressman Dan Glickman Sun., Nov. 20 L. J.C.C.—917 Highland 12:30 p.m. Admission: $2 Hillel Members $4 Non-Members For more information call 864-3948 19. Boston College (7-2) 20. Oklahoma (7-2) BASKETBALL --- 20. Oklahoma (7-3) Note by Agency with the American Football Association teams, the production by the NCAA are ineligible for the TCU championship consideration by the UPI Board of Coaches. The teams currently on production are Alabama, Arizona, Wichita State and Southern Mississippi Yesterday's Results New York 94, Indiana 87 Kansas City 101, Washington 101 loughlin's Games new york at Philadelphia seattle at Detroit cleveland at Phoenix tomorrow's Games indiana at Wake Forest TURKEY TROT Tonight's Game New Jersey 184, Houston 86 Connecticut 29, New York 152, Chicago 112, Atlanta 108, Boston at Dover Arlington at Angelo Atlanta at Portland Houston at Philadelphia **Entries Due:** 5 p.m. in 208 Robinson, or Lawrence Parks and Recreation 4th Floor. City Hall. FREE Steamboat Race begins 9 a.m.—Shenk Complex, 23rd & Iowa Berkshire Services Special Event --- Steamboat A Flurry of Excitement January 2-8 Full package price of $299 includes sleeper-bus transi- portation, 4 nights lodging at The Ranch Condos, lif- tickets for 5 days ski rental and a wine & cheese party. Sign up in the SUA office be- fore November 30. Another happier holiday from SUA. Come watch the Steamboat Film in the Union To- day. 1. 已知 $a, b, c$ 为实数,且 $a > 0, b < 0, c < 0$,则 $-b^2 - a^2 + c^2 \geq 0$。 YOUR LAWRENCE 7-11'S WOULD LIKE TO INTRODUCE A NEW CONCEPT IN CONVENIENCE STORE BEER SALES: LOW PRICES!! Compare our everyday prices to theirs ITEM 7-11 KWIK- SHOP* 1) COORS 6 PAK. REG. CANS OR BOTTLES $2.59 $3.09 2) BUD. LITE 6 PAK CANS OR BOTTLES $2.69 $3.19 3) MICHELOB PREMIUM 6 PAK BOTTLES $2.69 $3.45 4) MILLER 8 COUNT PONY PAK BOTTLES $2.09 $2.65 5) ALL BRANDS QUART SIZE .99 $1.29 6) MEISTER BRAU REG. 6 PAK CANS $1.89 $2.45 PLUS YOU CAN SAVE EVEN MORE WITH OUR SPECIAL CASE PRICES 7-11 #688 25th & IOWA 842-5601 ELEVEN FOOD STORES 7-11 #689 6th & LAWRENCE 842-5612 *Prices from 6th and Kasold KWIK-SHOP, in effect 11/8/83. KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS The University Daily KANSAN The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES | Words | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | or 2 Weeks | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 0-15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 | | 16-20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 | | 21-25 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.85 | | For every 5 words add | .96 | .96 | .75 | 1.05 | AD DEADLINES November 16, 1983 Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. Classified Display $4.2 per column inc. POLICIES .p column inch Classified Display advertisements can be any width column wide and no more than a minimum depth of one inch. No reserves allowed in classified display advertisements except for logos. working days prior to publication > Above rates based on consecutive day insertions of the difficulty limited by All advertisers will be required to pay in advance Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed "on or simply by calling the Karnegie business office at 864-4508. Page 15 - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words. - Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words. - Double-same same as Display Advertisement... FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS thly earned rate discount * Samples of all mail order items must be submitted print to publication of advertising Kansan classifieds get results. Classified display advertisements. - Classified display ads do not count towards mom until credit has been established Tearsheets are not provided for classification or - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only - Blind box ads+please add a $2 service charge; * Checks must all accompany all admitted ads listed ANNOUNCEMENTS Zenith ZT 11 with built in modern special price to Center Computer center of Dayton, Open thursday night, 8:30-10:30. UFES correct insertion of any advertisement * No refunals on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising Paid Staff Positions Business Manager. Edito - Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University Daily Kaman. The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Rooms 200 and 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applications due in Room 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall bv 5 m. wed. Nov. 16 The University Daily Kanan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employee Applications are sought from all qualified people who wish to be employed as sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry THE DAY AFTER -- Come light candles of hope after movie in Candlelight gathering on Campanile THE DAY AFTER - Come speak on out on movie and nuclear war at Town Meeting, Noon, Monday. #283 UFES THE SOUND OF MUSIC Friday and Saturday November 18 & 19 ENTERTAINMENT Downs Aud. $1.75 Dyche Hall WEEKLY NEWS MUSIC THE SOUND OF MUSIC G FOR RENT 1 & 2 bedroom apartments available immediately through early December; partial utilities paid. Contact Karen Valley phone: (800) 756-3898. 2 BR House, newly remodeled. KU has route, line close to laundromat, $250 943-8900. 1 Bedroom House $20 and utilities, walking road and parking. 2 Bedroom House $40 ridge and range included. Call after 5:00 p.m. STUDIO Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 2nd semester sublease, close to campus; 2 BV, very comfortable dorm room; 2 BV, very comfortable bedroom; 1 bedroom to sublease 2 dorm rooms, near bus route 490; Call Dan Warmer, 843-9120 or 843-2540 *surms* & *brinings* in living room 5; min from campuses & *brinings* in living room 5. HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APTS. 1 BR Apts. $285 2 BR Apts. $340-$360 3 BR Apts. $415 All apps, have CAG, gas heat, refrig. and leave. Please terms available to May 31, July 31, and Dec. 31. Call between 9 am-6 pm. m. Mon.-Fri. 843-8754. lease choice 2: BH. 2 bath and cushion of golf course. 4d 6021; april/mar/cwr. Herts, no pets. Days 48 d 6021 4 bedroom Cape Cod Cip. 112 baths, all appliances, buil- yard. 6 month rental. $350 per每月. 843-4648. Beautiful 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment, with or without utilities paid. Central air, wall to wa- ll for privacy. Designed, despoiled, close to shopping and KL bus路. Come see our 267 Bedroom Laundry Line 11; call 844-4884 for information BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. 842-1876 or 841-1287 trand new studio for sublease. 1 block from Union 41-1300 Anytime. keep trying. Duplex. 2 bath tubs for rent. East Lawrence. Jan 1. W2D hookup. 749-2155 FOR RENT. Newest. available brand new juni ture vanilla with 24 hour bus travel bus route ALL UTILITIES PAYD. Call 8492087 www.fordavilleautoservices.com Reserve your studio now for the spring semester while the selection is good. Fully furnished, free cable TV, close to campus. meadowbrook Furnished kitchen. Fully equipped Kitchen, gas heat and on bus route. Available Dev. 1, 2, reasonable. Large 3 bedroom apartment. Lots of storage, fully laundry, pot room, laundry facilities, water paid Qua- tionnaire. Bathroom, free toilet. Large one bedroom apartment, 1238 Vermont, range of rent. Garage巨权. All aliqued paid. $20 per month. Free Wi-Fi. Low rent. Roommate for 2BR apt. $137.50 mo. unit. Vail. Call B43. 849-1698 Naismith Hall Individually - Thermostatically Controlled Heat Sublease 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment on KU bus route. In excellent condition with carpet and wallpaper. Enclosed bathroom, 2706 Bledish Bed II at call 841 6666 for information. Sublease 1 bedroom apartment, furnished, carpeted, enclosed bathroom, 2706 Bledish Bed I at call 841 6666 for information. Stay Warm This Winter With *Private Sleeping Study Areas *Carneting Meadowbrook studio for sublease available now or December 1 $10 off December rent. Ask for U2U 800 *Private Baths 1800 NAISMITH DRIVE 843-8559 *Versatility in Payment Plans* *High Rise Living With A Pool And An Active Social Calendar* Nice 2 bedroom apartment just north of stadium. Available immediately. $275. 842-4434 Keep trying. Nice two bedroom house for rent. Close to campus. *剖宴星期 1. Call after 5 p.m. 841-4518 *Free Utilities Sublease EXCELLIENT new studio with bedroom and ceiling fan. Available December 19th, 2014 One block from campus 4 bedrooms, share living room, kitchen, 1/2 baths $12/month plus 1/2 bedroom. 1 bedroom. One bedroom apt. for rent. Great location just minutes from campus. Reasonable rent. For info. *Fourteen Meals Per Week* *Air Conditioning* Roommate need immediately, or starting Jan. 1 for immediate care. Call 804-9244 for Melissa, Cheap, Cheap. Room for rent near university and downtown. No pets please. 814-5600 SUBLEASE J. Jan. 10th June *Nice Quail Creek aquat* *Campground, 10 miles north of Lake Clifton, clubboat,* *$99/mo Call Mountains, Sun Thurs.* --required composition and literature courses. Required MA or PhD degree, experience working with or experiencing teaching in the University of Kansas Deadline for receipt of complete applications. December 15. Full job requirements include Master's Degree in Education Department; the University of Kansas, Lawrence. Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer Save money, rent a 1 or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets. phone 842-4153. Share five bedroom home close to campus. Use two or three utilities. Free rent until Jan Call 842-4153 at any time. ARRAYMENTS West An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievably Slashed Rates! 1 & 2 BR Apts. - Year-round swimming * Free shuttle bus to campus 14 times daily * Laundry facilities featuring: Don't miss this opportunity to join one of the most prestigious communities in this area if you want to situation, call us. We work with them. 842-4444 524 Frontier Rd. --required composition and literature courses. Required MA or PhD degree, experience working with or experiencing teaching in the University of Kansas Deadline for receipt of complete applications. December 15. Full job requirements include Master's Degree in Education Department; the University of Kansas, Lawrence. Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer Utilities paid. 2 bedroom apartment, close to KU. College town area. A900. 851-7427. 841-7429 FOR SALE COMPLETELY FURNISHED Studio, 2 or 3 bedroom apartments available immediately. Great location in the heart of Amsterdam. MADWINDOW BOOK spacious 2 bedroom apartment available now until May. Gas and water paid. quiet 2 weeks. 1967 FAIRLANE CONVERTIBLE, classic must go must sell $10. Call Jerry Jay. 195 Yamaha 125. good body, engine needs work, $75 negotiable. Call 843-4255. 1807 Mustang T6 pumps; poles; ACMF cassette; 1808 Mustang T5 pumps; poles; ACMF cassette; 1809 T7 Convert. Excellent shape; air air compressors. 1983 MUSTANG, V 6. loaded, new $10,500 best offer, 7500 miles, alien Allen, 804 6551, 1076 McCullum 6 tickets for Police Call Larry 749-3296 evenings for 600hillmile, 3 speed, $22.00 cost Offer, 84.95%* 101st Warranty Airplane, 4 speed, air low, $400* 120th Warranty Airplane, 4 speed, air low, $400* Auction - consignment every Friday night, 7 p.m. Sheenhaier's, across Kansas River Bridge, 2 miles north of McKinley City. Beautiful hand-made flower garden quilt. Makes a Christmas gift. $90.00 #1 893-035 Chery Impala, blue, 4-door. 78. Call 843-2501. In excellent shape. DYANMO Football Tablet excellent condition, X Moin coin挺 $89 Best offer this week M仕 sell XMoin coin挺 $89 Best offer this week For Sale Pro-lightning w system P: Rock bottom price 2 JBL Midrange hurdle s a Track TEAC tape deck, Arp Izm II synth s wAvil case III ENT condition untable case. Serious磨损. Formal dress. Size 7/8 Light Blue Gauze Sax, Queen Anne seeded neckline like necklace. B44. 1092-162 Huge moving sale all items must go. November 17 and 19 - 9 a.m. 4:00 p.m. 11:30 Pm. Drive-in store. Huge price on phone! Quality phones work on all long distance networks. Lowest prices, fully guaranteed. A great way to save money. Sound and video systems. Phone Tom 841-660-10 M.F. Don’t reach out and get Nineteenth century German violin Works good $1.500 $1.500 as a collector items. Call 842-8233. Police tickets for November 24 Will sell to highest offer. Call Susan. 841-8068. RAMJET Gas saver, power booster systems, power amplifier systems, acceleration, quicker start, less knock and ping. U.S. government tested and approved, guaranteed for life of car 8495, 7496-9609. Save up to $1,000 per year. Secroco S. excellent condition, very sporty AC, sweatband, black jacket, watch, michels. Micheal, guard red, spider Gb 902 860 Speakers, large beautiful walnut cabinets, 3 way transmission line. Excellent sound Call Lsa. 149 278 5000. RCA Video Recorder (VCR; VPF700) to the lime VRM remote ready special effects, etc. Stereo Techs receiver and turntable AAL speakers. Akai tape deck. Ecue condition, under the same lighting. Sterio television. All name brands. Lowest price. KC area. Total Sound Distributors. Used furniture, Shoemaker's, across Kaw River Bridge. 2 miles north of Lawrence on 841-846-8067 Why Pay Rest? $3260 buys 2 BR mobile home-store, air, new furniture. 841-849-8067 Women's Designer Sample Sale. Designer jeans by Calvin Klein, Jordache, Sasson, etc. $20; Blouses, and polo type shirts $10-13; Tops at least all half price or less high quality. 42-44, 158-160. Stereo television video All name brands. Lowest PC area Total Sound Distributors, 3K T159. PC-100A printer, software's business knowledge, mathualities, aviation, leisure, master knowledge 1918. CHRYSLER, RESTORED $2900. LEAVENHAY 883-7265. Reeling Chair. Good condition, must sell. Comfortable 40. Negotiable 79-735. HUGE SELECTION OF MEN'S MAGAZINES FOR DAYS AT MEN'S COMICS, 811 N.OPEN IN THE DAY LOST AND FOUND 1968 Karmann-Ghilel excellent engine, needs body work. 841-6235 Last: Black leather wallet around 10.12" & Mass. & Max. & Keep. Mass the money it need. I need the wallet. LOSST DOG Medium German Shepherd, black + silver gray hair, rounder first and duodhall of ears. CHICARPET CARpet dromosizes $50, shags $35, chocolate piles. Great deals, clean stuff. 842-413 Found Key ring, in front of Ellsworth Hall, Call 864 4539 Found, brown and black puppy in a bread neighborhood Call 841-1199 FRESHMEN SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE For children 8 and under, $250. For children 16 and over, $350. The Mother's helper wanted for New York City area for 6 months one year Must drive Non-smoker 18 years or older. Must be a licensed registered Marina Vell | Garden Ridgeridge, NY, NY 10026. Lime. Creamed wooden mullets. Three diamonds Summerfield. Great sentimental value. Reward Summerfield. Great sentimental value. Reward Could you use an extra $400 a month? Start your own Business. Less than $160 investment, unlimited liabilities. Fast delivery. BOSTON · EAST COAST ADVENTURE • Explore opportunities of exciting city while working as live in job opportunity. Contact Child Care Commitment • Contact Child Care Placement 149 Buckminster Dr., Brookline, Mass 02471 • 618-536-5111 College English teachers Possible openings beginning January 1864 for part time teaching in Found: scarf, call to identify. 8423384 Student hourly needed 20 per week. Call for Deployment 11/18, 9 p.m. Law School Placement Deployment 11/18, 9 p.m. Law School Placement Sales reps to call on security and fraternity houses Sales experience help; Contact Balfour. 85 Mae Ring. 921-340-7700. www.maryrose.co.uk Summer Jobs: National Park Cars 21, Parks 300, Mission Mountains 598, Mission Mountains 653, 434 and 87. W. Kaislap, MN Mountain Mts. AIRLINES ARE HIREING NOW! Flight Attendance is up to 175 people per hour. FIND YOUR FARE (your interviews) : 1-866-792-1731 www.afl.com Lost: Male, black kitten, 6 months old. Lost 11/8 842-1997 BOSTON/EAST COAST ADVENTURE Explore opportunities working with who are caring as live river stewards. Apply to the commitment, Contact Child Care, Placement Service, 140 Backmuster Road, Brooklyn, Mass. 212-396-5800. Caregiver to assist female with disability No. 157460-03-02-089807 Weekend weekend during holiday calls Call 1-800-453-5211 MISCELLANEOUS HELP WANTED PERSONAL EUKANAR is the only teaching which shows man how to go beyond this physical world and visit those realms beyond here and now during this lifetime. Room, Kannas Union. 16: 7 30 pm, Governor's room, Kannas Union LOOKING FOR A NEW AND EXCITING RELATIONSHIP? CALL PATT G OR KAREN S. GSP-CORBIN 1 NEED TO CONTACT WALLACE FERGUSON 7 CITY OF NEW YORK ME. AT JEAN C/O ALIA LA TROTTRE 4965 PENNINGTON LN, BLUE SPRING M0 66015 Life unimpaired is not worth living. Societies have to deal with the realities of being believed what they believed because their friends or relatives had told them certain things which they were supposed to be true. WHO, ME? YES YOU! HAPPY BIRTHDAY CARLA! SPA 111 SPRING '83 dorie. Believe it or not, I haven't forgotten Love, loved BUSINESS PERSONAL A strong kq outlet. Bennet Retail Liverpool Chilled to 125°F from the north, north of Maccam Memorial Stadium. Birmingham 842-9720. COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular conditions assessed Kansas City gave CVS TURKEY SHOOT This Week Today, Fri., Sat. Fun and Prizes Call 864-3311 or stop by the 2nd floor of the Military Science Bldg. Funded by Student Senate Activity Fee Curtin Mattes *Showcasepers* 600 moves choose from: Bent a video machine and pre-recorded video, or both. Don't lose sight of Night. Night. Catch HORIZON Don't lose sight of the Lawrence House. 5 p.m. f.l.t. The Lawrence House. 5 p.m. f.l.t. Iinstant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization tour, studio visit, and of course fine portraits Schaefer Studio 794-181 FOR THE HOLIDAYS Bring a gift of chocolates when you visit this Thanksgiving Chocolate Unlimited Just received, new of New Formal Wear including; new pastel cumberbuns and bow ties; formal wear scarves; black satin red plaid, and black silk white gauze or black formal wear vests. Most sizes of new wing tip tux suits are still in stock. Shipping of small and large tuxedo shirts and white used dinner jacket, black tuxedos, cutaway, tuxes shirt, and tux pants. Come see our sharp formal wear jewelry, and cushi and cuffs a good Christmas gift. It won't too early to order Christmas portraits for PHOTOS. 866. Fennellville. 841-400-795 PHOTOS. 866. Fennellville. 841-400-795 1601 W.23rd Las Vegas, register now! For 2nd round for $115.00 Pool Tournament Pool T竞赛 Sut-d Ns 749-4328 749-4329 Lawrence's nicest laundromat, Suds in Duds. I was the boring one at the laundry. MW 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. - Southern Hills Center 749-1100 MONEY FOR SCHOOL! We guarantee to find scholarships, grants, and aid which you’re eligible to receive. Application materials - $1.00 Indicate Attendance for Application Aid Finder Box 103-45, Fairfield, WA 20256. Laundry Laundry Night. Tues 7-12. Laundry doing laundry for 10 cents draws. Sudafed-749, 749-143 Leadership elect STEVE MARSHALL STEVE MARK Independent Candidate NUNEMAKER SENATOR Integrity Honesty Special for students. Haircuts $1 and penns $2. Charm, ask for Deena Jenna. 843-3800 Nov. 16 & 17 Paid for by Steve Marshall say if on a short, custom silicone printing T-shirts lens and cane. Shorten by 3ft. 280-011. SKI VAL, BEAVER CREEK call TOLL FREE 1-800-224-4460 or CONSULT YOUR TRAVEL AGENT FOR DISCOUNT RATES on lodging, gifts, and rentals. say it for you! craft table takes on printing! 1 shirts jerseys and jams, compact. Shrink to 74 x 601. Previews at Christmas Portraits through December 15 at Presses Studio Call for data: 749-1611 Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization notes to sense use to Western Civilization. Attend 31 or 31B for exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Church, The Village. The AOTT Pledge Class of '83 Would like to formally apologize to those of you who purchased roses, from us, because the delivery was so late and the quality of the roses was poor. We were disheartened at the outset, but we are very sorry for any inconvenience. Sincerely, The members of the AQTT Pledge Class of '89 HIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing confidential counseling 843-8272 Danger signals! backache, backache, arm pain, arm pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, call the Orthopedic Health Center and Doctor M.E. of Chiropractic health insurance accepted. No charge for consultation GRLRS, our new ladies wool fashion hats have arrived! The ETC Shop 72 Massachusetts, 841-6011 THIRT STORES Appliances, furniture, clothing, knoxs, bedding. Always good choice! 828-5960 Wholehouse Sound Rental, P.A., Guitar, and Bass - 841-6495 Lawrence is a lovely launderette, Suds Duds. It’s mideast on the left, 10:30 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Midnight is 12:15 p.m. to 12:25 p.m. (10:49-9:43). SERVICES OFFERED Artists with written word Typing, editing graphics. WORD ARTISTS. Eleni 841 2172 ENGLISH Plain will edit your thesis, dissertation; ENGLISH Thapp. Will edit in Eng. I: 101, 202, 203; Call Ms. Thapp. Would you like to English M A, 3 yrs uv teaching exp, wint ler grammar comp. will edit preadressual paper large or small Euronow all. In Lawrence Drew School reserve transportation. In Lawrence Drew School reserve transportation provided, drive now, pay later. Transportation provided, drive now, pay later. RESEARCH PAPERS TOLL-FREE HOTLINE 800-621-5745 IN ILINLISI CALL 312-922-0300 AUTHORS' RESEARCH, ROOM 600 407 S. Dearborn, Chicago, IL 61658 The Falcon Association can help you achieve your goals. If needed, they will provide a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Box 2034 in the New York Post Office. STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1032 Massachusetts, downstairs all haircuts. $3.00 No appointment. www.stadiumbarbershop.com Foreign Students: Personal, efficient editing of your dissertation, briefing the editor report, resumé background, book writing WRITES A PAGE Racquetball, tennis, squash racquet stringing specializing in new graphite hybrid stringing. Tennis Racquets for sale also. Heine, Prince, et al. Newware. $385.80, 79.92% evenings WAKE UP SERVICE We will wake you up in the morning by phone. Call Chris. 842-4040 TYPING 24-hour typing. Fast, accurate. Resumes, letters requested. Wipe up to do your writing. RB#0102 WORD PROCESSING B1 8966 000 quality (typing) WORD PROCESSING B1 8966 000 AAA TYPEMINT. Belttiva good (typeT1; 1942 after I) AAA TYPEMINT. Belttiva good (typeT1; 1942 after I) AFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs. Calluji, 842.7945 after 6 p.m. Absolutely Letter Perfect Typing, Editing, Formatting & Repairing. Quality 481-6981.冗余 overnight services Accurate affordable typing. Ask about speed, overnight service (under 25 pages). Call Mar Kay. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard student Eric Ferguson. Becky's Type and Becky's Excellent typing at reasonable rate. C++ is a powerful language. *p85x* /h65x* /210204x* **CLAN** and **TYPING** assigned. Call 684 10 apmtime Call TIP TOP TYPING 1202 Iowa Experienced callers and Verizon 615 Memoryways, Royal Telephone Number. Call Terry for your typing needs. Letters, term- mails and phone calls. 801-635-4298 or 801-635-4271, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. 842-4748 or 842-4741, 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Processing you can afford it 843 1020 JANETTE SHAYER TYPEING SERVICE IBM It's a Fact. Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing. Word Processing. You can afford it! 441-832-9000 Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations HM Correcting Secture. Call 914-237-5600. Experienced typist will type dissertations, thesis, term papers, e. g., reasonable rates. Call 842. 3213. GOOD WORK, TYPING, WORD, PROCESSING, reasonable rates. Call Tad: 842. 3111. ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED. FAST & EFFICIENT 841 3510 Experimented typed Tern paper, themes; all characters; all forms. Drawing: Plex, Picx and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9547. Elvis could wiggle. Shakespeare count write, *tall call* *Tug 8640* 0492 after 5:30 and weekends. *Experienced type* thessus, theses; dissertations, term papers, muni HM Correcting Selective Barb. *Hard copy* TYPING PLUS. Theses, dessertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with companion, grammar, spelling, etc. English for foreign students or Americans. 841-6245 3 services at 1 location typing, editing and graphics WORLD ARTISTS, call Ellen. 841-2722 Word Processing plus typing. Dictation plus transcription from cassette plus microcardite. Plus airbrush plus charts plus graphs plus photography plus pick-up and delivery . Ab's Art Plus 749 3230 2 Roomsmate to share 2 BR apt. for spring semester 16:16 to less ela. 844-646. Nan or Lisa WANTED 2 female roommates wanted to share 2 bedroom on campus. Only $160 per month, all utilities included. Female needle to take over second semester contract for Nnamithall face. Can move in December or early spring. 2 females to share 2 bedroom apartment for spring semester. Call for details. 842-7861 4th roommate for great house near station next room. Set up student/survey partner 1:47 per week. Offer a $1,000/month package. Male commute wanted 102$ monthly and 1/3 utility on bus route Call 844-9816 Female required needs to subluate Medford Room Apartment for spring semester (by bus route) 1000 St. Louis Blvd. Firmate roommate. Nice 1 bedroom duplex avail. 408 sq ft with balcony, large garden, £50 plus 1.2 utilities. On bus route 843.3671 Mature male cochinchin wanted starting spring flowering. Grow in a greenhouse, launch gardens near large 1/2 meter plant size and 1 1/2 meter plan size. Need roommate for spacious, furnished 2 bedroom apartment close to campus $150 plus 1.7/hr rent Responsible female to help with child care, charges in or furnished room, meals in family home Roommate requires to share 2 bfhm apt. at 760 IU Abbey, Upper floor of house 321 house 3. Room is located from Community Mercantile. For details, please call Hills Plaza Office at 842 5757. From 9:09 to 9:30. Homemade wanted for extra large 2 bedrooms Large room with private bathroom. Bank off all walking distance. Re included meals and cleaning. $150 per month. Roommate to sublease private room in a 2 BH apt Close to campus, cheap utilities. Free留令延期 to stay. Roommate wanted immediately. 2 BRI apartment $16.87 per month + 1.3 baths. 3 blocks from union station. Roommin for large house apartment Private room, energy efficient $150/month Availability Roommate wanted to share a furnished 3-bedroom house located at 900 Emery. Call 843-8448 Roommate to share nice 2 bedroom apt in a beautiful 1 BR apartment free laundry, free water. See Matter 842-298. WOMEN'S SELF DEFENSE. A no-money course that teaches you how to effectively effectively be allowed (n) $15 a month to buy new clothes. (No cash). People read the Kansan classifieds to find homes, jobs, cars, typing services, etc. You can use the Kansan classifieds to sell anything from A to Z. Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence,KS 66045. Use the rates below to figure costs and watch the results. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading Write Ad Here: ___ Name: ___ Address: ___ Phone: ___ Date to Run Classified Display: 1 col x 1 inch = $4.20 10 Days or Two Weeks $6.75 1 year --- : SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 16, 1983 Page 16 'Hawks open cage schedule against Dutch Brown is unsure whether his team is ready for game By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor The Kansas Jayhawk basketball team will open its season tonight when it faces a touring team from the University of North Carolina Field House. Tip-off is set for 7:30. Between 8,000 and 9,000 fans are expected for the game, which is The game will be the first outside competition for the Jayhawks, led by first-year coach Larry Brown. How did the team respond as a regular season contest for KU? The Netherlands, also called the Dutch National team, will be playing its fourth game in an eight-game tour of the United States. The team is 2-1, having Beaver Air Force and Southern Air Force and having lost 73-74 to West Virginia. "A lot of people don't realize that they are a pretty good team." Brown said. "I took a pro team over with the Gatorade team, and we打了 Williams on it and they were tough. "Personally, I don't think we're ready, but I think the kids deserve a The Jayhawks have five returning starters from last year's team which finished in a tie for last place in the Big Eight conference. Carl Henry, Kelly Knight, Calvin Thompson, Kerry Hendrick and Tad Boyle will lead the KU attack. Sophomore center Greg Dreiling will be making his first appearance for the Jayhawks after sitting out last season because he transferred from Wichita State. Ten players on the Netherlands 14-man roster are 6-foot-7 or taller. One of their players, Handy Wiel, wears a jersey with a blue collar. The average age of the team is 26 The team that will face KU tonight is not the Olympic team from the Netherlands, but several players from this squad will play in the 1984 games. Brown said yesterday that he has not decided on a starting lineup for tonight. "We're still searching for players who can play and combinations that play well together," Brown said. "A lot of them are trying so hard that they are struggling." "I still don't know who will be playing a lot or what kind of style we will be able to play. I don't think it will mean much." In contrast, I just want to see who can play." Brown is also expected to announce today the signing of as many as three more players in the early signing period for high school seniors. Danny Manning has already announced that he will play in the last day of the early signing period. Brown said he found out yesterday that All-American guard Troy Lewis from Anderson III, has decided to continue his career and earned an average of 29.9 points a game. "I thought we had him," Brown said of Anderson. "Distance was the key, he. PETER W. NEW YORK - The National Basketball Association owners yesterday named David J. Stern as the new NBA commissioner, replacing Larry O'Brien. Stern to replace O'Brien as NBA's top executive By United Press International NEW YORK - National Basketball Association owners reached into the league organization yesterday and appointed executive vice president David J. Stern to succeed Larry O'Brien as NBA commissioner. Stern, who was head of the league's legal department, assumes his new duties on Feb. 1. O'Brien relinquishing the position will be on call as a consultant and adviser. In other developments at the NBA Board of Governors meeting, no progress was reported in negotiations with referees, who have been locked out; a drug program resolution was adopted that also would penalize league personnel for use, possession or distribution of illegal substances; and the Stern, who joined the NBA in 1978 as its general counsel, becomes the league's fourth commissioner, following Maurice Podoloff, Walter Kennedy and O'Brien. He became the NBA's executive vice president for business relations, and was also O'Brien's chief assistant in shaping and carrying out league policies. league formally approved the sate or smaller SuperSonics to Barry Ackley. "Our meeting was so short that I waived my own rule of not discussing a new commissioner and brought up the subject," said O'Brien, who worked on John F. Kennedy's 1960 presidential campaign. He probably will re-enter the political arena with same capacity for some other candidate running for president in 1984. "I recommended to the owners they should not look outward for my successor and they agreed to search within the organization," said O Brien. "I told them of David's qualities and how I urged him to extend his work beyond the legal department. And of being a vice president for operations post so he could be the No. 2 man in the NBA. "I'm extremely pleased that he was available to move up to be No. 1. The Stern, a lawyer who also had the responsibility of overseeing the development of NBA marketing and promotional areas, had little to say except to thank O'Brien for his confidence. "Larry was inspirational," said Stern. "I learned the important thing to do is identify the problem and then work to solve it. I'm also indebted to the Board of Governors for their confidence I find the league in remarkably good shape and I don't plan to do it. I'm carrying on Larry O'Brien's good work." With an ever-increasing drug problem in sports, the NBA decided to wage an all-out war against all league personnel involved with drugs. Of the referees, Stern said he appreciated their contribution to the game, but he had been instructed by the owners not to go beyond the 37 percent cut. But she reported that the two sides were still far apart and that talks would continue. "We agreed that this would be applied across the board," said Russ Granick, the league's chief labor negotiator. "This means players, owners, general managers, coaches, trainers and even the league office staff." Mackovic prepares to battle White, Cowboys, will set old friendships aside until after game By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — John Mackovic spent two years of his coaching life trying to make the Dallas Cowboys the best team in the National Football League. But on Sunday Mackovic will be out to prove they aren't. Mackovic, the quarterback coach of the Cowboys in 1982-83, will take his Kansas City Chiefs to Dallas Sunday to face his former boss, Tom Landry, and his former star pupil, Danny White. No team has a better record than the 9-2 mark of the Cowboys this season, and no quarterback in NFL history has a higher career efficiency rating than the 84.7 of White. Mackovic left the Dallas staff last February to replace Mav Levy, who was fired as head coach of the Chiefs, and has directed Kansas City to a 5-4 record through 11 weeks of his rookie season. A victory over the Cowbies Sunday would put the Chiefs at .500 for the third time this season. "I'm the only person connected with our team with any personal link to the Cowboys," Mackovic said. "So it would be unfair for me to make the game out of more than just another game between us at Pasos City Chiefs and Dallas Cowboys." "John really came at the right time for me," White said. "I had just started my career as a starting quarterback, and what I needed more than anything else was support. John has a tremendous knack for seeing things like that. He knows the negatives and talks positives. It was very important to me at the time." Mackovic played an important role in the development of White into the game's top-rated passer. White has completed 61 percent of his passes this season for 2,799 yards and a league-high 24 touchdowns. But Mockovic doesn't think his close relationship over the previous two years with White — or with the Cowboys collectively — will give him any advantage Sundav. "I can't spend my whole week thinking up ways to disrupt Danny White," Mackovic said. "That would be foolish on my part. I have to prepare the Kansas City Chiefs to play as well as we can play. "I know so many of the players but I have to divorce myself from my personal opinions, both pro and con. I'll let my coaches coach the game the way they see it. I can't coach every one of them, but we fight against every one of theirs. If I tried, I'd be doing a great disservoir to the Kansas City Chiefs. "When the game is over, then it will be special to me. When I walk off the field and can see them as friends — Danny White, Randy White, Tony Dorsett, Bob Breung. It was difficult saying goodbye to all those guys after a Po Boil. But I can't allow that to my involvement in Sunday's game." Dupree wasn't OU's best soph Sooner fans still have Tisdale By United Press International NORMAN, Okla. — Marcus Dupree may have bolted the University of Oklahoma, but the Sooners can absorb his loss. After all, he was only the second-best player in the school's sophomore class. The best player — not only in the sophomore class but in the whole school and probably the entire Big Eight — are Tisdale of the basketball Sippers. [Basketball player] He is the Wayman Tisdale who set a Big Eight single-season scoring record, who led the Sooners to a 24-9 record and into the NCAA Tournament, who earned second-team All-America honors and who starred for the gold-medal winning United States Pan American team this summer in Venezuela. And that was as a mere freshman. And that was as a more freshman. Tisdale scored 810 points to break the record of 752 in scoring on scoring record of 800 points by Wilt Chamberlain of Kansas in 1965-67. He also scored a school-record 51 points in only his fourth game at Oklahoma, Wayman Tisdale coming within one point of breaking an enemy landing Chamberlain record of bombing. Tisdale finished eighth in the nation in scoring with an average of 24.6 points a game and 18th in rebounding with an average of 10.3 a game. He thus became the first player who Don Cheadle has lead the Big Eight in both departments. Tisdale then polished his game last summer at the Pan American Games, starting as power forward on an All-America laden squad and finishing second on the team in scoring behind Michael Jordan of North Carolina and second in rebounding behind Sam Perkins, also of North Carolina. "Wayman is a much better player this year than last," said Oklahoma Coach Billy Tubs. "He now has one valuable commodity — a year's experience. The Pan Am camp also had to improve him. He played against the Indians, and guys like that every day in practice. That had to be better for him than sitting around all summer doing absolutely nothing. "People naturally are going to say that Wayman scored 810 points last year so he ought to score 1,200 this year. If you think he may not but score as many points." Write your message in the coupon below putting one word in each box. No ads over 20 words will be accepted. Then mail the coupon to your payment to Kansan Advertising (or stop by in Nov. 30 at 5 p.m. Space is limited so you get yours in early! Send a friend some holiday cheer . . with a Kansan Holiday Message. *Price includes green color on border and ribbon of box. Phone ___ Amt. $ ___ A Kansan Holiday Message Is a great way to wish someone a happy holiday season or say goodbye 'till next semester. 20 words (or less) — $4.00* I All eds must be sworn. - Price includes green color on border and ribbon of box. Clin and bring to: Kansan Advertising 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Lawrence, Ks. 66045 "I don't know how fast I run the 40 (yard dash) now, but I bet you I could beat Pete Johnson or Franco Harris," he said. pounds, eight pounds more than his playing weight, and that he plans to train to get in shape. Even if Brown wanted to return to pro football, he'd have to deal with the team he left 18 years ago to pursue a movie career. Cleveland still holds the rights to No. 32, said a Browns' spokesman. TRAILWAYS INTRODUCES THE INCREDIBLE San Diego State Co. Belmont REDIBOX He said the additional games per year have diminished the hallmark of a great runner — a 1,000-yard season. NFL great Brown might come back if record is broken A spokesman for the Pittsburgh Steelers said Harris would not comment on Brown's remarks. Harris so far has 11,725 yards. Asked whether the Raiders would give Brown a tryout, club executive Assistant Al LoCaasa said, "Jim Brown is a great player and we're glad to see he thinks so highly of the Raiders." He declined further comment. The former fullback repeatedly mentioned that his record was set in nine seasons when teams played 12 games and never more than the current 16-game season. "I figure when they do break it, I'll talk to Al Davis." "I think it is better to die with your boots on like an old solider." he said or authorized dealer and ship it nationwide, all for one price. $11.95. Fill it up (maximum 75 lbs.) and bring in to one of our inter- national distributors. Brown said that should Harris break the record this year, he'll contact Davis, owner of the Loss Field, for playing for the Raiders next season. Redibox *makes shipping simple, fast and incredibly inexpensive.* Jim Brown SHIP NATIONWIDE. ONLY STI.95! In a telephone interview from his home in Los Angeles, Brown said, "Well, I never thought about it until he started asking me about the record. transportation anywhere, $248-$300. No other offers. It's that inexpensive. So stop by your Trailways terminal or authorized dealer today. Buy our new Redibox " container and make shipping simple, fast and incredibly easy. We offer overnight delivery within 500 miles, and 24 hour delivery for a 1,000 mile shipment. It is that fast. Brown, now 47, gained 12,312 yards while with the Cleveland Browns from 1957 to 1965 and already has been inducted into the Hall of Fame. However, Pittsburgh's Franco Harris and Chicago's Walter Payton are closing in on the career-rushing record. SERVICIAL FOR $100.00 PER HOUR And your $11.95 includes carton, $100 free valuation, and By United Press International This offer good on Trailways, Inc. and participate companies for interested non commercial use only. The contract is a fee based upon a contract with the terminal agent for restricted entries and destinations not served under this service. One time only. Please call 1-800-652-7355. Brown said that he weighs 235 1401 WEST 6TH ST. 843-5622 CLEVELAND — Jim Brown, pro football's career rushing leader even though he has been retired for 18 years, said yesterday that he would consider making a comeback in his career-rushing record was broken. EASTERN AVE. GoBigRed 10 32 GoTrailways For Rediboxes... 32 More Sports, Page 14 Women's—Thur., Nov. 17 at 6:15 p.m. Court 2. Robinson Center 1983 Fall Intramural Volleyball Hill Championships Men's—Thur, Nov. 17 at 7 p.m. Court 2 Robinson Center Free Spectator Seating in Balcony It's Not Just A Hamburger . . . Mickey's It's Not Just A Hamburger . . . Minsky's GUIDE For lunch this week try Steak . . . It's A 1/2 Lb. STEAKBURGER! THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA We deliver 2228 Iowa 842-0154 Style! THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA Open season Jayhawks beat Dutch, 74-70 Sports. p.15 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas Vol. 94, No. 64 (USPS 650-640) COOL High, 60s. Low, 30s. Details on p.2 Thursday morning, November 17, 1983 Palestinian rebels seize Beddawi refugee camp; Arafat retreats to Tripoli By United Press International TRIPOLI, Lebanon - Palestinian rebel captured Yasser Arafat's last stronghold yesterday in hand-to-hand combat that left at least 100 people wounded and drove the guerrilla chief's belaguerie. Reporters who witnessed the fall of the Beddawi refugee camp said the rebels looted Arafat's headquarters, stomped on posters of the Islamic State and killed three civilians in resistance inside the maze of cinder block homes. Arafat's troops were seen retreating south on the coast road to Tripoli as Syrian tanks crossed the harbour we outskirts of the refugee camp on the day of an all-out attack and artillery on assault. One Arafat soldier said Syrian tanks struck so swiftly that 'we did not even have time to take aim.' IN REHIRT, Syrian-backed militias struck the Defense Ministry building and the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. nine people in new attacks on Christian eastern Beirut and the besieged Christian enclave of Al-Qaeda. The shelling continued into early today, hitting homes in the capital but not inflicting more damage than expected. An unidentified assailant in a car also hurled a grenade at a Marine post on the coastal road near the U.S. peace-keeping base at Beirut Airport, but it exploded harmlessly. It was the fourth day of battles in the capital, which threaten to erupt into a new round of civil war, jeopardizing plans for future peace talks. In response, the U.S. ambassador's residence in Hazmiey STATE-RUN BEIRUT television quoted security reports as saying more than 200 people were killed, most of them Arafat loyalists, in the attack. At least 62 people were killed and 36 wounded. The Syrian-backed rebels began their drive 13 days ago and broke into Bedawi by capturing See MIDEAST, p. 5, col. 3 Senate raises ceiling on debt in push to adjourn tomorrow By United Press International WASHINGTON — Congress, hoping to recess by the end of the week, approved important legislation yesterday, including a decision to raise the ceiling on the national debt to $1.45 trillion — clearing the last barrier to adjournment Moving with dispatch, Congress approved a reorganized Civil Rights Commission and two key money bills, and killed President Reagan's tuition tax credit plan. The Senate vote on the debt ceiling, tabulated about 11:05 p.m. CST, was 58-40. The measure now goes to the House, which earlier this year voted to raise the debt ceiling to $1.615 trillion, enough to carry the government through the end of the fiscal year. The House must either agree to the lower Senate level or a compromise version must be worked out and sent to Reagan before Congress can adjourn for the year. The 1983 session is scheduled to finish tomorrow. Congress would then leave town until Jan. 23. SENATE REPUBLICAN leader Howard Zubrisky has filed a lawsuit against the able to finish on time, said in his most upbeat message. "We will do everything and I believe we will be able to commit Nov 15." Earlier yesterday the Senate voted 49-46 to kill a proposal by Sen William Armstrong, R-Co., that would have allowed the president to keep his debt under control. The debt was beaten exceeded on a monthly basis. Armstrong insisted on at least a vote on the presidential impoundment power as a basis for directing his support to an extension of the national debt limit. Under the proposal Armstrong favored, the president could not withhold more than 20 percent of funds from any one program over a year and could not cut entitlement benefits — such as Social Security or Medicare — from the level people are now receiving. Congress would "star-step" the debt limit — setting targets for each month — and if the president determined those limits were being violated, could he withhold funds from banks. Arrests. Action. The current $1.389 trillion debt ceiling technically expired Oct 31, when the Senate See CONGRESS, p. 5, col. 5 GREYHOUND DETROIT — A Grayhound bus sits by the side of the John Lodge Expressway after being involved in an accident with a car. A security car leading the bus struck the car, which had broken United Press International suddenly, and then was itself hit by the bus. Bernard Crittenden, driver of the car and a striking Greyhound bus driver, was taken away by paramedics. Greyhound returns despite accidents By United Press International PHOENIX. Ariz. - Greyhound returned to the roads today with a strike-breaking driver carrying five passengers and a security guard traveling on a bus trip since employees went on strike 3 days ago. Greyhound had assured travelers it was safe to ride their buses despite accidents yesterday. A 41-year-old woman was killed yesterday near Fresno, Calif., when her car collided with a Greyhound bus carrying three trainees. Police said the woman, whose name was not released, was hit by a police vehicle. The first bus to roll since the strike began left Orlando. Fla., early this morning for the first time in two months. contained five passengers and was being driven by a striking union member who had returned to work. It was being escorted by a security patrol car but Greyhound supervisor Jim Davis said no incidents of harassment or violence had occurred. Greyhound resumed its limited service with newly trained non-union drivers, 1,600 union members who gave up on the labor tead, and 1,700 supervisors and other non-union workers. State police said striker Bernard Crittenden, charged with reckless driving, was taken to Henry Ford Hospital with possible back injuries, and another person received minor injuries. His A striking Greyhound driver leading two Greyhound buses and a company security car in Detroit braked suddenly yesterday, causing accidents in which two people were injured. The FBI was called in to investigate. abrupt stop on a Detroit freeway triggered as many as five accidents within a half-mile of the crash. He said he stopped to avoid hitting a dog. The FBI was called in to investigate. In another incident yesterday, two buses were damaged by fire at the Greyhound bus yard on Detroit's near West Side. A security guard said two Molotov cocktails were thrown over the bus yard's fence, causing small fires that damaged the top of one bus and a fireman another. The fires were put out with extinguishers. Frederick Dumikosi, president of Greyhound Lines Inc., said the firm's telephone information centers have received more than 75,000 calls in three days from bus riders asking about the firm's limited schedule. Greyhound is offering half price fares for the routes. Planning board postpones action on church Staff Reporter By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Mier a vigorous two-hour debate, the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission last night delayed action for 90 days on an ordinance that would alter the procedure for building churches. The St. Lawrence Catholic Center's site plan for construction of a new church, chapel and student center at the corner of Crescent and Toomey to the City Commission Tuesday for approval. The commission now is free to consider the plan without considering the proposed amend- The Catholic Center announced its plans in April for expansion and construction of a new church. Last summer, residents in the neighborhood formed an association to oppose the concrete structure. procedure for approving church construction. ASTANDING ROOM only crowd of more than 80 people waged a highly partisan debate as seven members of the planning commission heard arguments for and against the additional Richardlee, chairman of the planning commission, told the audience that the hearing was not about specific church issues but was concerned with the proposed amendment. However, Ice was ignored. The crowd seemed unaware of the incident. The St. Lawrence Catholic Center and residents See related story p. 7 of the Cresent and Engel roads neighborhood near the KU campus. The amendment, which was delayed by a 5-2 vote, would require a special use permit for construction of places that require high traffic and public participation — including art galleries, museums, cemeteries, student centers, libraries and churches. THIRTEEN PEOPLE, including two KU students, spoke in favor of maintaining the current practice of allowing churches to build their own buildings and for filing a site plan with the City Commission. The Rev Vince Krische, pastor of the St. Lawrence Center, summarized most of the He said the Church was a unique entity and urged the planning commission to consider the needs of those in the region. He said that allowing the use permitted upon review system for churches would make construction of churches a political issue. He also distinguished between most churches, which need a student center churches, which need to occupy a spot close to the University to be effective. Graduate student Ben Clifton, a political science teaching assistant, advises Marci Sambol, Leawood senior. Department chairmen across the University say that otherwise healthy graduate programs are suffering from lack of money for graduate teaching assistant positions. REPRESENTATIVES FROM five other Lawrence churches also requested that the planning commission delay action, so that the church could participate in the amendment after the Christmas holiday. Applause broke out twice during the meeting. The first round came for Raymond Schwegler, health services physician at Watkins Hospital, when he urged the commission to reject the amendment and said that students needed to be close to religious influences so that they could be saved from alcohol and drugs. The second round came for Krische when he asked the commission to delay because of the vital consequences of the issue. The image depicts two individuals engaged in a conversation, seated at a table with open books. One person, wearing a white shirt and dark pants, is extending their hand towards the other person, who is dressed in a suit and glasses. The background is plain and dark, focusing attention on the interaction between the two. There are no discernible text elements or labels within the frame. Lack of funds means losing grad students By DONNA WOODS Karin Nelson didn't decide which graduate school to attend by calling heads or bails. The University of Texas lost by more than the toss of a coin. Staff Reporter Nelson wanted to attend KU this year to begin working toward a master's degree. But partly because KU could not offer adequate financial support, Nelson decided to enroll in graduate school at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. KU's Spanish department is not alone in its inability to offer substantial financial aid to graduate students. Chairmen and deans across the Uni- See GRADS, p. 6, col. 1 Lawrence unemployment drops to fifth lowest level in the nation By Staff and Wire Reports Lawrence unemployment became the fifth lowest in the nation after it dropped to 3.8 percent during September, according to Labor Department statistics released yester- September unemployment reached its lowest point in about 18 months in Lawrence, and unemployment rates fell in Kansas and Douglas County Unemployment in Kansas dropped 4.5 percent, and Douglas County dropped 8.8 percent. The national rate dropped to 8.8 percent. "I'm delighted that our unemployment dropped, but we still have a lot of people who are not as fortunate," she said. LONGHURST SAID HE was not sure why the Lawrence unemployment rate was so low, became several local industries had laid off The Kansas unemployment rate was nearly 1 percent above the unemployment rate in New Hampshire. New Hampshire recorded an unemployment rate of 3.6 percent for the state and 4.5 percent for the nation. North Dakota followed with a rate of 3.7 percent unemployment in the work force. Unemployment declined in 44 states during September. The Labor Department attributed the decline to an economic upturn observed by people across the nation. Douglas County Commissioner Nancy Hiebert said that the drop in unemployment rates in the county could possibly diminish See JOBLESS, p. 5, col. 4 'The Day After' sparks discussions in local schools about nuclear war Staff Reporter By SUSAN WORTMAN For the sixth graders at Cordley Elementary School, yesterday morning was typical. They were seated in the same classroom, the walls covered with last week's art projects. Several division problems were half-erased on the chalkboard But that afternoon the 20 students were sitting around a wooden table in the back of their classroom talking about a subject not so typical for school rooms — nuclear war. Because of the large amount of publicity for the television movie "The Day After," some Lawrence teachers have added discussions about nuclear war to their lesson plans. Of the 20 students who were in the classroom, 16 thought a nuclear bomb would be dropped "WHY DO THEY have nuclear bombs? And why do they have to have so many bombs?" asked 12-year-old Bryan Ware, son of Cledith Ware. “Because,” said Joel Wesman, 11, son of Randy and Vickie Weseman, “nuclear wasnt made to kill. Einstein didn’t make it for that. It is not possible to prevent it for that purpose. It just became that.” "Kansas City is a target shot," said Mike Adams, 16, son of Seal and Betty Adams. "It is in him that he wins." Bill Armstrong, principal at Hillcrest Elementary School, said "The Day After" had stirred conversation among students at the school. during their lifetimes. They came to the general conclusion that they would not live through a full-scale nuclear war because Lawrence would have been killed in the United States became involved in another war. "I CAN'T THINK of anything that has drawn such attention. There has been tons in the paper, and studies have been done, and it has been on TV," be said. "It is amazing." It all may be for a good reason, he said. The children have heard about the movie and have begun to think about the possibility of nuclear war. Brillia Scott, principal of West Junior High, said, "Motions of the discussions I have heard have changed." Students will also be discussing the movie at Pinekey Elementary School said principal Gail 1 Airmtstorm sgd tafiechs at HIllcresr were also See SCHOOLS, p. 5, col. 1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 17. 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Reagan pushes for passage of enterprise zone program WASHINGTON — President Reagan began a last-ditch push for passage of urban enterprise zone legislation yesterday, but supporters said congressional Democrats were blocking the program to deny him a campaign plum. On the eve of a house hearing, Reagan invited a group of city politicians, the White House to reaffirm his support for the federal proposal. However, the proposal, a priority administration program already approved by the Senate, is given little chance of getting through the House and a congressional conference committee before Congress adjourns later this week until Jan. 23. The proposal would authorize the creation of as many as 75 enterprise zones in depressed urban areas around the country. In each such area, tax and regulatory burdens could be eased to encourage investment and economic development. Hawaiian quake strongest since '75 HILO, Hawaii — The strongest earthquake in eight years jolted the volcano island of Hawaii yesterday, damaging scores of homes and businesses, touching off landslides and knocking out power. Only minor injuries were reported. The quake, which measured 6.7 on the Richter scale, destroyed four homes and caused damage to dozens more. Only minor injuries were reported in the quake, Hawaii's strongest since 1975, when a 7.2 quake killed two people. Police Ll. Chryl Reis said, “Dozens and dozens of structures in every district” on the island were damaged to some extent, “probably from a fire.” The quake broke three water mains and blacked out many communities. Nicaraguan urges CIA purge of rebels MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Eden Pastora Gomez, a leading Nicaraguan rebel, said yesterday that the CIA should purge its rebel army in Nicaragua of former supporters of Anastasia Somoa so that a true revolution could take place against the Marxist Sandistas. Pastora, a hero of the 1979 revolution that overthrew the repressive Somoza regime, said his Sandino Revolutionary Front did not cooperate in its planning. Meanwhile, Nicaragua's Interior Minister Tomas Borge assured Washington of the safety of Americans living in his country in an apparent effort to keep a Grenada-style invasion from being ordered by the Reagan administration to protect U.S. citizens. Reagan to freeze federal promotions WASHINGTON — The administration is planning to freeze promotions to high-paying federal jobs, despite congressional criticism that the move to save up to $1 billion might hurt morale, the White House said yesterday. Under the plan, about 8.5 percent of the 470,000 civilian federal jobs paying more than $24,000 would not be filled when people holding the position become available. White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater told reporters yesterday that the plan — which would take effect in fiscal 1985 and does not require congressional approval — was "part of a continuing civil service review and management reform effort." But Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Cole., retorted, "It's not professional management. It's political grandstand." Scientists say sneezing may be fatal ANAHEIM, Calif. — Allergic reactions that cause sneezing can trigger the release of enough histamine from the heart to cause potentially fatal heart attacks, scientists said yesterday. Laboratory findings indicate that the sudden release of histamine — a chemical present in all body organs including the heart — causes irregular heart activity, two physicians told a meeting of the American Heart Association. Such episodes, called "cardiac anaphylaxis," could be the cause of some unexplained sudden death and the physicians. L. Michael Goffman and Ralph A. Becker wrote in *The New York Times*. Trial sought for war crimes suspect TEL AVIV, Israel — Israel is seeking the extradition from the United States of a suspected Nazi war criminal thought to be a gas chamber operator known as "Ivan the Terrible," a newspaper report said yesterday. If extradited, John Demanjuk, 63, a retired autoworker from Cairo, will be the first person since Adolf Eichmann to be tried in Israel. An official in the state attorney general's office declined to comment on the report, which was published in the Jerusalem Post newspaper. District 'Court' judge in Cleveland revoked Demjanjuk's citizenship because of his alleged Nazi past when he came to the United States 32 years ago. First pole-to-pole flight is delayed RECIFE, Brazil — Aviator Brooke Knapp's attempt to become the first pilot to circle the globe from pole to pole in a business jet stalled in Brazil yesterday, with a crew flying from Georgia to fix the plane's landing gear. Manufacturers of the Gulfstream III jet in Savannah, Ga., dispatched a repair crew with spare parts to fly to Recife, in what looked like a possible 20-hour delay. Knapp said. The pilot had set a 61-hour timetable for return to Los Angeles International Airport that was interrupted by the breakdown. You have to be philosophical" the pilot said. "We could have had engendered us from this Pole. That would be serious. Instead we're here in beautiful Brazil." WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-17-83 LOW SEATTLE 29.53 COLD BOSTON MINNEAPOLIS COOL CHICAGO NEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO DENVER HIGH FAIR ATLANTA WARM NEW ORLEANS 30.00 MIAMI HIGHEST TEMPERATURES 50 70 50 70 UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST ® LEGEND RAIN SNOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORCAST to 7 PM EST 11-17-83 (80W) 39-63 hrs Today will be fair across most of the nation. Locally, today will fair with a high of 60 to 65, according to the National Weather Service. Tomorrow will be fair with a low of 35 to 40. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the low 60s. U.S. troops in Grenada to return by Christmas WASHINGTON — All American combat troops will be pulled out of Grenada by Dec. 23, a White House spokesman said yesterday, but there were indications that other U.S. personnel may stay longer. By United Press International Deputy Press Secretary Larry Speakes told reporters that Secretary of State George Shultz had informed Congress Tuesday that the troops still on the Caribbean island would be withdrawn two days before Christmas. "We have indicated to the Congress that there is no need for congressional action, in our opinion, on (the) war powers (act)," Speakes said. "WE DON'T ANTICIPATE there will be any additional hostilities and combat troops would be out, as the Department of Defense said, before the 60-day period expires, although we do knowledge the need for a 60-day period." Under the War Powers Resolution, adopted in 1973 as a result of the Vietnam War, a president must notify Congress when U.S. troops face a combat situation and must then withdraw those troops within 60 days unless authorized to authorization to do otherwise. The 60 day period can be extended by 30 days. There are an estimated 3,000 U.S. troops in Grenada, down from the 6,000 there during the invasion. Pentagon officials said they have not drawn up any plans for a withdrawal by Christmas. When asked about the status of other U.S. military personnel who may remain on the island, such as construction workers or medical personnel, Speakes said, "None of those issues has been decided." HE SAID A group of businessmen, under the auspices of the Agency for International Development, was mak- Speakes declined to answer any questions concerning reports that U.S. troops have participated in summary arrests and roundup of Grenadians. He said that "the governor general asked for the assistance of the peacekeeper." and a survey of Grenada's needs and issue a report Monday. The state of emergency in Grenada was lifted Tuesday, an interim government was sworn in and the United States began dismantling a makeshift prison camp where Cuban and Grenadian soldiers were held for interrogation. The state of emergency included a ban on public meetings and allowed arrest without warrant — restrictions that put U.S. officials on the defensive. IN POINT SALINAS, Grenada, Cuban Charge d'Affaires Gaston Diaz filed a protest with the U.S. mission, charging he was detained by U.S. driving near the Cuban Built Point Salinas airport, now a U.S. military base. "They stopped me and they arrested me," said Diaz, Cuba's sole diplomatic representative in Grenada, which was invaded Oct. 25 by U.S. and Caribbean forces to rescue American students and overthrow a Marxist regime. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mass phone 843-1151 "They had my license number and they took me inside their command post," he said. "I showed them my diplomatic identification but it made no difference." They made all kinds of obscene signs. They seemed to know who I was. After a brief detention, Diaz said he was released but later filed a protest made in his name. U. S. MISSION spokesman James Dandridge said a White House task force, including representatives of the Agency for International Development, sent personnel to the Peace Corps, was arriving for a three-day visit to the Caribbean island. Boyds Coins-Antiques Class Clings Buy-Sell-Trade Gold-Silver-Coins 731 Antiques-Watches New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 60644 913-842-8773 Journal says Soviets have cruise missile technology By United Press International LONDON — The Soviet Union has developed its own version of the low-flying U.S. cruise missile now being deployed in Britain, and the technology was probably stolen from Russia, an defense journal said yesterday. The disclosure by the journal, Jane's Defense Review, came as protesters staged demonstrations during the crush massage in mugel. At the Greenham Common Air Base, 50 miles west of London, where the U.S. missiles have been dropped on Iraq and Syria, more women protesters were arrested. OFFICERS SAID 141 other women had been arrested at Greenham Common since Monday when a U.S. transport plane arrived with the first of 572 cruise and Pershing 2 aircraft employed in five European countries. British courts began hearings for anti-missile protesters arrested at Greenham Common and outside the House of Commons where about 300 protesters were arrested Tuesday when they lay down in the street. In West Germany, police detained 24 anti-missile demonstrators who tried to blockade an entrance to the U.S. Armed Forces European headquarters in Stuttgart and 35 others who invaded a vacant U.S. Army installation in Innerberg, about 35 miles to the south, police said. IN ROME, the government of Prime Minister Bettyno Craxi was bringing the issue of deploying cruise missiles in Sicily to a vote in Parliament amid protests by the Italian Communist Party. Jane's Defense Review revealed that the Soviet Union has its own low-flying cruise missile — the SSN-X21. 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Kodacolor VR 1000 film is the fastest color print film in the world, for good pictures in low light, and when you need very high shutter speeds to stop action. An advanced, new emulsion technology enables the film to capture more light without the grain and loss in sharpness you'd normally expect with such a fast film! Try all four new films...and see all the ways you can be a better photographer! © Eastern Kodak Company, 1985 Kodak Kodak New Kodacolor VR films. 1 1 University Daily Kansan, November 17. 1983 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports State court upholds award for turnpike bridge death TOPEKA — The Kansas Supreme Court yesterday upheld a jury's award of $71,000 to the family of a truck driver killed when his rig plunged off a defective bridge on the Kansas Turnpike in Topeka. In a 6-1 decision with a strongly worded dissent by Chief Justice Alfred Schroeder, the high court said that a consulting engineering company hired by the Kansas Turnpike Authority to inspect turnpike roads to the public to exercise reasonable care in making safety inspections. In addition, the high court rejected contentions by the firm of Howard, Needles, Tammen and Bergendoff that the jury's damage award was excessive and based on passion and prejudice. The accident happened on Feb. 20, 1979, when truck driver Robert Ingram, Independence, Mo., struck a large hole while driving across the turnip bridge. The impact caused his truck to swerve, hit a guard rail and plunge 25 feet to the ground. Date of trial to be set in rape case Joseph Francis Mandak, a student at Benedictine College in Atchison, is also charged with aggravated bargaining in connection with the Oct. 15 bribery case. A trial date for an Atchison man accused of the attempted rape of a KU student will be set at 9:30 a.m. on Jan. 6 in Douglas County District Court. During a hearing yesterday in Douglas County District Court, Mandak's attorney said that Mandak was living with his father in Colorado Sorings, Colo., and was undergoing therapy. Warm Hearts sets goal at $100.000 The Lawrence Warm Hearts, an organization that helps low income and disadvantaged families with home heating problems and heating bills, yesterday set its 1983 fund raising goal at $100,000. State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence and the group's chairman, said the group based its goal on findings from Lawrence's natural gas task force. The task force reported that $100,000 would be needed to help families this winter. Last year, Branson said, the Warm Hearts organization set a goal to $80,000 but raised $70,000. All of that money was used for providing heath care. Branson said that the organization would ask Lawrence residents and businesses to donate the refund they receive from their Kansas Public Land Trust. The organization will solicit donations in the city and on campus, Branson said. Joel Jacobs, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, will head the city donation drive, and Wallace Johnson, professor of East Asian studies, will head the campus drive. Polls still open for Senate elections Polling places for conclusion of the Student Senate elections today will be open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Jim Clark, chairman of the Student Senate Elections Committee, said that all polling places, except for one in front of the Wescow Hall lecture hall, were closed on Tuesday. The poll locations are: Wescoe, Fraser Hall, Summerfield Hall, the Frank R. Burge Union, the Kansas Union and the Visual Art and Design building. Students will be required to present their student identification cards before voting. Topeka man will be tried for arson A Douglas County District Court judge said yesterday that a 23-year-old Topeka man would go to trial for aggravated arson in connection with a Nov. 1 house fire in Lawrence. Douglas Association Judge Mike Elwell also dismissed two counts of aggravated assault against Willis Seville Vance III during year 2014. A trial date will be set at 11 a.m. Dec. 2. Vance is accused of setting a house fire at 1233 Pennsylvania St. Loretha Parker, her five children and a nephew were in the house when the fire broke out on the back porch. Do you have a news trip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 864-4810. GOT A NEWS TIP? The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. Senate keeps living group seats, Minority Affairs By PETE WICKLUND Staff Reporter The Student Senate ended its 1983 legislative year last night by voting to retain five living group Senate seats in the Senate Minority Affairs Committee. Last night's voting ended almost three months debate on proposed changes in the Senate's operating rules. The action allowed the Senate to adjourn without any outstanding legislation and, by a vote, rescinded Senate, which will be elected today. The Senate vote to retain the living group seats after almost an hour and a half debate on the issue and after a week of debate, several students to keep the seats. Busby said he made the proposal to eliminate "duo-representation" of students in the Senate. In addition to the living group seats, students are also represented through elected school senators. LOREN BUSYB, chairman of the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee, on Nov. 2 made the proposal to eliminate the appointed living group seats representing the Association of University Residence Halls, the All-Scholarship Hall Council, the Interfraternity Council and the Panhellenic Society. Busyb's amendment to the Senate rules also called for the elimination of the elected off-campus seat. But four senators last night asked that Busby's amendment be eliminated. The senators, in a counter-amendment, argued that the living conditions provided a special channel of communication between the Senate and its constituents. The senators who asked for the elimination of Busby's proposal were: Cheri Brown, School of Social Welfare; Cheri Brown, All-Schoolship Hall Council; Amanda Island, Interfraternity Council; and Amy O'Brien, Panhellenic Association. THE SENATORS organized a group of about 50 students who attended the meeting to show support for the seats. Most of the students were from scholarship halls or black student organizations. the All-Scholarship Hall Council, also attended the meeting and voiced Jim Clark, Senate Elections Committee chairman, Allyson Beardsley, president of the Panhellenic Association, and Kevin Selman, president of Clark said the amendment would have had a detrimental effect on the Student Senate elections, which are currently underway. He said the amendment could have been unfair to three students who are seeking the off-campus seat. "I don't think it's fair to say midway through the election. 'I'm sorry it's all bad for naught,'" Clark said in reference to the off-campus candidates. DEFENDING BUSBY'S amendment, Paul Buskirk, hold-over senator, said that providing special interest Senate seats would require the ground to provide seats for other living grounds that might ask for seats in the future. Black groups have asked that the Senate also provide an appointed living group seat to the Black Panhellenic Association. But despite requests from several students last night, the Senate took no action on the request. The Senate last night also voted to retain the Senate Minority Affairs Committee. The Committee was scheduled to be eliminated, along with four other committees, as a result of the rules changes. BUT JIM CHAMER, student body vice president, successfully introduced an amendment to the rules, which enveloped the rule changes provision to streamline the Senate committee affairs, but also kept Minority Affairs. The Minority Affairs Committee had been accused in the past of being inactive. But members of black student organizations attended several past Senate meetings to voice support for the committee. "I think most of the senators thought that if there were many people who thought Minority Affairs was impertinent, then we keep the committee," Cramer said. The 14th Student Senate will officially adjourn at a Nov. 30 meeting, at which the 15th Student Senate, which will be elected today, will be sworn in. FRAUGHT WITH FINAL FEVER? Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358. Attend the Study Skills Workshop with emphasis on preparing for exams! Tuesday, Nov. 29 ALLESTRONG HILLS SAC WWW.SAC.COM 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. 300 Strong Presented by the Student Assistance Center. Steamboat Steamboat A Flurry of Excitement January 2-8 Full package price of $299 includes: sleeper-bus transportation, 4 nights lodging at The Ranch Condos, lift tickets for 5 days, ski rental and a wine & cheese party. Sign up in the SUA office before November 30. Another happier holiday from SUA. HURR: AND SIGN UP Y! SUN TRAVEL the fun affordable Place to be!! LAWRENCE-Barron's still has the best happy hour in town. 50c Draws and $1 Wells from 4-12p.m. plus twowafers on all daquiris, marigaritas, and pina coladas after midnight. 7th & Mass. Downtown. AREN'T YOU HUNGRY? BURGER KING Whopper® 99¢ each (no limit) Please present this coupon before ordering. Not to be used with other coupons or offers. Void where prohibited by law. This offer good Thursday, G Fri, Nov 17, 6, 18, 1983 Good only at: 1301 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Ks., UDK Burger King Whopper - Reg U.S. Tat & TM On! 1982 Burger King Corporation MISTER GUY CAMPUS CLASSICS SALINA 1987 CAMPUS CLASSICS MISTER R. GUY 920 Massachusetts 842-2700 MON. SAT 9:30 6:00 THURS. OPEN TILL 8:30 SUN 1 5 OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 17, 1983 Page The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kansas (USPK 600-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-First Hall Lawrence, Kansas for the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer sessions. Subscribes to mail are $15 for six months or $2 a semester at Saturday, Sunday, Monday or Tuesday. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $2 a semester at Sunday, Monday or Tuesday. Subscribes to mail are $15 for six months or $2 a semester at Saturday, Sunday, Monday or Tuesday. Address changes to the University Daily Kansas (USPK 600-640) are published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-First Hall Lawrence, Kansas for the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer sessions. Subscribes to mail are $15 for six months or $2 a semester at Saturday, MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Editor DON KNOX Campus Editor PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser Campus Sales Manager ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager LYNNE STARK Camus Sales Manager DAVE WANMAKER Retail Sales Manager MARK MEARS National Sales JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser Warm welcome Amid the doom-and-gloom events that tend to attract the news spotlight comes a beam of hope and good will. Two ailing South Korean children have come to the United States to undergo heart surgery not available in their homeland. The children — a 7-year-old girl, Ahn I Jook, and a 4-year-old boy, Lee Kil Woo — entered a New York hospital Monday. The children are scheduled to be operated on next week. The case of the young Korean pair merits recognition because of the special circumstances that led to their entry into the hospital. First, the children's flight costs and medical fees are being paid by Gift of Life Inc., a non-profit U.S. corporation, and the hospital, St. Francis Hospital in Roslyn, N.Y. In addition, the children's trip and treatment were made possible in part by an American living in South Korea, Harriet Hodges, who has helped other Korean children find treatment at U.S. hospitals. Finally, Hodges alerted U.S. officials to the children's plight, and the officials secured permission for the children to fly with President and Mrs. Reagan on the Reagans' return from their trip to Asia. Some may say that the Reagans' gesture was nothing but a convenient publicity stunt, but no one forced the Reagans to pay attention to the children. Moreover, no one forced Gift of Life or St. Francis Hospital to donate services to the pair. The Korean children are recipients of old-fashioned American hospitality. Huck an' Missus Allen Those who don't think that ignorance and censorship are two sides of the same coin need only look at a controversy in Pennsylvania involving a parent and the State College Area School District. Parent Margot Allen is objecting to the teaching of Mark Twain's great novel Huckleberry Finn on the grounds, she asks us to believe, that it is racist. "I read the book 25 years ago and hated it," she says open-mindedly. "Why, 25 years later, are we still passing this off in the name of good education?" Allen seems mainly to be concerned with the experience of her son, the only black in his class, who she says was told by his teacher to read the part of Jim "because he had the perfect voice for it." "All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called Huckleberry Finn," Ernest Hemingway wrote — and he This, if true, shows great stupidity and insensitivity on the part of the teacher, but is in no way the fault of poor Mark Twain. wasn't too far off the mark. Writes Clifton Fadiman: "Huck reflects the tensions still vibrating in the national conscience; and if you don't think so, reread the chapter in which Huck debates whether or not he shall turn in Jim, who is that criminal thing, an escaped slave, but who also happens to be a friend." Just to jog Allen's memory: Huck declares, "All right, then, I'll go to hell" rather than turn Jim in. Hardly the words of a racist. Regardless of Margot Allen, it seems fairly certain that the novel will not be banned from the school district, so there's no use getting too worked up about this episode of ignorance. Maybe it's best to just laugh it off, as Twain would have, and point to the novel's introductory paragraph: "Persons attempting to find a motive in this narrative will be prosecuted; persons attempting to find a moral in it will be banished; persons attempting to find a plot in it will be shot." Dangerous cutbacks Passenger traffic on the nation's 21 large and medium-size airlines was 9.1 percent higher in September than it was a year earlier, according to the Air Transport Association. And this figure doesn't cover the More Americans are flying on more planes belonging to more different airlines than ever before. At the same time, the Federal Aviation Administration has fewer inspectors in the field than it did three years ago. That's not a good combination. The nation's air-traffic controller system is still in the process of being rebuilt after the mass firings prompted by the 1981 strike. For the FAA to cut back on inspectors — and more cuts are scheduled in the next federal budget — is a grave and potentially dangerous disservice to the flying public. Newsday, Long Island, N.Y. scores of smaller companies that have sprung up since deregulation. The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-space and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff address. The Kansan also invites individuals and groups to submit guest columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. Germans show will by protests LETTERS POLICY The most remarkable week in the history of the Federal Republic of Germany is over. It was a week of peace demonstrations, of demonstrations against the scheduled distribution of 108 Pershing 2464 cruise missiles in Western Europe, especially West Germany. An estimated three million people participated in a series of demonstrations, which included the blockade of U.S. military bases, the forming of a 67-mile long human chain and several "die-ins." This was exacerbated by German and other authoritarian controls temporary climax in the growing opposition of the German people against these new missiles. I call this week remarkable for a nation that has been taught for years that disobedient and striking workers were responsible for it losing control for 1, and then having to suffer three another. Many people around the world learn from them in humility with increasing suspicion for the changing conduct of its people. The same German people, who have been taught to fanatically obey the orders of any given authorities, and who have followed the directions of American politics for almost 40 years like well-trained police officers, would develop their own will. They have begun to ignore their master's voice. The German people are opposed to missiles and weapons on both sides of the conflict and they demonstrate against all nuclear arms. The peace movement is not a communist movement, but the government tries hard to label peace demonstrators as such to scare people away. There are several reasons for this change and the most important one lies in man's culture. fear. The fear of the German people that they are helpless victims in a macabre and perverse contest of two nations for the dubious honor of building more and deadlier weapons. It is this tremendous fear for the lives of their families and friends that urges the German people to overcome their "conditioning" and practice nonviolent civil disobedience. Now there are about 6,000 nuclear warheads distributed in West Germany. These warheads are in a Guest Columnist JUERGEN HOEDEL highly populated area, only 15,000 square miles larger than the state of Kansas. This is the highest concentration of nuclear weapons in the distribution of the new missiles would bring this figure closer to 7,000. Reagan's plan to hide his MX missiles in Utah had Americans worried and protesting against the danger of such a high concentration of nuclear weapons in one place. And yet, the concentration would have been far less than what already exists in Germany. In an effort to justify the distribution of the new missiles, Reagan repeatedly informed his allies about the necessity for and peacekeeping efforts of the missiles, which represent state-of-the-art war technology. While the Germans listened to Reagan, they watched the U.S. military practice the latest techniques in mass burials during NATO's latest maneuvers. The official explanation for these rather morbid exercises was: "We have to clean up after every battle." There is only one feeling worse than fear — feeling both fearful and helpless. For years Germans have suspected the existence of chemical and biological warfare weapons on their soil. Even though West Germany has outlawed these weapons, the United States has confirmed that they are not capable of a thoughtout German. The German government has no idea where the depots are and how many weapons are stored in them. Now consider the aspect of legality. Are these demonstrators outlawed, misguided idealists? We have back in history to find the answer. After World War II the German people looked at what was left of the world and what they had done to mankind. When the Federal Republic of Germany was founded, the German people wrote in their constitution: Never again will there be a war starting from German soil. It looks as if they are about to break this oath. Pershing 2 and cruise missiles are first-strike weapons. They are not only unnecessary, they are inadequate for retaliation. Their only purpose can be to strike first. This means that these missiles are not only in contradiction to the Christian belief, but they are also unconstitutional. These weapons are supposed to guarantee peace but the opposite is true. The Russians will have to react to their deployment and they will react in two ways. They have already announced the distribution Their second reaction is much more dangerous. Because of the missiles' shorter flight time to their target, the Russians will depend solely on a computerized alarm system to alert their own missiles. of even more missiles if the Pershing 2s are distributed. This computer will be programmed to react immediately to the threat of attack and will not be monitored by humans. There would be no way to stop the launch on attack missiles. Our lives will depend on computers, which have been known to trigger false alarms. The Reagan administration has devised a strategy called "deciptation," a fast deadly strike designed to destroy all Russian nuclear warheads. And another plan describes how U.S. forces could win victories by fighting on the Central European battlefield, in the Middle East and with tactical and regional nuclear weapons, as well as chemical weapons. These same planners have also figured that a global nuclear war would kill 130 million Americans. For these planners the life of a human being is reduced to a bit of information in a computer. The death of 130 million people in the country alone is past the erasure of 130 million names from a computer tape. The peace movement wants disarmament on both sides. But as long as we keep sending negotiators who think and act like businessmen and are only interested in getting a good deal as possible we will not reach agreement. The world will keep balancing on a razor's edge. Juergen Hoehel, 23, is an Estibrarian Filx, West Germany, graduate student studying journalism. AMERICA IS MOM'S WARM SMILE. ITS PICKNIC ON SUNDAY AND SAYING YOUR PRAYERS BEFORE BEDTIME. AMERICA IS CHURCH STEEPLES. IT'S MACARONI AND CHEESE AND JOHN PHILIP SOUSA. AMERICA IS FREEDOM AND FIGHTING AND DYING" AMERICA IS THE CORNER DRUGSTORE AND WORK-OUT TENNIS SHOPS. IT'S SODA POP AND SUPERMAN AND TOUCH FOOTBALL WITH DAD. AND FIGHTING AND DYING AND DYING AND FIGHTING AND FIGHTING AND... THE PRESS CONFERENCE IS CONCLUDED! On the other hand, such shakers as Sens. Lowell Weicker, R-Conn., and Telling a senator by his signature WASHINGTON — The second annual "celebrity dooole auctions" are being held this month to raise money for worthy causes. Without taking anything away from these charitable endeavors, permit me to point out that mencatching is seen in the U.S. Senate much more frequently than once a year. Only instead of doodles, they are called cloture motions. Take a look at the celebrity DICK WEST United Press International The movers — Sens, Bob Pack wood, R-Ore., Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., and Robert Jepsen, R.lowa, among them — usually sign their names in a manner that requires no translation. signatures on any cloture petition — a parliamentary device to break up impostor filibusteres — and you get a list of who the movers and shakers are. Johnston's signature consisted almost entirely of squiggles that seemed to loop back on themselves in the manner of a snake swallowing its own tail. On a similar petition the previous day, by contrast, the name of Sen. Jennings Randolph, D-W Va., took out in pristine clarity. On clout motions sent to the press gallery, fortunately, some helpful soul usually prints the last names of the signers after the signatures. Otherwise we might never have known that one of the signatures on a Nov. 2 petition to the governor had been added to the consideration of the natural gas deregulation bill belonged to Sen. J. Bennett Johnston, D-La. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., affix signatures that are totally indecipherable. It is possible that Randolph, who first came to the Senate in 1984, has been around so long he no longer feels motivated to write illegibly. He is now opposed to the congressional arm of government, careers have been stymied for less. I recall talking several years ago to a federal official who had been passed over for promotion because he formed the letters of his name so plainly even half-literate in English could read his signature. "I just couldn't get the hang of it. I even tried writing my name with my eyes shut. It still came out recognition, nobody took my memos seriously." "Once you are important enough to have your own secretary, the executive squiggle becomes imperative," he explained. "It shows you are too busy making vital decisions to waste time writing your name." Recently, that same bureaucrat was on Capitol Hill testifying before a congressional committee. It being apparent that his star had risen, I asked how he had managed to overcome the legibility handicap "Simple," he replied. "I quit signing my name to inter-office memos and began marking them with an 'X.'" If senators tried that technique on cloture petitions, the debates might be much shorter. Historic pearls CHICAGO — Greatly stirred by the newest heroic naval rhetoric from an American admiral, I felt to musing on the great antecedents in this gallant line. At once, I was startled to realize that none of these historic gems has been translated into English, and so a whole generation of children have been denied access to this part of their heritage. The utterance that so moved me, of course, was that of Adm. Wesley L. McDonald, in the Pentagon on Oct. 28, 1983: "We were not micro- managing Grenada intelligence" until about that time frame." Thus inspired, I have translated a small selection of earlier admirals' BRUCE L. FELKNOR heroic prose for the edification of our young, for whom the original language lies undeciphered John Paul Jones, off the English coast Sept. 23, 1779. Rejecting surrender, he said, "I have not yet begun to fight." What he meant was: Combatwise, the time frame is upcoming. Oliver Hazard Perry, after the Battle of Lake Erie Sept. 10, 1813, "We have met the enemy, and they are ours." What he meant was: Area accessed in combat mode; mission finished. David Farragut, on Mobile Bay Aug. 5, 1984 "Damn the torpedoes Go (full speed) ahead." What he meant was: Disregard anticipated structural damage. Continue as programmed. George Dewey, on Manila Bay May 1, 1988. "You may fire when you are ready. Gridley" What he meant was: Implementation of aggressive action approved; time to be selected by fire control officer. In fairness to senior citizens, who remember the old language, what should a man meant was "Up to them, we need that attention" to spying on Grenada." Copyright 1983 the New York Times. Bruce L. Falknor is director of yearbooks for the Encyclopaedia Britannica. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Senate proposal lessens participation To the Editor: A current proposal before the Student Senate, if passed at the next meeting, would eliminate living group representation. This proposal was the Senate's solution to the issue of housing in the institution, a long neglected and ignored The standard argument used to justify this proposal is that living group senators constitute "double representation." By eliminating the living group senators, all students would be solely represented through their school senators, and therefore everyone would have an "equal" voice in the Student Senate. The logic of this argument, however, rests upon the assumption that all students on campus are equal in number. Common sense tells one that a "minority" group of limited number, spread throughout the total KU student population, has little or no chance of acquiring enough votes in one school to win a Senate seat. Is there a better alternative? A bill to be considered at the next Student Senate meeting would reauthorize the Act and add an appointed seat for Black Great Bend sophomore Richard W. Miller Topeka freshman Budget problems To the Editor: PanHellenic Council. This solution would not be a perfect one, but it could be the first step in a series of legislation making Student Senate representation equal in reality, not just on paper. Denise K. Fujikawa In the Nov. 10 Kansan, it was reported that Victor Wallace, past chairman of the computer science department, resigned "of du frustration after dealing with the department's budget problems." In the Nov. 11 Kansan, it was reported that the firm chosen, to design plans for the University's $2.5 to $3 million indoor practice facility had not been selected "because new options were being looked at." If I may suggest, the "new options to be looked at" should be the infusion of some of this money into the computer science department, instead of building a $3 million structure to keep athletes from eating cold. H.T. Rogers Lawrence senior University Daily Kansan, November 17. 1983 Page 5 Schools continued from p. 1 including discussions about nuclear war in their classes. "We ARE PREPARED to discuss the film," he said. "We are preparing the older classes for it. They will be talking about it tomorrow in social studies." Bryan said, "A nuclear bomb is radioactive. It destroys things forever. It is about heat. That is why we are here." People would hear an explosion, but "the gas and radiation would get to you before you could enclose it." Armstrong said that many children at little age would be more but a lot of them probably would not be. "We aren't recommending that the kids watch it. But we are saying that if kids are going to watch it, the parents should watch it with them and discuss it," he said. "Kids don't understand why you are telling us that kids we have here were born after 1971 and after Vietnam. They haven't been involved in a war." WATCHING THE "The Day After," he said, would be like watching "An American Werewolf in London." Many children might only see the movie and move the message behind the destruction. "I have a first grader and he won't see it," Armstrong said. "It is hard to know if they are ready for that. They could have nightmares for weeks. It is just not worth the risk." Herb Rowland, assistant principal for South Junior High School, said he thought that many students would be interested in the program. "They see television all the time. It is not anything all that new to them," he said. Mike said he did not plan to watch the movie. "BUT YOU KNOW, people in Russia don't want nuclear war," he said. "And our people don't want nuclear war. It's our presidents. They always want to send one off, but if they do, we will." He probably will go roller skating instead. Bryan said he had a solution for eliminating nuclear warheads. "They should just throw them in the ocean. They should just throw them away." he said. Even if they did survive a nuclear bomb, the world might be one that they did not want to live. "There would be so much junk in the air that we wouldn't be able to call anyone or breathe," Bryan said. "And there would be holes in things all fallen over and everything all dusty." Ziba Mofid, 12, daughter of Gini Mofid, said he would bother whether people would survive after a nuclear explosion. "Even if we did survive, all the plants would die and we wouldn't have any oxygen," she said. AND, SAID RACHEL, Allen, 12, daughter of JoBeth and Lew Allen, most of the hospitals would be destroyed, so people could not be helped if they were exposed to radiation. "What would you eat?" Bryan asked. "There is nowhere that you could get away from it." But Joel was more optimistic. He decided that people might have a good chance of surviving if he did this. Ziba said she could not understand why the world needed nuclear bombs at all. "It is stupid that they are building nuclear bombs in the first place," she said, "because we don't have any weapons." Proposal will allow farmers to buy damaged feed grain at lower prices in 27 states to drought-stricken farmers and ranchers. WASHINGTON — Sen. Lloyd Bentens, D-Texas, yesterday urged Congress to quickly approve a compromise dairy and tobacco bill that includes a provision forcing the secretary of agriculture to sell damaged or reduced rates to drought-streken farmers. Block has declined to release the grain, much of it stored since the Russian grain embargo and costing taxpayers $48 million in annual storage costs, despite the problems of livestock owners suffering the worst drought in 50 years. By United Press International "Words cannot express the sheer frustration these ranchers feel," he said. "They have spent a lifetime developing their breeding herds. Now this drought has left their herds diminished and their grassland barren. NICOSIA, Cyprus — Turkish Cypriot leader Rauf Denktash, likening his breakaway to America's Declaration of Independence, flew yesterday to New York to seek recognition at the United Nations for his newly proclaimed republic. "THIS WINTER THEY may have to move out, sell out or starve out," said Bensen. "I would hope that Congress will act quickly to approve this conference report so that it may be enacted into law before any more ranchers must face this decision." The provision sponsored by Bentsen is part of a conference report by House-Senate negotiators on the Dairy and Tobacco Adjustment Act of 1883, which both houses of Congress must approve before President Obama lets it into law. Votes are expected this week. Cypriot leader to ask U.N. to recognize state By United Press International THE SENATE FARLIER approved the provision but the House did not attach it to the dairy bill. However, negotiators for both sides included it in their compromise version. Department of Agriculture inventories show that 21.5 million bushels of corn, graded as unfit for export or use in the Payment-in-Kind program but suitable for livestock feed, are stored in Texas alone at an $11 million annual storage cost to taxpayers. Benten, other members of the Texas delegation and state officials have been pushing for Agriculture Secretary John Block to reopen a new grain storage in the Commodity Credit Corp. He said he expected to receive Turkish military backing if that became necessary for him. Cypriot President Spyros Kyriopanion also left for the United Nations, urging world sanctions against Denkash and mainland Turkey of the NSA's use of Syrian oil. His priority to give up paper in what is now Zimbabwe. There were also scattered reports of military alerts in both Turkey and Greece, but government officials denied troops had been placed on heightened readiness. Some 2,500 U.K. peace-keeping troops on the Mediterranean island remained on alert, ready to intervene in case of violence following a terrorist attack or independence by the ethnic Turkish minority. THE ONLY CHECKPOINT on the line dividing the Turkish north and the Greek south of Cyprus was shut. Most Turkish Cyprits, some 23 percent of a population of 637,000, live in the island of the island, protected by some 18,000 troops from the Turkish mainland 50 miles to the north. Bangladesh joined Turkey in recognizing the newly proclaimed "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus," and a Turkish Cypriot spokesman said he said more Muslim countries would follow suit. But most countries withheld recognition. The 10-nation European Economic Community condemned the Turkish Cypriot secession, which was denounced by the United States Tuesday. "WE ARE DETERMINED to be recognized and I have no regrets about what happened." Denktsah said during a stopover in London before flying on to New York, where he arrived late yesterday for a Security Council meeting today. "If we had not stood up we could have been thrown into the sea," he said. "At least now we will swim — we won't sink — and we hope they will we will have military backing from Turkey." Before departing from Ercan airport in the Turkish sector of Nicosia, Denkitalk said he hoped "the United States will understand us, they have also formed their country in this way." He said he was going to the United Nations "to dissuade the Greek Cypritis from procuring one-sided resolutions for their policy of usurpation." KYRIANOU, WHO LEFT from the airport at Larnaca, said he would ask the United Nations for sanctions against Turkey and Turkish Cypriot leaders for their 'serious provocation' against mankind and fraud of an international dimension." He was asked if force could be used if the diplomatic efforts failed to end the rebellion. "I don't think force is the answer, but peaceful, effective steps must be taken in order to change what has happened — effective steps such as in the case of former Rhodesia," he said. On the Greek side of Nicosia some 20,000 student protesters surged through the streets waving Greek and Cypriot flags and shouting, "Save us to its people . . . Cyprus must remain united." THE U.N. SECURITY Council held a second day of closed-door consultations, with a full seat of members in attendance. Kypriani stopped off in Athens for talks with Greek Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou and planned to fly to London today to meet with the French president Gabret Thatcher before continuing to New York. International trade sanctions were imposed in Rhodesia after its leaders declared unilateral independence from Britain in 1965 in an effort to stave off black majority rule. Britain, the former colonial power in Cyprus, has asked the Council for a resolution urging the Taiwan to abolish its independence. "Out with the invasion troops," they screamed, referring to Turkish troops in the war. It was the second consecutive day of protests by Greek Cypriot students. Mideast continued from p.1 two key outposts of the Palestine Armed Arafat unit equipped with the camp's security "Bedded has fallen," said police reports. "The shelling has stopped. The only sound coming from the camp is automatic weapon fire." Beirut Radio said the rebels pounded the camp for an hour before breaking through and fired shells and rockets at the rate of two every five minutes. "It is by exiling thousands of civilians from their homes in the north and in Tripoli that the Palestinian people will recover their occupied homeland?" Anticipating a rout by the better equipped and larger rebel forces, most of Arafat's 5,000 fighters retreated earlier this week to Tripoli in Libya, where they besieged al-Opim buildings in densely populated areas. ARAFAT'S SPOKESMEN refused to acknowledge Beddawi's fall and continued to boast they could hold out in Tripoli for two months against the rebels, who demand Arafat leave Lebanon and surrender his 14-year reign of the Palestine Liberation Organization to a committee of commanders who want to wage a new war against Israel. "Does the destruction of Tripoli bring back the demise of a distraught deputy maver Abdel Malai al Rafa'i." Officials of Lebanon's second largest city, 42 miles north of Beirut, pleaded with both sides for a cease-fire before a bloodbath engulfed its 150,000 citizens. Jobless continued from p. 1 the amount of money the county received for job training programs and other forms of aid for low-income residents, but she did not think the effect would be substantial. "IT DOESN'T CONCERN me because if we have local people working with employers, the funds will be used and the programs will continue," she said. She also said the unemployment figures might not accurately reflect the size of the Labor Force. "The unemployment figures published are sometimes misleading because there are a number of people in Lawrence looking for a number of "underemployed people," she said. Many people in Lawrence have master's degrees, Hobert said, and they are working in the field. "That just happens in a university town," she said. "People want to stay here. Some solve the problem by committing to Topека or Maidenhouse for lower-paying jobs and others don't have jobs." Financial aid programs such as Warm Hearts are still needed, she said. FOUR STATES SHOWED an increase in their unemployment rates during September. Massachusetts jumped from 6 percent to 7 percent, and New York unemployment increased from 8.2 percent to 8.3 percent. Ohio was up to 11.1 percent from 10.8 in August, and Texas unemployment increased from 7.6 percent to 8.8 percent. Congress continued from p.1 refused to increase it. Since then, we treasury Department, unable to borrow money, has been juggling cash accounts to pay its bills and has suspended the sale of U.S. savings bonds. Treasury Secretary Donald Regan had warned the situation would become critical about DAG. In the event of such a money crisis, Attorney General William French Smith had said the government would continue to write checks — for Social Security; unemployment, the federal payroll, etc. — and that it would be up to mutual banks to decide whether to honor them. In important actions yesterday: - The Senate voted 59-38 to kill the proposed tuition tax credit plan, through which parents who send children to private elementary and secondary schools pay tuition tax credits to partially offset the cost of tuition. - The House, by voice vote, approved and sent to the White House legislation reorganizing the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights under which Reagan and Congress would each appoint four members. The White House said Reagan would sign the bill. - The House approved, 417-3, a $10.5 billion appropriations bill for the departments of state, justice and commerce, the ninth key money bill approved by Congress, and the White House for Reagan's expected signature. - The Senate again put off action on the nomination of Reagan intimate William Clark to become secretary of the interior. SILVER BULLET TURTLE RACE at Cogburns the one and only 737 N. H. sponsored by Coors Friday, Nov. 18 8:00 Win Beer, Hats, Posters and Other Prizes TURTLES PROVIDED SB © 1982 Adriph Coora Co. Golden, Colorado 80401 START YOUR TURTLES! Cogburns HERE'S TO YOU KU!! burns and B. O.C.O. offer 20 kegs for the one and only KU vs MUT.G.I.F. $2 all you can drink or FREE admission with class card Friday, Nov.18 2-6 737 new Hampshire Sponsored by Coors CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1983 Page 6 Grads continued from p. 1 tolerant say that meager financial support undermines otherwise healthy graduate programs. "THIS UNIVERSITY DOES not provide an acceptable program to support graduate students," Gerald Mikkelson, chairman of the department of Slavic languages, said recently. University officials agree that it to attract and retain students. KU must be able to offer increased tuition fee waivers, higher graduate teaching assistant stipends, state-supported assistants, assistantships and more fellowships. George Woodyard, associate dean of the graduate school, said program quality was the prime consideration of graduate students when they decided where to go to school. But, he said, the college plays an important role in the decision. "It was a very hard decision," Nelson said of her choice to attend Illinois. "I can't say that money was the only say, but it certainly played a large part. "If I would have gone strictly on quality, I would have picked KU." THE KU SPANISH department was able to offer a half-time graduate teaching assistant position to Nelson. But that user not grown up. Somewhat reluctantly, Nelson said, she chose to attend Illinois after the department there told her it would be able to offer a full fellowship and a teaching assistant position for the second semester. Robert Spires, chairman of the KU Spanish department, said the department was losing students to uni- ties and would have to provide greater financial support. "We feel that we are attracting highly qualified students, but not the highest. On a long term basis, it is a threat to the quality of the program," Spires said. THE INABILITY TO attract the foremost students not only threatens the quality of the graduate program, he requires the quality of under-graduate instruction. Woodyard explained that attracting qualified senior faculty members was difficult if the faculty members would not be able to instruct adept graduate students and to engage in active research. "It's possible to just have a good undergraduate program, but it won't last long because it will become stagnant," he said. Despite the important role that graduate students play at KU, he said, and the subsequent need to attract highly qualified graduate students, the University does not offer a competitive financial aid package. A study conducted by the American Association of Universities showed that compared to 10 other Midwestern universities UU was $545 below the average UU cost. The package. The package included tuition fee waivers and stipends for TAs. MIKKELSON SAID THAT the University's compensation package was especially bleak in comparison to Ivy League schools and several Big Ten woodyard said that one of KU's most pressing needs was to increase the tuition fee waiver A fee waiver covering all fees paying the full cost of incident fees. Regents schools now offer a 60 percent fee waiver to TAS with a 40 percent or greater work load, based on a 40-hour work week. universities. The Regents this year approved a request for a 75 percent tuition fee waiver and forwarded that request to Gov. John Carlin. The 75 percent fee waiver proposal, which would cost the state $248,000 more than this year's 60 percent fee, was presented during the 1984 legislative session. Graduate students and department chairmen also say that stipend levels need to be increased and that TA given a higher priority in the budget. THE AVERAGE STIPEND at KU for a nine-month, half-time appointment is $5,300. The average salary will be increased to about $5,560 next year. "Gradeable students are getting paid $2,500 a semester. That's not very much money for the amount of teaching they do. They're like Cheeky Pyles, Lawrence graduate student." "It's just not viable. You can't live on less than $500 a month when you're paying for tuition, books and the costs of research. We're not trying to make money at this. We're just trying to eat well." Lester Mitscher, chairman of the department of medicinal chemistry, said that graduate students made a trade-off when they decided to go to college and could not expect to earn as much as they would in the private sector. "YOU KNOW THAT when garbage excretes it takes more times than you do and are hurting." But he agreed that graduate stipends should be higher. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said that stipend levels were below average, but that the problem was not unique to graduate students. "We have the same problem with faculty salaries," he said. "It is not that our graduate students are the particular victims. It is a shared problem." However, Don Watkins, chairman of the department of Germanic languages, said that the way TA positions are limited support for graduate students. Departments and schools across campus determine the number of TA positions that will be offered, the level of stipends that will be offered. BECAUSE DEPARTMENTS OR schools have flexibility in determining how to allocate resources for their TA programs, Watkins said, the programs generally are the most susceptible to being cut when budget shortfalls occur. "Our priorities don't really reflect the importance of the teaching assistant if in fact that is the very first item that can be scrutinized in the budget,' Watkins said. In the fiscal 1985 budget, the University is seeking $225,000 to restore 4 halftime equivalent positions that meet its instructional missions in this year's operating budget. Another consequence of allowing departments to determine the stipend levels for their TAs, Pyles said, is that financially strapped departments might not be paying TAs the proper amount for the services they provide. FOR EXAMPLE, she said, a TA position might have been reduced from a half-time appointment to a 30 percent appointment, but the graduate student would teach the same number of students. Graduate students are not in a position to protest, she said, because they need the job and other graduate students would readily fill an empty spot. In determining salaries, the University needs to establish minimal standards for departments to follow, she said, which would consider the number of hours, the number of students and the type of responsibility given to the TA. Pyles said that results of the study showed that TA salaries for a half-time, nine-month appointment varied from as little as $595 to $10,800. The average monthly pay is between $400 and $650, she said Woodyard agreed that the potential for abuse existed and said that a graduate task force was studying the variance levels in TA stenoids. A SAMPLING OF 53 departments showed that the average salary for a half-time, nine-month appointment ranged from $7,791 in the department of Human Development and Life Family to $6,750 in the School of Social Welfare. Janet Riley, assistant to the vice chancellor of academic affairs, said TA salaries varied not only because of a department's budgetary restrictions, but because some fields are students from other universities or the private sector. Tom Berger, former executive director of the Graduate Student Council, said that salaries also varied because TAS assumed different responsibilities. Some departments also have money from external sources to support a TA position and can afford to pay more, he said. BERGER AGREED, however, that graduate students in some departments might be shouldered with a disproportionate burden without receiving commensurate pay. Besides the need to increase the tuition fee waiver and stipend levels at KU, Woodyard said, the University is working to assist students with assistance to graduate students. KU does not presently offer state-supported RA positions. The Regents have requested $100,000 to finance 100 RA positions in the 1984-1985 school year that must be approved during the 1984 legislative session. Faculty members who receive external funds for research projects are often able to offer research assistantship positions to graduate students. OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRINDER MAN WE DELIVER! ALVAMAR RACQUET CLUB 4120 Clinton Parkway Lawrence, Kansas 66044 ALVAMAR ANNOUNCING the START of the FALL JAYHAWK TEAM TENNIS LEAGUE SAN FRANCISCO Lighten' up the Holidays at THE LIGHTHOUSE CALL ALVAMAR RACQUET CLUB to SIGN UP Phone 842.7766 or 842.7767 JANUARY 12, 1984 through February 16, 1984 Thursday Nights 8:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M. to people—call immediately Cost $45.00 per person MONDAYS: TUESDAYS: WEDNESDAYS: THURSDAYS: Football night- 50c draws 95c well drinks, 75c chili LADIES NIGHT- Your first 3 drinks are free from 8-11 p.m. Happy hour all night! LADIES NIGHT- Your first 3 drinks are free from 8-11 p.m. FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS: $1.00 well drinks all night! FRIDAYS & SUNDAYS: Happy hour all night! Fun • Food • Games • Dancing OPEN THANKSGIVING (LADIES NIGHT) Metcalf 103 Center-Overland Park, KS UPCOMING FILMS AT SUA: Friday & Saturday, November 18th & 19th Spectacular foreign film THE NIGHT OF THE SHooting STARS. 30 p.m. 7:00 p.m., & 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. AND Futuristic fun DEATH RACE 2000 12:00 Midnight Woodruff Aud. $2.00 Sunday, November 20th Sexual decisions with Sonia Braga in DONA FLOR AND HER TWO HUSBANDS. NIGHT SUA FILMS WACKY and LAUGH- PACKED! VISTA VISION Humphrey BOGART WE'RE NO ANGELS TECHNICOLOR with JOAN BENNETT ALDO RAY PETER USTINOV 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud. $1.50 --- 19. 95 Jordache FRAME SALE Hutton Optical can fill your new prescription or duplicate your present one and fit you with a new frame that is just right for your face. Come in and select from: Save 33% to 69% . Anthony Martin and more Zsa Zsa Gabor . Arnold Palmer . Oleg Cassini Balfour It's a matter of pride Get the Frames You Want for the Lenses You Need Mary McFadden M Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames. Can not be used in conjunction with any other sale. Offer good through Nov. 19 HUTTON HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2 CHAMPIONS SPECIAL! $15.00 Off 10 K Gold Rings $30.00 Off 14 K Gold Rings a0 eg NBAA ULTIMUM CHAMPION World Champions wear Balfour rings. So should you. Your class ring is made with the very same craftsmanship and care that go into the making of the sports world's most sought after symbols of accomplishment: the championship STANLEY CLUB STANBUREAU NASN FRANCESCO WORLD CHAMPIONS NRA GLOBAL CHAMPION $15.00 $30.00 2017 ASIAN ANGERSEA WORLD CHAMPIONS JAPAN FRANCE SEA WORLD CHAMPIONS SANLEY CUP WORLD CHAMPIONS Date: Nov. 17, 18, and 19 Time: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Location: Kansas Union Bookstore Trail Room Lobby Level 2 The Islamic Center of Lawrence In Collaboration With The Department of Economics Presents Mahmoud Abusaud Professor of Economics (Retired), consultant and planning in economics In A Lecture Titled: A WORKABLE ECONOMIC SYSTEM: AN ISLAMIC PROPOSAL People interested in world trade, interest rates counter inflationary measures, comparative economics, unemployment. etc. are all invited. Date: Fri., Nov. 18 Time: 7:30 p.m. Place: Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union REFRESHMENTS ARE PROVIDED CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1983 Page 1 Planning commission delays downtown decision By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter Members of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission, saying that they had been put on the spot by the Lawrence City Commission,innen decided to delay a decision on brown redevelopment plan until January. Commissioner Dean Harvey said that this was a poor time to make changes in the city's comprehensive downtown plan because of the recent selection by the Lawrence City Commission of a new developer of record for downtown. "The City Commission has put the Planning Commission on the spot, and I don't appreciate it," Harvey said. "I think there needs to be changes but not now." "THE PROBLEM WAS created by the City Commission. They may not like to hear it, but that's a fact. I cannot understand with any changes in the plan at this time." Harvey's comments were met with a light round of applause from several residents who were opposed to the planning commission making any decision without taking more time to review proposed changes. The changes in the plan, which is part of the city's master plan, were devised by the city planning staff and by a committee about two weeks ago. Commissioner Monte Miller agreed with Harvey and suggested that the commission postpone action indefinitely. Seven people spoke during the public hearing portion of the issue, all urging the commission to take more time to review the proposed changes. "It's unfortunate that this has come up, and I also don't approve of the position we've been placed in," Miller said. FORMER MAYOR MARCI Francisco, who was involved in the original workshops to prepare the comprehensive plan, urged the planning team to make a public work with it before sending a recommendation to the City Commission. All of the commissioners agreed that they had not had sufficient time to review and become familiar with the large number of changes that had been proposed. However, Commissioners Vicki Thomas and Paul Bahnauer both said that the downtown plan had to remain high on the planning commission's priority list. They pushed for the January date to again review the changes and prepare a recommendation for the City Commission. Planning Director Price Banks reminded the commission that an amended plan, which would find new downtown redevelopment plans in compliance with federal requirements, be needed for the city to carry out, proposed financing methods. HARVEY WARNED THE commission that he would not vote for any plan that approved closing Massachusetts condominiums and the amendment would allow closing the street. Last week the City Commission selected Town Center Venture Corp. to be the new developer for the downtown, Broomfield, Calif., Kenner, La. The move also shifted The Town Center plan calls for closing the 600 block of Massachusetts and building a shopping mall between it and the alley east of Massachusetts Street. redevelopment from the 700 and 800 blocks downtown to the 600 block. When the comprehensive plan was amended to the master plan in December 1981, it was done with the idea that development would be in the 700 and 800 blocks downtown. The City Commission's decision to switch to the 600 block led to the necessary amending of the plan. Several of the proposed changes that have been made relate directly to the TTP model. ONE PART OF the amendment changes the recommended development potential in the 600 block, making construction of a "major retail center" a possibility. The original plan said that development potential in the 600 block should be either an office building or a school of schools and benefit from being near the city's "major communication media facilities." Trial dates are scheduled for students in battery cases By the Kansan Staff Trial dates were scheduled yesterday in Douglas County District Court for a KU student charged with sexual battery and for another KU student charged with aggravated battery. Richard Alan Key, an 18-year Wichita freshman, was arraigned yesterday in Douglas County Discrimination Court for unlawfully battering another KU student. His hearing for the charge will be at 11:15 a.m. Dec.27. Key is accused of committing sexual battery on Nov. 2 outside Jayhawker Towers A. He has been arrested Douglas County jail on $2,000 bond. THE TRIAL OF Billy Hayes Courtney, Kansas City, Kan., senior, who is charged with aggravated homicide in Douglas County District Court yesterday in Douglas County District Court, Sergio Reyes, Salina senior, testified that at about 1 a.m. Nov. 8, Courtney hit him in the face with a beer mug while he was in a pool room at the Sanctuary, 1401 W. 7th St. Courtney has been released on $10,000 bond. During a preliminary hearing Reyes said that he had been standing at the counter of a bar talking to a woman when Courtney walked up and put his arm around her. He pulled away from Courtney and that he told Courtney to leave her alone. He and Courtney then exchanged words, Reyes said, and then Courtney went to the pool room. Courtney later returned to the bar, Reyes said, and again they exchanged words. Courtney returned to the pool room. Reyes said that he then went to the room pool to ask someone to calm Courtney. As Reyes was talking to him, he said the hit on the left side of the face KANU may sue for delay in antenna delivery By the Kansan Staff KANU radio is considering taking legal action against RCA Corp. of Camden, N.J., because the company is more than five months late in deliver- "We have called constantly only to be confronted with a series of excuses about the delivery schedules," said Howard Hill, director of KANU. "As a last resort, I am asking the University General Counsel to review our contract with RCA to see if that agreement has been violated in any way." using a new broadcast antenna to address the station director said sesterday. He said that he had sent copies of the contract to Vicki Thomas, University of Michigan. know when she would be able to decide whether the station had suffered enough damages to recover through a legal suit. "THIS IS a serious step, and not one I take lightly." Hill said. "Even if we were to bring action, it would probably not speed the delivery of a new He said that on March 11 the station had ordered the antenna, which RCA said it would construct within three hours of the date that KANU placed the order. However, he said, after several delays RCA officials told KANU in August that the antenna would be shipped in September. But the antenna still has not been delivered, and RCA officials have hedged questions concerning the exact delivery date. The radio station has been operating on a temporary system since last December when vandals destroyed the telephone tower and antenna on West Campus. Before the tower and antenna were destroyed, the radio station operated at an effective radiated power of 110,000 watts. However, since the temporary tower and antenna were installed, the station has been operating at only 8,260 watts, said Al Berman, development director. A new tower, constructed by the Bettlehner Tower Works of Harrison, Ark, has been ready to be shipped to Lawrence since early fall, he said, but the tower cannot be transported until the antenna is ready to be installed. A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 --- What are "FUNFLOWERS?" They're Flowers just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to arrange and enjoy. Put a little fun in your life. Pick up a bunch of FUNFLOWERS' today or any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 Specially priced! *For in town delivery SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" What are "FUNFLOWERS?" They're Flowers just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to range and enjoy. Put a Hite fun in your life. Pick up a bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" today on any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 Specially priced! 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Sat-Sun 2:00 PG VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1085 CHEYV CHASE DEAL CENTURY PC Eve: 7:15-9:15 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 1 SIXTH AND IONA TELEPHONE 843-1085 THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND Eve: 7:20-9:35 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 2 SIXTH AND IONA TELEPHONE 843-1085 SEAN CURRENT THIS IS A BETTER MOVE, BUT NOT ALWAYS WHERE AGAIN Eve: 7:15-9:35 Sat-Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 3 SIXTH AND IONA TELEPHONE 843-1085 Stephen King's THE DEAD ZONE Eve: 7:30 9:30 R CINEMA 1 SIXTH AND IONA TELEPHONE 843-1085 RUNNING G BRAVE PC Eve: 7:35-9:35 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 SIXTH AND IONA TELEPHONE 843-1085 THE BIG CHILL PC COLUMN PICTURES Eve: 7:30-9:35 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 HILLCREST 3 Stephen King's DEAD ZONE Eve: 2:00 9:30 Mat: Sat: 2:15 A MEETING FOR the formation of COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA CHRISTOPHER WILKEN NATRALIE LWOOD BRAINSTORM Eve. 7:15-8:35 Mat. Sat. Sun 2:00 PG VARSITY CHEVY CHASE DEAL CENTURY PC Eve. 7:15-9:15 Mat. Sat. Sun 2:15 A MEETING FOR the formation of THE NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN CLUB OF UNIVERSITY of KANSAS SPONSORED BY: * Office of Minority Affairs TIME: 8:00 P.M. DATE: Thursday-NOV.17,1983 PLACE: COPRIVITY SERVICE CENTER (Inside TRETE HALL) CONTACT * MINORITY AFFAIRS FOR SPECIALS COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN 7 CINEMAS 10 CHRISTOPHER WAKENK NATRIA WOOD BRAINSTORM Eve 1:15-9:25 Mail, Sat-Sun 2:00 PG HILLCREST 1 TIM AND IOWA VOLUME ONE 2003 THE OSTERMAN WEEKEND Live: 7:20-35 Mat. Sat. Sun 2:15 VARSITY TELEPHONE 825-1055 VARSITY CHASE DEAL OF THE CENTURY IPC: Live. 7:15-9:15 Mat.Sun-Sun 2:15 CINEMA 2 LAND AND VIEW THE BIG CHILL R COLUMBIA PICTURES Eve: 7:30-8:30 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 WOULD LIKE TO INTRODUCE A NEW CONCEPT IN CONVENIENCE STORE BEER SALES: LOW PRICES!! YOUR LAWRENCE 7-11'S ITEM 7-11 KWIK- SHOP* 1) COORS 6 PAK, REG. CANS OR BOTTLES $2.59 $3.09 2) BUD, LITE 6 PAK CANS OR BOTTLES $2.69 $3.19 3) MICHELOB PREMIUM 6 PAK BOTTLES $2.69 $3.45 4) MILLER 8 COUNT PONY PAK BOTTLES $2.09 $2.65 5) ALL BRANDS QUART SIZE .99 $1.29 6) MEISTER BRALL REG $1.00 $1.45 Compare our everyday prices to theirs 6) MEISTER BRAU REG. 6 PAK CANS $1.89 $2.45 PLUS 7-11 #688 25th & IOWA 842-5601 YOU CAN SAVE EVEN MORE WITH OUR SPECIAL CASE PRICES! ELEVEN FOOD STORES 7-11 #869 6th & LAWRENCE 842-5812 *Prices from 6th and Kasold KWIK-SHOP. In effect 11/8/83. GET INTO A UNION! Slip into winter with a classic union suit! This smart button-front style is known for its warmth, durability, and flair. It's a solid foundation for everyman's wardrobe with a seamless collar and ribbed cuffs. Don't be left out in the cold-get into a union!! - Made by Health Knit - Available in red, navy blue, and cream - Sizes S.M.L.XL - Makes great sleepwear - Makes great sleepwear - Monogramming available itwin's 831 Massachusetts 843-6155 MasterCard VISA MOLLARD CARD Open Sundays 1-5 p.m. Announcing the challenge of the century. SILVER BULLET SB TALE OF THE TAPE Height: 10.16 cm Weight: 2.41 kilograms Stride: 6.35 cm Length: 20.32 cm Best Clocking: Broke the 3 minute meter (3/20/81) THE WORLD FAMOUS COORS LIGHT RACING TURTLE TAKES ON ALL COMERS BRING YOUR OWN RACING TURTLE AND TAKE ON SILVER BULLET! DATE: NOV. 17 TIME: 8 p.m. PLACE: The Pladium See your campus rep for entry form. You can get your turtle from P. J. McGovern—843-2317. PRIZES! Winning turtle and trainer get their picture in the paper. SPECIALS THURSDAY— $4.25 All you can drink Live music -Clever Max Coca-Cola LIGHT © 1982 Adoqn Coors Co. Golden Consorado 80401 CAMPUS AND AREA Page 8 Movie shows threat to lakes from acid rain By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter Acid rain, caused by the emission of sulfur and nitrogen oxides into the atmosphere, is threatening to kill the life of many North American lakes, Jerry deNoyelles, professor of systems and ecology, said yesterday. University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1983 In Dyche Auditorium, deNoyelles spoke to a group of about 40 people after the showing of "Acid Rain: Requiem for Recovery," a Canadian movie that been banned and called propaganda by the U.S. government. The movie now can be shown to public audiences. KEVIN KENNEDY, chairman of the Wakarusa Sierra Club, an environmental awareness group sponsoring the showing of the movie, said that until the beginning of this year, anyone who had a permit to register with the Justice Department. The movie examines the causes of acid rain and explains how, because of wind patterns, pollution that comes out of American smokestacks drifts into Canadian territory, damaging lakes and forests. The movie was the last of a weekly series about current issues co sponsored by the Campus Coalition for Peace and Justice and the Sierra Club. THE MOVIE EXPLAINED how the oxides come out of smokestacks in gases and form into clouds that can carry toxic air miles away from the source of pollution. Acid precipitation is rain, snow, fog or dry deposits that contain significant amounts of nitric and sulfuric acids. The acids are formed when nitrogen oxide or sulfur dioxide emissions, primarily from coal-burning power plants and automobiles, mix with moisture in the atmosphere. Consumers often blame government and industry for not solving the problem but forget that industries are responsible to consumers the consumer demand for products, he said. A 1980 Environmental Protection Agency Report on acid rain says, "We do know acid deposition can and has destroyed lake and stream ecosystems, killing fish and other water life. Lakes in northern Minnesota, about 200 lakes in New York, and many hundreds of lakes in Canada already are acidified, and their fish populations are shrinking or are extinct." I'll just leave it as a placeholder if it's not needed. If you have any specific questions about the image, please provide more context or details. Kurt Von Schlemmmer, Leavenworth senior, applies theatre make-up to Bjorn Skaptason, Leawood freshman, as part of a theatre workshop. About 100 high school juniors and seniors participated in yesterday's workshop at Murphy Hall. High schoolers learn about theatre by BRUCE F. HONOMICHL Staff Reporter Karen Abbott wasn't sure what to make of it all. The improvisation instructor was leading her class around the room, whistling and groaning, she said, and expecting the students to follow. Hey, Karen figured, that's show biz. Hey, Karen figured, that's show biz. The instructor stood up and took her shoes off and started playing follow me leader," she said. "She wanted us to show how smart we have to do that. We could do anything we wanted, as long as it was improvisation. I enjoyed the improv, but it was weird." ABBOTT, A SENIOR at Watton High School near Atchison, wasn't the only one who had that weird experience yesterday. She was one of 98 high school juniors and seniors who camped in a day-long theatre workshop in Temple Hall that included classes in acting, set design and makeup. The high school students signed up for the workshop through their high school drama departments. Students from 11 Kansas high schools, including Lawrence High, participated in the workshop. They were taught by the workshop Arts faculty members and students. The students also saw a special performance of the University Theatre production, "The Great God Brown," by Eugene O'Neill. "We do this to expose the students to what we have to offer here," said Judy Wright, the coordinator of the program. "It also gives them pointers to how to succeed in introductions in their schools and gives them our philosophy in good theatre. DELBERT UNRUH, head of the department of design, said that the workshop was effective as a teaching tool and is in recruiting high school students. "But we try to get them involved in the classes and not be just passively listening." "Showing the kids these kinds of things will definitely help them in their careers, even if they decide not to go to KU, he said. "Showing them a kind of thing is a good start in learning the language." Kim Kendall, a senior at Wathea who is thinking about majoring in set design at KU, said that her group has been making theoration of a small set being assembled. In the costume design workshop, the students received instruction on the proper uses of models and sketching. DIANA MORRIS, a senior at Paola High School, said she looked forward to using some of the ideas given to her workshop in her school's future plays. Ken Wessel, a KU graduate student who last week completed his doctorate in theatre, was a member of a nine-act comedy,""Life in the Theater," for a group of students in improvisation class. "In improvisation, we don't need much language," he said. "Body movement and movement are important, and that's what we tried to get across here." By DONNA WOODS Staff Reporter Proposed discontinuance plan is criticized at SenEx meeting The proposal for a program discontinuance policy at the University of Kansas stumbled again yesterday's Senate University Senate Executive Committee. Although KU administrators agree with most of a proposed program discontinuance policy, several oppose the wording of some of the document's names, SenEx Chairman James Carothers said during the hour-long meeting. THE PROPOSED POLICY spells out the steps that KU must take in deciding to eliminate an academic program. It also outlines provisions for faculty members and students who would be affected by such a decision. Carothers declined to comment about whether the administrative objections would be removed. One of the administration's objectives with the document, Carothers said, is that faculty members would receive full salaries for two years after a dismissal notification date, regardless of whether they continued in their jobs. Administrators said that the discontinuance policy should specify that a faculty member would be reassigned to another department; the secretary would not constitute severance. *so* Another change that officials would like to see, Carothers said, is a clause that would require the University to recruit members in redirecting their careers. BECAUSE OF A lack of a quorum, SenEn members did not vote on the document yesterday. If the group has a quorum at a special meeting next week and reaches a consensus, Carothers said, the proposal will be brought to the Council for final consideration Dec. 1. However, if the proposal does not pass SenEx next week, the Council meeting will be postponed. Carothers said. The proposed program discontinuance document must be approved by SenEx, the Council, University Senate, the chancellor and the Board of Regents before it becomes University policy. Last month, SenEx members asked the administration to review their proposal before the document came to a Council vote, because several faculty members expressed concern about how Charlotte Gene A. Budg would react to the plan. T. P. Shrivinasam, professor of mathematics, has said that the faculty's concern was the possibility that Budig could approve the proposal in its entirety, or could approve only part of the proposal and delete the rest. SENEX MEMBERS HAVE not received a response from the Regents explaining what relationship an app might have to future Regent actions. However, KU administrators agreed that they would abide by an approved document that states the rights of faculty and students affected by a decision to discontinue an academic program, Carothers said. The proposed policy would give students three years to complete their degree before a program was eliminated. ON CAMPUS TODAY BASEALL Simulations will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union. GERMAN CLUB will show a video cassette of "The German Heritage of Kansas, Part II" at 4 p.m. in the Language Lab in Wescoe Hall. A LECTURE ON "Rubens, Poussin and the Politics of Style" will be given by Svetlana Alpers at 7:30 p.m. in Spencer Art Museum. STUDENTS FORMING a literary magazine will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union. will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. EPISCOPAL EUCHMIRT service is at noon in Danfort Chapel. ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS on Campus will discuss "Orthodox Iconography" at 7 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union. THE CHRISTIAN Science College Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the College Building. CHESS, GO and Backgammon Club AD ASTRA L3 Society will meet at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Hotel "Cologne at the time of Martin Luther-as seen through the eyes of an artist & poet" Lecture by: Professor Stohlmann 4067 Wescoe 4 p.m. Thur., Nov.17 KU German Club Sponsored by Student Activity Fee Hillel presents Lox & Bagels Brunch featuring JOHN B. KLEIN Congressman Dan Glickman Sun., Nov. 20 12:30 p.m. L.J.C.C.—917 Highland Admission: $2 Hillel Members $4 Non-Members For more information call 864-3948 .25 DRAWS & $1.00 DRINKS TONIGHT!! UNTIL 10:30PM EVEN MORE SPECIALS AFTER 10:30PM GAMMONS SNOWING 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 GAMMONS SNOW GOGO 2. Our Oliver Steinnagel is now at Salon Klaus on the Country Club Plaza. After intensive training at Sasson, Redken, and other Seminars . Oliver is pleased to announce something exciting for the students in this area .. All $13.75 haircuts for only $10.00. All permits & colors at 20% off regular price. Give Oliver a try when you're in Kansas City ... You will be pleased. Please present your student I.D. card Salon Klaus Salon Klaus Country Club Plaza & Corinth Square Square PLAZA- 444 Ward Parkway, Kansas City, Mo. 64112 815/311-835 CORINTH- 4034 Ward 83rd Street, Prairie Village, Ks. 66208 8162/642-500 MYTH: It costs less to have older VW's repaired in independent repair shops. BOB HOPKINS VOLKSWAGEN prices are equal to or below comparable services performed by independent shops that DO NOT USE N.I.A.S.E. CERTIFIED TECHNICIANS, have NOT been factory-trained, nor do they use authorized tools or up-to-date factory maintenance bulletins. PROOF: Coupon Specials BUG MUFFLER $3495 INSTALED. Including: new tail pipes, clamps AND labor. Offer ends 11/23/83 BUG BRAKES $3495 Front AND Rear Shoes INCLUDING labor. Offer ends 11/23/83 Specials apply only with presentation of coupons prior to service. Other discounts do not apply to these specials. Hopkins' 2522 Iowa VW 843-2200 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan. November 17. 1983 Page 9 Basic issues for blacks disregarded, prof says By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter American social policy has not addressed the fundamental problems facing the black underclass, a cause that U.S. visiting professor said yesterday. William Julius Wilson, Langston Hughes professor of sociology at KU this semester and a professor of urban sociology at the University of Chicago, spoke to about 100 people in the Kansas Union last night on "New Challenges for the Civil Rights Movement." MUCH OF HIS material was drawn from his next book, "TheHidden Agenda: Race, SocialDislocations and Public Policy inAmerica." The book is an important books, and is best known for "TheDeclining Significance of Race." Wilson said that blacks had made much progress in the past 20 years, but that not all segments of black society had benefited equally. "The relative rate of black progress since 1965," Wilson said, "has far exceeded any period since the turn of the century, despite the recent civil-right setbacks of the Reagan administration." But in that period, the plight of the poor urban black has worsened considerably, as measured by the number of pregnant pregnancy and low aspirations. BY 1890, he said, a few black leaders had recognized that some segments of the black population were losing, not gaining. Behind that decline was a disregard for economic and social trends in the planning of social policy regarding blacks. Poor blacks who lacked the education and skills to enter the work force in the 80s and 70s gained little from civil-rights legislation, Wilson said, and the better-trained and educated blacks gained less than from a burgeoning economy that added more opportunity. The result was a widening of the gap between poor blacks and the rest of society. Their plight today is not completely attributable to race. It is therefore cannot be solved through public policy based solely on race. FOR INSTANCE, he said, the high unemployment rate of black teenagers would remain relatively unchanged "even if you could wave a magic wand and eliminate all racial prejudice." implicit prejudice arises in situations, Wilson said, and is not the result of some imate perseverity. If the United States had full employment, employers would not discriminate because they would have to pay higher wages than their employment, they can better afford to discriminate against minorities. Fundamental change would come through politics. Wilson said The American political system, with its interest groups and ineffective parties, lacks the cohesiveness necessary to reach a consensus to protect the interests of employers and employees. he said. "In the 1980s," he said, "the civil rights agenda will have to be expanded to address what may be the most difficult problem of all—the problem of societal organization." "THE GENERAL philosophical basis for the freeze movement is that the destruction presented in this movie be prevented." Dolan said. "The movie promotes the idea that pacifism is the philosophy the American people should adopt. And that's a bankrupt philosophy." The television movie "The Day After" supports the nuclear freeze movement and is anti-nuclear propaganda, the national chairman of the Young Americans for Freedom said yesterday, because it implies that a strong U.S. defense posture could lead to nuclear war. By GINA K. THORNBURG Staff Reporter What's Going on THURSDAY at THE SANCTUARY? 16 oz. PRIME RIB—$6.95 au jus, baked potato, steak fries, salad DON'T FORGET YOUR QUARTERS! Quarter Draws From 9-12 p.m. 1401 W. 7th (Bet. Michigan & Florida) 843-9703 Reciprocal With Over 180 Clubs Group says Robert Dolan, the group's national chairman, spoke to about 150 people in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union as part of a symposium sponsored by the KU chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom. He said that the United States could not make itself vulnerable by declining to build a strong defense system. 'Day After' Dolan described a scene from the movie, which will be shown on ABC-TV on Sunday, that he said supported the nuclear freeze movement. In the movie, he said, an American newsman interviews a Soviet ambassador. He said the ambassador told the newsman, "You call us provocative to keep 7,000 missiles and 260,000 soldiers on the other side of our border." Dolan said, "We don't hear about any of the SS-20s on the other side of the Iron Curtain. Nor did we hear about Afghanistan." High Frontier refers to a defense project that uses a space-based ballistic missile defense system that would be deployed on heads traveling toward the United States. He said that the movie did not show both sides of the defense issue, because it only pointed out that the U.S. government advocated a strong determent system and did not show the military position taken by the Soviet Union. "THIS MOVIE FOLLOWS verbatim the propaganda line espoused by the Kremlin and its agents of influence the enemy," he said. "And that is that a strong defense against terrorism backed by American power, is a threat to peace — a threat of nuclear war." Because "The Day After" is part of an anti-nuclear propaganda campaign, Dornan said, the political action committee is negotiating with ABC officials to buy airline following the decision to present its side of the defense issue. A member of the audience asked Dolan if the United States was exempt from mistakenly launching a nuclear weapon in the nation's first-strike capabilities. "America has had first-strike capabil- ity for 20 years," he said. "But we're not a lot of it." supports nuclear freeze Another speaker, Robert Dornan, a former congressman from California, said, "There are a lot of things wrong with the United States, but starting war with them. I happen to think it's going to start with some madman in the Middle East." DORNAN IS PRESIDENT of the political action committee for the High Frontier, a group that is promoting the High Frontier non-nuclear space- He said that the movie implied that America was "as bad as the Russians" because the movie emphasized the U.S. government's desire to build a strong military, yet neglected to point such things as the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan or the gulag camps in Siberia filled with political prisoners. THE BOOK THE committee will promote on its commercial is titled "High Frontier" and is written by Lt. Gen. Daniel Graham, former Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency of the Department of Defense. He was scheduled to speak at the symposium but had to remain in New York to complete negotiations with ABC officials. based defense system. ABC officials, however, would not allow the committee to buy airtime to talk about its political stance, he said. The committee also will buy commercial time to sell books. Students without travel plans may have trouble getting home By ROBIN PALMER Staff Reporter Many KU students from out of state might have a hard time getting home for Thanksgiving if they haven't made travel plans ahead of time. Iana Benz, travel consultant for the Travel Center of Lawrence, said recently that students might have already waited too long to get flights home. Students should have begun scheduling their flights when they enrolled in classes at the beginning of the semester. to arrange transportation home might have to struggle with coach or first-air Students who have waited until now HOWEVER, LAST-MINUTE planers still have hope because airlines add extra sections during holidays such as Thanksgiving. Airlines will take a plane off a less traveled route and move it to a city where more travelers want to go. The extra sections are not advertised, Benz said, and are available only through a travel agency. Benz said that Amtrak was also an option but was not as popular with students. Amtrak is a limited system that does not go everywhere, which can cause travel rates to be more expensive. Benz said Amtrak was popular with students traveling to Chicago because the route was direct. A train to Chicago Lawrence every morning at 5:40 HOWEVER, A PASSENGER can get to Dallas directly from Lawrence but has to take the train to Chicago and then backtrack to Dallas. Amtrak also takes longer than airplanes Greg Dalzell, Bakersfield, Calif., junior. "It's just too far to drive or take the train considering the short amount of time, so I'm willing to pay to fly," said Buslines, which usually have cheaper fares, are another option for students who cannot get a flight or reach their destination by Amtrak. Reservations are not needed for either of the two main Lawrence bus lines — Trailways and Greyhound. Because of a Greyhound strike, Greyhound routes have not been running through Lawrence. Students interested in taking the bus need to show up 30 minutes ahead of the departure time to buy their tickets. THANKSGIVING IS NEXT THURSDAY Crack some nuts. Mince meeting words. Toast the wonders of creation. Kiss some turkey. Turn those family faults into scenery instead of eruptions. Carve time for thanking God. Do the dishes...the cook deser BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO An informal talk on: PSYSIOLOGICAL CONTROL AND EVOLUTION OF VIVIPARITY IN LIZARDS (Sceloporus aeneus) --by C.A.J. University Lutheran 15th & Iowa -843 6626 Sunday Worship 10.30 a.m. JLC catch us C Given by: DR. LOUIS J. GUILLETTE Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences, Wichita State University in a meeting of the Undergrad Biology Club FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1983 4:00 P.M. Sunflower room in cafeteria of the Student Union funded from the Student Senate Activity Fee - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO - BIO VOTE TODAY MOMENTUM For College Assembly NEW PEOPLE NEW IDEAS A BETTER CHOICE Rich Titus Brenda Flori Jackson Sherrard D. Sandstedt Molly Schemmel Stuart Deselms Terri Gast Hank Dickenson Linda Simon Tom Klote Lisa Burgess Howard Knight John Hilstrom Trisha Gates Mike Chrisman Eric Lauterbach John Hastings Christine Frieswick Mike O'Keefe John Lilla Beth Weber Mike Hartley Sarah Dickey Howard Hyten Jane Schrepel Rex Rhoten Nancy Carolan Tom O'Malley Matt Mayer Tim Crown Michelle Maher Cory Skinner Beth Leslie Kevin Halgarth Suzi Fall Jack Greenwood Louie Fisher Jennifer Juhl Scott Zeleznik Beth Jernberg Drew Hess Mike Grant Stacey Harkness John Kualinski Jeff Sonnich Anita Larsen Tad krape Steve Hoover Jill McLeod Ross Halsey Cathy Cravens Hal Garfinkel Catherine Gorton Laura Cary Jill Cohlmia VOTE MOMENTUM TODAY Paid For By MOMENTUM For College Assembly, Tom O'Malley-Treasurer. Final Day For Student Senate Elections Vote Today at the: Student Union Fraser Wescoe Summerfield Visual Arts Building Burge Union Open 8-5:30 --- Don't Forget your K.U. I.D. Paid for by Student Senate NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1983 Page 10 Israelis bomb guerrillas in retaliation By United Press International JERUSALEM — Israeli warriors swept into Lebanon yesterday in a retaliatory strike that demolished bases of pre-Iranian guerrillas thought to be responsible for the suicide bombings of U.S. French and Israeli forces. State-run Beirut radio said destruction of the bases and their tents, trucks and anti-aircraft guns was total as a result of the seven-minute raid into the eastern Bekaa Valley, a mere 2 miles from the border of Syria. "We are acting for what has been done to us," one Israeli official said. "If the Marines or French were attacked, we would have much the better those basis were hit." The air strike demolished the Janta and Shaara camps of the pro-Iranian Islamic Amal organization led by Hussein Mussavi, a 44-year-old former schoolteacher who Western sources believe masterminded the Beirut bomb attacks, which killed nearly 300 U.S. Marines and French paratroopers. Rescue workers said at least four people were killed, 38 were wounded and dozens more were trapped in the rubble of a demolished base 4 miles east of Rayak airfield, about 10 miles southwest of the city of Baalbek. Witnesses said wounded guerrillas chanted "Allah Akbar" — God is great — as they were carried away in ambulances and mothers of those killed wailed. "Our sons have been welcomed to heaven." The air strike came 12 days after a suicide truck bomb destroyed Israeli military headquarters in Tyre, killing 61 people — 29 Israelis and 32 Arabs. The State Department and the Israeli military command both denied the air strike was coordinated with Washington or conducted on America's behalf. Meanwhile, U.S. Mideast envoy Donald Rumsfeld met with Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir and reaffirmed America's commitment to the May 17 Israel withdrawal accord upon Lebanon, Shamir's spokesman said. Rumsfeld, who arrived from Cairo two days of talks in Israel, met with Sasanian officials. A senior Israeli official acknowledged they discussed Israel's air strike. FBI results on Carter papers requested WASHINGTON — Rep. Donald Albosta, D-Mich., pressed the administration yesterday to turn over results of an FBI investigation before his House subcommittee conducted hearings into how Carter White House papers reached Ronald Reagan's 1980 campaign. Albosta said that because he had yet to receive the FBI report he was postponing the hearings for a second time, until Jan. 26, 1984 — the week Congress returns from its holiday break. Saying President Reagan promised to let the panel see the FBI's file on the matter, Albsta suggested his latest delay will give the Justice Department "ample opportunity to fulfill its commitment." He said he wants the FBI's file because "we don't want to hold hearings and then find out that something that's relevant to a witness that might come before the submarine would come out after our hearings." By United Press International At the hearings, he said, he expects to place witnesses — possibly including Reagan's aides — under oath "to resolve conflicts that still exist." He warned that "if they perjure them, their witnesses will be prosecuted," he it, a very tough offense." He said some witnesses may be subpoenaed, if necessary. in a three-page statement and an interview, Albstona disclosed that his Post Office and Civil Service subcommittee has found the Rangan Institute to be "unfried information" from the Carter White House — mainly dealing with the Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.- Close 841-3268 FALLACY The best place to get a GORE-TEX running suit for the rainy or cold weather is a sporting goods or running shoe store. Outerwear made from GORE-TEX fabric is *windproof*, waterproof, yet BREATABLE: it's like having your cake and eating it, too. FACT. The best and most functional GORE-TEX running suits are found at discriminating outdoor stores. This is because they are made by the same companies that make all weather outwear for wilderness outdoor use. ALL MARMOT MTN. WORKS GORE-TEX 10% OFF ALL SIERRA DESIGNS GORE-TEX 25% OFF Gore-tex (gor-teks), n. 1: a multi- layered fabric that is windproof, waterproof, yet BREATHABLE. GRAN SPORT WILDNESS OUTFITTERS 7TH & ARKANSAS 843-3328 We are over in the waders (where else), just 4 blocks north of the waterfront. Check out the sleek styling and functional good looks of our GORE-TEX ski wear, ramwear, and around town wear. Our prices are the lowest. "I'm doing everything to try to avoid that," he said. "I believe it should not be hard for you." FBI Director William Webster told reporters last week that the bureau's investigation of the briefing papers' investigation was finally finished, except for one lead lead. Albosta denied, however, that he is trying to make the 1980 Reagan campaign activities an election-year issue. Iranian hostage crisis. He did not provide details. We're over in the woods (where else?) just 4 blocks N of the stadium. 1 block S of the sixth McDonald "ROSES DAY TODAY..." evidence gathered in the panel's investigation of Reagan's 1980 campaign will coincide with the 1984 presidential campaign — presumably after Reagan has formally announced his re-election bid. Baker, who phoned Albosta yesterday to try to set up a time for him to be questioned by subcommittee investigators, has said he recalls receiving from Casey a copy of President Obama's letter of debate with Reagan. Casey, who was questioned by the panel last week, has flatly denied delivering it. chief accuser and former husband, as a drunken and vengeful liar, but prosecutors said Foul was a crater trying to hide from a violent past. Yes, we up to our delighted nurses in lovely robes. And that means good news for YOU—or that special person you choose to delight with a visit at a very special price. He also indicated the subcommittee has been unable to resolve conflicts between key witnesses such as White Saker and Jake Saker and CIA Director William Casey. $1600 per lovely dozen Sidote, the second of Foat's four husbands, was granted immunity in exchange for his testimony. He is serving a 25-year prison term in Nevada for a parole violation stemming from an unrelated killing. The latest delay in the date for hearings means any public airing of Special only for "Roses Day" SOUTHERN HILLS Floral&Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" 749-2912 品 one vote in finding Foat not guilty in the 1965 tire-iron slaying of an Argentine businessman. Feminist found not guilty of 1965 murder Fouit's mother, Virginia Galluzzo, shouted, "Thank you!" to the jury when the verdict was read, and her supporters in the courtroom let out a loud shriek. By United Press International "She's finally free. She's finally free." Foat's sister, Emilia Guidi, said. "It was the last time he (John Sidote) could do this to her." On one piece of paper handed her by a juror, Foat wrote, "My love, my appreciation, my thanks for helping me to continue my belief in our system. Ginny Foat." VARSITY GRETNA, La. — California feminist Ginny Foot was found not guilty of murder yesterday by a jury that hugged, kissed and asked for her autograph amid a crowd of cheering spectators. About $100,000 was collected by Foot's supporters, but friends say the feminist leader needs $100,000 more to meet the expenses of her trial. Defense attorneys in closing arguments characterized Sidote, Foat's VARSITY Fri. & Sat. MIDNIGHT Box Office Opens At 11:45 Admission: $4.00 X WARNING Adult Audience Only the six-man, six-woman jury deliberated two hours and took only ENDLESS LUST Directed by ERICA FOX LUST EATS 1105 MASS LAWRENCE, KANSAS TALK TOUGUE TICKLING, TIDBITS! TIN PAN ALLEY Spend Some Enchanted Evening. . . PAPERBACK EDITIONS Available in Lavender, Powder Blue, Peach and Ruby Red With A Teddy! UNDERCOVER 21 W. 9 St. Put Yourself In This Picture. Nurse If you are interested in a rapidly growing and increasingly dynamic profession, dental hygiene may be the field for you. Service to mankind is the primary purpose of health professions, and the dental hygienist with a bachelor of science degree may accomplish this goal through a variety of challenging and rewarding professional opportunities. Dental hygienists are distinctive members of the dental health team. They, along with dentists, are the only ones licensed to provide direct patient services. The University of Missouri-Kansas City provides an avenue for you to become a licensed dental hygienist. The program prepares you to perform professionally in private dental offices or to hold responsible positions in community health program planning, institutionalized patient care, or research. for a dental hygienist with a baccalaureate degree are pleniful The Division of Dental Hygiene is part of the UMKC School of Dentistry located on "Hospital Hill" adjacent to the UMKC Schools of Medicine and Nursing. Truman Medical Center, Children's Mercy Hospital and Western Missouri Mental Health. The integrated educational opportunities are challenging and the rewards If you want more information on dental hygiene as a profession and the Bachelor of Science Degree Program in Dental Hygiene at UMKC, please complete the following and return to: Division of Dental Hygiene, School of Dentistry University of Missouri-Kansas City 650E 29th St. Kansas City, MO 64108-2795 650 E. 25th St, Kansas City, MO 64108-2795 321-824-0344 NAME Please send me additional information on dental hygiene at UMKC. ADDRESS City State Zip 52 Street University of Missouri - Kansas City Airline Opportunity Alternative ActionEmployee GIBSON'S 25th & Iowa, Lawre 842-6325 Pharmacists: Farrell Mitchel Mark Smith 25th & Iowa, Lawrence PHARMACY master charge VISA Hours: Mon.- Sat. 9 a.m.- 9 p.m. Sun. 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. Prices effective thru Sunday, Nov. 20th EAGLE Gibson's Pharmacy offers you... DISCOUNT PRESCRIPTIONS & PATIENT PROFILES & FREE MEDICAL EXPENSE RECORDS . . . compiled by the latest in computer equipment . . . ideal for personal use or tax records. - we accept student health insurance claims fill we fill welfare prescriptions ALLERGAN HYDROCARE Preserved Saline Solution SPECIAL GIBSON'S PHARMACY PRICE $2.09 8 oz. exp. 11/20/83 limit one item per coupon ALLERGAN MILK SOLUTION ALLERGAN MILK SOLUTION SPECIAL GIBSON'S PHARMACY PRICE 12-Hour Relief Triaminic-12 $ ^{TM} $ Tablets $1.69 10 Tablets exp.11/20/83 limit one item per coupon Triaminic-12 ROUR DOUILLER Dry Mats: Matte with antialgal coating 1. Température 2. Moisture content 3. Light exposure 4. Maintenance schedule 5. Maintenance cost 10 Offer Not Valid without coupon limit one item per coupon NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1983 Page 11 670 United Press International LATEX, La. — A Kansas City-Southern Railroad freight train derailed yesterday near the Louisiana-Texas border, causing a chemical explosion and large fire. One person was reported missing and at least six other were injured. By United Press International LATEX, La. — A Kansas City Southern Railroad freight train trained yesterday near the railway injuring at least six people, officials said several cars carrying a toxic chemical exploded and burned out of control. Train derails and injures six; cars with chemicals explode Four engines and at least one boxcar loaded with 55-gallon drums of the toxic chemical cypernethen burst into flames, forcing officials to evacuate residents in the sparsely populated area 10 miles west of Blanchard, La. Officials said one man was missing and up to six others were injured when the 75-car train was mistakenly divided into crashes that crashed into parked flat cars loaded by An estimated 9,000 gallons of diesel fuel that spilled from the locomotives was blazing. Bunn said. "WE ARE MISSING one man and we don't know where he is," said Richard Bunn, head of the hazardous material response team of the Caddo Parish Sheriff's Office. "He could be at a hospital." "Somehow that train got switten onto a spur line that goes into this pulvedum plant and the train slammed into cars loaded with wood," Bunn said. "We don't know if it was premedicated or if it was a mechanical failure." Tony Shomeker, a foreman at the Haughton Lumber Co., said he saw the train come rolling into the vard. Bunn said officials were unsure what caused the 75-car train to reel into the lumber yard about 3 p.m. CST. "WE'VE GOT A piggy back car behind a rear locomotive that we believe contains cypernethren, a flammable, and the piggy back has ruptured and the barrels were on the ground and have been on fire for some time," he said. mined five locomotives and up to four boxcars had derailed, but he said the number could be higher. "I turned around and saw two of my men falling off the (log) car. I just ran to the telephone and called for help. When she could see was a big ball of fire," he said. "We don't believe there's a great danger, but we're approaching it cautiously." Bunn said authorities had deter- J' Ever Eat A FOOTBALL? Come in to THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA For French Bread Pizza Night all you can eat—$2.95! 2228 Iowa 842-0154 Tuesdays & Thursdays No Carry Out Or Delivery On This Special "What we want is a well-qualified mouser," a spokesman said. He clocked out at 1 a.m. five hours before his shift ended. The day signalman ventured into the signal box after he arrived at 6 a.m., but commuter services to London were delivered well into the rush hour. State-run British Rail is now looking for a new man who can cope with mice. Press reports said that the sight of mice scampering among levers in the tower at Southbourne, 65 miles away, had been reported too much for the night signalman. "When the weather gets cold, a signal box makes a warm home for them, but normally signalmen are used to dealing with them," he said. LONDON — Rush-hour morning trains ground to a halt in two southern English towns yesterday because the signal tower was taken over by mice and the faint-hearted signalman fled. Rush-hour trains in London area stopped by mice By United Press International Thrifty Thursday Save $3.80 on the Thrifty Thursday Special: Large Pizza • one topping • double cheese • 2 free large Pepsis all for only $7.95 exp. 11/17/83 842-3232 PYRAMID PIZZ Place an ad. Tell the world. FALL PERM SPECIAL Celloperms, Redken, LaMaur, and Zotos permits. — Regularly $40.00 NOW $30.00. Offer good Nov. 16 thru Nov. 30 with Peggy or Nancy. For an appointment call: Joda & Friends -841-0337- 745 New Hampshire M-F 9:00-8:00 S 9:00-5:00 FRESHMEN NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Stop by 115 Military Science or Call 864-3161 UNIVERSITY + ILM SOCIETY UFS RODGERS and HAMMERSTEIN'S THE SOUND OF MUSIC FRI & SAT, NOVEMBER 18 AND 19 7:00 Downs Auditorium (Dyche Hall next to the Union) and 9:45 $1.75 HOLIDAY PREMIERE SALE SAVE A BUNDLE NOW! BUNDLE UP LATER. The Holiday Premiere Sale continues at Maurices! Bundle up this winter with a Down Stadium or Long Down Coat. The perfect balance between fashion and warmth. Choose from a variety of styles in the latest fashion colors. Originally $85 and $120 ... 59^99 & 89^99 Fashion Doesn't Cost A Fortune At MAURICES 706 Massachusetts Street, DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 11 METCALF SOUTH*OAK PARK MALL NATION AND WORLD [Picture of two individuals in formal attire sharing a moment, with one hand resting on the other. The background is blurred with indistinct figures and colors.] WASHINGTON — Robert Shriver; his mother, Eunice Shriver; Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.; and Caroline Kennedy, daughter of President Kennedy, attend a special tribute given by Congress in memory of President John F. Kennedy. Leadership of JFK is praised at Capitol memorial service By United Press International WASHINGTON — Congressional leaders led a memorial celebration yesterday for John F. Kennedy in the Capitol's Great Rotunda, where 20 years ago the body of the slain plane lay in state while a nation mourned. House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, D-Mass., and House Republican leader Howard Baker of Tennessee recalled Kennedy's style and grace and ex- plained how he managed perhaps above all else - invigorated America with a new sense of spirit. University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1983 Page 12 "We choose not to dwell on his death, but his life, his presidency." Rep. Edward Boland, D-Mass, said in setting the tone of the 90-minute service attended by about 600 people. "He gave us a new sense of vitality." SEATED IN THE front of the gathering were several members of the Kennedy family, including the president's brother, Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., daughter Caroline, 25, and sister-in-law, Ethel Kennedy. In the days following Kennedy's death in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, a steady procession of hundreds of tributes moved through the rotunda, slowly passing the president's flag-draped coffin The assassination came about 1,000 days after Kennedy rang in his new address in the east steps of the Capitol with an inaugural address that included the passage: "Let the word go forth from this time and place, to friend and foe alike, that the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans — born in this country — by war, disciplined by hard and bitter peace, proud of our ancient heritage." CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS salute Kennedy for his leadership in civil rights, getting the United States on a path to race and forging plans for Medicare. But repeatedly, he praised him for giving the United States a new and better system. Said O'Neill, "John F. Kennedy's special place in history is secure." "It is secure because of the absence of nuclear fallout . . . because of the doors that are open to minorities . . . that were closed 25 years ago," the speaker said. "He set an agenda for the United States." Speaking in hushed tones, Baker said, "Time and youth have fled since those early days of the 1960s, and yet Kennedy is young forever." Women live longer but need more care in old age, study says By United Press International BOSTON — Although women often live longer than men, women spend more of their later years unable to eat, dress, bathe or get themselves out of bed researchers said yesterday. *n* study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, also found that poor people spent more of their time traveling than those who were not poor. The report concluded that women spent more time physically dependent on others, not because they were any different from men, but because they lived longer and therefore might endure the infirmities of old age longer. MEN BETWEEN AGES 65 and 69 spend an average of 71 percent of their remaining years in good health, while their female counterparts can only expect to live 54 percent of the rest of their lives in good health. The report did not speculate why the poor were incapacitated longer, although an obvious answer might be that they had no access to receive much preventive health care. The study, conducted on Massachusetts residents in 1974, was designed to measure the quality of life rather than the life expectancy of elderly people. the culmination of a 30-year attempt to find statistically relevant health status indicators. He said he hoped the report would help shift the emphasis in medicine away from helping people live longer and awarding peoplelive better lives. "AS LIFE EXPECTANCY approaches the biologic limits of longevity, it is time to recognize that the primary objective of medical care is to improve patient function and to reduce the degree of illness," the report said. Dr. Sidney Katz, a member of the Biology and Medicine Department at Brown University, said this study was "Improvement of the quality of life is the goal, especially in the treatment of chronic illness, and functional assessment provides appropriate information for approaching such objectives." The study found that active life expectancy decreased with age, from 10 years for people entering the age category of 65 to 69 years to 4.7 for those in the 80-to-84 age group and to 2.9 for those aged 85 and older The poor live 2.4 less active years in the 65-to-69 group, and less than one additional year in the 75-and-older group. LAW AS A CAREER THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SCHOOL OF LAW presents a. PRELAW PROGRAM NOVEMBER 17, 7:00 P.M. GREEN HALL, ROOM 104 To help you plan a career in the legal profession, law school professors and students will be available to discuss with you your law school plans and answer questions about PRELAW EDUCATION ADMISSIONS PROCESS FINANCIAL AID LAW SCHOOL CURRICULUM JOINT DEGREE PROGRAMS JOB OPPORTUNITIES PANEL Michael Davis Barkley Clark Robert Jerry Lilian Six Carol Wolf Matthew Keenan Dean Professor of Law Admissions Committee Chair Director of Admissions Law Student School AGAPE LOVE PRODUCTIONS REFRESHMENTS Featuring: Tyrone Smith—Keyboards Robert Levels—Drums James Jeffrey-Bass presents "HOMECOMING 1983" "A Musical and Fashion Show Extravaganza" Michael Tyler—Trumpet Thomas Lipscomb—Saxaphone Karla Marine—Vocalist All members of . . . The KU Jazz Combo Also for your musical pleasure . . "UNIDOS" "The Pride of Middle America" in concert and introducing— "THRUST" The Ultimate Show Band! Nov. 19, 7-11 p.m. Central High School 14th & Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS. BE THERE Bring your ticket stub to the Bum Steer Bar-B-Q, 2554 Iowa after the show and get $1.00 off our prize winning Bar-B-Q. Congratulations Bum Steer & Keep On Smin'. ALPHA PHI COGBURN'S Nov. 17 - 19 PHI-NOMINAL BEAR LEGS CONTEST THURSDAY — SATURDAY A FEW THOUGHTS ABOUT OPPRESSION IN CENTRAL AMERICA On November 12th some 150 people demonstrated downtown against U.S. military intervention in Central America and the Caribbean. One piece of literature distributed by PRAXIS, a student organization which maintains "a center for . . . progressive groups on campus," mentions the United Nations International Covenant of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights" recognizing that "... the ideal of free human beings enjoying freedom from fear and can only be achieved . . . (by permitting them to) freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development." Yet, in their chants and speeches, the demonstrators frequently seem to forget this great truth. If John Linscheid, president of the Lawrence Ministerial Assn., thinks "The United States needs to be liberated from being an oppressor as much as the Central American nations to be liberated from oppression," then why doesn't he support this country's opposition to Nicaragua's Sandinista government which permitted Sandinista mobs to violently force the closure of more than a dozen churches last October 30th? While agreeing with them that U.S. tax dollars should not be handed to the oppressors in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, I hold that our resources are being used against like-minded groups in Grenada and Nicaragua. If, in the words of K.U. student Rhonda Neugebauer, "We don't have to make the world free. Central Americans are capable of claiming their own freedom", how did radical factions twice manage to gain total control in Grenada and why are most Grenadians now celebrating their liberation? If the United States' attempt to assist the manipulated majority in Grenada and Nicaragua is, as KU, Professor of Economics and Soviet and East European Studies Harry G. Shaffer claims, "the gossest violation of human rights anywhere in the world today," then on which planet does he think the Soviets' four-year-old bloody invasion of Afghanistan is taking place? While the record we've compiled in Central America and elsewhere is not without flaw, there are many Grenadians and Nicaraguans who deeply appreciate our efforts in their behalf today. William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Terrace PAID ADVERTISEMENT AT&T says dividends greater after break-up By United Press International NEW YORK - AT&T investors will receive a slightly higher dividend once the giant company is on the 1, officials announced today. The long-awaited prospectus detailing the finances of the post-divestiture AT&T and seven regional holding companies was filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and distributed to the public shortly after 11 a.m. CST. THE FIRST DIVIDENDS for the eight companies that the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. will become will add up to $1,365 per pre-divestiture AT&T share. That means investors who have been getting $1.35 per share each quarter from the old AT&T can count on getting slightly more once the company is broken up and shares in the new regional companies are distributed. The dividends approved today by AT&T directors will be paid on May 1, 1984. Wall Street and investors had asked whether the payout after Jan. 1 will equal the old dividend. The first dividends of the new companies have been the subject of particular speculation and concern. As the most widely held stock in the nation with 3 million shareholders, old AXT paid an annual dividend of $0.46 per share skipping or reducing a dividend in more than a century of business. AT&T AND REFUSED to confirm it would release the documents today, but invited reporters to its Manhattan headquarters for what one spokesman called a "press watch." The New York Stock Exchange has said it would begin trading in the new AT&T and seven regional banks on Monday. Monday under special rules The schedule was intended to give analysts several days to study AT&T's projections before trading starts. But some seemed ready to pore nonstop over the information the moment it is released. "I hear one of our competitors has a team of lawyers, statisticians, and accountants who are going to stay on the job as an analyst for a major brokerage firm. "... You'd better not quote me on that," he added nervously. "I think that's stupid. I'm going to stay in the city but I have every intention of using my hotel room for sleeping," the analyst said. THE DIVESTITURE will permit AT&T to compete in unregulated business of its choosing, as well as offer long distance telephone service. The regional companies will continue to provide local phone service and also will be able to diversify into unregulated activities. The earnings estimates for the new companies always have been expected to be inexact at best. These projections became even more cloudy when the Federal Communications Commission postponed implementation of an access charge on phone users that would have helped the reqirmen companies for the loss of their old AT&T subsidies. Congress is working on legislation that would ban the charges altogether for residential and small business phones. Secrest Leather A fine selection of traditional leather goods Traditional gifts in leather. 914 Massachusetts 842-6046 ZERCHER PHOTO WIN A TRIP TO SAN DIEGO! ROUND TRIP FOR TWO ON TWA! A KODAK DISC 6000 CAMERA TICKETS TO DEC. 11TH GAME HOLLIS KANSAS CITY CHIEFS vs. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS CIRCUIT BOARD REGISTER BY NOVEMBER 30 AT EITHER ZERCER PHOTO LOCATIONS! Free Chiefettes... POSTER with purchase of each roll of KODAK FILM or each roll of FILM DEVELOPED Kodacolor V2 24 FLASH Kodakx KODACOLOR V2 1000 24 YEAR DOWNTOWN 1107 Massachusetts Kodak PAPER 4.4 in x 6 in (11cm x 15cm) ZERCHER Chiefettes.. PHOTO Kedah TWA HILLCREST 919 Iowa Kodah TWA KLSI.93 SPORTS University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1983 Page 13 Bowling teams finish fall conference competition By JOHN UNREIN Sports Writer When Warren Boozer decided to recruit KU's first women's bowling team this semester, he knew the task wouldn't be easy. Boozer, Jaybowl recreation manager, said yesterday that he searched for unknown talent in the physical education bowling classes that he taught. He watched weekend bowlers during breaks on the job. And finally he convinced five women to bowl for the team. "To get a girls' team, I just had to beat the bushes." Boozer said. "We finally came up with a team, but in the first match we had a little trouble. We went to it and thought I think the other girls averaged scores somewhere between 110 and 115 in each game. "But we've come a long way since then. We're not too far out in left field, and I do think we have a pretty doggone good team." Boozer said he was also pleased with the performance of the men's bowling team. The University of Kansas has had a men's team for more than 20 years. Both teams finished fall conference action a week ago, with the women's team and the women's team fifth in the Kansas-Nebraska Bowling Conference. KU COMPETES WITH Wichita State, Kansas State, Emporia State and Nebraska in its conference, Boozer said. But the teams, Boozer said, have not faced their toughest competition from opponents. Their main problem is lack of support and money. "I don't know whether we n ever able to get up to the caliber of Wichita State, which was the national champion last year," Boozer said, "but we could be a lot better if we got more support from KU." 1 Gary SmithKANSAN Boozer said that because he was not aware that Student Union Activities gave money to sports clubs, he had not applied until two weeks ago for recognition of the bowling team as a sports club. For the 18 years that Boozer has coached the team, it has subscribed on the $1,500 a year the Kansas Union designated for the bowling team's use. ADMINISTRATORS of the Kansas Union, Boozer said, never had allowed him to accept support from any outside organization because they thought the money would influence operations of the Jaybowl. But Boozer said that the team needed as much money as it could get. Now the team needed $20 million. In addition to funding from SUA, Boozer said, the bowling team will Dave Passaglia, Chicago senior, works to improve on his 188-pin average, which qualified him for next week's KU men's bowling team trip to the National Collegiate Match Play Championships in St. Louis. continue to be aided by Marilyn Miller, owner of two Lawrence box hotels. "SHE'S JUST A DREAM." Boozer said. "She has just bent over backward to do anything she can to help us. I guess she's just a KU person at heart because she had two sons graduate from here." said, and has contributed some money to the program. She is currently looking for a van to donate to the team for use on future out-of-town trips. Miller allows the KU team to practice without charge on her lanes, Boozer Boozer said he hoped Miller could find a van before the men's team's next trip Nov. 27-29, to St. Louis for the National College Match Play Championships, their final meet this semester. The men's team will also compete in a collegiate invitational in Las Vegas over the Christmas break. Boozer said, Both men's and women's teams will finish the year in a conference tournament Jan. 27-29, in Manhattan. The women's team has finished competition for the remainder of the season. THE MEMBERS of the women's roster are: Diane Miodenziewicz, Lawrence Laura Rouen, Haysville freshman Stephanie Clapton, freshman Brandon Glennice, III, freshman and Barden Wichita Glennice, III, freshman and Barden Wichita The men's roster includes: Jim Mack, Kailan Han, senior; Ned Iles, Lytas senior; Howard Shaw, Lawrence senior; Dave Passagliac, Shawn Larson, senior; Jeff Stallone, Kelly Coiffon, Tupaela freshman; Vivor Barb, Ulysses freshman; Michael Brennan, Kaman City, Kevin Koeven, Kevin Fried, Kaman City, Kan. Officials say hunters killing fewer pheasants this season By United Press International The guns of autumn began be- come last weekend in western Kansas, but pheasant hunters are bagging far fewer birds than they did during last year's record setting season, state fish and game officials say. "There's no question our pheasant hunting is down pretty substantially," said Randy Rodgers, a wildlife research biologist in Hays for the Kansas Fish and Game Commission. Upland game bird hunters in 1982 bagged more than 1.5 million pheasants, a record for Kansas, which is considered one of the premiere pheasant hunting states in the nation. Fish and game officials, prior to the start of last week's second season, predicted another sterling bird success, although they conceded it would not parallel last year's success. "I THINK MAYBE WE came out with too much of an optimistic prediction," Rodgers said of early predictions this year. Cindy Konda of the fish and game commission's Dodge City office said, "Pheasant are down and there is no such an exception, there are still lots of birds. Anybody that goes out and hunts should find a bird." She said hunters last weekend averaged up to two birds, compared with the four birds most took on opening weekend last year. Rodgers said unic miro fields this fall have made it difficult for hunters to flush pheasants out into the open. He also said the summer's scorching drought and a cool, damp spring delayed pheasant nesting, which resulted in late hatchling. When the pheasant eggs did hatch, about three weeks late, hot temperatures killed some of the young birds. Rogers said a preseason survey in Kansas's pheasants revealed a 20 percent to 30 percent statewide population decline. "EARLY INDICATIONS from the hunting season indicates it to be off more than that," he said. No hunter fatalities have been reported since the beginning of the upland game bird season, but the only increase in hunters will be accidentally shot. "I'm predicting, when the smoke clears, we'll have 12 to 14 hunting accidents," said Royal Elder; asaw he enforcement for the commission SPORTS ALMANAC KU 74,Netherlands 70 Eireild 2.6/0.4 Kupfers 4.6/2.2 Limmad 3.4 Wiel 3.5/0.6 Plan 7.1/3.6 Cramer 5.12 Heng 3.9/0.8 Ship 3.4/0.6 Faber 2.6 Ihages 2.0/0.4 Viel 2.0/0.4 Camera 2.0 Ontaals 0.2 Totales 6.2/7.0 - Henry 7.5-1.8 26, Knight 7.2-1.2 14, Dreving 7.4-1* Halftime - Netherlands 36, Kansas 11, Fouled out - Kuyper - Total tosls - Netherlands 26, Kansas 8 *** NBA Standings Eastern Conference Atlantic Division New Jersey 6 3 667 2 New York 6 3 667 2 Washington 6 3 633 5 Washington 6 3 633 5 W 1. W, Pct. GB Indiana 9 2. 718 Philadelphia 9 2. 718 Illinois 1 Milwaukee 6 4 600 Detroit 6 4 590 1 Alanta 4 4 190 1½ Chicago 3 3 375 2 Indiana 6 3 333 2½ Cleveland 2 2 325 Western Conference Midwest Division Last Night's Results Philadelphia 102, New York 97 Detroit 122, Seattle 120 Boston 122, Miami 114 Cleveland 115, Pennsylvania 101 W L Pct. GB Dallas 5 4 54 Ulah 3 500 1½ San Antonio 4 6 400 1½ Denver 4 6 375 1½ Houston 4 6 375 1½ Kansas City 3 7 330 2½ Pacific Division Los Angeles 3 7 278 Portland 7 2 727 Golden State 4 6 400 1½ Seattle 6 5 545 2 Phoenix 6 5 545 2 San Diego 7 3 306 2 FOOTBALL NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE Sunday, November 20 Baltimore at Miami, 12 p.m. Miami at Hockey, 12 p.m. Detroit vs. Green Bay at Milwaukee, 12 p.m. Houston at Cincinnati, 12 p.m. L.A. Raiders at Buffalo, 12 p.m. San Antonio at Chicago, 12 p. N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia, 12 p. San Diego at St. Louis, 12 p. Atlanta at Tampa, 12 p. San Francisco at Atlanta, 3 p. Seattle at Denver, 3 p. Washington, A.R. Raines, 2 p. Monday, November 21 Monday, November 21 N.Y. Jets at New Orleans 8 p.m. UNDER THE BIG TOP Friday/2:30 p.m./Jayhawk Boulevard to Memorial Stadium Floats on display until 10:00 p.m. Memorial Stadium parking area Homecoming Benefit Dance ★ Gary Foster, KU alumnus and jazz recording artist Crimson and Blues Alumni Swing Band ★KU Jazz Ensembles $5.00 per person/SUA Office/Kansas Union Proceeds support jazz music scholarships Saturday/8:00 p.m. to midnight/Kansas Union Ballroom Other Activities The University of Kansas Homecoming 1983 Friday and Saturday/November 18 and 19 Circus Parade and Pep Rally All-University Homecoming Luncheon Saturday/11:00 a.m./Kansas Union Ballroom Contact KU Alumni Association for reservations/864-4760 Football KU versus Missouri/Saturday!1:30 p.m./ Memorial Stadium Contact Allen Field House for ticket information FREE LETTERS 3 FREE LETTERS WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY GARMENT. WHAT A DEAL! ΑΔΠ 'BALFOU 935 MAS KU BALFOUR HOUSE 935 MASS. 749-5194 KNOWLEDGE EDUCATION COMMUNEED SERVICE MORROW DESIGNING VECTOR 9009 KAYROY OKDATA 32d & 8 Louisiana Maitake Delivery Center 81-004-994 Computerark Horizon at the Lawrence Opera House Fri. 9-12 p.m. FREE BEER ALL NIGHT $3.50 Ladies $4.50 Men Horizon I am so excited to be here. I love this place and the people around me. I'm very happy to be part of this community. The look is rugged and ready for action . . . Casual, yet filled with purpose. Woolnich proudly presents for Fall '83 a great name in fashion . . . LITWINS FASHION AND ACCESSORIES GO HAND-IN-HAND AT LITWIN'S WE HAVE STYLE AND SELECTION! Look over our great selection of fall clothing by Woolrich. Flannel shirts, wool sweaters and flannel nightshirts too! We also feature a great selection of Woolrich for men! Ask us about the secrets of layering for winter warmth and year-round comfort. You'll find the answer to all of your fashion needs at Lilwi's! 831 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence litwin's 1976 The University Daily KANSAN The University Daily KANSAN C' KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Words 1-1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days or 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75 16-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80 21-24 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.85 For every 5 words add: 9.56 12.50 15.55 1.05 CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues allowed if it exceeds one inch. No overbrakes allowed in classified display ads. Classified Display ... $4.20 www.carbonite.com ANNOUNCEMENTS POLICIES Formatted 1 bedroom apartment available for lease at 276 East 43rd Street and downtown. $25 plus electric. Call 841-298-3987. Zenith ZT 11 with built in modem. Special price to Asphaltite Company, Centre 646, Melbourne. Open thursday 2pm. Send ... With a KANSAN Holidav Message. A KANSAN Holiday Message is a great way to wish someone a happy Holiday Season or say goodbye 'til next semester. Here's what you'll get for only 4 bucks: A 20 word message addressed to the person of your choice inside a package like the one shown below. Look for order forms tomorrow Your Message Here ENTERTAINMENT THE DAY AFTER. *Come speak out on movie and nuclear war at Town Meeting. Noon*, Monday, 9/25 Snowman UFS THE SOUND OF MUSIC Friday and Saturday November 18 & 19 7:00-9:45 THE DAY AFTER — Come light candles of hope after movie in Candlestick gathering on Campanile a Friend Some Holiday Cheer! FOR RENT - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words * Difficulties: 1. & 3 bed bedroom apartments immediately above partial units with contact Row Valley Manage - No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement. - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising 2 BR House, neatly remodeled, KU bus route, law offices, to close laundry, $250, 843-263. - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only advertising • Blind box ads—please add a $2 service charge. 2nd semester sublease, close to campus, 2 HR, very nice, quiet, new carpet, $390.00; m41-845, 846ens, 3 bedrooms to sublease 2nd semester, near bus route $430. Calm Dan Winter. #481071 & #431943 Reserve your studio now for the spring semester while the selection is good. Fully furnished, free cable TV, close to campus. meadowbrook 515 & Crestline 842-4200 November 17, 1983 Page 14 STUDIO yard 6 month lease, $550 per month, #84-1436 beautiful 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment, with or existing kitchen and bath. carpet, dishwash, disposal, close to shopping and KU bus route. Come to see at 270B Redwood Lane 11 or 270C Sunset Ridge 11. Bedroom House 827 and infites, walking around the house. Wide range and range and range included. Call after 5 p.m. on Thursdays. until credit has been established * Tear beets are not provided for classified or Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. - Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University Daily Kansas 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 - Classified display advertisements - *Classified display ads do not count towards mon - Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to submittal of advertising. 3 room kit. Furnished. $220/mo plus utilities between campa and downstream, quiet and clean. BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please come to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. br new studio for sublease, 1 block from Union. 64.1300. Anytime, keep trying. Duplex: 2,1 baths duplex for rent. East Lawrence. Jan. 1. WRD hookup 749-215 Excellent location, fully furnished 1 bdm basement gte Central air located at 1801 Mississippi, call (516) 237-9824 For BENT Nicest, available brand new just-commissioned phone. All TLLT PAID PAYMENTs Call 842 967-1057 www.bentnicest.com HEY KU!! COME SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER THE STUDENT WHO WANTS TO LIVE OFF CAMPUS! - CONVENIENT - WEEKLY MAID SERVICE - GREAT FOOD WITH - UNLIMITED SECONDS • FULLY FURNISHED, - FULLY FURNISHED, CARPETED, AIR CONDITIONED SUITES - CONDITIONED SUITES - SWIMMING POOL - INDIVIDUALLY CONTROLLED HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING Applications available for Spring Spring NAISMITH HALL 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Large one bedroom apartment with fireplace and is close to the campus. If you are close company 35510 - try anytime. For lease choice 2 BH, 2 bath cords on golf course. All Kit appl.赠送 Rubs, Nets, pees Days Rubber mat required Furnished Studio Fully equipped kitchen, gas heat and bus route. Available 1. Decision. 1 reason. Low rent. Roommate for 2BR apt. $137.50/mo. util. paid Call Bell. 843-1869 Don't miss this opportunity to meet the most gifted,gressive,resident-mentorshipin this area. If you're not interested call us. We work WHILE APARTMENTS West An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievably Slashed Rates NICE 1 BR APT. $300 a month. All utilities paid good and good location. Call 841-420 Meadowbrook studio for sublease available now or December 1, $100 off December rent. Ask for U90 JU One bedroom apt for rent Great location just away from campus. Reasonable Residence. For info. call 841-2749 One block from campus; 4 bedrooms, share living kitchen, kitchen, 1/2 bath; $12/month plus 1/2 bath. 842-4444 524 Frontier Rd. Nice 3 bedroom apartment just north of stadium, available immediately. 8278 843-4432 Keep try- ing. Room for rent near university and downtown. No pets please. 841.5000 Nice two bedroom house for rent. Close to Lennon. Start December 1. Call after 5 p.m. 841-4518 1 nice bedroom apartment for sublease. 2 blocks from campus. Call 842 6458 or 847 6087 homes. Roommate must be immediately or starting Jan. 1 for roommate to arrive. Call **822-0844** for Melissa Cheap, Cleaner, **Cell** **822-0844** for Melissa Cheap, Cleaner. HEATHWOOD VALLEY APTS. SUBLEASE JAN. 1st June. Nice quad crew age. $450-$750. Mail to: Sublease@mail.com. $950; call McLain, Sun Thurs. days. 740-4866. Send resume to: McLain, Sun Thurs. days. 740-4866. save money, rent a l or 1 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. no pets, phone 842-4185. 1 BR Apts. $285 2 BR Apts. $340-$360 3 BR Apts. $415 All apts, have CA, gas heat, refrig. hus, Lease terms available to May 31, July 31, and Dec. 31. Call between 9 a.m.-6 p.m. on Fri. - Bri. 845-4754 Sublease 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment. On KU bus route. In excellent condition with carpet and upholstery. Room size 150x80x70. 2706 Redbud Lane I to call 841 4686 for information. Sublease 1 bedroom apartment, furnished, carpeted. Sublease EXCELENT new studio with bedroom, alcee ceiling fan can Available December 15th Utilities paid 2 bedroom apartment, close to KU Sublease costs to Auction $2684, maid 91/47 9079 COMPLETED! L.Y.FURNISHED Studio 2 or 3 bedroom studios. Please contact us to reserve a room: clayase@l.y.furnished.com 812.1411.8252 or 842-9445. FOR SALE 1967 FAIRLAND CONVERTIBLE, classic. books/frames good, must买 $120. Call Jerry. Jimmy's Books DWADBROWKO spacious 2 bedroom apartments available now! Twin. Gas and支付, queed. 2 bedrooms. $100,000 per month. Y91 Yamaha 125 - good body - engine needs work, $75 -negotiable - Mail 843-425-325 A/C, TURBO. 45,000 miles, sunroof. $15.00, 44,900 TRT CONVET Excellent shape, air conditioner, sensor, ac hose, spare parts. 1981 Escape Wagon 4-speed, air, low miles, $4400 Cocktail Mirror 16x20 ATAMI 800 computer 40% Perform Data disk data brand new! 842 567 or 842 253. Auction - consignment every 2 Friday night. 7 o'p.m. p.m. Barnstable - consignment every 2 Friday night. 2 miles north of Lawrence at 34.81 840-6877 1985 MUSTANG V, 6-loaded, new $10,500 best offer, 1850 miles, alien leave, ma644, 80515, 1070 McColm 6 tickets for Police Concert Call Larry 749-3226 evenings borth of Lawrence on 23-9-814-806-7 Beautiful hand-made flower garden quilt. Makes a cute keepsake. Chevy Imagal, 4-blue, 78. Call 843-2501. In ex- eclent shape DYNAMO Food Course. Table excellent condition, XMn Food couch much $300/ best offer this week Must sell. Formal dress. Size 7/8. Light 7-Bau Saxen Gau. Queen Anne seeded neckline blue. Like new. 846-1962 Arizona, Orient! DONT MISS. HISSE! Imported Templat! Tempat! Sites Stn. NYC. NY001, or call Templat! Tempat! Sites Stn. NYC. NY001, or call Huge moving sale-all items must go November 17, and 18 and 9-09 a.m. 4:00 p.m. 1Pine Drive Huge move sale-all items... Phone drive. Pinewood drive. Limit your loss from AT&T break-up. Purchase your own phone! Quality phone work on all long distance networks. Lowest prices, fully guaranteed. A great value for students and employees. Sound and video systems available. Phone Tom 30-10-10 M-F. Don't reach out and get burned. Nineteenth century German violin. Works good. $1,500. See a collector's item. Call 848-83233. iPhone compatible iPhone 7 & iPhone with auto zoom Excellent condition, $49 evening, 80.7375 less than $129 Police tickets for Nov 24 Call 841-9689 RAMJET Gas saver, power booster systems. Increase gas mileage up to 30%. PASTRAC effort to improve efficiency of government tested and approved, guaranteed for life of car $1,586,740 - 769,000 anytime. Save up to $1,000 RCA Video Recordet VRC: VF7506 (top of the line) cable, cable ready, special programs, video recording. Scrocco S, excellent condition, very spry, AC sunroof, cassette stereo, front wheel drive, alloy wheels, red spinel, refill 845-082-653 Set of PA. Band speakers. Can handle 200 clean wax calls. Call 845-1154 Used furniture, Shoemaker's, across Kaw River Bridge. 2 miles north of Lawrence on 841-981-8067. Why Pay Rent? $250 buys 2 BIR mobile home-stove, refrigerator, air new furniture. 841-543-8067 Television-sellectron video. All name brands. Lowest prices. KT audio. Total Sound Distributors. Stereo Technologies receiver and turntable AAL speakers. Akai tape deck. Exc condition under full light. Speakers, large beautiful walnut cabinets, 1 way transmisson line Excellent sound Call Lisa. 1948 CHRYSLER: RESTORED $2900. LEAVEN- WORTH 882-7255 1996 Karmann-Ghia Excellent engine, needs body Reclining Chair, Good condition, must sell. Comfortable. 40. Negotiate. 749-775. LOST AND FOUND Xerox 680 Memorywriter, five pages storage, service warranties, very nice machine, 680 Evenings, USCARPET Dormroom sizes, $shags, $chocolate pies. Great clean, clean stuff. 843-4133 Team colored wooden miters. Three diamond cuts. Summit great sentimental value. Keward. Summerfield great sentimental value. Keward. LOST DOG Medium German Sheepard, black w/ gray silk grazing. Around Zircon and Gusdahl Found brown and black puppy in Oread Bowl #1841L-001117 Found Key ring in front of Ellsworth Hall Call neighborhood. Call 841-1199 Female and male calls 841-1199 Lost: Male, black kitten, 6 months old. Lost 11/8. 842-997 Lost: Black leather wallet around 11M. & Mass. or Lock: Black money the burglar but I need the waiter. Joe: 86-1040 Found: scart, call to identify. 842.3384 LDTN, DCF, Medium, Medical, Healthcare Lost! Men's 3-fold brown leather wallet and blue lining. Made from Green Oread Grapes and Halley Pat Pete Kelley Pickle. AIRLINES ARE Hiring NOW! Fight Attendances, Air Travel & Flights - Call 1-800-729-6111; POLARIS WEAKE YOUR interviews! Call 1-800-729-6111; HELP WANTED Could you use an extra $400 a month? Start your business. Less than $160 investment, unlimited earned money. College English teachers. Possible openings begin in September and continue until the end of the composition and literature course in English and successful college English teaching, or as a full-time instructor in Kansas. Deadline for receipt of complete application is December 31st from Haskell Springer, English Department; from Haskell Springer, English Department; or from KSC 6904. AnEqual Opportunity (Affirmative Action) Award may be given. FRESHIMEN SCHOOLSHIPS AVAILABLE. It's not too late to attend in NAVAL ROTT. Call 861-3611. Summer Jobs. National Park Co.'s 21 Parks, 2000 Bachelor's Degree in Wildlife Conservation or Minor Mission Co.'s 61st Ave 2nd W., Waltsepell, MT 53079 Student bounce needed 20 hours per week. Call dept. Deadend 1/18. 6 lpm. School Placement dept. Deadend 3/18. 6 lpm. Sales rep to call on security and fraternity houses. Sales rep to call on the University of Mass. apply 11/27, 11/30, 11/31, 11/32, 11/34 Part-time help. Outside business salesperson and businessman. Tom 841-6257. Alphabetic Computer Centers MISCELLANEOUS The Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures has an opening for a Graduate Teaching Dates: to conduct drill sessions from 18th April to 2nd December, third Year Japanese; Hours: 20 of Elementary and T Uused furniture bought and Pick up available Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont. PERSONAL Due to yesterday's poor response (0), we are now in a relationship. Call Paty or Karen, PLEASE. VIRTUE JMG CONTACT WALACE FERGUSON WARREN JMG CONTACT WALACE FERGUSON INNEMAN LK G BLUE SPHINES, MG 6014 INNEMAN LK G BLUE SPHINES, MG 6014 Lorie. Believe it or not, I haven't forgotten Love, Jim SWM graduate student seeks pleasant girl for company, dinners and in movies, sports, entertainment, etc. You'll be together. I'm really looking for someone to care for me and to teach a single scene and loope, too! P O B 402, Lutele 1462. BUSINESS PERSONAL Happy Thanksgiving Tammy C., Love Gary A strong key outfit. Retail Rennet Laijar Lacquered knee socks. 84.116.842-7220. north of Memorial Stadium. 84.116.842-7220. Bennett's Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine. Bardolph, Illinois, 843-0727. TRAVEL CENTER We MEET Or BEAT Any Available Air Fare We Have Every DISCOUNT And REDUCED Rate And REDUCED Rate Colorado Springs $100 Cincinnati $118 Chicago $120 Houston $130 Denver $140 New Orleans $150 Dallas $158 Phoenix $160 Las Vegas $180 Los Angeles $198 Ft. Lauderdale $198 Ft. New York $198 Washington, D.C. $190 Honolulu $350 Airline Ticket Available Receive $100,000 Flight Insurance with every airline ticket purchased at no additional cost TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 841-7117 COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early preparation of health care providers; confidence assuredly Kansas State. Call 911 or 212-354-8000. Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd M-F 9:5:30 * Snt. 9:30-2 STEVE MARSHALL Independent Candidate NUNEMAKER SENATOR ☑ ☑ ☑ Nov. 16 & 17 Paid for by Steve Marshall Don't lose sight of Friday Night. Catch HORIZON They're surprised! FREE Beer, you see at once. Catch HORIZON for free. The AOTT Pledge Class of '83 Would like to formally apologize to those of you who purchased roses from us. Because the delivery was so late and the quality of the roses was poor, we were dissatisfied at the outcome of the project. We are trying to remedy this situation. We are very sorry for any inconvenience. Sincerely, The members of the AOTT Pledge Class of '83 GOT SKIP FEVER? LONGING FOR THE BEACH? with SUA on one of our three terrific spring break trips (PT.LAUDERDARE, PADRE ISLAND); for more information call 843-647-3987. Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, museum guide, and of course fine portraits. Swell Studio 749-161 It's not too early to order Christmas portraits for the city. You can preorder from Permisiyaua (1-800-4903). By appointment. Curtis Mathes Showstopper! 600 movies choose from Rent a video machine and pre-recorded videos. SKI GETAWAY PINNEDMID --- In Keystone Colorado with Pyramid Pizza! Feb. 2-6 239 per person Trip includes . . - 3 days of ski rental - 9 days of int tickets * Key of beer on the bus * Pre-tour pizza party! * For a Free flyer and transportation from Lawrence. 2 nights' lodging in 2-bedroom, 2-bath condos, sleeping 6, at Kestone Keyland Condominium. at keystone resort, near shopping, restaurants and night Maupintour travel service new formal Wear in cluding; new pastel wool; new silk wool; new wear silks, black satin, red slin, and blackwatch cuffs and buttonties and box ties, and extra small tuxedo shirts. New extra small tuxedo shirts are still in stock. Shipment of small and extra small expected soon. We still have good quality used white dinner packets, black tuxedos, cutaway dresses, and other formal wear. We also have jewelry, studs and cuff links, a good Christmas Etsy. The Etsy Store, 722 Mass. 843-0611. Ladies Laundry Night Tues 7-21. Lizards do laundry dryes 10 cent drawings. Suits 2-Daids 749-432. Bring a gift of chocolates when you visit this Thanksgiving Chocolate Unlimited 1601 W 23rd Las Vegas, register now! For 2nd round for $115.000 Las Vegas Pool Tournament Sub-nb Ticket 794-8322 - Southern Hills Center 749-1100 Lawrence's nicest, laundromat. Sunda, Days in. We take the boring out of laundry. MF, in m., md. We do the washing and drying. NF, in nw. KWALITY COMICS For the best prices and service anywhere PREFAMING FOIL FOR FINALS Study Skills Workshop. For the finals, please call 312-574-1055. Free on-premise registration required. The student must be a graduate or equivalent degree holder. M-F: 11-7 New Coventry 843-7239 Sat: 10-5 Every Saturday 107 W. 7th SKI WAIT BEAVER CREEK call TOLL FREE 1-800-222-4589 or CONSULT YOUR TRAVELAGENT FOR DISCOUNT RATES on lodging, lift, and rentals WANTED: Anyone who has ever boogied their bodies to the sounds of the UNIDOS BAND. Come down to Homecoming at Central Jr. High Sat.. Nov. 19, 7-11 p.m. Also for your musical pleasure we will have the KU Jazz Combo and Thrust— The Ultimate Show Band! Say I can a shirt, custom silk-screened T-shirts. jerseys and jerseys. Shirt by Stuartwa 749 1611. Print on Christmas Postcards through December 15 at Stuart's Studio Call for details **8*1611** Special for students, Harvits Curs. & perms #22 Charm, ask for Deena Jensen 843-3300 ENCORE IN-BETWEEN ACTS AUDITIONS Lawrence's next landmark, Sudbury-Hunt, Wednesday 12.31 SUN, 10.40 MON, 10.40 TUE, 12.13 SAT, 10.16 TUE, 10.49 FRI Danger signs* headache, backache, arm pain, arm pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, call the Chiropractic Health Center and Doctor M.E. of your choice for insurance accepted. No charge for consultation. individual acts: Bring a prepared song Dice to dance at Accompanied provided. For individual acts: Provide information for. For more information call 864-4556. Individual Group Acts: All auditions are open to individuals in Borguion. Burguion Auditions Dec. 3. Register to in BOOCIO, Office 10, B Kansas University. THRIST STOIRS Appliances, furniture, clothing. THRIST STOIRS Always good bargains! Vernissage i E. Kline Always good bargains! Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sense to use in Western Civilization! Purpose of 314 Pair exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Town Crier. The BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing - confidential counseling. 831-8212 GRILLS, our new ladies wool felt衣 just had a riffle! The Eccl. Shop 732 Massachusetts, 843-6011 Professors - grad students! Turn your knowledge, skills into a profitable seminar. Highly successful seminar entrepreneur will help you FREELF INVITE Jordan Seminars, box 824, Topeka, Ks 6903 Wholesale Sound Rental, P.A., Guitar, and Bass amps. 841-605 SERVICES OFFERED Eirwell now! In *Lawrence Driving School* receive a driver's license and learn about transportation provided, drive well, pay later. English A. 4, yrs. pre-university, teaching wi. will tutor in grammar. comp. will wield protread books large (150-275 pages) in English. 42-hour training Fast accurate Resumes letter 48-hour training Affordable TYPING SERVICE. Fast A A A A Affordable TYPING SERVICE. Fast TYPING **Foreign Students:** Personal efficient editing of your dissertation, then in a technical report, research paper or manuscript. Racquall broms, branches racquall strummen Racquall broms, branches racquall strummen Racquall broms, branches racquall strummen Racquall broms, branches racquall strummen Racquall broms, branches racquall strummen HOME PET CARE, responsible care for your pets in their home. Reasonable $814.432 $847.432 $464.570 STADIUM BATHER SHOP. 1603. Massachusetts All haircuts. $5.00 No appointment necessary. AFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs. Call: Judy. 82945-7945 at 6 p.m. IMS selective power Call 842 604 before 10 p.m. CLEAN and FAST TVPNGing. assured Call 842 604 Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed, overnight services under 25 calls. Paper B14, 641-8673. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School Secretary. Call Nancy, B14-1219 Missouri, Letter Poster Typing, Editing, Took browsers. Prompt professional, high quality 84/630 fax. Mail resume to: 512-795-1234. Carr Terry for your typing needs, before, later, at 8:45 a.m. or 10:30 a.m. 842 4754 or 842 3671, 2021. 11 am to 10 p.m. Call TIP TPDP TYPING 2014 Iowa Experienced Call TIP TPDP TYPING 2014 Iowa Experienced Call TIP TPDP TYPING 2014 Iowa Experienced Call TIP TPDP TYPING 2014 Iowa Experienced hybrid talent typing C414 0622 after 5:30 a.m. and weekends. Experienced type typed documents, term papers, must HJM Correct Selective Hard BAR 822 210 after 7:00 p.m. Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations. HIS Correcting Selective. Call 405-628-9131. Experimented typal Term paper, themes, all topics were written by myself. The paper will be copied and will correct spelling. Phone #815-723-2400. Processing: you can afford it! #432 860] JEANETTE HAPPY TYPING SERVICE IBM It is a Fact. Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing Word Processing. You can afford it (481-3628) ON TIME PAPEKS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT 841-3510 3 services at a location typing, editing and graphics WORLD ARTISTS, call Ellen, 841-2722 Experienced typol will type dissertations, theses, term papers, e- reasonable rates. Call 842.3820 GOOD WORK, TYPING WORD PROCESSING Reasonable rates. Call Tod. 842.3111 TYPING PUSS: Theme, dissertation papers, paper towels, books, handouts, etc. poster, grammar spelling, et al. English tutoring principal, education specialist, etc. Water Processing plus Cygnus Duration plus Freshwater plus Cygnus Duration plus Infrared plus Cygnus duration plus photograph plus cygnus duration plus photograph plus cygnus duration plus Library Research - Typing - Editing - Will help research, outline, write) 812-810 2 Roomsmate to share 2 BH apt. for spring semester $116.00 per month; 841-666. Nan of Japa WANTED 2 female roommates wanted to share 2 bedrooms apartment. They were 18 and 34 years old, all attained in Call 841-2596 after 6 p.m. 2 females to share 2 room apartment for spring semester. Call for details. 842-766 4th roommate for great house near stadium next seminar. Senior student serious partner. 1-4 rent for roommate. Female needles to take over second second contact for Saxonium Hall. Can move in between. Call 317-480-2968. Female roommate. Nice bedroom dual avail. Im- petal room. 2 bath, garage, desk, arm, pet allowed. Ground floor. No pets. Female roommate needed to subdue Midwestern break Apartment for spring semester on bus route Female roommate wanted $155 plus 1/2 utilities water is on账. On her road. Occupy Aids. Availabl ties. Call (843) 679-4500. Female roommate; nice bedroom. After December 14, 8:00 month plus amenities, 19th and Mississippi County. Male roommate wanted. $102/month and 1/3 utilities. On bus route. Call 841-9816. Male roommate wanted. Jan 1. Excellent deal 2-level townhouse, design award, partially furnished $16 mo. $90 utilities. Five min. walk from campground. Ski lift, dresser. Dask 844-8250. Grad student预留 Mature male customers wanted starting sprays of the best available brands. grocery prices 9/20 plus 1.2 electricians. Need roommate for spacious, 2 bedroom needroom, close to campus $30 plus 1.2 unit率 *** Quiet roommate will share 2 bdrm apt at 700 1/2 Alabama. I apartment floor of 295-302 house. I am a native American from Community Mercantile. For details, please call 0415-842-8467 or 842-8467 from 05:00-5:00. For phone number 841-842-8467: Responsible female to help with child care, chores in exchange for furnished rooms, meals in family home. Roommate wanted for extra large 2 bedroom furniture and all amenities. Must be able to lift off awning easily walked behind. Hire included. Roommate to sublease private room in a 2 BR apt. Choose to camp; cheap utilities. Free up time. Roommate wanted immediately 2 BR apartment $16.67/month plus 1/3 utilities. 3 blocks from union office Roommate for huge house apartment Private room. energy-efficient $150/month Availability commune to share nice 2 bedroom apt. in a nice walk. Inlock free clean laundry. free water. See www.niosol.com Roommate need to share nice, fully furnished Clips to cunepair, on bus route. $15 a month plus 1% Fees per room. WOMEN'S SELF DEFENSE. A no-embroidery counter with a strap. The baggage will be reserved. Only $15 to the first 100 pounds. SPORTS . The University Daily KANSAN November 17,1983 Page 15 Ripken says he'd be happy if Murray won Baseball writers rank two Orioles 1 and2 for MVP By United Press International BALTIMORE — Orioles' shortstop Cal Ripken, named the American League's Most Valuable Player yesterday, said he would have been just as happy he teammate Eddie Murray won. Ripken picked up 15 first-place votes and 322 points to 10 first-place votes and 290 points for Murray. Chicago Sox catcher Carlton Fisk finished third. Ripken hit 318 with 27 home runs and 102 RBI during his second major league season. He led the league in doubles with 47 and hits with 211. In addition, Ripken played every inning of every game in leading the Orles to their first World Championship in 13 years. MURRAY, THE ORIOLIES' quiet first baseman, finished second for the second straight year despite a stellar hit in the surprise hit 306 with 33 homers and 111 RBI. But it was Ripken's "Iron Man" reputation that made the two in the mid-20th century wagers. "I cared enough about the team to go out there and be in the lineup every day," Ripken said. "I had some nagging injuries, but no major ones." Ripken said he hoped to play in every Orioles game next year. "I've dug my own grave, haven't I?" he asked. "I would also like to come back." I could 200 again. I think the RIBs, the home of women and base hits will take care of themselves." Ripken, whose local milk commercials fit his all-American image, said he didn't know whether he would be getting a bonus from the Orioles for being named MVP, "but I'm going to go home and look." "HOPEFULLY, it's in there," he said, referring to his contract. "But, really, it's the prestige to be named a billionaire." He asked money, that would be enough for me. "But if the money's in there, I'm not going to give it back." The usually reserved Ripken is beginning to grow more comfortable He carefully scrutinized an Orioles' press release, remarking "you never know where the rumors about marriage are going to crop up." Recently, news of Ripken's engagement falsely dashed the dreams of multitudes of females, who ching to the bachelor at his every appearance. But on his "first love" – baseball — Ripken said he was "deeply honored" to win the MVP, but said individual awards could never top the feeling of the Orioles' World Series victory over Philadelphia. "WINNING the World Series will always stand out foremost and utmost in my heart." Ripken is the first player to win the Most Valuable Player in his second season after winning Rookie of the Year and winning Fred Lynn won both in 1975 with Boston Three KC Royals to face sentencing on drug charges By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Three of four members of the 1983 Kansas City Royals who pleaded guilty to misdeemoran charges of attempting to possess cocaine will be sentenced today. Willie Wilson, Willie Aikens and Jerry Martin are scheduled to appear before U.S. Magistrate J. Milton Sullivant at separate hearings beginning at 9:30 a.m. The three pleaded guilty last month to charges of embezzlement and securities charges came out of an investigation into a cocaine distribution conspiracy. AS A RESULT of the investigation, 11 men and one woman were indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiracy to distribute cocaine. None of the Royals were named in the indictment, which was issued Oct. 13. Pitcher Vida Blue, the 1971 CY Young Award winner who was released from the Royals in August, had been scheduled for sentencing today but earlier this week won a delay until Dec. 15 on his guilty plea to a charge of possession, Session, Serving them "good cause" for delaying Bue's sentencing. Wilson, who was the American League batting champion in 1982, apologized to Kansas City Nov. 11 and announced his commitment to help establish a drug-abuse program. The league has sent its players to Kauffman, the Royals owner, who said Wilson had been the only player so far to come to him for help. Wilson pledged $50,000 and "unlimited hours" to the effort. KANSAS 45 Carl Henry looks for an open teammate against the Netherlands' zon defense. The touring visitors used the zone to slow down the jayhawk offense in the first Jim McCrossan/KANSBAN half of last night's game, but KU, led by Henry, Kelly Knight, Calvin Thompson and Kerry Boagni, came back to win the game 74-70. KU edges Netherlands with second-half rally By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor The Kansas Jayhawks, behind a 24-2 second-half spurt, beat the touring Netherlands national team 74-10 in the first game under Coach Larry Brown. Kansas trailed 44-35 with 17 minutes left to play. After a time out, the Jayhawks ran off eight consecutive points. Calvin Thompson and Kerry Boagni each scored four points in that streak. "It was thrilled that when we got down, some of the players started to assert themselves," Brown said. "We weren't prepared for their zone, but we made some adjustments at halftime and attacked it better." THE NETHERLANDS, whose record fell to 2-3 on its eight-game tour, used a stingy zone defense and a patient offense to build a 36-31 half-time lead. Thompson led the Jayhawks with 11 half points, and Carl Henry added nine. "Come into the game, we knew they played a little bit of zone," guard Tad Boyle said. "We weren't thinking about zone coming into the game because we been working on man-to-man in practice." We just weren't penetrating at all. Brown took the blame for the sluggish first half. "We just put the zone offense in and that's my fault." Brown said. "We changed the alignment and got into the game and got some cheap baskets." Greg Dreiling, playing his first game against outside competition in more than a year, scored six of KU's first eight points, but the Netherlands team was patient offensively and hot from the outside. "I WAS LOOKING to get off to a better start than I did in the intra- squad game." Dreiling said: "I was a lot more loose. I knew I would be playing against people who hadn't seen my moves." The Netherlands ran off an 8-2 spurt to take a 26-22 lead with 5:35 left. Kelly Knight and Thompson each scored to equalize, but the Netherlands came back with four points in a row. Thompson then hit a jump shot, but the Netherlands outscored KU 6-2 for a 36-29 lead with 27 seconds left. Henry dropped in with 24 seconds left to make it 36-31 at halftime. After Boyle hit a jump shot with 18:24 left in the second half, the Netherlands, led by Randy Wiel, took its biggest lead of the game. 44-35. Weil, a former North Carolina player, hit two baskets during the streak. Boagni and Thompson then scored the next eight points following a KU time out. Boagni added two more baskets as the Jayhawks took the lead, but the Nets scored on tight points and Boagni added a layup on an alley-ox pass from Jeff Gupta. HENRY SCORED a basket and a free throw and Drew tipped in a shot to give KU a 60-52 lead with 7:05 left in the game. Knight and Henry each scored four points as the Jayhawks held off a late rally by the Netherlands. After KU's victory, the Jayhawks could pull no closer than four points. Thompson and Henry each finished with 16 points while Knight added 15 and Boagi 12. Henry grabbed nine rebounds and Dreiling seven to lead KU. The Jayhawks shot 65 percent in the second half to pull away. KU will play the Houston Cougars in Houston on Nov. 26. "Now we have an easy one." Brown said. "I'm glad we have 10 days to prepare for Houston. I think we're way behind. Some kids I firmly believed that would play have had trouble adjusting." KU signs 3; another may commit later Head basketball coach Larry Brown announced yesterday that he had signed three high school players during the NCAA early signing period. As anticipated, Lawrence High's Danny Manning headed the list of recruits. The two other players signed by Brown are Altono Campbell of Vashon High School in St. Louis and Milton Newton of Coolidge High School in Washington, D.C. The 6-foot Campbell averaged 15.5 points and 8.3 assists a game last season. He was an all-state performer in Missouri. Newton, a 6-4 forward, averaged 16.1 points and 12 rebounds a game last season. Brown said that he expected to sign one more player but did not know whether the player would be available for him. Tyrbne Jones is the player that the Jayhawks are reportedly looking at. Jones is from Dumbbell High School in Washington, D.C., and is rated one of the top 50 prep teams. Women's basketball team opens season with 4-team tourney By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer The KU women's basketball team will open its season at 8 p.m. tomorrow against Oklahoma City University in Allen Field House. The game is part of the Dial Lady team on campus tomorrow and Saturday. The four-team tournament will also feature the University of North Carolina and Northwestern State from Natchitoches, La. The only time the Jayhawks have played OCU was two years ago, and KU won that contest. 66-62. "The they are a team that tries to run," Coach Marian Washington said. "And they will play a lot of player-to-player defense. backcourt.' "We must come out ready." We must come out ready. -Washington said that she thought the KU players were experiencing pre-game jitters this week. "The 6 o'clock game should be good." Washington said. "From what I've seen on paper, they are similar teams. Both have good returning veterans, an inside threat and the ability to hurt you in the The tournament will conclude Saturday night with two games after the homecoming football game KU and the University of Missouri. "THEY ARE TIGHT, but that is expected," she said. UNC and Northwestern State will open the tournament at 6 p.m. Friday. The two losers from tomorrow's games will play at 6 p.m. and the winners from each game will play for the championship at 8 p.m. Washington said she was glad North Carolina, a team that participated in last season's NCAA tour, was able to come to this tournament. "WE IDENTIFY with North Carolina because of Dean Smith," she said, referring to the KU men's team at UNC. "They're Washington said that as of yesterday, senior Angie Snider, junior Barbara Adkins and sophomore Michael Ayers starters for Friday night's game. excited about coming " "We'll see' how our last two practices go," Washington said. "I may not decide until 10 minutes before game time." Classic Bracket North Carolina VS Northwestern State 6 p.m. Friday Loser Winner 6 p.m. Saturday 8 p.m. Saturday Consolation Champion Tournament Champion Loser Oklahoma City VS Kansas 8 p.m. Friday Winner Allen was also ineligible last fall. WHEN THE FIRST round of the tournament begins tomorrow, the Jayhawks will be playing in their first Dial-sponsored basketball classic. Washington said she was happy that Dial-Armour, Inc. chose to help with the Lady Jayhawk Classic this season. The tournament the past two years. Allen was also ineligible last fall KU will be playing without 6-foot-3 center Philicia Allen, who has not practiced this fall while waiting for a grade change. She officially was declared ineligible yesterday for the fall portion of the season. She is expected to return to the lineup during the spring. "We want to keep Dial," she said. "We want them to see Lawrence, Kan, and the KU tournament as one of our most prestigious tournaments." The Dial Classic program is one of many athletic events sponsored by the Dial Soap National Sports Program whose purpose is to bring recognition, competition and learning opportunities to amateur athletes and coaches across the country. The Dial Lady Jayhawk Class will host one of the most impressive women's basketball tournaments, a pre-rehearsal from Dial News Said. Women's athletics receives $2,000 boost from soap company By COLLIN HERMRECK Staff Reporter The University of Kansas will receive a financial boost this weekend in hosting the first-ever Dial yahawk Classic in Allen Field House. The four-team tournament, scheduled for tomorrow and Saturday, is being underwritten partly by Armour-Dial Inc. The makers of Dial soap have given KU $2,000 to help pay for costs of the tournament. The rest of the women's basketball budget. Dial has sponsored women's tournaments since 1979 when the first one was played at Montclair State College in New Jersey. Linda Klein, director of public relations for Armour-Dial, said the company helped foot the bill for the tournament series but left the option of how to spend the money up to the host schools. "WE'RE STRICTLY amateur athletics," Klein said. "We kept it on that level because that is where the money is needed. Some companies will sometimes come in and provide shoes and other items and will recommend. We give the money and let them know that we're backing them." The Dial women's basketball tournament series, which has become the largest in the country, includes 10 tournaments this year. The Lady Jayhawk Classic is first on the schedule. The Jayhawks will also play in Dial Classics the next two weekends at the Universities of Minnesota and Kentucky. KU has also played in previous Dial Classics, but will provide the home site for the first time. "We look for teams that are highly recommended, have a good solid program and who will put the tournament on in a professional way." Klein said. "We have heard many games about the University of Kansas." Marian Washington, KU women's basketball coach, she said she was pleased to get the sponsorship. She said it was another way to make women's sports more visible on campus. A WELL-RUN tournament also helps enhance the company's image, she said. "I's really a great opportunity that we shouldn't miss," Washington said. "I think Dial has done a good job." We are very professional in their approach. KU has already begun plans to attract nationally ranked Louisiana Tech and Stephen F. Austin for next year's tournament. KU solely sponsored its own tournaments in the past from the women's basketball budget. The last sponsored tournament was in 1978. KU WILL HAVE to cover the outside costs not included in Dial's $2,000 contribution. Washington said KU was chosen to host a part of the Dial circuit because of its successful program in the past and because of KU's reputation for difficult but attractive schedules. KU has contracted to pay the three visiting teams a total of $2,500. The University of North Carolina and Northwestern (La.) State University are both guaranteed $1,000 and Oklahoma City University is promised $500. Those figures. Susan Wachter, athletic department business manager, said KU's cost of hosting the tournament could not be determined until its budget was set this year's budget had not set special money aside for the tournament. Besides the $2,000, Dial will also provide warm-up suits for the five players chosen for the all-tournament team. A gold necklace will also be awarded to the tournament's most valuable player. BARS OF DIAL SOAP will be given to the first 1,000 people attending each night. Admission prices are $3 for adults and $2 for students, including KU students with identification. Games are reserved for 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. both nights. 1N The Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 W Turpike Access Rd., will be the tournament headquarters this year. The hotel room will provide the hospitality room. 1 Page 16 University Daily Kansan, November 17, 1983 SAVE AN EXTRA $400 ON MAXELL AUDIO CASSETTES (Cash Rebate by Mail) Special Rebate Certificates Available At Kief's KIEF'S EVERYDAY PRICES ON RECORDS, BLANK TAPE AND STEREO EQUIPMENT ARE KIEF'S EVERYDAY PRICES ON RECOR AND STEREO EQUIPMENT ARE CONSISTENTLY LOWER THAN MANY STORES' "SALE PRICES" KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE DISCOUNT STEREO shop HOLIDAY PLAZA 1 Homecoming Section The University Daily KANSAN Homecoming Section Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas Vol. 94, No. 65 (USPS 650-640) Friday morning, November 18, 1983 FLASHBACK Homecoming is a time for parades, for football and for memories of those years spent on the hill. This year,the class of 1958 returns to Mount Oread for its 25th-year reunion. The University Daily Kansan devotes this special homecoming edition to the class' music, fashions,homecoming traditions and decade. 1950'S THE FOAL MCCONY KU Homecoming memories This year, the 25th-year reunion. this special homecoming fashions, homecoming trac. HOMECOMING UNDER THE BIG TOP KU HOMECOMING UNDER THE BIG TOP INDEX 2 1983 Homecoming activities 3 Mount Oread and the '50s 4 Floats and festivities 5 the birth of a mascot 6 The music of two eras 8 A first-class reunion 9 Fashion and the '50s 10 The Dean Smith days 11 Thirty-five years of sports 1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 Homecoming offers 'circus' of events By BRUCE F. HONOMICHL Staff Reporter The circus is coming to town. But so are the class of 1958, a parade, a pep rally, "The Great God Brown," an all-University luncheon, "The Messiah," and a jazz concert conducted by a graduate who is a respected jazz musician in bands with famous jazz musicians. Homecoming is coming to town. And, if the ball bounces the right way, the University of Kansas may see a few Jayhawks round out the circus by bining a few tiers. Homecoming at Collingwood town. Homecoming at Collingwood town, couple of years this year than in most years but won't lack activities for students and alumni. This year's homecoming, featuring the circus, is titled "Under the Big Top." HOMECOMING ACTIVITIES will begin with a parade this afternoon and will end tomorrow. Homecoming Day, with the annual Kansas-Missouri football game, the oldest college football rivalry west of the Mississippi River, and a homecoming dance featuring jazz artist Gary Foster. Foster, who has degrees in both fine arts and education from KU, will perform from 8 p.m. to midnight tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom on Wednesday and are on sale at the Student Union Activities office in the Kansas Union. Foster is an instructor of commercial music at Pasadena, Calif., City College and is the director of Nova Music Studies. Pasadena. Foster, who has recorded two albums recently released in Japan, has played in orchestras for television programs such as "Lou Grant," "Vegas" and "Hart to Hart." The proceeds from his concert will benefit the jazz music scholarship fund of the Kansas University Endowment Association. Foster, a saxophonist who also plays the clarinet and the recorder, has recorded with groups led by Clare Louis Bellson and Frank Zappa. FOSTER HAS HEADED the improvisation and woodwinds sections of the National Association of Jazz Educators and is a woodwind clinician and jazz soloist for Yamaha Corp. He will also meet with several fine arts classes during his visit to the University Foster will be accompanied by the Criminal and Alumni Swim Band and the Kzz Eggz Entertainment. Homecoming activities will officially begin this afternoon with the annual homecoming parade and a pep rally. The parade, which will capitalize on the celebration of 2014, will near the Chi Omega Fountain and snake down Jayhawk Boulevard to Mississippi. Street, moving north to Memorial Stadium. Floats that participate in the parade will remain on display in X Zone (Bethlehem). AFTER THE PARADE, a pep rally will take place in X Zone. Awards for the best floats and student marching will be announced during the pep rally. Other activities today include the 25-year reunion for the class of 1988. A dinner for the class will be at 6 p.m. on Monday, K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center. Tomorrow, activities will begin at 9:30 a.m. with a reception for members of the class of 1958 at the chancellor's residence. In addition, many campus living groups will have receptions to welcome returning alumni. The Chuck Berg Band will play from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. in the Kansas Union lobby. Fred Ellsworth Medallions, for meritorious service to the University, and the Chancellors' Club Teaching Award will be awarded at an all-University luncheon at 11 a.m. in the Union ballroom. Tickets for the luncheon are $7. They may be purchased from the University of Kansas Alumni Association. THE FOOTBALL GAME between the Jayhawks and Missouri Tigers, will begin at 1:30 p.m. Over the years, KU has won 39 games and Missouri 43 in the rivalry that began in 1981. Nine games have ended in ties. Missouri has won four of the last five games between the teams and won last year 18-10 in Columbia. Missouri is 7-3 in Iowa. Jayhawks will come into the game 3-1. Reserved seats for the game, which is scheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m., will cost $12. General Admission tickets are available at the Allen Field House ticket office. A concert and a play, Handel's "Messiah" and "The Great God Brown," will be performed during homecoming weekend. THE "MESSIAM" will be performed at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium. it will feature KU choirs, choral ensembles and the KU symphony orchestra. Admission is free. Special to the KANSAN Homecoming bonfires aren't tradition any more, but football, floats and reunions remain a part of KU homecomings. This bonfire, at a 1958 pep rally, preceded KU's Homecoming Day football game. HOMECOMING '83 AT The Pladium 901 MISSISSIPPI THE PLADIUM IS DOING HOMECOM- ING RIGHT — WITH EPIC RECORDING ARTISTS THE CLOCKS!! SHOWS START AT 9:00 NIGHTLY. DOORS OPEN AT 7:30. DON'T FORGET — THE PLADIUM IS HAVING A POST-GAME PARTY 50¢ DRAWS FROM 4:30 to 8:00 AFTER THE KU -MU GAME! HOMECOMING '83 AT The Pladium 901 MISSISSIPPI The Pladium 901 MISSISSIPPI HOLIDAY SALE GOING ON NOW! Seiferts OVER 100 STORES ACROSS THE MIDWEST! 821 Massachusetts Seilgerts Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 Thurs. 9:30-8:30 Pyramid Pizza salutes surtés the cast of "The Day After." "We glow when we get it." THE "Where-did-Lawrence-go?" SPECIAL: Bake Food not peach 842-3232 off $1 off any large pizza. Offer good until Sun., Nov. 20th EXTRA MUSHROOM SPEICAL! BONUS Say "Ronald Reagan" and get free mushroom topping - Sunday only. 1 9 University Daily Kansan, November 18. 1983 Page 3 WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY Registration during the 1950s bears little resemblance to KU's new computer registration process in Strong Hall. '58 events are relevant 25 years later By JILL CASEY Staff Reporter Staff Reporter "A strange sort of cgitural calm has settled over the nation's colleges, at least on the surface." That's how a 1958 article in Time magazine branded America's college students, and a picture of KU students listening to Mozart in the old Spooner-Thayer Museum of Art was used to illustrate the writer's point. "STUDENTS ARE DOCILE," John Ise, KU professor emeritus of economics, said when the story was published. "Their social life and football are more important than politics and world affairs." The description still seems to fit 25 years later. Many have said that a new generation of apathetic students reigns on today's college campuses. But the world affairs of the 1950s have also been relevant to those of today. President Eisenhower promised Americans in March 1958 that the recession would end. Unemployment was up to 5.1 percent, and like suggested that everyone "go out and buy things you want" to halt the recession and bring stability to the economy. During the fall semester of 1957, Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson announced that the armed forces would be reduced by 100,000 to increase funds for the production of guided missiles. In December, the United States' NATO accepted an offer to stockpile medium-missiles for European defense. EISEENHIWER MADE HIS 'atoms for peace' call at the 1957 Atomic Energy Conference in West Germany. The conference emphasized that "may one day unify a divided world." Manuel Gottlieb, assistant professor of economics, disagreed, saying that the United States should make a pledge to use its deadly weapons only in tactical warfare, and not against civilian populations. THE SOVIET SUPERIORITY in space was the No. 1 issue in 1958, and America's repeated failures to get satellites into space was a source of embarrassment. Meanwhile, the Soviets had launched three Sputnik satellites. This heated issue was greatly publicized. Even the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals got into the spirit when it drafted a letter of protest to the Soviet Union for sending a dog into space. In 1958, Vice President Richard Nixon took his infamous South American tour with his wife, Pat. They were flown home after attempts on his life were made in Caracas, Venezuela. The headline in the University Daily Doreta's Decorative Arts Sponsors the 7th Annual Holiday Bazaar love Clifford P. Ketzel, now a professor of political science, reflected the peculiar paranoia of the era when he said, at a meeting of the National Defense Executive Reserve, that if Americans had known of the precarious position of the U.S., there would have been a dramatic increase in requests to public officials to increase financing to the Civil Defense Administration. THE JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK had a new fully equipped darkroom built at the Kansas Union, and editor Tome Petitt said. "With this darkroom I was able to provide plenty of timely pictures of yearbook value, not only today but in 20 years." But Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev said that the Soviets "will never start a war", even though the country is the world rocket and missile superiority. Preliminary planning for an engineering building — Learned Hall — was underway in 1958, as was the remodeling of Watson Library's main reading room, now the periodicals section. Sat., Nov. 19 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Plan to do your Christmas shopping... over 150 exhibitors! Lawrence Community Building 115 W.11 St. Lawrence.KS 843-7255 The physical appearance of the campus itself was ever changing. The Sunside married student housing was being replaced in '58 by Summerfield Hall, and 120 units were added to Stouffer Place. Two new residence buildings at Sycamore Hill Location were under construction, along with Joseph R Pearson Hall 1006 N.H. Campus life for students in the case of 1956, though in many respects much more similar to what happened in 2014. FIDEL CASTRO WAS not yet giving this country headaches, but two Cuban students at KU predicted his coming to power when they told a Kanstan reporter that "everyone is against Batista." 20 REASONS FOR EATING AT CHRISTOPHER'S 1. Served by waiters and waitresses in lovely turn of the can curry atmosphere. 2. Fresh breaded beet salad including sandwich and mayo dip. 3. Deli lunch specials for $2.49 4. HAPPY MARRYDAY on the day of your wedding with a presentation proper 1.D. before ordering and bring it to the table on your behalf. 5. On the house, Friends dinner is o Students also were changing Only 2,300 females were enrolled in KU in 1988 out of 9,000 total - but that still represented a marked increase. Kansan the next day "Nixon Gets the welcome" — now seems some- what trivial. CHRISTOPHERS Family Restaurant See DECADE, n. 5, col. 4 calvin klein BRITCHES CORNER KATY'S CELLAR SHOPPE Next-to-New Clothing for Women the Marketplace, 745 New Hampshire 842-7456 Open Tuesday thru Saturday. 10:30 to 5:30 Bernard Blythe $1599 (LIMITED TIME ONLY) LEVI'S JEANS Levi's* Boot-Cut Jeans... American fashion. Western tradition. Levi's * classic boot-cut styling, born on the American frontier is slimmed down for the fashion frontier. And Levi's * great fit and rugged wearability are still going down in history. That's good old-fashioned American value. That's good old-fashioned American value. In the Levi's $^*$ tradition. LEVI'S JEANSWEAR QUALITY NEVER GOES OUT OF STYLE KING Jeans 740 MASS. e Oct. 1983 1 Page 4 University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 '50s racial attitudes recalled By LAURE JONES and ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporters A white boy walked up to a black man in a grocery store and ran his finger down the man's arm. The boy turned toward his mother with a puzzled look and said, "Mom, it didn't come off like Daddy said." Hobart Woody, KU nuclear reactor operator, can now look back to the 1950s when he was the subject of the boy's "experiment" and see the humor in the incident, he said recently. "When you are subject to segregation, you have to look at it in a humorous way to get over it," he said. Woody's experience was characteristic of the atmosphere in Lawrence during the 1950s when blacks often were segregated, he said. BLACKS, FOR INSTANCE, were not served in most local restaurants and taverns, he said. Also, they were required to sit at the back or in the balconies of downtown theatres and entrance to the public swimming pool. Aaron Shanon Bennett, a 1938 KU law graduate, in 1961 became the first black attorney to work for the Land and Natural Resources division of the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C. Lawrence's downtown theatres did not change their segregation policies until former Chancellor Franklin Murphy told theatre managers that he would show free movies for students every night on campus. Bennett said. "You either went downtown and subjected yourself to the segregation, or you just didn't go at all." Bennett told me. "I went from interview from Washington D.C. "He made a vow to change the situation and within one week all movie theatres dropped the policy." Bennett said. ALTHOUGH BLACKS were the victims of segregation, whites often joined the battle for desegregation. Harry Shaffer, professor of economics and Soviet and East European studies, was among those concerned about racial discrimination in the 1950s. Shaffer resigned from the University of Alabama in 1956 to take a position at the University of Kansas because he thought that the University of Alabama had been unfair to its first black student. The university expelled Lucy Antherine after she had made "broad accusations" against the university. She said officials had not provided enough security to protect her from attack, and did not want her to attend the school. About 3,000 students had demonstrated against her admittance after the U.S. Supreme Court had ruled that school could not bar her enrollment. Although desegregation was especially rife in the South, Lawrence also had discrimination problems, Shaffer said. "I EXPECTED LAWRENCE, the "i capital of non-slavery during the Civil War, to be more integrated than it was when I arrived. It was disappointed when I arrived." "A black student with a Ph.D. in chemistry could not even get a job selling chewing gum in a five-and-dime store." In 1989, Shaffer was president of the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy, a group dedicated to racial integration. "We conducted sit-ins at various restaurants," Shaffer said." During the sit-ins black and whites sat together and refused to leave after being ignored by waiters. Usually, the owner approached the protesters and asked them to leave because it was not appropriate for a restaurant to serve blacks." he said. "one owner told me that 15 to 20 percent of the people in town were prejudiced and that if he hired a black he would go broke," Shafer said. Woody, the nuclear reactor operator, was born in Lawrence and has been affiliated with KU since the 1970s. He is the author of the monographs of being discriminated against. "NOWADAYS PEOPLE USE more finesse, but they really don't mean what they say," he said. For him, the memories of segregation are too recent to hope that prejudice will disappear during his children's lifetime. But Woody said that he had perceived a decrease in prejudice since the 1950s. "There has been a tremendous amount of change, but I don't think there is a black that is not frustrated some time during the day because of prejudice." Woody said. "People are too skin-color conscious." Shaffer said that KU students had played an important role in the fight for change. With student support, the Lawrence League for the Protection of Democracy picketed a local, privately funded pool that barred blacks, he said. AFTER THE PICKET. Shafer received many threats, he said. One incident involved a cardboard effigy put on his front porch with a message painted in red that stated, "You shall never swim again." Carol McMilliam, a 1962 graduate, said that during the time she had attended KU and was a member of the Kappa Gamma gamma sorority, discrimination on campus was still common. "The fraternities and sororites were not integrated," she said. "It was progress to pledge a Jewish bride in a far-far back in the dark ages we were." BENNETT, THE ATTORNEY, said that sports became one of the first activities to be desegregated after an arduous battle to lessen policies that discriminated against black students at the University. "It was not uncommon for blacks and whites to stay in separate hotels while playing on the road," Bennett said. "We wanted the University to refuse to play any schools where the teams had to be segregated." Shaffer said that the combined efforts of people to eradicate discrimination had been fruitful. "It was a long and bitter struggle that to be had fought, but we have made great progress," he said. "It took a long time to get where we are today . . . even in the city of Lawrence." By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter Floats with circus themes to compete Phineas T. Barnum and James A Bailey would be proud. Staff Reporter "Under the Big Top" is the theme for this afternoon's homecoming parade, and 13 floats with circus themes have entered to compete for prizes in the parade, which begins at 2:30 p.m. at the Chi Omega fountain. Homecoming officials say this year's parade should be better than those in previous years because more floats have entered the competition. Last year only eight or nine floats competed, Frank Buccero, parade coordinator and senior class president, said last week. BUCCero, Overland Park senior, said that more groups outside of the Greek system entered the float competition this year. Oliver, Joseph R. Pearson will join residence halls have entered floats, as has KU's Sword and Shield club. He attributed the increase to a change in the attitude of Homecoming. Homecoming, he said, was advertised as something that everyone could be involved in. It was not aimed toward the fraternities and sororites. "May'be they don't feel so much dissension; toward the Greeks." Bucero said. "I'm just happy that they entered." KU'S FIRST HOMECOMING parade, in 1916, was dominated by schools and campus organizations — not by fraternities and sororities. The first parade started on Massachusetts Street and moved north to the Eldridge House and back down Massachusetts Street to South Park. The Men's Student Council organized the parade, which included the KU marching band, the city band, the University of Missouri marching band, cheerleaders, alumni and the National Guard. But in 1922, the campus started a new tradition to accompany the parade — scholarship halls and fraternity and sorority houses were decorated and, like floats, were judged and awarded prizes. THE PHI BETA PI fraternity won the men's house decorating division that year, and the Alpha Chi Omega took first place in the women's division. 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We've got a great crew working for us who understand what you're looking for and we've got a terrific stock of men's clothing, sportswear & accessories for you to select from ... beautifully gift wrapped and with all the trimmings. *Cross Creek rugbys *Pendleton shirts *Woolrich flanels *Braemar sweaters *Cricketeer tweeds *Zero King Jackets - Authentic Imports jackets *Sero dress shirts *Scotland Yard sweaters *Pendleton sweaters *Christian Dior jackets *Sero sport shirts and a great deal more ... House decorations became the homecoming competition during this period. During the 1951 homecoming, living organizations did not decorate their houses. During the summer, north Lawrence was flooded. Living groups decided to donate their decorating money to rebuild the area. In 1948, administrators decided to do away with the homecoming parade, and have a pep rally at Memorial Stadium instead, as was the custom of the 1920s. KU homecomings had no parades or floats for more than 30 years. But house decorations remained popular until 1970, when the tradition the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755 The parade was revived four years ago. The Delta Tau Delta fraternity and the Delta Tau Delta sorority are going to work this year's theme into their float by building a three-ring circus, said Bryan Shandy, Milford sophomore and float chairman for the Delts. THIS YEAR, THE Gamma Phi Beta sorority team up with the Kappa Psifal fraternity to build a float that will show off their hawks riding on the Missouri Tigers. SORORITIES AND fraternities traditionally team up because it is a good way for houses to mix. BUCCero said, "If you want to be involved when it is divided between two houses." One ring, he said, would depict a tiger being tamed by a circus master. The second ring would show a tiger being shot out of a cannon and the third ring would show a Jayhawk doing a balancing act on a gold post, with a tiger underneath. Mardie Harberts, Overland Park senior and float chairman for the Alpha Phi sorority, said the Alpha Phis had about $500 to spend on their float. "This year we we're having a moving float. When mechanics are involved, it is amazing." Five judges will watch the floats as they move down Jayhawk Boulevard in front of Strong Hall. They will judge both the moving and non-moving categories on theme, originality and color. Working within the budget is easier if materials are recycled, said Shawn Driscoll. Russell sophomore and float for thephi Delta Theta fraternity. "We have a lot of stuff left over, like the chicken wire. And divided between two types." The Phi Kappa Psi's fish was built in its parking lot, and the Gamma Phis helped with the planning. They also helped stuff colored paper into the chicken wire frame — the traditional materials used in building floats. MOST GROUPS BUILD parts of their floats indoors, Shandy said. Sections of the float usually are moved outdoors during homecoming week and assembled the Wednesday and Thursday before the parade. "We've been planning on a late-nighter," Shandy said last week. "It is kind of a tradition to stay up and finish the float." HOMECOMING OFFICIALS also have introduced a third category this year for two-dimensional floats , which are similar to billboards. Bucero said the new division was added to help minimize the costs of the project. "We heard through the grapevine that some people didn't enter because they couldn't afford to spend $500 to see it," he said. "This way they can enter too." For Today's Homecoming Fashions And Tomorrows Memories KANSAS OUTDOOR Assorted Jackets . . $39.95-$49.95, grey 'Kansas' sweatshirt . . $17.95. Argyle sleeveless vest available in grey or white . . $13.95. Assorted caps . . $3.50-$9.95. Royal Jayhawk sweatshirt . . $13.95. Stadium cushion . . $6.00. KU 'Kansas' pennant . . $3.80 for a set containing a pennant, bumper sticker, and button. Jayhawk Bookstore ... at the 1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, KS. 66044 819 Massachusetts Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 * Thurs. all 8:30 Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Massachusetts Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 • Thurs. 9:30 Arensberg's = Shoes 9West Fall'83 Fashion High Heel in Black & Taupe --- University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 Page 5 Baby Jay's birth brings memories to originator By THERESA QUENSTEDT Staff Reporter Homecoming marks the time of year when friends and alumni of the University of Kansas gather to celebrate school spirit. It is a time for parades, floats, football and memories of time spent on the hill. KU mascot Boby Jay, seen here at a recent football game, celebrates a birthday this week. The mascot, 'hotchot' during the 1971 homecoming football game with Kansas State University, was created by Amy Hurst Jones, then a Cleveland sophomore. But Homecoming also marks another special event — the anniversary of the death of Diana. Twelve years ago, Baby Jay stepped out of a blue egg onto the field during halftime at KU's homecoming game. The college has since become a KU tradition. "WHAT THE BIRD BIRD always needed was a baby Jayhawk," said Amy Just est students, a 1974 graduate who created the mascot by day after creating the mascot in 1971. Jones said that she had got the idea for Baby Jay from Jayhawk decals that had several small Jayhawks following a large one. After her freshman year, parents built the costume for Baby Jay in the garage of their Cleveland home. MICHAEL ROBINSON Baby Jay was a top secret before matching so that even Jones' roommate would never see her. Once the costume was finished, Jones packed it up and presented it to Dick Wintermute, special projects director for the Alumni Association, who was the homecoming chairman at the time. Wintermute approved the mascot, and it was decided that Baby Jay would be hatched on Homecoming Dav 1971. On Oct. 9, 1971, Baby Jay was hatched from a blue egg before a record crowd of 000 fans home for Kansas against Kansas University. KU won the game 39-13. forget the day she had stepped out of the egg. "WHEN I STEPED out, you could hear the entire stadium gasping. It was great — quite a thrill," she said. Jones said that she would never Jones said that there was no deep meaning behind the mascot. "We were out there to have a good time, be school-spirited and have a super-high energy level to reflect the team," she said. The mascot, she said, merely serves a public-relations role, because it tries to attract customers. Jones was Baby Jay during her sophomore year, but as a junior she transferred to the University of Kansas Center to study physical therapy. Another student was chosen as a back-up mascot in case Jones could not return from Kansas City, Kan., to the football games, she said. But Jones remained the Baby Jay mascot until her graduation in 1974. In 1978, a supposed knee turned out to be serious matter when the Baby Jay became insoluble. The costume was stolen Sept. 9, that year from a local canvas awning and canvas company, where it was being re-covered. BABY JAY'S DISAPPEARANCE prompted searches by several university organizations, even though athletic officials had hoped that the costume's theft was only a prank and that it would show up at a football game. "We are certainly not going to let Baby Jay die," Don Baker, sports information director, said at the time. "It is our opinion that Baby Jay has become a big tradition at the University." Messages from the athletic department asking that the costume be returned were flashed on the Memorial Stadium scoreboard at about three home football games. The messages said that no legal action would be taken against anyone who returned the costume. ATHLETIC OFFICIALS considered replacing the costume after waiting almost a month for its return. But about two weeks later, the University Daily photographed the photographs and a note that confirmed the costume was being held captive. The note was not signed and did not ask for a ransom. The fiberglass costume, then valued at $600, finally was found Oct. 26 by a Kansan reporter and photographer working from an anonymous tin. Jones said that she was amazed by the whole thing. "I reacted like others, that it was a practical joke," she said. I didn't want them to hurt or destroy it. Decade continued from p. 3 In response to a Newsweek article that reported on this influx of women on campuses all over the nation, Kansan editor Larry Bost wrote, "Now if it's efficient or economically rewarding to wide-skirted little dolles around, we are all for it. Whether the rewards will be academic 'is another question.'" Nobody joked about the edge women had in their grade point averages, but women still were excluded from KU's marching band in 1958. OVERCROWDING WAS A problem not unique to KU at that time, and Phillip Ward Burton, professor of journalism at Syracuse University, suggested restricting enrollments of women so there would be more room for the nation's campuses. Emily Taylor, a student at Resource Center and then dean of women, opposed his idea in a Kansan editorial. In 1958, James E. Seaver, now director of the Western Civilization Department, said that it would be more rewarding for students to study ideas through history, and not just historical fact. Several new author were also added to the Western Civilization readings, including Martin Luther, John Calvin, Isaac Newton, Karl Marx and V.I. Lenin. ALSO IN 1958, the Lawrence City Commission allowed students to drink beer and dance in the same establishment. A 13-year-old ban had prohibited participating in both "activities," but the commission allowed Louisiana's Mile restaurant, 29rd and Louisiana stalls, to offer beer and dancing. Famous speakers in 1958 included Walter Van Tilberk Clark, author of the "Ox-Bow Incident." Another distinguished speaker was Thurgood Marriott. The book was also recommended for the Advancement of Colored People and a future Supreme Court justice. The most distinguished speaker. though, was the Massachusetts Senator John F. Kennedy, who spoke to a full house at Hoch Auditorium about "Politics — Curse or Careur?" A KU student commenting on the speech said it was a "typical college speech, where politics is defended and nothing special or of current interest, is discussed." PIZZA, AS USUAL, was a delicacy for students, and a large 'Around the World' pizza could be purchased at the Campus Hideaway Pizzeria for $1.95 But haircut prices were raised, much to students' chagrin. A Kansan editorial said, "If Joe College becomes a basked-hairy individual with long sideburns, instead of the clean shaven man, it could be no great cause for alarm. It's the haircut prices which are to blame, not the Elvis Presley craze." But some things haven't changed at KU in the past 25 years. In 1958 students were faced with threats of stricter fines. One student who for two weeks left his 1931 Buck stranded on campus ran up an unprepared $200 fine. ABOUT 100 STUDENTS were caught forging documents to beat the enrollment process. Their punishment: They were suspended and enrolled during the next two semesters. A proposed tuition increase that year brought many debates, and students also complained that the 10-minute break between classes was too short Some original pranksters also roamed the campus, the most famous being 'Mr. X' who, in a letter to the Kansan, claimed responsibility for a shuttle bomb at the Kansas Union station, where people were evacuated in the incident. The rivalry with Kansas State University, then Kansas State College, also was strong. Controversy about the school's proposed name change arose when the state legislature pollster that "it should be changed to Kansas University of Agriculture." We've Got Your Fragrance... (at great prices!) Opium Oscar De La Renta L'air Du Temps Halston Eau de Parfum We also carry men's fragrances. 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DOMINO'S PIZZA Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations. 35104763012 Page 6 University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 Soft love songs, rock mark music of 1950s By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter The music of the 1950s was that of two eras — the soft love songs of the early years and the loud, raucous sounds of rock 'n' roll. Some of the popular singers in the early 90s were Doris Day, Dinah Shore, Debbie Reynolds, Patti Page, Jennifer Aniston, Drew Barrymore, Eddie Fisher and Franklin Laine. And some of the more popular songs, according to Variety Cavalcade of Music, were: "Love is a Many Splendored Thing," "Que Sera, Sera," "Crying in the chapel," "Ive Been You Were Changing 'I've Been a Cook'" "Your Cheatin' Heart" and "That Dogy in the Window." BROADWAY MUSICALS, especially those by Rogers and Hammerstein, also were popular at the time "Showboat," "The King and I," "The Music Man," "South Pacific" and "The Sound of Music" produced some of the classic tunes from that era. Dick Wright, KU associate professor of music, said that the music of the early 1950s was prom-like, dreamy and musky. Tom Yoe, then director of the KU News Bureau, said, "Dance bands were still bands. They had full instrumentation and they didn't shrink down to trios and duos with amplified drums and electric guitars. They played a variety of dance music." Because of a city ordinance prohibiting students from dancing and drinking beer at the same establishment, Yoe said, the Dine-A-Mite, a student hangout at 23rd and Louisiana streets, became even more popular because it was just outside the city limits. STUDENTS ALSO danced to live bands at University-sponsored dances in the ballroom of the Kansas State University and at traternity and sorority parties. Users wanting to just listen to the jukebox, drink a beer and grab a meal, could go to the Jayhawk Cafe, Bricks or the Rock Chalk Cafe, said Yoe, who is now publications and andor consultant for University Relations. Jeanot Seymour, who attended KU from 1951 to 1953 and is now assistant director of communications for University Relations. He has been instrumental in the Gene Kelly movies and broadway show tunes. As 45-rpm records became popular, she listened to Tommy Dorsey and Frank Sinatra. She said she even waited for $2\frac{1}{2}$ hours to see a Frank Sinatra concert BUT IN 1953, music began to change. Popular music became heavily influenced by the rhythm and blues songs of many black artists. Bill Haley and His Comets that year released "Rock Around the Clock," which not only provided a name for this new style of music but also gave America a rock 'n' roll authet Wright said that KU students seemed to frown upon rock 'n' roll in its early days. "They looked on rock n' roll as kind of slimy with its ducktail haircuts and guys with cigarette packs rolled up in their shirt sleeves," he said. "We didn't think it was popular music. We looked down our noses and smiled, just to be cool to the motorcycle gang, not to educated people. We thought they were the ones doing damage and writing graffiti on the wall." BUT BESPITE ITS image, rock 'n' roll caught on pretty fast on campus — especially when Elis Presley burst on the scene. Yoe said. In 1955, Presley created a nearriot on "The Ed Sullivan Show" with his spry hips and his loyal following of screaming women. Although Presley was censored on television from the waist down, Ed Sullivan liked Presley enough to let America know that he "was a real fine boy." By 1956 Presley had 10 songs in the Top 20 such as "Hound Dog," "Love Me Tender," "Blue Suede Shoes" and "Jailhouse Rock." Yoe said that rock 'n' roll drove out the big dance bands and replaced them with the jukebox. He said that by the end of the '50s rock had completely taken over the music scene. ALTHOUGH PRESLEY was king, other artists who played an important role in the birth of rock 'n' roll were Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis, the Platters, Fats Domino, Pat Boone, Buddy Holly and the Crickets, Ricky Nelson, Brenda Lee. Frank Avalon and Fabian. Other songs that made the era famous were "Be-Bop-La-Lulu," "Blueberry Hill," "Johnny B Goode," "Rock and Roll Music," Great Balls of Fire, "That'll Be The Dog," the "Dippin' Song," "The Purple People Eater," "Splash, Splash" and "Put Your Head on My Shoulder." BY 1958 it seemed rock had matured enough for Danny & the Juniors to declare "Rock and Roll is Here to Stay." Abel Green, editor of Variety Cavalcade of Music, wrote, "When rock and roll swept over the nation in the mid-1960s, there was a general conviction in the music industry that the 'fad' had, a seasonal sensation. But after 15 years the 'fad' has refused to pass." Put your best foot forward. Jobs are tight and in order to compete in today job market you must stand-out. Present your best image with a professionally designed and typeset resume. At the House of Usher we're experts at thesis binding and resumes. We'll help you put your best foot forward at a price you can afford. As a convertible circled the track at Memorial Stadium more than a decade ago, KU's homecoming queen of 1969 waved goodbye to a University tradi- Staff Reporter Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy is flanked at the 1958 homecoming football game by 1938 Homecoming Queen Penny Amerine, left, and 1958 Homecoming Queen Susie Kastner. Kastner's attendants included Marcie Hall and Carol Puncan, both at right. HOUSE OF USHER 834 MASSACHUSETTS STREET • LAWRENCE KANSAS 66044 • PHONE 913-342-3510 The royal tradition, which started 50 years ago when Lucy Trees was crowned the first homecoming queen, captured the hearts of loyal students, faculty and alumni. KU even had a homecoming queen in 1942, when the administration canceled most homecoming events II and because gasoline rationing kept many alumni from returning to campus. The crowning ceremony, Rundquist said, was the biggest problem. Digitarians chose the Jayhawkman Queen from pictures of candidates chosen by the yearbook staff. Prince Monroe II of Monaco chose the queen in 1957. Service Beyond Duplication THE 1590S, HOWEVER, were the glory years of royalty at KU. Queens nominated from many organizations divided the campus kingdom. Dellwig said, "I went down to Weaver's year that I had them donate the cloth for the robe. Lawrence agreed to clean it every year." Rundquist said that faculty as well as students used to plan homecoming months in advance, and the queen made sure all guests had access to the selection process to the crowning. THE ROYAL ROBE was draped over the shoulders of several homecoming queens in the years following 1857 as she joined a ball in a glass case at the Kansas Union. JAY BOWL FALL HILL CHAMPIONSHIP BOWLING TOURNAMENT The University Daily Kansan reported in 1957 that as many as 250 different women could be nominated to become one of the queens at KU. Indeed, 12 women claimed scepters that year. The regal dozen included the Calendar Queen, the Carnival Queen, the Engineering Queen, the KU Relays Queen and the Greek Week Queen. Military organizations on campus crowned three queens. The Kansas University Resident had her court for the law students. LOUIS DELLWIG, professor of geology, and Richard Rundquist, professor of counseling, were the facultyusers to the queen committee in1957 By ROSEMARY HOPE JAY BOWL FALL HILL "It was so very important to get the halftime ceremony down to a science so BOWFIELD WINNING The four women are holding bouquets of flowers, likely for a celebration or victory ceremony. The background is an open field with a flag in the center, suggesting an outdoor event. ELIGIBILITY: Only those participating in Jay Bowl Leagues SINGLES Collectively, the '60s did change the way KU students celebrated homecoming, but it wasn't until 1970 that homecoming queen was dethroned Queen tradition provides fond memories WHEN: Tues., Nov. 29, 7 p.m. DEADLINE: 5 p.m. Tues., Nov. 29 COST: $5 PRIZES: prize money returned 100% FORMAT: Full Handicaps established in league play 12 game minimum FLAGSHIP: (2) IN 1969 THE Black Student Union asked the Homecoming Committee to be allowed to crown their candidate with the traditional queen at balfour of time. The black queen denied the request. The black queen was crowned before the game. WHEN: Sat., Dec. 3, 1 p.m. COST: $5 PRIZES: Money 1st place $50.00 2nd place $30.00 3rd place $20.00 FORMAT: 3 games TEAM members must have handicap based on minimum of 12 games ELIGIBILITY: Top 3 Teams in each league 1. Monday Nite Mixed 2. Greek 3. Guys & Dolls TEAM Kerwin and Dellwog both said it was too bad that KU no longer crowned a woman with the title. "They tried to change everything in the 60s," he said "It was right in the middle of exams. I was in a musical. At night I had to be in a performance, and in the morning I was on to TV for an interview." she said. Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Susie (Kastner) Kerwin was KU's homecoming queen of 1958. Kerwin said last week that she was disappointed KU no longer crowned homecoming queens, SUSIE (KANTER) KERWIN, Shawne Mission, who was homecoming queen in 1938, said that homecoming occurred of the times in the late 50s. "It was kind of like 'Happy Days.'" she said. A statement by the 1970 homecoming committee said. "It seems inappropriate in a multicultural environment such as a university to select one or a group of young women to represent that community. The 1970 homecoming committee deems it more appropriate to recognize those who embody the academic spirit for which this community was established." Judy (Gorton) Parkinson, McLean, Va., took her title in stride when she was crowned homecoming queen in 1959. Parkinson, a music major and professional violinist, was queen during a busy time in her life. Alan Forker, her husband, remembers the scene more vividly. "Hell, it was the first time I ever saw her," he said. "It wasn't reality I remember thinking, 'Gosh, do I do that?' she said. The crowning, for Sharon Stue (Sout) Forker, Lincoln, Neb., who was home- coming queen in 1956, was like a fantasy, she said it itd not run overtime. As I recall, it ran right down to the last minute" he said. U HOMECOMING 1983! Level 2 MAIN UNION - The Prairie Room 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. - The Hawk's Nest 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Level 3 THE KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICES WELCOME TO - Soup & Salad Bar 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. - The Cafeteria 10:00 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. - The Deli 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. - The Prairie Room 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. GREAT TASTY BUTTERS Conveniently located next to Allen Field House. There's plenty of free parking. Stop in before and after the game for a bite to eat or beverage. BURGE UNION - The Shoppe 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Level 2 SUNDAY BRUNCH BUFFET Main Union, Prairie Room, Level 2 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Features: Entrees, Salad Bar, Fresh Baked Pastries, desserts, plus Juices, Coffee, a very enjoyable meal. SAVE $2000 OR MORE ON A KAYPRO II. For $1595, Kaypro gives you a business computer as complete machines costing $2000 to $3000 more. 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Lunchtime 843-7398 5 p.m.-Close 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Downtown Lawrence Only Lawrence Area 1 If you haven't seen these groups LIVE in the last year, you're missing out on the excitement at The Jazzhaus LIVE MUSIC IS BETTER 9261/2 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 913 -749-3320 Son Seatz Blues Band HAPPY HOUR every day 4pm TO 5pm McBun's History of Rock'n Roll CARIBÉ HERB ELLIS SHORTY ROGERS and BUD SHANK Mose Allison Trio BLUEWAE Blueplate Special THE JUKE JUMPERS JAY McSHANN 18 PIECE Jazzhaus SWING BAND Clip and mail this coupon along with $10 membership fee to The Jazzhaus. Cards may be picked up on club premises 10 days after we receive your application. Bill Lynch Band MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION Name: Las Date of application: Fires Birthdate: Phone: Place of Business: Drivers License: # Signature: Agent/Owner: 4 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 --- (1) PETER J. BURGESS PETER A. MAYER 1935-1947 The Fred Ellsworth Medalitions will be presented tomorrow to five olimnii who have represented bottom left, Charles Slawwon, Wichita, Wendell Holmes, Graham Gadsby, gmade grade 393. Availaton Road; John O'Leary Jr., Lt.-Colonel; Mike Shaker, Shaker Heights, Ohio 1024398 Alumni Association to give medallions to 5 graduates By the Kansan Staff The highest awards given by the University of Kansas Alumni Association — the Fred Ellsworth Medallions — will be presented to five alumni tomorrow at an all-age banquet in the Kansas Union ballroom. The medallions honor "unique and significant service to the University" The alumni chosen to receive them are Kathryn Langmade Langer, 933 Avon Road; Wendell Holmes, Hutchinson; John Sawyer, Charles Skawson, Wichita; and Charles Snpher, Shaker Heights, Ohio. Fred Williams, executive director of the Alumni Association, said recently, "I think the awards are highly significant. They are a way of honoring the people who have taken part in this event and to articulate themselves to the University." Nelson graduated in 1931. When she was leader of the Campus Planning Committee, she convinced students to decorate apple trees to decorate the campus. HOLMES GRADUATED FROM KU in 1928 and later earned a law degree from George Washington University. He was national president of the Alumni Association from 161 to 162 and has been on the Citation Selections Committee and the Board of Directors. O'Leary graduated in 1948 and is president of the Peoples State Bank in Luray. He was the association's national president from 1979 to 1980 and has been a member of the Alumni Association Executive Committee, the board of directors, the Adams Alumni Steering Committee and the Alumni Center Planning and Building Committee. Slawson graduated in 1920 and was an active member of the Alumni Association and director of the Chancellor's Club. Spahr graduated in 1934. He received the KU Distinguished Service Citation in 1964 and the Distinguished Engineering Service Citation as a life trustee of the Kansas University Endowment Association. THE ANNUAL AWARD was established in 1975 to honor the late Fred Ellsworth, longtime executive secretary of the association. Students, faculty, alumni and Kansans referred to Ellsworth as "Mr. KU." Ellsworth Hall, a residence hall on Daisy Hill, was named in his honor in 1965 REMEMBER YOUR ALUM BUY A MUM! Only $3.50 Lawrence FULL CASE BROKEN WASTE LOTTLE JAMES & KENDRICK HONDA The class of 1958 will be the first to gather in the K. S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center to celebrate its 25th annual reunion this Homecoming weekend. Bv the Kansan Staff 1958 reunion to be first at Adams center Two days of activities have been sponsored by the University of Kansas Association. The association's planning committee is looking forward to the first reunion in the new Alumni Center, Sue Alumni planning chairman, said recently. In July the association moved into the $5 million, three-story center, which houses faculty-alumni club and museum for faculty, as well as alumni Association offices. THE FAMILY OF THE late Kenneth is a doctor in Kingman, said that he already had made plans to get together and go shopping. "I like reunions and I plan on coming and having a good time." Never said. BOB HOPKINS, president of boo Hopkins Volkswagen, is planning to attend the reunion because he is a member of the class of 58. "The 25th year of any event is a very special time," he said. Bonded she hoped that two other planned activities would help make the situation better. The first is the presentation of the class gift at the dinner party this evening to the Alumni Association in appreciation for their work. The gift is a painting of a panoramic view of Kansas by Kansas City artist James Hamil CLASSICS NEVER GO OUT OF STYLE LEVI'S $ AUTHENTIC DENIM JACKETS More than 150 members of the original 1,800 members of the class of '58 are expected to return for this weekend's activities, Donna Neuner, assistant director at the Alumni Association, said. The second attraction is a slide show of old photographs and memorabilia put together by Ellen Proudfit Williams and Ken Spencer, both members of the 1958 class. "I's a very nice addition of the U.S. and we're very pleased," said Sander. Class president Robert E. Boyer, who Diane Sanders, Lawrence member of the class of '58, 2820 Tomahawk Dr. said that both she and the different service organizations she belonged to had used the building and would continue to do so. In regular and long. The classic returns with 100% cotton denim shell and authentic western styling for men and women. Levi's famous XXX denim jacket is available unlined or blanket lined. 843-6155 S. "Bools" Adams, a KU graduate and former president of Phillips Petroleum Co., donated $1.3 million three years ago to help build the center. Faculty and alumni contributions also helped build the center. Activities begin today with a cocktail party and a silver anniversary dinner party at the Alumni Association dinner at 6:30 p.m and dinner is at 7:30 p.m. THE COCKTAIL PARTY will take place on the first floor of the Alumni Center and the dinner party will be in the room. Mr. McGee and All American rooms. Tomorrow's activities begin with registration at 9 a.m. in the main lobby of the Kansas Union, Chancellor Gene A. Budig will then host an Eye-Opener party from 9:30 to 11 a.m. at the chancellor's residence. At 11 a.m. there is an all-University atlcoming luncheon in the Union bldg. PETER LANE FIRST DANCE The class of 1958 presented the University with a fountain that now sits in the courtyard of Murphy Hall. The fountain was the class gift in 1968 and was given to honor their reunion, said Neuner. The class is planning to sit together at the game tomorrow afternoon. Homecoming activities conclude with the Homecoming dance featuring an alumni dance band of the '40s and a student jazz band Open Sundays 1-5 The all-University homecoming luncheon and the homecoming dance have been planned by the University from the Alumni Association, sponsored. SUNFLOWER Royal Robbins 831 Massachusetts Litwin's The class of 1958, seen here 25 years ago swinging to one sound of Tommy Dorsey and his Orchestra, will be the first class to celebrate its anniversary reunion in the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center. SCTV cinemax The Emmy-winning comedy troupe lets loose in an exclusive Cinemax series. All-new nuttiness! sunflower cablevision NOVEMBER 22 TUES. 9 PM Cinemax CABLE CHANNEL 15 64 34 N E W HAMMERSHIRE / T EL EPECHAN (9 31 84) 21 00 --- Rent it. Call the Kansan. MTV MUSIC TELEVISION I want my MTV! Available in stereo. sunflower cablevision sunflower cablevision 644 NEW HAMPSHIRE / TELEPHONE: (913) 841-2100 WELCOME ALUMS! WELCOME ALUMS! college town™ Because you don't stop being a junior when you become a woman.* THE JACKET $66 THE SLACKS $37 THE BLOUSE $35 ENJOY HOLIDAY FUN WITHOUT WORRY. ING ABOUT WHAT TO WEAR. This COLLEGE TOWN, tho, will take you through the seasons in style and comfort. The easy jacket has patch pockets. Matching pants have a tuck waistband in machine washable jeans. Playy 90's Rayon. The solid crepe de chine blouse has a tuck yoke and contrasting piping. All are available in sizes 3/4 to 13/14. WE OFFER— • MASTERCARD • VISA • AMERICAN EXPRESS Jay SHOPPE FREE PARKING Jay 1 SHOPPE FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 835 MASS. * 843-4833 * LAWRENCE, KANS. 66044 Hay SHOPPE University Daily Kansan. November 18. 1983 Page 9 Stars created '50s fads, Lawrence retailer says NEW BOOKS WILL BE Campus fashion of the '50s perhaps were influenced most by movie and singing stars. Although Jimmy Stewart, James Dean, Grace Kelly and Kim Novak were picked as the most popular actors and actresses in a 1957 Jayhawk yearbook, Marilyn Monroe's influence on fashion also was great Movie and singing stars of the 1960s influenced fashion in America probably more than fashion designers in Paris and New York, Charlotte Dart, owner of Barb's Vintage Rose, 918 $½. Massachusetts St., said recently. By GINA K. THORNBURG Staff Reporter A student survey published in the 1957 Jayhawker Yearbook lists some favorite movie stars that might have survived a way KU students dressed in the 1958s AS THE ACTRESS became more popular so did the clothes she wore. Soon many women were wearing capri pants, the tight-fitting, ankle-length pants. Monroe wrote on her first version and availored it to Murray's Murrow, "person to Person." "Marilyn Monroe did a lot for women's fashions in the '50s," Dart 86. According to the 1957 poll, the most popular actors were Jimmy Stewart and James Dean; the most popular musicales were Grace Kelly and Kim Ninovk Skirts and pants fit tightly at the waist to emphasize the waistline and "We wrote a really corseted look in the 150s," she said. The corseted style of the 1950s is evident in Jayhawk yearbook photos of the time. Residence hall photographs show rows of women wearing tight-fitting sweaters trimmed with white cord, dollars, or a scarf tied around the neck. KU women in the 1950s usually wore calf-length pleated skirts, pooled skirts and full circle skirts with saddle shoes and booby socks on campus. ROI 801 Mass. ND CORNER DRUG STORE - Featuring complete stock of all natural vitamins and health foods. Full line drug store accepting student insurance —Plus —Plus —Schiff —Twinlab - See us for your party needs. 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 0111 The skirts were so full that getting around town was sometimes difficult. Dart said with a laugh. "The skirts had three buttons." About two people could get in the car. MEN AND WOMEN rarely wore blue jeans to class, she said. Blue jeans, which women usually rolled up, were for picnics and other outdoor activities. Cheese & Salami Shoppe —Cheese & meat trays -Gift baskets Contrary to the image promoted by Fonzie in the television show "Happy Days," men who wore dark leather motorcycle jackets and who greased back their hair were exceptions in the 1950s, she said. Men at KU usually wore cuffed khaki pants with plaid or white Oxford shirts that had button-down collars. Pink, green and brown are the most popular colors (or裤, bart said). —Cheese balls Men would often toop off their outfits with letter jackets or letter awners, shearing them. And, the shoes that most men liked to wear for casual occasions were the shoes that Elvis Presley and Pat Boone made popular. - Large stock of pipes & tobacco made to order "Everybody wore blue suede or white buck shoes." Dart said. MISTER GUY FOR EVENING DANCES on campus, men would wear three-button suits that had very narrow lapels. Skinny ties would help dress the suits up, and if the suit did not have any pink in it, the tie probably would, she said The men's dates would stay with the corseted look but would be a little more sophisticated. Homecoming Weekend starts at Mister Guy of Lawrence... for MEN and WOMEN Tom Stidham, assistant director of bands, said that the alumni band would perform with the Marching Jayhawks and would be part of a band formation toward the end of the show. However, the formation became more complicated because alumni band members have had limited practice, he said. THE ALUMNI BAND will be directed by Russell Wiley, professor emeritus of fine arts. Wiley was the first member of the band to years until his retirement in 1968. Hours: M-T-W F-Sat 9:30-6:00 Thurs. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 1-5 (TGIF) Free Beer and Pop every Friday afternoon & all home football game days Thurs. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 1-5 In addition to the traditional "I'm a Jayhawk," the alumni band will play a special arrangement of "God and Earth" for Barnes, assistant director of bands. The band will rehearse its music with Wiley at 8:30 a.m. and practice with the KU band at 10 a.m. tomorrow. Then, the members will meet in Section 32 of Memorial Hall to play and play for team warm-ups. ABOUT 200 TO 250 ex-band members will play in the alumni band at half time tomorrow as a part of the 11th annual KU Alumni Reunion The Marching Jayhawks will bring this weekend's band reunion Stidham said that marching in the band was like riding a bicycle. Formal dresses were strapless so that women's shoulders were bare. Long gloves, rhinestone jewelry and a wide belt completed the formal outfit, Dart said. Gatewood was a drummer in the band from 1951 to 1955. He is now an attorney in Topeka. Hensley, who now lives in Wichita, said that she would attend the reunion because she enjoyed playing in the band and seeing old friends. 920 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansa 842-2700 Alumna recalls that women couldn't march in KU band By JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter Roth Gatewood, band member who will return for the reunion said, "I have a special appreciation. I have to be in a musical organ." "When I joined, there were not about seven women in the band program," she said. "(Marching) had not been done." Hensley said that she had marched with the KU band at nine of the past 10 to homecon games as a member of the KU Alumni Band. "But I haven't been on a bicycle in about 10 years," he said. "I tried to ride, and it wasn't good. I wobbled, but I would lack endurance and I would be sore the next day." Women weren't allowed to march with the band until 1922. However, they could sit in the stands and play "rah-rah tunes" with the male band members, said Hensley. She was a member of the band from 1940 until 1943. Bettie Austin Hensley, class of '44, didn't march at halftime when she was a flute player in the KU band program. "ization. Once a year, I get to strap on a drum and have some fun." Cold wine & beer Meisner- Milstead Liquor Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa Next door to Kief's Welcomes "Vintage" Students And Students Who Enjoy Vintage We have beautiful antique kimono—perfect for a special Christmas gift, for hostess wear at holiday parties, and for informal occasions when you want to dress with a flair for style. Fine quality formal wear, vintage in fine condition and at prices that make buying from us much water than renting elsewhere. New tax shirts, bow ties, suspenders, summer hounds, etc. Listen to the game on student radio KIHK 90.7 FM The Etc. Shop sponsored by THE ETC. SHOP 732 Massachusetts 843-0611 FOR REPLACEMENT CONTACT LENSES SOFT & HARD B&L, AO Hydrocurve Aqua Soft Hydron Extended Wear BP FLEX NEW LOWER PRICE NEW LOWER PRICES Look to OWENS OPTICAL HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 843-1964 FOR NEW GLASSES NEWEST IN FRAME STYLES & COLORS PLASTIC LENSES NEW TINT COLORS & COATING FOR SCRATCH RESISTANCE LAWRENCE BOOK COUPON $20 OFF OUR WOOLENS ARE HERE! selection of woolen and alpaca weaters and accessories direct from Ecuador Bolivia Portugal and Iceland SUNFL OWER INTERNATIONAL in the CASBAH, 803 MASS. SUNFL OWER INTERNATIONAL in the CASBAH, 803 MASS. Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 18. 1983 --- Dean Smith remembers KU's NCAA title By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer In March 1952 the Kansas basketball team, coached by F. C. "Pho" Allen, blew St. John's University off the court and won its first—and only—NCAA title But one member of that championship team has returned to the Final Four 7 times as the winningest coach in college basketball history. The man is Dean Edwards Smith. Smith lettered on KU's basketball team in 1952 and 1953 as a point guard. "I was the 11th man to letter on a 16-man team," Smith said jokingly from his office in Chapel Hill, N.C., last week. "I REMEMBER coming back from Seattle the next evening," he said. And literally thousands of people were invited down the streets to welcome us back. "we rode the fire truck through town night. That was an interesting “upcoming” event." He said there was an interest shown in athletic teams then by professors like, just as he assumed there was now. Another player on the 32 team, All-American Clyde Lovelette, was the first KU player to be named outstand- ing former of the NCAA tourn- The following year the Jayhawks advanced to the finals of the NCAA tournament in Kansas City, Mo., where they narrowly missed repeating as national champions when they were defeated by Indiana. 69-68. Smith said he also remembered going to the Dine-A-Mite Im and the Stables THE DINE-A-MITE Inn, operated by Roy Borgen in the 1950s, was at the intersection of 23rd and Louisiana streets. The Stables, another famed KU nightcap, is now the Sanctuary, a private club at 1401 W. Seventh St. Besides remembering the favorite nightspots in Lawrence, Smith said he remembered his relationship with memorable teams and his commitment to Phi Gamma delta. Smith competed on the football, baseball and basketball teams while at KU. He lettered as a catcher on the baseball team. "I surely enjoyed my experience at KU," he said. "Everyone appeared problem-free, although I am sure they weren't." Smith graduated with an education degree in 1963 but stayed fifth year at KAIB. He then went to the Air Force Academy and was an assistant coach there also before settling in Chapel Hill, N.C. in 1958. He was an assistant coach for three years and took over the head coaching job in 1961. ABOUT THE TIME Smith was assuming his duties at UNC. Ted Owens came to KU as a basketball assistant. Although Smith is still coaching, Owens And when Owens was fired last March, many KU faithful thought Smith's ties with KU might have brought him to build a dynasty at But Smith chuckled when asked whether he was tempted to take the job and said his only comment was that he was happy that he had been considered. KII "I still have a loyalty to KU," Smith said. "I'm also starting my 26th year here at North Carolina. It is my home now. I would have a hard time ever leaving my team and the people I have recruited." He also said KU had a fine new coach in Larry Brown, a captain on Smith's team. "LARRY WILL DO an outstanding job for KU I will sure," he said. Smith said he still kept in touch with several KU alums and teachers at the University, and visited Kansas when possible. "My folks still live in Topeka," he said. "So I'm still sentimental toward KU, especially when I see the tops of the buildings in the skyline on the drive airport in Kansas City to Topeka. It always brings back good memories." Smith's athletic career has been full of memories. His teams at UNC have advanced to the Final Four many times, but did not win the coveted title as a head coach until 1982, when the Tar Heels defeated Georgetown University for the championship. "We have been to the final four many times, and each time is special." Smith said. "Of course winning the regional championship will be a thrill for any coaching staff." He said the difference between playing on a team that won the national title and coaching a team to the title, those being years apart, was significant. “As as coach, you have all the press conferences to go. To there is more interest in college ball now,” he said. “I just remember having a good time.” 20 Smith as a Jayhawk in 1952 PETER E. WOODRICH Dean Smith, a 1953 KU graduate, is pictured at left during his first year as the head basketball coach at North Carolina and at right after 20 --- THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA $2 OFF any large pizza on Homecoming 2228 Iowa 842-0154 A tradition of excellence . KU and Minsky's THE BEATLES NIVEA & MISSONIU 843.2139 DRIVE-IN CARRY-OUT HENRY'S RESTAURANT henrys Try Our Gourmet Salad Bar TOMATOES --- 100 Our gourmet salad bar has 28 items, including: turkey, ham, grated cheese, cottage cheese, fruit, sprinkles, olives, pickles, cole slaw, carrot salad, potato salad, sunflower seeds, raisins, chocolate pudding, regular and diet dressing. 6th & Mississippi 843-2139 Style. At Headmasters we know how important good looking hair is to you. It not only enhances your appearance but it also affects the way you feel about yourself. Our 'headmasters' have been helping people look and feel their best for over seven years. 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Extra savings on Sat. night specials! Pennylane Offers You More!! —Best selection & price! —Preferred customer cards! - Separate jazz & classics room with own sound system! —T.G.I.F. sale-20% off regular priced items every Fri. 6-10 p.m.! Mon.-Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-8 —Used LP selection! Fri. 10-10 —Check it out previewing area! Sat.10-8 —Jazz & classical 20% off every Sunday! Sun. 12-6 We will meet or beat any locally advertised price on LP's & tapes. Just bring in the ad! 817 Vermont PENNYLANE 749-4211 ] 1 University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 Page 11 Assistant AD's KU ties span 35 years Temple recalls Jayhawk stories of '50s By JOHN UNREIN Sports Writer Akfly Temple about the 1950s, and he'll tell you a few good stories about how much KU has changed in 30 years. Temple, a 1950 KU graduate who is now a KU assistant athletic director, might tell you about the one-lane road he used to cut from 23rd and Iowa State Field to the Chi Omega sorority house, his future wife, Beverly Beryls, lived. Temple, a KU assistant football coach in the 50s, might tell you the story of having his coaching office moved to the same location and then located at the site of Wesson Hall. Temple, 57, worked as an assistant football coach from 1958 to 1976 and coached the KU baseball team for 28 years, from 1953 to 1981. BUT IF THE SUBJECT came to football, Temple's eyes would probably have been taken. membered well the old days when a dominant force in the state of Kannadu. And then Temple would tell you about the man who helped make it all possible — KU head football coach Jack Mitchell. Mitchell was one of the best recruiters he'd ever known, Temple said. "Back then, we pretty much got an 'Kansas kid we wanted,' Temple said. "Jack Mitchell's theory was if he felt that a borderline recruit could help Kansas State, he took 'em anyway. He went to every other school in the state down." "Mitchell controlled Kansas, but now it's a totally different situation. You've got to really scramble in recruiting, even in your own area." Temple said that NCAA rule changes limiting the number of scholarships a school could give out put an end to an era of KU dominating the state in recruiting. In the 1950s, Temple said, there were no limits. "YOU COULD GIVE out as many scholarships as you could afford," he said. "We would give out anywhere up to 50 or 60 scholarships to kids in one year. And at times, we probably had between 120 to 130 kids on scholarship at one time." NCAA schools currently can give out no more than 30 scholarships a year or have more than 95 scholarship athletes on the team. The primary reason for the change, Temple said, was money. He said that schools could afford to give out more scholarships in the '50s because a full scholarship then cost the school about $1,000. Schools now probably spend about $4,500 on each full scholarship athlete a year, he said. Also, football and basketball players on scholarship in the '50s stayed at Joseph R. Pearson Hall and had only 27 students. The training table in Carruth O'Leary Hall FOOTBALL AND BASKETBALL players now live at the Jayhawker Towers. They eat three meals a day at the training tables in the Towers during the season And Temple sees other changes. "We had some quick athletes then, like Charlie Hoag and Wade Stinson, but there weren't nearly as many of them," Temple said. "I think that some of the KU linemen now could have been running backs in the '50s." Stinson's 239 yards against Utah in 1950 rank him third on the KU all-time single-game rushing list. Hog ranks 14th in KU career rushing list with 1,914 yards. "I look at our athletes today, but I don't really think you can compare them to those of the past," Temple said. "Through increased emphasis on conducting programs and coaching techniques, we can become bigger, stronger and faster." Because there were only five classes on the KU football staff of the '50s, Temple said, they had little time to teach blocking and tackling techniques; they also spent their time scrimmaging with the first-team of fense playing the first-team defense. 13 --- File Photo Floyd Temple, KU assistant athletic director for operations, with his granddaughter, is pictured with head baseball coach Marty Pattin last April when Temple's old number, 13, was retired. Temple, a member of the Kansas Baseball Hall of Fame, was KU baseball coach for 28 years. The only other coach with more tenure was F.C. "Phog" Allen, who coached basketball for 39 years. "PRACTICES WERE usually pretty rough," Temple said. "Mostly, there was just a lot of head-knocking going on." Temple said that players in the '50s also differed from players now in terms of size. Players were rarely taller than 6-1 or heavier than 220 pounds. Because athletes were not as big, Temple said, the football players often played several positions on both offense and defense. And the most popular positions were the fullback and the quarterback. "We recruited a tremendous number of fullbacks and quarterbacks out of high school because they were usually the best athletes." Temple said. "Sometimes, we'd have 10 or 12 fullbacks on the team." Temple was a fullback on the Jayhawk football team from 1948 to 1950. Temple played both football and baseball for KU, but Temple said he did not see much action on the football field, with players such as all-conference running back Stinson on the team. "IREALLY DIDN'T wear out a lot of uniforms in those years," he said. Temple said that before coming to school at KU he played football and baseball for a junior college in his hometown of Coffeville. 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SAVE UP TO 30% COMPARED TO REGULAR SUPERMARKETS DOUBLE CASH REBATE GUARANTEED LOW PRICE PROTECTION AT FOOD BARN YOU SAVE OR WE PAY! (DETAILS AT THE STORE) OPEN 8'til MIDNIGHT EVERY DAY! Double Coupons Seven Days a Week (Details at store) KEG BEER AVAILABLE ... PRICED RIGHT! Page 12 University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 THE HOT SPOT! JIM LEE OUR D.J'S PLAY THE MUSIC YOU WANT TO HEAR. AND IF YOU LIKE WHAT THEY'RE DOING WITH THESE ALBUMS, ASK THEM TO SHOW YOU WHAT THEY CAN DO WITH A 45 RPM! GAMMONS SNOWBOARD 23rd & Ousdahl Southern Hills Center 842-3977 BOOM The University Daily KANSAN The Day After Special entertainment package with film review Entertainment, p. 6 CLOUDY Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas Sunny High, 60. Low, 40 Details on p. 2 Vol. 94, No. 65 (USPS 650-640) Friday morning, November 18, 1983 Priority candidates win race for top Senate seats Staff Reporter By PETE WICKLUND Staff Reporter Scott Swenson last night was soaked with champagne and elated that he had been elected student body president. But at the same time he was also struck by a close margin by which he had won the election. Swenson, the presidential candidate of the Priority Coalition, and his running mate, Dennis See related stories pp. 7, 8 Strickland, narrowly defeated the Momentum Coalition candidates last night by 13 votes to become the executive officers of the 15th Student Senate. Officially, Priority's presidential candidates garnered 1,049 votes. Momentum was second with 1,036, and the Costume Party had 1,044 votes. The Freedom Coalition finished last with The election was the closest in Senate history. Momentum candidates Kevin Walker and Mark Lennon were contenders. PRIORITY'S VICTORY was announced at 10:55 p.m. Results for Senate seats were incomplete at 4 a.m. and ballot counters at the Kansas Union said they would wade through the votes throughout the night. Walker and McKee have appealed a Senate Elect. plea to decision to invalidate 114 bills that were遭罪 Before the announcement was made, checks by Priority campaign staff members showed that Swenson and Strickland were in a tight race with Momentum and the Costume Party. Swenson and Strickland were notified of the victory minutes before the announcement was made public. They ran from a second floor study to meet their supporters and Senate candidates in the chapter room of the Sigma Nu fraternity house 1501 Sigma Nu Place. About 100 people greeted the candidates with screams, hugs and handshakes. "TITS TIME WE represent the student body," Swenson shouted at his supporters. "With 13 votes, I realize there will probably be a recount. We need to decide." He is concerned. I think we will come up on top. During the victory celebration, Jim Cramer, the out-jugging student body vice president, asked questions about the victory. See PRIORITY, p. 5, col. 1 Momentum declares victory despite lack of official votes By SUSAN WORTMAN Although the official count placed them 13 votes behind the Priority Coalition, Momentum Coalition candidates Kevin Walker and Mark McKee declared last night that they had won the student body presidential and vice presidential elections. 1975 Staff Reporter Nephron Philippe KANSAN head refers to the Momentum Coition, which is used to establish a McDonald's restaurant in the Kansas Union. "As far as the students at the University of Kansas are concerned, I am president," Walker said after the closest election in Student Senate history. "I can just taste it." Momentum's write-in campaign received 1,036 votes in the Senate elections, 13 short of Priority's 1,049. But a decision by the chairman of the Student Elections Review Board disallowed ballots that were marked only "Momentum," instead of having the candidates' names. "We've got it," he told members of his coalition last night at the Peppertree Park Apartments clubhouse, 3100 W. 22nd. "We've won." BECAUSE OF the decision, 114 ballots were invalidated last night. Jim Clark, chairman of the Student Senate Elections Committee, said he did not know how many of those ballots were Walker said that students who had marked their ballots. Momentum" clearly had voted for the Democrat. Walker promised to take the ruling to court if the Elections Committee refused to validate the "PEOPLE WILL be upset," he said. "They know who was running for Momentum, and there was no way, no way in hell, that they couldn't walker and McKee were not allowed to have their names printed on the ballot because Walker could not verify his enrollment in the University by the Oct. 17 filing deadline. "We'll never take it through the University appeals board. The appeals process is ridiculous, Mickey Mouse and inefficient." McKee all we need is 13 votes. Concerned, we have won. All we need is 13 votes. know who they meant. The student body has elected us." Also, McKee said, voters had asked ballot box workers whether they could write "Momentum" on the ballot. The workers told voters that they could. McKee said he was confident that the Elections Committee would validate enough votes to declare Momentum the winner. He said his coalition had "done everything by the book." "I'm proud that we have run everything legally and ethically," he said. Walker and McKee appealed the decision and asked for a re-count. The Elections Review Board will meet at 1 p.m. today to discuss the invalid ballots. MCKEE SAID that a percentage of the ballots were always invalid because people filled them out incorrectly. But he questioned whether the committee would make fair decision on the matter. "The they are a biased committee." he said. Scott Swenson of the Priority Coalition raises his hand in victory after narrowly winning the Student Senate presidential election. The McDonald's can hold above Swenson's champagne-soaked In the midst of cheers, McKee shouted, nineteen is a bad luck number for the Priority Cause. Walker, McKee and Momentum's 23 Senate candidates grinned, shook hands and slapped each other on the back as if they had the opportunity to win. The champagne and toasted each other as winners. After Prince and two men named the winner, Walker grabbed a glass of champagne and said, "I'd like to propose a toast to the 114 invalid votes." "He said he wouldn't touch it with a 10-foot pole," McKee said. "We have the exclusive right to the word 'Momentum' and the voter knew that. Right now those votes are not being counted. They are going into a shoebox somewhere." The problem with the voting became apparent about Wednesday afternoon, McKee said, and he had talked to Jim Clark, Elections Committee chairman, about it. "There are reasons for festivities," Walker said. "We've won. Don't worry about it." MCKEE SAID. "We're so confident that it isn't even funny." STANLEY AND WILLIAM Mark McKeen. Momentum vice presidential candidate, and Kevin Walker. Momentum presidential candidate, react to the news that the Momentum Coalition finished close enough behind the Priority Coalition to force a recount. Momentum finished with 1,036 votes last night. 13 behind Scott Swenson and Dennis Strickland of Priority. Early tally gives three of six seats to Priority group By the Kansan Staff the Priority Coalition won three of the six Student Senate seats that had been decided by 4 a.m. today. Priority's Robert Walker won the *Social Welfare seat with eight votes*. Dema Molis, a law professor at Princeton University, said: Brian Raleigh, also of Priority, won one of two special student seats with 17 votes. Five other write in candidates tied for second with one vote anice. The Law School seat was won by Priority's Mike Booth with 33 votes. Stephen Robinson of Pittsburgh lost to Larry Gaynor. The Costume Party Coition was the only other coalition to win one of the first six seats. Costume's Shirley A. Gilley garnered 642 votes to win the seat. Charles Lawhorn of the Momentum Coalition had 332 votes to the Coalition had 322 votes. A total of 44 students were named on write-in ballots. An independent candidate, Mark Hoover, won the Pharmacy seat with 11 votes. Five write-in candidates with one vote each tied for the Allied Health seat Chris Edmonds, secretary of the Elections Committee, said that the Senate might not decide the winners of the Allied Health and Medical Corps. He said that many students usually decline the seat. The Elections Committee was still counting ballots at 4 a.m. Edmonds said that some of the candidates had lost their ballots. 'The Dav After' attracts worldwide media to Lawrence By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter With autumn settling quietly on Lawrence, the television movie "The Day After" has brought more than a controversial film about nuclear holocaust to the city. Spokesmen for the Young Americans for Freedom - a conservative youth group - and Let Lawrence Live - an anti-nuclear organization - both said yesterday that they had been National and international journalists have swarmed the city, focusing much of their attention on two local groups that have taken opposing stands on the film. The film has brought with it a media holocaust. deluged with calls from journalists around the world. See related story p. 3 Jorge Luis Borges Several local radio and TV stations also have interviewed group members, he said, and the CBS News story "60 Minutes" last week broadcast a story featuring three VAF members. Allan Hanson, the director of Let Lawrence Live, said he had talked to the Denver and Philadelphia papers and to the Australian BRYAN DANIEL, state chairman of YAF, said that he had talked with the New York Post, the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Denver Post and a British Columbia newspaper. He also said an Australian news team had been in Lawrence talking with YAF members. The movie, which was shot in and around Lawrence, will be broadcast at 7 p.m. Sunday In "The Day After," Jason Robards portrays Russell Oakes, a heart surgeon who finds himself trapped in a hospital during a nuclear explosion. The movie, filmed in and around Lawrence, will be broadcast at 7 p.m. Sunday on ABC-TV. Previously, Let Lawrence live was featured on the "CBS Sunday Morning News," and Hanson had been interviewed by several newspapers and magazines. journalist. He also spoke with news teams from all three networks and with the New York Times. BOTH GROUPS are urging people to watch the film, but they have distinctly different opinions on the movie. "The movie will force them to think about nuclear war. And people thinking about it for the first time can be encouraged to join the move for peace, and push for removal of nuclear "We are taking part in a general consciousness raising event," Hanson said. "A lot of people have made up their minds, but a lot more haven't." "Deterrence has worked for 40 years and will continue to work. Watching the movie spurs me on to work even harder for peace through strength." Daniel said. "We feel the movie is being used. We're afraid that people won't think more about it." THE END IS not in sight. Both groups have several activities planned for this weekend and Hanson said that the ABC News show "Nightlife" be betw a Monday night to bed live from the Kansas City area. Jos Hanbar, a national media publicist who is working with anti-nuclear groups around the country, said that gatherings were planned in thousands of communities around the country. "Nightline" has scheduled debates about nuclear war for four nights next week. "There's never been a larger, bigger TV show from a reedia standpoint." Baran said. Let Lawrence Live has a poetry reading scheduled at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Union and plans to stage a candlelight vigil at the flagpole on Campanile Hill immediately after the movie is broadcast. Mayor David Longhurst will preside over a town meeting at noon Monday. Organizations continue tradition of ending week with TGIF parties Staff Reporter By ROB KARWATH Staff Reporter The professor stands in front of the room, pointing to slides being shown on the movie screen and offering explanation. A group of about 15 students listen attentively as he talks about the research he did on insects several years ago in Germany. mostly, the classroom eating is traditional except for the pitchers of beer on the steak. THE GRADUATE business students meet once a month, each time at a different bar. Carey said it has become an event that most of the students look forward to. Not to be concerned, though. It's Friday afternoon and the "classroom" is the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. The students, members of the KU Biology Club, are assembled for their weekly Friday meeting, a "thank God it's Friday" sort of. "WE'VE BEEN doing this every Friday at 4 p.m. since 1977," said Brower Burchill, professor of physiology and cell biology and a professor of the club. "It's kind of become a tradition." "We've been meeting for at least 10 years, so it's a pretty well-established event," said Sara Schwartz. "We are going to keep it." And one needs only to make the rounds of the local bars between 2 and 7 p.m. on any Friday to see that the tradition still runs strong Tradition is a good way to describe the ritual known as TGIF at the University of Kansas. As long as there have been Fridays, likely they have been TGIF parties at the University. grantee Business Student Council, whose group had 16 in November TGIF part at the university. "The graduate business school is a high-pressured school, and a lot of students don't get out very often. When they were undergrads, they had a more structured social life because they lived in dorms, fraternities, sororites, scholarship halls, etc." "Grad students don't usually have that structure, so this is a little outlet, a time when they can really think. Meeting people doesn't mean just meet other students. Most academic groups sponsoring TGIP's usually invite professors and teaching assistants to join the party as well. "I's great when the professors show up," said Dodge Johnson, president of the Engineering Club, which meets every four weeks and batches at the Burge Union cafeteria. "WE TRY NOT to talk shop too much, so it's more of a social affair. We encourage professors to come out and members of the club are free to bring friends if they want." Because they are so popular, TGIF parties usually don't require too much publicity. Most of the groups use the standard handgear technique, but some go a little further. See FRIDAY, p. 5, col. 1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Sniper attack in Grenada wounds two U.S. soldiers ST. GEORGE S. Grenada — Snipers opened fire on a U.S. observation post on an island off the coast of Grenada yesterday, slightly wounding two soldiers — the first American casualties on the Caribbean island in nearly three weeks. U. S. military spokesman Maj. Douglas Frey, meanwhile, told reporters that local intelligence sources indicated that between 12 and 30 Cuban holdouts were "still on the loose" in Grenada and that efforts continued to capture them. One soldier was hit in the arm and the other in the leg. he said. The wounded men, part of a 10- to 15-man squad, were not identified. Frey said the latest shooting occurred on Green Island, just off Grenada's northeastern coast, around midafternoon. Investment firm to buy Dr Pepper DALLAS — The board of directors of Dr Pepper Co. approved the sale of the nation's No. 3 soft drink maker to Forstman Little & Co., a private investment firm, for $12.5 million in cash yesterday. Under conditions of the agreement, Forstman Little & Co. would pay $22 a share for more than 23 million outstanding shares of Dr Pepper Company. Brown said the agreement, with Forstman Little, which recently bought Topps Chewing Gum for $85 million, was subject to approval of stockholders, closing of bank loan agreements and signing a definitive merger agreement. Forstman Little is a private investment firm that specializes in leveraged buvouts. Housing starts decline in October WASHINGTON — The pace of housing construction slowed 3.8 percent in October, the second consecutive month of decline, the Commerce Department reported yesterday. Despite the softening of the housing boom due to higher mortgage interest rates, industry forecasters still expect 1983 to end 60 percent ahead of last year and 1984 to be better yet. The decline in housing starts was all in single-family houses, a category that dropped 7.2 percent. The October drop in overall starts declined by about 10 percent. The department also revised an August increase to 5.5 percent instead of the originally reported 8.4 percent increase. Storms in West bring snow and rain SUN VALLEY, Idaho — A new storm and the remnants of an old one delivered more snow and pounding rain to the West yesterday and plastered parts of the eastern Great Lakes states with high winds and up to a foot of snow. The new storm off the Pacific Ocean washed the west slopes of the mountains to up to 1 inches of rain and piled close to half a foot of snow around Sun Valley. More snow was expected, and a cold front was coming to push the system eastward. As the storm mounted, hopes of rescuing four duck hunters from the inundation around Leville. Colo., sank. The weather crippled another search on the Clark Fork River in Iowa for two young cappeists whose craft overturned Monday. Navv finds cracks in four FA-18 jets WASHINGTON — Cracks have been discovered on engine mount parts in at least four U.S. Navy and Canadian FA-18 Hornet fighter-bombers that have flown only 300 hours, the Navy and the plane's prime contractor acknowledged yesterday. Canada, which has taken delivery of about 20 of the 138 Hornets it has bought in a $5 billion program, has grounded three of the jets although the Navy has not issued orders to keep its FA-18s from flying, the Navy and Canadian sources said. The Navy could not identify the builder of the part or say whether the manufacturer or the Navy would have to pay for a redesign of the engine mount, which may become necessary. No cost estimate was available. WASHINGTON — The House Ethics Committee yesterday found "substantial evidence" that former Reps. Barry Goldwater, R-Calif., John Burton, D-Calif., and Fred Richmond, D-N.Y., bought or used cocaine or marijuana while in office. The committee's report, ending a 16-month. $1.5 million investigation, dismissed allegations that Rep. Ronald Dellums, D-Calif., Rep. Charles Wilson, D-Texas, and seven other current House members had used drugs on Capitol Hill. However, it did find substantial evidence that the three former members of the House purchased or used illicit drugs on Capitol Hill while they were members in 1978-82. Doctors find cause of sore throats BOSTON — The leading cause of sexually transmitted disease in the United States, Chlamydia trachomatis bacteria, has been pinpointed as a main cause of adult sore throats. doctors said yesterday. Chlamydia and another common bacterium, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, which together cause 30 percent of all adult sore throats, are also the most common cause of sexually transmitted infections. Reporting in Science magazine, doctors said if further studies verify their findings, a large number of sore throats, which send more people to doctors than any other ailment, could be easily cured. However, doctors said the use of antibiotics should not be greatly increased until more information was known. WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-18-83 29.77 29.50 29.77 SEATTLE COLD MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON NEW YORK 30.24 SAN FRANCisco CHICAGO COOL DENVER ATLANTA LOS ANGELES DALLAS FAIR MIAIH HIGHEST TEMPERATURES NEW ORLEANS WARM LEGEND RAIN SHOW SHOWERS UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST 5 Todav will be mostly fair across the nation. Locally, today will be mostly fair with a high near 60, according to the National Weather Service in Toneka. Tough will be cloudy, with a high near 50 Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy, with a high near 50 Tonight will be cloudy, with a low near 40. CORRECTION Because of a reporter's error, the Kansan incorrectly reported yesterday in a Student Senate story that Black Panhellenic did not receive a new Senate seat. The Senate on a voice vote approved the seat. Congress approves bills as deadline approaches WASHINGTON — Senate House negotiators approved a compromise $250 billion military money measure, and the Senate approved a multibillion-dollar housing bill yesterday as Conrad moved closer to adjournment Friday. By United Press International "The only thing you have to do is get the debt limit through conference and DOD (military spending)." a Senate leadership source said. "Not much else." The breakthrough that cleared the way for adjournment came Wednesday night, when the Senate voted 38-40 to raise the national debt limit to $1.45 Senate and House negotiators yesterday approved the $250 billion military spending bill, the largest in history, after eliminating $124 million for production of a new generation of nerve gas weapons. The bill contains the go-ahead for the first of the MX missiles, $24 million in covert aid for Nicaraguan rebels but no money for nerve gas production. Despite White House desires for an extension through Sept. 30, the Senate and House were expected to readily agree to the shorter compromise. Senate-House negotiators were near agreement on a compromise that would allow the Senate to reconsider. On the next-to-last day of the session — barring unexpected complications — the Senate voted for a "turkey and camel" combination that mated $15.9 billion in federal subsidies for 100,000 housing units and an $8.4 line of credit for the International Monetary Fund. The vote was 67-30. The Senate and House were expected to vote on the compromise defense plan. The two big ticket items, along with $5.1 billion tagged for the International Development Bank, were bunched into an amendment and attached to a $303 million supplementary appropriations bill. But the Senate ran into signs of troubles when senators — desperate to attach legislation to the session's final vehicle — began offering amendments that could delay or jeopardize passage of the supplemental money bill. IF APPROVED by the Senate, the bail would still have to clean the House because it is not going to be on the ballot. Congress also approved and sent to the White House a bill to give $4.6 billion in new tax credits. EXILE Over 100 Top LPs $5.99 every day 1000s of used LPs & tapes $1.00-$3.25 Wide selection of imports & indies We pay cash for good LPs all categories Rock-Jazz-Classical-New Wave Concert T-Shirts Rock Posters & Buttons 15 West 9th • Lawrence • 842-3059 75th & Metcalf • Metcalf 75 Shopping Center • 913-384-2499 ZERCHER PHOTO WIN A TRIP TO SAN DIEGO local governments for the next three years. ROUND TRIP FOR TWO ON TWA A KODAK DISC 6000 CAMERA TICKETS TO DEC. 11TH GAME KANSAS CITY CHIEFS VS SAN DIEGO CHARGERS REGISTER BY NOVEMBER 30 AT EITHER ZERCHER PHOTO LOCATION ROUND TRIP FOR TWO ON TWA A KODAK DISC 6000 CAMERA TICKETS TO DEC. 11TH GAME KANSAS CITY CHIEFS SAN DIEGO CHARGERS REGISTER BY NOVEMBER 30 AT EITHER ZERCHER PHOTO LOCATIONS! Free Chiefettes... POSTER with purchase of each roll of KODAK FILM or each roll of FILM DEVELOPED Kodakcolor VR 1000 1000 24' Kodak PAPER A PHOTO GIFT DOWNTOWN 9107 Massachusetts ZERCHER PHOTO HILLCREST 919 Iowa Chiefttes... Kodak TWA KLSI93 FUJITSU Free Chiefettes... POSTER with purchase of each roll of KODAK FILM or each roll of FILM DEVELOPED Kodak Kodacolor VR 1000 1000 24" Kodak PAPER BY AFRICA.COM THE HOUSE refused yesterday to consider an $8 billion tax increase bill, killing any chance that Congress this year will reduce swollen federal budget deficits that threaten the economic recovery. And the Senate, which Wednesday debated a $28 billion combination of tax increases and spending cuts, appeared in no rush to go to a vote. DOWNTOWN 1107 Massachusetts ZERCHER PHOTO HILLCREST 919 Iowa Chiefettes. Kodak TWA KLSI-93 IN THE MIDDLE of the day, without advance fanfare, two former presidents, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. came to heavily guarded Capitol Hill to discuss the Middle East with congressional leaders. The Senate again put off action on the nomination of William Clark as interior secretary, unwilling to provoke a filibuster on a resolution that would force him to suspend environmental policies. A recess appointment app peaked increasingly likely. There was no indication why the two former chief executives chose the hectic hours before adjournment to make the trek to the office of Senate Republican leader Howard Baker. Drinking Myth of the Week IT'S RUDE TO REFUSE A DRINK. Nonsense. What's rude is trying to push a drink on someone who doesn't want it. Or shouldn't have it. The Student Assistance Center Drinking Myth of the K Vihi Kaappi Theta-Gamma Thai Keto Fall Classic 83 THE MEN OF PHI KAPPA THETA,THE WOMEN OF GAMMA PHI BETA AND HEINEKEN WISH TO THANK ALL WHO PARTICIPATED IN THE 2ND ANNUAL FALL CLASSIC 3rd Place—B0II CONGRATULATIONS TO THE WINNERS: 1st Place— $ \Delta\Upsilon $ MEN 2nd Place—AT0 ALL TOURNEY Paul Schulte—AT $ \Omega $ Mike Spradlin—ΔT Bill Winter----ΦK $ \Psi $ Doug Kremers—BΘΠ Rodney Osbourn— $ \Delta \Upsilon $ 2nd Place— $ \Delta\Gamma $ Washburn U. 1st Place-AX $ \Omega $ WOMEN ALL TOURNEY Lori Perich—AXΩ Cheryl Oliver—AXΩ Carrie Wagaman—ΔΓ Washburn (1) Washburn U. Katherine Seymour—IIBΦ Melanie Bohannon—A $ \Phi $ AND A SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR CONTRIBUTORS: All Star Dairy Johnny's Tavern Delta Delta Delta Cogburn's Pop's J. Watson's Plaza Barber Shop FMC Henry's Restaurant Walt Houk Harris Menswear Stadium Barber Morris Sports Minsky's Pizza Doug Compton Alpha Omicron Pi Kwik-Shop E & E Specialties Strong's Office Supply Maupintour Johnson Furniture NEW YORKER Bring your Friends VIDEO MADNESS 101 TOKENS for $7.00 Bring your professors Bring your house mother Offer expires 11/30 (less than 7c per play) BRING IN THIS COUPON Bring the family 1021 MASS. Bring your professors Bring the family University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Jesse Jackson accepts offer to address area farm group GREAT BEND — The Rev. Jesse Jackson, a Democratic presidential candidate, has accepted an invitation to address the Kansas chapter of the American Agriculture Movement Dec. 9, an AAM spokesman said yesterday. Jackson will speak at 7:30 p.m. at the Barton County Community College Fine Arts Auditorium, said AAM spokesman Darrell Ringer. Ringer said Jackson's speech would center on agriculture issues. He said he hoped to schedule a question-and-answer session afterward. Ringer said the North American Farm Alliance, an agriculture group in the U.S., and the agency's schedule Jackson's appearance in the central California district. He said the AAM would ask all presidential candidates to address the group in the coming months. Student's forgery trial date delayed The trial date for a KU student accused of forging four checks of another KU student has been rescheduled from December to January. Associate Douglas County District Court Judge Malone granted the motion for a trial on Jan. 9 of John Joseph Bristow. Leavenworth County judge Michael Cormack ruled in favor. Bristow, who is free on $5,000 bond, is charged with forgiving four checks in October for $25.20 each that belonged to another KU student. He is also charged with one count of burglary. All are Class D felonies, including 18 years and a maximum sentence of 10 years, and a fine up to $10,000. Journalists to discuss photography Eight newspaper photographers and writers will be the speakers at the 1983 Steve Fritz Photojournalism Conference today in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. the conference begins at 9 a.m. with a slide presentation by Jim Richardson, special projects photographer for the Denver Post Other speakers include: Jim Sheehan, photo editor for the Kansas City Times; Mike Gullett, chief photographer for the Chanute Tribute; Mark Sheerd, Kansas City Times staff writer; Cliff Schiappa, Kansas City Times staff photographer; Chip Murray, director of photography for the Providence (R.I.) Journal and Evening Bulletin; and Randy Olson, photojournalism instructors at the University of Missouri at Columbia. Winning entries in the 17th annual KU photography contest, which took place last night, will be on display Dec. 6 through 17 in the Union Activities gallery. ON THE RECORD A 22-YEAR-OLD Lawrence man was arrested Wednesday afternoon after he was allegedly seen shoplifting a video-cassette recorder, police said. The suspect entered Wal-Mart, 2727 Iowa St., about 4:35 p.m. Wednesday, police said, took the $85 video recorder out of its box and put it in another box that was marked $47. The suspect paid the $47 dollar amount for the recorder. The suspect, who is free on $3,000 bond, was booked on two counts of felony theft and is to appear at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Douglas County District Court. A CASSETTE, a receiver and two speakers were stolen sometime between Nov. 1 and Nov. 7 from Maupintour, 1515 St. Andrews Drive, police said. The items, worth $740, were taken from an unlocked storeroom. The police have no suspects. A DIAMOND RING worth $1,900 was stolen sometime between 9:45 a.m. and 11 a.m. Wednesday from a residence in the 1700 block of Louisiana Street, police said. The ring was taken from a table in a bedroom. The police have no suspects. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 481-4810 The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. 19. 95 FRAME SALE Save 33% to 69% Get the Frames You Want for the Lenses You Need Hutton Optical can fill your new prescription or duplicate your present one and fit you with a new frame that is just right for your face. Come in and select from: . Oleg Cassini Jordache Mary McFadden . Anthony Martin Zsa Zsa Gabor and more Offer good through Nov. 19 . Arnold Palmer Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames. Can not be used in conjunction with any other sale. HUTTON HUTTON OPTICAL CO. 842-5208 Sat. 10-2 742 Mass. Regents likely to continue open admissions By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter HAYS — Raising admission requirements to limit enrollment in Board of Regents schools would be impractical and fiscally unsound, the Regents executive director said yesterday. Stanley Koplik, executive director, said at a meeting of the Regents Academic Affairs and Special Programs Committee that many Kansas students in grades 9 through all the courses in the Regents recommended high school basic curriculum. The most recent estimates, Kopilk said, indicated that less than one-fourth of the freshman class in Regents Hall fall had met the recommendation. The Legislative Educational Planning Committee, which is studying the question of the state's open admissions policy, is supportive of the Regents suggested curriculum, Koplik said. But the committee will stop short of legislation to change open admissions for the next legislative session. THE RECOMMENDED curriculum comprises four units of English, three units of natural science, three units of physical sciences and two units of foreign language. A possible later recommendation, however, might be to allow open admissions only to those students who have completed the Regents recommended high school curriculum. In addition, the Regents' accredited by the state Board of Education is all that is necessary for admission to a Regents school; sometimes, schools do not even see the student's high school transcript. REGENTS SCHOOLS would be reluctant to turn away students based on their high school transcripts, Koplik said, because the schools' financing is closely tied to the number of students enrolled. Koplik predicted that the committee, in its final report next month, would recommend no changes in the state's open admissions policy and that it would endorse the Regents recommended high school curriculum. A tentative endorsement was approved by the committee Wednesday. The Regents committee also heard from Eugene Staples, hospital administrator for the University of Kansas Medical Center, who reported a continued decline in the number of patient days at the Center. That number was 7 per month in 1984 and 6 months of fiscal year 1984 compared with the same period in fiscal year 1983. DESPITE THAT decline, Staples said, hospital revenues have increased, and the projected income for this fiscal year is $5 million ahead of last year's income. The Med Center is adjusting somewhat to the decline by curtailting overtime and other salary and wage expenses, he said, which are down almost $800,000 from the same time last fiscal year. The meeting included a discussion of the difference in general education requirements between the bachelor of arts and bachelor of science degrees at the Regents schools. Sandra McMullen, a hutchinson Regent and chairman of the committee, said the Regents were considering a more comprehensive TOASTIES! GLORES AND MITT'S IN WOOLS, LEATHERS, GORETAX AND A CHART presented by Jerry Bergen of the Regents Office of Academic Affairs indicated that most of the schools had some disparity between general requirements for the BA and BS degrees. The requirements at Fort Hays State University, however, were identical to those in other colleges each in the humanities, natural science and math, and social and behavioral sciences. study of those requirements in its schools. Koplik criticized the requirements for not including foreign language for either degree. James Murphy, vice president for academic affairs at Fort Hays State, said that the language requirements were already years ago from the general education requirements, partly because students "did not express much demand for it." SUNFLOWER 804MASS. KOPLIK URGED the university to consider reinstating the language requirement, given that the Regents had recommended foreign language study for high school students and that it had traditionally been a principal difference between the BA and BS degrees. Murphy said the school had already begun considering changes in its general education requirements. The other Regents committees and the full board will meet here today. The Facilities Committee will consider $710,000 in roof repairs and other improvements for University housing, to be paid for by housing fees; the Fiscal Affairs Committee will consider housing fees for Regents schools. What are "FUNFLOWERS?" Daisy Bouquet 100% They're Flowers just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to arrange and enjoy. Put a little fun in your life. Pick an a bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" today or any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 FUN LOWERS $4.00 Specially price! *For in-town delivery* SOUTHERN HILLS Floral&Gift SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" 749-2912 Yaklllack "We ought to be encouraging this movie to be seen by the other player in the nuclear game." Rep. Glickman, D-Kan, said. WASHINGTON - Secretary of State George Shultz will appear on television immediately after the broadcast of "The Day After," a movie about nuclear war, to present the Reagan administration's position on arms control, sources said yesterday. Shultz will present President Reagan's plan for arms reduction as a deterrent to nuclear war in the interview Sunday night following broadcast of the ABC-TV film, "Safety First." Although they say underscores the importance of the administration attaches to the film and its repercussions. White House Communications Director David Gerger said yesterday that a videotape that was shown to some presidential aides was "very emotional and could have a strong effect on people." Shultz to present arms-control talk after TV movie By Staff and Wire Reports Keep warm with this stylish 100% wool inverted pleat skirt by H. Borenstein. The traditional wool cable knit sweater vest by Jason Younger will be an addition to any wardrobe. To finish the outfit we added a silk foulard tie. Shoes by Joan and David. Come in during homecoming weekend. Share a cup of coffee, enjoy our relaxed atmosphere and view our entire selection of winter fashions. Saddlebrook The White House announcement came 10 hours after Kansas congressman Dan Glickman introduced a resolution urging that the television movie "The Day After" be shown in the Soviet Union. Hours: 10:53 Mon. Tues. Wed. 8:04 Thurs. 10:5 Sat. 710 Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas 841-7222 Saddlehook Computerark A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook Saddlebrook KNOWLEDGE EDUCATION COMMODORE EPSON MORROW DESIGNS VICTOR 900 IKAYRO KODATA 3204 & Louisiana Center Staff Center SPECTRUM SYSTEMS 841-1112 THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO TGIF at THE HAWK First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills 12:00-1:00...$0.75 1:00-2:00...$1.00 2:00-3:00...$1.25 3:00-4:00...$1.50 4:00-5:00...$1.75 5:00-6:00...$2.00 6:00-7:00...$2.25 DR. PAUL LIMBERG Optometrist Announcement that he has assumed the practice and retained all records of DR. DALE SILLIX Optometrist For an appointment phone 843-5966 DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG Optometrist EYE EXAMINATIONS CONTACT LENSES FULL FRAME SELECTION 202 Lawrence National Bank 843-5966 GRANADA DOWNTOWN PHONE 803-5788 CHRISTOPHER WILKEN NATURAL WOOD BRAINSTORM Eve 7/9-3/29 Sat-Sun 2:00 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-725-9780 CHRISTOPHER WAKEEN NATALIE WOOD PG BRAINSTORM Eve: 7:30-9:25 Mat. Sat-Sun: 2:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-725-9065 CHEYF CHASE DEAL WITH CENTURY P/L: Eve: 7:15-9:15 Mat. Sat-Sun: 2:15 HILLCREST 1 OTTA AND IOWA TELEPHONE 843-725-8000 a night to hareen Eve: 7:35-9:25 Mat. Sat-Sun: 2:15 HILLCREST 2 OTTA AND IOWA TELEPHONE 843-725-8000 MATE HAVES A NAMED FETISH Eve: 7:30-9:20 Mat. Sat-Sun: 2:15 HILLCREST 3 AMITYVILLE 3-D ORION Eve: 7:25-9:30 Mat. Sat: 2:15 CINEMA 1 OTTA AND IOWA TELEPHONE 843-725-8000 RUNNING Braiz Eve: 7:35-9:35 Mat.Sat-Sun: 2:00 CINEMA 2 OTTA AND IOWA TELEPHONE 843-725-8000 THE BIG CHILL COLUMNS PICTURES Eve: 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat-Sun: 2:00 CHEVY CHASE DEAL CENTURY P.O. Box 1065 917-432-8700 Mail St, Surrey, BC M8S 1J8 a Night Havens Eve. 7:35-25 Matt. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 2 9TH AND 10TH APRIL 7-8 PM (SAT) 3/26-2/20 NATE HAYES GRAND CITY TENNIS PG 49 Eve: 7-30 9-20 Mat. Sat-Sun: 2-15 HILLCREST 3 TEL 719-200-1000 FAX 719-200-1000 AMITYVILLE 3-D WATER ST. WATER ST. ORISON Eve. 7:25-9:30 Mmt. Sat. 2:15 RUNNING BRAZZ Eve. 7:39-35 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 1955 AND DOWNTIME THE BIG CHILL R COLUMBIA PICTURES Eve. 7:30-30 Mat. Bat. 2:00-8 OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 18, 1983 Page 4 November 18,1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kansas (USP$ 605400) is published at the University of Kansas, 181 Stauffer-Finn Hall, Lawrence, KA 60055, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer sessions. Subscriptions are $15 for six months or $27 for a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $35 for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $12 for six months and paid through the student activity for POSTMASTER. Mail subscription is free. MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Author DON KNOX Campus Editor ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager General Manager and News Adviser DAVE WANMAKER Retail Sales Manager MARK MEARS National Sales JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager Limit has no end Both houses of Congress finally passed an increase in the country's debt limit this week. The move really wasn't any surprise. Indeed, every time the limit approaches, debate starts in Congress' hallowed halls about not disrupting government operations. Social Security checks might not go out, the talk goes, although to stop them would be politically disastrous. Employees won't be paid, and the Washington Monument will be shut down unless the government can borrow more money to pay its bills. Millions for defense and not a dime for the father of our country. The shutdown in many operations even costs the government money, as agencies must close down and then open up again. Think of what raising the debt ceiling means. Congress wants to borrow more money to pay its bills. It doesn't want to just spend less. And of all things, it doesn't want to tax more, especially with an election year approaching. The national debt clearly is a political albatross. Increasing the debt limit provides an easy out for Congress. No muss, no fuss, and the machine keeps printing checks. Surely, somewhere in the federal budget there is some fat that can be cut. Perhaps a thousand or two thousand fewer dollars can be spent for each screw bought as replacement part for some piece of military equipment. Perhaps the military budget could even be decreased, ever so slightly. Ways to save money abound. Ordinary people save money all the time. They know what happens when they overspend and run out of money. They don't have any more. Perhaps the nation's farmers could compete on the open market, or the subsidies might at least be reduced. Unfortunately, the government hasn't learned that lesson. It spends and spends and then spends some more. Some of the money is spent for good causes. To help the unemployed. To provide aid to single mothers who have children. To help poor people heat their homes. But some of the money is wasted. By the military, although that is admittedly an easy target. And some probably is wasted by every other agency of government. The government debt ceiling now means nothing. Government isn't a business and can't be run as one. But it could at least make an attempt, however feeble it might be or however long it might take, to live within its means. Nerve gas, Nicaragua Senate and House negotiators acted wisely last night when they agreed not to approve funding for nerve-gas production. But they weren't so wise in approving $24 million in covert aid for right-wing Nicaraguan rebels. Production of the deadly nerve gas, which is even ghastlier than more conventional weapons such as bombs and guns, is something more fitting to Nazi Germany than the leader of the free world. And the negotiators made a sane move when they denied the funding. and more hardship for the Nicaraguan people. Warfare between the CIA-backed rebels and the Sandinista government will leave the Nicaraguan people caught in the cross-fire. Besides, neither the Reagan administration nor members of Congress have proven that the Sandinista regime is a threat to the region. On the contrary, during the Carter administration, Sandinista land-reform ideas were greeted with approval. But now the country has been branded Marxist, therefore evil. Congress, unfortunately, seems to have taken on this simple, yet shortsighted, view of the world. The money for the Nicaraguan rebels, however, only will lead to more instability in Central America Better to take the loss Did the Senate succeed this time in driving a stake through the heart of the Clinch River Breeder Reactor? The experimental project with pork barrel appeal has been rescued many times, but the 56-40 vote against additional funds sent a message. U.S. Energy Secretary Donald P. Hodel said he would begin the "orderly termination of the project." The reactor, authorized in 1970, would produce more fissionable fuel than it would consume. The technology was seen as aiding a conversion to nuclear-generated electric power to reduce dependence on foreign oil. But a Senate majority has come to see it as too expensive and probably unnecessary, given nuclear power's diminished importance in meeting future power demand. Also undermining support for the breeder was the threat it posed, as a producer of nuclear fuel, in promoting the proliferation of nuclear weapons. It took some courage to cut off funds after spending $1.7 billion for preparing the site on the Clinch River in Tennessee. It is better to swallow that loss, however, than to spend the additional $3 billion to $7 billion it would cost to complete the project. -The Hartford (Conn.) Courant The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan also invites individuals to submit a written proof of columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kanson office, 111 Stauffart-Fliiff Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. LETTERS POLICY THIS OUGHT TO DISPEL RUMORS ABOUT ANDROPOV'S WHEREABOUTS! THIS OUGHT TO DISPEL RUMORS ABOUT ANDROPOV'S WHEREABOUTS! CAPITOLIUM Frack meets the Tweed Club When the intergalactic space shuttle smacked onto the lawn in front of Watson Library Tuesday night, no one seemed to notice. The few students hurrying past were more concerned with the cold weather than with a chartreuse humanoid. I stopped to help the creature, who was having difficulty with his craft's hatch. "Thank you, Earthling. I am Frack. Take me to your leader." "I don't care. I am here to survey University of Kansas politics." *how can you speak English?* 1 *asked suspiciously.* "If I explain that, you won't have time to show me Student Senate." "Right. But, why do you even care about the Student Senate?" "Somebody has to," Frack replied, quite reasonably. "Walk this way," I said. I watched him scuttle along beside me. Frack resembled Truman Capote, only he wore a hat and fat, with a whimy, ashive voice. "Why KU?" I asked Frack. "Why did you come here?" "KU has the lowest percentage turnout of elective voters in the universe. It's even lower than that of my home planet, Algernon. In fact," Frack giggled, "the participation of students in textbooks as an example of how not to run a representative democracy." "Now, see here, buddy," I began planting a forefinger in his fleshy green chest. "Our Student Senate is a collection of the most caring, capable students on campus. Our Student Senate is an assembly of dedicated legislators driven by an all-consuming desire to further the goals and ideologies of KU students, without a thought to personal gain." "Save it, please. Apparently you are one of the few who voted?" PRESENTED BY "Darn right." I said proudly JESSE BARKER Staff Columnist "Then why, if the student government is so important, did most students not vote?" Frack sensed that an answer was not forthcoming. "I'll tell you why. Apathy Except those who care and their loved ones, no one cares." "But the Senate allocates a million-dollar budget," I protested. "If it weren't for the diligence and hard work of our Student Senate, the entire campus would grind to a halt." "Oh, gag me with a gavel. You remind me of a Righteous." "A political party, Algernon have three political parties: the Righteous, the Concerned and the Apathetic. We Algers have been overwhelmingly Apathetic for more than a millionium. On Algernon, we have harnessed the power of Apathy and have used it as a positive force to promote the purest form of representative democracy." "What's that?" v naturally, I was curious "How?" "A 10 percent vote for the official candidates would indicate a 90 percent vote for the Apathetics on Algeron. "That would be quite a mandate." "That would be quite a mandate. "That's the beauty of Apathy. The actual officeholders are then selected randomly from the list of the novoking Apathetics. To qualify they must correctly answer one question: Do you want to work in government?" "And I suppose 'I don't care' is the appropriate response?" "You catch on quickly for a Righteous." We had arrived at the doorway of the Student Senate meeting. Frack peered in, then shook his head. "No. I wish to see Student Senate, not the Tweed Club." "Sorry," I said. "This is the best we can do." "You see what ignoring Apathy can cause?" Distaste curled Frack's lips as he watched the Senate in action for several minutes. "Oy," he said at last. "How about a drink?" "I don't know." LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Paper shouldn't endorse candidates To the Editor: Although I have been quite impressed with your newspaper since I began studying at the University of Kansas this fall, I was disappointed to find that you chose to endorse a this year's Student Senate elections. While it is true that most newspapers do endorse candidates and parties during election campaigns, a college paper has responsibilities and duties entirely different from those of privately owned and operated papers. First of all, for all practical purposes the Kansas is the only source of campus news. By endorsing one party over all others, you not only deny those other parties an opportunity for equal time, but also leave yourself open to the accusation that you have skewed your coverage of the election all along. This type of reporting is fine for a privately owned newspaper — readers expect such biased reporting. Indeed, for every biased privately owned newspaper there is nearly always another paper with an opposite bias. Furthermore, in elections of greater scope, there are other news sources as radio and television that normally do not have a widespread audience outside parties. The point is that all sides of the story are told. What good things about the other parties were not printed? What bad things about the party you endorsed did you feel we did not need to know? By endorsing one party over the others you have taken on a responsibility that is not yours. You are a student newspaper and, therefore, must represent only a portion chosen to represent only a portion of the student body and although you may feel it is in the student body's best interest, that is not your decision to make. Tom Kaleko Greeneville, Tenn., graduate student I feel that you owe an apology to the students you serve if not a retraction of your endorsement. Thanks, but . . . To the Editor While I enjoyed the photos of parts of the Computer Center in the Nov. 10 Kansan, I do have some corrections and a complaint. First, the Honeywell 6DPS computer system was purchased by the University in 1979 and was not donated by Honeywell as indicated. We do have a new DPS 820 system that was shown or mentioned Second, we have fewer than 50 "computer discs", but we do have several thousand computer tapes, which is what were shown in a photograb. Now for my complaint. While the photos were interesting, they were totally unrelated to the stories with which they were associated. Furthermore, they tend to perpetuate misconceptions that the computer science department and the Computer Center are one and the same. The computer science department is located in Strong Hall and provides research and instruction in the computer Center, located on Sunnyside Ave, houses the office of information systems and academice computing services. Collectively these two are: KU computing services. We provide the equipment and support personnel for computing services campus-wide. The computer science department is one of our customers as are the chemistry, physics, HDFL, psychology, engineering, business and 80 or so other departments and divisions. The computer science department and the Computer Center have different locations, different staffs, different budgets, different administration and different missions, but thanks for the nice photos. Jerry Niebaum Director of computing services Appalling photo To the Editor: I realize that the United Press International provides an insight into national and international affairs. I further applaud the efforts of the Kansan editors to have come to the realization that the world as an entity does not revolve around the likes of various KU fraternity and sorority events and to include the UPI stories in such a manner as to be easily viewed by the average KU student. However, I am appalled by the picture on the front page of Monday's Kansan showing a U.S. soldier demonstrating the use of a machine gun to a group of Greanadian children. Why didn't you include a cute caption, such as "Look here I'm playing with you" or "14 people," or perhaps "Let me show you the real way to play cowboys and Indians?" This gun symbolizes President Reagan's method of dealing with an international crisis. It is obvious by the choice of photographs you publish exactly where you stand with respect to this violation of international law instigated by President Reagan. I beg you to retreat to the position that you should be taking as an objective, unbiased news source. Scott Francis Scott Francis Fresno, Calif., junior Aides see invasion as a success WASHINGTON - President Reagan and his top aides are smiling. They think they have a success story on their hands from the Grenada invasion and all good things may flow from that — such as the opinion polls, overwhelming support of the American people. The administration officials are leaving up in the air whether Reagan's euphoria will prompt military moves in the Caribbean. Top officials have refused from the start of the administration to rule out overt action against Markist-led Nicaragua and Cuba. In the Mideast, administration officials also hedge on the possibilities of reprisals against Syria, the bête noire at the moment in the continuing turmoil in that region. HELEN THOMAS United Press International Reagan, Caspar Weinberger and Pentagon officials think that Reagan is in the driver's seat. He can try to change the vocabulae and tell an invasion a mission" and publicly charge his critics. Reagan, who has been criticized for not having foreign policy goals, except in terms of the East-West struggle, may decide that the military option can be used to recover some of the political ground lost over the last few decades. Since he believes that all the political turmoil in the world emanates from Moscow, he may decide to draw a line in the dust. they have made the quantum leap and that the United States no longer has a "Vietnam syndrome" or apprehension over deep involvement, again in a category for thousands of miles away. "It is very easy for some smug know-it-all in a plush protected quarter to say that you are in no danger," he told a welcome home honoree who more than 400 college students we were evacuated from Grenada. "I have wondered how many of them would have changed places with you," he said. But few doubt that the Vietnam syndrome would reappear in the populace if the president started spreading the troops far and wide where they would meet more of a fight from native forces than they did in Grenada, where a ragtag leaderless army was in disarray. Before they left the White House Reagan enlisted the students to speak out about the "courage and commitment" of his military men who raised their fears to evacuate them from Grenada. Despite the growing violence throughout the world, Reagan takes a more optimistic view of events in recent days. On the eve of his Asian swing he told a Japanese television interviewer, "I think there is more of an awareness today that in order to have peace we must have strength, so I am not discouraged by what is going on." University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 Page 5 Priority continued from p. "As of 11 o'clock this evening we have a new student body president," said Cramer. "And the new student body president will need the keys to the Senate office." Cramer then gave his set of office keys to Swenson. The thrill of victory went beyond the Priority supporters and also enveloped two people who have probably followed Swenson's political campaign. Anyone. Those people were Swenson's parents. SWEDE SWENSON, his father, shared a segment of a pep talk he had given Scott when he sought a political office during his high school years. "I told him, from the standpoint of an old farm boy," swede Swenson said, "something Scott's grandfather, a stellar politician, always said — the cream rises to the top. "And I think it did tonight." Marge Holton, Swenson's mother, said she was proud of her son was able to overcome the challenge of being a girl. "That was hard to take," Holton said in reference to campaign mud-slinging. "But he ran a clean camaign." After the celebration died down a bit, Swenson. And Strickland retreated to a quiet parlor of the Sigma Nu house to collect their thoughts and to drift off. There, Swenson said that he perceived the students' need to be tricked in order to work hard to represent all KU students. IN 1979, 31 votes separated the two top campaigners. Imagination campaign that was previously the main initiator. In 1979, 38 votes separated the top three coalitions. Forty-five votes last night separated Priority, Momentum and Costume Party, the top three coalitions. Swenson said that the strong showing of the Costume Party Coalition in this year's campaign showed the need for the student body president to field the needs of his constituents. In acknowledging his strong Greek support, Swenson said, "We're still not completely representative. And that's something I want to work on." Swenson praised the Costume Party Coalition for its presidential candidate Dunn"s "Boog. Highbrow." "I have a lot of respect for Boog." Swenson said. "He made some interesting points during the meeting." "I REALIZE now that the people the other candidates represent need to be represented. And if we don't represent them we won't be doing our job." Strickland said that he was not suprised by the Costume Party Coalition's strong showing "I was more surprised by Momentum's showing than footballs." Strickland said "I had been told I should be a better player." "I've been out there talking to people and they have been telling me how frustrated they were when I was with them." Stirrickland said that the Costume Party Coalition's showing required him and Swenson to leave. "He got more people out that normally wouldn't have voted," Strickland said of Highberger. "And we'll go out there tomorrow and talk to those students." Fridav continued from p. 1 "Most of our students have computer accounts and they have a service called electronic mail," said Nancy Penney, president of the Association for Computing Machinery. "We put a notice on the electronic mail, but usually our meetings are a generally-known thing. The people who are regulars kind of trained in their minds to be there every time." A REGULAR CROWD is definitely a characteristic of TGIFs. But for groups like the Architects' Club, which meets every week from 5 to 7:30 p.m. at Ichabod's, 1510 N. Third St., that characteristic can pose a small problem. "We always have a great turnout — 'I say between 60 and 100 people — but we always ask people to bring guests,'" said Steve Carleton, president of the club. "The problem is that the ratio of guys to girls in the School of Architecture is about three or four to one. "So we tell the guys to bring their friends," he said. "We encourage the girls to bring lots of friends." Between the friends and the beer, the troubles of a just-finished week seem to slip away. FOR THE STAFF of the University Daily Kansan, the weekly "Press Club" at Burlwinkle's, 1344 Tennessee St., is a chance to get into the regular Friday afternoon staff meeting. "People usually show up about 3:30 or 4:00, but it really depends upon how bad they want to get out and drink," said Rick Musser, former adviser for the Kansas. Musser said that during the years he was adviser, from 1977 to 1882, the Kauai staff was trained in the techniques of the sport. "About five years ago, we used to meet at a place called Father's on 23rd Street. Besides the students, the guys who work out at Printing Services used to come out and have a beer once in awhile. "It was nice because you had the people who wrote the paper and the people who printed it getting together and meeting each other." FOR MOST students, though, TGIF parties mean one thing: It's a time to kick back, take a load off their minds, and contemplate the weekend. "Our primary goal is definitely just to relax and take it easy for a change." said Kevin Coffey, St. Louis sophomore and member of the Architects' Club. "Students in the School of Architecture work pretty hard during the week. Usually our deadlines for projects are on Fridays, and a lot of us always wait until Thursday night to finish up. "By Friday afternoon, we're ready to get on of the classroom, forget about the week, and go out." French retaliate for Beirut bombing by attacking Iranian guerrilla bases By United Press International BEIRUT. Lebanon — French jets swooped deep behind Syrian lines in eastern Lebanon yesterday and smashed Iranian guerilla bases before a fierce bombing that killed 58 French troops last month. S six hours later, gunmie fired rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons at a French peacekeeping post in the Shite Muslim neighborhood of Khandak el Ghamik in west Beirut, apparently in retaliation for the air strike. No one was reported injured. The French assault came a day after Israel war jets destroyed training camps, arms depots and command centers of the militant Islamic group. The Israeli military 4 bombing of Israel's headquarters in Tyre. STATE-RUN Beirut radio and the station of the Malgira militia报载 heavy casualties in Baikhe, that are 42 miles out of Beirut and 18 miles in. The shelling demolished in the Beka Valley 24 hours earlier. The French attack came as Yasser Arafat, beleaguered chief of the Palestinian Liberation Organization, vowed in Tripoli "to fight to the end" despite the fall of his last Lebanese stronghold to Palestinian rebels who had unleashed new rocket and mortar barrages. Arafat, whose hand was bloody and bandaged, admitted that he had lost most of the refugee camp of Beddawi but said that 600 Arafat loyalists had launched a counterattack within the fall camp in a deserate bid to rejoin 5,000 refugees who retreated to Tripoli earlier in the week. IN BEHRUT, Marines fresh from the invasion of Grenada came ashore to join the multinational peacekeeping force and to replace the missing 279 men in a suicide bombing attack Oct. 23. Simultaneous bombings by terrorists driving trucks loaded with explosives leveled the Marine headquarters at the airport and a French base in west Beirut. The French lost 38 paratroopers. On Nov. 4, an almost identical suicide bombing destroyed Israeli headquarters in the southern city of Tyre, killing 61 people — 29 Israelis and 32 Arabs During the night three bombs went off in west Beirut, destroying a carpet store, a clothing outlet and a car. No one was injured, largely because of a curfew that kept the streets of the Muslim area deserted at night. The French Defense Ministry in Paris said all jets had returned safely to their base on the aircraft carrier Clemenceau. STATE DEPARTMENT spokesman John Hughes said the United States was told in advance of the French raids, but he refused further comment. Phalange Radio said that the raids had lasted more than an hour and that Syrian troops which were there held by Islamic State It also said four French jets had returned later to nearby Islamic Ami positions that Israel jets had devastated near Rayak, 10 miles south of killing at least 20 people and wounding 112 An administration official said that if intelligence showed the suspected terrorists targeted by the Israeli and French raids were not wiped out, it would be "a correct logical assumption" that U.S. strikes could be ordered to protect American Marines from further attacks. "But that is a big if," he added. THE UNITED STATES has conducted aerial reconnaissance over the area near the Syrian border where the guerrillas have their headquarters. Asked yesterday if the French and Israeli raided said the U.S. promise of retaliation. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said, "We're not discussing diplomatic discussions." In Israel, the government warned guerrilla groups in Lebanon that they could not escape retribution for terrorist acts and vowed to launch an attack against them, strikes against their bases behind Syrian lines. "As we made clear, those terrorist organizations which will perpetrate those monstrous terror activities against us will not enjoy any peace. Deputy Foreign Minister Yehuda Be-Meir." "WE WILL search for them wherever they are and strike at them." LONG SLEEVES ON SHIRTS Quitting Business Sale! Huge discounts on all clothing patagonia software SIERRA DESIGNS MICKS 139 MASS Outdoor Outfitters Tuba 843-5650 Before the game. Relax at the Union with the Chuck Berg Band. With the best in jazz and blues at 11:00 a.m. Sponsored by SUA Fine Arts, AFM Local 512 and the Music Performance Trust Fund. 4th Floor Lobby of the Kansas Union Chuck Berg—saxophone and flute Jim Stringer—guitar James Jeffley—bass John Moore—drums EATS 1105 MASS LAWRENCE, KANSAS TASTY, TONGUE TICKLING, TIDBITS! TIN PAN ALLEY The Islamic Center of Lawrence In Collaboration With The Department of Economics Presents Professor of Economics (Emeritus), consultant and planner in economics Mahmoud Abusaud In A Lecture Titled: Place: Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union A WORKABLE ECONOMIC SYSTEM: AN ISLAMIC PROPOSAL REFRESHMENTS ARE PROVIDED People interested in world trade, interest rates counter inflationary measures, comparative economics, unemployment. etc. are all invited. Date: Fri., Nov. 18 Time: 7:30 p.m. Student Loans at The First. Worth writing home about ... right now. Dear Mom and Dad, This is not a surprise! This is not a letter asking for more money. I just applied for a guaranteed student loan at The First. Tution and expenses are covered for next semester. And I don't begin payments until after graduation. Thanks for everything, PS. and Food!! Complete a guaranteed student loan application by December 1 and the loan papers will be waiting for your signature in time for fee payment in January. By thinking ahead, you can finance your second semester now and avoid waiting in January. Stop writing home for money. Come to the First instead. If you've already gotten a loan for the fall semester, you may be eligible for more financing. Call Terry Boyer at 843-0152 for more details. Then send the good news home. TheFirst We want to help We want to help The First National Bank of Lawrence Ninth & Massachusetts, Lawrence, Knasas 66044 Member F.C1C. Equal Opportunity Lender/Employer ENTERTAINMENT The University Daily KANSAN November 18, 1983 Page 6 'THE DAY AFTER' TV GUIDE THE BEST MILER! THE WORLD'S HEARTBREAKER THE MOTION PICTURES A COMPLETE GUIDE TO THE FILM SHOW Vide nightmare Comes Hom Public Service or Propaganda? How Will It Affect Children? ABC's 'The Day After' The Andropov Mystery Newsweek TV's Nuclear Nightmare Public Service or Propaganda? How Will It Affect Children? ABC's 'The Day After' The Andropov Mystery Newsweek TV's Nuclear Nightmare Public Service or Propaganda? How Will It Affect Children? ABC's 'The Day After' How will media hype affect the ratings? By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter The ABC-TV film "The Day After" has received more publicity than any other TV movie in history as hundreds of stories on the show have been released, magazines and on television says the network. Sunday, ABC will find out whether that attention will attract the vast audience and promote the brand. The movie, which depicts the catastrophe of nuclear war, premiered in Lawrence Oct. 12, and several writers from around the country attended. Since then stories about the movie, which was filmed in and around Lawrence, have been appearing daily across the country. Newsweek magazine has run two stories on the movie, TV Guide, Time and People have also done magazine stories. Some magazines, like The New York Times, have devoted entire issues to the film. Almost every large newspaper in the country has done at least one story on it, including the San Francisco Examiner, the Los Angeles Times and the New York Times. New York Times has published five stories on it. NICHOLAS MEYER, the film's director, said he was given at least 50 interviews in the last two weeks. CBS, a rival network, covered the "The Day After" on "60 Minutes," "The Sunday Morning News" and "CBS Morning News." The nationally syndicated "Entertainment Tonight" and "ABC" will be covering its own movie on both Good Morning America" and "Nightline." Even "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood" devoted parts of five episodes to the film to deal with the effects that the fear of nuclear war has on children. When Scott Osborne of "Entertainment Tonight" was in Lawrence for the screening, he explained why the national media was so interested in the film. "THE SUBJECT IS LOADED," he said. "There's been controversy about the film for two years. We knew people would react, and we wanted to see how they would react. "Brandon Stoddard (ABC president) got up and told us he had a terrific film, but he couldn't tell us anything about it. We've been waiting ever since." Dan Doran, an ABC publicist assigned to the "The Day After," said the amount of coverage devoted to the film was more than ABC could have hoped for. Whether it will have the desired effect of producing high ratings when the movie is broadcast at 7 p.m. Sunday is another matter, he said. "Our one fear is that the coverage might create the feeling that the movie will be depressing," Doran said. "If people think it will be depressing, it might it might turn on them of the movie." THE FLIP SIDE to that, Doran said, is that people might decide that even though it's depressing, "The Day After" is something they should see. Meyer was philosophic about all the discussion. "As Oscar Wilde said, the only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked Meyer also said that everyone in the country was looking for an excuse not to watch the film at the studio. NBC-TV is countering the film with the first part of a three-part mini-series about John F. Kennedy. CBS is sticking with its regular Sunday line-up of comedies and "Trapper John MD." "THE VIEWER WILL have a clear choice between something historical, something dealing with the future or some more of the regular TV fare." Doran said. Doran, who is one of several publicists assigned to the project, said that one unusual aspect of publicizing the film was the lack of interest in the stars. "Normally press people want to talk with actors," Doran said. "On this project they want The movie stars Jason Robards, John Lithgow, Bibi Bisc, John Cullum, Steve Guttenberg and Joabeth Williams. Doran said that Guttenberg, Besch and Cullum had helped to "The Day After" has been the focus of many stories that have focused on the pro- and anti-nuclear groups that are using the film to promote their viewpoints. Meyer said he was not worried about the groups' use of the film, but he was bothered that people who had not seen the film were telling them who had not seen it what they should think about it. Although "The Day After" has attracted nation-wide attention, another nuclear film, "Testament," was released without extensive publicity in movie theaters earlier this month. Meyer, who hasn't seen "Testament," said, "I hope it's better than my film. "We're trying to draw the public into debate, and if Testament creates more discussion, Film powerful, but relies on subject, not form, for success Much of the excitement and publicity surrounding "The Day Ahead" has been politically ramified salicifications of a film design with the horrors of nuclear war. Attention has been turned away from the acting, directing and technical proficiency of the film. And considering the quality of the acting and directing, that move may be a benefit for both Nicholas Mever and his cast. Meyer, the director, ended up with a powerful film. But the movie relies almost entirely on the subject matter for its plot. And Meyer defends the movie on that basis, saying that the MOVIE REVIEW movie is a "giant public service announcement." He also says the film is not art and was never intended to be. But that doesn't mean that those aspects of the movie shouldn't be addressed. The nuclear bombs don't fall until almost an hour into the film, and most of what happens before that time is boring. The actors — Jason Robards, Jobeth Williams, Steven Guttemberg and others — hand in solid but uninspired performances. Scenes of Russell Oakes (Robards), a physician, dealing with his The actors know that nuclear war, and not acting, is the center of the movie. That and a sometimes weak script result in a bunch of fights. daughter's decision to move to the East Coast and watching his son play football add little interest. When the bombs do fall, and we see the nuclear destruction of Kansas City, it is the most gripping moment in the movie. The four minutes of chaos and destruction will keep people glued to their television sets. The special effects are excellent, and Meyer makes it seem shockingly real despite an order from the censor to rage seven times. The director's use of light and sound is excellent. These four minutes may be the best four minutes of TV this year. After that, the movie heads down a road of depression. Meyer tries to depict as much of the horror of nuclear holocaust as possible. Although the decay of humanity is grippingly real, overlooked details are sometimes amoving. Amid all the decay, one family, the Dahlbergs, who survived the blast in the cellar of their farm house, seem to be making a recovery. While Oakes is fighting the ultimate in losing battles as he tries to treat the wounded at a hospital on the KU campus, the team was able to stay on task. They break out the clean clothes and clean up the house. They also, inexplicably, manage to dig up some new livestock. Other technical aspects in the film also don't ring true. After the explosion, the Dahlbergers have running water. exploison, the Dambere that has gone into accurate portrayal of nuclear destruction it seems odd that Meyer would let these inconsistencies creep into the film. tences creep into the movie. The movie can be applauded for reaching no convenient conclusions. People die — many of them — including several of the characters we are introduced to before the blast. character we are here to encounter. When Oakes goes back to Kansas City, searching through the rubble of his home, finally falling to his knees in tears, the basic message of the film comes home. There may be life after nuclear war, but it isn't life worth living. There can be no doubt about the power of "The Day After" and its potential to kill or harm humanity. The real question you have to ask before watching this movie is do you want to take an emotional roller coaster ride, starting with "The Incredible Hulk"? John Hoogesteger Director criticizes TV,but calls it best forum for his movie By United Press International NEW YORK — Director Nicholas Meyer has little respect for television as an artistic medium, but he decided to make ABC TV's shocking nuclear war movie "The Day After" because he considers it a public service announcement, not art. THE YOUNG DIRECTOR said he was enormously disturbed when he first read the screenplay, which relates in gut-hitting detail the story of a nuclear war and what happens to it. "I thought about it for about two weeks and finally decided it was the right thing to do - my mother." A movie has been criticized by right-wing figures for its decision to air the two-hour film, which cost $7 million, more than three times the standard price for a TV movie. The network announced in September that it would show the commercials it now sells half the time is sold. Among the critics is Moral Majority leader Jerry Falwell. After screening the movie in Washington, he said it would be "very interesting to learn which American companies will be sponsoring such a one-sided presentation of a controversial subject." MEYER DENIED THE film was political and said he would not discuss his views on nuclear weapons. "If you can find my political bias in the movie, then you are entitled to ask me that question," he said. "But otherwise, I'm keeping my views on nuclear weapons mum until the movie has been seen." "I don't want to tell the American people what to think. The point of the movie is to let you make sense." Meyer outdated the wisdom of ABC's decision to air a special edition of "Viewpoint" with anchor Ted Koppel and a panel of experts immediately after the movie. "Once again, we're not going to have to do the responding. There's going to be professional advice." "THE DAY AFTER," was Meyer's first century television and he said it probably was his last. Meyer thinks television flunks as an artistic medium but does serve a purpose by allowing people to be themselves. "I don't like television. I don't like to watch it. I think it does, like a refrigerator in my room." "It's good to watch sports events. It's good to watch Neal Armstrong put his foot on the Moon. It's good if you want to tell people what nuclear war is like." But for art? "TTS SUBJECT TO all sorts of intrusion, whether it's censorship, commercials, the baby crying, the neighbor coming over, the phone answering, the teacher having experience. They re all militating against it." "Plus the thing gets interrupted every seven minutes — no matter what the hell is going on — for someone to tell you about his underarm deodorant. "That is an affront." As for "The Day After." Meyer said it does not masquerade as he did. He said he did not want to use many big-name actors or catchy music — anything that might make people comfortable watching the film. Meyer said the final result is a "crudie" movie. "It comes on as a public service announcement and in that context I think television is the appropriate medium for it." Plays emphasize women's role By PAMELA THOMPSON Staff Reporter The role of strong women in male-dominated societies and writing are the common themes of the three one-act plays presented by the Lawrence Community Theatre this weekend. “It’s a unique program,” said Paul Stephen Lim, lecturer in English and author of the third play, "Hatchet Club." “We each just know how to play it and ready to be produced at the same time.” Although all of the plays deal with writing and contain strong women characters, they were written independently by three local playwrights. John Clifford's nostalgic play, "Here to You, Grandma," and Penelope Weiner's dream sequence-filled play, "Tributaries" will be performed preceding "Hatchet Club" at the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont. After tonight's performance, which starts at 8, a group from the University of Kansas Women's Studies Program will conduct a presentation on controversial issues that are raised in the plays. MARY DAVIDSON, assistant director of "Hatchet Club" and lecturer in English, said that she wanted the women to have a chance to be more what (feminist) implications of the plays. wrights, the casts and the audience after the performance. Lim said about 10 or 12 women were expected to informally talk with the play- Lim's play is about a young assistant professor, Christina Jaher, who presents a research paper to some of her male colleagues in the department of a Midwestern university. Davidson said that much of the sexism that came out in "Hatchet Club" is the kind that was unintentional and often involved domestic matters. "It won't be a debate because they will not criticize the plays," he said. "They'll generate the discussion on the self-hood of those men that men will stay to join the discussion too." In Lim's play, one of the kindier male faculty members suggests to Jaber that she open a restaurant because she is such a good cook. This incites her without permission the entire class. Davidson said. INDIRECT SEXISM IS not a serious problem, she said, but it is still a common problem that affects many women both inside and outside the academic realm. - "The innocently-mant remarks are the ones that you can't very well resent," she Lim said that his play was not sexist, but concerned "what men and women do to each other." "I HEAR THROUGH THE grapevine that there is some unessiness about my play at the University," he said. "But the history of academia is supportive. Two of their professors are in it." Also in the academic realm is Weiner's contemporary play "Tributaries." It concerns Syd, a young female student who works with her teacher an assignment for her creative writing class. Weiner said the play contained some feminist rhetoric, but that Syd was "too involved in the little problems to be involved in politics." WEINER SAID THAT she was anxious to see what the Women's Studies group had to say about the three plays. Asyd creates her stories at the typewriter one night, the character she writes about are Sylvain's friends. "I'm a feminist in a strange sort of way," she said. Clifford said that his play, "Here's to You, Grandma," concerned the relations among a teenage boy, his aunt and brother. They all live together in a Chicago fat in the 1930s. "I remember the attitudes of people in the '30s," he said. "Women were by and large expected to do the housework, while a man was expected to work." MANY TENSIONS DEVELOP in the play, because the uncle, Owen, cannot find a job and feels that his manhood is threatened, which puts a strain on his marriage with Clifford, a script writer for industrial films at Centron Corp., said that his play was not a flattering picture of how life used to be. "There was more sexism then," he said. BLOOM COUNTY HELLO I'D LIKE A 15 YO' U HAVE (WINK ! WINK !) MANUAL DIGITIZER FOR MY IBM COMPUTER SHAPE* BY BERKE BREATHED NATURALLY, YOU WON'T BE LOOKING TO IT (WINK! WINK!) THE MOTTO POPS TEL FILES. (WINK! WINK!) TIC TIC TIC TIC AND YOU WON'T THINK TO CROSS CHANNEL, IT'S COOKING HARD TO CROSS WHEN / SENDROOM HIGH- SECURITY ACCESS CODES. (WORK) WORK! (WORK) WORK! (WORK) WORK! (WORK) WORK! MAYBE ATTENTION, INTROVER THIS IS THE CENTRAL I'MS COMPUTER OFFICE YOU ARE CONSTRUCTION AN LEVEL INTRU- SION INTO I'MS FILES IDENTIFY YOURSELF REPORT IDENTIFY WARNINGLY MADRID KNOCKON ON MY FRONT! DOOK AT 5 O'CLOCK MAKE A RESULT MONTHLY !! THE FIRE B.I. MY PRILLAG YOU ARE UNDER A PROTECTION DATA TRUSSING AND COMPUTER PRISY, OPEN UP! WAIT HERE WE DO. STE STEVE SPRILLAD HEY GET THIS DOWN! TOTAL. GOVERNMENT MUST BE ORGANIZED. PROGRAMS OF AND CASES FOR FOUR BROTHERS. AWARDS GIVEN. KNOCK! KNOCK! YAAAA! PHOOS! THAT OVERHAIR WORK K EYE UP KNOCK! KNOCK! CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 Page 1 PLANET Gary Smith/KANSAN Dennis "Boog" Highberger and Carla Vogel, presidential and vice presidential candidates for the Costume Party Coalition, react favorably to news that their coalition finished a strong third in this year's Student Senate elections. The elections were the closest in Senate history. Costume Party considers third place a victory By JOHN EGAN Staff Reporter Despite finishing third in the student body elections, Dennis "Boog" Highberger and Carla Vogel were convinced right that they had achieved a victory. Higherberger and Vogel, the presidential and vice presidential candidates from the Costume Party Coalition, garnered 1,004 votes, 45 behind the Priority Coalition. The election was the closest in Student Senate history. "Winning to me has nothing to do with the number of votes we get." Highberger said as votes were being tabulated at the Kansas Union. The victory, he said, was achieved by stirring interest among students to talk about it. COSTUME HAD advocated improved communication within the Senate and had said that all offices in the Senate should have equal rank, a stance they said would have created respect among senators. About 10 people, informally dressed in denim and flannel, gathered at the They were sipping wine while talking about various topics, not necessarily political. Scraps of newspapers, a pair of scissors and a roll of tape were used to lay down the living room carpet — the tools they had used to make political posters. campaign party that Costume had at Vogel's two-story house on Tennessee Street. "When I went into this I wasn't thinking of winning at all," Vogel said. "I was just thinking of talking to people and telling people know there is an alternative." AS VOTES were being counted, the candidates and supporters listened to radio reports about the election and tapped their teeth to vintage Monkees' tunes. One Costume supporter took home movies of the evening's events. Costume supporters said they would celebrate, win or lose. "We'll have a party. No doubt about that," Highberger said. A burst of hisses and laughter rang the radio station reported that Priority had group broke out in applause when they heard that Costume had received over 10,000 calls. "I expected a lot." Highgierer said aloud. Costume's ballot total "I'm happy." After hearing the preliminary election results, the candidates said they would go to the Priority Coalition's at the request of Priority candidates. TOMMORROW. Highberger said, they will begin taking down campaign posters. The reason for Costume's high spirits was that the coalition thought students were receptive to their ideas, which they said, showed in the vote total. One of Costume's campaign gums is to hand out free bug cards this week. "Win or lose, there's still 900 hugs fishing around campus. Biggered up Vogel said the whole campaign and election process was enlightening; especially considering the controversy over centrism votes that were declared invalid. Don't wait till the day after. Join us.Sunday night. Nuclear holocaust comes home to KU and Lawrence in Sunday's gripping TV movie, The Day After. Right after, at 9:30 p.m., come to the candlelight gathering on Campanile Hill above Memorial Stadium. * (In case of heavy rain, we'll gather at the Ecumenical Ministries Building, 12th and Oread.) America will be watching Lawrence Sunday night. Let the nation know that Lawrence wants to live. - Several TV stations will carry portions of the gathering live. Also, at 2 p.m. Sunday: Poetry reading and photo exhibit. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union. Town meeting chaired by Mayor David Longhurst. U.S. Rep. Slattery will attend. Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont. Monday noon: Monday night at 8: Forum on "The Consequences of Nuclear War". Paul Ehrlich, Stanford biologist, on the ecological consequences. Robert J. Lifton, Yale professor of psychiatry, on the psychological implications. Kansas Union Ballroom. ANGEL RECORDINGS, by special arrangements with KIEF'S RECORDS presents a SALE on their fine Angel, Angel Red Line, and Seraphim recordings (and quite a deal at that!) Now at KIEF'S all Angel Digital Recordings which carry a manufacturer's list price of $12.98 are only $8.75 per disc. Choose from scores of titles like these: MFG. LIST $12.98 per disc KIEF'S PRICE $8.75 MOZART COSI FAN TUTTE Salzburg Festival Production Marshall Baitas - Araza - Morris Battle, van Dam Vienna Philharmonic MUTI THE DANCE RECORD OF THE YEAR Hugo Strasser orchestra DIGITAL MFG. LIST $12.98 per disc KIEF'S PRICE $8.75 MFG. LIST $12.98 per disc KIEF'S PRICE $8.75 DIGITAL EMI Target WAGNER OVERTURES TENNSTEDT Berlin Philharmonic Also select from hundreds of fine Angel analog recordings. These are manufacturer's list priced at $9.98, but are KIEF'S priced at only $6.99 per disc now! Want even greater savings? KIEF'S has Angel Red Line recordings which carry a manufacturer's list of $6.98 but are now a low $4.49 per disc. Select from fine titles like these: MENUHIN PLAYS BACH The Unaccompanied Violin Sonatas and Partitas (BWV 1001-6) Mozart The "Haffner" Serenade Pinchas Zukerman English Chamber Orchestra CHOPIN THE FOUR SCHERZOS FANTASIA IN F MINOR DHLSSON MFG. LIST $6.98 KIEF'S PRICE $4.49 No, we haven't forgotten the Seraphim line. Naturally, KIEF'S has big discounts on Seraphim too... MFG. LIST $5.98... KIEF'S PRICE $3.99 Many of these titles are available on cassette. If you want an Angel recording that we're out of stock on, we'll be glad to order it for you! KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE SHOP HOLIDAY PLAZA CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 Page Momentum seeks new decision on ballots By JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter The Momentum Coalition today will appeal a decision that invalidated ballots marked "Momentum" in this week's student body presidential elections. The coalition also asked for a recount. The decision may have cost Momentum candidates Kevin Walker and Mark McKeen the highest offices in the Student Senate. The difference is greater than the Priority candidates Scott Swenson and Dennis Strickland. The coalition objected to a decision made by Elections Review Board chairman Julie Menze that invalidated write-in ballots for president and vice-president marked "Momentum" instead of with the candidates' names. Her decision was presented in a statement read by Chris Edmonds, elections secretary, at about 8 p.m. About ten minutes after the official vote totals were released, Momentum campaign chairman Russell Ptacek submitted an official petition for the appeal to Jim Clark, chairman of the Student Senate Committee. The petition was written in longhand on notebook paper. MOMENTUM WILL present its appeal at a formal hearing before the Elections Review Board at 1 p.m. in the Wheat Room of the In all, 114 ballots were declared invalid in the election. Election officials said that they were unable to determine just how many invalid ballots were marked "Momentum." According to Clark, they will not know until a recount is finished. However, Ptacek said that he thought "at least 50" of the ballots were votes for Momentum. "TT IS OUR feeling that the clear intent of such marked ballots was as a vote for Kevin Walker and Mark Garner," he wrote in the petition for appeal. In her statement, Menze said that Walker and McKee had no exclusive right to use the name "Momentum" for their campaign because they had not met the Oct. 17 filing deadline for candidates. Senate regulations state that a candidate must file on time to be a part of an official coalition. Therefore, "Momentum" did not officially represent Walker and McKee, Edmonds said, and could not be counted as a vote. The other leaders marked "Momentum" could be considered a vote for any of the coalition's members. However, Ptacek that voters who had marked their ballots "Momentum" obviously were voting for Walker and McCain. The momentum posters and they had campaigned mostly as a part of the coalition. "THE REASONS for not counting them as votes for the presidential and vice-presidential candidates were late in the elections," he said. In her statement, Menze also said that Kansas law governing the election required that a write-in ballot be cast by all voters to the candidates to avoid ambiguity. "This is consistent with the election rules that have been followed at this University in the past and with the rules that have been followed as guidelines for this campaign and election," she wrote. However, Platek said that it was not specifically known that state laws covered the elections. Menze said that the Senate followed the "highest available" laws in its elections regulations. If the appeal fails, the Momentum Coalition will be allowed to appeal to the University's Judicial Committee. However, Ptacek said he thought the Elections Review Board would rule in Momentum's favor. ny DONNA WOODS Staff Reporter Freedom Coalition incurs $800 fine The student body election has not ended for the Freedom Coalition, whose members were shaken last night by an attack in Charlottesville on the Freedom Coalition for alleged campaign violations. The coalition, which finished last in the Student Senate elections, accrued a fine of $400 because it affixed campaign posters in four buildings with tape, said Chris Edmonds secretary of the Democratic Review Board that assessed the fine. However, Steve Bergstrom, presidential candidate for the coalition, said that members of the Elections Commission before the grace period had ended Senate code states that posters cannot be hung with an adhesive sticker. AFTER THE Student Senate Elections Committee discovered the infraction early Wednesday morning, it gave the student a penalty for the posters without incurring a penalty. Greg Haunschild, vice presidential candidate, said that Jim Clark, Elections Committee chairman, had assured the coalition members that he would seek a repeal of the fine because the grace period had not been upheld. The second fire of $400 was levied because four posters were found on the outside of Learned Hall, Edmunds said. the grace period had not been upheld. Freedom coalition members deny having fastened the posters to the building and say that they will fight for a repeal. Although disturbed by the fines, Bergstrom and Haunschild said they were not disappointed with the campaign. "WE THOUGHT that it would be surprising if we won," Bergstrom said. "We did not campaign nearly as hard as Priority or Momentum, and therefore, we cannot legitimately expect the same results. "When you are an outsider, it is very difficult to win an election." But Freedom Coalition members agreed that this election was only the their first appearance and that the Republican candidate will be in next year's Student Senate elections. "The Freedom Coalition is not going to die this year and shrivel in and blow away." Bergstrom said shortly before the results were announced. "We will be in the election next year regardless of the outcome." "There is a possibility that we might not be the outside coalition next year. It depends on who rises from the Senate a leader." The Freedom Coalition's final tally of 246 votes, nearly 800 votes behind the winners, did not daint the spirits of this year's coalition members. HAUASCHILD SAID that despite the coalition's comparatively low vote, they had played a key role in the campaign. The Freedom Coalition's platform called for termination of mandatory fees, and that was the only significant issue of the campaign, he said. "Our views definitely got ex-pressed," he said. We discussed the issue with Mr. Cain. 'We knew we were taking a chance on that issue, but if we didn't throw ourselves in and create issues, we knew we wouldn't stand a chance.' Haunschild said he thought that the coalition's stance had helped bring about a near-record voter turnout. Both Haunschild and Bergstrom also said that they did not agree with the Senate Elections Committee decision to disqualify write-in votes that said "Momentum" and did not specifically list the presidential running team. "I think it's unfair as hell," said Haushardt "I think Swenson should be ashamed to be in office if he won by a tie, and they didn't count Momentum's." FREE BEER TODAY! Student Happy Hour 3-5 p.m. Free Beer until the Kegs run out and two for one drinks. GAMMONS SNOWBLE 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-39 GAMMONS SNOW 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 Entertainment THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA Style! Magic! Not Only The . . Friendlist Service & Best Pizza But Now . . . Minsky's has the MAGIC every FRIDAY MARK TAMS Magician 6 packs to go we deliver 6 packs to go 2228 Iowa Minsky's has the MAGIC every FRIDAY MARK TAMS Magician we deliver 842-0154 BARRON'S N'S BARRO the fun affordable Place to be!! KU FANS CELEBRATE WITH GREAT 1$WELL DRINKS - 50$DRAWS 4TH/12. PLUS more specials after 12! Don't forget—We're open Sundays! J. 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For More Details Contact: Joan M. Putt 749-3423 1 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 Page 9 Women depicted inaccurately Jamaican poet challenges portrayal By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter Caribbean and North American black literature have failed to portray Jamaican women as the strong, suffering kind that they are. Lorna Goodison, a Jamaican artist and poet, said yesterday. Goodison spoke at a poetry reading sponsored by the department of African studies. About 30 people attended the Council Room of the Kansasug Land The image that most people have of Jamaican women was reinforced by Harry Belfonte's song "Matilda," which told the story of girls with her lower one's money, she said. "Even in literature, with very few exceptions, the women are shadow images." to say is that these women have never been adequately mirrored or rewarded And no-one should be put on a pedestal, Goodison said, not even Jamaican women who often endure hardship. But she said that their resilience and courage should be portrayed in literature. MANY JAMAICAN women travel miles to the marketplace with a basket of fruit to sell and then sleep at the market several nights to look over their goods. Jamaican women are often dressed in suits or large families on their own, she said. "If we produce women like that, why are they not reflected in literature?" she exclaimed. Goodison studied at the Jamaican School of Art and also at an institute in New York City. She is a member of the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa this semester. The Centenary Medal of the Institute of Jamaica was awarded to her for contributions to Caribbean poetry, and she has been published in her home country and abroad. THE STRENGTH of Jamaican women comes from their belief in the "great beyond," she said, a belief that bitterness deserves extreme hardship. "Sometimes I am not sure I understand their strength, but I think it should be acknowledged," she said. "Jamaican women are not bitter. They don't have time to be bitter about their lives." Goodison ended the poetry session with one of her poems, which, she said, was inspired by the Jamaican infatuation with travel. "I won't tell you what I spy, but it is for that alone I tread this road." KU music groups to perform Handel's 'Messiah' Sunday By the Kansan Staff Every semester the University Symphony, the Chamber Choir, the University Singers, the Concert Chorale, the Concert Choir and the University Chorus perform together as a final project. Coordinating all these groups is a feat in itself, but this semester's performance has the added challenge of performing the "Messiah," the popular work by German composer George Freddrick Handei. The choirs, choruses and the symphony will present a free performance of the "Messiah" at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium, featuring thirteen student soloists. said that Handel wrote the work within 24 days in 1741. James Ralston, professor of music and director of choral activities. "Messiah" is performed more than any other oratorio, which is a religious composition written for chorus and orchestra. he said. Handel included both the Old and New Testaments in this work, covering in three parts the birth of Jesus. Crucifixion and the Redemption. Ralston said that the "Messiah" was traditionally associated with Easter, but that the piece is often performed during the Christmas season, especially the "Hallelujah Chorus." "I'm always searching for a work of lasting value for the students to perform, so I chose 'Messiah' because it is a good piece and we didn't performed it since 1963," he said. ON CAMPUS TODAY LLOYD DANIEL will present poetry and music in an event sponsored by McColum Black Caucus and Praxis, in am in Alderson Auditorium of the University THE WAY CAMPUS Fellowship will meet at 12:30 p.m. in Alcove G of the U THE EMILY TAYLOR Women's Resource Center will present a lunch-on discussion titled "You Can Do It!" at noon in Alcove R of the Union SUNDAY INTERVARSITY Christian Fellow- ship, 3 p.m. in the Pine Room at the Union A POETRY AND prose reading and photo exhibit of pictures taken during the filming of "The Day After" will be p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Univ. A CANDLELIGHT gathering will be held 20 minutes after the end of the showing of "The Day After" at the flagpole on Campanile Hill. ICHABOD'S EST. MCML2XX 25¢ Draws 7-11 Saturday $1. Cover $2.00 Pitchers and 75c Long Necks for the rest of the semester. 2 miles north of City Hall JUAREZ TEQUILA The Magic of Mexico. 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To reserve your space on this special trip full payment must be sent in by November 28, 1983 - 2 nights at the Hyatt Regency right next to the Superdome Price includes: * Roundtrip air fare from Kansas City to New Orleans O might happen high next to the Superbowl. *Admission to the Sugar Bowl* Basketball Tournament featuring the University of Kansas Jayhawks, Tulane, Florida and Southwestern Louisiana. Roundtrip transfers between the hotel and airport, luggage-handling taxes and tipping for these services Hosted by John and Betsie Woodson Maupintour 749-0700 travel 900 TINY TINY Massachusetts We're just as particular about the quality of your purchases you love. The Diamond Love Knot Collection Care her a tribute to love and beauty that wins hands the one of time. McQueen JEWELERS 809 Massachusetts • 843-5432 The Store Where Happy Decisions Are Made. 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YOUR BEST SOURCE FOR FRAMED PICTURES LAST. - FINE ART PRINTS - POPULAR POSTERS - FINE ART PRINTS AND LAST, - LIMITED EDITIONS AND LAST... ORDER EARLY AND GIVE THE PERFECT GIFT - COMPLETE FRAMING - GIFT CERTIFICATES 4 FILL THOSE BARE WALLS! DO IT YOURSELF & CUSTOM FRAMING FRAME WOODS 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza 842-4900 L FRAME WOODS --- NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 Page 10 Clashes erupt as Greyhound begins service Strikers arrested in confrontations; no one is injured United Press International GREYHOUN ALBANY, N.Y. — An Albany policeman warns a striking Greyhound worker to refrain from causing trouble as an Albany-to-New York bus inches its way out of the terminal. Non-union drivers yesterday drove the first buses to roll since the two-week-old strike began. By United Press International PHOENIX, Ariz. - Scores of striking Greyhound workers, some hurrying eggs and bottles and waving American flags, were arrested yesterday in clashes that erupted at bus stations from coast to coast as the service used by non-union employees. Angry confrontations flared at terminals from San Francisco to New York City most under the glare of the sun but no serious injuries were reported. More than 12,000 strikers shut down the country's largest bus system two weeks ago after being asked to take 9.5 percent wage cuts. Greyhound later began hiring non-union replacements, including drivers, and at least 1,700 union members also quit the walkout rather than lose their jobs. The buses, protected by police and security guards, began taking to the highways at dawn. Most were nearly as they drove past angry pickets. JOHN TEETS, Greyhound chairman, he was "leased" by. Of 346 schedules operating yesterday, he said 90.5 miles ran on time and without incident. "We expect the passenger count to start to rise dramatically over the next 6 months." One bus returned to the San Francisco terminal with its windshield wipers torn off, windshield smashed and splattered with paint. In Boston, at least 50 persons were arrested after tossing eggs and golf balls at buses. Some hurled themselves in front of the wheels. FORTY MEN were arrested for violating a court order limiting the number of pickets at Greyhound's Philadelphia bus terminal. The pickets blocked a bus bound for Washington, D.C., waving an American flag and shouting 'scab' at non-union workers. They restart a bus from the terminal. Officials of Greyhound and the Amalgamated Transit Union meanwhile continued negotiations in Scottsdale, Ariz., but neither side Four demonstrators were arrested in the nation's capital. Nine people were arrested in Detroit and two striking drivers were arrested in Boston, where ABOUT 100 pickets at the Port Authority terminal in New York City urged urgers to boycott Greyhound and ieered at non-union drivers. a police officer was injured by a car trying to crash a picket line. "This isn't Poland," said Joe Sayk of Brooklyn, waving an American flag at passing buses. "They can't break us like they broke Solidarity." In Detroit, Edward Jouzapitais, a Greyhound driver for 15 years, carried clippings of newspaper stories telling about her and the bases on practice runs Wednesday. Six foreign reporters confirm massacre by Salvadoran army By United Press International SAN SALVADOR El Salvador — Six foreign journalists whose boat capsized on a lake north of San Salvador said yesterday that they confirmed rebel radio claims that U.S.trained troops villains who collaborated with lefthands. "We pretty thoroughly proved it," said Tim Ross, a reporter for ABC-TV who said he saw 20 skeletons and seven freshly dug mass graves. Ross and five other foreign journalists were rescued by local fisherman after the boat in which they were sailing to investigate the reported massacre capsized on Lake Suchtitan, 35 miles north of San Salvador Rebel Radio Venceremos claimed the U.S.trained Atalacit battalion massacred 123 civilian collaborators Nov. 4 in the villages of Copapayo, San Nicolas and Escopeta. The army denies the claim. A Nicaraguan anti-Marxist rebel leader said yesterday the morale of the Sandinista Army was collapsing so fast that a U.S. Grenada-style invasion of the Central American country would not be necessary. Emilio Echaverry, chief of staff of the Democratic Nicaraguan Forces, called FDN, gave the remarks in an interview in Honduras one day before 800 U.S. Marines were to land on a Honduran beach as part of joint war games with Honduras that Nicaragua says is a prelude to invasion. The Nicaraguan rebels' military position is improving steadily inside Nicaragua while the Sandinista position is weakening. Echavera said, The FDN had 8,000 fighters inside Nicaragua and plans to increase them to 15,000 in the next few months, he said. "What we visualize for victory is a collapse of the system. Morale is very low," Echavery said. "For all the weapons they have, when there is no food, no conditions for life, they cannot support the war." He said the U.S. led invasion of Grenada Oct. 25 "has already had an effect on morale" inside Nicaragua but a similar action by the United States is not necessary because he forsees a Sandinista collapse soon. S.U.A. Fine Arts Committee presents: The First Annual Crafts Bazaar A perfect opportunity to purchase Christmas gifts. November 29-December 2 Kansas Union Gallery If you are interested in participating in the Bazaar pick up an application from the SUA Office. Attention Campus Community: For all your outdoor needs, GRAN SPORT has equipment for camping, hiking, canoeing, bicycling, backpacking, skiing and many more. We carry the best brands North Face, Sierra Designs, Wilderness Experience, Marmot Min. Works, Mount Snow, Kelpie packs, Gorgy packs, Vaqueous boots, Wenonah Canoes, and Hibiscus biycles, just to name a few. Our gear is the best. Our prices are CHEAP GRAN SPORT WILDNESS OUTFITTERS 77TH & ARKANSAS 843-3238 Just 4 books on the station, 1 book St. of the St. Mick McDonald. Appropriately situated in a pleasant, wadded area. (Where else would you find to expire? Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. 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NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 Page 11 Dispute stymies nuclear arms talks By United Press International GENEVA, Switzerland — American and Soviet negotiators discussed nuclear missile reduction in Europe for more than two hours yesterday to meet next week, but U.S. officials warned the talks could break off. The U.S. negotiating position appeared to have suffered a setback with Italian Prime Minister Bettino Craxi's statement that 162 British and French missiles should be counted in the conflicts between NATO and the East Bloc. France and Britain, two of Italy's NATO partners, insist the 62 missiles are national forces outside NATO control. France, while a NATO member, does not belong to its integrated military command "I UNDERSTAND the position of the governments of London and Paris," Craxi said in an interview with the French newspaper Le Monde. "Nevertheless, I observe that those arms systems are not on the moon ... I consider that they should enter into specific calculations." The Soviets have said the 162 missiles must be counted as part of the NATO arsenal, a position rejected by the United States. "They're continuing," chief U.S. negotiator Paul Nitra said of the talks. Soviet and Americans negotiators met for two hours 15 minutes. A statement said another session would take place Wednesday. As Nitze arrived for talks with Soviet negotiator Yuli Kvitinsky, some 15 demonstrators stood outside the Soviet mission waving banners and shouting "nukes, nyet" and "negotiate." IN PRIVATE, U.S. officials said the talks would probably break down. The Soviets have warned repeatedly they would end negotiations "when the first missile attacks" the first cruise ships were flown to Britain Monday. NATO plans to deploy up to 572 cruise and Pershing 2-missiles in Europe starting next month unless Moscow agrees to reduce its arsenal of 630 intermediate-range missiles, including 230 SS-208 aimed at West Europe. THE SOVIETS have made clear their worry about 108 Pershing 2 missiles scheduled to be deployed in Ukraine, where they could strike Soviet territory. U. negotiators believe the Soviets may end the medium-range weapons talks without fixing a resumption of their nuclear negotiations, would resume negotiation next year. American delegates believe the Soviet Union will make a move after the West German Parliament debate Monday and Tuesday on the planned establishment, German parliamentary approval of the NATO plan is almost certain. Delegations to the parallel Strategic Arms Reduction Talks also met yesterday, for 2½ hours and agreed to meet again next Tuesday. Chief Soviet START negotiator Viktor Karpov said before his talks that "the American delegation is blocking all progress." Cardinal warns arms protesters in Britain By United Press International LONDON — The Roman Catholic primate in England argued against unilateral disarmament yesterday and warned nuclear-protesters not to break the law in their campaign against the delivery of U.S. cruise missiles. Cardinal Basil Hume said in a 1,200 word policy statement that the West ran the risk of "nuclear blackmail" if it disarmed unilaterally as many of Britain's increasingly active anti-nuclear protesters demanded. Hume said that the disarmament must come from both the East and the West. Police Wednesday night arrested 70 demonstrators at Trafalgar Square in central London, bringing to more than 500 the number detained since a giant U. S. transport plane landed at the Greenham Common air base with Britain's first batch of cruise missiles. A SOVIET general accused the United States yesterday of making Europe its "nuclear firing range" and warned of Soviet reprisals against America if new medium-range missiles were deployed in Europe. Col. Gen. Nikolai Tcheverv, a Moscow Defense Ministry spokesman, told reporters that the Soviet Union planned to withdraw from Syria on rocks on medium-range arms reductions if NATO deployed new U.S. missiles. "Europe is giving its future into the hands of the United States and the Pentagon if it accepts these weapons," he said, "and the Pentagon is making Europe its nuclear firing range." Hume said that everyone had a right to be against nuclear missiles, but "I would judge that this does not violate the law and defy the law in the present situation. "We must have due regard for democratic processes and for the institutions of a free society," said the prime minister. "Who is primate for England and Wales." HIS STATEMENT, published in London's Times newspaper, contrasted sharply with the stance of Mgr. Bruce Kent, a Catholic priest who heads Britain's Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Britain is to get 160 of the 572 medium-range missiles NATO plans to start deploying in Europe next month unless a missile reduction agreement with the Soviet Union is reached in Geneva. Hawk JAYHAWK PHARMACY FREE DELIVERY - DISCOUNT PRICES - PATIENT RECORDS We fill K.U. Student Insurance Prescriptions Hours Mon-Fri 9:00-6:00 Sat 9:00-3:00 CLOSED SUNDAYS Have your Dr. call us & we'll deliver your prescription to your do Look For Our Coupon In: Lawrence Book 842-9982 6th & Michigan Put Yourself In This Picture.. PLEASE REMIND ME OF THE BACK OF THE BOX. I WILL BE ATTENTIVE TO ANY INFORMATION YOU MAY NEED. I WILL NOT HAVE ANY QUESTIONS ANSWERED UNTIL A FULL REFERENCE IS GIVEN. If you are interested in a rapidly growing and increasingly dynamic profession, dental hygiene may be the field for you. Service to mankind is the primary purpose of health professions, and the dental hygienist with a bachelor of science degree may accomplish this goal through a variety of challenging and rewarding professional opportunities. Dental hygienists are distinctive members of the dental health team. They, along with dentists, are the only ones licensed to provide direct patient services. The Division of Dental Hygiene is part of the UMKC School of Dentistry located on "Hospital Hill" adjacent to the UMKC Schools of Medicine and Nursing, Truman Medical Center, Children's Mercy Hospital and Western Missouri Mental Health. The integrated educational opportunities are challenging and the rewards The University of Missouri-Kansas City provides an avenue for you to become a licensed dental hygienist. The program prepares you to perform professionally in private dental offices or to hold responsible positions in community health program planning, institutionalized patient care, or research. If you want more information on dental hygiene as a profession and the Bachelor of Science Degree Program in Dental Hygiene at UMKC, please complete the following and return to: for a dental hygienist with a baccalaureate degree are plentiful. Division of Dental Hygiene, School of Dentistry University of Missouri, Kansas City Please send me additional information on dental hygiene at UMKC. 650 B. 25th St, Kansas City, MO 64108-2795 Telephone (812) 364-0474 University of Missouri-Kansas City OOB ECE CPPM ADDRESS NAME: ADDRESS. Street ym rity of Missouri-Kansas City AnEqual Opportunity-Affirmative Action employer Rights commission discusses issuing reports By United Press International WASHINGTON — The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights met yesterday for the first time since Congress saved it from extinction to discuss releasing two reports, including one expected to be critical of the administration. In a half-hour session, the commission discussed issuing the reports on rights enforcement and budgets out of existence by agency goes out of existence on Nov. 29. The Reagan administration objected to release of the reports as part of an emergency appeal to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals against a judge's reinstating two liberal commissioners fired by President Reagan last month. The two fired commissioners, Mary Frances Berry, Washington, and Blanda Ramirez, San Antonio, Texas. Two other commissioners, two members were in Washington and The administration argued that the district court ruling interfered with legislative plans to resurrect the commission in a new form and allowed the commission to take "critical actions" at a time when the membership of the agency was still being challenged in court. three others took part by conference call. ONE REPORT, probably to be released next week, is on civil rights enforcement budgets at six agencies—the Justice Department, the Department of Housing and Urban Renewal, the Energy Department, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Labor Department. An earlier draft of the report was sharply critical of administration staff. In a statement four commissioners said that the report followed the commissioner's own findings. Lawrence's original Christian Nightclub Every Friday & Sat Doors open at 7:00 concerts begin In the Holiday 25th & Iowa Every Friday & Saturday Doors open at 7:00 p.m. concerts begin at 8:00 p.m. In the Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa BECKER CPA Mr. Jerry Noble, C.P.A., will speak on "More About CPA Exams," plus general information on the Becker CPA Review Course. Monday, November 21 at 7 p.m. Kansas Union Pine Room Refreshments will be served. 544 West 23rd Valentino's Valentino's Ristorante 749- 4244 NOW GET THE BEST FOR LESS! Try our new Deep Dish Pizza FREE DELIVERY Ask about our catering Too! COUPON $ 2^{00}_{\text{OFF}} | $ 1^{50}_{\text{OFF}} | $ 1^{00}_{\text{OFF}} Large Pizza Medium Pizza Small Pizza Dining Room • Take Out • Delivery 749-4244 Good in Lawrence, KS only Offer expires One coupon per order Nov. 25, 1983 544 West 23rd Valentino's Restoration YOUR LAWRENCE 7-11'S WOULD LIKE TO INTRODUCE A NEW CONCEPT IN CONVENIENCE STORE BEER SALES: LOW PRICES!! Compare our everyday prices to theirs ITEM 7-11 KWIK- SHOP* 1) COORS 6 PAK. REG. $2.59 $3.09 CARR ROBOTLS. 2) BUD. LITE 6 PAK $2.69 $3.19 CANS OR BOTTLES 3) MICHELOB PREMIUM $2.69 $3.45 6. BAK ROTT! ES 4) MILLER 8 COUNT $2.09 $2.65 4) MILLER 8 COUNT $2.09 $2.65 PONY PAK BOTTLES 6) MEISTER BRAU REG. $1.89 $2.45 6 BAY CANS PLUS YOU CAN SAVE EVEN MORE WITH OUR SPECIAL CASE PRICES! 7-11 #688 25th & IOWA 842-5601 7 ELEVEN FOOD STORES *Prices from 6th and Kasold KWIK-SHOP, in effect 11/8/83 7-11 #889 6th & LAWRENCE 842-5612 determining whether federal civil rights enforcement resources were adequate and properly used. "We believe it is a balanced, thoroughly professional study, conducted according to established research procedures and careful reviews for accuracy," said the statement by Dr. Kurtuckelshaus and Mary Louse Smith. Chairman Chirence Pendleton, Jr., a research team faulted the report in a separate statement. "The body of the report contains little or no empirical data," Pieddon said. "It is filled with the notion of some things that have not been achieved with unlimited resources." THE CASTLE TEA ROOM THE COMMISSION scheduled another meeting Nov. 28 to discuss its final report. phone: 643-1151 Boyds Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy Sell Trade Gold Silver Coins Antique Watches 731 New Hampshire Lakewerne, Kansas 60544 913-842-8773 Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRINDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 Horizon at the Lawrence Opera Hoc Fn. 9-12 p.m. FREE BEER ALL NIGHT s3.50 Ladies s4.50 Men PURPLE PASSIONATE PURINE PRESIDENTE VERBILLE EVERCLEAR ALCOHOL EVERCLEA GIN ALCOHOL Add passion to your punch with Everclear 190 proof grain alcohol. EVERCLEAR T-SHIRT OFFER EVERCLEAN T-SHIRT OFFER 100% cotton with white and black EVERCLEAN logo Only S A 95 Please wear me **Exercise:** Purpose for homomorphic Tables with a point of view. 16. Write a program to add 24 points to each table. Act #1 | Expired Send short to: BIOLOGY EXAMINER Address City/State 71 Signature Mail Id: PayPal Account Number: Email Address: paypal.com/account/ Password: Password of your PayPal account. Note that if you are not registered with PayPal, you will be unable to send payments. If you have registered with PayPal, you will be able to send payments. For communication regarding issues with your account, be sure to contact PayPal. 4 --- University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 NATION AND WORLD Greek Cypriots protest Turkish act By United Press International NICOSIA, Cyprus — Thousands of Greek Cypriots stopped work for an hour yesterday to protest the self-proclaimed Turkish Cyprus state. but Turkey agreed to hold talks or not, as the divided Mediterranean island. In New York, U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar told the Security Council that he would meet President Syriza Kyriannon and then lead a delegation to Cyprus. Cypritol state in northern Cyprus, to "to try to [weather the present crisis]." Congress yesterday condemned the declaration of a separate Turkish Federated State of Cyrus. The Senate passed a resolution by voice vote declaring the United States should "act with urgency and determination to oppose this and any other action" aimed at a permanent division of the island. THE HOUSE passed its own resolution, saying that the attempt to make the Turkish-dominated portion of Cyprus a separate state should not be recognized by the United States as a legitimate act. Civil servants, shopkeepers, factory workers and other salaried employees joined the strike in towns and cities throughout the Greek Cypriot southern sector. Cyprus radio went off the air for the duration of the protest. The situation was calm as 2,500 U. N. troops remained alive along the "green line," the border between the Turkish-controlled northern sector and the southern two-thirds of the island. A U.N. spokesman said no incidents had been reported since Tuesday, when Denkhtak proclaimed the independence of the northern sector of the island occupied by nearly 20,000 from Turkey, 50 miles to the north. IN ANKARA, Foreign Ministry spokesman Nazmi Akai said Turkey would accept a British government proposal for talks with Britain and Greece "to discuss the Cypruslements as guarantor countries." Britain, the former colonial power in Cyprus and co-guardant of a united Cyprus republic with Greece, has been undermined the Turkish Cypriot action. In London, Kyriapian, leader of the Greek Cypriot majority, called for international political and economic sanctions against Turkey if it refused to overthrow the self-proclaimed republic. In Washington, the Senate and the House in separate resolutions called for firm U.S. efforts to oppose the independence move by Turkish Cypriots and to seek political unification of the island. KYPRIANOU, who was to confer with British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher on the crisis, warned at a news conference that the problem could spill over to other parts of the strategic eastern Mediterranean. "I am talking beyond Cyprus, in the area," Kyriapou said. "We don't want bloodshed, we don't want war. But that should not be taken as meaning that we don't insist on quick action to reverse the situation." Kyrippan, who was on his way to New York, stopped in Athens Wednesday to talk with Greek Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou. Denktash, in New York to plead his independence case before the United Nations, said at a news conference that he was prepared to hold talks with the Greek Cypris to create a federated republic. AT A SEPARATE news conference, Cypriot Foreign Minister George Iacovou dismissed the federation idea as an attempt to 'camouflage partition' of the island, divided for 10 of its 23 years as a nation. Most Turkish Cypriots, 23 percent of a population of 637,000, live in the northern third of the island. Other than Turkey and Bangladesh, most countries have withheld recognition of the Turkish Cypriot state. The 10-motion European Economic Community condemned the Turkish Cypriot secession, which was defended by the United States Tuesday. It's Not Just A Hamburger . . Minsky's It's A 1/2 Lb. STEAKBURGER! For lunch this week try Steak . . . THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA We deliver 2228 Iowa 842-1054 Style! It's Not Just A Hamburger . . . Mindy's THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA "ROSES DAY TODAY"" "ROSES DAY TODAY"" Humor and tricks used to resist the urge 19.5 million smokers quit for a day By United Press International Surgeon General C. Everett Koop's report said heart disease caused by cigarette smoking would kill 170,000 Americans this year and could eventually take the lives of 10 percent of the population. The society said a telephone survey of 2,123 households showed 29 percent of the male smokers and 43.7 percent of the female smokers were attempting to complete the 24-hour mass nicotine fast. CARLROLTON, Ga. - A record 19.5 million cigarette smokers – 35.6 percent of the nation's estimated 55 million – joined the seventh Annual Great American Smokeout yesterday, American Cancer Society announced. Some drew on help from friends and relatives. Others resorted to tricks such as snapping a rubber band on the wrist when the yen became overpowering. Some were faced with the peer pressure of "public humiliation" if they gave in before the midnight deadline. Midpoint in the nicotine fast that started midnight Wednesday, the newest U.S. Surgeon General's report on smoking and health came out in Washington. **FEW SMOKEOUT** groups had a send-off to match the one in Carrollton, Ga. where the entire town of 35,000 quit smoking for the required 24 hours. It's Not Just A Hamburger . . . It's A 1/2 Lb. STEAKBURGER! For lunch this week try Steak . . . PIZZA We deliver 2228 Iowa 842-1054 Style! "ROSES DAY TODAY" Yes, we're up to our delighted noses in lovely roses. And that means good news for YOU—or that special person you choose to delight with a dozen. Carry'em away at a very special price. $1600 per lovely dozen Special only for "Roses Day" SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W. 29rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammon" 749-2912 Thinking About Buying A Computer? STOP • Do you really need a computer? • Is there a cheaper way to get started? • Will a computer pay for itself? • How hard are computers to learn? • What is word processing? • What is an electronic spread sheet? A Gallup Poll to be conducted in several weeks will find how many lasted 24 hours this time around, the society said. In last year's Smokeout, 4.5 million smokers hung on for the full period. At a pre-Smokout pep rally and bonfire, cheerleaders from West Georgia College cheered, "Breathe — Breathe — We take it all for granted — but if we keep on smoking — in the ground we will be planted." THOUSANDS ACROSS the nation dialed recorded messages from psychiatrists through a micine hotline set up by the American Psychiatric Association. The 19.5 million figure was half a million more than the figure for last year. consumed about 15 cups of coffee before noon yesterday, but he was determined to adhere to the town's vow not to smoke. "Unless smoking habits of the American population change, perhaps 10 percent of all persons now alive may die prematurely of heart disease attributable to their smoking behavior," the report said. SOUTHERN HILLS Floruf&Gift Mayor Tracy Stallings already had Millions of smokers across the nation pit their willpower against their cigarette habit. KOOP'S REPORT also noted a decline in the number of regular smokers in the U.S. population from 42.8 percent in 1966 to 33 percent in 1980, with the decrease most prevalent among older men. But the average number through 21.7 cigarettes a day in 1980, up slightly from 20 in 1970, the report said. STOP The first smokers were caught just hours before the Smokeout began when two Oklahoma men were arrested, paraded through the town square in a mule cart and ordered to have dinner with the mayor. Thinking About Buying A Computer? STOP FIND OUT FIRST Many people relied on humor to get them through the day. Smokers who lit up in Gainesville, Texas, were warned not to sit and light-hearted public humiliation. Koop said new research has shown that the increased risk of death from heart disease begins to recede almost immediately after a cigarette smoker quits. LIBYB BARKER, organizer of Gainesville's Smokeout activities, said the men were "real good sports . . . and they say they'll try (to quit)." - **RENT** one of our computers for as little as $5.00 per hour. COMPUTERENT has the answers! Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. • Monday thru Saturday 841-0066 - Classes designed with the beginner in mind. 1000 Iowa Street Lawrence, KS 66044 A Division of IMS, Inc Call Us or Stop By Today and Find Out More! - Learn what computers can do for you or your business before you commit to a major purchase. Mayor David Coeman of Concord, N.H. had a lot riding on his attempt to quit smoking. If he made it through the day without smoking, Somersworth Mayor George Bald promised to pull him around city hall in a rickshaw. COMPUTERENT If Coceman smoked, he had to return the favor for Bald at his city hall. Making Computers Affordable NIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY UFS INSTITUTY FILM SERVICE RODGERS and HAMMERSTEIN'S THE SOUND OF MUSIC FRI & SAT, NOVEMBER 18 AND 19 7:00 owns Auditorium (Dyche Hall next to the Union) and 9:45 $1.75 The best has a taste all its own. A taste that's not easy to find. It's something you have to strive for. In everything you do. And when you've done it, when you've found the best in yourself, taste it in the beer you drink. Ask for Budweiser Light. Bring out your best. Budweiser LIGHT © Budweiser Burch, Inc. St Louis, Mo. 1 University Daily Kansan, November 18. 1983 Page 13 SPORTS ALMANAC BASKETBALL NBA Standings Eastern Conference Atlantic Division W L Pct. GB Benton 9 2 818 Philadelphia 9 2 709 New jersey 6 3 667 New York 6 3 500 Washington 6 3 400 Milwaukee 5 3 46 - Detroit 5 3 500 - Baltimore 5 3 100 - Chicago 3 6 333 2 / Indiana 3 7 590 2 / Illinois 5 3 800 - W I. Pct. GB Dallas 6 4 .600 — Utah 5 5 500 1% Denver 5 4 599 1% Ramsey City 4 3 764 2% San Antonio 4 3 764 2% Houston 4 3 764 2% Los Angeles 8 2 800 Portland 8 3 727 %
South Carolina 8 458 2
Golden State 8 5 346 2½
Phoenix 8 4 544 2
Phoenix Beach 8 5 444 Washington 102, Indiana 94 Atlanta 93, Philadelphia 94 Seattle 119, Chicago 116 San Francisco 108 Kansas City 128, San Antonio 128 Los Angeles 127, Cleveland 114 San Diego 141, Milwaukee 126 Oklahoma City 114 Tonight's Games New York at Boston, 8:30 p.m. Utah at Detroit: 8:35 p.m. Milwaukee at Phoenix: 9:35 p.m. San Diego at Orlando (40 p.m.) Toronto's Games Detroit at New York Boston at Philadelphia Utah at Washington Seattle at Atlanta Philadelphia at Antonio Indiana at Chicago Phoenix at Dallas Cleveland at San Diego Milwaukee at Denver Cleveland at Sun Diego SOCCER MISL Standings W L Pct. GB Cleveland 2 0.100 Memphis 3 1 750 — Baltimore 2 6 167 (½) Pittsburgh 2 1 333 — Rockford 2 1 333 — New York 0 4 000 — St. Louis 3 0 1.000 Los Angeles 0 1.000 Phoenix 1 1.500 Kansas City 1 1.500 1/2 Wichita 1 1.500 1/2 Chicago 0 4.000 Memphis 4, Pittsburgh 3 (OT) Tonight's Games Baltimore New York, N.Y. Cleveland at St. Louis 15 :30 Kansas at Los Angeles 9:35 Baltimore at Pittsburgh Cleveland at Wichita Cleveland at Phoenix "We had some very pleasant talks, and it looks like we're 85 percent toward finalizing a contract," Bavasi said. "But we still have some items to check and discuss. As soon as someone brings them in, we make an appropriate announcement." Bavasi said talks will resume again early next week Carew earned $1.1 million last year reported asking for $1.5 million for the job. FOOTBALL Saturday, Dec. 10 INDEPENDENCE BOWL At Shreveport, La. 7 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 11 CALIFORNIA BOWL At Fresno, Calif. 3 p.m. FLORIDA CITRUS BOWL At Florida Fla. 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 22 HALL OF FAME BOWL Postseason Bowl Games Carew was accompanied by his agent, Jerry Simon, in the meeting with Angels' executive vice president Buzzie Bavasi and vice president Mike Port. HALL OF FAME BOWL At Birmingham, Ala., 7 p.m. Friday, Dec. 20. HOLIDAY BOWL At San Diego, Calif., 8 p.m. Friday, Dec. 23 HOLIDAY BOWL At San Diego, Caufl. 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 24 SUN BOWL A1 El Dia, 7 p.m. At El Paso, Texas. 2 p.m. Monday, Dec. 26 Monday, Dec. 28 ALOHA BOWL At Houloula, Hawaii, 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 29 LIBERTY BOWL At Mempelu Teem, 7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 30 GATOR BOWL At Jacksonsville, Fla., 7 p.m. PACHCH BOWL At Atlanta, 3 p.m. Monday, Jan. 2 GATTON BOWL At Dallas, 12:30 p.m. FIESTA BOWL At Tempe, Ariz. 12:30 p.m. ORANGE BOWL Paadaena, Calif. 4 p.m. ORANGE BOWL At Miami, Fla. 4 p.m. SUGAR BOWL At New Orleans, 7 p.m. ANAHEM, Calif. — Seven-time American League batting champion Rod Carew met yesterday with officials of the California Angels and both sides appeared close to agreement on a new contract. Angels interested in renegotiating Carew's contract PREDICTIONS PGA GOLF (Final) MONEY LEADERS 1. Hal Sutton $463, 668. 2. Puzzer Zozy 3. Larry Wadey $395, 604. 4. Puzzer Petele $183, 613. 5. Caldwell $424, 43. 6. Ben Cremanshua $472, 474. 7. Maude $35, 60. 10. Jack Chan $10, 16 Johnie Carriere $281.402. 2 Patti Johne Carriere $281.402. 3 Patti Jan Stephenson $281.402. 4 Paula Whitmore $281.402. 6 Ben Diamond $281.402. 7 Amelia Amy Akeet $281.402. 12 Oky Akemen $281.402. 142 Ilya Okemen By United Press International (Assn. of Tennis Professionals) 1, Ivan Kendall, Czechoslavia, $17,208.7 2, John McEarra $13,103.1 3, Guillermo Vilas, Argentina, $635.75 | | Carothers | Brown | Budig | Cravens | Hartley | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Missouri at Kansas | Missouri 23-19 | | Kansas 23-20 | Kansas 35-28 | Missouri 36-17 | | Oklahoma St. at Iowa State | Oklahoma St. 21-10 | Iowa State 30-14 | Oklahoma St. 24-16 | Oklahoma St. 17-16 | Oklahoma St. 17-14 | | Kansas State at Colorado | Colorado 28-13 | Colorado 28-21 | Colorado 31-19 | Colorado 24-14 | Colorado 26-21 | | Harvard at Yale | Harvard 17-15 | Yale 21-17 | Harvard 21-7 | Harvard 10-9 | Harvard 16-14 | | Baylor at Texas | Texas 30-24 | Texas 24-0 | Texas 27-13 | Texas 24-23 | Texas 20-17 | | SMU at Arkansas | SMU 40-18 | SMU 14-0 | SMU 31-14 | SMU 35-10 | SMU 30-25 | | Ohio State at Michigan | Michigan 19-16 | Michigan 14-13 | Michigan 31-14 | Michigan 10-9 | Michigan 15-13 | | Penn State at Pittsburgh | Pittsburgh 20-14 | Pittsburgh 14-10 | Pittsburgh 20-9 | Pittsburgh 21-20 | Pittsburgh 22-14 | | UCLA at USC | UCLA 29-9 | USC 24-22 | UCLA 17-16 | UCLA 27-24 | UCLA 30-3 | | Northridge at Humboldt St. | Humboldt 54-40 | Humboldt St. 27-26½ | Northridge 11-10 | Northridge 6-5 | Humboldt St. 43-28 | | Season Totals | 71-28-1___710 | 65-36-0___736 | 68-31-1___680 | 59-40-1___590 | 63-36-1___630 | The predictors are James Carothers, associate professor of English; Larry Brown, head basketball coach; Chancellor Gene A. Budig; Jeff Craven's, associate sports editor; and Andrew Hartley, sports editor. Gerry Faust dispels rumors that he will leave Notre Dame By United Press International SOUTH BEND, Ind. — A student's "tongue-in-cheek" comment on a radio show stirred up erroneous reports that Notre Dame football coach Gerry Killen tried to resign on the eve of his first bowl invitation, a sportscaster said yesterday. "I have two years left," said Faust, The widely circulated reports, which Faust emphatically denied, were "99 percent rumor and 1 percent gag," said leaders of WCAU-AM in Philadelphia. who is in the third year of a five-year contract and is expected to receive his first bowl bid tomorrow. "I intend to stay the full two years and longer." Rumors that Faust planned to resign at tonight's pre-Air Force game pep rally on campus began circulating online, which originated on a WCAU talk show. Fredericks said the false reports grew out of an on-the-air, long-distance telephone call to South Bend, when the sports director of the Notre Dame radio station said Faust's resignation was "the not rumor on campus." (1) VARSITY Fri. & Sat. MIDNIGHT Box Office Opens At 11:45 Admission: $4.00 X WARNING Adult Audiences Only ENDLESS LUST Directed by ERICA FOX ENDLESS lust Send a friend some holiday cheer ..with a Kansan Holiday Message Write your message in the coupon below putting one word in each box. No ads over 20 words will be accepted. Then mail the coupon with your payment to Kanas Advertising (or stop by in early) at City Market, Nov. 30 at 5 p.m. Space is limited so you get yours early. A Kansan Holiday Message Is a great way to wish someone a happy holiday season or say goodbye 'till next semester. --- 20 words (or less) — $4.00* *Price includes green color on border and ribbon of box. | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Kansan Advertising 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Lawrence, Ks. 66045 This page will run Dec. 6th. Address Clip and bring to: - All ads must be prepaid. No refunds. one word per box FREE TACOS FRIDAY! SUNDAY: 75¢ Pitchers 1 to 5 and 31 75 Super Schooners All Day. AT THE SANCTUARY Make Your Own Every Friday From 4 to 6. Your Choice Toppings, Including Mild & Ace Balsam! SATURDAY: 15% Pitchers to 10 & 8% And 8% House Drinks from 10:10 Midnight SANCTUARY 1401 W. 2th Michigan; Ft. Florida 843 - 973 03 Recruits With Over 180 Clubs SNA FILMS --- This Weekend, TWO FEATURES! "The movie is a kind of incarnation, a ritual tribute that is intended, like the old real epics, to be passed on to the new generation as a remainder of a legacy," he added. "The movies are larger than life. Probably only a film so unorthodox in style can be embraced by human heroic values. This movie is a marvel." David Aksen, *NINESWEK* "By the end of this majestic entertainment but one技能 like the children in it; you can imagine that it embodies the dream and it awakens refreshed and exhibited." Richard Cohen --a cross country demolition derby The Night of the Shooting Stars A NAILS AND HAWKED MAN, STRING WITH BEETLES, INMIGRATION LANDSCAPE, SCREENPLAY BY NAILS & HAWKED MAN, A FILM BY TOM SABATINI, DIRECTED BY MICHAEL WEBER WITH JOEY KLEBERT, JAMES DEAN, AND THOMAS KLAUS FOR A NAILS AND HAWKED MAN, STRING WITH BEETLES, INMIGRATION LANDSCAPE, SCREENPLAY BY NAILS & HAWKED MAN, A FILM BY TOM SABATINI, DIRECTED BY MICHAEL WEBER WRITTEN BY JOSHUA SMITH, DIRECTED BY DAVID BRENNER PRODUCED BY JOHN ROBERTS, WRITTEN BY JOSHUA SMITH, DIRECTED BY DAVID BRENNER A NAILS AND HAWKED MAN, STRING WITH BEETLES, INMIGRATION LANDSCAPE, SCREENPLAY BY NAILS & HAWKED MAN, A FILM BY TOM SABATINI, DIRECTED BY MICHAEL WEBER EDITED BY JONATHAN STEPHENSON, PRODUCED BY JOHN ROBERTS, WRITTEN BY JOSHUA SMITH, DIRECTED BY DAVID BRENNER A NAILS AND HAWKED MAN, STRING WITH BEETLES, INMIGRATION LANDSCAPE, SCREENPLAY BY NAILS & HAWKED MAN, A FILM BY TOM SABATINI, DIRECTED BY MICHAEL WEBER ARTIST: JOEY KLEBERT, WRITTEN BY JOSHUA SMITH, DIRECTED BY DAVID BRENNER PRODUCED BY JOHN ROBERTS, WRITTEN BY JOSHUA SMITH, DIRECTED BY DAVID BRENNER One of the most acclaimed foreign films in recent years, Fri. & Sat. $ 3,50; p. 7,00; m. 9,30; & w. 10,30 $ 1,50 BLOCK 1 DEATH RACE 2000 --- R RESTRICTED Starring David Carradine, Mary Worcsey and Sylvester Stallone Fri & Sat, MIDNIGHT ONLY $2.00 www.davidcarradine.com Also, Our Sunday Special Film. DONA FLOR AND HER TWO HUSBANDS an enicting Sonia Braga star in this sex comedy as a remained yellow who conjures her first husband back from behind to confront her sexual deprivation. $1.50 2:00 p.m Woodfruff Aud. Get a Lift. Coors SKI Team Get a Lift. Come to the Coors Ski Team Party Watch for Details. Party At The Opera House Saturday, Nov. 19 8 p.m. $5 Cover—Prizes & Beer Featuring Horizon & The Opinions Pyramid Pizza will also be here to sell Pizza Featuring: SUMMIT TOWN Lighten' up the Holidays THE LIGHTHOUSE at VILLAGO DE VENTA MONDAYS: WEDNESDAYS: TUESDAYS: THURSDAYS: Football night- 50c draws 95c well drinks, 75c chili Happy hour all night! LADIES NIGHT-Your first 3 drinks are free from 8-11 p.m. FRIDAYS & LADIES NIGHT- Your first 3 drinks are free from 8-11 p.m. SATURDAYS: $1.00 well drinks all night! SUNDAYS: Happy hour all night! Fun • Food • Games • Dancing OPEN THANKSGIVING (LADIES NIGHT) Metcalf 103 Center-Overland Park, KS APARTMENT LIFE GOT YOU DOWN? Let Naismith Hall Take the "Hassle" Out of Apartment Living. Reserve a Place Now for Spring'84 NAISMITH HALL your UNEQUAL ED HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 19th and NAISMITH DRIVE Page 14 University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1983 WE GIVE BIG DISCOUNTS! the GRAMOPHONE shop A the winner again! [Symbol] The 1982 Hi-Fi Grand Prix Awards AudioVideo INTERNATIONAL MJ-PT GRAND PRUX AWARD AudeVideo In writing, in good handwriting and with proper attribution RECEIVER OF THE YEAR The Gramophone Shop carries all 10 of the top 10 brands in this category! Denon HI-FI GAMMA PRIXTU AWARD Award No. AW16920 The University of New York at St.onyx Computer Science Department Department of Computer Science New York, NY 10017 The fourth year in a row, the Gramophone Shop has swept the awards! This year's awards mark the fourth anniversary of the Hi-Fi Grand Prix Awards from AudioVideo International magazine and every year the overwhelming percentage of most-preferred products are found at the Gramophone Shop. --- TURNTABLE OF THE YEAR The awards salute the year's finest achievements in engineering expertise, innovative technology, fidelity of sound reproduction, reliability, craftsmanship, and cost-performance! The Gramophone Shop carries 9 of the top 10 brands in this category! DRA-400 H.F.J.P. GRAPHOPRIX AWARD 1 In recognition of outstanding contribution to the development of graphic communication. HI-FI GRAND PRIX AM/FM To the number of senior executives in the company, please contact us at: 412-630-7585. Denon DP-52F INTEGRATED AMPLIFIER OF THE YEAR The Gramophone Shop carries all 10 of the top 10 brands in this category! H-5T GRAND PRIX AWARD Yamaha Yamaha The Gramophone Shop carries all 10 of the top 10 brands in this category! O A-96011 HL-Fl1 GRAPHIC ART AWARD No. 1 To the office of the Chief Executive Officer, Glenn Burke, President of the Company, 2050 N. Wacker Drive, Pittsburgh, PA 15269 TUNER OF THE YEAR The Gramophone Shop carries all 10 of the top 10 brands in this category! TAPE DECK OF THE YEAR The Gramophone Shop carries all 10 of the top 10 brands in this category! The Gramophone Shop carries all 10 of the top 10 brands in this category! POWER AMPLIFIER OF THE YEAR ZX-7 HI-FI GRAND PRIX AWARD to facilitate and promote international awareness of high-quality fire protection products FM.TWO L1230 Nakamichi HLF-1 GRAVITRIX AWARD Award No. 84 X. J. K. MCDONALD SPEAKER OF THE YEAR ADS PREAMPLIFIER OF THE YEAR The Gramophone Shop carries all 5 of the top 5 brands in this category! HI-FI GRAND PRIX AWARD Crown M1 HL-1 FI GRAND PRIX AWARD The Institute of Health Sciences London, England www.ihs.org.uk NHL-FI GRAND PRIX AWARD no. of awards given to professional players in hockey and joint awards Kenwood SOUND PROCESSOR OF THE YEAR The Gramophone Shop carries all 5 of the top 5 brands in this category! Yamaha C-70 ONE BRAND SYSTEM SPECIAL AWARD The Gramophone Shop is pleased to carry the B & O line! dbx 3BX Series Two Bang & Olufsen Beocenter 7000S H SERVICE We offer the finest audio products available and we back them with professional service; our technicians use the finest equipment to check set-up and service your stereo equipment. MATTHEW BRYANT BEST PRICE The Gramophone Shop offers any single purchaser every major brand of audio at wholesale pricing. The Gramophone Shop Wholesale Division is unique in that you can purchase at or below so-called "sale" prices at any time and yet receive better service than mail order houses. QUALITY We've expanded our facilities to a total of 12,000 square feet to serve you better. We offer the largest, most comprehensive selection of audio equipment in the midwest. Four "State of the Art" showrooms; three mass manufacturers showrooms; one budget manufacturers area; and wholesale division and mail order facilities. KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE DISCOUNT STEREO shop 25th & IOWA (913) 842-1811 KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS The University Daily KANSAN November 18,1983 Page 15 The University Daily The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Words | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | or 2 Weeks ------- | ----- | ----- | --- | --- 0-15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 16-24 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 21-29 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.85 For every 5 words add: | 25c | 50c | 75c | 1.05 AD DEADLINES per column height * Limited Display advertisements can only be one size * Column width is limited to a maximum of Minimum height is one inch. No reviwers allowed in limited display advertisements except for bat dimensions. Monday 5 p.m. Tuesday 7 p.m. Wednesday 9 p.m. Thursday 10 p.m. Friday 11 p.m. Classified Display $4.20 per column inch POLICIES - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 1 words * Word set on Display count as advertised - working days prior to publication. * Above rates based on consecutive day rentals. - Deadlines same as Display Advertisement -- working days prior to publication. - Classified display ads do not count towards more earned rate discount - Teachers are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. - Requests hosted kept on all count but towards monthly subscriptions of all mail order dress must be submitted --i to The University Daily Kansan • All advertisers will be required to pay in advance > Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS until credit has been established * Teachers are not permitted for a classified or - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising ANNOUNCEMENTS - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement - No liability for errors made by the advertiser - **Hold box ads - please add a $2 service charge** - **Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed** found them can be advertised FREE or charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed on person or simply by calling the Kansas office at 864-4158. Furnished 1 bedroom apartments available for lease on the third floor and downstairs 72% plus electric. Call 841-299-2500. Zenith ZT 11 with built in modern. Special price to buy from us. Call for details. Computer Center, dome 62, Mass Open, Thursday thru Friday. THE DAY AFTER . Come speak on out on movie and nuclear war at Town Meeting, Noon, Monday, 9/25 2nd semester sublease, close to campus, 2 BV, very quiet, new carpet; $1300 mo. or 841-365, evenings room; $1750 mo. or 841-365, evenings room; $430. Call Dan Ward, 841-0352 or 841-3240. room! apt furnished, $220 mo. plus utilities. Bedroom call Calgary Blue Property, 842-3175 or Glenn B4-4235. 4 Bedroom Cpe House I.c. 112 spaces, all baths, appliances, closets. Apartment for rent. 14.1 Tennessee Spaces. 2 bedroom. Walk to KU off street parking. Room! apartment for rent. THE DAY AFTER... Come light candles of hope after movie in Candlelight gathering Camille 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 FOR RENT 1. 3 a bedroom apartments available immediately 2. partial utilities paid Contact Kaw Valley 3. commercial property 1. Bedroom House $25 and utilities, walking 2. Kitchen House $10 and utilities, range and range include Called after $5 money Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. STUDIO 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN 842-1876 or 841-1287 If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. Beautiful 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment, with or without utilities pad. Central air heat, wall to wall carpet, dishwasher, disposal, close to shopping and kitchen. 2 bedrooms. 697 Redhead Lane 11 or call 841 6884 for information. COMPATIBLE HOME. CHEAP. One block from COMFORTABLE HOME, for two months, dep. see 2. f. furnished. Ibrand new studio for sublease, i block from Union, 641-4300. Always keep trying. Duplex 2.1 b iath book for rent. East Lawrence. Jan. J. W KWD duckup 749-2155 Excellent location, fully furnished 1bhr basement apartment, air located at 1861 Mill Valley, calif. FOR BENT. Nearby, available brand new just ask for delivery. but rather ALL UTILITIES PAID) Call 842-96270 For leisure, choose 2 BRL 2 bath candy on golf course. AI Kit: microwave Refills. Netpapers. kids Daisy Shelf. Lok rent. Roommate for 2BR apt. $137.50/mo. ublf. Call Bill. 843. 1694 (8) Likely one bedroom apartment with fireplace; located in old house, has separate entry and it is well decorated. HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APTS. 1 BR Apts. $285 2 BR Apts. $340-$360 3 BR Apts. $415 All abps, have CA, gas heat, refrig, bus route. Leave terms available to May 31, July 31, and Dec. 31. Call between 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon-Fri. 843-754- Meadowbrook tool for sublease available now or December 1, $140 off December rent. Ask for UU20 *** One bedroom apt for rent Great location just minutes from campus. Reasonable Rent. For info. One block from campus 4 bedrooms, share living room, kitchen, 1/2 baths, $12/month plus 1/2 baths. Two blocks away. Room for rent near university and downtown. No pets please. 841-5600 Reserve your studio now for the spring semester while the selection is good. Fully furnished, free cable TV, close to campus. meadowbrook 15th & Crestline 842-4200 NICE 1 BR APT. $30 a month. All utilities paid quiet and good location. Call 841-4201. Nice 1 bedroom apartment for sublease. 2 blocks to the Stripes shopping center. Roommate needed immediately or Jan. 1 for incredible apartment. Have your own room pay half call: C45 802-0494 for Melissa. Cheap, Clean. SUBLEASE. Jan thirte June. Nice Quail Creek quak BIRCH, 11 IH; 1 IH SUNRISE, 2 IH; Sun Thru夜. Thru 6/40/96. SUNROOM, 2 IH; Sun Thru夜. Thru 6/40/96. --inpatient passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, vita, ID, and dj of course fine portraits APARTMENTS West An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievable Slashed Rates! 1 & 2 BR Apts. From $200 featuring - Free shuttle bus to campus 14 times daily * Laundry facilities Gibson guitar 1979 Model RD Artist, w/case in pre-amp, gold prepared. Hardware: mint condition, list price. - Excellent maintenance 842-4444 524 Frontier Rd. SUBLEASE - female roommate needed for second room. free bed, free bath, free free food: bait campus. 1000+ plan 1/2 utility plan. Sublease EXCELENT new studio with bedroom, ceiling fan fan Available December 15th 848-235-6900 Huge moving sale-all items must go November 17, and 18 and 9-10 p.m. 4:00 a.m. 19 Ponecane Drive. NAVY leather bootes size 7. Hardly worn, gift that didn't fit. $5, Call 843-2821 after 6. Utilities pair, 2 bedroom apartment, close to KU. Sublease soon to August, $250, ma-84, 919-792. Save money, rent a 1 or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets. Book 842-483. Sublease 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment on KU campus. Refundable for upgrades. Central air, heat, dishwasher. come to see at 708 Beddub Lane 11 to call 841-6868 for information. Sublease 1 bedroom apartment furnished, furnished. FOR SALE MEADOWBROWN spacious 2 bedroom apartment (150 sq ft) in a quiet, quiet, quiet blocks from campus. Buit 842-4290 COMPLETELY FURNISHED Studio, 2 or 3bedroom complex. Great location close to campus. Midwood, 1421, 1812, 1705. Limit your has from AT&T & break up. Purchase your own phone! Quantity works on all long distance HOLIDAY plans. Cassette players, stereo radios, 841-7600 4:00-10:00 M.F. Don't outreach and get hit with a blackout. 1980 MUSTANG V, 6. headed, new $1,500 best offer, 1800 miles, alien leasing, 844,653 (10) 107 McCadden (McCadden) 1967 FAIRLANE CONVERTIBLE classic. 489 good. must sell $1,250 Call Jerry. Rockstar edition. 1976 Honda Civic d= runs good, must sell $1600 or best OPEF 4 speed. 864-618 10800 TK Converse: Excellent shape, air mass, grip. 12000 KK Converse: Excellent shape, air Adds computer terminal model 17120 for use with Honeywell. Call 842-4455. DONT RENT NEXT SEMESTER - Own your mobile home? 2 BDMH, all app stay! Call 687-7287 DYNAMO FooTable. Table excellent condition, X DUMMY Best offer This week. Must sell. We #84-8384 after 5. Chevy Impala, blue, 4 door. 78. Call 845-2021. In excellent shape. Auction - consignment every Friday night, 7 o'p.m on Friday, 8 o'p.m at the Bridgefront, 2 mile north of Lafayette on 24 to 59 10am. IPv4 Yamaha 125 - good body - engine needs work, $75 - negotiable - Call 843-425-265 Formal dress. Size 7/8. Light 7-inch Sq. Suite. Queen Anne seeded neckline. Like new. 804-1623. New car touch screen supporter. Lumino color display. Two interior colors. No noise. No bad paint. The best $15,000 car you'll find! Nineteenth century German violin. Works good 1.500. Special as a collector items. Call 842-5233 Omega photographen enlarger, 4 x 5 with auto focus and lens. Excellent condition. $400. evening Police tickets for Nov. 24 Call 841-9689 Set OF PA. Band speakers. Can handle 200 clean watts easily. Call 864-1154 RAMJET Gau saser, power booster systems Gau saser, power booster systems, acceleration, quicker start, less knock and ping. U.S. Government tested and approved, guaranteed for life at $4185, $4394, anytime. Save up to 20% on purchase. Secroto S, excellent condition, very spartan. AC phone 612-430-9105, michels.mcguire.del.respo. Gilbert 869-802 Speakers, large beautiful walnut cabinets, I way transmission line. Excellent sound Call Lisa 714-645-7800 Stereo-television video. All name brands. Lowest cost. Total Sound Distributors, 913-849-6000. www.sounddistributors.com Xerox 620 Memory writer, five pages storage warranty, very nice machine, $1,650. Evenings. Used furniture. Shoemaker's, across Kaw River Bridge. 2 miles north of Lawrence 841-886-8067 Why Pay Here? $2850 buys 2 BR mobile home store, vwprofiler, air_furniture. 841-886-8067 1948 CHRYSLER, RESTORED $2900 LANDSCAPE 114/6975768 1968 Karmann-Ghia Excellent engine, needs body work. 841-6315. LOST AND FOUND CURED CARPET dormroom sizes. $30, shags $35, chocolate mice. Great deals, clean staff. 842-113 **DREAMS** Found 3 kittens, in good health They are living outside in the cold and need help. Please call Ladies gold watch w/ Ioman numerals. Please call Shirley. B42 3392 Black lost leather wallet around 11' Mass. or Keep the money but need I the wallet Jacq. 96-1400 Melissa Lain. Creamed coconut wood putti. Three diamond cuts. Summerfruit. Great sentiment value. Reward Summerfruit. Great sentiment value. Reward Late Orange-red Ice backpack with 2 Larg Lost. Men's 3-fold brown leather wallet and blue zip pouch from Orcad Apegs, and Bailey Pike Kelly set (14). HELP WANTED ABILIBES ARE HIRING NOW: Flight Attendance Team: 100-500 Positions YOU PRESS YOUR INTERVIEWS: 916-721-1821 College English teachers. Possible openings beginning January 1984 for part time teaching in required courses at the University of Kansas or English language courses. English teacher, or experience teaching English at the University of Kansas. Deadline for receipt of position is May 20th. Description available from Haskell Spring. English Department, the University of Kansas. Lawrence, An Equial Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer. Could you use an extra $40 a month? Start your own business, use the investment in unlimited loans or invest in real estate. GOT SKIP FEVER* LONGING FOR THE BEACH! take off WITH SUA AN One of our 3 terrific spring break trips! PT LAUERDAHLER, PADRE ISLAND 844-387-4971. For more information call 844-387-4971 FRESHIMEN SCHOARSHIPS AVAILABLE It's too late to email in NAVAL ROTC. Call 861-3416. Part-time work. Outside jobs businesspersons and digital repair technicians. Tom 841-6027. Alphatex Robot Skillets Liquor Store needs one or two clerks for day and night help Contact Mr. Saundell at 1906 Mac Student hourly needed per week. Call for Placement (812) 410-110. 5 p.m. Law School Location 804. 447-373 Summer John, National Park Co. 21 Parks, 5000 Mountain View, National Park Co. 3860 Mission Mtn Co. 624 and Ave. 1 Wakefield, MT Sales reps to call on sorcery and fraternity houses. Sales experience: Contact Haflout 05 Max. Email: haflout@hfla.com MISCELLANEOUS The Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures has an opening for a Graduate Teaching Assistant. To be admitted, candidates must: 1. conduct钻研 sessions and assist instructor of Elementary and Third year Japanese; Hours: 20 and 30 hours per semester; spring semester salary: $1,400; Minimum Req. in education KU Graduate Student status; 2. B average in work KU 3. native fluency or equivalent; Preferred language teaching experience: 2. student of EALC teaching and or linguistics; 2. Japanese language teaching experience; 3. student of EALC teaching and or linguistics; 3. Japanese language teaching experience; 4. student of EALC teaching and or linguistics PERSONAL SWM graduate student seeks pleasant girl for companionship, dinner out and in, movies, sports. I can be a fun partner or together. I'm really looking for someone to care for me. I will provide the single scene and laineto, not P-0. Box 1425. Uused furniture bought and sold. Pick-up available Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont. Derek: Have a great Thanksgiving, I miss you, but I am thinking you. Thanks for always being so kind and thoughtful. BUSINESS PERS A strong keg outlet, Retinental Retail Laundry Closed one. Kegs - Ice Cold Beers - north of Montana. Cold Kegs - Ice Cold Beers - south of Montana. Bennett's Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine. B46 Illinois. B42-0722 Happy Thanksgiving Tammy C., Love Gary. Telegram: I want to call the Fishing party. Dec 3. Stop Your Phone. Stop Will call the Fishing party. Stop Will call to confirm Your WHB End. COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES): early detection and referral to specialty care centers; confidentiality assures Kansas City area. Call 314-265-7010. Curtis Martin Showstoppers' 600 movies; choose a feature film or two; and pre-recorded movies. **1447 W. 242 St., B42 8721** Just received, shipment of new Formal Wear including, new pastel cumbersands and bow ties, formal wear scarves, black satin red plaid and white cotton dresses. Shipment of black formal wear vests. Most sizes of new wing tip tuxes are still in stock. Shipment of small and medium sized dresses and white used dinner jackets, black tuxedos cutouts, tux shirts, and tux pants. Come see our sharp formal wear jewelry, sturdy and cuffs knit, a good Christmas gift for the holidays. Don't lose sight of Friday Night. Catch HORIZON Don't lose sight of Friday Night. Catch HORIZON of the Lawrence Opera House. $12.95 p.m. Friday Alpha Leasing we rent Cars-Trucks-Vans as low as 33 45 ROCK THERAPY 1607 westport k.c. mo. rd. It isn't too early to order Christmas portraits for Pierce Brown's *The Pennsylvanian* 841-4003 *Pierce Brown's *The Pennsylvanian* 841-4003 Ladies laundry Night Tues. 7-12 Ladies laundry laundry let 10 cent draws. Suds-in Durs. 749-3123 Las Vegas, register now! For 2nd round of $115,000 Old Midwakeau Pool Tournament at Suds-in Durs. $9.95 per day (plus mileage & ins.) Located at Smith Motors 1231 E. 23rd 842-8187 Pick up & Delivery avail. Lawrence the winters launfortress, Suds-Dads "Husks" the boring out of laundry." MF, 10 m in the sun. Make this holiday season special with Mary Kay! Call Diane 841-4734 SVA VAL BEAVER CREEK call TOLL FREE SVA VAL BEAVER CREEK for DEPOSIT FOR DISCOUNT RATES on LODGING fees and other offers. Bring a gift of chocolates when you visit this Thanksgiving Chocolate Unlimited - Southern Hills Center 749-1100 Say it on a shirt, custom silkscreen printing. T-shirts. http://www.silkstores.com/Shirts-720-111 Special for students. Haircuts $7 and perms $25 Charm, ask for Deenja Denen 843-380 ** and cage. Stirrart by Swell 749-1188. Speak to Swell at (310) 256-7161. December 15 at Swell Studio. Call for details. Lawrence is the belle laudronite, Surds in Duds. He takes the bored out of laundry, *M. F.* 10 a.m. on Tuesday. In her own words: Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sense to use in your classroom. Study the book, Town Crier, 31 for exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' by Andrew L. Town Crier. The Bookmark, and Oread Bookshelf. BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing confidential counseling 814-821 No more missing out on your favorite comics! Have them reserved—at a discount at A Friday Alternative Sherry and conversation 4:00 until 5:30 P.M. Canterbury House 1116 Louisiana North Kearney "Introduction to Islam" A Friday Alternative SERVICES OFFERED KWALITY COMICS Artists with the word *word* Typing ed. graphics. WORD ARTISTS. Elen B412-2172 England M A, 5 yrs university teaching, will winter in New York for teaching large papers large or small. Reasonable fees. 842-1915 Firma Cantabria Solidaridad y Amizade Equipo de Investigación For the best prices and service anywhere M-F: 11-7 Sat: 10-5 **Foreign Students:** Personal, efficient editing of your dissertation; thesis m.s. technical report; research proposal. HOME PET CARE = responsible care for your pets in their home. Reasonable $432, 842, 642, 567, 642, 547 STADIUM BARRER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts, downstairs all haircuts. $0.00 No appointment **Rquetball** tennis, squash racquet stringing specializing in new graphite/hybrid stringing. Tennis Racquets for sale also. Head, Prince e. new/used 843 565 days. 749-572 evenings. 843-7239 107 W. 7th 24-hour typing. Fast, accurate. Resumes. Letters. sorting. Spelling. Want to do resume writing. #870615. Danger signs* Headache, backache, arm pain, arm pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, call the Chiropractic Health Center and Doctor M.E. for an assessment of spinal insurance accepted. No charge for consultation GARDENBLE AT the Lift at Salem, Nov. 19, 813/573 GARDENBLE AT the Lift at Salem, Nov. 19, 813/573 BABY BIRD, Offend your friends. BE THE ONLY BABY BIRD, Offend your friends. BE THE ONLY reports, themes. I want to do trope 842-0121 for the character of Rufus in WBDRS processing 841-0060, quality typing, WBDRS PROCESSING 841-0060. TYPING ENCORE IN-BETWEEN ACTS AUDITIONS THRIST STORES - Appliances, furniture, clothing, knuckles, bedding - Always good bargain harmful items quality typing. WORD PROCESSING 841 1060 AAA TYPING. Helping a good! typestr 8421 1924 after t typing GIRLS. Our new ladies wool fashion has just arrived! The Eat Shop 732 Massachusetts, 843-6011 Individual acts: Bring a prepared song. Dress to dance or costume provided by the company. Do not ask for information more than for information call 864-4556. Individual Group Acts: All auditions are open. Participants must be Burgeon Union. Auditions Dec, 3. Register to audition in BOCO Office, 11 K Iowa State AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs Call Judy. 842-7945 after 6 p.m. Profession - grad student; Turn your knowledge, skills into a profitable seminar. Highly successful seminar entrepreneur will help you FREE Korion K. Gordon 6000, Seminars. Box 3124, Topeka, KS 60004 Planned Parenthood, reproductive health services including contraceptive counseling and supplies, pregnancy testing, abortion counseling and services, I & D & G & N. Care: T 756-2278 in Kansas City for the Absolutely Letter Perfect Typing, Editing, Bookkeeping Prot. professional, high quality content, easy to follow Accurate, affordable typing Ask about speed overnight service (under 25 pages) Call Mary Wholeheart Sound Rental, P.A., Guitar, and Bass amps. 841-6495 Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School Secretary. Call Nancy. 841-1219 IBM select (pca) Call 842-8686 before 10 p.m. CLEAN AND FAST TYPING Assign (pca) Call 842-8686 Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, term lines, and tables. Call 412-8744 or 843-2801, 11:30 a.m. to pick up a copy of the book. Call TIP TOP TYPING 1203 iowa Experimented Call TIP TOP TYPING 615 Memorywriting Royal Correspondence SEECON 9000187 Call TIP TOP TYPING 615 Memorywriting Royal Elvis could wagle. Shakespeare could write - my teacher,叫八ale404 after 5 a.m. and weekends. Experienced typist,types; dissertations, term papers; music; HM Correcting Electric Bart. Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations. IBM Correcting Select Call System. Experimented typist will type class dissertation, theses, SCIENCE, TEXTS, MISCELLANEOUS. GOOD WORK TYPEWING NO. PROCESSING NON-CLASSIFIED TEXTS. Is a Fact. Fast. Affordable. Clean Tying. Word Processing. You can afford it! 843-8208 Experienced typed Term papers, these all use Times New Roman font. My final report will be printed with Pica, and will correct spelling 1043-8534, Mrs. TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English for foreign students, or Americans. 841-6249 Selective III. Pica or PICA 843/837 ONTIME, PAPERS TYPEED, EAST & EFFICIENT 3 services at 1 location typing, editing and graphics WORD ARTISTS, call Eilen, 841-2722 photography print publication photo transcription from case studies graphics art airbrush charts plus graphs plus photography Plus pick & delivery *Alb. Arts Pk* 749-3201 Library Research - Typing - Editing - Will help students with research writing WANTED 2 Doormats to share 2 BR apt. for spring semester $118.66 plus ecom. 841-646. Nan or Lisa **roommates wanted to share 2 bedroom apt** **for $149 per month, all adults** included. **Mail B3-822-5907** 2 females to share 2 bedroom apartment for spring semester. Call for details 842-7661. Male roommate wanted $102 monthly and /1 utilities. On bus route Call 841-9816. 4th roommate for great house new stadium next room. 2nd roommate (serious partner) 1.4 floor room. 2nd floor: 29,062 Roommate roommate to noiseless Mendocino Apartment for spring semester. On bus route to New York City. Female roommate: nice 3 bedroom. After December 14, $4000 plus month rent, 19th and Massachusetts Male roommate wanted. Jan 1. Excelent deal 2-level townhouse, design award, partially furnished $160 ms. $40 utilities. Five min. walk from campus. Suitable for college, dress. See扎442829. Grad student preferced Male roommate needed for extremely new ap Sundance: 1 bedroom with separate sleepage area sleeping lift. Prefer non smoking, upper class grad student $135; plus 1.2 ceil. 824-906 Female roommate wanted $150 plus 1/2 unit/hour Roommate wanted Roommate Park 25 app. Available roommate call +51-33-44-89 Male roommate, non smoking, semi-serious to share 3 br. house with 2 others, over 21年 四块宿舍 from campus, spacious, $150/month plus 1.5 low rent. Roommates will be required during college collections. Avail now thru Jan. 1. Male roommate will share 2 bedroom, 2 bath apt, with 2 other roommates $125.00 per month plus base rent. Male roommate to hire more two lice apt with present roommate. Ap is on bus route, near Wellington Road. Must be fluent in English and low $1050 plus 2 unititions. Needly furnished. Needed roommates as possible. Call Paula or Robert (866) 434-1234 LUHV2 Mature male roommate wanted startling spring shower in beautiful landscaping near the laundry, greenery nearby. $55 plus 1.2 electric Rommites needed to share (computable) funds $12/month Lease December 31 August 8 of option available. Roommate request to share 2 blem at ap. 760 1/2 Bahama Island floor of upper 32-story house from Community Mercantile. For details, please call Hallway Plaza Office at 842 7226 from 8:00 to 9:00 a.m. Roommate wanted for extra large 2 bedroom apartment in a quiet neighborhood. Bank all of you easily walking distance. Ekta includes utilities and insurance. No fees. Call 1-800-759-3101. Roommate to sublease private room in a 2.3 BTH close to campus, cheap utilities. Free until dead. Roommate wanted immediately, 2 BR apartment, $161.60/mo plus 1/3 utilities, 3 blocks from unit 1805-95-100 Roommate for huge house apartment. Private room. energy efficient $150/month. Availability until closing. Roommate wanted to share a furnished 3-bedroom house located at 900 Ernest. Call 843-8948. Roommate to share two 2 bedroom apt in a house. Walk in closet, free laundry, free water. See map. Roommate needed to share space, fully furnished apt Close to campus, on bus route 151 $15 a month租 Roommate needed to share space, fully furnished apt Close to campus, on bus route 151 $15 a month租 WOMEN'S SELF-DEFENSE A noninvasive course effectiveness will be stressed (only 12 $) a month. Effectiveness will be assessed by the instructor. KANSAS CLAS People read t classifieds homes, jr ing ser can classit. anything no. Just mail in Classified Heading Write Ad Here: ___ with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall Lawrence, KS 66045. Use the rates below to figure costs and watch the results. Now you've got selling power! to ___ Name: ___ Address: ___ Phone: ___ Date to Run: ___ 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or Two Weeks 15 weeks or fewer $2.60 $1.15 $1.75 $6.75 Additional weeks 23e 50e 27e 1.05 Classified Display: 1 col x 1 inch—$4.20 1. ... SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 18, 1983 Page 16 The close of a record-setting career Victories few in Kallmeyer's final season By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor The Kansas offense, led by quarterback Frank Seurer and receiver Bobby Johnson, has become the best passing team in KU history this season. Tomorrow's game will be the final appearance for Seurer and 18 other seniors in a hayawk wk uniform. Offensive starters E.J. Jones, Kerwin Bell, Remwick Atkins, Reggie Smith, K.C Brown and Paul Fairchild all will become part of the history of KU football. Darren Green dislocated a finger yesterday and will not be able to play against Missouri Another senior who has left his mark in the KU record book is kicker Bruce Kallmeyer. The senior from Shawnee Mission owns virtually every KU kicking mark and also holds a handful of Big Eight records. This season alone, Kalmeyer has set the Big Eight field goal record, the KU scoring mark for both a season and a game. He recorded a record for points in a game by a kicker. Kallmeyer has had an excellent season, but he said winning could have been the key. "ITS TOUGHER to concentrate when you're not winning," Kallmeyer said. "Two years ago, when we went 8 and 3 went to a bowl game, it was fun to practice and to play. When you lose. You had to work a little harder and it's tough." Kallmeyer said the most frustrating game of the year was the season-opening loss to Northern Illinois, a team that KU was supposed to beat. "The first game is so important," he said. "I guess we've had quite a few frustrating games, but the first one is the one you probably remember the most." After the Jayhawks lost to Northern Illinois and tied Texas Christian, Kallmerhey set the NCAA record by scoring a first Winich StateUtah U17 history. following week when KU traveled to Southern California and upset the Troians. 27-23. "I'll definitely remember that game." Kallmeier said. "I can't see "No one expected us to win, and we had a few guys from California so we were all fired up," Kalmeyer said. "It wins biggest wins since we've been up here." Although he has won many games with late field goals, Kaliiner never made it. COLUMBIA 'It's tougher to concentrate when you're not winning. Two years ago, when we went 8-3 and went to a bowl game, it was fun to practice and to play. When you lose, you have to work a little harder and it's tough.' —Bruce Kallmeyer, KU place kicker ever having the opportunity to score that many points in a game again. I don't consider that a great game because the offense was moving the ball and I kicked five fairly short field goals." THE GAME KALLMEYER remembers most from this season came the years ago as his biggest kick. KU won the game 17-16. "There were, I think, seven seconds left and I had to kick a 38-yarder into the wind." Kallmyer said. "It was hard, but it was wet. That had to be my toughest kick. "The Nebraska game two years ago when I kicked five field goals and we were taking them three quarters ago. Of the numerous records that are now Kallmeyer's, such as the KU record for consecutive extra points, the KU scoring record or the Big Eight field goal record, he does not see any of these as his finest accomplishment. "T'D HAVE TO SAY the career percentage record is the one I'm most proud of. "More important is having a score or scoring consistency is what kicksters try to achieve." his career field goal average is 769. Kallimer is currently majoring in engineering and has two semesters of professional football may be in his future. "I've been contacted by a few teams and some agents, but now I just have to sit around and wait. "he said. "If I make it, great. If I don't, I just have to concentrate on school. No matter what, I'm going to finish my degree." Even though the Jayhawks are 3-4-1 and going no where, Kallmyer said the team was still focused. "The last game is so important because that's the one you remember." Kallmeier said. "I'd like to end up on a good note. Missouri is a big rivalry, and we've played close games the last three years." Tomorrow, No. 3 will trot out on the field for the last time and take with him one of the three prizes. "It's been a great experience," he said. "I would have liked to have a few more wins. I'll be thinking about the game and not it being my last one. "Four years have gone by kind of fast. Four years is a long time, but it doesn't take as much to do it." KU (3-6-1) vs. MU (7-3) Date: Saturday, Nov. 19 Time: 1:30 p.m. Place: Kansas Memorial Stadium Estimated crowd: 35.000 Weather forecast: Chance of rain, high near 50 Line: Missouri by 171a Line: Missouri by $ 17^{1 / 2} $ Probable Starters Kansas Missouri Offense 89 Bobby Johnson (6-1, 180) SE 84 Andy Hill (5-9, 184) 81 Byster Byrd (6-3, 218) TE 82 Greg Krahl (6-4, 234) 72 Renwick Atkins (6-5, 265) LT 73 Scott Shockley (6-5, 270) 69 Paul Fairchild (6-4, 257) LG 68 Tom Hornot (6-5, 255) 68 Bennie Simecka (6-4, 265) C 53 Phil Greenfield (6-1, 250) 75 K. Brown (6-6, 260) RG 67 Bernard Laster (6-1, 267) 76 Reggie Smith (6-4, 260) RT 76 Conrad Goode (6-6, 167) 8 Sandy Moe Gee (6-3, 210) FL 87 Craig White (6-2, 196) 10 Frank Seurer (6-2, 194) QB 10 Marlon Adler (6-0, 183) 4 Kevin Brown (5-9, 185) TB 48 Cameron Riley (6-1, 191) 39 E.J. Jones (6-0, 210) FB 33 Enc Drain (6-2, 207) Defense 5 Travis Hardy (6-1, 190) LE 95 Taft Sales (6-2, 220) 37 Carky Alexander (6-3, 220)LT 99 Michael Scott (6-5, 270) 90 Eldridge Avery (6-3, 220)LG/NG 56 Steve Leshe (6-2, 255) 74 Larry Convery (6-3, 240)RG/RT 66 Robert Curry (6-3, 264) 48 Mike Arbanas (6-4, 220)RT/RE 96 Bobby Bell (6-3, 214) 51 Len Gant (6-1, 210) RE/WL 36 Tracey Murdoch (6-0, 222) 55 Darnell Williams (6-3, 210) LLB/SLB 34 Jay Wilson (6-3, 215) 60 Willie Pless (6-0, 210)RLF/BS 26 Reco Hawkins (6-2, 190) 33 Jeff Colter (5-11, 175) LC 20 Terry Matchakii (6-2, 190) 13 Elis Vatterton (5-10, 190) RC 21 Jeff Hooper (6-0, 172) 18 Wayne Ziegler (6-2, 190) S/SS 4 Jerome Caver (5-10, 191) Specialists P 16 Julius Keller (6-0, 183) PK 71 KU's All-Time Record vs. Missouri; 39-43-9 Six players selected for ITCA meet KU tennis team to compete with national talent By JOHN UNREIN Sports Writer SIX KU tennis players will compete today and tomorrow in the ITCA Intercollegiate Region 5 Championships at Oklahoma City. Scott Perelman, KU tennis coach, said he was notified yesterday that Mike Wolf, Michael Center, Charles Stearns, Jim Syrett, Scott Alexander and Richard Blond were accepted this weekend. The team will pete in the indoor meet sanctioned by the Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches Association. "The exciting part of this tournament is that it will be a great chance for the KU players and our program to get some more national exposure." Perfection, has also been a great motivator for our guys to stay on top of their games." The ITCA championship meet, strictly a men's individual tournament, is a regional qualifier for next February's national intercollegiate tournament at Princeton, N.J. Team scores will not be kept, Perelman said. THE JAYHAWKS last competed this fall in an 0ct. 15 dual win over Kansas State. For the past month, Perelman said, the team has practiced nights at the Alvamar Country Club's indoor courts, in addition to a daily conditioning program of weight training and running. "We've tried to approach this time of the year as a time of individual improvement." Perelman said. "We're still working on improving our team and stronger for this tournament." "This weekend is exciting for me as a coach, because for the first time since I've been here we've got a chance to play together at singles and the doubles competitions." Perealm, in his second year at KU, said the Jayhawks had never competed in the ITM championship meet before a recent loss to the Giants this time KU, has a chance to be noticed. Each KU player will compete in both singles and doubles, Perelman said. The doubles teams will be Wolf and Syrett, and Alexander and Blond. "WOLF HAS GOT to be one of the favorites in singles," Pereira said. "And again in doubles, Wolf and Center have to be among the favorites." KANSAS 22 Fate strikes KU football team again; Green sidelined with jammed finger Wide receiver Darren Green . . . will miss the final game in his career Rv.JEFF CRAVENS Pereman said that 64 singles players and 32 doubles teams from Region 5 were invited to the single elimination tournament. Predictions More Sports On Page 13 Associate Sports Editor Just when coach Mike Gottfried and the Kansas Jayhawks thought that they had every bad break happen to them in the season, fate again raised its ugly heat. Yesterday, in a routine passing drill, KU wide receiver Darren Green dislocated a finger on his right hand and will be unable to play in the Jayhawks final home game tomorrow afternoon against Missouri. Kickoff for the homecoming game is set for 1:30 p.m. After Green's finger was jammed by the wrist, he was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. "It's like plugging a dykes," Gottfried said. "Every time you think you have it stopped, you spring another leak. It's tough for a teacher to miss his last game, but that's not hard on us. For us. Like I said when he was hurt before, its like losing two people." GREEN, ONE of many seniors, will watch the rest of his class play their final game in a Jayhawk uniform against the Tigers. If Kerwin Bell starts at tailback, eight of the 11 offensive starters will be seniors. Starters Frank Seurer, E.J. Jones, Bell, Bobby Johnson, Renwick Atkins, Reggie Smith, Paul Fairchild, K.C. Brown, Bruce Kullmeier and reserves Craig Kirschbaum and Jeff Sneed will all be trying to upset the bowl-bound Tigers in front of the expected home- coming crowd of 35,000. Defensively, Marky and Cary Alex ander, Mike Arbanas, Jeff Colter, Elvis Patterson, Eddie Simmons and Ken Powers are the seniors. "I think the seniors have given a good effort," Gottried said. "They know they at the foundation and they are willing to build but they know it will take time." Missouri, 7-3 and headed for the Holiday Bowl in San Diego, will be led by junior quarterback Marlon Adler. Adler, from Winfield, made the Tigers a walk-on two years ago and is now ranked sixth on the MU total offense "HE DOES BOTH things well," Gottfried said. "He can run and pass equally well. We need to contain him and keep him from getting a hot hand." Adler's favorite target is senior "We have to stop them," Gottfried said. "That's the big thing we have to do to have any chance of beating them." receiver Craig White from Lawrence. White is MU'S second all-time receiver and needs five catches to pass James Wilder for the top spot. THE TIGER DEFENSE shut down Oklahoma two weeks ago and features Taft Sales, who was voted Big Eight Defensive Player of the Week for his 56th win. He read coach Warren Powers said he was concerned about the KU offense. Last season, Missouri edged KU 16-10 in Columbia. The year before, the Jayhaws whipped the Tigers 19-11 in Lawrence to elimb a bid to the Hall of Fame Bowl. This season there are no injuries on the horizon for the Jayhaws. "Our game with Kansas is always a tough battle." Powers said. "I'm sure you will." "Kansas is the second best offensive team in the conference." Powers said. They've got a great passing game and on defense, they are attackers in the country in Frank Seurer. 3 Royals sentenced to federal prison By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Kan. — A federal监理 ignored please for leniency yesterday and ordered former batting champ Willie Wilson and two Kansas City Royals teammates to serve three games in the blind bars for attempting to buy cocaine. U. S. Magistrate J. Milton Sullivant said he hoped the stiff sentence — the maximum prison sentence for the misdemeanor offense — would serve as a "deterrent to young people" in the use of drugs. First baseman Willie Aikens and former Royals outfielder Jerry Martin, who along with Wilson pleaded guilty last month to attempting to buy a minute amount of cocaine, declined to discuss the sentences. AN ANGRY WILSON left the courtroom hand-in-hand with his wife and told reporters in a brief aside laced with that "they made an example of me." Aiken $5,000 and Martin $2,500. He suspended the final nine months of the one-year sentence, although all three were convicted for an additional two years. Wilson and Martin were ordered to surrender to the authorities at the prison on Dec. 5. Aiken was given until Jan. 3 to allow him to complete the remaining five weeks of his drug rehabilitation program in Baltimore. "THE COURT regards this as a serious offense," Sullivan said of the misdemeanor charge. "Frankly, if there wasn't any market, there would be a sales ban. An appropriated sentence would be tough to young people for the use of drugs." The magistrate recommended the three ballplayers be sent to the minimum-security federal prison in Fort Worth, Texas, which has a 19-year prison rehabilitation program, and suggested they become a part of that program. Sullivant also fined Wilson and alleged cocaine distribution in several Kangas City suburbs. Former Cy Young Award winner Vida Blue was also swept up in that investigation and pleaded guilty last month to a misdemeanor charge of possession. The former Royals pitcher, who faces sentencing Dec. 15, later testified that he and his co-op indicted 12 people on charges of conspiracy to distribute cocaine. None of the Royals were named in that Oct. 18 indictment, however. Akens, 29, who slammed four home runs in a loss effort in the 1980 World Series, has been on the trading block for some time and team sources have indicated it would be unlikely that he would be a part of the 1984 Royals. BLUE WAS DROPPED from the team and placed on wavers at mid-season after he posted a 0-5 record. The team later declined to pick up the contract because of action during the 1983 season because of an injured wrist. But Wilson, 28, who was the American League batting champion in 1982, apologized to the team and fans last Friday and announced his commitment to help establish a community drug rehabilitation program. The announcement was made with Ewing Kauffman, the Royals' owner, who said Wilson was the only player so far to come to him for help. Wilson pledged $50,000 and "unlimited hours" to the effort. WILSON'S EXPECTED release from prison March 5 would allow him to attend spring training in time for the Rovals' opening game April 2. However, baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn reiterated yesterday that he could assess additional penalties on the four, including — but not limited to — suspension from baseball for an indeterminate period. Kuhn said he would make a ruling Dec. 15 on the four along with Doggers'pitcher Steve Howe, another baseball player linked to drug use. The Royals have declined to say what actions, if any, would be taken against them. 3 KU teams to compete in weekend tournaments By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer The Jayhawks, under head coach Marian Washington, will end their play Three KU athletic teams will be competing for first place titles in联赛。 The opening game of the tournament, featuring the University of North Carolina and Northwestern State in Natchitoches. La. begins at 6 o'm. The women's basketball team begins its season at 8 tonight in Allen Field House against Oklahoma City University. Sound of the Dial Lady Jayhawk Classic. in the tournament at either 6 or 8 p.m. tomorrow, depending on whether or not it's raining. Washington said earlier this week that the tournament marked the beginning of the season for all the teams competing, so each would have to wait and see how the others reacted to game situations. THE WOMEN'S volleyball team will compete in the Big Eight Volleyball Championships. The University of Kansas' first round opponent is the University of Oklahoma. The Jayhawks are at 7 p.m. today in Ames, Iowa. Head coach Bob Lockwood said yesterday, that despite an 10-5 Bid Eight record, his team was optimistic going into the tournament. "They have a good attitude toward traveling to Ames and also toward the Big Eight tournament," he said, and good movement in practice all week. He said the team had concentrated on line shots, line hits and its blocking attack this week in practice and hoped it would improve its quickness against the tail Oakland team. Junior Sherri Erickson, who had been moved into the starting rotation for KU during past couple of weeks, was doubtful for the tournament because of a severely sprained left ankle, Lockwood said. Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, Texas A & M and Texas Tech also will battle for the relays title. Head coach Gary Kempf said all the teams in the relays would be competitive and have fast times. A women team and women will swim in each event. Kempf said he was only taking nine men and eight women to the all-away meet because of the strong competition (KU) also will have one diver in the meet. THE MEN'S AND WOMEN's swimming teams will compete in the Arkansas Razorback Relays tomorrow in Favettville, Ark. The Kings made 20 of 22 shots from the floor in the third period as they outscoed San Antonio 46-26 to take a 103-93 lead into the final period. Larry Drew scored 11 of his 21 points in the third quarter, and Steve Johnson scored 10 of his 20 points in the period. San Antonio hit 18 of 20 free throws but only 4 of 15 field goal attempts in the third quarter. By United Press International SAN ANTONIO, Texas — Eddie Johnson scored 25 points last night, including two free throws with six seconds to, lift the Kansas City Kings to a 129-128 victory over the San Antonio Spurs. George Gervin scored 24 of his 35 points in the second half, including 13 in the final period. Mike Mitchell, who gave San Antonio its only lead of the final period at 128-127 with 16 seconds left, added 24 points for the Spurs. Billy Knight scored 20 points for the Kings. Gene Banks, the NBA's leading field goal percentage shooter, scored 17 for San Antonio. The game was marked by 78 personal fouls, including 4 against the Kings — a record for a San Antonio opponent. KANSAS CITY (129) E. Johnson h 18-9-12, 19-2-5, Oberding b 2-6-2, 5-6-4 6-5-3, 0-1-3, Dew 3-12, 9-2-3, Klien k 11-8, 4-3-7, 2- 4-3, 11-7, 1-3-2, Dew 3-12, 9-2-3, Klien k 11-8, 4-3-7, 3-11, 1-3-2, 1-3-2, Sutte b 2-2-3, 2-3-4, Buse b 1-4- 2, Leder o 0-0-3, 7-48, 8-3-8, 49-129 1 SAN ANTONIO (128) Banks 6-5 k 6-5 17, Michael 0-2 12-6 24, Glmore 4-1 11-13, 17, 38 - 4, 6-6 - 4, 9-6 - 12-11 11-11, 35 Roberts 2-6, 24 - Paasion 0-1 11-2, 16 - MciNamain 2-3 3-7, 8 Roberts 2-6, 24 - Paasion 0-1 11-2, 16 - MciNamain 2-3 3-7, 0, Williams 2-3, 1 Totals 4-11 45-5 27-8 4 New Jersey 26 31 46 28-128 San Antonio 28 39 26 35-128 Three-point goal-Moore Fouled out E. Johnson, S. Johnson, Gilmore. Total fouls-Kansas City 43. San Antonio 35. Rebounds-Kansas City 35 (S. Johnson) 7. San Antonio 61. Rebounds-Kansas City 60 (S. Antonio) 32 (Moresle). AUT. 9-12. The University Daily Missile talks Soviets give mixed signals Inside, p. 2 KANSAN MILD Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas Vol. 94, No. 66 (USPS 650-640) Girl in a blue shirt running. High, 64. Low, 43. Details on p. 2. Monday morning, November 21, 1983 Costume party coalition won election in re-tally candidate Walker says By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter Dennis "Boog" Highbierger and Carla Vogel of the Costume Party Coalition unofficially have won last week's student body election, another presidential candidate said yesterday. But the official winners of the election won't be known until the Elections Review Board meets in Philadelphia. Scott Swenson and Dennis Stricktian or the Priority Coalition originally were named the winners of the election, the closest in Student Senate history. But Julie Menge, chairman of the elections board, said yesterday that errors had been made in the tallying. MOMENTUM PRESIDENTIAL candidate Kevin Walker said that an election official told him that the board re-failed the ballots Friday and determined that Costume Party won the election by one vote. Walker declined to identify the official. "It is such a simple procedure to count the beat. Walker said "I don't see how they could wake." Menze agreed that election officials had re-tallied the votes, but she declined to say which coalition was found to be the winner. Jim Clark, chairman of the Student Senate Elections Committee, and Chris Edmonds, secretary of the student committee, also declined to name the winner. "After the discrepancies were found, there was a new winner," Menzel said, "but we haven't officially named a new winner because there is no difference. We came up with the same discrepancy twice." disrepair twice. THE ELECTION BOARD will count the ballots again at 9:30 this morning in the Centennial Room in the Union. Menge said that each presidential candidate would be allowed to have a representative in the room. Priority originally had 1,049 votes, Momentum See SENATE, p. 5, col. 1 Local viewers express shock disbelief at 'The Day After' By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter Lawrence has survived The Day After. After months of media attention and controversy, KU students and Lawrence residents last night viewed the ABC TV movie in living rooms. The film's focus on a teenage television lounges in University residence halls. Reaction to the film, which depicted the aftermath of nuclear war, varied greatly. More than 200 people watched the film on a large screen in 3140 Wescoe. The silence in the room was broken only when television commercials provided comic relief for the audience. But tension peaked when the nuclear missiles were launched. Most people kept their eyes glued to the screen, while others began crying and covered their faces in disbelief. No commercials were shown throughout the remainder of the film. "It was very depressing," said Lisa Couch, a resident of Overland Park. "It had a negative effect on me because it is something I wouldn't want to face. You may ask." "It was positive in that it made me more aware of my surroundings and I appreciate things more," she said. "I think we should be something like this and not just close our eyes to it." Carol Enos, 2023 Quality Creek Drive, said that she thought the chance of recovering from a "I was not shocked by it," she said. "I thought See related stories p. 7 the devastation would be much worse. There would not be as many survivors. The only ones left would be so ill from radiation sickness. Who would want to live through it?" TOM WAECHTER, MEXICO, Mo., senor, said that he had seen the film before but that he watched the film in Wescot to see the reactions of other people. Jim McCrossen/KANSAN "I saw the film before and I didn't care to see it again," he said. Waechter, who was an extra in the film, said that he was shocked and dazed after seeing it the first time. MUNICIPALISTA DE SANT JOAN Scott Turner, Shawnee Mission sophomore, is subdued by a KU police detective, left, in a windbreaker, and a Lawrence police officer. Turner and Mike McCann. Shawnee Mission freshman, at right, were among the thousands who flooded the Police fail to stop downing of posts field Saturday after the Jayhawks defeated Missouri, 37-27. Both goal posts were torn down by fans, though police officers briefly attempted to prevent the posts from being damaged. By JEEF TAYLOR Assistant Campus Editor announced over the public address system. Still the fans kept coming, climbing over the wall. Spectators on Campanile Hill began drifting toward the football field in the darkness of Saturday's rain-cold afternoon. Thousands of people had been abandoned as many beaded for the addictive "Ladies and gentlemen, there are still 44 seconds remaining in the game." Howard Hill When time expired, thousands of fans rushed onto the field to celebrate KU's 37-27 victory. The goal posts in both end zones were torn down, and scattered fracases broke out when police briefly attempted to prevent the spectators from damaging the goals. WHILE POLICE TRIED to restrain the crowd, a few used bily clubs and Mace. Police officials said yesterday that officers had been instructed to defend themselves if necessary. The officers were also instructed to use only marginal force, police said. Because the police wanted to avoid injuries and excessive force, officials said, they did not attempt to stop the crowd after it became too large to control. Minutes after the first fans reached the south See GOAL POST. n. 5. col. 3 Susan Murphy, Olathe junior, and Richie Roberts, Olathe sophomore, share a quiet moment at the candlelight vigil sponsored by Let Lawrence Live, an anti-nuclear group. More than 1,000 people attended the rally last night following the presentation of ABC-TV's "The Day After." MICHAEL AND JOHN BROWNING Vigil reveals nuclear concerns By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter More than 1,000 people gathered around an American flag flapping from a pole on Campanile Hill last night silently waiting for a candlelight vigil in support of nuclear disarmament to begin. A thin layer of smoke floated up from the glowing candles as students, faculty and Lawrence residents listened to people express concern after watching a movie "The Day After," which portrayed the catastrophe of nuclear war. "It looked like the bombs were being launched from Jayhawk towers," said Before the ceremony, people talked softly to their friends, and the silence was broken only by the laughter of four small children who raced down the hill. Volunteers from Let Lawrence Live filtered through the crowd, passing out petitions. "I put my head in my pillow and closed my ears," said a boy of about 10. "I went to school with him." SOME OF THE comments showed concern about what people had seen in the room. "It made me sick to my stomach," said one vounge man. "I can't buy a Commodore computer," shouted another man, referring to the boycott of advertisers proposed by Rev. Jerry Falwell. "Now 75 million people will think of men and women and sex when they think of Kansas." He was me with a curt "Don't joke about it, Don." from one of his friends. KATE TORREY. A representative from Let Lawrence Live, the group that sponsored the vigil, told the crowd at about 9:45 p.m., "It is with the spirit of somber realism that we gather here tonight." About 30 members of the Young Americans for Freedom gathered on one side of the crowd, carrying signs that proclaimed "Peace Through Strength" and shouting comments at the speakers. Mayor David Longhurst quoted from this is Lawrence. Kansas. Randall Boudy. "We saw our community destroyed," he said. "We saw civilization annihilated. Our nightmares came true. I think we have to be a preview of comer attractions." "The movie didn't have a happy end. I couldn't see a future for my son." LONGHURST URGED THE crowd to join him in asking the leaders of the United States to do something to prevent nuclear war. "What is it that two countries whose fates are so intertwined never communi- cate?" Actually, it's "what is it that two countries whose fates are so intertwined never communi-cate?" The comma after "communi-cate" is a typo. It should be "communicate." The Young Americans for Freedom sang "God Bless America" and chanted "Peace Through Strength" as they burned replicas of the US flag. Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology, compared the farm wife in the film, who made the beds as the bombs were falling, with the average American. "We are so busy with everyday things, and we fill our minds with daily activity," he said. "We push nuclear war out of our minds. "The difference is that we live in the day before. We have other options." HE URGED THE audience to write their congressmen and tell them that their reelection depends on a vote for disarmament. John Linscheid, pastor of the Lawrence Mennonite Fellowship, said that the movie had shown the country that peace through strength would not work. "He who lives by the sword, dies by the sword," he said. "I know that what man has done is to be a sword." The YAF shouted obscenities against the Soviets as the pastor spoke of Stalin's atrocities. The crowd slowly joined in a chorus of "America." For almost an hour after the ceremony, people gathered in small groups on the hillside to discuss the film, and to talk with television reporters about their reactions to the horror of nuclear war. Kansan editor, business manager are chosen for the spring semester Doug Cunningham, Pipestone, Minn, senior, and Dwan Wanaka, Leawood senior, were selected Friday by the Kansan Board to be editor and business manager of the University Daily Kansan for the spring semester. The Kansan Board is the governing body of the Kansas. Cunningham now is managing editor of the Kansan and Wanamaker is retail sales manager. Applications for news and advertising staff positions will be available after 10 a.m. today in 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall, the Student Senate office in 105 B of the Kansas Union and in the office of student organizations and activities in room 403 of the Union. The applications should be turned in to 200 Stauffer Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Nov. 29. KU life came to a standstill when JFK was killed By BRUCE F. HONOMICHI Staff Reporter Most people were eating lunch about noon on the Friday before Thanksgiving 20 years ago. There was no reason to weep. It was going to be a happy, busy weekend. Football fans were planning to attend the KU-Missouri game, a sellout and the final game of the season, on Saturday afternoon. The die-hards and the coaches were preoccupied with the thought that the flu would keep Gale Sayers out of the Jayhawks' starting backfield. MONDAY MORNING Students who didn't have a ticket to the game might have paid a dollar at the Varsity Theater to see "McClintock." a western comedy starring John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara. They might have listened to jazz musician Miles Davis perform Sunday in the Kansas Union. A cold rain fell at lunchtime — as if to underscore tragedy, though no one anticipated it. But the rain was only passing through lavae, and the game-day forecast called for sunshine. On cue, the sun shone on Saturday. But Memorial Stadium was empty. The teams stayed home. The game was postponed for a week, and a few members of the crowds of every theater in Lawrence were dark. A RIFLE SHOT in a city 550 miles away had ended the life of a young president. On a weekend in which there should have been no reason for sorrow and grieving, when there should have been football and movies and television, the next day there was instead an assassination of a president See KENNEDY, p. 5, col.1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 21. $19B^{a}$ NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Greyhound workers voting on latest contract proposal PHOENIX, Ariz. — Striking union members around the country yesterday began voting on the latest Greyhound contract offer, which would cut wages about $40 a week, while in New Orleans police and the FBI investigated a gunfire attack on a bus. About 115 Amalgamated Transit Union members in Cheyenne, Wyo., voted yesterday, but Jim Hayes, president of ATU Local 1126 based in Omaha, Neb., said the outcome would not be revealed until Nov. 28. About 12,700 union members were involved in the 20-day-old strike. Votes were to be relayed back to Phoenix, the headquarters of Grevound, by Nov. 29. None of the 14 people aboard the bus going from New Orleans to Mobile, Ala., was injured in the shooting Saturday night, but one bullet struck a car. China objects to Taiwan resolution PEKING — China said yesterday that a proposed Senate resolution on Taiwan had "seriously harmed" Sino-U.S. relations and warned that they might get worse unless the Reagan administration stopped passage of the measure. "It is an unscrupulous breach of the norms of international relations and is an act of hegemonism pure and simple," said a commentary in Penguin Press. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee passed a resolution Tuesday affirming Taiwan's right to determine its own future, peacefully and "free of coercion" by Peking. The resolution is pending in the full Senate. Filipinos stage pro-American rally ANGELES, Philippines — About 15,000 Filipinos, some carrying signs saying "Thank you President Reagan" and led by the mother of slain opposition leader Benigno Aquino, marched yesterday in a rare show of support for the United States. Bar girls and other residents tossed contetti as the parade wounded through Angeles, a town of bars and brothels near Clark Air Base, a key U.S. air base. Most recent demonstrations in the Philippines have been vehemently anti-American, charging the United States with propping up the regime of President Ferdinand Marcos. The protesters gathered in a sports center for a rally where speakers urged Marcos to revise the country's 1935 U.S. style constitution. New travel rules issued for Soviets WASHINGTON — The government has eased some limits on Soviet diplomats traveling in the United States, but also declared several important cities off limits for the first time, the State Department said yesterday. The new travel rules, delivered in a confidential note last Wednesday, were issued after a lengthy State Department study of the Kremlin's 1978 revision of its restrictions on travel in the Soviet Union by U.S. diplomats, department spokeswoman Sondra McCarthy said. The New York Times reported that the "off-limits" list now included the high-technology "Silicon Valley of California as well as Houston, Dallas." Cities previously off limits but now open to traveling Soviets include Topeka and Savannah, Ga., it said. Freighter breaks apart in heavy seas NEWPORT, Ore. — A Panamanian-registered freighter rammed a jetty and broke apart in heavy seas at the mouth of Yaquina Bay, spewing fuel that could threaten a nearby bird sanctuary, the Coast Guard said yesterday. The 350-foot ship Blue Magpie split nearly in half after running aground Saturday night at the mouth of the bay on the north-central Oregon coast, said Cmdr. Clinton W. Carter. No serious injuries were reported, Carter said. The skipper of the vessel did not heed warnings to steer clear of the bay, a Coast Guard officer said. Carter said more than 600 gallons had spilled but that the total could reach 94,000 gallons. Chicago leader denies role in deals CHICAGO — The head of the powerful Cook County Democratic organization yesterday denied reports that he was involved in any "deal/making" with the Republican Party to help President Reagan win re-election. Chicago Alderman Edward Vrdolyk, chairman of the Cook County Democratic Central Committee, said charges that he made a deal with the Republican Party to back Democratic presidential hopeful Walter Obama in order to make a Reagan victory easier "bizarre and unbelievable." Chicago Sun-Times and Chicago Tribune news reports quoted sources who claimed Droylak engineered the local party's early endorsement of Mondale after aides to the president said Reagan would prefer to face Mondale in the 1984 election. Women land plane after pilot dies LUKE AIR FORCE BASE, Ariz. — A 78-year-old woman with no flying experience and a 59-year-old woman who had taken a six-hour "pinch-hitter" course safely landed a small plane yesterday after the pilot died. The two women and a third woman passenger, who were not identified, were unhurt and the Cherokee PA 180 single engine helicopter was retrieved. Civil Air Patrol mission commander Dalton Smith said the 78-year-old woman in the right seat and a 59-year-old woman in a rear seat worked in tandem. Smith said one woman in the right seat was alone while the woman in the back seat operated the radio and throttle. WEATHER FACTS SEATTLE 30.00 FREEZING MINNEAPOLIS COLD CHICAGO BOSTON NEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO DENVER WARM ATLANTA LOS ANGELES HIGHEST TEMPERATURES DALLAS NEW ORLEANS MIAMI LEGEND (N-H) RAIN SNOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST 17: 7 PM EST 11-21-63 Today, snow is expected in the Northern and Central Plains, with showers expected over the Central Pacific Coast. Locally, today will be partly cloudy and mild with a high in the low to mid-60s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a low from 40 to 45. Tomorrow will be cloudy with a chance for showers. The high will be in the 50s. Soviets clarify arms negotiation position BONN, West Germany — Soviet leader Yuri Andropov has told West Germany that Moscow will not drop its insistence on counting French and British nuclear missiles at the Geneva conference government spokesman said yesterday. By United Press International The clarification came on the eve of a debate in the Bundestag, the lower house of Parliament, on whether to proceed with the distribution of 96 cruise and 108 Pershing-2 missiles in Germany. Approval was expected. THE NOTE CONTRADICTED Kohl's remarks Thursday that the Soviets might be ready to make concessions at Geneva by dropping the French and taking them from the talks — considered one of the main stumbling blocks to agreement. Andropoy to West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl Friday with the message on the medium-range weapons. Spokesman Peter Boenisch said the Soviet ambassador to Bonn, Vladimir Kuznetsov, said that the U.S. had Diplomatic sources in Bonn viewed the contradictory statements on the missile talks as a sign of a power struggle in the Kremlin stirred by his reported prolonged illness. He has not been seen in public for three months. The offer was raised by the chief Soviet negotiator at Geneva, Yuh Kuo, and on 23 September in Moscow. The offer reportedly called for a Soviet ceiling of 120 SS-20 missiles in Europe in return for a U.S. withdrawal agreement. The war tense rose and Pershing 3 missiles in western Europe. SOVIET DEFENSE MINISTER Dustin Ustinyov firmly denied the offer in the Soviet newspaper Pravda today. The United States had rejected the proposal, but the aid proposal would retain the aid monopoly in medium-range missiles. his U.S. counterpart, Paul Nitzle, last weekend, officials had said. Some 200 anti-missiles demonstrators staged a torchlight vigil outside the Kohl's offices late yesterday to protest the planned missile distribution. Police said there were no arrests. More than 3,000 anti-missiles protesters planned to "beseige" Parliament with a sit-down protest during the parliamentary debate. THE OPPOSITION SOCIAL Democrats and anti-nuclear Greens overwhelmingly voted against the distribution at party conventions during the weekend. The Social Democrats defeated them in 1979 when they were in power in Bonn. Meanwhile, British Defense Minister Michael Heseltine, interviewed via satellite on ABC's "This Week with David Brinkley," said opposition to distribution of U.S. nuclear missiles in Europe came only from minority political parties and most Europeans approved the basing. Soviets will not abandon arms talks, officials say By United Press International WASHINGTON — Two top Reagan administration officials said yesterday they did not think the Soviet Union would permanently walk out of arms control talks because of American involvement of new nuclear missiles in Europe. "If they do walk out, and I certainly think there will be a recess . . . they will be back," Assistant Defense Secretary Richard Perle said. "They will be back because the world expects the United States and the Soviet Union to bend every effort to achieve an agreement," he said. Perle, interviewed on ABC's "This Week with Drinkley," also said that the United States "will remain at those talks as long as it takes." IN A SEPARATE interview, Kenneth Adelman, head of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, said, "No. I do not," when asked if he thought the Soviets would break off any of the other nuclear arms talks currently being held. The United States has begun the five year process of deploying 572 nuclear-armed cruise and Pershing 2 missiles in Europe, U.S. officials and its European allies maintain the added weapons are necessary to counter the threat of Soviet missiles aimed at Western Europe. DELMAN ALSO DISMISSED Soviet threats to counter the NATO action, perhaps by deploying new missiles of its own. 'I think this is the kind of threat the Soviet Union makes on an ordinary basis," Adelman said. "I would expect the kind of modernization program the Soviets have had in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union for the last 30 years will continue. "What will be different on their part is that new efforts on their part that were planned long ago will be called the natural modernization, just part of the natural modernization. Both Adelman and Perle said the Saviets were responsible for the failure FOR GEAR THAT STYMIES COLD WEATHER CHOOSE FROM LAWRENCE'S MOST DIVERSE SELECTION OF HIGH QUALITY FUNCTIONAL OUTDOOR CLOTHING BY: PATAGONA TRAILWISE DUV BACK NORTHFACE SUMMIT WOOLRICH THE CLASSIC LOGAN BOOZARD DOWN PARCA BY TRAILWISE SUNFLOWER 804 MAES... THE CO. --for DORMROOMERS: The Carpet Man Cometh Today! Fun • Food • Games • Dancing OPEN THANKSGIVING (LADIES NIGHT) Metcalf 103 Center-Overland Park, KS Lighten up the Holidays at THE LIGHTHOUSE Schedule (parking lots): Shane Enterprises brings carpets for your delight. And he charges only $30 to $35 (10% discount for cash). Catch the "old grey pickup" at your dorm today. Warm'YeFeet! 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The motion requested that the verdict of second-degree murder be set aside because the evidence had only established that Seurer had been killed during a sudden quarrel or in the heat of passion, which is classified as voluntary manslaughter, not second-degree murder. The motion also said that Douglas County District Court Associate Judge Mike Elwell, who presided over the trial, was incorrect when he allowed a confession Bell made to police when he was arrested on Aug. 17 to be admitted into evidence. The motions will be ruled upon at 1:30 p.m. Dec. 6 in Douglas County District Court. Student injured after fall from roof An 18-year-old KU student was in critical condition last night after he fell from the roof of a fraternity house and struck his head. Rappoport said that about 4 a.m. yesterday Findley and two other men were on the roof of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity house, 1645 Tennessee St., looking into a window. While they were running along the cell wall about 10 feet and landed on a concrete porch, Rappoport said. Tim Findley, Overland Park freshman, underwent about four hours of surgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center to relieve pressure on his brain, Paul Rappoport, president of Sigma Phi Epsilon, said last night. Findley was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and then to the Med Center, where he underwent surgery about 8 a.m., he said. Parents lack medical fund records KANSAS CITY, Mo. — An area couple has no accounting records for $14,000 spent from a $90,000 special charity fund for their daughter who suffers from a rare and often fatal skin disease. Douglas and Carolyn Sue Henderson said they had no records accounting for $14,000, but the receipts they have show some of the donated money was used to remodel their home and to purchase imported tableware, the Kansas City Star reported yesterday. The Kansas City couple appealed to the public because their 11-year-old daughter, Tami Hendrickson, has a disease called dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa, a rare and sometimes fatal disease that makes skin so sensitive it blisters or tears at the slightest touch. Officials still searching for man, 72 TOPEKA - Police and Osage County Sheriff's Department deputies were unable to find an elderly diabetic man who has been missing since last week, officials said yesterday. Irvin Wagner,72, was last seen Tuesday leaving a Topeka restaurant. His car was discovered by hunters near Lake Pomona Thursday. It was stuck in mud. Wagner is black, 5 foot 6 and weighs 135 pounds. Police said he suffered memory lapses and sometimes confused. Five homecoming floats win awards This year's homecoming theme, "Under The Big Top," inspired many KU students to create colorful floats for the homecoming parade. KU students to create colorful floats for the homecoming parade. A group of five faculty members, alumni and local merchants judged the floats. First place for floats with movable parts was awarded to Alpha KappaLambda fraternity and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority for their work on the FLOAT project. Second place for floats with movable parts was awarded to Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and Gamma Phi Beta sorority for their float of a merry-go-round. First place for floats with non-movable parts went to Phi Delta Theta fraternity and Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Second place for floats with non-movable parts went to Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity and Sigma Kappa sorority for their float of a float that met the criteria. The judges gave a special award for spirit and theme excellence to Joseph R. Pearson and Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin residence halls for their float. ON THE RECORD TWO KU STUDENTS were arrested early yesterday morning and was booked on a charge of criminal damage to property, KU police said. The two had allegedly damaged a study table in Oliver Hall. One of the students was released at 10:30 a.m. yesterday on $1,500 bond from the university to appear in Douglas County District Court at 4 p.m. on Nov. 28. The other student was still in jail yesterday morning on $1,500 bond. ABOUT $300 IN cash was stolen between 12:30 and 12:45 p.m. Saturday from Morris Sports, 1016 Massachusetts St., police said. The money was taken from a cash drawer during business hours. The police have no suspects. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansas news desk at (913) 648-4810. The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. KU profs could gain from merit-pay plan By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter Stanley Kopik, the executive director, spoke at a meeting of the Regents Fiscal Affairs Committee, at the Regents会议 at Fort Hays State University. The committee reviewed the recommendations from the budget to Gov. John Carlin and to Kansas legislature for the next fiscal year. HAYS — The University of Kansas could receive $644,000 next fiscal year from a proposed $2 million fund to reward superior classroom teaching at Board of Regents schools, the Regents executive director said Friday. THE SPECIAL FUND would be used by the schools as an additional source of merit pay, and would be distributed throughout the schools based on evaluations by students, other faculty and administration, Koplik said. The University would receive $64,400 in the next fiscal year, Koplik will pay the $2 million was divided among the schools based on credit-hour enrollment. The $2 million fund proposed by Carlin is in addition to his recommendation that a pool of money equal to 5 percent of the system-wide unclassified salary base be available for merit raises. The University of Kansas and the Regents, however, had requested a merit-pay fund of 7 percent for unclassified employees, said Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs. The 7 percent figure would make $3.54 million available for unclassified funds. The budget director's recommendation for KU, at 5 percent, is $2.53 million. AFTER INCLUING THE money the University would receive from the special $2 million fund if it was distributed based on credit-hour enrollment. KU would have $3.17 million available for unclassified merit raises less than the $3.54 million it requested. The Regents and the University requested a 5 percent merit-pay fund for classified employees, Nitcher said. The budget division controls classified salaries statewide, and it had recommended a 5 percent figure. Therefore, he said, the University and the Regents could not realistically ask for higher classified merit raises, even though they wanted to. KU Chancellor Gene A. Budig said, "A 7 percent adjustment is a reason one — it deserves to be supported. I believe that we view it as realistic. A 5 percent adjustment for faculty and classified staff is not enough." HE SAID THE 7 percent raises were needed to draw and retain good faculty, many of whom were attracted by higher salaries in the private sector. "The University of Kansas is on the verge of losing some of our most able faculty and classified staff," Budd said. "Many of these individuals would view the 7 percent figure as being realistic." Koplik said he was optimistic that the Legislature would be receptive to the 7 percent proposal because of the recent improvement in education and thus improving the quality of education. Archie Dykes, a Topena regent and former KU cancellation, said the Regents would have to decide whether to continue to support its original 7 percent request or to work with what Carlin has proposed. Several of the regents also approved of the fund for superior classroom teaching. Good teachers stay interested in work, prof says By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter A good teacher has to be interested in people and in the subject he teaches, Kenneth E. Rose, this year's winner of the National Teacher Training Award, said yesterday. Rose, professor of mechanical engineering, received the award during Saturday's homecoming luncheon in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Teaching the same subject for almost 40 years can be exciting if the teacher still wants to learn what is new in the field, he said. "There is always some change," he said. "I learn to when I am teaching." AND STUDENTS' ATTITUDES play an important role in how well a teacher can do his job and how much he is able to enjoy teaching, he said. Students who study the class often show interesting and rewarding. Most of his students fall into this category. Students don't often directly express their appreciation to a teacher for his efforts, but seeing years of teaching fruitful is rewarding enough, he said. "You can tell by their attitude," he said. "The greatest satisfaction is, after they graduate, to see them succeed." And he enjoyed having students keep in touch with him after they graduated. "They come to see me and I hear from them at Christmas," he said. HE TAUGHT AT the National University of Engineering and at the University of Lima in Peru, and at the University of Zulia in Maracau, Venezuela, before coming to the University of Kansas in 1947. Teaching has been part of Rose's life for 40 years, he said. Before coming to KU, his profession took him to South America. When he first came to KU, Rose was chairman of the department of mining and metallurgical engineering. Now he teaches courses in the science of materials, corrosion, metallic materials and manufacturing processes. The Chancellor's Club, which chooses the recipients of the Career Teaching Award, was founded in 1977 and has 500 faculty members. A minimum of $1,000 to KU each year. Rose is the third professor to receive the $5,000 award J. Eldon Fields, professor emeritus of political science, received the award in 1981 Barbara Craig, professor of French and Italian, received the award in 1982. PIZZA Shoppe and pub PIZZA EATEN WITH 12 FOODERS WE DELIVER! PIZZA Shoppe and pub PIZZA EATEN WITH YE FINDERS Monday Night Football Special (coupon) $8.75 plus tax 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center Triple topping King Size Pizza and 32 oz. Pepsi DELIVERED! Extra Mozzarella FREE By Mentioning This Ad! 21 Triple King S and 32 H 842-0600 KNOWLEDGE EDUCATION COMMODORE SERVICE MORROW DESIGNS VECTOR 900 II KAYPOR OKGATA 24x Louisaula Mall Shopping Center 841-0048 CELEBRATE TURKEY DAYS WITH BERT $4.00 cover All the beer you can drink Computerark Four Fun Nights of Dancing & Drinking! 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Student subscribes are $3 a semester through the student activity and POSTMATERIAL.SEND. Mail requests to: USPS-60-640. MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Author DON KNOX Campus Editor ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager DAVE WANAMAKER Retail Sales Manager MARK MEARS National Sales PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser Doubletalk President Reagan's messages to the American people, often noted for their evasiveness and self-contradiction, were recently recognized as some of the best doubletalk in the nation. The Committee on Public Doublespeak, which has given an annual Doublespeak Award to public figures since 1974, recently paid its tribute for irony to Reagan for his dubbing of the deadly MX missile as the "Peacekeeper" and his condemnation of arming rebels in Central America. Last December Reagan made a speech to deputies of the Costa Rican National Assembly in which he said: "Any nation destabilizing its neighbors by protecting guerrillas and exporting violence should forfeit close and fruitful relations with any people who truly love peace and freedom." Officials of the Committee on Public Doublespeak chose this speech as being worthy of the 1983 award because of the CIA's involvement in recruiting, training, arming and directing clandestine guerrilla military operations against Nicaragua. The award recognizes public officials who have "perpetuated language that is grossly deceptive, evasive, euphemistic, confusing or self-contradictory." The president's The recent proposal by the Reagan administration to reduce the number of elderly, poor and unemployed who use the federally financed Legal Services program would seem to fit this category as well. speeches have fit nicely into this category. While saying that the Reagan-appointed Legal Services board of directors is not out to ax the program, the board's president, Donald P. Bogard, says the eligibility changes that call for denying assistance to those with more than $15,000 equity in a house or $4,500 in a car just guarantee that the truly needy will have access to lawyers. Critics claim the changes could eliminate the help for two-thirds of the elderly who use the program. But the administration has a reply to those critics: Those with $15,000 in a house or $4,500 in a car can go out and get a loan to pay for a lawyer. Of course, this misguided belief does not take into account that banks usually hate to make small loans, especially to people on low incomes. This latest doubletalk comes from an administration that has been trying since its first day in office to shut down the Legal Services Corp. and has succeeded in slashing its budget and paring down its staff. President Reagan deserves his award. Travel restrictions Diplomacy, in theory, is based on compromise. In real life, a bit of show is useful, too. That evidently is the State Department's view of its mission, in light of its updates on which parts of the country are open to travel by Soviet diplomats and journalists. The latest travel regulations stem from the mid-1950s, when the United States restricted Soviet travel in response to limits on U.S. travel in the Soviet Union. The new U.S. rules, according to a New York Times report, reduce the limited area to 20 percent of the country, a level that the Soviets have had since 1978. But look at that 20 percent: the entire Mississippi River; gambling havens such as Atlantic City, N.J., and Las Vegas, Nev.; the "Silicon Valley" area near San Francisco; and even Douglas County — though Lawrence is an open city. At least the Soviets won't have to worry about running into riverboat gamblers peddling silicon chips available only in Eudora. National security is a vital matter, but travel restrictions seem a questionable protection of U.S. interests. A State Department spokesman said that the United States had repeatedly asked the Soviets to abolish their travel limits. Yet as the department displays diplomatic strictness by retaliating for Soviet restrictions on Americans, it may also show the Soviets what the United States considers as its key geographic areas. Are we in effect telling the Soviets, "I dare you"? End the overcrowding Maybe New York Mayor Ed Koch summed up the situation best. That was Koch's response after 400 inmates were released early from city prisons because of overrowding - as a result, a woman was raped by one of them. "Idiocy," he called it. The federal court order to reduce the prison population was something New York officials had little power to stop. And, when the woman was raped, there was little reaction from There is now a woman who has to live with the ugly realities of prison overcrowding. It will do her no good to hear that perhaps some day there will be no need for the "idiocy" that resulted in the violence against her. them except: "This is something we expected." An end to prison overcrowding, though it won't cure all of society's ills, at least might prevent some other woman from the same nightmare. —Manchester (Conn.) Herald The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff. The Kansas can also invites individuals and teachers to submit polled columns and letters 'can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Staffier-Flint Hall. The Kansas reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. LETTERS POLICY 'The Day After' ABC movie brings nuclear nightmare alive The destruction of civilization as we know it through a nuclear exchange is a nightmare that has remained with the world for almost 40 years. With last night's broadcast of ABC's movie, "The Day After", the nightmare has gone beyond imagining what a nuclear war would be like to actually show how it would be. The nightmare of nuclear annihilation as portrayed in this movie must wake us up to the harsh reality that this could actually happen. We have been lucky so far. The war which would destroy most, if not the entire human species, has not yet occurred. At times we have come close, though, very close indeed On the morning of Nov. 9, 1979, a computer tape simulating a nuclear attack had gone out as the real thing. All of our intercontinental ballistic missile attacks had been attacked alert. After six minutes, intensive verification procedures, the computer error was discovered. In late 1973, an American computer mistakenly predicted that a Soviet test missile would land in California. The missile landed instead in Kamchatka. Siberia. An alert went out to all American SAC and US military. A computer error was discovered. More than likely, these two incidents are just the tip of the hook. ROGER HOLDEN Guest Columnist iceberg It is reliably estimated that incidents of computer errors triggering nuclear alerts occur every couple of years. I do not take comfort with the fact that specialists and engineers have traced these errors down within a few minutes of their occurrence. The awful fact remains that you, I and our neighbors around the globe have been placed within fifteen minutes of total destruction from errors rampant in our defense computers. Should we say how hum and watch our soap operas and football games as if nothing has happened? Have we, to our misfortune, learned to live with fast food and automobiles? I am afraid that a lot of America has learned just that. The possibility of a nuclear catastrophe resulting from a computer error now extends to probability with the current deployment of NATO missiles in western Europe. Consider that these missiles will be only six minutes away in flight from Moscow. Can we trust the specialist in Soviet Union to evaluate their computer malfunctions within such a short amount of time? Computer Error? If it is 19 year old can break into a defense computer system with a home computer, what does that say about the security and reliability of the nuclear defense computers? We are living in a climate of extreme international tension. Can one feel secure with such conditions, knowing the risk of damage to a computerized hairstriger? These are harsh but realistic questions that should concern every thoughtful person. If the Soviets decide to implement Launch on Warning as they have threatened to do in response to an attack, this is the equivalent to Launch on As Martin Luther King wrote, "If modern man continues to flirt unhesitatingly with war, he will transform his earthly habitat into an inferno such as even the mind of Dante can not imagine." Roger Holden is president of Holden-Gentry Systems line, a firm which designs and sells animation computer systems. He also is president of the Kaneos Film Company, and Meyer its top insider. The Grand Orizz, at the world premiere of "The Day After." A two-hour commercial for the nuclear freeze With those last spoken words, the film ends. "The Day After" deals with the aftermath of a nuclear attack on Kansas City. "Hello? . . This is Lawrence . . Lawrence, Kansas . . Is anybody out there?" To say that the film is good or bad is irrelevant. The question should be asked, "Does the movie accomplish its purpose?" If its purpose is to cause hysteria in the general public then the answer is yes. If its purpose is to give people a free movement then the answer is an enthusiastic yes. If its purpose is to support the Peace Through Strength organizations then the answer is a definite no. When ABC Circle Films came to Lawrence last year to film "The Day After," I thought it was going to be a human drama about people trying to survive a nuclear war. Unfortunately, that part is just superficial. There is no real focus on anyone. The people just want to survive. The only real drama is in the basement of one of the families. A. A. VICTOR GOOD- PASTURE However, instead of focusing on that, the movie just moves on. Characters seem to die as the script calls for it. The movie, whether or not it was ABC's intention, is a highly politically motivating film. The obvious mention of the Pershing II deployment in Europe labels the film as political propaganda. The film has a Soviet official say on television that because of the Pershing II deployment the Soviet Union must take counterattacks against its counterseers include the total blockade of West Berlin and then the invasion of West Germany. THE NATO alliance, on the verge of being overrun, uses tactical nuclear weapons to halt the massive Soviet onslaughter. In essence, the deployment causes the III. That is a political statement. By having a nuclear war break out from the very start, the movie is a political statement because it implies that the policy of deterence has failed. With that implication a nuclear freeze is nonverbally insinuated. The film's airing last night comes only days before the first scheduled deployment of nuclear missiles in Europe. Coincidence* ABC is making a $7 million, two-hour commercial for the nuclear treeze movement. The company is launching off and running with the film When Korean Airliner 007 was shot down by a Soviet fighter, the world was shocked and appalled. At the height of the outrage, a friend told me that in two weeks the whole incident would be forgotten. I replied that that just happened, and I forget the atrocity committed by the Soviet Union. I told him. I was wrong. Victor Goodpasture, Topeka Sophomore, occasionally writes movie reviews for the Kansas. Reagan's Far-East trip was a morale booster WASHINGTON — President Reagan was netted by reports that his journey to the Far East to show the flag was more "symbolism and substance," and in terms of con- dition, the assessment has a lot of merit. But for South Korea and the American troops, it was a big morale booster and worth the price of admission. Reporters had been alerted in advance to expect no breakthroughs or dramatic announcements. In Japan, the focus of the talks between Reagan and Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone was on the trade imbalance, which is about $20 billion in the red on U.S. books. Reagan apparently pressured for more trade concessions, warning Nakasone that by next summer there would be more sentiment in address to protect American products. The president also tried to mudge Nakasone into doing more for Asian defense and taking a greater global HELEN THOMAS United Press International role. That had its ironies: 42 years ago Japan's militarism and expansionism forced the United States into World War II. In South Korea, Reagan, a strong believer in military build up as a deterrent to aggression, was right in tune with President Chun Doo Hwan. There is no question that he heartened American troops manning the barricades. Reagan reassured Chun that the United States would be ready to fight again, as it did in 1950, if the North Koreans threatened. He added a flourish by visiting the city of Seoul and a mile from North Korean outposts. Deputy chief of staff Michael A camera crew hired by the Republican National Committee was very much a part of the picture and was given choice spots to record Reagan's big moments on the trip. The movie will be used during his campaign to stress the president's statesmanship. Deaver, now in China to arrange for Reagan's trip there, planned the Far East trip for maximum exposure and enough rest time, so that the president would not look too fatigued in the film. All presidents are actors on a stage, particularly when they are abroad. Reagan carried off the role with aplaethon and was very well known in Israel and the National Assembly in Seoul in the speeches he delivered. The president came home with what he called the "good news" that "America's partnerships are stronger, and prospects for a more secure peace and prosperity are better today than a week ago." University Daily Kansan, November 21, 1983 Page 5 Senate continued from p. 1 write-in candidates Walker and Mark McKee had 1,036. Costume finished third with 1,004. The Freedom Coalition had 246 votes. Walker said that Thursday's miscount occurred when an elections official apparently lost "Someone goofed and they were afraid to admit it," he said. The presidential hallots were counted four times. The winner and Swenson was named the winner at 10:58 R.I.P. Walker immediately asked for a recount after Swenson was declared the new student body president. He also challenged a decision by the elections board that invalidated ballots that had been marked only "Momentum" and did not have either of the candidates' names. THE ELECTIONS REVIEW Board was to meet Friday afternoon to decide whether 114 invalidated ballots would be counted. The elections board, however, canceled the meeting because it needed an accurate ballot count to make a decision, Menzel said. The board is scheduled to meet at 2 p.m. today in the Alderson Room in the Union to discuss the complaints and discrepancies in the election. The meeting is open to the public. Menze also extended the deadline to file complaints to 9 a.m. today. Walker said yesterday that Menze overstepped her authority when she postponed the Friday elections board meeting and when she extended the deadline for complaints. HE SAID THAT Senate rules and regulations required that the elections board vote to approve a budget for the state. Menzle, however, denied that a vote was necessary to postpone board meetings. She said that the deadline for complaints was extended and was approved by the Σπίτιs Review Board. "All the rules say that complaints are supposed to be filed 24 hours after the polls close. But light the discrepancies and the allegations, though it was only fair to extend the deadline," she said. goal post, the tall uprights were bending toward outward-reached hands that shortly before they broke, and some of the Goal post continued from p. 1 "Ladies and gentlemen, pictures are currently being taken of activities on the field." Hill said, a warning that mounding boos. The ground was mowed out of the土壤 once The goal post washed out of the stadium on a sea of hands and was carried to Potter Lake. "We tried to discourage them, but when we found out we couldn't do it, that all we could do." Assistant Athletic Director Floyd Temple said. "We're really asking somebody we tear down the goal posts." THE KU POLICE department apprehended and identified several people who were involved in taking down the goal posts, a dispatcher for KU police said. The department found anyone and is waiting for the athletic department to decide whether it will press charges. Athletic Director Monte Johnson is out of town until Wednesday and could not be reached for comment Other members of the athletic department said that they did not know how to handle the situation. Members of the KU and Lawrence Police Departments, along with a member of the Douglas County Sheriff's Department, had met with Temple at half time. Temple, who is in the same building, called them, said that they had discussed what the officers would do if the crowd came onto the field. "It was our feeling that we would try to get all the personnel available to try to discourage students from taking down the goal post in the event that KU won the ball game." Temple said. "There was no way to stop them, unless we had the National Guard." THE GOAL POST in the north end zone also was removed, but without resistance from post. Temple said that the stainless-steel goal pests each cost $2.500. Jim Denney, director of KU Police, said that Temple and the officers from the other departments agreed that no one was to be injured in the attempt to prevent the goal posts from coming down. Officers were instructed to use marginal force in protecting themselves, Denney said, and also were told that they were to protect themselves if spectators swung at them. "There is no way you can stop 3,000 to 5,000 people without using force." Deney said. "It's entirely possible that officers used Mace if it officers used Mace. I'm not going to mount it." DENNEY SAID THAT a female officer was thrown to the ground and kicked in the ribs, and another officer almost lost consciousness when he fell. One of the officers were seriously injured, he said. "Blood isn't worth property." Denney said. "There must be a better way — fold-down goal posts, greased goal posts, throw-away goal posts." Kennedy continued from p. 1 and violence against the man accused of killing him. Through a week in which there should have been no violence, John F. Kennedy visited KU only once — he spoke in Hoch Auditorium on November 7, 1957. He was 40 then, and an eager young senator getting a jump on the 1960 presidential race. The topic of his speech, the importance of having college-educated men in politics, was bland. Many students complained that Kennedy had been a fool when he speckled his speech, the University, Daily Kansan reported. BUT MORE THAN 4,500 people — in an auditorium that was built to seat 3,888 — came to hear the wealthy young senator from Massachusetts, the World War II hero with the chestnut-colored hair and the thick Boston accent. Some complained about substance, but none complained about style. The handsome young senator wowed the audience. "If I were he, I would be starting my 1960 campaign right then," the Kansas reported one young woman as saying. A Kansan editorial stated: "In case you missed him, girls, he looks just like his pictures ... From Senate sessions to meetings with factory workers in his home state, Kennedy has poured on the charm and confidence and political shrewdness." Kennedy won the 1960 election. He promised to do away with what he saw as the cobwebs of the Eisenhower administration. He created Peace Corps, presided over the United States' burgeoning space program and stared down the Soviet Union in a brush with nuclear war. BUT THE RIFLE shot in Dallas ended his presidency at 1,066 days. The country was left wondering what its president might have accomplished if given a full term. "I was getting ready to teach a class in Strong Hall at the time," said Donald McCoy, professor of history. "I mentioned that I'd heard that the 2016 election had been over. I could tell right off that there were some who hadn't heard the news. "The class actually went pretty well. But I rushed home to see television. Watching the television, you felt as if you were in a military message center. There were so many bulletins. When they had a commercial on one channel, you would turn to another for news." THE KANSAN WAS then an afternoon paper. The lead stories for Friday's front page had already been planned at news conference that morning. Blaime King intercepted a glut of such bulletins, King, then a KU senior and editorial editor of the Kansan, sat on the newspaper's front page, which flooded the United Press International wire. King was eaten lunch when Burton Marvin, the king of the School Journalism, gave him the news. King said, "We went back to the newsroom in Flint. The UPI ticket in the newsletter had a problem with it." things. If the ticker rang five times, it meant an urgent bullet. It did that once when Jackie Kennedy had lunch with King Paul of Greece. But this time it went mad and meant it." AS FAR AS putting the news in the paper was concerned, there wasn't much time for anything but simplicity. The front-page headline said: "The President is Dead." Only one story referring to the assassination was published, making the paper an erie mix of ON SATURDAY, THE Kansan published a one-sheet edition covering the assassination "It was a weekend on which you didn't want to be alone." King said. "It is advantageous to us to be in the news business at times like those because there is always something to do besides grieve. But there was dead silence on campus. We weren't accustomed to this." MCCOY WAS ANGRY and could sense the anger in his student ackward. "The general feeling was, 'How could that happen here? These things don't happen in the United States. Those types of things are limited to madmen in faraway places. Those aren't just the rules of the game," he said. "He was such an attractive person. We weren't so cynical before this happened. You sat up a lot at night after the fact, wondering why it happened. And why Juby Rackie池 Lee Harvey Oswald. We all watched that on TV, too. We all wondered what was going to happen next. And some would suggest that it started all of the violent reactions and demonstrations that marked the later '60s." RUT LIFE WENT on Classes after 1:30 p.m. were cancelled on the Friday of the assassination and a convocation was set for Monday, the day of the funeral. "We had to pick up the pieces and go ahead." King said. "There was no end to idealism. We just had the wind knocked out of us by this. The young are resilient, I guess, and there were so many things that had to be done in the way that President Kennedy would have wanted done." + EMERGENCY! Today only 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Sale on all 1st Aid and Emergency Supplies including: Savings at least 20% on: + First Aid Wall Panels Elastic Bandages Instant Ice Packs Emergency Blankets Air Splints Ammonia Inhalants Multi-Trauma Dressings AND MUCH MORP Emergency Pillows (more than just Bite Sticks Burn Kits Spenco 2nd Skin Mouth to Mouth Breathers Bloodstoppers Multi-Function Bandages Sterile Burn Sheets Purcell Medical Equipment 749-4417 515 Indiana Free roll of sterile bandage with every purchase Be Health Aware Be Health Aware Stress Management Workshop Wed., Nov. 30 6:30-9:00 p.m. Register in 208 Robinson by Monday Nov. 28 Limit: 30 people Presented by Carol Hartman, Counselor - Adult Life Resource Center. Sponsored by Recreation Services Special Events Call 864-3456 for more info BECKER CPA Mr. Jerry Noble, C.P.A., will speak on "More About CPA Exams," plus general information on the Becker CPA Review Course. CPA Monday, November 21 at 7 p.m. Kansas Union Pine Room Refreshments will be served. DOMINO'S PIZZA Domino's Pizza Delivers. We promise free delivery and fast 30 minute service to your door. All you have to do is call! Call us. 841-7900 1445 West 23rd St. 841-8002 nth & Iowa Hours: 4:30pm - 1am Sun - Thurs. 4:30pm - 2am Fri & Sat. Prices do not include applicable sales tax. Our drivers carry less than $10.00. Limited delivery area. © 1983 Daimyo Puzzle, Inc. 9th & Iowa Our Superb Cheese Pizza 12" cheese $5.15 16" cheese $7.35 The Price Destroyer" Limited portions of 9 items for the price of 5 Pepperoni, Ham, Ground Beef, Fresh Sausage, Olives, Green Peppers, Onions, Mushrooms, Extra Cheese 12" Price Destroyer" $ 9.40 16" Price Destroyer" $13.60 Additional Items Pepperoni, Mushrooms, Ham, Onions, Anchovies, Green Peppers, Olives, Sausage, Ground Beef, Jalapenos, Extra Cheese, Extra Thick Crust 12" pizza $ -85 per item 16" pizza $1.25 per item Pepsi/ 16 oz. cups 2 free with any pizza. Monday Madness! DONNINO'S PIZZA Includes a 12" 1-item pizza plus 2 free cups of Pepsi for only $5.00. Good Mondays only. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 12/30/83 Fast, Free Delivery* Good at listed locations. Weekend Special! DOMINO'S PIZZA $2.00 off any 16" 2-item or more pizza Good weekends only. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 12/30/83 Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations. 104/63012 $1.00 Off! DOMINO'S PIZZA $1.00 off any pizza. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 12/30/83 Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations. 35104/65012 ENTERTAINMENT The University Daily KANSAN November 21, 1983 Page 6 Somber 'Feast' ends in message of peace By PHIL ENGLISH Staff Reporter The setting was almost churchlike. At one end of the room was what appeared to be a corpse, covered by worn lace cloths. Candles gave a warm glow. In the hallway, as they surrounded every entrance and window. People entered through the large doors as if taking part in a mass funeral. It wasn't until the end of the performance that the corpse was revealed, revealing large loaves of fresh bread and fruit. "The Feast" was the fourth presentation of its kind presented since 1977 by the Creative Association, an organization of Lawrence artists. In creating this year's event, the performers focused in on the personal, local and worldwide consequences of the message presented in the film "The Day After." About 100 people showed up to observe and eventually take part in a theatre ritual "Feast 83. The Light at the End of The Day After." The light was held at the Lawrence School of Ballet, 205 F. W. 9th St. Marsha Paludan, one of the key contributors to the performance, said the film could be a tribute. "IF WE CAN PRESENT an image of the world, why can't anyone see a world of complete truth?" Members of the group are united by their commitment to peace. Using the theater as a common ground for everyone to associate with the group, members of the group found a way to communicate to the world. After the performance, the actors and young children passed the bread and fruit to the audience, in an effort to symbolize their hope for world peace through sharing. "There is a big problem with attitude and possessiveness," she said. "There is enough food in the world to stop the pain and suffering of us, but there are too many people with "fear of scarcity." "WE HAVE A VOICE, we can say what we want and stop problems during our lifetime, and it is beginning through organizations like the it Wizard Hunger Project." she said. The performance, which was a benefit for the World Hunger Project, represented an interesting mixture of black comedy and haunting reality. Mike Randle, who sang the words, "So long, Mom I'm off to drop the bomb, so don't wait up for me," was very moved by the end of the performance. "People might have felt a little down after the performance, but it isn't a result. The feeling has always been there and the performance just might have brought it out," he said. "In most cases, including world peace, we want to reach for something very good, but in order to get there, you have to go through something very bad. Kevin Barrett portrayed a tightrope walker as he dramatically spoke the words to a poem by HarperCollins. THE POEM DESCRIBED THE "shadow" of a nuclear war with the words, "for three decades, we have lived with its fingers outstretched. clinging to our future, our children's future." The lights were dimmed and voices could be heard from behind the back wall. They were unidentified voices, singing in low choral tones. A group of people, shroved in white, held up a placard. Several characters broke off to the middle of the room and began to symbolically wash their clothes, chanting, "The light at the end of the day." then the characters began to paddle a boat down a stream, represented on stage by the white cloths, while singing. "We're all in this boat together." BUT A FIGHT started, because the characters could not agree on which direction to paddle the boat. The fight was violent, but it stopped suddenly, and the characters began to laugh. A large white blanket was carried out as the group members continued to laugh. When the blanket was lifted above their heads, they stopped laughing. The white mushroom cloud over their heads brought a silence to the little children walked among the quiet performers. Members of KU's University Singers, Chamber Choir, Concert Chorale and Concert Choir sing the "Messiah" in a free performance in Hoch Auditorium. The University Symphony joined the combined choirs in yesterday's concert, which was conducted by James Bolstan, professor of music. Thirteen student soloists were featured in the performance of the anatomy, composed in 1741 by George Fredrick Hands.) Holiday toys no longer just for children Bv United Press International As Thanksgiving approaches, so does another American tradition — the holiday shopping season, which for many begins the next day as they prepare to purchase new consumers to downtowns all over the country. Nearly all the more than 130 board games and 70 computer and video games produced by the Avalon Hike Game Co. of Baltimore are designed to be played on a computer game G. I. Avent of Victory, a $40 military game. The shoppers will be looking for toys, but they can't all be for kids. Grown-ups are buying more. high-tech video games, many of which are accompanied by adult price tags. Among the new board games is a $150 dollar crossword from Scrabble. Carolina Biological Supply Co.'s Oh My Deer, $17.95, which allows players to try to control the progress of a deer berd through a six-year life cycle in the wild, and Selchow & Righter's Trivial Pursuit Genus Edition, $40, with 6,000 trivia questions One of the biggest adventure games is Sierra On-Line's Time Zone - at about $100, a micropic of 12 disk sides with 13,000 places to go from the stone age to the space age in nine time periods. The game is so vast that Source Telecomputing Corp., of McLean, Va., has created a national solving club. The Vault of Ages, for subscribers Jazz, campus find harmony in ensembles This form of music is popular both in classes and bars, director says By DAN HOWELL Staff Reporter The mention of jazz to many people evokes images of mellow taverns, late nights and cool cats. Such settings still exist, but jazz is its most powerful form. It is its flavorful status in universities today. Ronald McCurdy, coordinator of jazz ensembles at the University of Kansas, said this week that academic acceptance of jazz's legitimacy had opened teaching positions such as his. He has found the University fruitful for jazz. 00.1 36.8 2 08.74 "I think I have the best of both worlds," he said, "teaching and performing. That's how I do." - McCurdy will get to show his teaching talents in a free concert tonight when he directs his students in Jazz Ensemble I and the Jazz Chor. The next time, p.m. in Swanbuck Rectal Hall in Morrison Hall. McCurdy came to KU in 1976 to pursue a master's degree and provide instruction in jazz. He said that jazz actually had gained from getting away from its sometimes seedy surroundings and into universities where jazz people wanted to teach could reach many students. "WHAT WE DONE in jazz education is to provide a short cut from the trial-and-error approach." Ronald McCurdy, KU instructor of jazz, rehearses jazz ensemble students in Murphy Hall. McCurdy said that the public's image of jazz musicians had improved. Because of his concern for that image, he insists that his students excel in playing and wear coats and ties or dresses for concerts. "Jazz has shifted from nightclubs and barrooms to classrooms." he said. The transition to academic settings has not come without its problems, McCurdy said. Many people he calls jazz impostors were appointed to teaching and directing positions in new jazz programs and failed to produce high-quality music. McCurdy said that his background had prepared him to produce. Though born in late 1963 in Chicago, he calls Belle Glade, Fla., his hometown. His parents always insisted on solid work in school, and started him in piano by age five. After a period of interest in the harmonica, he took up the trumpet in sixth grade. It is still his primary instrument. STUDYING AT FLORIDA A&M University was an excellent experience, he said, and helped especially by providing both vocal and instrumental training. He played in a jazz quintet, sang in a choir, and as a senior was president of the school's marching band, which has been featured on "60 Minutes." The excitement of the days in Tallabassee still animates him. "The message I got there was 'Give everything your best,'" he said. His pride in excellence shows in rehearsal as his long arms and large, expressive hands snap out a rhythm or paint a crescent line. He then plays a rhythm and reviews a rhythm that must be exactly right. When they HE SAID THAT he had relied mostly on emotion to teach jazz improvisation when he first came to KU as a graduate assistant in 1976. Now, by studying and listening, he has learned complex jazz theory, and relies more heavily on intellect to teach. "I’m a real teacher now," McCurdy said. "I spend a lot of time thinking of ways to convey the truth." take up a brassy beep number, his heels lift off the floor to emphasize the synopses. Having finished his Ph.D. this year, McCurdy looks forward to advancing the KU jazz program. The school needs more students and at the same time wants to continue the growth of its reputation, he said. "Improvisation is a thinking man's game," he said. "A jazz musician is a composer of sorts. He says that." MCCURDY ENJOYS THE times that he performs with the Ron McCurdy Quintet, but he finds his greatest satisfaction in his teaching role. He said that his biggest reward was knowing that students did well after they left KU. He also hopes to arrange and compose more "When they write back and say thank you, it feels good," he said. "It provides the incentive to continue in that direction." He added that many of the new schools such as North Texas State University. often, especially for large jazz bands or jazz choirs. McCurdy said that he expected to make jazz teaching his career because he liked everything he did. So far he has built KU's program from the ground up while earning two advanced piano lessons and performing harmonica player, such accomplishments make a sense of pleasure and pride quite natural. Dutch art expert shares information in seminar By PAMELA THOMPSON By PAMELA THOMPSON Staff Reporter Many art historians are inevitably bound to the time and place of the art they research. But Svetlana Alpers, the 1983 Murphy Lecturer in Art at the University of Kansas, said she was bound only by her method of drawing contemporary analogies to art. "I see myself with the audience of those who look at art," she said. Alpers, an internationally known art historian on 17th-century European art and a professor of art history at the University of California at Berkeley, has been a visiting lecturer for a graduate student seminar in art history at KU since Nov. 8. THE SEMINAR, WHICH coincides with the current exhibition at the Spencer Museum of Art titled "D_prints In Daily Life," is focusing primarily on Alpers' recently published book, "The Art of Describing: Dutch Art of the Seventeenth Century." The 11 students in the seminar had to prepare extensively for Alper's visit, said Linda Stone, assistant professor of art history and regular lecturer for the class. the students researched topics raised in Alpern book and also evaluated the strengths of these topics. They also researched various problems with the period and wrote papers that were discussed by experts. "Her book is on the cutting edge of scholarship in Dutch art history," Stone said. Alpers said, "Since the book was published last spring, the timing was perfect. The ground laying and pre-planning paid off. It was a clever device. The seminars were quite intense." ASIDE FROM TEACHING and traveling, she divides her time as the editor of two scholarly journals published at Berkley called "The Raritan Review" and "Representations." Alpers said she enjoyed writing for the journals, particularly because she worked with 12 scholars from other academic disciplines on one of the publications. "We publish empirical research that is conceptually sophisticated but readable by a broad audience." Because Berkeley is such a large institution, which makes it nearly impossible to touch base with experts in diverse fields. Alpens said, a journal that creates a sort of community for the research field. Alpers has been teaching at Berkeley since 1982, but said she and her husband, who is a professor of English there, had traveled extensively in the United States and in Europe. BEFORE COMING TO Lawrence, Alpers was in Venice for six weeks, studying Italian art. Although her primary interest is the Northern tradition of Dutch and Flemish art, Italian art has interested her ever since she started concentrating on art history. She enjoys the chance to lecture and research art from around the world, but she said she loved to teach because she learned so much from the class sessions herself. "I'm happy to have come to KU," she said. "I've had a wonderful time and have been particularly impressed by the world art history inhabs here." As one of the faculty members who helped to bring her to KU, Stone, who studied under Alpers at Berkeley, said that Alpers 'visit was a great experience for everyone involved. "IT'S BEEN MARVELOUS having her here," Stone said. "She's enormously perceptive, bright and lively. She has a command of many fields." Alpers gave a lecture last week at the Spencer Museum of Art, titled "Rubens, Poussin and the Politics of Style" as part of the Murphy Lecture in Art series. Sally Hoffmann, public service coordinator of the Spencer Museum of Art, said the series was sponsored by the Spencer Museum, KU's Kress Foundation, the department of art history and the Nelson-Akins Museum of Art in Kansas City. Mo. The endowed lectureship was established in 1979 through the KU Endowment Association to promote research in mathematics. BLOOM COUNTY BY BERKE BREATHED IT'S O'MINE. THE LADY VIEWS 'WED' ON IT'S LAST NIGHT. EVENINGLY. WE ARE WATCHING BY MICHAEL MARK WITH LEFT OR RIGHT MAN HERE A BIT SWEEN. OH SIR MY MAN IS A WORLD THAT COMES ON YOUR FEELINGS THIS MORNING! SIR? JUST A WORD? AND THAT WAR NO FIRE TREASURES OF COURSE, YOU REALIZE THAT THE SHOWING OF THE O'DY ANTI- WOOD MEDICINAL PLOTT. PRIME NOMAN, WAS, NO DOUBT, A MAJOR CONSULTATOR. OWN LIBRICAL. HOW IS THIS COUNTRY STREPT TO CONDUCT A DECENT ARMS RACE IF EVERY- ONE IS HYSTERICAL? OH JUST LOSEEN THE BIRD'S NAIL CORRANDUM. WH WOMAN KNOW WHAT YOU ARE ? A NUCLEAR WEENIE! TIME FOR A FUEL OR MONEY, 100 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 21, 1983 Page 1 Stephen Phillips/KANSAN People gather after the candlelight ceremony to sing peace songs. Secretary of State George Shultz appeared on ABC TV's "Viewpoint" program immediately following "The Day After" and said that the film underscored the nation's policy that our war is simply not acceptable." Viewers who are emotionally affected by watching "The Day After" could use ABC for "reckless disregard the emotional welfare of the viewer's heart" and "culpation," the assistant director of the American Legal Foundation said last week. By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter Film viewers could sue, lawyer says Antinuclear groups, however, said the movie showed that America's traditional peace-through-strength policy was insane in the nuclear age and that a reduction in arms was needed to save mankind. Staff Reporter John Martin, the assistant director of the foundation in Washington, D.C., said that "The Day After" could cause viewers so much anxiety, depression and stress that they might need psychiatric help or even hospitalization. The movie was broadcast last night on ABC-TV. KENNETH ADELMAN, director of "I am certain there will be media victims," he said. "It will be the straw that breaks the camel's back for the borderline people." THE MOVIE IS depressing enough to cause some people to commit suicide or have nervous breakdowns. And chil- drines will haightrakes for weeks. Martin said. "The Day After" was shown at 7 p.m. Central Standard Time, and the "ABC knows there will be vunerable people in the audience," he said. "That's totally irresponsible behavior. I can even see people getting punitive damages since ABC knows. Shultz was interviewed on "Viewpoint" before a discussion by a panel of experts began that included former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. "If someone commits suicide from seeing the movie, ABC has intentionally contributed to his suicide I don't believe that matching it a bit. Relatives can sue." the arms Control and Disarmament Agency, said Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press," "It's going to reinforce support for the president." Kissinger said, "I think that this film presented a very simple-minded notion of the nuclear problem. The problem we have to deal with is how to avoid such a war and how to preserve freedom while we avoid this war." By United Press International Dan Doran, ABC's publicist for the movie, said that he had not heard the accusations made by the American Legal Foundation. “People who are hurt by the movie have the right to legal recourse,” he said. “We are trying to tell people that they have the right to sue. We are fighting the police in southeastern. This raises the burden of proof to ABC. This makes them culmable.” 'Day After' reflects U.S. policy, Shultz says But Martin said that the foundation was not suing ABC and was willing to help people who wanted to bring suit against the network. REPORTS FROM PSYCHOLOGISTS and people in the public education system have indicated that children will probably be affected by the movie more than adults will, Martin said. They concluded that the good "It is sobering, but we don't know what you're anything, really like commitment." Martin said that another problem with the movie was that it was being shown during prime time. Broadway would have been wrong would alleviate that problem some. first missiles were fired about an hour into the program. BUT THE MOVIE is still potentially dangerous, even if it is broadcast later, because television does influence people, he said. However, Doran said that he doubted if the movie would have a great impact on him. Martin estimated that more than 70 million people would watch the movie, and that if one out every thousand or one out of every million viewers was affected, more than 70 suits could be filed. effects of the movie were outweighed by the bad effects. "There is no role for nuclear war," Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern told students in Ann Arbor, Mich., shortly before the movie began. "If the film can get that across, maybe it will contribute to world sanity." One of several protests about the movie took place in Lynchburg, Va., where about 30 students from the Rev. Jerry Fawell's Liberty Baptist College gathered outside WSET and chanted, "ABC and KGB." "After the 'Deerhunter,' more than 200 people in the nation committed suicide by playing Russian roulette." he said. "TV does have an effect." "The Day After" was designed to be depressing. Martin said it. It offers a glimpse of the future. Priority wins 23 seats; Momentum second By the Kansan Staff The Priority Coalition won 23 of the 52 seats in last week's Student Senate elections, and the Momentum Coalition won 18. The Costume Party Coalition won toon of the Senate seat; the Freedom Congressional Committee voted to approve it. An official presidential winner probably will be named today. Scott Swenson and Dennis Strickland of Priority originally were declared the winners of the student body presidential election, but elections officials Friday discovered that errors had been made in tallying the ballots. The winners are: Allied Health Five-way tie Winner not yet decided Architecture & Urban Design David McCormick and John D. Oaken, both ofPriority Business, John Flynn and Jw Wollstone, both of Florida; Education, Frank King, Creston Party; Lawyer, Mike Lennard Engineering, Paulie Boltze, John Carnall, Bill Davidian Llewellyn, all Priority. Tom Bottler. Fine Arts, Sean Daw, Priority, Julie A. Got- tschamer, Freedom Graduate: Tom Berger, Eric Hartness and Jon Hammann Jr. Trained Martin, Jay N. Ferguson. Trained Martin. Journalism; Chris Coffelt, Momentum Law; Mike Boohar, Priority Flaubert, independent. Lawra J Marphel and Ann E Stocker, both of Priority, and Heza Zonghui Literary Arts & Science, Farahad Azad, independent, Am Bash, Jill Eddy, Jake Kaye Woods, all of Priority, Ann Lloyry, Milton Scott, Jeff Huff, Tamari and Tami L. Weatherly, all of Momentum Namerickman Amy Banker, Bob Burchell; David Bullard; Jonah Johnson; John Start Ketemia; Theresa Lailing Matthews; Merritt; Rius Pruce, John K. Severity and Cody Hammond; Robert A. Sutcliffe; Eddie Jacohen and Janet Mackery; Jolie Polack and Janet Stoffel. Off Campus, Shirley A. Giley, Costume Pharmacy, Mary K. Howard, Independent Social Welfare; Robert Walter, Priority Special Students; Brian Kaileny, Primary Our Oliver Steinnagel is now at Salon Klaus on the Country Club Plaza. After intensive training at Sasson, Redken, and other Seminars... Oliver is pleased to announce something exciting for the students in this area... All $13.75 haircuts for only $10.00. All perms & colors at 20% off regular price. Give Oliver a try when you're in Kansas City... You will be pleased. Please present your student I.D. card 3. Salon Klaus Country Club Plaza Country Club Plaza & Courth Square Sixth Square PLAZA - 444 Ward Parkway, Kansas City, Mo. 64112 816/331-1835 CORINTH - 4034 West 83rd Street, Prairie Village, Ks. 66208 916/342-5300 *This page will run Dec. 6th.* a reciprocal club SALT PRESTUNTS OF THE MOUNTAIN BAR & RESTAURANT Monday Night is PROGRESSIVE PITCHER NITE at SGT. PRESTON'S Name ___ Address ___ Phone ___ Amt. $___ one word per box 1 a.m. $1.00 12 $1.50 11 p.m.$1.75 10 p.m.$2.00 9 p.m. $2.25 8 p.m. $2.50 7 p.m. $2.75 Clip and bring to: Kansan Advertising 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Lawrence, K. 66045 Tuesday Night Special check at SGT. PRESTON'S for this week's special Wednesday Night is Ladies Night 25c draws 50c bar drinks 7-2 815 N.Hampshire - All ads must be prepaid. No refunds. 20 words (or less) — $4.00* *Prices include green color on border and ribbon of box Send a friend some holiday cheer ... with a Kansan Holiday Message. A Kansan Holiday Message Is a great way to wish someone a happy holiday season or say goodbye 'till next semester. Write your message in the coupon below putting one word in each box. No ads over 20 words will be accepted. Then mail the coupon with your payment to Kansan Advertising (or stop by in store) on Friday, Nov. 30 at 5 p.m. Space is limited so you get yours early. 20 words (or less) — $4.00* NOVEMBER SPECIAL Ends 11/30/83 Breakfa at Vista $1.89 Regular $2.75 --one sheet per coupon EXPIRES 12/30/83 Vista RESTAURANTS Mon-Sat 6-10:30 Sun 7-10:30 1527 W. 6th NOVEMBER SPECIAL A ham and cheese or bacon and cheese omelette made with three fresh eggs. Served with golden hash browns, toast or home made biscuits. Enjoy our full breakfast menu ...including Sunrise Sandwiches! --- COUPON Save 50¢ -$1.00! Half Sheet 50¢ OFF 2-Half Sheet Pkg. $1.00 OFF DRY TRANSFER LETTERING Zip-a-tone KU KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union HAWK'S NEST 9:00 am-3:30 pm M/F KANSAS UNION LEVEL 2 HUNGRY CROSS SPECIALS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21 Nacho Chili Pie 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $1.45 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22 Tacos (2) Tacos (2) 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $1.45 The Hawks Nest will be closed until Nov.28. Have a Happy Thanksgiving. CAMPUS AND AREA Page 8 Regents plan to review allotment of state funds University Daily Kansan, November 21, 1983 By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter HAYS — The decreasing percentage of the state's general fund allocated to higher education will be a primary concern of Board of Regents representatives when they meet tomorrow with the governor and state budget division officials. Stanley Koplik, Regents executive director, and regents John Montgomery of Junction City and Archie Dykes of Topeka, a former University of Kansas chancellor, will meet with budget director Lynn Muchmore in Topkai to discuss the budget division recommendations for fiscal year 1985. AT A MEETING of the Regents Fiscal Affairs Committee at Fort Hays State University on Friday, Koplik said the proportion of the general fund used to pay for the past several years and said that it represented a "disturbing trend." "State general fund support has dropped dramatically from only a few years ago. Koplik said "General fee increases are paying for increased expenditures." Dykes said the state's budget policy did not encourage the University of Kansas Medical Center to earn money, because earnings over a specific level would be distributed to other areas and not returned to the Med Center for salaries and equipment to help it stay competitive. Koplik said that under present budget proposals, the general fund would contribute $2.1 million less to the schools than it did for this fiscal year. ANOTHER TOPIC THAT will certainly come up tomorrow. Koplik said, is the budget division's recommendation to create a pool of money for merit raises equal to 5 percent of the unclassified salary base, with an additional $2 million available to reward senior classroom teaching. The Regents had requested a 7 percent figure, but even with the $2 million fund added in, the total budget division had budget division was about 6 percent. Also, Koplik said the board would try to respond by Dec. 10 to six alternatives to increase efficiency that were suggested in a report from the Legislative Post-Audit Committee. Those alternatives are: *Establishing a standard measure that the state could use to compare costs of programs at the different schools. That would be difficult, Koplik wrote in a memo, because comparisons between similar programs in different schools often have no meaning because of the great difference in schools. - Consolidating or reducing degree programs. This alternative is already underway through the Regents five-year review plan, Koplik said. The Regents are now reviewing education programs. - Placing enrollment caps on some Regents schools so that students will attend other schools where resources are available. This is unnecessary, Kopik said, because enrollments will relatively stable in the next 10 years. - Reducing the number of schools. Koplik defended the number of public four-year universities in the state as not out-of-line with neighboring states, and said all of the schools were still capable of delivering a quality education. - Setting long-term legislative budget goals and letting the Regents and the Board of Education work out how the goals will be met. That would be called a Kohl's plan, because of difficulty in predicting enrollments and state revenues. *Shifting a greater amount of the cost of education to students. The informal agreement between the Regents and the Legislature, Koplik said, has been that students would pay 25 percent of the cost of their education. ALTHOUGH THAT PROPORTION fell to about 20 percent by 1981, it has been brought back to 25 percent since then. Koplik said that proportion is out-of-line with other states, and it requires equal access to public higher education. The school-presidents, the regents and the Regents staff will draft an answer to these alternatives for the post-audit committee. Koplik said the comments in his memo were suggestive what should be included in the answer. On the recommendation of the Policy and Procedures Committee, the board endorsed a proposal for the next legislative session that would low the cost of the staffing class assigned to employees from 62 to 60 to compensate the employees for accumulated sick leave. ANOTHER PROPOSAL THE board supported would create an early retirement plan for faculty members between ages 60 and 65 who wanted to work between quarter-time and half-time. The state would continue to pay federal land and health insurance premium as if they were full-time employees. William Kauffman, Regents general counsel, said both changes could be financed with existing funds. If 25 percent of the budget for this year took half-time appointments, Kauffman said, the Regents system could save as much as $2.1 million. Glickman says stronger ties important for U.S., Soviets By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter saying that Soviet-U.S. relations were at their worst point since World War II, Rep. Dlg克曼克 Lichtman improved ties with the Soviet Union. Glickman, D-Wichita, told about 100 people at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive, that Soviet-U.S. relations had been deteriorating since 1979 when President Jimmy Carter issued a statement in January because of the invasion of Afghanistan. GLICKMAN PRAISED Lawrence for its recent efforts to improve Soviet relations and stressed the level of 'between the two countries'. "It's time to change the Afghanian sanctions," Glickman said. "We need to produce good, strong contacts with the Soviet Union." Rather than concentrating on political relations, he said, improved contacts should take place in the cultural and scientific exchanges. GLICKMAN ALSO SAID unilateral disarmament was not a possibility, and that an agreement would only from length negotiations. "Right now it's more important for KU to develop a relationship with the Soviets than for us to develop political-level ties," he said. He said that he saw no end to the fear of nuclear war in the next 15 to 20 years. That was part of the reason Glickman recently presented a speech in Congress urging the Soviets to show, "The Day After" in the Soviet Union. "The movie is basically neutral. We want Russian people to see it so they can encourage their government to do something about it." Glickman said. "If you talk to people there individually, they acknowledge many things, but the interest in bearing individual views. Glickman's recent trip to the Soviet Union with 18 other congressmen was the first formal trip he made since Carter stopped official visits. Glickman described his Soviet visit and the impressions he came away with. "The Soviets know little about our political system, they have a hard time understanding how it works," he said. "There is a fundamental difference in how we relate to each other." He predicted that the present Soviet leaders would soon hand the reins of leadership to the next generation, and that this would create an early negotiating situation. The next generation will not remember World War II and will not work with Joseph Stalin, he said. Glickman also attacked President Reagan's foreign policy, and said he hoped Reagan would be replaced in office. He said Reagan was too inflexible. "I heard the word respect over and over from the Soviets," Clickman said. "A basic cultural difference between Americans and Russians is that Americans want love more than respect and the Russians want respect more than love." HE SAID THAT the Soviets felt that Richard Nixon had treated them with respect. "They have a Rodney Dangerfield complex," Glickman said. "They don't get no respect. MIDNIGHT MUNCHIES 19. DUNKIN' $1.1 DONUTS $1.19. 11 p.m.-2 a.m. $1.19 11 p.m.-2 a.m. By DONNA WOODS Staff Reporter All the donuts and coffee you can eat . . . counter only . . . NO TAKE OUT! Sunday thru Thursday. Prof says Jackson candidacy could hurt progress of blacks OPEN 24 HOURS 521 W. 23rd New Owners We want your business! For more than 20 years, the Rev. Jesse Jackson has held audiences spellbound with his message of social and racial equality. But Jackson's recent decision to run for the 1984 Democratic presidential nomination could undo years of pro-immigration blacks, a noted sociologist said Friday. His mesmerizing oratorical style has brought him distinction paralleled by no other black leader since Martin Luther King Jr. "A candidate running as a 'bark candidate' and who seems to be calling attention to 'black issues' could sharpen the racial division over the issue," he said. "It all depends upon how the issues are defined and elaborated." William J. Wilson, Langston Hughes visiting professor of sociology and a professor of urban sociology at the University of Chicago, said that if he was based on racial issues, his campaign would become married with racial tensions. WILSON CONTRASTED THE MAYOR election in Chicago last year, which he said was tainted with racism, and the recent mayoral election in Philadelphia that was free from such a problem. The difference, Wilson said, was that racial issues were not the focus of the campaign in Philadelphia. Wilson said that Jackson was concerned with the issue of equality for all races, not just for blacks. His campaign also focuses on foreign policy issues and not just social issues. But Wilson said he was concerned about what path the issues might take during the next few months on the job. He added the corporation, Citizen Corporation in San Francisco. "I like the issues he is raising and I wish that he could be a positive force in the campaign," he said. "But I worry about what might come out." "I think if the press gives Jessi fan coverage, he will come out sounding like a candidate who can relate to all people." BUT IF THE media get caught up in portraying Jackson as a flamboyant orator who can captivate an audience with his evangelical-style manner and they focus on the most colorful aspects of his campaign, Wilson said. Jackson's commitment to other issues will become overshadowed. "He is an enormously impressive man." Wilson said. "He is one of the most knowledgeable and informed persons you'd ever want to meet. He is much more impressive to me than to anyone, the college faculty members I know." Wilson said he was encouraged by the effects Jackson's campaign could have on voter registration across the country. "His candidacy could trigger a sharp increase in voter registration drives across the country," he said. "It is conceivable that he could lead to Reagan's defeat by increasing black voter registration." MEXICO BORDER BANDIDO 1 Texas Burrito SALE $1.39 SALE $1.39 Reg. $2.19 Also $ - 80^{\circ} $ off the No.2,3,4 Texas Burrito Sun. thru Tues., Nov. 20, 21, & 22 1528 W. 23RD. Video Games Across from Post Office 842-8861 PHONE AHEAD FOR SPEEDY CARRY-OUT SERVICE 842-8861 --- Thinking About Buying A Computer? STOP STOP STOP FIND OUT FIRST... - Do you really need a computer? - Is there a cheaper way to get started? COMPUTERENT has the answers! - How hard are computers to learn? - What is an electronic spread sheet? - RENT one of our computers for as little as $5.00 per hour. - What is word processing? - There is a cheaper way to get it! - Will a computer pay for itself? - Classes designed with the beginner in mind. - Learn what computers can do for you or your business before you commit to a major purchase. 1000 Iowa Street Lawrence, KS 66042 A Division of IMS. Inc 841-0066 Call Us or Stop By Today and Find Out More! Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. • Monday thru Saturday COMPUTERENT Making Computers Affordable MONDAY COME SEE MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL ON OUR BIG SCREEN 15¢ DRAWS $1 COVER 8-11 P.M. HAPPY HOUR 11-CLOSE GAMMONS SNOW 23rd & Ousdahl • So. Hills Center • 842-3977 GAMMONS SNOW G 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 GAMMONS SNOWEES University Daily Kansan, November 21, 1983 NATION AND WORLD Page israelis hurl third air strike at Beirut By United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — Waves of Israeli planes bombed Palestinian bases in the Syrian-controlled mountains outside Beirut yesterday in an attack on Israel occupation forces. One of the attacking jets was shot down. Official Beirut irad said that two Druse Muslim civilians in the town of Sofar were killed and eight others were killed by a car bomb against targets in Lebanon this month. There was no immediate announcement about casualties among the team. Mediterranean Sea Beirut Israel left downed in southeastern Beirut LEBANON AIRPORT Faluah Bhamdoune Sofar ISRAEL attacks pulled back in Syrian-controlled mountains SHOF MOUNTAINS 5 miles United Press International Clashes between the Druse Muslim militia and the Lebanese army broke out late yesterday on the frontline in the mountains behind Beirut. Beirut Radio said that artillery exchanges between the army at Souk el Gharb and the Druse in Aley and Baysour had escalated early yesterday. IN NORTH LEBANON, fighting between guerrillas loval to Palestine Liberation Organization Chairman Yasser Arafat and rebels backed by Syria and Libya intensified, with the report to have entered the city of Tripoli. "The fighting is too violent to get exact details, but reports indicate that rebels have advanced in from the north and have closed in on Arafat's headquarters (well inside Tripoli)," Beirut radio said. In Israel, Prime Minister Yitzhuk Shamir followed up on the Israeli airlift of humanitarian aid. "We will fight the terrorists and hit them in Lebanon and elsewhere as long as they direct their efforts toward striking Israel," he said in an Israel Television interview hours after the raids. HE ALSO WARNED Syria against starting a new war, saying, "The Syrians should know that whoever抓 Israel received his punishment." The pilot of the downed Israeli jet bailed out and was taken away by Lebanese soldiers, examined by a doctor and found to be unharmed, said a Western military source. Hours later, the Israeli Military Command said that he was flown home in an Israeli helicopter. The plane, an Israeli-built Kifr, crashed in an empty field between apartment buildings in southeastern Beirut. Official Beirut radio said that the Israeli jets had not clashed with Syrian jets飞着 over the area, indicating the Kfir was downed by ground fire. But it was not immediately known who brought the plane down. Israel confirmed the downing - its first air loss since July 24, 1982 – but an report that a second plane was lost THE ISRAELI MILITARY command in Tel Aviv said that the strikes were in retaliation for guerrilla attacks in south Lebanon, indicating a return to the policy of massive retaliation for the assaults. "They hit everything from Bhamdou to Dahr el Baidar," said a Western military source in Lebanon in describing the air strikes. Bhamdou is 12 miles east of Beirut and Dahr el Baidar is 16 miles east of the capital. Israeli Cabinet Secretary Dan Meridor said that the air raids were not aimed at Syrian troops, who have occupied the area along the Brune Muslim militiamen opposed to the Lebanese government and Palestinian guerrillas. Yasser Arafat Shares in new Bell companies soon may flood NY exchange By United Press International NEW YORK - Christmas is coming early to Wall Street. On Monday, the New York Stock Exchange will begin trading eight new stocks, representing seven huge recompensations in the US and American Telephone & Telegraph Co For the NYSE it is history in the making. "An unprecedented event," said executive vice president Richard Grasso. It also represents what the financial community likes best — the chance to own a business. THE NYSE HAS done this before, though never on such a great scale. It has ever undone the deals on occasion AT&T splits into eight companies Jan. 1, when it spins off its local operating units. The initial trading in the "new" AT&T and seven regionals will take place under special "when issued" rules that will allow for delivery of the stock certificates after they're distributed in February. when an anticipated merger failed to occur. The NYSE estimates that the AT&T trading could account for an extra 10 million to 15 million shares a day during the 90-day when-issued period. The customers for the brokers, who charge their customers to buy and sell on their behalf. That will absolutely not happen with the nearly 700 million new shares that start trading Monday. Grasso promo a company to give his heart by just suggesting it," he said. In an effort to attract all possible stock owners, brokerage houses have created an AT&T plan for every occasion. For the conservatives, "Humpty Dumpy" trusts promise to put the old AT&T back together again. The investor hands over his shares and the brokerage handles the paperwork for the eight new units, sending back a monthly dividend check. FOR THE MORE daring, a "prime and score" option allows the investor to choose between buying the stable, dividend-producing side of AT&T and Some of the new programs are rumored to be doing less well than expected, and some observers are wondering whether the big brokerage houses have spent too much time chasing after "widows and orphans" — investors who are too small and trade too seldom. "There are two schools of thought," admitted Stuart Sklar of Prudential-Bache. "A great case could be made for either one. But at least this gives us a chance to sit down with people and tell them how much you own AT&T also other stock." the speculative price-appreciation side. The prices of the new stocks will be based on early orders that arrive at the NSE by the 10 a.m. EST opening. Eight traders, called specialists, will be responsible for estimating the initial selling prices. THE SPECIALISTS ARE responsible for "making the market" by matching buy and sell orders and keeping prices from fluctuating too wildly. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 Boysd Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy-Sell Trade Gold-Silver-Coins 731 New Hampshire Laurence, Kansas 66044 913-842-8773 Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. The warmest and most durable pants you wear are very heavy, winter-appropriate 100% woolen dresses with cut back sleeves. You'll want extra pockets, and side cargo pockets. All these pointers are from the West German army, brand new condition. GERMAN ARMY WOOL PANTS Only at GRAN SPORT, and only $24.50. SWEATERS Why buy a Hong Kong infiltration when you could get the real thing? The best way to avoid infiltration is to purchase a Pearl Storm Waterer a sweater made from 100% virgin wool, high-quality wet-repair fabric. From England or Scotland. Price $42.50. *GULARLY $48.50, OUR PRICE $42.50.* GRAN SPORT WILDNESS OUTFITTERS 7TH & ARKANSAS 843-3238 Juxta 4 packs in a station, 1 seat; 50% of the fir. McDonald's. Appropriately situated in a pleasant, wooded area. Where else would you expect to find a grill? --hand-powered wings, to powered flight, the jet age and space. 39. 95 SALE WE HAVE THE FRAMES YOU WANT FOR THE LENSES YOU NEED At Hutton Optical, pick your favorite designer and purchase a complete pair of lenses and frames for only $39.95—regularly $65.00 to $100.00. Tints, oversize, cataracts and multifocals—additional charge. Designer frames available are: - Mary McFadden * Anthony Martin Offer good through Dec. 3 - Zsa Zsa Gabor * Arnold Palmer - Oleg Cassini * Vera Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames. Cannot be used in conjunction with any other sale. HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 Museum notes invention's birthday Hot air balloon is 200 years old By United Press International That first flight opened an era eventually leading to dirigibles, aircraft, space vehicles that put men on the moon and computer-intelligent machines hurting billions of miles from air or voyages that could last eternity. WASHINGTON — Two hundred years ago today, humans took to the air for the first time using a hot air balloon considered so dangerous that two condemned prisoners almost got assigned to the first idle. Instead, two daring Frenchmen — an amateur scientist and a soldier — persuaded King Louis XV1 to let them make the flight. On Nov. 21, 1783, a brilliant blue, 70-foot-high balloon lifted Jean Pilatre de Hoizer and the Marquis de Vivendi to漂浮在 Blois de Boulogne in Paris into the sky. THE AIR AND Space Museum in Washington is commemorating man's first ascent into the sky with a display chronicing its beginning with balloons 200 years ago to its advancement into the space frontier. The white-domed Albert Einstein Spacearium, a 70-feet diameter dome with 200 projectors to depict the stars, movies and slides to trace flight from movies to space. The space and sea gulls, to the first feeble efforts by humans to emulate them with The exhibits include a puppet presentation of the first balloon crossing of the English Channel on Jan. 7, 1785, by Jean-Pierre Blanc and France and Dr. John Jeffries, a physician and native of Boston, Mass. To keep aloft over the churning channel, they had to toss all ballast, including their food and a precious bottle of vintage cognac — which had Blanchard in tears, and finally striped to the buff. They landed in a tree on the French coast, nude and cold but alive. MORE THAN AN YEAR before that, the first balloon flight began when one of the French Montgolfier brothers, Joseph and Etienne, declared, "Procure me immediately some taffeta and rope and I will show you something that will astonish the world." The brothers did just that, fabricating a hot air balloon. On Nov. 21, 1783, it carried de Roizer and the French fleet of landets aloft — the first humans to fly. According to the Johnsonson Institution's research section, de Rozier and d'Arlandes almost did not make flight. King Louis XVI "considered him so dangerous that he proposed to substitute two condemned prisoners." "But de Rozier, conscious of the honor involved, persisted and the king relented," researchers said. "The Marquis d'Arlandes, a soldier and member of the minor nobility, later wrote of the flight, 'I felt myself lifted as it were into the heavens'" AMERICANS WERE not far behind the French. On June 19, 1784, one of the first unmanned balloon ascents in the United States took place at Bladenburg, Md. the work of a lawyer-bartender named Peter Carne. A canny businessman, Carne launched an unmanned balloon around the country, charging an admission price for the sight. "In he climbed, and became the first person in America to ascend in a balloon," said Trom Crouch, curator of aeronautics at the space museum and author of a book on the history of balloons in America. The first person in America to ride in a hot air balloon is believed to be a 13-year old boy who gave his name as Edward Warren. He asked to ride in hores balloon during a demonstration flight at Baltimore on June 24, 1784. Women were no less courageous. "Women balloonists were common in the 19th century." Crouch said. "They were popular with the crowds and set many records." Swedes seize Russian-bound computer By United Press International STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Swedish officials yesterday stopped shipment of a highly sophisticated American computer reported to be a missile guidance system being smuggled to the Soviet Union by a KGB agent in South Africa. CARL-JOHAN AABERG, permanent The Times said the computer was to be shipped yesterday from Sweden. The Times of London reported that the KGB was on the verge of "taking delivery of a complete American computerized missile guidance system supplied by the United States to South Africa and then secretly diverted." A Swedish customs official said the shipment was "frozen" because no customs declaration was received with the equipment. U.S. Embassy officials refused comment on reports Sweden was asked to impound the shipment. Part of the same shipment, containing another computer, was impounded by West German authorities in Hamburg last Monday. undersecretary of Sweden's Foreign Trade Ministry, said the computer was being guarded and would remain in Sweden for at least "several days." The Times said U.S. and West German officials obtained a court order to seize only one of two computers in the shipment at Hamburg and thereafter, second one got through to Sweden when it was to be sent on to the Soviet Union. Three containers thought to hold a VAX 11-782 computer made by the high-tech Equipment Corp arrived in the Sunda Islands, Kingstown bore last week from South Africa. A customs official in the United States had said the VAX 11-782 could be used "for missile guidance or some other purpose," keeping track of troops and weapons." The Times reported the deal was planned by a German-born KGB agent, Richard Mueller, a resident of Capetown, South Africa. MUELLER CONTROLLED another agent named Commodore Dieter Gerhardt who, until his arrest last Jan. 26, was second-in-command at the South African Simontown naval base, the Times said. South African news reports said yesterday that two American special agents are in South Africa to investigate Mueller, who is believed to be wanted by U.S. authorities for questioning on the computer deal. Other press reports say Mueller built a stockpile of sensitive U.S. and Western technology in Cape Town for transfer to the East Bloc. Mueller, who moved to South Africa in 1980 and bought a lavish $1.8 million Cape Town property, is "lying low" in the wake of his son's sonor of police, Gen. Johann Coetzee. WANTED Female Student To Model And Sell Novelty Item On Campus - Excellent remunerative incentives - Minimal time required - Send letter of application to: Box 23 - University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Lawrence,Ks.66045 ) Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 21, 1983 If you saw "THE DAY AFTER," you need to read this: "THE DAY AFTER"-a message of nuclear death, destruction and despair—implies a questionable future and leaves the viewer with a sense of hopelessness. In this atmosphere of despair, Christians still share GOOD NEWS. There is a future; there is a hope for all who have a living, personal relationship with Jesus Christ, the world's only true Redeemer.4 The Bible speaks of people without Christ as being without hope and without God in this world.2 However, for those who experience a living, personal relationship with Jesus Christ—He is their hope.3 In His great mercy, God has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and into an INHERITANCE that can never perish, spoil or fade, kept in heaven for you.4 WE INVITE YOU TO CONSIDER HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE THIS INHERITANCE: I. ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU ARE A SINNER. If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. II. RECOGNIZE THAT THE PENALTY OF SIN IS DEATH: SPIRITUAL, PHYSICAL AND ETERNAL. But cowards who turn back from following Me, and those who are unfaithful to Me, and the corrupt, and murderers, and the immoral, and those conversing with demons, and idol worshippers and all liars—their doom is in the Lake that burns with fire and sulphur. This is the second death. $ ^{6} $ III. ACKNOWLEDGE YOUR INABILITY TO SAVE YOURSELF BY EDUCATION PHILOSOPHY, SELF-REFORM AND/OR GOOD WORKS For it is by Grace you have been saved, through faith and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God-not by works, so that no one can boast. JESUS CHRIST IS GOD'S PERFECT PLAN FOR MAN IV. REPENT AND CONFESS Repentance is "turning around"—turning away from sin and turning towards God. Jesus said, unless you repent, you too will all perish.8 Confession is admitting one's sins before God. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us of our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.9 V. BELIEVE AND RECEIVE. Believe that Jesus Christ died for YOUR sins. Receive Jesus Christ into your heart and life. Yet to all who receive Jesus, to those who believe in His name, He gave the right to become children of God.10 MAY WE SUGGEST YOU PRAY THIS PRAYER: "Heavenly Father, I need you. I admit that I have sinned against you and deserve only your wrath. But you love me and sent your Son to die on the cross for me. I now confess my sins to you. Forgive me as you promised and give me strength to turn away from all sin. I now receive your Son, Jesus Christ, into my heart and life as Lord and Saviour—and joyfully accept the eternal life you offer. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. I pray this in the name of Jesus, Amen." IF YOU WOULD LIKE PERSONAL COUNSEL IN ASKING CHRIST INTO YOUR LIFE—OR HAVE OTHER SPIRITUAL CONCERNS, PLEASE CALL ONE OF THE FOLLOWING: Harold/Bonnie Bishop 843-7357 Gene/Leellyn Tuel 841-8941 Mike/Nancy Jordahl 842-8517 Kathy Torell 843-4390 Russ Munyan 841-9239 Mike Bickley 842-7538 Kevin Mebust 842-7538 Kevin Rauckman 864-2696 Bill Faflick 843-9188 SUGGESTED HELPS FOR SPIRITUAL GROWTH: Read your Bible daily. Pray to the Lord, individually and as a family. Seek serious Christian fellowship in church. All scripture verses are from the New International Version Bible except as noted. 1. John 14:6 5. I John 1:8 8. Luke 13:3 2. Ephesians 2:12 6. Revelation 21:8 (The Living Bible) 9. I John 1:9 3. I Timothy 1:1 7. Ephesians 2:8-9 10. John 1:12 Paid for by The Lawrence Free Methodist Church 802 W. 22nd St.Terrace—Lawrence, Kansas-Harold Bishop, Pastor 842-2343 1 NATION AND WORLD Missouri 2nd in U.S.report of bad bridges KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Almost 70 percent of the bridges in Missouri are either structurally deficient or functionally obsolete, according to a report that places the state in second place nationally for having bad bridges. By United Press International The "Fourth Annual Report on the Highway Bridge Replacement and Rehabilitation Program," which was submitted to Congress earlier this year, includes: June 1982. 45 percent of the nature's 604 bridge were classified as deficient. In Missouri, 16,351 of the state's 23,525 bridges were deficient, or 69.5 percent, according an article in the November-December issue of the Midwest Motorist, a publication of the Automobile Club of Missouri. In Kansas, 59 percent of the bridges were deficient, ranked 9th among the worst. MISSOURI IS RANKED second behind North Carolina, which has a total of 73.0 percent of its bridges falling into one of those two categories. A structurally deficient bridge is defined as being restricted to light vehicles only, closed to traffic, or limited illumination immediately to remain open. A functionally obsolete bridge has narrow lanes and low load-carrying capacity, and therefore can not safely serve its current traffic load. of every five bridges in the nation is classified as either deficient or other. White House requests aid for fuel plant By United Press International WASHINGTON - White House counsel Edwin Meine interceded with the chairman of the federal Synthetic Fuels Corp. to request aid for a major private synucles project in North Dakota, the Washington Post reported yesterday. The Washington Post reported that Meese called Edward Noble, chairman of the independent federal agency, to the White House two weeks ago to discuss the Great Plains coal gasification project in Beulah, N.D. The project, which would convert coal into synthetic natural gas, has a $2 billion government loan guarantee and is seeking further subsidies, the Post EVEN TOUGH THE plant is 88 percent complete, the companies in charge of the project - including Tenneco Inc. and American Natural Resource - have said they might employ the effort unless they receive the new subsidies. The corporation board voted last month not to provide the subsidies unless the energy companies also asked Congress for help. Shortly after the vote, Noble met with key congressional leaders who called on the corporation to help Great Plains, and agreed. The meeting with Meese followed. Ten days ago, House conferees amended a government spending bill by inserting a provision calling on the federal government to price support for Great Plains. ... United Press International PARIS — A policemen inspects the damage from a bomb blast that injured 30 patrons of L'Oree Du Bais restaurant. A witness said two men on motorcycles hurled a bomb at the second floor banquet room of the restaurant owned by Robert Taieb, a Tunisian-born Jew. Taieb speculated that the attack was connected to events in Lebanon. Terrorist bombs Jewish restaurant By United Press International "It was a gratitudous terrorist act, perhaps connected with events in Lebanon," restaurant owner Robert Taibed said. "Through my establishment, someone has tried to terrorize public opinion." PARIS — One of two men on a motorcycle hurled an terrorist bomb yesterday into a packed Jewish-owned restaurant on the edge of Paris, slightly injuring 30 dinners, including several children, police said. No group immediately claimed None of the 30 injured people were hurt seriously but the blast shortly after midnight local time blew out windows and brought down part of the roof at the L'Ore du Bois restaurant on the edge of the Bois de Boulogne park. responsibility for the attack. University Daily Kansan, November 21, 1983 Page 11 A TUNISIAN-BORN JEW, Taieh recalled other similar incidents in Paris, including the Aug. 9, 1982 attack in which two men opened fire at Jo Goldenberg's restaurant in the heart of Paris' Jewish quarter. Six people died and 21 were injured in that attack, believed to have been caused by a bomb. rorists still sought by police. Taieb said he had no particular connection to Jewish groups or to Israel. "There are also Lebanese, Iranians, extreme-left and extrem-right people who come here. All that matters nothing, we are apolitical." He said. Police would not speculate on whether the attack could be connected to last Thursday's French air defense against pro-Trianan guerrilla in east A WITNESS TOLD police that two men on a motorcycle paused in front of the restaurant, shrouded by trees, and one hurled the bomb. Casey willing to use lie detector, paper says By United Press International WASHINGTON — CIA Director William Caskey is willing to take a lie detector test to answer questions about whether he received President Carter's debate briefing materials during the election, it was reported yesterday. The Washington Post quoted informed sources as saying Casey had agreed to take a polygraph test to help resolve a dispute with White House Chief of Staff James Baker about the briefing materials. If the detector tests were used, it would be in connection with an FBI investigation of how the Carter papers investigation of how the Ronald Reagan's 1980 campaign that the FBI had not approached Casey about taking a polygraph and that it had not decided whether to use the device. Baker had indicated last summer that he would be willing to undergo a lie detection. Casey, who reportedly has taken polygraph tests twice on national security matters, described the idea of taking the new test as "demeaning." the Post said. But sources told the paper that when Casey agreed to undergo questioning, he remarked, "My conscience is clear." BUT FEDERAL LAW enforcement sources told United Press International Baker and Casey offer differing statements describing their involvement with the Carter campaign papers. Baker said that he got the documents from Casey, who was Reagan's 1980 campaign manager. Casey insisted that he never had the Carter papers and did not even know that they had been obtained. Also at issue is whether any of the materials that reached the Reagan campaign were classified. If they were, there are indications that further investigation should be undertaken to determine whether Reagan campaign aides violated a felony statute. Classic doesn't have to be costly Military sources also reported that at a huge Thanksgiving airlift this week would get as many U.S. troops as possible to force home for Thursday's holiday. Army spokesman Maj. Douglas Frey said that he could not say if the OH-58 helicopter had been fired upon, but said there were no reports of Friday evening was under investigation. Minsky's offers you the tastiest pizza for a lower price than the three other major full-service pizza shops. Compare Minsky's with the guys under the Red Roof and savor the flavor, and the savings. ST. GEORGE'S. Grenada — A U.S. helicopter with three men aboard crashed into the Caribbean off Grenada's northeast coast last week, a U.S. military spokesman said yesterday. No one was inured in the accident. By United Press International For soldiers who remain on the island over Thanksgiving, the Army was planning a traditional turkey dinner near Kabul, which would cover near Point Sahina, an official said. $3 OFF Frey said the helicopter, attached to the 1st Squad of the 17th Cavalry, 82nd Airborne Division, was on a routine mission in the east coast when it crashed into the 95A. Minsky's C PIZZA THE PILOT, CO-PILOT and crew chief, who were not identified, were rescued from the water without injury. Frey said. The helicopter was recovered Saturday. Frey gave no explanation of the delay in reporting the incident. Chopper crashed off Grenada last week, Army report says MORE AMERICAN EXPERTS and politicians arrived on Grenda yesterday, the latest are a group of American physicians. Asked if "the press should continue to accompany American soldiers into combat zones . . . or be restricted from now on, the way they were in Grenada," 63 percent said they opposed restrictions, 28 percent said the same restrictions should apply and 9 percent said they did not know. Led by Rep. Ed Long, D-N.Y., the group yesterday began a study on a reorganization of Grenada's health structure of Cuban and Soviet-bloody doctors. The group also will evaluate the possible modernization of St. George's General Hospital, where most Gremna residents are, the Oct. 25 U.S. invasion were treated. we deliver 842-0154 U. S. troops and forces from six Caribbean nations invaded the island of Grenada in 2010, while Greenada's militant Marxist regime which took power in a bloody coup. The White House has said that similar press controls will be imposed on any similar military operation in the Middle East or North America, oppose, the poll indicated. No delivery on this special. Minakys PIZZA And on Mondays, Save More! The two were feared killed in the battle which was felt up to 45 miles Seventy-five percent of those questioned said that they believed reporters form a necessary service in a combat situation, but only 15 percent were harmful and 8 percent were not sure. U. S. military officials have reported four sniping incidents since Nov 8, the latest occurring Thursday when two U.S. soldiers were slightly wounded by four armed men on Green Island, which is off Grenada's northeast coast. 6 packs to go 2228 Iowa A military source at the Point Salines airfield said "a big troop withdrawn" was planned for midweek so that as many U.S. soldiers as possible can be home for Thanksgiving. Frey said he had no withdrawal but could not provide details. any large pizza "It's an outrageous miracle that no one was hurt because most people were home at that time," said Polk County Sheriff L. Randy Cross. ... for a slice of style. MEANWHILE, A LOS Angeles Times The blast blew a crater 100 feet across and 30 feet deep, flattening all trees in the area. Two houses were destroyed and about 50 others were severely damaged. No serious injuries were immediately reported. The poll, released in the newspaper's Sunday editions, said 52 percent of those interviewed agreed with the White House policy of "denying unrestricted press access" during the invasion. Forty-one percent disapproved of limiting news media access and 7 percent were undecided. PLEASANT HILL, Iowa — Sheriff's deputies searched yesterday for two teen-age hunters who investigators think may have fired random shots at a former munitions dump and triggered a dynamite explosion that damaged about 50 homes and blew a crater 100 feet across. Roll reported that by a slim majority, the American public supports the news blackout that President Reagan imposed on the Grenada invasion. Explosion of munitions dump may have killed 2 teen-agers By United Press International THE BLAST AT about 4:30 p.m. Saturday occurred at one of three buildings owned by the Quick Dynamite Supply Co., which formerly was used by the federal government to store explosives and blasting caps. A third youth, who had been hunting with the other two, returned home shortly before the explosion. The police found about 100 vards from the site. Police said the two other buildings containing explosive materials were One world, One human family Authorities called in heavy equipment to aid in the search for Jeff Waddell, 14, and Clinton Woodard, 14, whose little hope was held for the youths. the ★ Baha'i Faith INVESTIGATORS TAKE THE explosion might have been caused by the teenagers firing random shots at one another. In a 25,000-pound of dynamite was stored. Meetings start at 7:30 p.m. on Mon., Nov. 21st in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union The KU Baha'i Club cordially invites you to attend an introductory talk about the Baha'i Faith. Mr. Bob Posttlethwaite will speak about Baha'i teachings as they relate to concerns about world peace and security. Everyone is Welcome The Wheel Pyramid Pizza & PYRAMID PIZZA & DINN present tonight the SURVIVAL PARTY $1.00 Cover 25¢ Draws "Pizza-by-the-Slice" Prizes for the best radiation burns "If you survived last night-wait 'til tonight!" Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 GRANADA BOUNTOWN CHRISTOPHER WAKENK NATRIA WOOD BRAINSTORM Eve 7:00-25 May Sat, Sun, 2:00 VARSITY GROUNDTOWN TELEPHONE CENTER CHASE HYDE DEAL OF THE CHEVRY 1/4. Eve. 7:15-6:15 Mat.Sat.Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 1 THE ICON AND IWOOK FEATURES RELEASED a Night in Heaven Eve. 7:35-9:25 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANDA LIVE 9:30AM CHRISTOPHER WALKEN NATRILA WOOD PCT BRAINSTORM Eve. 7:30-9:25 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00 VARSITY GRANDA LIVE TELEPHONE 867-8400 CHEVY CHASE DEAL WITH CENTURY PCT: Eve. 7:15-8:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 1 a Night in Heaven Eve. 7:35-9:25 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 2 MAYES PG: <> A WARM HOUSE Eve. 7:30-9:20 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 3 AMITYVILLE 3-D ORION Eve. 7:25-9:30 Mat. Sat. 2:15 CINEMA 1 LA VIE DE LOS AMIENS PCT: Eve. 7:35-9:25 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00 CINEMA 2 THE BIG CHILL COLUMN PICTURES Eve. 7:35-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00 HILLCREST 2 10AM TIME AND VIEW 57TH AVE. NORTH BROADWAY BOOQ MILE HAVES 1 NASHVILLE FUN PG 4-9 Eve. 7:30-9:20 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 3 THE TEMP AND ITALY AMITYVILLE 3-D ORION Eve. 7:25-2:30 Mst. Sat. 2:15 RUNNING BRAZI Eve: 7.35-9.35 Mat. Set-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 THE BIG CHILL COLUMBIA PICTURES Eve: 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat 8:00-2 ) University Daily Kansan, November 21, 1983 Page 12 SPORTS KU netters place 2nd in regional By the Kansan Staff KU tennis players Mike Wolf and Michael Center qualified for next year's Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches Association National Championships by making the finals of the Region 5 championships at Oklahoma City last weekend. Yesterday at Oklahoma City's Summerfield Racquet Club, the unseeded doubles team of Wolf and Center lost in the finals of the ITCA regional meet to No. 1 seeded team of Peter Mallett and Loomis of Oklahoma State, 64-63. But KU tennis coach Scott Perelman said yesterday that because both winners and runner-ups in the tournament received automatic berths, Wolf and Center still qualified for nationals. "I'm very happy with the way our guys played." Perelman said. "Our team has gained a lot of respect from other schools this weekend, because we and Oklahoma State basically dominated the tournament." Wolf, seeded No. 8 in singles, also came close to qualifying for the nationals in singles, but lost in the semifinals yesterday to Oklahoma on the No. 4 seed. Wolf was defeated 6-2, 3-6, and 7-5 in the tie-breaker. "That was one of the best collegiate matches I've seen in my life," Perelman said. "It was a bit disappointing because Mike played well enough to win, but he was still the only freshman in the tournament to even get that far." Santessant won on to win the singles final in the tournament. Wolf still has a slim chance of getting an at-large berth to nationals, Perelman said, but being a freshman will hurt his chances. Pereelman said that upperclassmen were given priority for the at-large bids. Victory continued from p. 14 "We didn't even come close to having a punt blocked before this game." In the first half, Seurer picked apart the Missouri secondary. Sandy McGee, replacing the injured Darren Green, caught seven passes in the first half. Johnson had three, including his two touchdown receptions. Green dislocated a finger and couldn't play. "I DON'T REMEMBER them being in Frank's face all day," Gottied said. They really came at us at the bedside, but we were surprised, but they had to drop off and cover. "Frank's had a great year. He'd have more of adversity but he's fought hard for it." Seurier, who passed Lynn Dickey to become the Big Eight's all-time passing leader, completed 15 of 23 passing 800 yards in the first half as set at 77.47. The Jayhawks got on the board with a 26-yard pass from Seurer to Johnson. Kallmeyer's extra point hit the upright. After Bell's touchdown and a Kali's goal, Seurer and Johnson connected again, this time for a 42-yard touchdown. Reed ended the day with 100 yards on 18 carries and a touchdown. Adler and second-string quarterback Warren reed led the Tigers to first-half touchdowns. KALLMEYER'S SECOND field goal in the half, with nine seconds left, gave KU a 27-24 lead. The Jahayw defense then stiffened up in the second half and scored. to reflect on their final game and their careers. Missouri, led by freshman running by Jon Redd, had 188 runs rushing by bye. After it was over and the goal posts were down, it was time for the seniors "Sometimes you look at a record and you have a tendency to say that you are unsuccessful," Gofftried said. "But when you lead the Big Eight in passing you've accomplished a lot. We've come a long ways." Senior continued from p. 14 never play with this group of guys again." KALLMEYER ENDED his career as the Big Eight's leading scorer for a kicker with 233 points. “It’s going to take awhile for it to sink in,” Kallmer says. “I was just fortunate to play with an offense that had so many opportunities.” "I'm disappointed, but I enjoyed watching the guys play well," Green said. "I made it real hard. I'm kind of happy with it, the same time, its hard to describe." Elvis Patterson blocked a punt and fell on it for a touchdown in his last game and was happy with the way the team played. As the crowd showed its eestasy and the Jahways turned in an inspired performance, flanker Darren Green could only stand and watch. Green wasn't able to play in what was to be his final college game after dislo- Atkins was ready to go out and "IT FEELS GREAT to go out and play with emotion in our last game," he said. "I hate to go, but life goes on. The Lord has more in store for me." celebrate the victory and the end of his college career. "I feel like going out and having a beer," Atkins said, "I'm 21 and not a college athlete any more. I'm going to miss all these guys. I probably won't miss UJ and Reggie because we'll probably all be in the bread line together." Finally, everyone was gone. None of the players remained, but the bierie feeling was still in the air, like the feeling a person gets when they move through it. Frank, Bruce, E.J., Renwick, Reggie and the group wouldn't be back. It was over. Missouri gets bowl bid after losing to KU By United Press International Bowl invitations were officially announced Saturday, and despite Missouri's 37-27 loss to KU, the Tigers will Brigham Young in the Holiday Bowl. BYU finished its season with a 10-1 record after Saturday's 57-7 rout of Utah behind Steve Young's six touchdown passes. The Cougars' only loss was in their opening game against BSU at 40-36. As champions of Western Athletic Conference, BYU drew an automatic bid to the Holiday Bowl. It will be BYU's sixth straight Holiday Bowl appearance. Missouri was the only team to beat Big Ten champion Illinois this season. It also beat powerhouse Oklahoma and gave top rank Nebraska a scare for the second time. IN OTHER BOWL announcements, the 11th-ranked Iowa Hawkeyes and the 12th-ranked Florida Gators accepted invitations to meet in the Gator Florida, 7-2; must play Florida State, 6-4. Saturday. This will be the Gators' seventh appearance in the Gator Bowl, where they have a 4-2 record. Their last Gator Bowl appearance was a 13-0 loss to Maryland in Iowa finished its regular season with a 9-2 record Saturday by beating Minnesota 61-10. It is the Hawkeyes' best record in 23 years. Kentucky, which rebounded from win 1982 season to post a 6-4 1-mark West Virginia, 8-3; also lost Saturday as Syracuse held off a Mountainer comeback for a 27-16 win. Afterward, West Virginia Coach Don Nehlen said that the Hall of Fame bid was the “best thing that could have happened for us.” this year, will play 150th-ranked West Virginia Dec. 22 in the Hall of Fame. The Maryland Terrapins, 8-3, wrapped up the Atlantic Coast Conference title Saturday with a 29-6 victory over North Carolina State at Raleigh, N.C. THE CITRUS BOWL Committee extended invitations to Maryland and Tennessee to meet in the annual post-season game Dec. 17. Tennessee downed Kentucky, 10-0, at Lexington, Ky. to go 7-3 for the season. Vanderbilt, 2-8, Saturday. The Tar Heels, 8-3, earned the bid with a regionally televised 34-27 victory over Duke. Florida State, idle Sasquatch was the remaining against Florida on Dec. 3. North Carolina and Florida State will play in the 16th annual Peach Bowl at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium on Dec. 30. Washington, winner of last year's inaugural Aloha Bowl, will meet Penn State in this year's matchup Dec. 26 at Aloha Stadium. FIESTA BOWL OFFICIALS announced Pittsburgh and Ohio State as the participants in Fiesta Bowl XIII, to be played Jan. 2 in Tempe, Ariz. THE PEACH BOWL will be televised by CBS at 2 p.m. CST Dec. 30. The KU men's and women's swim teams finished fourth in the Arkansas Razorback Relays Saturday in Fayetteville, Ark. The scoring was based on first, second or third place finishes. The Arkansas placed first in its own meet with 49 points, followed by Texas A & M with 27. Nebraska with $19_{1/2}$, KU Oklahoma and Texas Tech each with 2. KU's top finish was second place in the 1,000-yard crescendo relay, a freestyle event. Freshmen Liz Duncan and Todd Neugent, sophomore Celine Cerny and junior Douglas Hiemstra and Brad Wells swam on the relay team. Relay teams placing third were the 200-yard freestyle relay, 200-yard backstroke relay, 200-yard medley and women's 400-yard medley relay. Members of the freestyle relay were freshmen Jim Ammons, Chris McCoal, Tammy Pease and Duncan; the backstroke relay team were sophomores Brad Corey, Cerny, freshman Tana Bowen and Wells; the 200-yard medley relay were Coens, Pease, freshman Kari Stumpf and junior Jenny Brennan. The women's 400-yard medley relay were Cerny, Pease, Wagstaff and Duncan. The men's medley relay members were Coen, Neueng, Wells and Ammons. Head coach Gary Kemp said yesterday that his team did not meet his goals. He said he was pleased with the performance of the freshmen because they were handling the pressure of competition better. KU swimmers finish fourth in Arkansas "We just lacked that extra intensity a good team has this weekend." Kenny. The swim teams will have two weeks to prepare for their next competition, the Saluki Standard Invitational Dec 2 and 3 in Carbondale. III. SPORTS ALMANAC FOOTBALL By the Kansan Staff Kansas 37, Missouri 27 Missouri 10 11 2 0=27 Kansas 6 21 10 0=27 Ken Johnson 20 pass from Seurier (kick failed) Mis-FG Burditt 47 Mis-Esso 1 run (Burditt kick) Ken Falkmeyer 1 run (Kalmeiner kick) Mis-FG Kalmeyer 54 Mis-Kinder 2 run (pass from Seurier) Mis-FG Kalmeyer 4 pass from Seurier Bryd pass from Seurier Ken Falkmeyer 42 Ken FKG Kalmeyer 39 Mis-FG Kalmeyer 32 Ken Patterson recovered blocked punt in end zone (Kalmeiner kick) Friday, Dec. 23 HOLIDAY BOWL At San Diego MU KU First dows 35 Rubber yards 83 Passing yards 70-290 169 Retrieving yards 199 354 Return yards 295 Passes 14-28.3 252 Passes 2-2 252 Fumbles lost 2.2 0.4 Fumbles lost 3.2 0.4 Time of possession 26.32 32.38 College Football Bowl Games Individual Leaders (All times CST) Saturday, Dec 10 INDEPENDENCE BOWL Independence, LA Air Force (62) 65-17 (65-17) Saturday, Dec. 17 CALIFORNIA BOWL Bingham College Rushing - MU, Redd 16-100; Adler 18-45; Drain 10-43; Barbara 7-58; KU, Jones 15-82; Bell 10-43. Saturday, Dec. 24 SUN BOWL 11:00 DOWN TIME At Presno, Cal. Northern Illinois (9-2) vs. Cal State- Fullerton (7-4), 3 p.m. At Jacksonville, Fla. Iowa (9-2) vs. Florida (7-2-1); 7 p.m. Drain 10.43, Barbison 7.6, KU 10.28, 10.92, Drain 10.35, Barbison 7.6, KU 10.28, 10.92, Passing KU, Adler 13.27, 13.76, Sitzes 12.29, PEACH BOWI BOLIDA POWE At San Diego Brigham Young (10-1) vs. Missouri (7-4) 9 p.m. At Orlando, Fla. Maryland (8-3) vs. Tennessee (7-3), 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 22 HALL OF FAME BOWL Birmingham, AL West Virginia (8) vs. Kentucky (6-4-1), 7 p.m. Friday, Dec. 20 GATOR BOWL At Jacksonville, Fla. Olive Florida (2.2) 7:1m Saturday, Dec. 24 SUN BOW! At El Paso, Texas Southern Methodist (91) vs. Alabama Monday, Dec. 26 ALOHA BOWL At Honolulu, Hawaii Penn State (7-4-1) vs. Washington (8-3), 7 At Atlanta Florida State (6-4) vs. North Carolina (8-3) 2 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 29 LIBERTY BOWL At Memphis, Team Boston College (8-2) vs. team to be named. 7:30 n.m. Monday, Jan. 2 COTTON BOWL HAWKENET BOWL At Houston Baylor (7-3-1) vs. Oklahoma State (7-4): 7 P.M. Illinois (10-1) vs. UCLA (6-4-1). 4 p.m. ORANGE BOWL At Miami, Fla. At Dallas Texas (9-0) vs. Georgia (8-1-1) FIESTA BOWL At New Orleans Auburn (9-1) vs. Michigan (9-2), 7 p.m. At Phoenix, Ariz. Ohio State (8-3) vs. Pittsburgh (8-2-1). 12:30 p.m. BASKETBALL BASKETBALL Dial Lady Jadehawk Masher (In Alley Field House) ORLANDA CITY UNIVERSITY (82) ORLANDA CITY UNIVERSITY (82) 4-14 20 Buckner 1-4 3.75 9 8-12.6 4-20 Buckner 1-4 3.75 9 8-12.6 Yarbridge 2-0 1.4 Hansen 1-0 12.32 Tamiya 2-0 1.4 Hansen 1-0 12.32 KANSAS(81) Carter l 2.13 | Push K 2.14 | Taylor J 2.24 | Ranks k 4.01 | Thomas k 2.04 | Grayson s 5.17 | Push k 1.06 | A. Harris k 6.14 | Kyan r 1.04 | A. Harris k 1.24 | Khan r 13.02 | Katsura t 13.02 Stocker 0.0 * 0.00 * 12.3 7.27 * Adkins 6.87 * 18.17 * Olt. 7.27 * Myers 7.15 * Page 3.4 * 9. Webb 1.2 * 0.22 * Schell 0.0 * Platt 1.24 * 9. Webb 1.2 * 0.22 * Schell 0.0 * Platt 1.24 * Haltifee - Oklahoma City 6.6 * Kansas 3.7 Fouled out - Kellogg, Yarhough, Snider total foats - Oklahoma City 4.2 * Kansas 3.6 Saturday's KU Result NORTHWESTERN STATE, (23) Halftime — Northwestern 41, Kansas 35 Fouled out — Taylor, Banks, Pugh, Webb Fitness Awareness Techniques Services Adkins 4.7 14.2 Sünder 8 10.13 6, Page 10.6 0.1t 3.67 OT35 Meyers 3.47 Web 5.10 10.Quarles 10.2 6.2 Shell 0.44 Platt 0.22 10. Total 62 22.34 7 Seminar FALL PERM SPECIAL Tuesday, November 22 Exercising in Cold Weather will be discussed in the Robinson Pool Lobby FREE 12:10-12:50 p.m. Cellperms, Redken, LaMaur, and Zotos perms. — Regularly $40.00 NOW $30.00. Offer good Nov. 16 thru Nov. 30 with Peggy or Nancy. For an appointment call: FRAUGHT WITH FINAL FEVER? Come and listen during your lunch hour. Joda & Friends -841-0337- M-F 9:00-8:00 S 9:00-5:00 745 New Hampshire --- Attend the Study Skills Workshop with emphasis on preparing for exams! FREE Tuesday, Nov. 29 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. 300 Strong 树 SAC WEST MUNICH MA 10025 nabil's RESTAURANT Public Restaurant, Purchase DAILY SPECIALS—Sun. thru Thurs. Presented by the Student Assistance Center - Lamb in Onion Sauce • Beef Kabob your choice • Spanish Chicken 6.95 • Trout Almondine Entrees include salad, vegetable and homemade bread Recipient with other Kansas Clubs Meisner Milstead Liquor Wines for every occasion ... from exams to holiday parties! VIM 925 Iowa in the Hillcrest Plaza 841-7226 & 841-7227 2104 B W 25th/Holiday Plaza 842-4499 Total Body Exercise Versatile Cardiovascular & Strength Machine $295 RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 VERMONT • LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 • (913) 841-6642 Hamburger ... It's Not Just A Hamburger . For lunch this week try Steak... $2.50 It's A 1/2 Lb. STEAKBURGER! THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA Style! We deliver 2228 Iowa 842-1054 K.U. BASKETBALL per person Double Occupancy Sugar Bowl Tournament in EU $389 New Orleans December 28-30, 1983 Hosted by the Wheel's John and Betsy Wooden Join the WagonWheel's "D, Wo" and others from Lawrence to help cheer on the Jayhawks at the Sugar Bowl篮球 Tournament this December in the party city of New Orleans! Eat gumbo, oysters on the half shell and dance to Dixieland or Hurricane. To reserve your space on this special trip full payment must be sent in by November 28, 1983. Price Includes: - Roundtrip air fare from Kansas City to New Orleans. * 2 nights at the Hyatt Regency right next to the Superdome. * Admission to the Sugar Bowl Basketball Tournament featuring the University of Kansas Jayhawks, Tulane, Florida and Southwestern Louisiana. * Airport transfers between the hotel and airport, luggage handling, taxes and tipping for these services. * Hosted by John and Betsy Wooden. Maupintour 749-0700 900 Massachusetts travel service THANK YOU PI PHI'S FOR A GREAT HOMECOMING '83 FROM THE MEN OF $ \Sigma A E $ 1 KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS University Daily Kansan, November 21, 1983 The University Daily KANSAN The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES 10 Days or 2 Weeks Words 1-1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75 16-30 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80 21-25 2.85 3.15 4.50 7.80 For every 5 words add: 310 290 525 105 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. Page 13 Classified Display ... 54.20 net column each POLICIES Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues allowed in Classified Display advertisements except for log on no overturns. - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words * Deadlines same as Display Advertise— - Until Credit has been established Tear sheets are not provided for classified or unclassified credit cards. - Classified display ads do not count towards more than earned rate discount FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS - On cancellation in pre-paid classified advertising. - Blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge. - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement - to The University Daily Kansas * All advertisers will be required to pay in advance - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only - % earned rate discount * Samples of all mail order items must be submitted within 14 days of receiving the item. - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising - Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements - Blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge.* * Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University of Kentucky. Found items can be advertised FREE charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed on station or simply by calling the Karanban office at 843-4558. ANNOUNCEMENTS Farmed up | bedroom apartment available for lease on the 16th floor, downtown and downstairs. $25 plus fee. Call 844-299-0777. News and Business Staff Positions The Kansan is now accepting applications for Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Kansas University; in the Office of Student Organization and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in rooms 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 StauFFER-Hint by 5 p.m., Tuesday November 29 FOR RENT The University Dalian Kansu is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employment Applications are sought from all qualified people with disabilities, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry. THE DAY AFTER. Come speak on out on movie and theater at Town Meeting, Noon, Monday 9/23 STUDIO 3 room appt. Furnished $220 plus utilities, between camp and downtown and quiet, clean cabins 2nd semester sublease, close to campus, 2 HV, very quiet, price new, carpet $300; moi $414,805; evening beds 3 bedrooms to sublease 2nd semester, near bus route. $430. Calm Dan Winter, #431-012 or #432-540. Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 4 bicameral Cape Cod, 1/2 baths, all appliances, big yard 6 month lease. $350 per apartment. 843-4144 BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please come to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. Call us at: 842-1876 or 841-1287 Apartment for rent. 1414 Tennessee Splendid, plea- sure, 800-365-7872. Kill of Street parking Call: 841-654-6343 Apt to sublease Dec thru May Phone 841-3794 HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APTS. Beautiful 2 bedroom unfurished apartment, with or without utilities paid. Central air condition, wall to wall carpet, tile shower, disposal, close to shopping and restaurants. 2720 Bedroom Lane 11 or 841 6864 for information 1 BR Apts. $285 2 BR Apts. $340-$360 3 BR Apts. $415 All apts. have CA, gas heat; refrig. boiler. Leave terms available to May 31 July 31 and Dec. 31 Call between a.m. 6 p.m. Mon. Fri. 843-4754 COMFORTABLE ROOM, CHEAP ONE block from Union at 1509 Ohio, 1/2 bath, for December, deposit due in January. Displej : 2 t.bathpipe for rent. East Lawrence. Jan i. W kRd hookup. 749-2155 Excellent location, fully furnished 1dbm basement apt. Central air located at 1801 Michigan call, sagebrook Large one bedroom apartment with fireplace, located in hip of house, has separate entry and is equipped with 2 bedrooms. Low rent. Roommate for 2HR apt. $137.50/mo. util. Call Bill. B43. 849-169 Meadowsbrook studio for sale available now or December 15th off October rent. Ask for UU20 Reserve your studio now for the spring semester while the selection is good. Fully furnished, free cable TV, close to campus. 'oubrook meadowbrook 5th & Creston 843-42 15th & Crestline 842-4200 NICE 1 BR APT $205 a month All utilities paid Quit and good land Call 841-420 Q: How do you book a room? A: Nice 1 bedroom apartment for sublease. 2 blocks to the city center. $599/mo. cree bedroom, Sundance Apts, on KU Rutie Route, very nice, very water paid, suites available, free parking. One block from campus 4 bedrooms, share living room and kitchen. 1225 square feet, plan 1.5 square miles. Call Dug Road Neighbourhood Call Dug Road Neighbourhood Room for rent near university and downtown. No pets please. 814-5000 Roommate will immediately or start taking Jan. 1 for me. I will call you at 825-0842 for Mission Cheap, Cheap, Cheap. Call 825-0842 for Mission Cheap, Cheap, Cheap. --bus route. In excellent condition with carpet and draper. Central air heat, beldishware. come to see at www.martinandco.com. Sublease EXCELLENT new studio with bedroom above, seeing fan Available December 18th APARTMENTS West An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievably Slashed Prices! Rates: 1 & 2 BR Apts. From $200 featuring Limit your loss from AT&T break-up. Purchase your quality Phone works on all long distance HDTV. HOLIDAY present. Cassette player, stereo radio, DVR. 800-455-1234 BH-7100 4:00 to 10:00 MF. Don't reach out and get hit by a car. Nineteenth century German violin. Works good $1,500. A collector as a dealer. Call 842-9323. Year-round swimming - Free shuttle bus to campus 14 times daily * Laundry facilities I don't miss this opportunity to teach students pessive, resident-oriented attitudes in this area. If you're uninformed about situation, call us. We work with you. - Excellent maintenance NULEHASE (female roommate needed for second roommate) $100/month free, free bear fee to campus $10/month plus 1.72 utilities. $40/month rent for 3-bedroom apartment. FOR SALE 842-4444 524 Frontier Rd.> Save money, reept a l to 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. pone, phone 842-145-6 MEDOWBOOK BOOK spacious 2 bedroom apartment new three floor. Gas and water paid quz $249.00 per sq. ft. 1967 FAIRLAND CONVERTIBLE 1967 FAIRLAND CONVERTIBLE good must sell $1,250 Class Jerry. good must sell $1,250 Class Jerry. COMPLETELY FURNISHED Studio, 2 or 3 bedroom apartments available immediately. Great location for office or apartment. SET of PA Band speakers. Can handle 200 clean wattly easily. Call 864-1154 1976 Honda Civic Dc - runs good, must sell. $1600 or HST Offer 4 + speed 804-6618 Call 841-5493. ATAHU 800 computer 40K Percom Data disk drive 10k. Speed $3,200 per hour; max 365k/sec. Occupancy Wagon 4-air speed, air, low miles; $400 per mile. Gibson guitar 1979 Model RD Artist, w/ case built in prewarp guitar plated hardware. Mini condition, list in back cover. Auction: consignment every Friday night, 7 o'p.m. Shoemaker's, across Kai River Bridge, 2 miles from hotel. $40-$65. 1980 TEN TRT Convertible. Excellent shape, air condition- ment, $42.70/hr Bord Offer, 84%/60m DONT RENT NEXT SEMESTER. Own your own bedroom, furnishings, appliances and outfits for 1727 California Supreme. Great fresh kW new radiators, ps, plc a/c, wheels, landau top, etc. good paint quality. The best $1,250 car you can'll find. Speakers, large beautiful walnut cabinets, 3 way transmission line, Excellent sound Call Lisa. Italian leather boots, size 7. Hardy worn, gift that didn't kill. Call $85. Call #20492 after 6. Ads add computer terminal model 1720 for use with Honeywell. Call 842-4455. Sarah looking at 78 Torrance BS 5.8 Sport Comp. 5-speed sports car with a rear-wheel drive, practical and reliable for school. Call practical and reliable for school. Call Stereo television video. All name brands. Lowest area. Total Sound Distributors. 133 684 368 Omega photography enhancet 4 x 5 with auto focus Excellent condition, $400; evening, 843/7727. Used furniture, Shoaker'smear, across Kaw River Bridge, 2 miles north of Lawrence on 841-591-8067. Why Pay Rest? $2600 buys 2 BR mobile home-stove, refrigerator, air; new furniture 841-593. a mom's boat ice skates, ski jumper and coat and three-quarter length rabbit coat, only used once great Christmas ideas! Call Adrienne at 749-5600 Keep crying Total disk drive 10GB drive Brand new! 842 5697 or 842 2903 Add computer name for use on mac Macintosh Xerox 600 Memorywriter, five pages storage, service warranty, very nice machine, $169.00. Eight-inch LCD. 1948 CHRYSLER. RESTORED £2900. LEAVEN- Worth 852-7265. CARPET CARPET; dromormoon sizes, $5 shag, $5 chocolate piles. Great deals, clean stuff 842-4133 LOST AND FOUND *Personal assistant* Ladies gold watch w/ Roman numeral. Please call Hilary 842 5392 Found 3 kittens, in good health. They are living outside the cold and need help. Please 843-361-361. Lott: Black leather wallet around 10 lbs. & Mass. Joe: Keep the money but I need the wallet. Jeff: 64-1000 Lost: Men's 3-fold brown leather wallet and blue lottie binder between Gread Apts, and Bailey Apt. in New York City. Lorraine Orange "E-FastPack" backpack with 2 zipper pockets and a water bottle. NEED my Notes. Please call Stu. B4183-6461 or use phone: 516-785-4014. HELP WANTED ALPHANUM ARE HIREING NOW: Fight Attendees, Do Something: Get In Touch with the Team TAP YOUR NAME to Visit our Website: CALL 912/700-1211 Could you use an extra $400 a month? Start your own business. Less than $15 investment, unlimited earned income. College English teachers. Possible openings beginning January 18th for part-time teaching in requires English and successful college English teaching, including FRESHMEN SCHOOLSHAIRSHIPS AVAILABLE. It is not too late to enter in NAVAL ROTC. Call 641-3618. Harvard School of Public Health is looking for a technical person to operate and maintain an air force aircraft or to assist with upperclassman or grad student. Associates degree preferred but not necessary Part-time hours; bachelor's degree required. Dumyam, IBSH Room 1321, 663 Huntington Ave. Boston, Mass. 0215 or call 1215 or 1213 or only Part-time help Outside business salesperson and digital report technician Tom B18 9027. Alphabay Skilllets Liquor Store needs one or two clerks for day and might help. Contact Mr. Ruddyhee of 1904 Mass Facility, 823-227-8856, masteropenings.com. Openings. Complete Information $5.00 Park Report Mission Mn. Co. 6512 Ave W.N. Kaitliff, MT 53019 The Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures has an opening for a Graduate Teaching Duties. to conduct drilling sessions and assist instructor of Elementary and Third-year Japanese. Hours: 20 mins per session, graduate spring semester salary $1,400; Minimum grade Graduate Student status. 2. B average in work KU. 3. native fluent or equivalent. Preferred Teacher education in English, teaching and/or linguistics. 2. Japanese language teaching experience. 3. student of EALC Department and/or related. 3. required interested applicants should contact the secretary of the EALC Department, 2118 Wesley, to make an application. You will receive the following documents: academic transcript including KU record, a brief resume include re- Wanted part-time custodians, evening hours 15.20 hours per week for Admission at Adkins Center A 811.697.4355 MISCELLANEOUS Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont. COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care, confidentiality assured Kansas City area. Call for appointment 942-643-1000. HAPPY 1 B-DAY Deb Screencrews tonight! Happy Thanksgiving here, let's look at a area Stop smoking or lose weight with acupuncture 760.4439 9.5 Bob: don't miss out on the SUA STEAMBOAT TRIP Call 8644-1472. Day·After T-Shirts Par hasard, L' intrigue. Nous aurons toujours fait de vous PERSONAL Private room available in artive environment. Promote individuals looking for, roommate in downtown area and office in Lawrence galleries and Art Center. Urban space available immediately for the right man. Available immediately for the right man. Bennett W Sweelection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine 846 Illinois. 242 072 SWM graduate student seeks pleasant girl for com- partment dining, children and in movies, sports. SMSL's Bachelor of Arts program is designed to together. I'm really looking for someone to care for me. I have a single scene and foeley, too. P.O. Box 1402 Luebner, Montreal, Canada Get them while they are still "HOT" Three designs to choose from I SURVIVED THE NOLEAR BLAST ON MARA KETTY NOV. 20, 1983 CALL (913) 541-8868 Hey Nebon - A very happy birthday to Ohmar Mergerh告别 from Scandall and Corruptedurring. The final is only 22 days away. Then Minsky's look on you can see if we can't improve our typing by then! Tuftsita -letters from Hamlet, calls from Einstein, Sand cart and driver. Belle Happy Thanksgiving. BUSINESS PERS TRAVEL CENTER We MEET Or BEAT 789-4422. 9.5 Datebook Number: 1 A strong keg outlet. Retail Retail Launder. Closed. Ice Cold Beer. north of Memorial Station. Colorado Springs $100 Cincinnati $118 Chicago $120 Houston $130 Denver $150 New Orleans $150 Dallas $158 Phoenix $160 Las Vegas $180 Los Angeles $198 FL Lauderdale $198 New York $198 Washington, D.C. $190 Honolulu $350 TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd M-F 9:5:30 • Sat. 9:30-2 $9.95 per day Curtis Matthes *Showstoppers* 600 movies to choose from. 124 episodes, pre-recorded movies 144 W. 228 D. Any Available Air Fare We Have Every DISCOUNT And REDUCED Rate Airline Ticket Available 841-7117 $100,000 BONUS Located at Smith Motors 1231 E. 23rd 842-8187 (plus mileage & ins.) Alpha Leasing we rent Cars-Trucks-Vans as low as Pick up & Delivery avail Important passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits. It's not too early to order Christmas portraits for your parents or your special friend. FANTASY PHOTOS 806 Pennsylvania 841-4003. By appointment only. Special Presences on Christmas Portraits through 15 at Isabella Studio for call for details 784-6111 Special for students. Haircuts $7 and permits $22 Charm, ask for Deena Jensen 843.5300 Two stoves full of bargains and you are helping them. S.A. Thrift Store, S.A. Thrift Store, 16 E. did 828 Verizon. ENCORE IN-BETWEEN ACTS AUDITIONS Individual acts: Bring a prepared song and perform during the tour. Posttales: Nov. 28, 29 & 30 JULY For more information call 864-4556. Individual Group Acts: All auditions are open to all ages. In lieu of a special Burge Union Auditions Dec. 3. Register to BDCO in BOCO Office, 10 Kansas Union (1) BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing : conti- nue 1-4 counseling 182-1821 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sense to use in your own classroom! See "For Exam preparation." New Analysis of Western Civilization is now available at Town Crier, the online source for the Notes. When you just need to talk to someone you can call or head by headquarters. Wefort at 1602 Massachusetts. Our numbers are 855-739-5050 and confidential and WE NEVER CLOSE. Danger signals! backache, backache, arm pain, leg pain, numbness. For complete evaluation, call the Chiropractic Health Center and Doctor M.E. for consultation. Insurance accepted. No charge for consultation. Professor - grad students! Turn your knowledge skills into a proficient seminar. Highly successful seminar entrepreneur will help you FREE INFO/NEWS, Jordan Seminar, Hosia 314, Tepka, Ks 66005 GIRLS, our new ladies wool felt hat just护 reed: The Ec. Shop 723 Massachusetts, 841-601 THIRT STORES - Appliances; furniture; clothing. THIRD - bedding. Always good burgers 628 THIRD Wholekale Sound Restful P.A. Guitar, and Bass amps 841-6495 SERVICES OFFERED English M A - yrs. v.a., teaching exp, will winter in grassman positions, use univ./masters paper large or small envelopes, new tech. graphics. WHICH ARTISTS? Ellen BAI 30172 Can write computer term, service paper, themes of literature, etc. **FREE** HOME PET CARE: responsible care for your pets in home. Responsible: 843/162/8432, 542/167/842 STAMINA BARRER SHOP: 1033, Massachusetts. All haircuts. $5.00. No appointment necessary. Alterations, mending, eustomating cleaning. Cleaning carpets, windows,妒s, offices, houses, laundry. Replacing pipes. **Foreign Students:** Personal, efficient eduction of your dissertation, themes in s. technical report, resume for employment. TYPING 24 hour tying. All day, all night. Extensive use. 24 hour forms of typing. For tying. All four tying forms. 842 0612 A. A.A. AFFAILED TYPING SERVICE. Fast, first quality typing. WORD PROCESSING 841 0600 AAA TYPING. Helicon good type! 1942 1024 after t Morn, Fri & day half Sgt. I'll try to keep this clean. I'll try to use a table. AFPDORABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs Call day: 842-7953 after 6 p.m. Absolutely Letter Perfect Typing, Editing, Book Knitting, Prompt, professional, high quality 845-642-7160 Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speedy, over- or under-graded computer systems. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard computer science graduate. Back's Typing Execution at runnable rate Back's Typing Execution at runnable rate CLEAN and PASF TYPING assured. B1 644 866 PASF TYPING assured. B1 644 866 Call TIP TOP TYPING 1201 Iowa Experienced Teacher;复印器 Xerox 615 Memory writer, Royal Press FOR THE HOLIDAYS JANETTE SHAFFER - TYPING SERVICE IBM SECURE III Pc. Epsilon Elite 834-8877 Reasonable rates. Call Tol. 842-3111 It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean Yewneb, Word Chocolate Unlimited Call Terry torure your typing needs. letters, term- mands, numbers, punctuation, and special characters 842-7454 or 843-6791, 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. www.torre.com ay it on a shirt, custom silkscreen print. T shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt: Swells 749-1611. Unlimited SKI VAL/DEAVER CREEK call TOLL, FREE 1-800-224-400 or CONSULT YOUR TRAVELAGENT FOR DISCOUNT RATES on lodging, gifts, and furniture. PREPARED FOR FINALS Study Skills Workshop Tuesday, November 29, 7:00 p.m. 300 Room Free, no registration required The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4644. Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations IB M correctly Calling. Select C Elvis could write, Shakespeare could write my, mature typing. Call 842 1043 after 5 a.m. and weekends. Experienced typist theses, dissertations, term business in HM Correcting Electra; Barb 842 2130 after 5 a.m. 2 roommates to share 2 BR apt. for spring semester $116.66 plus else. 841-646. Nan or Lisa 1601 W 23rd 1. A fast Fact, Affordable Clean Typing Word 2. JEANETTE SHAFFER, TYPING SERVICER 3. JEANETTE SHAFFER, TYPING SERVICER Experienced typist. Term papers, themat, all thesis, conference papers and books. Send Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 443.904.594. Email pica@microsoft.com ON TIME. PAPERS TYPED. FAST & EFFICIENT. 844 3510 Library Research - Typing - Editing. (Will help research, outline, write) 912.8238 Experienced typist will type disassociation/thesis, theorem, procedures, algorithms, data structures, good WORD, TYPING-WORD, PROCESSING- WORD. Apply to: ACM, IBM, Google, Dartmouth, NYU. Typing. Dissertation, thesis, term paper, etc. Fast, accurate, reliable. Call 841 457 3 services at i.location typing, editing and graphs. WORLD ARTISTS, call Eilen, 841, 2127 TYPING PLUS. Thesus demonstrations papers, letters and lecture notes that exemplify grammatical spelling, e.g., English battery training, English grammar review. WANTED 2 female roommates wanted to share 2 bedroom apt right on campus. Only $10 per month, all utilities in cluded. Call 843-4258 after 6 p.m. - Southern Hills Center 749-1100 Female roommate needed to sublease Meadowbrook Apartment or spring semester On bus route 749-5386. Female roommate wanted. $135 plus 1/2 utilities, water is paid. On bus ride. Park 25s. Availability required. Graduate student seeks non smoking female roommate $147.90 plus 1.2 utilities. Close to camp and recreation center. For the best prices and service anywhere Male roommate wanted, Jan 1. Excellent deal 2-level too house; design award, partially furnished $160 mo. $40 utilities. Five min walk from campus. Bachelor's degree, dresser, desk衣柜 842-8295. Grad student preferred Formate dormitie nic 3 bedrooms. After December female room, utilities 10th and Mississippi. Call now: 842-1098 Need 1-2 roommates to share nice duplex in quiet, nice neighborhood with 6 bus and easygaying guys. Mature male roommate wanted starting spartan housekeeping. Wanted 18+ years of experience in business grocery nearby, $160 per month, 1.2 electric power, 1.2 bathrooms. Bring a gift of chocolates when you visit this Thanksgiving Male roommate, non smoking, some serious to share 3 br. house with 2 others, over 21 only. Four blocks from campus, spaces $160 plus (1.4 low fee) for weekends. Travel for college days during vacations. Avail now; Jan. 1. Reminders needed to share contemporary Barnacle leaves. Please email me December 18th August 19th, Call Lease November 20th August 19th, Call Male resume to have very nice 2-arm april siphon. Have a clean, dry, flexible male reflexes shopping area, has private pool and 1/2 afterschools. Nicely furnished fisherman's cabin. Needs to move in as soon as possible. Call Paul or Mary to see if you need M-F: 11-7 Sat: 10-5 Roommate requests to share 2 12th apt. at 790 1-2 Alabama. Upper floor of unit 24 2-story house. Available for rent from Community Mercantile. For details, please call (855) 361-3415 or (855) 342-8428. From 8/9 to After 9/9. Phone 811 341-8357. Made resume needed for extremity ice appt. Sham, Mesh gown for hospital ward, dressing kit, clothing kit, Profer non-smoking, white shirt or black suit. Call 911 if needed. Roommate to sublease private room in a 2 BH apt. (close to campus, cheap utilities. Free until Dec.) Perfect duplex apt. by stadium*. Modern, furnished 2 girls need a more female roommate starting an LR apartment. Roommate for huge house apartment. Private room, energy-efficient. $150/month (availability) to meet your needs. Male roommate must to share 2 bedroom. 2 bath apt. with 2 other roommates. $100 per month plus rent. KWALITY COMICS Roommate wanted to share a room 3 bedroom house located with 900 Entrance. Call 843 6498 Residence to share nine 2 bedroom apl in a house Walk in free; laundry, free water See www.melrose.com No more missing out on your favorite comics! Have them reserved— at a discount at Make this holiday season special with Mary Kay! Call Dawn 841-4754 Just received, shipment of new Formal Wear including: new pasted cumbersand bows and tie flowers, pastel blue checkdress cumberbands and bow ties, and black formal wear vests. Most sizes of new wing-tip tux suits are still in stock. Shipment of small and large dresses is included when used with dinner jackets, black tuxedo cutouts, tuxedo shirts, and tux pants. Come see our sharp formal womens clothing and Christmas gift. The Etc. Shop, T32 Mass. 843, 016-257-9800. Roommate needed to share space, fully furnished apt. Roommate needed to clean, on time. $150/month plus 1.5% tax. Roommate needed to share space, fully furnished apt. People read the Kansan classifieds to find homes, jobs, cars, typing services, etc. You can use the Kansan classifieds to sell anything from A to Z. Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045. Use the rates below to figure costs and watch the results. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading: Write Ad Here: Name: ___ Address: ___ Phone: ___ Date to Run ___ to ___ Classified Display: 1 col x 1 inch—$4.20 1 Day 2-4 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days of Two Weeks 15 weeks in foster $2.60 $3.15 $3.75 $6.75 With additional weeks 25c 50c 75c 1.05 SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 21,1983 Page 14 Jayhawks end season by whipping bowl-bound MIU By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor With 38,400 screening homecoming fans and stunned Holiday Bowl officials looking on, the Kansas Jayhawks ended up winning a deserved victory over the Missouri Tigers. "We needed a win," Coach Mike Gottfried said. "We sat down before the game and showed them what they had accomplished this season no matter if they now today or not. But they were not going to be denied." The KU seniors, playing their last game in Jayhawk uniforms, went out in style, dominating the 7- Tiger;s. No bowl bid was on the line for the 4- 61 but, the fans stormed the field and (ore down the goal posts anyway. Johnson set a league one-season record with 1,184 yards in pass weeks. Seniors Frank Seurer and Bruce Kallmeyer established Big Eight career records. Seurer shredded the MU defense for 354 yards and two touchdowns passes to Johnson. Kallmeyer added three field goals to become the Big Eight's career scoring leader for kickers. KU'S 37 POINTS were the most scored by any team against Missouri, which defeated Illinois and Oklahoma. Nebraska, which set an NCAA record for most points in a season, managed 34 points against the Tigers. The offensive line, led by seniors Reggie Smith, Renwick Atkins, K.C. Brown and Paul Fairchild, gave Seurer all the time he needed. E.J. Jones had his second-best day as a Jayhawk with a Kerwin Bell added a touchdown. Though slightly overshadowed by the seniors, sophomore Willie Pless had an impressive record and was a strong contender. Defensively, senior Elvis Patterson blocked a punt and recovered it for touchdown, and Colter Cooper intercepted two Marlon Adler passes. MU managed only a 39-yard field goal in the second inadvertent the suddenly stingy KU defense. Anniston, Ala., recorded 22 tackles, 17 unassisted. He also recovered a fumble and intercepted a pass to kill Missouri drives. ASIDE FROM PLESS' statistics, it was a day for the seniors, who ended their careers with the second upset of Missouri in three years. In 1981, KU beat Missouri 19-11 to earn a spot in the Hall of Fame bowl. "The game two years ago probably meant more since we were going to a bowl," Kallmeyer said. "But I think the game was a lot more convincing." It might have been convincing, but the outcome wasn't decided until Colter's second interception with 44 seconds left to play. Adler and the Tiger offense finished the game in fifth, so you couldn't score a touchdown in the second half. "I thought the seniors met the challenge," Gottfried said. "The defense played well, and the thing is that most of them are freshmen and sophomores, so they will only get better." "WE HAD SCORING opportunities in the second half, but didn't capitalize." MU coach Warren Powers said. "You have to give KU's defense credit." Besides Colter, Pless and Patterson, freshman lineman Phil Forte had a good day, as he recovered a Missouri fumble with 4:06 left in the game. The Tigers committed five turnovers for the game, four in the second half. KANSAS 30 After a high-scoring first half, Patterson's punt block was the only touchdown in the second half. The play was similar to the one KU used at Southern California to score a touchdown. Although Patterson was expecting to block a punt, Powers could not believe it. "Going into the game, I thought we could block one," Patterson said. "I think it must us up. Dane Griffin and I took their men out and I hit the seam." "The thing that really surprised me was the blocked pout." Powers said. See VICTORY, p. 12, col. 2 Fullback E.J. Jones races through a gaping role as Richard Estell, left, throws a block. Jones rushed for 82 vards in his final game as a jawfah Saturday to help KU to a 37-27 victory over the Missouri Tigers had his best game of the season and the second-best of his career. Class of '83 finds its place in record book Jayhawk seniors go out in style by upsetting Tigers By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor career scoring leader for a kicker. When Frank Seurer, Bruce Kulleyer and Co. walked off the field Saturday after beating Missouri, a UK football history went with them. The jubilation was tainted. After KU kipped Missouri 37-27 Saturday, it marked the end of an era. There were more business in the air, a kind of eerie feeling. Searer threw for 354 yards and two touchdowns to become the Big Eight's all-time passing leader Kalmerney. The NFC has five points to become the conference's Bobby Johnson got in the act, too, catching eight passes for 175 yards and two touchdowns. Johnson became a leader in season single-season receiving leader But after all of the records were set, and KU had ended its season with a victory, an eerie feeling settled in the Javhawk locker room. "IT'S SAD REALIZING that we won't be together as a unit again." E.J. Jones said, "but I'm happy that we were part of something growing." Many of the 20 seniors sit around watching the other players file out one by one, savoring their final moments "So many people told me that you remember the last one the most," offensive tackle Renwick Atkins said, "God, I wanted to win. Now it's kind of a sigh of relief "THEIS IS THE classiest group of guys. We never quit, never died, but were always fighting. I always thought that E.J. Reggie and myself were kind of the examples of that — always going out and playing hard." "When I came here, I knew the Big Eight was a running conference," Johnson said. "I was just hoping I could catch a couple of passes a game." Johnson, a native of East St. Louis, III., said that he was glad he chose to attend KU after playing at Independence Community College his freshman year. wanted to throw, and I couldn't ask for anything more, except maybe a ALTHOUGH KU WENT to the Hall of Fame Bowl two years ago, the seniors ended their careers wondering what might have been. Disappointing losses to Northern Illinois, Iowa State and Colorado, and a tie with Texas Christian left the Jayhawks at 4-6-1 Then these coaches came in and In 1981, KU upset Missouri 19-11 to advance to the bowl. Memories of that victory came flooding back after Saturday's game. "I'd have to say that two years ago was better because we were going on," Jones said. "But the atmosphere is the same. It's brought back a lot of memories." Source agreed "NOBODY GAVE US much of a chance, but this win makes up for all of the disappointments we've had this season," he said. "It means the world to me. When the fans torsed down the hall, we reminded me of a couple of years ago." Offensive lineman Reggie Smith said, "This was probably one of the most important games in my life. It was a great game and I got a career with a great bunch of guys." "I'm kind of happy and sad at the same time. It was a great win, but looking around, I realize that I'll See SENIOR, p. 12, col. 3 Carolina first, Jayhawks 3rd in KU tourney By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer Kings The KU women's basketball team placed third in the four-team Dial Lady Jayhawk Classic Saturday night in Allen Field House by defeating Northwestern (La.) State 74-73 in front of an estimated 400 fans. The North Carolina Tar Heels defeated the Alabama Crimson Tide in university, 86-63, in the double-match game. THE JAYHAWKS tied the score with 11:25 remaining in the game. For the next nine minutes, the two teams battled for the lead. OCU advanced to the finals after defeating the Jayhawks 82-91 Friday night on a pair of free throws with seconds remaining. North Carolina defeated Northwestern State 69-68 in the opening game. Sophomore Valerie Quarles looks for an open teammate against Northwestern State in Allen Field House. Quarles came off the bench to spark the Jayhawks to a 74-73 victory over Northwestern State in Saturday's consolation game, giving KU third place in the Dial Lady Jayhawk Classic. KU took the lead for good with 2:02 remaining when junior Barbara Adkins sank two free throws to give the Javahaws a 70-68 lead. Northwestern State was forced to foul KU in the closing minutes, and free throws by juniors Mary Myers and Barbara Adkins and senior Angie Smider helped KU to its first victory of the season. "I'm pleased. They were down and they came back," head coach Marian Washington said about her team after the game. "They learned from last night." In Saturday's game, Northwestern State led the Jayhawks 41-35 at halftime, but KU came out in the second half with a pressure defense, forcing Northwestern State turnovers and closing the gap on the Lady Demons 12-point lead about 5 minutes into the half. The Jayhawks were led by Snider's 26-points in the consolation game. SNIDER WAS KU'S only member of the all-tournament team, along with two players from the University of North Carolina and one each from Oklahoma City and Northwestern State. Adkins and freshman Toni Webb also added 12 and 10 points respectively. In Friday's game, the Jayhawks were defeated by Oklahoma City With seconds remaining, OCU sink two free throws to give it a three point lead following a loose ball foul. Barbara Adkins 'basket at the buzzer was all for naught as the Jayhawks came up one point short. University after seeing a 15-point lead in the second half disappear Dorsett scores two TDs as Dallas rolls by Chiefs KU was paced by Snider's 27 points. Adkins added 17 and Mvers 15. IRVING, Texas — Tony Dorsett galloped for two touchdowns and became the ninth player to surpass the 8,000-yard career roaring mark yesterday, and the Dalton Cowboys fought to down the Kansas City Chiefs, 41-21. For the first time all season, the Cowboys led from start to finish, raising their record to 10.2 and staying in the top 25 of the Redskins at the NFC East. The Chiefs, which fell behind 27-0 before Kenney began to pick away at the ballots, had a lead over the Spiders. Dorsett run 28 yards for Dallas' second touchdown midway through the second quarter and then broke free for the fourth scoring run in the third period. DORSETT PICKED UP 108 yards during the day, raising his season total to 1.038 and his career total to 8.651. It marks the 12th time in 13 years — dating back to Dorsett's junior year in college when he has surpassed the 1,000-yard mark. By United Press International During the strike-shortened season of 1982, Dorsett managed just 745 yards. Ron Springs scored Dallas' first touchdown on a yard run at the end of the Cowboys' first possession, Rafael Martinez in yards and, after Kansas City had sunted to within 13 points. Timmy newswire covers or three-draw down their rankings. Then, with less than seven minutes to play, Gary Allen returned a punt 86 yards for another score — the first time the Cowboys had scored on a punt return. KENNEY, WHO BROKE Len Davis's Kansas City record for most passing yardage in a single season, was intercepted twice in the first half. But he directed an 80-yard march on the Chiefs' second possession of the second half and finished it off with an 18-yard scoring pass to Carlos Carson. Four minutes later Kenney and Carson hooked up on a 48 yard scoring pass. Kenney finished the day with 23 compitions out of 40 attempts for 337 yards, but was replaced by Todd Brown when the Chiefs fell behind by 20 points. Blackledge, the rookie from Penn State, threw his second professional touchdown pass with 2:12 remaining in the game, a 7-veder to Stephen Paige. DORSEST, WHO HAD complained during the week about his inability to produce 100-yard games lately, scored seven goals. The end of an 80-yard Dallas march. Having a first-and-10 at the Chiefs' 28. Dorsett was called on to sweep right end. He started off in that direction, but cut back to the left and easily scored. It was on that run that Dorsett moved past 8,000 yards for his career. More Sports Inside, p. 12 - Two KU tennis players qualify for national meet - Swimmers place fourth in Razorback Relays - Missouri offered Holiday Bowl bid despite upset - Box scores and statistics in Sports Almanac Kansas 19th, Tar Heels 1st in UPI Top20 By United Press International NEW YORK - The North Carolina Tar Heels, who won the NCAA title in 1982 and came within a game of the Final Four last season, were voted into the national team in the country in pre-season balloting by the UPI Board of Coaches. The Kansas Jayhawks, who have five starters returning and new coach Larry Brown, were picked 19th and received a first-round vote. Oklahoma was picked 17th. North Carolina went 28-8 last year, ending with a loss to Georgia in the East Regional. And the Tar Heels are well equipped for a Final Four trip this season with Jordan, one of the country's most electric players, and Kyle Richards, who can also go low. The two are complemented by forward Matt Doherty, center Brad Dougherty and guard Buzz Peterson. No. 3 Georgetown had 2 first-place votes and 460 points. No. 4 Houston had 4 first-place votes and 401 points and No. 5 Iowa had 393 points. "I DON'T PAY MUCH attention to it," Smith said of the ranking. "We've been ranked before and our players realize this." North Carolina coach Dean Smith, who goes after his 500th coaching victory this season, has two All-Americans in Michael Jordan and Sam Perkins to punctuate a team strong up front and deep on the bench. Georgetown attacks with fury on defense and has a fierce center in Patrick Ewing. Houston, which lost last season's NCAA title game to North Carolina State on a last-second dunk, features a menacing center in Akeem Olaijuwan and some "Phi Slama Jama" returnees. Rounding out the Top 10 are No. 6 Memphis State, No. 7 Louisville, No. 8 UCLA, No. 9 Maryland and No. 10 Arkansas. Kentucky finally gets back Bowie, a 7-1 center who missed two seasons with a fractured shin bone. He teams with the UCLA Bruins and Benny Walker for a brushing front wall 1 IN AN EXCEEDINGLY close vote by the 42 coaches, North Carolina won 19 first-place votes and 568 total points to edge Kentucky by 3 points. The Wildcats, who at last return center Sam Bowie to form perhaps the nation's best frontline, received 16 first-place votes and 568 points. Iowa has a new coach in George Raveling and twin trouble underneath in Michael Payne and Greg Stokes. Memphis State gets another turn with America for fourth round with Louisville's glistens with Lancaster Gordon and Milt Wagner. UCLA regroups around Kenny Fields and center Stuart Gray. Maryland has two tough numbers in Adrian Branch and Ben Coleman. 1 March for arms Group defends weapons buildup Inside, p. 6 The University Daily KANSAN CLOUDY Night Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas High, 60. Low, 25 Details on p.2 Tuesday morning, November 22. 1983 Vol. 94, No. 67 (USPS 650-640) Gary Smith/KANSAN we have tomorrow bright before a Langton Hythe Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan., addresses citizens attending a Lawrence town meeting at Plymouth Congregational Church who were concerned about the effects of nuclear war as portrayed in the ABC-TV movie "The Day After." Mayor David Longhurst, left, also participated in the meeting. Speakers say nuclear blast to chill Earth By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter A nuclear explosion would blast people into a midnight-dark, frozen world of radiation, smog and social chaos, two experts on the effects of nuclear war told about 500 people in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. The two experts, Paul Ehrlich, a KU alumnus and a Stanford University professor of biology, and Robert Jay Lifton, professor of psychiatry at Yale University, spoke about the effects of nuclear war at a forum sponsored by the KU College Faculty Committee on the History and Philosophy of Science. THE LAST PART of the forum, beginning at 9:30 p.m., was broadcast on ABC-TV's "Nightline" Ted Koppel interviewed members of a panel of Lawrence citizens, a student and the two experts about the various issues raised by "The Day After," a movie on the consequences of nuclear war that was broadcast Sunday night. The audience in the Ballroom could see the Washington "Nightline" studio on several television sets in the room. Belfried said that if 1 percent of the See related stories p. 6 joint nuclear arsenals of the United States and the Soviet Union was detonated, the world's temperature below 40 or 50 degrees below Zero Celsius. The dust and smoke covering the atmosphere would be enough to asphyxiate survivors of the explosion and the ensuing radiation, he said. "The dust is so thick that asphyxic because it showed survivors stepping onto a world with sunlight. Movie renews summit issue for Longhurst By BRUCE F. HONOMICHL Staff Reporter Lawrence Mayor David Longhurst announced yesterday that he had again invited President Ronald Reagan and Soviet President Yuri Andropov to Lawrence for a summit meeting to estimate an end to the nuclear arms race. Longhurst made the announcement yesterday at a town meeting at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St., where several Lawrence residents told of their fears of nuclear war. He said that yesterday, after having See TOWN, p. 5, col. 1 Priority wins by 2 votes; coalitions attack results By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter The recent student body presidential election has become a "circus," "run-around" and a "game of musi- tion." The coalition members said yesterday. After a second official count, Scott Swenson and Dennis Striickland of the Priority Coalition are again narrowly beaten last week's Student Senate elections. On Sunday, Momentum presidential candidate Kevin Walker said that an election official had told him that the Costume Party Coalition had won by one vote after the Elections Review Board re-tallied the ballots and discovered more votes for the Costume Party candidates. However, results from the re-tally were never officially announced. Throughout yesterday's meeting of the Elections Review Board, Dennis "Bogo" Highberger and Carla Vogel, Costume Party president and vice presidential candidates, remained silent. The Elections Review Board voted 3-2 to uphold a previous decision that invalidated ballots marked with "Momentum" instead of the candidates' names. Altogether, the Senate Elections Committee invalidated 114 votes from the election, some because they were marked only with the word "Momentum." But Mark McKee, vice presidential candidate for the Momentum Coalition, said, "It's not over. It is not over vet." Walker said his attorney would file a formal complaint today in Douglas County District Court appealing the decision made by the board. He also said that he had already See related story p. 5 arranged for an emergency meeting of the University's Judicial Review Board so that he could appeal the decision. After hearing about the review board's decision not to count the ballots marked "Momentum," McCain said, "No way. This just isn't fair." Walker also said that he questioned the ruling of the board. "If we aren't Momentum, then who in the hell is?" he asked. Walker said he thought that the board's decision was biased because some members had connections with the Perspective Coalition, which won last year's student body elections and this year supported Priority. Jim Clark, chairman of the elections committee, said the review board had reached its decision because it had no way of knowing whether students intended to vote for him or when they voted for "Momentum." Referring to Kansas state law, Clark said, "The rules state that you have to write in the names. Everyone knows that. The poll workers gave us somewhat of a problem. We had two isolated incidents where poll workers were telling people that they could Momentum, but I said, No more." However, he said, the problems were not as great as Momentum said. "Some people did make mistakes, but it didn't happen all 30 or 50 times that they said it did." Clark said. "We don't want to cover the poll workers' mistakes." The review board re-counted the ballots yesterday morning. The official results were: Priority, 1,654 votes; Costume, 1,052 votes; Mo Re-tallies, appeals delay results of election See ELECTION, p. 5, col. 1 Since Thursday, several events have unfolded, clouding even further the closest election in Student Senate elections in November and decisions de rei since then. Since last week's student body elections, the results have been tallied three times, apparently with two different winners. - THURSDAY: Priority Coalition officially defeats Momentum Coalition by 13 votes. Priority candidates Scott Swenson and Dennis Strickland are eliminated, while Kevin Walker and Mark McKee receive 1,066 votes; Costume Party's Dennis "Boo" Highbierger and Carla Vogel finish third with 1,004 votes; and Freedom the Steve Bergstrom and Greg Gausha get 246 votes. However, 114 ballots cast in the election are declared invalid. Julie Menzel, chairman of the Elections Review Board, rules that some ballots are invalid because they are marked with only the word "Momentum" and not with the names of Walker and Menzel. The board asks for a recount and for repeal of the board's decision. Walker says that if the votes marked "Momentum" among the 114 ballots had been counted, his coalition would have won. Walker and an election official both say that the sheets have been tabulated incorrectly, and Walker says that an election official told him that Costume Party had won the election by one vote. - FRIDAY: Tally sheets used in tabulating the ballots are re-counted. - YESTERDAY: After a third re-count, Swenson and Strickland are again declared the winners by two votes. According to the revised totals, Priority receives 1,054 votes to Costume's 1,062. Momentum finishes third with 1,038. The Elections Review Board also upholds its decision to invalidate the ballots marked "Momentum." Walker she will he take the Review Board's decision to invalidate the 114 votes to the Judicial Review Board composed of students and faculty. AT&T stocks welcomed in trading By United Press International NEW YORK - Wall Street greeted the long-awaited debut of eight new AT&T stocks yesterday with calm but active trading that produced few surprises. The eight new companies will be created from the old American Telephone & Telegraph Co. when AT&T spins off its local operating companies Jan. 1. The divestiture will produce a new, trimmed-down AT&T and seven regional utilities. Almost 14.5 million shares of stock in old AT&T and the eight new pieces were traded on the New York Stock Exchange when volume was counted up at 3:30 p.m. CST. That was close to the NYSE estimate, but sluggish trading in other areas produced a total volume below 100 million. Ambitous the new stocks will not be distributed until February, the NYSE permitted trading to begin yesterday under special "when issued" certificates for the delivery of the certificates in 90 days. THE UNUSUAL PROCEDURES and the general confusion that has accompanied the diversite apparently kept small stockholders out of the picture. Much of the action required to involve arbitrats — financiers who profit from hairline/infantile differences between the same commodities on different markets. With the old AT&T trading side by side with the eight pieces that will replace it Jan. 1, the arbitrators had a field day. KU freshman dies of head injuries By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter An 18-year-old KU student died yesterday afternoon from injuries he suffered early Sunday morning in a fall from the roof of a fraternity house. Tim Findley, Overland Park freshman, died at 3:25 p.m. at the University of Kansas Medical Center where he had undergone nearly four hours of surgery Sunday morning to relieve pressure on his brain, said Paul Rappoport, a graduate Alma Mia Epsilon fraternity, 1465 Tennessee St. RAPPOPORT SAID that about 4 a.m. Sunday Mr. Findley and two other men were on the roof of the fraternity looking into a window. While they were running along the roof, he said, Mr. Findley fell about 10 feet and landed on a concrete porch. I In high school at Shawnee Mission South, he was an all conference offensive tackle, his father said, but he was not big enough to play college football. He was then taken by ambulance to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and was later transported to "I'm liked people," his father said. "He had a tremendous number of friends. I never realized it." Mr. Findley Mr. Findley was majoring in computer science at KU; his father, Jerry Findley, said. "THE ONE THING that impressed me was that whenever he saw you in the hallway, he would say, 'Hello,' or 'How's it going','" he said. Rappoport said that Mr. Findley had one quality that stood out to most people he knew. Jerry Findley remembered that his son was also enthusiastic about one other thing Christmas. "Tim at 18 was still a little kid at Christmas. He would get so excited over presents. We never open them on Christmas. We had to open them on Christmas Eve." he said. Visitation will be from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday at D.W. Newcomer's Sons, 8201 Mctal Avenue, Overland Park. Mass will be at 1:30 p.m. Friday at the Country Club Christian Church, 6101 Ward City. City, Mo. Burial will be at Johnson County Memorial Garden, 112th Street and Metcalve Avenue. Besides his parents, Mr. Findley is survived by a brother, Richard. The family requests that memorial conti- nues on Sunday, the day's name to the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. THE WORLD'S FIRST EVERYBODY RESPONDING TO A DISASTER With autumn's job nearly complete, the only thing left for a child to do is to turn nature's work into a playground. Two-year-old Violet Blossor, 1226 Connecticut St., was helping her mother, Khelila, compress raked-up leaves in a trash can last week when she temporarily became a part of the pile. Staff Reporter After the last turkey from the Thanksgiving rank and file wobbles through the check-out stand on Thursday, customers can expect to see prices rise. Fowl is fair game for Thanksgiving bargain hunters By DONNA WOODS Staff Renorter "Everybody gives away turkeys at Thanksgiving," said Al L阳, manager of Kroger Super Store. 23rd Street and Nissim Drive. "But by Christmas, you can expect to see the prices up." Turkies struggle to fly, but prices seem to soar with ease. And soar they will. During Thanksgiving, Long said, supermarkets sell the birds below cost to bring in customers who not only buy turkeys, but also buy shopping carts with all of the trimmings. MARVIN HAUSCHLID, manager of Rusty's IGA, 910 low St., said the price of turkeys was at least 20 cents lower than a store's wholesale cost. The "bottom-of-the-line" bird is selling for about 35 cents a pound in Lawrence, provided that customers spend a specified amount on other groceries. Al Adams, extension specialist at Kansas State University, said that the average wholesale cost for a turkey this year ranged from 57 cents to 87 cents a pound. But Victoria Witers, house director for Alpha Delta Pi sorority, said that most of the sororities and fraternities did not take advantage of lower costs, because they did not have the freezer space or because they ordered food from wholesalers. CHERYL WILEY, kitchen manager for Ellsworth Hall, said that residence halls operated on a monthly bid system and could not buy extra bids, either. The high cost of corn, milo and soybeans — the turkey's main diet — has made turkey-raising more expensive. Adams said that the price was about the same as last year, even though the cost of raising capital was higher. But the bird that Benjamin Franklin wanted to be a national symbol is not in danger of extinction. "Somebody's always going to raise the turkeys, but it's going to be the small producers that make it." 1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Two men dead in collision of jets on training mission VICTORVILLE, Calif. Two Air Force Phantom jets on a training mission out of Mount Kilimanjaro, were crushed in flight and erupted into flames during an attack by George Kilimanjaro. Sgt. Richard Mas said the two F-4E jets collided about 3 p.m. CST in the helan area, about 13 miles southwest of the San Bernardino County base. Greg Randolph of the county coroner's office confirmed that there were two fatalities in the crash, but said that the victims had not yet been identified. Sheriff's Sgt. Bill Bethke said witnesses saw a large ball of fire in the sky and two parachutes. The two pilots who parachuted to the ground were located, but no information was available on their condition. The bodies of the other two victims were found near the wreckage. Heavy fighting was reported in the northern mountains of Nicaragua yesterday by both the government and the U.S.-backed insurgents. The government said it had killed 100 rebels, while the rebels said that the Sandinista troops had suffered 200 casualties. The leftist government and the rebels regularly infiltrate enemy losses, but the high casualty count issued by both sides indicated that the level of damage was not significant. The official government newspaper Barricada said the Simon Bolivar Battalion, the ruling Sandinista Front's counter-insurgency strike force, overran a large rebel camp on the Kantayawas mountain in Jinetea province. 125 miles northeast of Managua. Philippines revives vice presidency MANILA, Philippines — The ruling party decided yesterday to revive the vice presidency as President Ferdinand Marcos' wife Iwela took herself out of the running to be a candidate to succeed her reportedly ailing husband. Leonardo Perez, the minister for political affairs, told reporters that members of the ruling party in the National Assembly had voted at a caucus meeting to abolish the executive committee and to restore the position of vice president in 1987. As an interim arrangement, Perez said that the speaker of the National Assembly, former Supreme Court chief justice Queurbe Makalintai, would succeed Marcos, 66, if he becomes unable to complete his term, which expires in 1987. Personal income rises 1.2 percent WASHINGTON — Personal income rose 1.2 percent in October for the strongest gain in more than two years, the Commerce Department reported yesterday. But the department said spending slowed dramatically, especially on services such as electricity. Every large category of income, from Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige said that the growth pattern was typical and that it was generated by continued expansion in production and employment. Clark sworn in as interior secretary WASHINGTON — William Clark was sworn in as the 44th secretary of the United States yesterday in an unusual private ceremony attended by President Regis White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said that "Judge Clark wanted to be sworn in privately and quietly, and he was." Carr wanted to be on his patrol and question, "he wants to go on with the job." Speaks said. Attorney General William French Smith administered the oath, Sneakes said, and no media coverage was permitted. It was unusual not to have a public ceremony for the oath-taking of a Cabinet official. A full-blow ceremony was staged last week for the swearing in of Susan Phillips as chairman of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission. Cousteau praises experimental boat NORFOLK, Va. — Marine explorer Jacques Cousteau said yesterday that his experimental sailboat had worked "beyond expectations" until storms wrecked it on the 38th day of its Atlantic crossing. The 65-foot camaraderie Moulin a Vent, which had a smokestack-like mast that propelled it by deflecting air through the cylinder, had to use a large fan. "This experiment is finished, and documents that the new system works beyond expectations." Couteau said. The craft's maiden voyage went smoothly during Thursday, Cousteau said, when welds securing the mast snapped during a storm. LONDON — Russian defector Viktor Korchnoi yesterday upset Soviet prodigy Gary Kasparov, who is trying to become the youngest chess champion ever, in the first game of their world semifinal series. Kasparov, 20, a former Soviet youth champion, got into serious time trouble against the 52-year-old grandmaster, who branched into the world in the early 1980s. Before the match, Kasparov and Korchnoi shook hands and smiled at each other, then began their board-jousting in a chandelier banquet room of the Great Eastern Hotel near the heart of London's financial district. WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-22-83 30.00 29.77 SEATLITE COLO MINNEAPOLIS WARM BOSTON NEW YORK 30.00 SAN FRANCisco DENVER METRO ATLANTA COOL LOS ANGELES HIGHEST TEMPERATURES DALLAS NEW ORLEANS MIAMI LEGEND RAIN SNOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW UPI WEATHER FOCOAST Today, the weather will be mostly fair across the nation with snow expected in parts of the northern Plains and parts of the Great Lakes. Locally, today will be cloudy with a chance of rain and a high near 60, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tonight will be windy and colder with rain changing to snow and a low around 25. Tomorrow will be cloudy with a chance of light snow and a high around 30. Thanksgiving Day will be partly cloudy with a high near 40. CORRECTION Because of a reporter's error, the Kansan incorrectly reported yesterday that Mark Hoover, winner of the Pharmacy Student Senate seat, was an independent. He is a member of the Priority coalition. JFK to be remembered 20 years after his death By United Press International Americans, including his widow and 93-year-old mother, will observe the 20th anniversary of President John F. Kennedy's assassination today with memorial services, special Masses and concerts. His mother, Rose, and his widow, Jacqueline Onassis, will be at the family compound on Cape Cod and will attend a special Mass nearby. Most of the Kennedy family will start the day with a visit to his grave and the eternal flame at Arlington National Cemetery, celebrate a special Mass with President Reagan and others, and attend a commemorative concert. The Kennedy Library in Boston plans a special celebration of his life. CHURCHES OF ALL denominations around the country will hold services to remember Nov. 22, 1963, when the nation's 35th president was killed by a Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., and family members will enter Arlington National Cemetery outside Washington, D.C., before it is opened to the public today. The family is to gather at the grave where the eternal flame burns and a wreath overlooking the marker forms the letters "JFK." Kennedy and his family will then go to Holy Trinity Roman Catholic Church in Georgetown for a Mass to be celebrated by Archbishop James Hickey. The senator also will speak at the church. Dallas will conduct its annual memorial service about a block from where Lee Harvey Oswald fired the fatal shots. sharpshooter while he was riding in a motorcade through Dallas. REAGAN IS AMONG the guests invited to the church, which the late president attended when he was a senator. Mrs. Reagan is visiting her ailing mother in Phoenix, Ariz., and The Kennedy family will attend a free concert at the capital city's Kennedy Center for performances by diva Grace Bumry, conductor Mistislav Rostropovich, violinist Isaac Stern and pianist Eugene Istomin of works presented at the White House while Kennedy was president. Caroline Kennedy, the late president's daughter, will attend the Washington events and then is expected to fly to Hyannis Port to be with her mother and grandmother. Kennedy's son, John, is in India doing graduate work will not attend. In Dallas, county Democratic officials said today's commemoration of the event that brought infamy to the city would be the last one Future services will take place on Kennedy's birthday. Sen. Kennedy and Onassis declined invitations to the ceremonies. ERIK JONSON, mayor of Dallas in 1933, said the city had spent 20 years living down its image as the "City of Hate." Officials at the Kennedy Library in Boston plan special films and programs concentrating on Kennedy's life, not his death. "The whole aspect is that this is a library of life," said Jane Cronin, a library spokesman. "We try to concentrate on the bright and the lively parts of the Kennedy administration and his life." The Vatican City newspaper *parti tribute yesterday to the slain president, saying he was" the major protagonist of the conflation and of universal peace* In Moscow, the Soviet news agency Tass also commented, saying, "In the opinion of the researchers, most of the (presidental) assassins were actually concrete influential political forces that disliked some figure or another. Irish group threatens violence after church attack By United Press International BELFAST, Northern Ireland — Extremists who sprayed gunfire in a Protestant church, killing three Bible-bearing ushers, vowed yesterday to make the attack "like a picnic" if violence against Catholics continued. The new threat of bloodshed came one day after three masked gunmen sprayed automatic-weapon fire at 70 Protestants praying in a wooden church in Darkey, 47 miles southwest of Belfast. Police began an intensive manhunt for the terrorists who killed the three ushers and wounded seven other churchgoers. One member of the congregation was tape-recording the opening hymn when the attack took place, and the macabre sound of a religious hymn interrupted by rapid gunfire was broadcast yesterday on Ulster radio. POLICE BLAEMED NATIONALIST guerrillas after ballistics experts said one of the guns used in the attack had been used in murders carried out by the exemptist Irish National Liberation Army (NLI) of the banned Irish Republican Army. A previously unknown group, the Catholic Reaction Force, claimed responsibility for the killings, denounced by Irish Prime Minister Garret Fitzgerald as a "blasphemous seectarian horror." A Belfast police spokesman said, "We now believe the Catholic Reaction Force is a flag of convenience for the INLA, who seem intent on starting another campaign of tit-for-tat killings between Protestants and Catholics." Catholic extremists who claimed responsibility for the attack, in a telephone call to an Irish reporter, demanded a halt to the Protestants' "vicious campaign against Catholics, or we will make last night's killing look like a picnic." THE CALLER SMD the attack was made "in retaliation for a murderous sectarian campaign carried out in the Armvault and Down areas over the past years by the Protestant Action Force" a Protestant paramilitary group. In London, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher condemned the attack, saying "murder is terrible of any kind. Murder when they are at worship is the worst kind of all. I want only to express one's total horror and rebellion." MAMA JENERIC'S PIZZA IS READY TO DELIVER 12" Pizza with one topping $6.00 each additional topping--75c 16" Pizza with one topping $8.50 each additional topping--$1. Don't forget--'Pizza-by-the-Slice Only $1 per slice! Delivery 'til 1 a.m. Dine In or Sunday-Thursday Carry Out 'til 2 a.m.on weekends 'til 2 a.m. MAMA JENERIC'S PIZZA 900 Indiana 843-MAMA Oo 39. 95 SALE WE HAVE THE FRAMES YOU WANT FOR THE LENSES YOU NEED 图 At Hutton Optical, pick your favorite designer and purchase a complete pair of lenses and frames for only $39.95—regularly $65.00 to $100.00. Tints, oversize, cataracts and multifocus—additional charge. Designer frames available are: eg - Mary McFadden * Anthony Martin - Oleg Cassini * Vera - Zsa Zsa Gabor * Arnold Palmer Offer good through Dec. 3 Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames. Cannot be used in conjunction with any other sale. 9 HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 AN INVITATION TO: HAAS IMPORTS Open House WHEN: Sun., Nov. 27. WHERE: 6th and Kasdell - Westridge Shopping Center WHEN: Sun, Nov 27 Come for the annual Open House all merchandise—Holiday items, gifts ideas, etc. at the Haas Imports store. 20% off except consignment goods. Open Sunday 1:4 p.m. M-S 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Th 9 a.m.-8 p.m. **PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA** PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA·MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA·MAZDA KEEP THE TOYOTA FEELING... SPARK PLUGS $1.99 $1.25 $4.95 AIR FILTERS WITH TOYOTA QUALITY SERVICE AND PARTS. DILFILTERS $3.75 $3.95 FUEL FILTERS COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL $21.95 Japanese Imports Only • Pressure test cooling system • Drain & install one (1) gallon of permanent-type anti-freeze • Check belts & hoses PLAZA TOYOTA·MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2191 Coupon must be presented at time of write. 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SPARK PLUGS SALE PRICE: $3.99 $1.25 AIR FILTERS SALE PRICE: $4.95 OIL FILTERS SALE PRICE: $3.75 FUEL FILTERS SALE PRICE: $3.39 COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL $21.95 Japanese Imports Only • Pressure test cooling system • Drain & install one (1) gallon of permanent-type anti-freeze • Check belts & hoses PLAZA TOYOTA•MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2191 Coupons must be presented at time of write-up Coupon TUNE-UP SPECIAL All Japanese Imports $29.95 Electronic ignition Includes new bank plug and older models digital wifi • install new bank plug • set engine reprogramming • adjust fuel pressure • adjust ignition • install new tire Mats and Toyota only PLAZA TOYOTA•MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2191 Coupons must be presented at time of write-up $36.95 Standard ignition Includes new bank plug • install new bank plug • set engine reprogramming • adjust fuel pressure • adjust ignition • install new tire Mats and Toyota only PLAZA TOYOTA·MAZDA TUNE-UP SPECIAL $29.95 All Japanese Imports Electronic Ignition included at spare and laborer models, higher range • Installed new spark plugs • Levering new plugs • Adjusted accelerator power • Installed new clutch pedal • Installed new transmission • Adjusted airbag system • Installed new brake pedal • Installed new transmission • Installed new brake pedal PLAZA TOYOTA • MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA (842) 2191 Coupons must be presented at time of service Standard Ignition included at spare and laborer models, higher range • Installed new spark plugs • Levering new plugs • Adjusted accelerator power • Installed new clutch pedal • Installed new transmission • Installed new brake pedal WE KEEP YOUR TOYOTA CHEAP-2-KEEP PARTS AND SERVICE PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1983 Page NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports : Missouri seeks legal action against designers of Hyatt KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The state of Missouri has taken initial steps to discipline people involved in the design or construction of the Hyatt Regency hotel, where 114 people died when a catwalk collapsed in July 1981, the Kansas City Times reported yesterday. The Times said that the state Board for Architects, Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors met Sunday in St. Louis and formally asked the Missouri attorney general to begin legal action to suspend or reconsider the fees of several architects and engineers involved in building the hotel. Assistant Attorney General Paul Spinden refused to name the individuals because of pending legal action. He said that the board had reviewed the findings of an inquiry that had been under way for more than two years. The National Bureau of Standards also investigated the disaster, which injured about 200 people reported that the walkways in the location were unstable. Student pleads not guilty to charge A KU student pleaded not guilty Thursday in Douglas County District Court to a charge of aggravated assault and aggravated battery in an attempt to kill his mother. William Bemis, Hays senior, will be tried on those charges at 9 a.m. Jan. 9 in Douglas County District Court. The complaint, which was filed Nov. 9, alleges that Bemis struck Wilkerson with a stick. Man injured in hit-and-run accident A 26-year-old Lawrence man suffered minor injuries last night when he was struck by a hit-and-run driver near 12th and Mississippi streets, police said. Douglas J. Degn, 26, 2020$^2$; W. 27th St., suffered cuts and bruises to his lower right leg in the accident. He was transported by Lawrence County Ambulance to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where he was treated and released. Degus was unable to get out of the way, police said, and, as the car struck him, he used his hand to try to jump over the front end of the car. Police said Degn was standing beside his car when he saw a car that was heading north on Mississippi Street veer to the right toward him. The car struck Degr in the leg, police said, throwing him onto the hood and over the top of the car. Police described the car as a red compact, and red paint from the car was found on Degr's pants. Five groups chosen for Encore show Five groups of fraternity and sorority members were chosen last night to present shows based on the theme "Beyond the 20th Century" during the second annual Encore production sponsored by the Board of Class Officers Encore will be Feb. 23-25 in Hoch Auditorium Fifty percent of the show's proceeds will be donated to the Lawrence United Fund, 40 percent will go to participating groups to defray expenses and the remaining 10 percent will be used to pay operating expenses. Groups selected to participate in the show were: Beta Theta Pi and Alpha Delta Pi; Phi Gamma Delta and Kappa Alpha Theta; Delta Upsilon and Chi Omega; Kappa Sigma and Delta Delta Delta; and Sigma Nu and Alpha Chi Omega. ON THE RECORD WOMEN IN TWO rooms in Ellsworth Residence Hall reported to KU police that a man entered their rooms early Saturday morning. Two women in one of the rooms said that the man fled when they awoke and saw him in their room. A woman in another room said that a man entered her room about 2:45 a.m. Saturday and fled when she recognized him. Police have a suspect in the case. IN ANOTHER INCIDENT at Ellsworth, a woman reported that sometime between 12:45 and 1:45 a.m. Wednesday a man entered the women's bathroom while she was showering. Another woman had been in the room for about midnight. Police do not know whether the same person was involved. AN EIGHT-POUND turkey and $75 in cash were stolen sometime between 2:30 and 6:30 a.m. from an apartment in the 1600 block of Haskell Avenue, police said. Entry was made by removing a screen, breaking a window and crawling through the window. Police have no suspects. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news dork at 4083-6181-6081 The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. Send a friend some holiday cheer ... with a Kansan Holiday Message. A Kansan Holiday Message Is a great way to wish someone a happy holiday season or say goodbye 'til next semester. Write your message in the coupon below putting one word in each box. No ads over 20 words will be accepted. Then mail the coupon with your payment to Kansan Advertising (or stop by in The Box) on Wednesday, Nov. 30 at 5 p.m. Space is limited so you get yours in 20 words (or less) — $4.00* Price includes green color on border and ribbon of box. Name ___ Address ___ Phone ___ Amt. $___ one word per box This page will run Dec. 8th. Clip and bring to: Kansan Advertising 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall * All ads must be prepaid. Benefits to faculty from retirement plan are cited By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter A Board of Regents plan for phased retirement would benefit both Regents schools and faculty members, the chairman of the Regents committee that worked on the proposal said yesterday. The Regents last week approved a legislative proposal that would allow its schools to offer incentives to unclassified employees between ages 60 and 65 who wanted to work between half-time and quarter-time. Richard Mann, the committee chairman and director of information systems at the University of Kansas, said the proposed legislation would require health insurance to be a time health-insurance and retirement benefits for such a faculty member. “This is a very modest step,” Mann said, “to simply see if there is something we can do to give faculty members incentives. It's one that we think has advantages to both the faculty member and to the University.” UNDER PRESENT LAW, Mann sition to the employee's retirement tribute to the employee's retirement and health-insurance plans for an employee who is working less than The plan would help faculty members by allowing them to keep a connection with the University while not losing benefit. The plan should not cost the state any more money. And, for instance, if a faculty member was reduced from full-time to half-time, the other half of the allocations are allocated for each unclassified salaries. "The opportunity to give the faculty member flexibility is there, and it gives the University some flexibility." Mann said. NO PRESSURE COULD be exerted by a faculty member to enter the phase of gasification. said, because it would require the two agreement of the University and the faculty member. Therefore, the plan would be made only when it would benefit both parties. take the phased-retirement option, Carothers said, is difficult to guess because faculty members' motivations would vary. 'The Regents' proposed legislation also would allow unclassified employees to retire at 60, instead of the present age. It provides compensation for accumulated sick leave. James Carothers, president of the University Senate Executive Committee, said he favored the proposed changes. "IT WOULD LET the individual maintain a University connection and not have to suffer a loss in benefits at point of full retirement." Carrothers said. The proportion of faculty who will "At that stage in your career, you have a wide variation of difference." Carothers said. "Some don't want to give up a minute of full engagement in the profession. Others want to take full retirement as soon as they are financially secure." He content to teach in order to maintain access to research facilities." Also, Carothers said, many don't know enough about the plan to decide. One suggestion has been made to appoint a faculty member on each of the seven Regents campuses to advise the employees about their options. Mann said that employees between ages 65 and 70 would not be eligible for the incentives, although they might receive some benefits from some capacity. The Regents committee wrote the proposal that way because *i*-1 faculty *t*'d retire at age 65 City Commission discusses lower gas rates for KU BY JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The Lawrence City Commission yesterday began discussions on the possibility of giving the University of California a boost to keep the school from switching to fuel oil. In a study session with representatives from Kansas Public Service Co., and from an arbitrating company, the commissioners debated the benefits of using KU a break because it is the biggest consumer of natural gas in the city. EARLIER THIS MONTH, KPS requested a 4.5 percent rate increase for natural gas. KPS, which serves only Lawrence, works under a franchise with the city and rate increases must be approved by the City Commission. KPS is not regulated by the Kansas Corporation Commission, the state utility regulator that recently reported that the price of natural gas in Kansas increased by 9 cents from August to September, but the average cost in the state was 34 percent below the national average. Normally the city and KPS agree to take the request to arbitration, however this time the city decided to first conduct the study session. Most of the commissioners' concerns centered on information the commission received from Tom Anderson, director of Facilities Operations, saying that KU would switch to fuel oil if prices went any higher. KU USES ABOUT 10 percent of the natural gas in the city. Last year, KU switched to fuel oil for 58 days. KPS lowered rates for all interruptable customers to encourage KU to return to natural gas. Interruptable customers are non-residential customers who can be cut off when the gas company is short on gas. The interrupted customers are价钱 before their gas is shut off so they can switch to alternative fuel sources. Now, however, with escalating natural gas prices and low fuel oil rates, KU and other interruptible consumers are switching to fuel voluntarily. Lou Drees, of Drees, Dunn, Lubow and Co., told the commission that the phenomenon was fairly recent and would have to be considered when establishing new gas rates. Drees's report was attributed for Lawrence and KPS since 1978. DREES SAID THAT natural gas would be cheaper to burn when when fuel oil prices were lowering. rapidly. Only in the last two years have fuel oil prices dropped, creating the problem with interruptable customers. Drees said that the ideal solution would be to set a rate that would be 1 cent below fuel oil, and also to establish a fee for fuel oil, as as a customer would not be profitable. Under the franchise agreement, KPS is allowed to make a 13 percent return on equity. Last year, the company paid $50 million to get KU to start using natural gas again. Commissioner Ernest Angino said that much of the problem was caused by the glut of fuel on the market and that the rate relief would have to be equal enough to keep KU on natural gas after a "pass-through" increase. Pass-through increases are price increases from the gas company's Police watch tapes of goal posts' fall, analyze crowd control By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter "I must have spent 45 minutes on the show, first 52 seconds," Denner said. Despite efforts by police to deter them, football fans tore down the north goal post in 52 seconds Saturday. They must have been fast learners — they would have lost the goal post in to seconds, James Denney, director of KU police, said yesterday. Police officers looked at tapes yesterday of Saturday's game between Kansas and Missouri to analyze what had happened at the game and to determine when the police lost control of the crowd, he said. "I am a strong opponent of using force to protect goal posts," he said. BUT HE REACHED no conclusions after looking at the tapes, he said, and will continue to look for other ways to help kids play after games and protect goal posts. Scattered skirmishes broke out after the game when officers attempted to control the crowd rushing onto the field. The players, billy clubs and Mace with rcdy fans. Denney said that he would meet with athletic department officials today to "There's got to be a better way," he said. discuss what had happened after Saturday's game. Denney said the tapes showed that 1,500 to 2,000 people began to gather along the sidelines with 44 seconds left in the game. Extra workers had lined up at the side. Denney said, and officers thought that people would not go through them. "It worked in the Kansas State Democrat. "Only about 25 or 30 people attended." But it did not work at Saturday's game. THE TAPES SHOWED that the TUESDAY FREE DRINKS $2.50 COVER 8-11 P.M. HAPPY HOUR 11-CLOSE GAMONS SNOWIE 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA CHRISTOPHER WALKEN NATALIE WOOD PG BRAINSTORM Eve: 7:30-9:25 Mat, Sat-Sun, 2:00 VARSITY CHEVY CHASE DEAL CENTURY PG Eve: 7:15-9:15 Mat, Sat-Sun, 2:15 HILLCREST 1 a Night in Heaven Eve: 7:35-9:25 Mat, Sat-Sun, 2:15 HILLCREST 2 HAYES Eve: 7:30-9:20 Mat, Sat-Sun, 2:15 HILLCREST 3 AMITYVILLA 3-D ORION Eve: 7:25-9:30 Mat, Sat, 2:15 CINEMA 1 RUNNING Braiz Eve: 7:35-9:35 Mat, Sat-Sun, 2:00 CINEMA 2 THE BIG CHILL Eve: 7:30-9:30 Mat, Sat-Sun, 2:00 Denney said that the officers were under orders not to injure anyone while trying to prevent the goal posts from coming down. officers tried to keep control for about 30 seconds after the fans ran onto the field toward the north goal post, Denney said. But after that, the officers no longer tried to stop the fans from tearing down the posts. Denney said that when the six officers saw the fans begin to run toward the south posts and saw that the posts could not possibly be defended, they followed orders not to try to stop the crowd. SPECTRUM A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 SPECTRUM UNITED 841-1113 Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.- Close 841-3268 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES CHRISTOPHER WILKEN NATURAL LWOOD EXIT BRAINSTORM Exe 7: 30 8/25 Mat. Sun 2:00 VARSITY BOUNDARY TELEPHONE 1-804-5154 CHEYV CHASE DEAL ON THE CENTURY KH2 Evie 7-16/19 Mat. Sat/Sun 2:15 Mat. Sat/Sun 2:15 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA CHRISTOPHER WAKEEN NATRAE WOOD PG DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-7148 Eve: 7:30-9:25 Mat. Sat. Sun: 2:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1055 CHEVY CHASE DEAL WITH CENTURY PG: Eve: 7:15-9:15 Mat. Sat. Sun: 2:15 HILLCREST 1 BOTH AND IOWA TELEPHONE 843-4800 a Night in Heaven Eve: 7:35-9:25 Mat. Sat. Sun: 2:15 HILLCREST 2 BOTH AND IOWA MOVE HAYES A NAME FOR PG Eve: 7:30-9:20 Mat. Sat. Sun: 2:15 HILLCREST 3 BOTH AND IOWA AMITYVILLE 3-D ORION Eve: 7:25-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun: 2:15 CINEMA 1 BOTH AND IOWA RUNNING BRAZZ Eve: 7:35-9:35 Mat. Sat. Sun: 2:00 CINEMA 2 BOTH AND IOWA THE BIG CHILL COLUMBIA PICTURES Eve: 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun: 2:00 HILLCREST 3 TEL/FAX 800-123-4567 PHONE 800-123-4567 MITYVILIUM 3-D ONDON Ew 7:25-9:30 Mtt. Sat. 2:15 ) OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 22, 1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University of Dayton, KANSAS (USK 606-644) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart Fruit Hall, Lawrence, KA 60045, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday in all season locations. Subscription fees are $15 per month, and for a two-year subscription, or $25 per month, a Subscriptions by mail are $15 each or $25 each in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 a semester pass through the BOOKSTUDENTS KANSA network. MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Editor DON KNOX Campus Editor PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager business manager DAVE WANAMAKER MARK MEARS Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser Meaningless talk "The Day After," its stark, ghastly scenes portraying the hell of nuclear war, was indeed a depressing movie. But the panel discussion on ABC-TV afterward rivaled the movie for imparting a sense of hopelessness. The panelists - including Henry Kissinger, Robert McNamara, William F. Buckley and others told us that the number of nuclear bombs probably would not be cut substantially in the next 15 years. They said, in essence, that we must continue to live with the bomb. And then they said, just as Russell Oakes said to his wife in the movie, that man's rational behavior would keep the world powers from fighting World War III. But the unthinkable happened in the movie, and as the world's population of nuclear missiles grows, or even stays the same, the odds are that it will be repeated on the living stage. The effects, scientists agree, would be much more gruesome than what we saw on television. Yet this group of "authorities" sat on a panel talking of "deterrence." us and them, and "the window of vulnerability." They've taken the ultimate threat to mankind and turned it into harmless missile ratios and bureaucratic doublespeak. That's their "responsible" approach. Speaking in human terms is neither good politics nor good diplomacy. The movie spoke in human terms. And the American public got the message — nuclear war can happen; it is deadly; and the death is ugly and inhuman. Critics are right when they say emotion should not guide our nuclear-arms policy. But they are wrong when they cloak the problem in euphemisms and understatements about the horror of nuclear war. A mix of emotion — maybe some of man's finer traits such as trust and compassion — and realism would make for a better arms policy than we now have. The emotion has been gone too long, and we're thankful that "The Day After" was able to bring it back for some people. Unfortunately, most of the panelists, seemingly untouched by the horrors we face, were able to talk of nuclear war only in cold, meaningless terms. We'll have to look for our hope somewhere else. Stay out of Nicaragua The administration of President Reagan accomplished its goal in Grenada. The invasion was a quick one, without too much muss or fuss. Administration officials have until recently been quick, even eager, to point out the things that make Grenada different from other countries in the region. And besides, American lives were endangered. And it was an infusion for the ailing presidency of Reagan, as the polls show that many Americans supported the move into the tiny Caribbean country. Now, however, the protestations are not quite so urgent. Indeed, the administration appears to be mounting a low-key campaign to raise the possibility of U.S.-backed military action against Nicaragua or military insurgents in El Salvador. Late last week, 1,400 U.S. Marines staged an amphibious assault on a Honduran beach as part of joint military maneuvers. Reagan has hailed the move into Grenada as a last-ditch stand against a Soviet-Cuban effort to turn that country into an exporter of communism. Reagan also has leveled similar criticism against the Sandinista government of Nicaragua and against the rebels in El Salvador. The latest administration moves, if they are indeed borne out to be action, would be a drastic escalation in the use of force by the Reagan presidency. The administration's hints about what action might be taken also indicate a big change in the safety of the Western Hemisphere. Instead of an outside force interfering with the affairs of the Western Hemisphere, the United States would do the meddling. The United States, if it is wise, will leave well enough alone in Central and South America. Diminishing returns The numbers put out by the Postal Service, which says it is staring at an $800 million deficit next year, might make a strong case for its proposed 3-cent boost in the price of what is now a 20-cent stamp for first class mail. But the law of diminishing returns makes a stronger one for turning it down. Postmaster General William Bolger maintains that even with the boosts, the service will still be one of the best bargains around — and possibly he's right. That's not likely to happen, though. Three years ago the Postal Rate Commission approved only part of a requested increase, but the Postal Service rejected that decision and put the whole gob into effect anyway. So the odds are that come Oct. 1, 1984, we'll not only be paying 23 cents to mail a letter but it will cost 15 cents to send a postcard, and the costs of other classes of mail will also go up. But only a few years ago the service had a virtual lock on parcel post. Then private carriers took a huge chunk of it away by offering to deliver packages faster and cheaper, and now the service is scratching to get some of it back. -Boston Herald The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-space and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town, or a holiday or staff member. The Kansan also invites individuals and groups to submit guest columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. LETTERS POLICY --will benefit from his recent trip to Japan and Korea. Piano THE DAY BEFORE. Reagan may be unbeatable in'84 WASHINGTON — A year ago, it might have seemed to Democrats that just about anyone could retire President Reagan in 1984. Today, they may be wondering whether anyone can beat him. In November 1982 unemployment had climbed past 10 percent, the economy was still in the dolrums and the Israelis, this country's main client in the Mideast, were occupying Beirut after invading Lebanon, ostensibly to drive the PLO away from their border. This year, unemployment is down, the economy is up and U.S. troops are in Beirut. That last might be considered a political minus for Reagan except that he rallied solidly behind the president after more than 239 Marines died in the attack on their headquarters last month. Furthermore, the polls also show that Reagan got a surge of support from the public after he went on television to give his reasons for sending troops to Grenada, and there is reason to think that he also ARNOLD SAWISLAK United Press International There are, however, still some small, dark clouds threatening the sunny days in Reagan's political weather forecast. proudly proclaiming in recent months will be choked off by the high interest rates that will result from the government's overwhelming presence in the credit market. That could happen quickly, perhaps even by midyear — mid-election year, that is. The federal deficit, for one. Some respected economists, including paul e. steinberg, say the recovery that the president has been so Another potential problem is the arms race. Reagan says he will put Cruise and Pershing II missiles into place in Europe if there is no arms limitation agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union. The Soviets have hinted that they will be deployed in Ukraine, perhaps within range of the United States, if the Cruse and Pershing II go on line. 11 those threats and counterthreats were poker players' bluffs, it begins to look very much as if the hands of both sides are going to be called. And if that leads to no more than another increase in the level of nuclear tension, it could be a political problem for the president in 1984. Still, far fewer knotty political problems face Reagan going into the campaign than seemed likely a year ago. The Social Security crisis, for example, was politically neutralized by the 1980s when commission came up with stopgap financing that both Republicans and Democrats publicly endorsed. There is some talk of trying the same commission approach to the deficit problem. Such an arrangement might work to get the budget under control, but if it does, it can lead to a decrease in revenue away from whatever Democrat draws the straw to run against Reagan next November. Convention may be needed to cut deficit DENVER — For the first time since 1877, delegates of all the states may join in a convention to amend the United States Constitution. The impetus for this constitutional earthquake, whose size and scope judicial scholars are debating, is the failure of the president and Congress to take meaningful steps to reform the votes of two more legislatures must be necessary to set off this seismic shock. All our political lives, both of us have opposed a constitutional amendment to require a balanced federal budget. "Irresponsible, unnecessary and unworkable," we have asserted. But we well understand the public's growing frustration and implication that the federal deficit threatens our children's fiscal future. We've worked in our own states to coalesce the votes needed to reduce spending and increase revenues to balance our own budgets. We urge the same approach in Washington, but fear that the necessary coalition will not form. We recognize that America is heading into a president-elect era, so our steps are not taken, we are afraid that we, too, will have to look seriously at the extreme remedy of a constitutional amendment. The federal deficit is so big that no single measure will solve the problem. The nation must look at both sides of the ledger and find the political courage not only to increase taxes but also to cut spending. With military expenditures and entitlement programs consuming 60 percent of the budget, it is essential that they be critically scrutinized — strong then constituencies. The nation's governors have assigned a top priority to bringing RICHARD LAMM and SCOTT MATHESON deficit has not and will not be a project the nation cannot take a projected $23 billion a month out of its savings to finance a runaway deficit and Democratic Governors demandate. The nation's budget into balance the nation's budget into balance largely targeted reductions in domestic and military spending and increases in revenues. With certainty, the governors have warned that adding the projected $1.3 trillion in deficits over the next six years clearly would choke off national recovery and bring on an economic trauma of enormous dimensions. These views have been conveyed by international leaders of both parties — to no avail. The projected deficit has not shrunk; it has grown. expect anything but sharply increase interest rates. It will soon take more than two-thirds of all loans to finance the federal deficit. President Reagan has set an economic course in which his deficit will equal that of all previous presidents put together Federal deficits as a percent of gross national product will grow from 2 percent to more than 6 percent. Economists of both parties warn of disaster. Alan Greenspan urges a "national economic summit" to deal with the deficit. But congress and the president have not yielded. The projected deficits are different qualitatively and quantitatively than our historic deficits. They will ensure that real long-term interest rates stay high. They will magnify an already unsustainable trade deficit. The biggest issue for history has the nation been more vulnerable, and never deficits taken such a large percentage of the GNP. Today's policies borrow money from our children to give tax relief mostly to the wealthy. They borrow money from the future to avoid making hard decisions today about Medicare and Medicaid. They borrow money from our grandchildren to build B-1 bombers, which soon will be obsolete. We collect $75 in taxes for every $100 we spend. Neither party can solve the problem. They have learned to cut taxes but not programs. The problem grows with each passing month. The nation's governors, like Congress, face constituencies. We know the pain of hard and unpopular decisions. Yet we are determined to use our influence to fight for fiscal sanity. We are willing to share the political burden of action — but not of inaction. Forty-nine of 50 states require a balanced budget. They live with and operate under such restrictions. They also need to set priorities and make hard choices. While the analogy is not perfect, we wonder: Is the blunt instrument of a constitutional convention the only way to divert congress and the president from running the country? Or is the concession may soon provide the answer. Even though our entire histories weigh against it, we both may find ourselves forced to support the amendment if the present fiscal course continues. We desperately hope we can avoid that decision. Copyright 1983 the New York Times. Richard Lamm, a Democrat, is governor of Colorado, and Scott Matheson, also a Democrat, is governor of Utah. A computer that every candidate must have WASHINGTON — The threat to human job-holders posed by computerized "artificial intelligence" has been justly celebrated in song and story. But until this year, apparently, nobody suspected computers of having "political intelligence" as well. What may be a breakthrough, of sorts, was demonstrated here this week at a meeting of the American Association of Political Consultants. In the proverbial spotlight was a software system named "Campaign" to provide to providers the political acumen the average candidate needs. Billed as a "powerful, new campaign tool," this system, according to its developers, "has it all." Not only will it do work normally performed by poll-takers, accountants, direct-mail specialists, media professionals. For $499.95, it also sends thank-you letters to volunteers. Moreover, it will put a candidate in touch with potential contributors who might have the wherewithal to offset the capital investment$^1$ Here are three other vital chores DICK WEST United Press International tne "Campaign Manager" is said to perform: - "Prepares your treasurer's report in compliance with state and federal guidelines." - "Projects your budget (bumperstickers to store-fronts)." - "Identifies ticket-splitting voters requiring special attention." Why, says a company brochure, it will even "help you get your press releases out in time for newspaper deadlines." The system is the brachiedue of Aristotle Industries of Norwalk, Conn. Aristotle, incidentally, is the middle name of the company president, John A. Phillips, who previously made headlines while a student at Princeton, by designing a do-it-yourself atomic bomb. Part of the problem may be content. While this city, with its He and his brother Dean, who has the same middle name and was instrumental in putting the political software together, figured that with a few exceptions he would be a big demand for computerized campaign strategies. highly charged political atmosphere, might seem a natural market for software of this type. The Aristote product has no data on "dirty tricks." Maybe they were right, But, although John Phillips said the program had been selling "very well" since it was introduced last spring, the demonstration here drew fewer political consultants than the Democratic Party has presidential candidates. In devising a system suitable for all candidates "from the city council to the U.S. Senate," the brothers Phillips apparently envisioned campaigns in which the rivals would win the positive rather than slue mud. It is all very well to have "opposition research, voting records and issues materials at your fingertips." But unless a candidate also is privy to the latest dirt, political shortcomings may develop. Nevertheless. I was pleased to note that the system has an 'escape key' a campaign manager can punch. That presumably will come in handy whenever sudden bail-outs are indicated. University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1983 Page 5 Election continued from p.1 mentum, 1.038 votes; and Freedom, 245 votes. There were also 22 write-in votes for others. Walker to appeal Walker plans first to obtain an injunction to keep Swenson out of office, and has asked the Judicial Review Board to convene by the end of this week or the beginning of next week to look at the Electoral Committee. He also said he would call on state and University officials to support his protest. Walker said he still had no reassurance that the ballot-counting was accurate. 1. believe a number of ballots were tampered with. I think Costume got screwed." Walker said. "Thursday night, my people told me that Costume was ahead. It would be very, very easy for someone to scuttle a few votes from them. Student Senate and the administration are prejudiced. They don't like Costume." McKee said, "It is unbelievable. First Costume came up with 40 more votes and now Costume is behind two. That's weird." Clark, however, denied that the ballots had been tampered with. "There is no way, absolutely no way that those votes have been tampered with. They have been locked up in the vault. We had everything short of an armed guard outside the door," he said. Election officials said Friday that they had lost a tally sheet and that this was why the ballots had to be counted again. "They lost a tally sheet?" McKee said. "Come on. Who is to say that they didn't lose more than that?" But Clark insisted that no tally sheets had been lost. The error came when people added up the sheets, he said "People who were not involved in the tallying added up the sheets. They misread a tally sheet," he said. Attorney is critical The Momentum Coalition hired an attorney to represent it at the Elections Review Board. Walker said he wanted an outside person to observe the decision made by the board. Lance Burr, the attorney, said that the elections board was trying to follow state law and that the law did not apply in this case. "These laws have no applicability. You haven't adopted state law and you have no procedure for that. You are required to follow your state law, and you're told that." Burr told the Elections Review Board at a meeting yesterday. "If you are toying with the state statutes, you have to follow all of them. That means the person with the highest number of votes is to receive the certificate of office so the will of the people will be done." Burr said that he thought that students knew who they were voting for when they marked "Momentum" on their ballots. Because Momentum was an official coalition, the votes should be counted. "There is no prohibition against counting the votes of an official party. You have to fulfill the will of people. That is due process," he said. Clark said that the Senate was not bound to follow state law but that sometimes it was necessary. "But if there is ambiguity or a situation that our own rules and regs don't cover, and we don't turn to law,"aws, what do we turn to?" he asked. Swenson said yesterday that he "But it sounds like they were thorough," he said. "I don't see how Momentum can challenge it. had been expecting a re-count but had not expected to win the second time. The board was correct in following state law. Swenson said. "I think we are standing on firm ground by the Kansas Statutes. We're not asking for the rules to be bent in our favor. So if it goes to court, it would make me feel better." "We are a state institution. When our rules and regulations don't apply, you go to the next highest level. We aren't a little island sitting out here." "Kevin ran last year and he knew the rules. That is part of having a write-in campaign." However, he did say that the problems with the Costume Party's votes were unusual. "It looks weird. I just really can't Swenson said he was convinced that the elections were over and added that he planned to take office by accepting applications for his staff. explain it." Swenson said. Board is attacked "The board completely did not work. It was total confusion, they did not even know the rules." Bergstrom said. Steve Bergstrom, presidential candidate of the Freedom Coalition, said that he was disappointed in the board's decision. "A lot of elections laws are written in favor of incumbents. No party wants a write-in to win. We're not bound by state election laws. This is not political hardball. And if the people should have been counted, the people should get what they wanted. They shouldn't get the second-place Student petition seeks new presidential election Dougherty said that the petition would be circulated in classes on By JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter Two KU students yesterday began circulating a petition calling for a new vote in the presidential and vice presidential nominees, the recent student body elections. Kim Dougherty, Stilwell senior, and Cathy Hittner, Salina junior, said that they circulated the petition around 100 health and collected about 100 signatures. The Elections Review Board also campus and in residence halls today. AFTER BALLOTS were again recounted yesterday, Scott Swenson and Dennis Strickland of the Priority Coalition were declared the winners by two votes. Priority received 1,064 votes and the Costume Party Coalition received 1,052. The Momentum Coalition placed third with 1,083 votes, and the Freedom Coalition finished fourth with 245 votes. "We hope that people will become more aware about what's going on, so that the next election will be more fair," she said. upheld a decision by its chairman, Julie Menze, to discount ballots marked only "Momentum." candidate." Both Doughery and Hittner said that they were not affiliated with any coalition that was involved in the election. "It seemed that the elections were not really fair." Dougherty said. "We didn't like the way things were being handled." After the petition has been circulated, she said, it will be presented to the Student Senate's Judicial Review Committee. The student opinion will force a new vote. After the Elections Review Board had decided not to count ballots marked "Momentum," Highberger said that the meeting was ridiculed. "The meeting was by the book, but the rules got in the way of justice and freedom." Several students had mixed reactions to recent election events. MARY KENNEY, Overland Park sophomore, said that the election was "a rip-off," because the votes marked "Momentum" were not counted. "I think they should count all the votes because Momentum won," she said. "They'd win by a clear majority if there was another election." "When the whole thing started, people thought that we were making this into a circus. Now it is obvious where the real circus is," he said. "I'm really sick and really tired of this. I would have been really uncomfortable being president of the student body by one vote. BUT STEVEN ALBRIGHT, Ottawa junior, said that if more people had voted, the election would not have been close and Priority would have won by a big margin. He said that Priority would win a new election. Highberger said he thought that the election rules needed to be changed and suggested formation of an executive council that would be made up of the three top presidential candidates and their vice presidents, instead of having one student body president. "Then no one would get stepped on. If our real interest is in serving the students, this seems like the only fair way to do it," he said. "It would look better as well, but it would look as good on a resume, but it is the only fair thing to do." The Costume Party is circulating a petition for a coalition government. Highbierger said the Costume Party was going to ignore the official channels and go ahead with the petition. Still, he said, he might file for a re-count. "I'm disappointed that they didn't count Momentum's ballots, but I never really thought that they would," he said. "I'm just pretty disgusted with the way it was run. Students won't ever trust the Senate elections again." Forum continued from p. 1 "It would be like living in a toilet seat, under an ultra-violet light," he said. "People would be starving to death in the smoggy darkness." NUCLEAR EXPLOSIONS would destroy the atmosphere's ozone layer, he said, leaving plants and animals exposed to deadly levels of ultra-violet And people, unable to believe that the damage was equally serious in most parts of the world, would try to move, creating even more panic and chaos, he said. Rivers would be frozen and ocean life non-existent. "If a nuclear war occurred during winter, it would still be too dark in the snow." the Northern Hemisphere goodbye." THE SPEAKERS, addressing a supportive and enthusiastic audience, often drew applause with humorous remarks and calls for a nuclear freeze. The effects on the Southern Hemisphere of a nuclear explosion in the earth would be no place there said. But there would be no place on Earth where life would be pleasant. Ehrlich's statement that he agreed with the motto, "Freeze now or freeze later," drew widespread applause and laughter. Lifton, addressing the question of the psychological effects of a nuclear war, spoke in a more somber tone and said, "We don't have any jokes in this area, it is too grim." Lifton has done extensive research on how the atomic bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, affected the citizens of the city. The emotional numbing that many Hiroshima survivors felt in the wake of widespread destruction is similar to what some Lawrence residents might have felt after watching "The Day After," he said. He said that the first step to prevent nuclear war was for people to avoid psychological numbing and to pool their emotional and intellectual re "THE HEART AND mind each atrophy in the absence of each other." be said. "Rebellion of the human mind is a step toward rationality." "When I arrived in Hiroshima 20 years ago, I learned something that shocked me. No one had studied theological and social effects," he said. And the psychological and socia- effects of nuclear warfare have not be- tht changed since the end of World War II. If there are tiny bands of survivors, their behavior would be primitive and they would probably be victims of psychological immobilization that would make them unable to act, he said. A sort of "Nuclearism," which makes nuclear weapons into deities, has taken over society and has in turn led to inaction and psychological numbing, he said. "Nuclearism is a sort of fundamentalism focused on the weapons," he said. AND CITIZENS SHOULD not "leave it to the experts." when it comes to deciding the future of a nuclear arms buildup, Lifton said, because experts don't always know better than other people. "We need to worry less about the children's nightmares and more about the weapons that cause these nightmares," he said. "I hope every one of you will devote some aspect of your life to combat that danger." continued from p. 1 Town Longhurst also sent letters April 23 involving the two leaders to a summit in seen the television movie "The Day After," he had written the letters inviting Reagan and Andropov to Lawrence. "I SAW LAST night at the candlelight vigil after 'The Day After' 1,000 people holding up candles to express hope for the future of the world," Longhurst told an audience of about 150 people in the church's sanctuary. "If I did not write the letter and try to initiate a move for the church, I would letting down those people as prayer." in "The Day After" really happened in Lawrence. He said that he had been considering sending another invitation, but finally did so when a reporter from a local news outlet wrote to him how he would feel if the events depicted However, he said that he was not making a public play for himself or making a public statement. "It is hard to convince people that I'm not grandstanding," he said. "He asked me how it would feel if this would ever come to pass," Longhurst said. "I felt that if it were to happen, I would have let down my home as a citizen and as a parent. You might say that it pushed me over the edge." LONGHURST'S LETTER states that relations between the United States and the Soviet Union have deteriorated since last spring. "In the seven months since the Lawrence Meeting for Peace invitation to attend, I am very grateful." United States and the Soviet Union have continued their dangerous deterioration," the letter said. "Recent scientific studies show beyond any doubt the fate that awaits the human family if we fail to eliminate the possibility that nuclear weapons would ever be used." Longhurst's announcement came at the end of the meeting, at which Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan., spoke briefly and commented on statements made by citizens in the audience. After Slattery said that he would give minutes to express his views on the nuclear arms race. About 20 spectators spoke. SLATTERY ADVOCATED "peace through strength" in his remarks, saving that the Soviet Union was trying to split the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. "Anyone who says that the United States is a second-rate power is pushing so much bunk," he said. "The United States is the premiere military force in the world, and none of us has any desire or intent to use those god-awful nuclear weapons." "But the Soviet Union has the nuclear capability to destroy the United States, and there's nothing to stop them either a mutually assured destructive deterrent." Slattery made his remarks despite the fact that he voted in favor of the nuclear freeze resolution that came before the U.S. House of Representatives last year. Kennedy, he said yesterday that the United States could not afford to bargain out of fear but could succeed in reducing the stockpiles of nuclear weapons. "President Kennedy said: 'Let us never fear the negative. Let us never negotiate out of fear,'" Slattery said. "But one thing is sacred, and that is Most of the spectators in the audience who spoke supported a nuclear freeze. who spoke supported a nuclear freeze. Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology, praised Slattery for voting for the nuclear freeze resolution. "THERE HAS BEEN much more emphasis on 'build' than 'down' lately, he said. "The way to get rid of weapons is to get rid of nuclear weapons." Man flees house, refinishing work as fire breaks out QUOTING PRESIDENT John F By the Kansan Staff Leroy Walburn, 41, 538 Lindley Drive, was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital and released A man doing some refinishing inside a home in the 1300 block of West Fifth Street escaped serious injuries when a fire broke out in the house. Capt, Larry Woydziak of the Lawrence Fire Department said that the man was doing some refinishing work in the rear of the house when a fire broke out about 9:52 p.m. Woydiak said that the owner of the house, Shirley Russell, was uncertain of the address of the house and that fire officials could not determine the address from the home. No one else was in the house at the time of the fire. Woydziak said that the fire sored through the house. Woydiiak said that after the fire broke out, the man ran through the house and escaped through the front door. A spokesman at Lawrence Memorial said the man suffered minor burns to his leg. Capt William Brubaker said the firefighters spent 15 to 20 minutes fighting the fire and stayed on the house where the fire was putted by the fire, he said. Woydiak said that firefighters thought the fire was accidental, but the cause is under investigation. 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After commissioning, you'll attend a five-month internship at a major Air Force medical facility. It's an excellent way to prepare for the wide range of duties you will have in the Air Force nurse officer. For more information contact ATR FORCE A great way of life Capt. Sarah Kendell 913-236-3256 Call collect University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1983 Page 6 CAMPUS AND AREA Two KU professors disagree on effects of nuclear attack By MATTHEW HARRISON Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Two KU nuclear radiation researchers disagree on the validity of many of the scientific facts that have been reported about the ABC-TV movie "The Day After." Edward I. Shaw, professor of radiation biophysics, said yesterday, "There were a great many inconsistences in the movie." No buildings in Lawrence would be destroyed if a nuclear bomb hit Kansas City, he said. The movie "Streetcar Ride" that had been destroyed in the blaze FRANCIS W. PROSSER, professor of physics who does research in nuclear physics, said that overall the film was scientifically accurate, except that a real nuclear attack would have been less than the one depicted. Both men said they were disturbed because the film did not adequately explain that all nuclear research was not evil. Shaw, who has spent more than 27 years on nuclear biological radiation research, said, "The people who link nuclear energy, with its application of providing power and energy for the population, with nuclear weapons, do society a disservce." Prosser said that the movie correctly portrayed the electrical phenomenon known as the Electro-Magnetic Pulse, or 'EMF' effect. The EMP effect occurs when a tremendous amount of electromagnetic radiation, such as that created in an atomic blast, causes anything metal to act as a conductor of electricity. Prosser said that this overflow of current would render most electrical appliances useless. The EMP effect is not theory as the movie suggested, he said, but is fact. "The business of cars stopping, though, is something I'm not sure about," he said. "The interior area, such as the engine, would be pretty well shielded." Nuclear freeze advocates have said that nuclear radiation accumulates in the body and is not excreted, and that constant exposure to such radiation would lead to cancer. But Shaw said that nuclear radiation could not be lumped into simple categories. TWO BASIC KINDS of radiation effects would be produced in a nuclear explosion - acute doses and chronic doses, he said. An acute dose of radiation exposes a cell to a high level of radiation in a short period of time, such as during a nuclear blast. Chronic doses occur when a cell is exposed to radiation for a long period of time, the kind of exposure that would occur during radiation fallout following any initial nuclear blast. Chronic doses of radiation are much less effective in killing cells, he said. Shaw said that when discussing the amount of radiation that would kill a cell, one must consider the type of radiation the cell was receiving and the length of exposure to radiation that the cell received. "THE RATE AT which the radiation dose is delivered is important because you have the phenomenon whereby cells can repair some of the damage they receive as they are irradiated — if the dose is spread over a sufficient period of time," he said. "Because a dose on any given day is not sufficient to produce damage that will kill the cells, the cells would recover in 10 to 12 hours from the effects of radiation they received. The following day the cells would behave as if they were not radiated at all." Marchers see peace through arms as vital By BRUCE F. HONOMICHL Staff Reporter The dead soldiers in all of America's wars were heavy on Matt Thor's mind yesterday as he marched down Massaonia and began taking a sign that read "Muiti Is Right." "You can't fight evil without weapons," he said. "If we let the Communists take over, we will be destroying everything that every soldier who ever fought and died in war for and in and the Constitution ever fought for." AND WE HOPE IN RIST DON through ENS WE SUPPORT PRESIDENT REAG AMERICA GUARD YOUR FREEDOM! THE SOVITUN NEEDS YOU SUPPORT AUS VOLEEN FREE LE "The whole philosophy of communism," she said, "is to eventually take over the West. Total disarmament for "COMMUNISM STAGNATES the mind. America stands for right and if we don't defend her with our arsenal, that freedom will wither and die." Stephen Phillips/KANSAN About a dozen students protest nuclear arms policies, chanting and singing across campus. Yesterday's march was sponsored by the KU chapter of the Maranatha ministry. Steve Strom, right, is pastor of the chapter, and Donna Alexander, center, with her husband Chris, left, are co-directors of the chapter. Thor, Billings, Mont., freshman, marched with 18 members of the KU branch of Maranatha, a worldwide college ministry. The Maranatha members marched from the Chi Omega Mountain in Pittsburgh to North Charleston, they said, in support of peace through strength and President Reagan's military policies. "The movie 'The Day After' played on fear. It gave no hope. But there is no problem." DONNA ALEXANDER, a Lawrence resident and one of the co-directors of the KU branch of Maranatha, said that day in defending one's home and family. Armament, the Maranatha marcheers said, was the way, the truth and the Cathy Bickler, 102 Pinehaven Court, a member of Manaranaha, said, "The Bible says that Jesus Christ is coming back and is not going to come back to a world blown to bits. We need peace through strength. We've had the deterrent for 38 years and that has stopped the evil cold. us is total strength for them. The people are being deceived by the movement to disarm We are commanded in the army to assist the soldiers and sisters and families and houses. "The movie was not pro-America. It was a defense of socialism We're pro-armament and pro-Reagan." The marchers, led by a police escort, ran into few hecklers, but their procession slowed traffic on busier streets. They marched down Jayhawk Boulevard to 13th Street, then moved along Massachusetts Street to downtown before stopping at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St., to attend a town meeting about the nuclear arms race. AT THE END of the march, in Beth State, a 1963 KU graduate, said she thought the movie was image State carried a sign that asked, "Do Russian Leaders Seek Peace?" "It was an abmination of God," she said. "The girl in the movie who was looking for her birth control device was looking so she could have sex before her marriage. The only way we can prevent miscarriage, this again is peace through Jesus." THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1307 Mas Plymouth's parking lot, members of the group bowed their heads and prayed for President Reagan and the continued strength of the American military. The group repeatedly sang "God Bless America" and "The Star-Spangled Banner." It shouted the Pledge of Allegiance after each rendition. Use Kansan Classified. Computerark Most of the marchers said that they were offended by the movie's message KNOWLEDGE EDUCATION COMMODORE EPSON MOREWARD DESIGNS VICIOR 9000 ORDATA 3204 & Louisiane MALE Shop Center B41-0094 Boysd's Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy-Sell-Trade Gold Silver Coins 731 Huntington Antiques-Watches New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-842-8773 MEL AMIGOS MUNICIPAL CENTRAL DESTINANT JULY 1944 2600 IOWA MEL AMIGOS MEXICAN MEZCAL SALO LADIES NIGHT TONIGHT! FREE TACOS 4-6 p.m. 50° Margaritas $1 Highballs HAPPY HOUR 12 NOON-6:30 7 DAYS A WEEK Did You Know That . . . TUESDAY at THE SANCTUARY You Can Now Buy $20 Worth Of Cover Charges For Only $10.27! 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However, Bill Barr, president of the Engel-Crescent neighborhood association, has filed a mot., with the courts saying the site plan is in violation of city ordinances because it doesn't have enough parking spaces. The residents in the neighborhood, which is near campus, have objected to having the church built in their neighborhood and have formed the Crescent-Engel neighborhood association to oppose construction. The church is required to have one parking space for every four seats in the church, and the plan calls for 106 seats for 424 seats, which is a ratio of 4 to 1. However, Barr has maintained that extra parking spaces must be provided for the 100-seat chapel and the student center, which could house about 150 Price Banks, city planning director, said he thought the site plan was properly filed and that the parking lot would be locked only to the main building on a site. The church has promised the residents that the chapel would not be used during church services and that no one should attend in the student center during services. The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission delayed action last week on an amendment to a city zoning ordinance that would require additional review of plans to build churches. UNDER THE AMENDMENT, certain public structures — including churches, cemeteries and museums — could be built to use permits before they could be built. Under a use permitted upon review, the city would have the power to monitor the use and revoke the permit if the City Commission determined that use of the building was interfering with the neighborhood. Because of the delay by the planning commission, the City Commission will not have to consider the ramifications of the amendment at its meeting at 7 p.m. today at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets. ON CAMPUS TODAY CAMPUS Christian Fellowship will meet at 7:30 p.m. at 1116 Indiana St. CAMPUS CRUSADE for Christ will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. TAU SIGMA DANCE Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Dance Studio 242 in Robinson Center. CHAMPIONS! will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. Two KU students have died since October from severe injuries suffered in automobile accidents. One died from massive head injuries and the other from severe internal chest injuries from the vehicle and pinned underneath. By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter Local safety campaign to stress value of seatbelts Neither were wearing safety belts. Neither were wearing safety belts. "Statistically, one would have lived it," said Brad Baker, coordinator for Lawrence Coalition's "Make Economic Task Force studies ways to boost local economy By the Kansan Staff The Lawrence Economic Task Force yesterday continued efforts to identify problem areas in the local economy and setting that the city needs to improve. "Are we going to give it lip service or are we going to do something?" he asked. "The city has been beating its gums for too long." The Task Force is preparing a report for the Lawrence City Commission on how to improve the city's effectiveness in attracting new industry. Angino said the city would have to pick targets to work on, such as the addition of an industrial park. He also added playing up the city's strengths. Commissioner Ernest Angino said that businesses were not coming into Lawrence and would have to be encouraged to build in the city. Among the strengths listed by the task force were: *The city's central location in the United States. A central location cuts down on transportation costs, Angino said. *The existence of two transcontinental railroad lines and one national highway running through the city. *The city's location between Topeka and Kansas City. - The extended entertainment and artistic opportunities, because of the University of Kansas and superior teaching such as the Lawrence Public Library. - The presence of an underemployed workforce and the existence of good vocational-technical training for work-related aid the needs of a manufacturer. Baker said that more than 60 percent of the nation's traffic fatalities could have been avoided if the passengers had been wearing safety belts. The Connection — Buckle-Up" campaign. HE PLANS ON driving seat belt awareness into the Lawrence community as part of Seat Belt Awareness Week, Nov. 16 through Nov. 29. Lawrence was one of five cities nationwide to receive a grant from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for the project. Nationwide, about 50,000 people die in motor vehicle accidents annually. Traffic accidents are the leading cause of death among young people than 45 years old. passed a bill to allocate $281,000 to the program. The money was distributed through Board of Regents' institutions and Washburn University. The University was allocated $89,000 by the state to pay 50 percent of working students' wages. Houston said. KU is not the only school having trouble filling these jobs, Houston said. Other schools are in the same situation Beverly Peaseley, program manager for the office of traffic safety of the Kansas Department of Transportation, said that he was slightly below the national average. To apply for the program, students do not have to be receiving financial aid, but must be eligible for it. If they have not filed for financial aid, they must fill out an American College Testing Service family financial aid packet and send a copy of their 1040 tax form to the financial aid office. Students pass up career-related jobs offered by KU office of financial aid THE NATIONAL SEAT belt usage is about 10 to 14 percent, Peasley said, but She attributed this low safety belt usage to the lack of myths that traffic safety Kansas statistics are below average at about 9 percent. When students keep an eye on placement office bulletin boards for internships, they could be passing up an opportunity to get career-related work through the KU office of student financial aid. Many people get a false sense of security from being in an enclosed car, she said. And many drivers say that they can avoid the brown free of a car than be strapped in. But according to NHTSA statistics, being thrown from a car results in 25 times more deaths. Safety belts can keep people from plunging through the windshield, from being thrown out of the car, from being scraped on the ground and from being crushed by the person's own car. ram Houston, coordinator for the student employment center, said yesterday that she had not had a lot of students express interest in the State Work Study program. In this program students can get career-related, off-campus jobs, which usually pay more than minimum wage. Last year the Kansas Legislature trapped by seat belts and that people who wore safety belts were more likely to be conscious to free themselves. Another myth that many drivers have about safety belts is that if they are careful drivers, they won't be involved in accidents, she said. STATISTICS SHOW that only a half percent of all accident victims were By the Kansan Staff She also said many people did not wear safety belts on short trips near home. Traffic figures show that in four out of five accidents, the people involved have never had an accident before. But 80 percent of all traffic deaths occur at speeds less than 40 mph, and 75 percent of all traffic-related deaths occur less than 25 miles from home. Baker plans to heighten seat belt awareness by running newspaper and radio ads and by distributing seat belt safety literature throughout the area. He also hopes to get community groups involved in the cause. J' Ever Eat A FOOTBALL? Come in to THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA For French Bread Pizza Night all you can eat—$2.95! Tuesdays & Thursdays 2228 Iowa 842-0154 Minsky's PIZZA ZT-11 Terminal only at $420.00 Terminal & Monitor at $555.00 No Carry Out Or Delivery On This Special THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA Please send a Christmas Gift Certificate for a T21 terminal to be picked up from AlphaByte at 646 Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kentucky. We enclose check or money order for: Minsky's PIZZA OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRUNDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 ONLY 47.50 FOR 200 CHECKS ALSO AVAILABLE COMPANY CUSTOM CHECKS BASED ON YOUR OWN DEPOSIT AND NO MORE THAN 200 CHECKS PER YEAR. GIRL CERTIFICATION AVAILABLE KANSAS BANK NOTE CO. DEPT KU OFFICE & JEFFERSON P. D 100 X 800 IRENDINA KS 66738 CALL 915-502 FOR 200 CHECKS P.O. BOX 1408 WEST MIDDLE SCHOOL ATLANTA, GA 33701 DELIVERY ADDRESS: 100 WEST MIDDLE SCHOOL ATLANTA, GA 33701 MAINTENANCE ADDRESS: 100 WEST MIDDLE SCHOOL ATLANTA, GA 33701 Computer terminal for Chrismas? Send this ad to your parents and let them know about Zenith's student discount on ZT-11 terminals. $72 student discount. ZT-11 includes a modem and can access KU's Honeywell computer. Green screen monitor available separately, $149.95 or $135.00 with terminal. The investment of $420 (including tax) for terminal only or $555.00 for both and may be completely tax deductible. Student or Staff ID Number. Phone COASTAL PARKS Unplanned pregnancy? Decisions to make? For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and to talk with you. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Understanding all your alternatives makes you really free to choose. Replace pressure and panic with thoughtful, rational reflection. [Image of a woman's profile] Birthright 843-4821 MONDAYS: TUESDAYS: Lighten' up the Holidays at THE LIGHTHOUSE LADIES NIGHT- Your first 3 drinks are free from 8-11 p.m. LADIES NIGHT- Your first 3 drinks are free from 8-11 p.m. WEDNESDAYS: Happy hour all night! Football night- 50c draws 95c well drinks, 75c chili THURSDAYS: FRIDAYS & SUNDAYS: $1.00 well drinks all night! Happy hour all night! Fun • Food • Games • Dancing OPEN THANKSGIVING (LADIES NIGHT) Metcalf 103 Center-Overland Park, KS Thinking About Buying A Computer? STOP FIND OUT FIRST . . . - Do you really need a computer? - Do you really need a computer? 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Inc a 1 University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1983 Page 8 NATION AND WORLD Sudan's president attacks Israel By United Press International WASHINGTON — Sudanese President Jaafar Nairyumne denounced Israel as "the cause of the problem in the Middle East" yesterday and urged President Reagan to push the Israeli war master conciliation with the Arab world. Numeiry criticized Israel, as well as "the shedding of Arab blood by Arab hands," after nearly two hours of meetings with Reagan and other top U.S. officials at the White House during his first official visit to Washington. "WE CALL ON President Reagan to exert his utmost to stop Israel's Numeirie, who was expected to seek assurances of security and economic assistance during a week-long visit to the United States, also called on the Soviet Union to assist in the peace process. expansion policy," Numeiry said, "and play the role becoming a great power that has such a great interest in the Arab world." The Middle East was one of two key security issues that arose during the talks between Reagan and Nuremberg, who has been president of Sudan — the largest country in Africa — for the last 12 years. underscored the trouble-free nature of relations between their countries, with Reagan pledging "to help the Sudan and military challenges that it faces." In departure statements to reporters on the South Lawn, the two presidents ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT is of utmost importance to the people of the Sudan," he said. "And in this endeavor, I am happy to lend a hand to a friend." "We are of one mind on the need to support African countries threatened by nuclear weapons." Reagan said he and Numeir, a moderate African leader valued by the United States, were "in basic agree- ment with each other" in the Middle East and the horn of Africa." Irag describes naval attack as success By United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — Iraq said it hit and destroyed seven ships and a warplane yesterday near the entrance to the Shatt el Arab, the disputed waterway that sparked Baghdad's war with Iran more than three years ago. An Iraqi military communique said the attack took place at dawn, surprising Iran, which scrambled jets to fight off the Iraqi navy vessels. During the occupation, Iranian Iraqi planes battled in the sky, but Iraq claimed only one was shot down — a U.S.-made F-14 used by the Iranians. Iran did not comment on the reports. THE IRAQI MILITARY communicated the ships were Iranian vessels leaving the Khurqi Island oil loading depot heading north, while the ship remained in the southeast, but it stopped short of positively identifying the vessels. Iraq has warned it would sink any vessel of any nationality trying to approach the Iranian port just east of the disputed Shatt el Arab. "Today the Iraqi navy recorded yet another heroic epic victory," the Iraqi navy said. "Other enemy (naval) targets fled in disarray while a number of its warplanes were rushed to the skies over its naval targets." "traiq naval forces were at dawn able to hit and destroy seven naval targets coming from the Iranian island of Kharg toward the area of Khor Mussa and into Bandar Khomeini. "THESE WERE DEALT with by our fighter planes, which, after an air battle, were able to shoot down one of the enemy aircraft," the agency said. A military communique said the plane was a U.S.-made F-14. The war erupted on Sept. 22, 1860 in a dispute over ownership of the waterway. Several attempts to mediate the quarrel and end the war have failed. UAWleader proposes end to job luring By United Press International DETROIT — The Great Lakes states must stop trying to lure jobs from other states and instead concentrate on training unemployed workers and reopening closed factories, United Auto President Owen Bieber said yesterday. Bieber made his remarks at a meeting of the Congress on the Economic Future of the Great Lakes States, which is aimed at stimulating planning among leaders from business, agriculture in the six-state region. Bieber told congress participants it is time to end "smokestack chasing." "Recently a group of southern governors entered into an agreement to stop using tax abatements and related schemes to lure jobs from other states. We in the Great Lakes region should do the same," he said. Bieber urged industry leaders to stop playing "the state business climate game," which focuses on factors such as wages, union strength and taxes to make one region look better than others. Instead, he said, leaders in the Great Lakes region should concentrate on training programs for unemployed workers and the reopening of plants. Hijacker demands Jackson is restrained by passengers By United Press International CHICAGO — Passengers aboard a Republic Airlines jetliner yesterday overpowered a hijacker who said he had a bomb and wanted to talk to Democratic presidential candidate Jesse Jackson, police said. The plane landed safely and no one was injured. Republic Flight 275, headed from Detroit to Chicago with 36 passengers, was commandeered at the Kalamazoo, Mich., Municipal Airport where the plane had stopped to pick up passengers. Chicago Police Sgt. Terry O'Donnell said that the suspected hijacker, Rasault Ali Shakir, a driver from Detroit, was overpowered by passengers and minutes later at HQ Harpe International Airport. NONE OF THE PLANE'S passengers or five crew members was injured, although one passenger and three other heart attack, authorities said. Shakir was taken into custody and charged with air piracy. G. Donnell said Shakir claimed to have a bomb in the leather satchel and a gun but no explosives were found in the satchel; only religious books written in Arabic. Federal agents said that he claimed to belong to a They said he had no prior arrest record Shakir he wanted to come to Chicago to talk to Jackson, the head of the Chicago-based Operation PUSH, O'Donnell said. Jackson was not in Chicago, a spokesman at the civil rights organization said. "Passengers on a Republic flight today subdued a male passenger who said who he would explode a bomb unless he was allowed to speak to Jesse Jackson, Democratic presidential candidate," said Walter Hellman, spokesman for Republic in Minneapolis. "The man boarded in Detroit, then told the flight crew his brief case contained a bomb. "NO BOMB WAS shown to the crew. After a brief confrontation at the Kalamazoo Airport, the DC-9 took off for Chicago. Passengers jumped the man five minutes before landing in Chicago." No one got on or off the DC-9 plane at Kalamazoo, police said. The plane remained on the ground for an hour, but took off for Chicago after the FBI gave the pilot permission to leave, authorities said. The plane arrived at 12:45 CST at Chicago and taxied to a ramp 200 feet from Republic's terminal. BONN, West Germany — Police fire water cannons at demonstrators to clear a road to the parliament building. Several thousand demonstrators yesterday tried to besiege the building while parliament debated the deployment of new U.S. missiles. West Germans begin missile debate By United Press International missiles were needed to safeguard peace. N.Y.C. The small, anti-nuclear* Greens Party created a disturbance inside the chamber, parading photographs of the dead and the Jews batting Jews in the Warsaw ghetto. BONN, West Germany — The West German Parliament, besieged by thousands of chanting protesters held back by police spraying jets of water laced with tear gas, debated a plan to install new U.S. missiles in the country. Chancellor Helmut Kohl told the legislators that the medium-range THE GOVERNMENT coalition of Kohl's conservative Christian Democrats and Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher's liberal Free Democrats support the stationing and hold a safe majority in Parliament. The opposition Social Democrats and Greens were given no chance of rejecting the missile program in a vote scheduled for today. The missiles to be deployed in West Germany are part of 572 missiles that NATO plans to place in Europe unless the United States offers them and with the Soviets at the Geneva talks on limiting medium-range nuclear missiles Anti-missile actions also took place in other cities on the first day of debate in the Bundestak, the lower house of Parliament, on the deployment plans. POLICE DISPERSED 3,000 to 4,000 demonstrators, most of them young, who marched on Parliament, blocked the main roads leading to the building, stoned the Salvadoran Embassy and paraded through the capital shouting "Americans get out!" and "Grenada, Nicaragua, Euroshima." The last name in the chant has been used to describe Hiroshima-like music. Bomb squad removes ticking parcel from airport By United Press International It was "addressed to President and it was ticketing. said Port Authority." NEW YORK — A bomb disposal team removed a ticking package addressed to President Reagan from Kennedy International Airport yesterday but was not sure whether it contained an explosive device. The parcel was discovered at the door and was later found about 2:30 p.m. By a postal worker Elque said that the parcel was warranted to contain two sticks of dynamite. But a spokesman for the Police Department's Bomb Squad said the squad was uncertain if the package contained dynamite. "WE'RE NOT SURE at all," said Sgt. Joseph Caporiciol, "We can't see Building 250, which houses the post office at North Boundary Road and Old New York Boulevard, was evacuated. Elaine said. A White House aide said "there was no way" the package would have arrived at the Oval Office. "All of them are checked when they come in," he said. scene shortly after 4 p.m. and members of the disposal team placed the bomb into the truck for removal to a Police station in a range at Rodman's Park in the Bronx. Detective Ronald McLean of the Bomb Squad said that two sticks of dynamite were powerful enough to cause "physical injury to anyone within 900 feet of it. It would have messed up the building." McLean said the truck would leave the airport as soon as it was determined traffic along the route to the Bronx was light. Caporici said police would wait until daylight today to inspect the package because of a lack of adequate lighting at the firing range. into the package clearly enough with X-rays. The first X-ray by postal authorities showed dynamite. Our X-rays don't show dynamite — not at all. They do show some electrical wire around the cap. But we not taking any chances. Police Department spokesman Sgt. Raymond O'Donnell said that once the bomb was at the range, "If they think it's safe to open it, they will do that." The main thing is to make it safe, to get it away from everyone." THE POLICE DEPARTMENTS bomb disposal truck arrived at the A spokesman for the FBI in New York said, "A package was found at JJK address to the President," but said the matter was being handled by police. A hiker walks through a forest. For all your outdoor needs, GRAN SPORT has equipment for camping, hiking, canoeing, bicycling, backpacking, skiing, climbing and oceanening. We carry the best brands, North Face, Sierra Designs, Wilderness Experience, Marmor Min. Worx, Moonstone Mountaining, Katy packs, Greymountain just to make sure you have CARS, and KHES bicycles, just to mention a few. Our gear is the best. Our prices are CHEAP. GRAN SPORT WILDERNESS OE TWENTIES 7TH & ARKANSAS ST. 942-836-0288 blossoms, blooms, blooms of the St. McDonnell Association, appropriately in a pleasant, wooded area. (Where else would you expect to find a wooden trunk?) What are "FUNFLOWERS?" "FUNFLOWERS" Pick up a bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" today or any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! They're Flowers just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to arrange and enjoy. Put a little fun in your life. Pencil Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 Specially price! * For in-store delivery. Specially priced! *For in-town delivery* SOUTHERN HILLS 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" 749-2912 SOUTHERN HILLS Floral&Gift POLICE JUAREZ TEQUILA The Magic of Mexico. IMPORTED & MATTELLED BY TEQUILA & JALICIO S.R. ST. LOUIS, MO JUAREZ TEQUILA The Magic of Mexico. IMPORTED & BOTTLED BY TEQUILA, JALLICO B.A. ST. LOUIS, MO Four Fun Nights of Dancing & Drinking! CELEBRATE TURKEY DAYS WITH BERT Every Friday and Saturday $2.00 pitchers all night Wednesday and Thursday, November 23rd & 24th $4.00 cover All the beer you can drink All the music you can dance Bring in this ad for $1.00 OFF cover ( 11/23-11/26 ) Bert Haycock's R O A D • H O U S E 10635 Floyd (formerly Mavericks) - Overland Park, Kansas North of I-435 and Metcalf on the back side of Overland Station Shops MEXICO BORDER BANDIDO Reg. $2.19 1 Texas Burrito SALE $1.39 Also—80° off the No. 2, 3, 4 Texas Burrito Sun. thru Tues., Nov. 20, 21, & 22 1528 W. 23RD. Across from Post Office 842-8861 PHONE AHEAD FOR SPEEDY CARRY-OUT SERVICE 842-8861 --- KANSAN FOOTBALL CONTEST 图 Final Contest Winners 2. ) Randall Miller...$15 2) Randall Miller...$15 12 correct 1. ) John Cooley...$25 12 correct—closest to the correct score 3. ) Jay Bjorndahl...$10 12 correct 12 correct - 4, 11 correct - 62, 10 correct - 59, 9 correct - 39, others 8 correct or less - 44. Thank you for your support throughout the season. SPORTS ALMANAC KANSAS CITY - Mo - The 183 IU conference Press International Al-Big Eight football team listing position, name, weight of team in parentheses, height, weight and class. FOOTBALL Wide receivers - Irving Fryer,NBraskaua (Mount Holly, J.N.) 6/0, 198, senior, Tracy Henderson, Iowa State (Maywood, Ill.) 6/0, 198, sophomore Tight end — Dave Hestera, Colorado (Arvada, Colo.) 6-3, 242, senior First Team Center - Mark Traynowicz, Nebraska (Bellevue, Neb.) 6, 60, 200, junior. Port Worth, Texas); he bw; seni- Runningbacks Mike Hoster, Nebraska (Camden, N.J.) .N J, 10, senior; Jeson, Jaeus, Iowa State (Chicago) III. Gi. 6, 228 Tackles - Conrad Goodo, Missouri; Si Lou, Mo.; 6:4, 26, 107, senior; Scott Ridion, Nebraaska (Mason City, Iowa) 6:3, 280, senior Quarter back ... 6,10,190, senior Fort Worth, Texas) ... 6,10,190, senior Running backs ... Mike Ritzer, Nebraska Camden, N.J.) ... 5,12,200, senior Jason Harrison ... 5,12,200, senior Kicker — Bruce Kallmeyer, Kansas (Overland Park, Kan.) 5-10, 180, senior. Defense Ends- Kendra Kevin Murphy, Oklahoma (Plano, Texas), X-2, 22nd, junior, Bobby Bell, Missouri, (Lee's Summit, Mo.), 6, 3, 214, senior Tackles — Rick Bryan, Oklahoma (Broken Arrow, Okla.) .64, 240; senior, Leslie O'Neal, Oklahoma State (Little Rock, Ark.) .42, 2980 Backs- **Jackey Scott**, Colorado East St.洛杉矶, Lions, 31 - 102, see 86; Chris Huckins, Chicago Bears, 41 - 139, see 57; Scott Case, (Oklahoma) Edmundo Missouri Joubert, 41 - 126, 9 - 128; Missouri Joubert, 11 - 92, 16 - 198 Second Team Jamie harris, Oklahoma State Tight end John Clessey, Oklahoma State Offense Wide receivers --- Bob Johnson, Kansas; Tackles - Bennett, Hammond, Husband Damian Johnson, Kansas State Guards - Kevin Igo, Oklahoma State, Junior II, Colorado Center — Chuck Meyers, Iowa State Quarterback — David Archer, Iowa State Running backs — Shawn Jones, Oklahoma Baker Larry Roach, Oklahoma State. Backs - Adam Hinds, Oklahoma State Bret Clark, Nebraska; David Ast, Kansas Tackles — Rob Stuckey, Nebraska; Bob Shater, Oklahoma Middle guard — Tony Casilla, Oklahoma Linebackers — Jay Wilson, Missouri Jackson Knox, Oklahoma Orense Wide Receiver - Mike Wallace, Kansas State Ends — Taft, Sales, Missouri; L.E. Madison, Kansas State Guard - Paul Fairchild, Kansas; Paul Parker, Oklahoma Marlon Adler, Missouri Running back — Spencer Tillman, Oklahoma State, Sevil Bankmark Colorado Punter - Scott Fulghue, Kansas State Center — Chuck Thomas, Oklahoma Quarterback — Frank Seurer, Kansas Marlon Adler, Missouri Johni State Linebackers — James Spencer, Oklahoma State; Chris Washington, Iowa State; Derrrell Williams, Kansas National State tackle John Washington, Okla born.State NFL Standings Tackle Robert Curry, Missouri; Rodney Harding. Oklahoma State American Conference W W I T Pct. Cpf. PPd. PA Miami 8 3 0 1 667 467 189 Buffalo 8 3 0 1 597 520 188 New England 6 6 0 500 257 332 Baltimore 6 6 0 100 137 222 University Daily Kansan, November 22, 1983 Pittsburgh 9 3 0 750 281 196 Cleveland 7 5 0 750 293 184 National Conference LA Raiders 9 3 0 750 319 368 Denver 7 5 0 750 319 230 Seattle 6 5 0 500 301 294 San City 6 4 0 301 301 185 San Diego 6 4 0 333 262 165 Cincinnati 5 7 0 .417 278 225 Houston 1 11 0 .083 203 356 Washington W L 1 T Pct PUF PA Dallas W 10 T Pct 833 592 369 St. Louis 5 1 6 1 458 262 193 Philadelphia 6 1 8 433 172 269 Philadelphia 6 1 8 433 172 269 Minnesota 7 5 0 6 583 265 254 Detroit 6 0 6 0 583 265 244 Green Bay 6 6 0 590 323 321 Grayton 6 6 0 473 321 318 Tampa Bay 1 1 1 013 031 158 West Jan Francisco 7 5 0 581 329 226 A Laimis 7 5 0 581 329 226 New Orleans 6 0 0 500 258 271 Ulanta 6 0 0 417 417 291 Miami 17, Baltimore 0 Chicago 27, Tampa Bay 0 New England 0 Detroit 23, Green Bay 0 Cincinnati 38, Houston 10 L.A. Raiders 27, Buffalo 24 Minnesota 17, Pittsburgh 14 Washington 17, San Francisco 14 St. Louis 44, San Diego 14 Atlanta 28, San Francisco 14 Dallas 44, Kansas City 21 Washington 42, LA. Rams 20 Thursday, November 21 Pittsburgh at Detroit, 11:30 p.m. St. Louis at Dallas, 3 p.m. CLASSIFIED RATES Washington 42, L.A. Rams 20 Last Night's Result N.Y. Jets 31, New Orleans 28 The University Daily The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days on 3 Weeks or 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 0.75 16-29 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80 21-39 2.15 4.15 5.23 0.05 For every 5 words add. 250 500 750 1.05 POLICIES AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BUILD-FACE count as 3 words * Deadlines same as Discl. Advertisement - notify - No responsibility is assumed for more than one in case of immediate notification of any advertisement. - Always take patient precautions. - Always taken before consent given, except only Classified Display advertisements can be only one width wide and no more than six inches deep. Maximum depths are one inch. No increases allowed above this limit. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. No overflows. correct insertion of any advertisement * No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid hasteful advertising - Blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge - Blinds must be company allied licensed ads used - In the University Daily Korean • All advertisers will be required to pay in advance - Treatments are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. - Workshops are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. This earned rate discount Samples of all mail order items must be submitted FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS can be advertised FREE if charge for a picture not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed simply by the Kansas business office at 843-4158. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE ANNOUNCEMENTS Furnished 1 bedroom apartment available for sublease beginning Dec. 2, Jan. 1. Close to campus. News and Business Staff Positions The University Daily Kan萨 is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employment Agent. Applications are sought from all qualified people with a bachelor's degree, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry 4 bedroom Cape Cod 1/2 bath, all appliances, big 6 month leave. $350 per month. 843-464 The Kansas is now accepting applications for Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Kansas Union, in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union, and in rooms 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Tuesday, November 29. Kansan classifieds get results. FOR RENT 2nd semester sublease, cover 2B, HIRV, nice, quite new carpet $600 mm or 414.845, eavings STUDIO (1) & 2 bedroom apartments immediately available in a well-maintained, fully partial utilities paid. Contact Katie Valley 842-1876 or 841-1287 Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 2500 W.6th 843-7333 3 bedrooms to subsuite 2 secondmeter, near bus route 491. Call Dan Winter. 841-052 or 841-264 1 room gtF apt $220/month (no cleaning) and clean Clair Big Water. 844-3175 or Glenn 844-4235 BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please come to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. Apartment for rent. 1414 Tennessee Spaces pleasant 2 bedrooms, Walk to KL, Old street parking Apt. to sublease Dec. first月 Phone 814-7944 COMFORTABLE ROOM, CHEAP One block from Union at 1290 Ohio, 1/2 bath for December, deposit see 5, furnished Duplex: 2.1, bath duplex for rent. East Lawrence. 1. WAK hookup. 748-295 215 HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APTS. 1 BR Apts. $285 2 BR Apts. $340-$360 3 BR Apts. $415 For Fent. 2-Bedroom house includes洗衣机, dryer and fridge & Ridge. 7-month plus deposit and utilities. Free WiFi. Large one bedroom apartment with fireplace, located in big old house has separate entry and is very quiet. Meadowbrook studio for submissions available now or December 11, $10 off of December rent. Ask U/A 828 for details. Low rent. Roommate for 2HR ap $173 36 mo util. Call Bill: 843-1890 Reserve your studio now for the spring semester Fully furnished, free cabit TV, close to campus. meadowbrook Sixth & Crownin 840.40 One block from campus. 4 bedrooms, share living room, kitchen, 1/2 bath. $15/month. plan 7.50 per room. Roommate need immediately or starting Jan 1 for MSSS. Call Jill at 212-453-6780, mail us cuf800 8444 ask for Melissa Cheap, Clean. NICE 1 BR APT $200 a month. All utilities paid, Quiet and good location. Bk41-8420 from campus. Call 822-8446 or 841-8438 evenings. The dorm is located on the second floor, available very nice, warm water, paid bathroom, available for guests only. - Creative Atmosphere - Individually controlled thermostats IT'S A HALL OF A PLACE! Nice 1 bedroom apartment for sublease 2 blocks from campus. Call 843 8430 or 843 6708 rooms. - Unlimited seconds on good food - Maid service Plan Now for Spring '84 NAISMITH HALL 19th & Naismith - Semi-private rooms with connecting bath ★ No utility bills Swimming pool SUBLICE, female roommate needed for second roommate. Fee includes: free bus to university; $100 per week; 1 pair 2 meals; free bat to bat; $600 per month; 1 pair 2 meals; free bat to bat. Room for rent near university and downtown. No pets please: 841-5500. Save money, rent a 1 or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets. Phone 842-7853. Sublease EXCELLENT new studio with bedroom above ceiling fan Available December 16th --used furniture. Shoemaker's, across Kaw River Bridge, 2 miles north of Lawrence on 841-881-6067. Four-season length railroad coat. Only used one great Christmas idea! Call Adrienne at 749-5600 An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievably Slashed Rates! 1 & 2 BR Apts. From $200 featuring - Year round swimming * Free shuttle bus to campus 14 times daily * Laundry facilities Don't miss this opportunity to push the most progressive, resident organization of communities in this area if you can. Don't hesitate; call us. We work with them. Vacancies in the Konsina Christian Living Community for second semester Contact E.C.M --used furniture. Shoemaker's, across Kaw River Bridge, 2 miles north of Lawrence on 841-881-6067. Four-season length railroad coat. Only used one great Christmas idea! Call Adrienne at 749-5600 COMPLETELY FURNISHED Studio 2 or 3 bedroom apartments immediately. Great location. FOR SALE MIDWESTBROOK spacious 2 bedroom apartment available now via Sun. Gas and water paid quarter 2. Call 518-764-9036. 1967 FAIRLANE CONVERTIBLE. classic furniture good med bed. Call Jerry. Lakewood. 1954 Honda Civic runs good. must sell $1000 or BEST OFFER 4 speed. 844 6618 Ads combiner terminal model 17120 for use with Honeywell Call 812 4455 Auction: consignment every Friday night, 7:00 p.m. Shoemaker's, across Kane Bay Bridge, 2 miles from the beach. DON'T RENT NEXT SEMESTER - Ten your new mobile home! 2 HIMM + all app stay! Call 844-722-6911 or visit www.himm.com. You can rent new radios, pc pls, ac wheels, landau top etc. Just good point. Your best $250 car you can fit The University Daily KANSAN Gibson guitar: 1979 Model RD Artist, w/case built in Gibson glazed gold hardware. Mind condition: test. Having trouble getting on the university computer terminals? You can purchase your own terminal to use with your phone and do your homework in your notebook. You can also use the reduced price of the terminals for students, faculty and staff. For details and for demonstration visit http://www.duke.edu/634mhs. Ask for Khalil Hamilton Italian leather boots, size 7. Hardly worn, gift that didn't fit. (JL $642 8204) after 6 Limit your loss from AT&T break up. Purchase your new phone. Limit your cell phone use. Lowest prices, fully guaranteed. A great HOLIDAY present. Cassette players, score readers, computers. 30-day warranty. 10:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Dm. I don't reach out to you until the business closes. Nineteenth century German violin Works good $1.50. Special as a collector item Call 842 6231 Omega photograph enlarger, 4 x 8 with auto focus and lens Excellent condition $400, evenings Set of PA Band speakers Can handle 200 clean watts easily. Call 864-1154 Police tickets for Nov. 24 Call 841-9689 Sharp looking 28 Corvallis SK S-3 Sport Cup 5-sided. Practical and relatable for school. Call practical and relatable for school. Call practical Stereo television video. All name brands. Lowest prices. KC area. Total Sound Distributors. Speakers, large beautiful walnut cabinets, it may transmission one Excellent call Call Sala Xerox 680 Memorywriter, live pages storage, service warranty, very new machine, $169.00 Earnings. USER CAMIPET dirmount sizes, $25 shags, $35 chocolate piles. Great deals, clean tips. 824-113 LOST AND FOUND Lost - grunge-E 'EastPack' backpack with 2 books and 3 notebooks, in Learned Hall Labs. 1 NEED my notes. call Stu. 841 883 or turn to 208 Learned. Read Lost. Black leather wallet around 1'2" Mass & Mass. Keep the wallet but need I the wallet to pay for it. HELP WANTED merring earnings Call 894 6222 e-ovensv FRESHMEN SCHOARLISHERS AVAILABLE. It is not too late to enroll in NAV IOTC! Call 894 1511 or call MSE at the technical person to operate and maintain an air conditioning station located at opera job outlabs degree preferred but not necessary. Part time hours: daytime dependent but not necessary. Dumyatnoi HISR Room 112 612 Huntington Ave. Boston, Mass. 03135 or call 12/12 or 12/13 Found a A gold necklace on sale path behind the watch store. I will send her a gold ladies watch or Roman men's. Please call 800-723-6545. AIIRLNDN AIB HIRING NOW! Flight Attendance Room 10124 - 3rd Floor, 605 N. Michigan Ave. PIPX Ports your interviews! 910-721-1181 (721) 1181-1181 Found 3 knifes, in good health. They are living outside in the cold and need help. Please call Skillful Lapeer Store needs our two or three chairs for day and night help. Contact Mr. Rubicky at 1906 McMurray Southern Hills Flower is accepting applications for experience or training. Call 749 292 or stop by. College English teachers. Possible openings beginning January 1984 for part time teaching in English, English Language and English Required. M.A. in English and successful college English teaching, or experience teaching English at Kansas. Deedline for receipt of complete application to the University description available from Haskell Springer. English Department, the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Ohio. Offer of equal Opportunity Action Employer. Could you use an extra $400 a month? Start your own business. Less than $100 investment unlimited. More than $200 investment unlimited. Wanted part-time custodians, evening hours 15-20 per week per day at Alamo Center Arena 611 10am-4pm. No phone calls. BOSTON-EAST COST ADVENTURE Explore opportunities of exciting city while working as live in a community service commitment. Contact Child Care. Placement Service. In Buckminster Road, Brooklyn. Mass. Summer John, National Park Gcs. 24 Parks. Missouri State University, Missouri State University, Missouri State University, Railroad Mall, KNIGHTT, KNIGHTT, KNIGHTT, MISCELLANEOUS PERSONAL Used furniture bought and sold. Pick up available Everything Hat Ice, silk and Vermilion Cody. Just a personal aid to say that when you cross over the bridge in Thanksgiving and fastening Thanksgiving, they may be getting it all too hard. --two years, love,关爱 GLP stop smoking or lose weight with acupuncture Happy Thanksgiving Lane, here I looking at a great two years. Love, Gavin GLP MSE If you think this one was good, wait till the next one. I love juggling. Blae Day·After T-Shirts SURVIVED THE NUCLEAR RISK KANSAS CITY NOV. 20, 1983 AALO (Q) Pat hassard, L, intrague. Nous aurons toujours faim de me. Private room available in artistic environment with private bath, furnished and equipped. Roommate in downtown area apartment, within 2 blocks of Lawrence gardens and Art Center 1 1/4 block away. Available immediately for the right man. Roommates are required to be available immediately for the right man. SWM graduate student weeks pleasant girl for companionship dinner and out in movies, sports, theater, or art together. I’m really looking for someone to care for you. If you’re little of the single scene and lonely, let me know. BUSINESS PERS A strong kg outlet! Bennett Retail Liquor Chilled Wine. Kegs 18oz Cold Ice Brew 2 bikers mash of ice. COMPENSATIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE: early completion of the mission and completion compensatively assured Kamausa area call center. 16b8: don't miss out on the SUA STEAMBOAT TRIP 840-3477-Joe, Call **Immune Wine Selection** includes over 927,000 bottles of chilled wine. 614 Ills. 8442. Illus. 8442. SKI GETAWAY Pyramid Pizza! Feb. 2 239 per person 2-6 In Keystone Colorado with Trip includes . . . Roundtrip motorcoach transportation from Lawrence. 2 nights' lodging in 2-bedroom, 2-bath condos, sleeping 6, at Keystone Lodge Condominiums located in the heart of Keystone resort, near shopping, restaurants and night 3 days of ski rental 3 days of lift tickets 5 days of hotel access Pre- tour pizza party! Eat free lunch and reservations call or visit 749-0700 900 Mass/KU Union FREE NAME IMPRINTING with purchase of two or more boxes of Hallmark Card, Arribadas印卡 Curtis Mathes Showsuppliers' 600 movies choose from: Hunt a video machine and pre-recorded videos. GOT SIKI FEVER! LONGING FOR THE BEACH! to take UP SUA AM one of our 3 terrific spring break trips FT LAUERDALE, FAIRFAISEN, HEALMORE. For more information call 843-647-3907 It is not too early to order Christmas portraits for the newborn. We will be creating a special PHOTOSHOP in *Pennsylvania* 841-4003 by Rachel Walters. Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, transfer card, and of course fine portraits with Nudia Studio [749 101]. Alpha Leasing we rent $9.95 per day (plus mileage & ins.) Located at Smith Motors 1231 E.23rd 842-8187 Pick up & Delivery avail Just received, shipment of new Formal Wear including, new pastel cumbersand bows and ties; new blue jeans and dresses; black washland clair cumbersand and bow ties, and black washland formal wear vests. Most sizes of new wing tip tuxes are still in stock. Shipment of small and large tuxedo jackets made of white used shirt dancers' black tuxedos, cutaway tuxes, tux pants. Come see our sharp formal wear jewelry, and cushion collars and a Christmas gift. Shop online. FOR THE HOLIDAYS PREPARED FOR FINALS Study Skill Workshop. Students will be required to have no registration required. The Student must be a high school graduate or equivalent. Bring a gift of chocolates when you visit this Thanksgiving Chocolate - Southern Hills Center 749-1100 SKI VAL-IDRAVER CHEEK gall TOLL FREE (800) 342-1500 FOR DISCOUNT RATES on Lodges, lifts, and other outdoor activities. Say it on a shirt, custom silhouette printing T-shirts, jeans and skirts. Shirt Ski 749.1611 Special Presents on Christmas Portraits through December 15 at Wesley Studio. Call for details. 749.1611 Special for students. Haircuts $7 and perm$ 12. Charm, ask for Deenja Jenna 843;350. Two stores full of bargains and you are helping others when you shop SA Thrift Store 16, E with your name. Western Civilization Notes. Now on SALE! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sense to use in your curriculum. 199. For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western civilization* available now at Town Creek. The author. ENCORE IN-BETWEEN ACTS AUDITIONS Individual acts: Bring a prepared song Dress to dance. Accompanied provided. In the case of any special occasion, For more information call 864-4556. In charge of your presentation. For any KU student, Hold at Parkburg Burge Union. Auditions Dec. 3. Register to the BOCO Office, I-10, B.Kansas University in BOCO II. BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing . confidant trial counseling. 841-882. Danger signals* Headache, backache, arm pain, leg pain, numbness. For complete evaluation, call the Chiropractic Health Center and Doctor M.E. Johnson 843-9879. RU student insurance accepted. GRLRS, our new ladies wool felt hats just arerived. The Ec Shop. 723 Massachusetts. 843-601. THRIFT STORES. Appliances, furniture, clothing, knee-socks, bedding. Always good garb. 828-595-2250. Wholeware Sound Rental, P.A. Guitar, and Bass sources 841-6095 SERVICES OFFERED Artists with the written word. Typing, editing treasures. WORKS ARTISTES Filen 91272 Can write computer service: term papers, books and manuscripts. Call 841-3698 -月 and 4-8 English M A 3, yrs. w/ teaching exp, will tutor in grammar, comp. will edit proofread paper large in dictionaries. Send resume to: english@microsoft.com Foreign Students: Personal, efficient eduction of your dissertation, thesis, m. i. technical report, research presentation, or coursework. Earl now! In *Lawrence Diving School* receive a new pair of scuba diving gear. The transportation provided, drive you, pay later. Rasquetteball tennis, squash raquet stringing tennis, badminton rackets, tennis racquets, Raquettes for headache (head Pain), Bamboo Rackets for headache (Head Pain). STADIUM BANDER HIPP 1:033, Massachusetts, downstairs. All harbours. $6.00. No appointment. **HOME PET CARE:** responsible care for your pets in their home. Reasonable 843/612 843/612 843/2478. Alterations, mending, custom sewing. Cleaning carpets; windows, offices, houses, laundry room. TYPING 24 hour typing. All day, all night. Extensive experience with all forms of typing. For all your typing needs. A.A.A. Affordable TYPING SERVICE. Fast, first quality (typing, WORD PROCESSING kit 600) WORD PROCESSING kit 600 Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed, over-night service or 24-hour service. Call Mary at (866) 753-9011 or the Medical School Secretary Call Nancy 841-1292 Becky's Excellent typing at reasonable rate. Call Dennis at (866) 753-9011 or the Medical School Secretary Call Nancy 841-1292 APPROVED QUALITY for all your typing needs Call duty, 842-7945 at 6 p.m. Absolutely Letter Perfect Editing, Typing, Bookbinding and Printing quality. Quality $800 per month. Everlasty availability. Call TIP TOP TYPING 1201 iowa Experienced Call TIP TOP TYPING Aerox 306 Memory manager, Royal Call TIP TOP TYPING Aerox 306 Memory manager, Royal Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations. IBM Correcting, Selective, Call Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term letters, special characters. Call 817-452-3617, 163-271, 10:30 a.m., 10:30 p.m. 817-452-3617, 163-271, 10:30 a.m., 10:30 p.m. Elvis could wiggle. Shakespeare could write my talent. Call 842.404 after 5 o'clock and weekends. Experienced typist, desserters, term paper writers, Correcting, Barber, 842.230 after 5 o'clock Experimented hybrid Term paper; them all, for the first term in their dissertation. Mrs. Pope and will correct spelling. Phone 845-326-7901. Pope and will correct spelling. Phone 845-326-7901. It's a Fax Fast, Affordable, Clean Tying Ward Processing. You can afford it! 841-3028 ON TIME PAPERS TYPED FAST & EFFICIENT 841 4510 Typing- Dissertation, thesis, term paper, etc. Fast, accurate, reliable. Call 841-437. Experienced typist will type dissertations, theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable rates (Call 842.311) Frustrated? Pressed for time? Let me put you for you so you can concentrate on research and competition. GOOD WORK. TYPING WORD. PROCESSING Reasonable rates. Call Tad. 842.311 3 services at 1 location typing, editing and graphics WORLD ARTISTS, call Eilen. 8412 2172 TYPING PLUS. Dress, dissertations, papers, lab reports, essays. Send to: John A. Sternberg, grammar, spelling, e.g., English tattling, French tattling, Latin tattling. E-mail: john.sternberg@umd.edu Library Research - typing - Editing - Will help research, outline, write) 928230 2 Rooms to share 2 BR apt. for spring semester $16.16 plus €4.81 - 841-666. Nan or Lasa WANTED 5 female rounder (and 4 female taller) from four male rounders. All in attendance, all attending, call 814-3260 after 6 p.m. Desperately Needed Math 101c Book Fundamentals with Swokowski by Swokowski;本书以 Ed Kell Call (Call Ruth) as the author. $49.95 Formal roommate, nice 3 bedroom. After December $140 monthly plan plus bath, both and Mississippi Female dormite needed to suave Moodbreak apartment for spring semester. On bus route 184. Female roommate wanted. $150 plus 1/2 ushties. water is paid. On her bill, Park 25 & Availah Maurice & Erik. Residency required. Graduate student seeks non smoking female roommate $142.90 plus 1.2 hours. Close to campus and suburban areas. Male roommate warned. Jan t. I: Excellent deal 2-level house design, award design, partially furnished $165 mo. $40 utilities. Five min from campus. Need bed. Need desk, dresser Bk 84/4800 Male roommate needs for extremely nice apt. Situated in a quiet corner with private balcony and sleeping left. Prefer no smoking, high class or luxury accommodations. Male roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath room. Room is located on 3rd floor or per month plus 1.4J electricity. I interested in roommate for 10% Male roommate to have very nice 2-3m2 apt with present roommate. A private pool, Rent is low $149 plus 2 1/2ufits. Needly furnished. Needs moved in as soon as possible. Call Paul or Brian to move in. Male roommate, non smoking, semi serious to share 3 br. house with 2 others, over 21 only. Four blocks from campuses, spacious 8km plus 1.5-1 low entry areas, accessible by wheelchair during vacations. Avail now thru Jan 1. Need 1.2 roommates to share nice duplex in quiet nice neighborhood with 3 neighbors and easyguy girls Nonstalking female roommate for a bedroom apartment, with own room. Ubic bus route: A,板, path 808. Perfect duplex apt by stadium! Modern, furnished, used once and will remain roommate starting Jan 2017. 5BR/3BA, 800 sq ft. Quiet roommate to share 2 bdrm at, 760 1/2 Alabama. Upper floor of door 2 houses from Community Mercantile. From from Community Mercantile. For details, please call Haliday Plaza Hotel at 842 857 9000. from 8:45 to 9:30 a.m. Rummiters needed to share contemporary furnishings with family and friends. Visit Lease December 1st August 9th, calls #26053487 Routinate to address private room in a 3 BK. app. To close柜, keep spill inventory. Roommate for large house apartment. Private room. energy efficiency. 118/118 foot. Availability Roommate to share to a furnished 3-bedroom townhouse located at 100 Emery 1843-8489 townhouse located at 900 Errym. Call 843-4848 Roommate need to share nice, fully furnished apt. Close to campus, on bus route: $115 a month plus 1/3 elem. #843_2302 Wanted: Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apt. On his route, charter to campus. After Feb. 2014, $650. 1 SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 22,1983 Page 10 Two Jayhawks named UPI All-Big Eight; Nebraska places five By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Nebraska's All-America tailback Mike Rozier and five of his teammates on the most prolific offense in college football history were named yesterday to the Big Eight football team. Rozier was joined on the first team by fellow Cornhuskers Turner Gill at quarterback, Irving Fryar at wingback, Scott Rardon at offensive tackle, Dean Stinkuhker at guard and Mark Traynor at center. A significant reached a league-high seven players as linebacker Mike Knox was named to the defensive unit. Two Jayhawks were named to the first team: place kicker Bruce Kallmeyer, who set a Big Eight scoring record for kickers, and sophomore linebacker Wille Pliss, who led the Big Eight with 190 tackles. Receiver Bobby Johnson and offensive tackle Renwick were KU choices on the second team. QUARTERBACK FRANK Seurer, who set the Big Eight single season and career passing records during the Missouri game Saturday, earned honorable mention honors behind Gill and Iowa State's David Archer. Offensive guard Paul Fairchild and linebacker also were named honorable mention. Joining Rozier, Gill and Fryar in the backfield of Iowa State fullback Jason Jacobs. The other offensive skill position was also filled by a Cyclone, wide receiver Tracy Henderson. A third Iowa Stater, guard Bruce Reimers, was named to the first team offensive line along with Missouri tackle Conrad Goode and Colorado tight end Dave Hester. Also named to the defensive unit were ends Kevin Murphy of Oklahoma and Bobby Bell of Missouri, tackles Rick Bryan of Oklahoma and Leslie O'Neal of Oklahoma State, nose tackle Reggie Singgle of Kansas State and defensives backs Victor Scott of Colorado, Terry Maticchak of Missouri, Scott Case of Oklahoma and Chris Rockins of Oklahoma State. JOHN CONWAY of Oklahoma State was named All-Big Eight punter. After recording 22 tackles against Missouri, KU's Willie Pless was named Big Eight Player of the Week by United Press International yesterday. Pless, Seurer named players of week Pless had 17 unassisted shots, recovered a fumble and intercepted a pass in helping the Jayhawks upset the Holiday bowl-bound Tigers 37-42. Saturday it was their third victory since November 9. On the season, Pless recorded 190 tackles, easily the highest total in the season, whose sophomore Ann Amnion. Alaqua Butler the season as a defensive end before her junior season. UPI is expected to announce this morning that Frank Sourer will be named as the conference's Offensive Player of the Week for his performance against the Tigers. The senior quarterback, who received honorable mention on the UPI all-Big Eight squad, completed 20 of 35 passes for 354 yards and two touchdowns. In the process, Seurer became the Big Eight's all-time leader for passing yards in both a season and a career. It will be the second time Sueur has earned the award. He won earlier in the season for his performance in KU's upset victory over Southern Cal. Rozier, Gill and Fryar are the primary cogs in a Nebraska offensive unit that has scored an NCAA-record 596 points this season, breaking the previous mark of 560 set by Brigham Young in 1980. The No. 1-rated and unbeaten Cornhuskers are averaging 54.2 points per game, having scored 50 or more points in seven of their 11 games thus far. Rozier is the nation's leading rusher and scorer with 1,943 yards and 28 touchdowns. Gill is the Big Eight's top-rated passer with a 57 percent completion rate in 154 passes for 1,458 vards and 14 touchdowns and Fryhar has caught 36 passes for eight touchdowns with a conference-leading 20.9-yard average "They're all tremendous athletes and they're the three best players at their positions in the Big Eight." Oklahoma Coach Bairy Switzer said of Rozier, Gill and Fryar. "They're far superior to anyone else in the league and anyone else in the country. They make Nebraska what they are." HENDERSON BECAME the first Big Eight receiver ever to top 1,000 yards (1,051) in a season and also set a league record with 81 catches. Jacobs ranked second in the league in receiving with 64 catches for 584 yards and also rushed 99 times for 490 yards. Hestera caught 29 passes for 366 yards to move into the No. 2 spot on Colorado's all-time receiving list. Murphy led all Big Eight linemen in tackles with 128 and Bryan chipped in 94 for the 6- rated defense in the 94 game O'Neal had a league-leading eight passes broken plus nine sacks. eight passes broken recovery and a blocked punt, Bell, the son of Pro Football Hall of Famer Bobby Bell, had 13 tackles for losses and Singletary 99 total tackles and three tumble recoveries. PLESS LED the Big Eight in tackles with 190, including 22 Saturday against Missouri, and Knox has 113 tackles and four interceptions heading into Nebraska's regular season finale Saturday at Oklahoma. Case has six interceptions, Scott four, Rockins three, Matischak two. Rockins also had 90 tackles, broke up a league-leading 12 passes and recovered three fumbles. Kallmyer set a Big Eight record with 24 field goals and also set a school scoring record with 98 points. Conway yards in 62 pts to lead the Big Eight Singleton and Rozier are three-time All-Big Eight picks with Gill, Murphy, Bryan and Scott repeat selections from a year ago. There were 17 seniors named to the team, four juniors (Traynowicz, Knox, Murphy, Matichak) and three sophomores (Henderson, O'Neal, Pless). Complete listing on page 9. Strawberry honored as top rookie By United Press International NEW YORK — Darryl Strawberry, a shugging outfielder who recovered from a poor start to provide a bright spot in an otherwise dismal season for the New York Metts, was named the National League's Rookie of the Year yesterday by the Baseball Writers Association of America. The 21-year-old Strawberry was named the league's top rookie in 18 ballons cast by 24 members of the Baseball Writers Association and had 106 points to beat out Atlanta Braves pitcher Craig McMurtry for the award. McMurtry received the remaining six first-place votes and 49 points and was followed by Chicago Cubs outfielder Mel Hall, Cincinnati Reds outfielder Gary Redus, Houston Astros second baseman Jared Houston, Boston Red Sox DIPino, San Diego Dodgers first baseman Greg Brock, San Diego Padres pitchers Lee DeLuce and Mark Thurmond and Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Lee Tunnel. Strawberry is the third Mets' player to win Rookie of the Year honors, joining previous winners Tom Seaver (1967) and Jon Matlock (1972). Strawberry's selection ends a four-year extension of the award by the Dodgers. "IM EXCITED, thrilled, you name the," Strawberry said. "I thought it would be much closer. I was really worried about McMurtry. Any time a rookie pitcher wins 15 games you have to think he had a great year. I was fortunate about my late start but I was fortunate enough to make some good lasting impressions." A lanky 6-foot-190-pound left-handed hitter who has been compared to Ted Williams, Strawberry hit more home runs (26) and drove in more runs (74) than any rookie in the league to open the season in the minor leagues. Strawberry was the Mets' leading hitter in spring training but was sent to Tidewater of the International League to start the season in order to get more experience. Calcled on May 4, he started out slowly and was batting only 179 after seven weeks and striking out once every three times at bat. IT WAS THEN that batting coach Jim Frey took him aside and worked diligently at improving his natural skills. Strawberry slowly began to develop confidence in himself and went on a batting tear during the second half of the season that lifted his final average to a respectable 257. Forty-eight of his 108 hits went for extra bases. In addition to his prowess with the bat, Strawberry also proved to be an excellent baserunner and possessed one of the league's best throwing arms. McMurtry was the favorite for rookie honors when he was 12-3 at mid-season. The 23-year-old right-hander slumped to a 15-9 finish, however, and went winless for a month at one stretch late in the season. Hall, a 23-year-old who bats and halls left-handed, hit .283 with 17 bases in 40 pitches. Dean Nesmith: By GREG DAMMAN Sports Writer The equipment managers led the trainers 24-0 at halftime Sunday during the annual "Dealer Cup" flag football game at Memorial Stadium. The team's Dealer Dean Nesmith wasn't about to give up. "How come they always get the wind?" Nesmith yelled from his familiar pickup truck parked along the sidelines as the equipment managers kicked off to start the second half. "We need Frank Seurer in there at quarterback," said NeSmith, affectionately nicknamed "Dean." The Deaner Cup is played every year in his honor after the last game of the season. But this game was special. It was the last for Nesmith, and during this year after 46 years as KU's head trainer Nesmith, 69, has been Mr. Dependable as KU's trainer, with a string of 475 consecutive football games. "The LAST GAME I missed was the Arizona game down there in 1937." Nesmith said. He said that he enjoyed working with athletes and that, like most people who grew up during his childhood, he was an avid golfer. A typical day for Nesmith begins at 6 a.m. He arrives at Parrott Athletic Center by 6:40. At 7:30 he teaches a class in the prevention and care of athletic injuries. The rest of his day is devoted to preparing players for practice and to treating them after workouts. Annual 'Deaner Cup' is the finale for KU's long-time athletic trainer "All in all, it makes for about a 12-hour day." Nesmith said. Spare time is a luxury for Nesmith, but he said his enjoyment of athletics justified the time. "I really don't have any spare time," Nesmith said. "Everybody here that is matriarch are allowed to be only baby." NESMITH CONSIDER'S his association with current and former players to be one of the most successful. Nesmith likes to reminisce about former patterns and how things have changed since his 1960s days. "I really enjoy talking to football players after they've been out." Nesmith said. "They appreciate you more than they did when they were around here." Nesmith graduated from Belleville High School in 1932 and came to Lawrence that summer to work. Although he had not planned to play football in the fall and played on the football team. "ALL THE TIME I was in high school I worked for the telephone company. I always thought I'd make a career out of it, but the Depression came along. I saw the handwriting "I called my brother, who was playing football at KU, and told him that I'd go to school at Nebraska because they offered me a job. I worked at the stadium, so I ended up here." working at the stadium, so I ended up here." Proud of his KU football days. Nesmith has three pictures of KU teams on which he played hanging in his office. Nesmith played football during the days of leather helmets and no face masks, and he is the first to acknowledge the advantages of modern football equipment. "In a good afternoon scrimmage, it wasn't anything to have six or eight bloody noses. Today it's rare to have a bloody nose because of face masks," he said. NESMITH LEFT KU in 1936, but returned a later year to work as assistant trainer and coach the freshman football team. The head trainer later resigned and Nesmith was hired to take his "It was 1938 and good jobs weren't exactly what I expected," Smith said. "No I took the job and I been busy." Having been associated with KU athletics for more than 50 years, Nesmith is uniquely qualified to name KU's greatest athlete. However, he declines to do so. His respect for former athletes causes him to say that there must be too many to single out one person CARVU CHAMBERLIN ATTENDED KU with Bill Nieder, 1946 Olympic gold medalist in the shot put, and Al Oerter, four/time Olympic gold medallist in the discus. Both men were extremely strong. A trace of favoritism shines through though when Nesmith tells a favorite story about the American Civil War. "The three of them lifted weights together all the time," Nesmith said. "They'd come in the training room and have arm-wrestling matches, and Wilt would hold his own with them." During his years as an athletic trainer, Nesmith has been a part of a number of "big events" in KU athletic history. But perhaps his most memorable moment came not in Lawrence, but in Rome. "One of the biggest thrills I've had was training the U.S. Olympic basketball team in 1960 in Rome," he said. "It's a big thrill that comes up once in a lifetime." 10 *THE TRAFIC WILL be terrible. The best you can do is stay home and watch it on (you) TV.* Dean Nesmith through the years: left, after 45 years as trainer in 1982; above, in 1974 with injured quarterback Scott McMichael; and right, in the late 1920s after becoming trainer. WARNER BROS. Washington optimistic as KU awaits tournament By JANELLE MARTIN Head coach Marian Washington and her basketball team have a couple of days over Thanksgiving break to Friday and Saturday in Minneapolis. Sports Writer "The freshmen will gain confidence as the season goes on," she said, referring to four freshmen who played in the tournament. In their first two games, the Jayhawks had difficulty inside Oklahoma City had the advantage in rebounds in Friday night's game 56 to 42 and in western State grabbed 49 compared with KU's 40 in Saturday night's game. "WE ARE HAVING to work very hard to recruit size," she said. "That is an area that has hurt us the last two years. Washington said yesterday that after seeing her team in the Dial Lady Jayhawk Classic last weekend, she was optimistic about the season. Washington also said that the pressure defense by her team in the second game was an improvement over its first outing. "We were out of position in the first game and several times it hurt our 'total defense', she said "As the team goes on we will become more effective." "With our lack of size we must concentrate on blocking out." Allen Field House will be the site of this season's Kansas 6A state basketball championships, and Lawrence High School basketball coach Ted Junueau wants his defending state championship team to be there. Washington has stressed the conditionning of her players since the beginning of the season. "As I have said before, we have been doing a lot of running on the track for conditioning," she said. "We must get used to running the floor row in order to take advantage of our team quickness. Each game we will see improvement." LHS considers playing games in Allen Field House healthy. Adkins strained a hamstring a couple of weeks ago and re-injured it during warmups Friday night. SOME IMPROVEMENT will be seen in the following cases: said, with sopromore Vickie Adkins is Junior Barbara Adkins and senior Angie Snider worked both ends of the court well, she said, along with sophomore Valerie Quieres, who came to participate in several minutes of Saturday's game to spark the Jay-hawks with four steals. She also said that she was pleased with the newcomers because the team showed potential at times during the tournament. By JOHN UNREIN KU will fight Arkansas Friday night in Minnesota in the first round of the MIAA. Sports Writer But before the team even reaches the title game, Juneau said, he hopes "Personally, I don't want to because I like to play our home games where we practice." Jumeau said. "If we played the game, we'd lose our home court advantage. tentative plans to play some regular season Lawrence High home games at the league. But the possible lack of seating in the Lawrence High gym, which holds about 2,400, may force Lawrence High to do otherwise, a Lawrence High official said vesterdav. Darrell Falen, Lawrence High athletic director, said that because of expected large crowds this season at Lawrence High basketball games the possibility of playing home games at Allen Field House, with a seating capacity of about 14,000 players. He also said a decision would not be made for about two weeks — until after several Lawrence High home games had been played. "THE ONLY WAY we're considering it is if our crowds are so huge that we can't accommodate everyone," Falen said. "We'll see after a few games." Lawrence High is expecting larger crowds this year because of the transfer of Danny Manning to the school. Manning is rated as one of the top five pre basketball players in the country by several basketball publications and has signed a letter of intent to play at KU next year. Falen said that he had spoken last week with Floyd Temple, KU assistant athletic director, about the proposal. "LAWRENCE HIGH would have to pay for basic operational support services — such as security, electricians, set up and clean up — but there were no charge for them." "Territory?" they would also have to sell their own tickets and supply ticket takers, because we would have nothing to do with that. KU prepares for TV game at Houston Jayhawks to open against Olajuwon, NCAA runner-up By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor Larry brown will have history on his side when the Kansas Jayhawks begin their season Saturday against the Houston Cougars. The game will be Brown's official debut as KU's head coach, and all but one of the Jayhawks' first five coaches won their first regular-season game. In 1898, the Jayhawks, coached by James Naismith, lost their inaugural game against the Kansas City YMCA. 16-5 The game against the Cougars will be KU's first regular-season game. The Jayhawks won 74-10 in an exhibition game against the Netherlands national team. Houston will be playing its second consecutive nationally televised game. The Cougars lost 76-64 Saturday to the Browns, who held the last year's NCAA championship game. “WE’RE LEARNING, and its going to take some time.” Brown said. “I think we’ve learned a few things since I’ve been teaching. We just proved how far we still have to go.” The Wolfpack defeated Houston in the championship game by one point, but were unranked going into the contest. Houston returns Akeem Olajuwan, one of the nation's premiere centers. The 7-foot Olajuwan, who averaged 13.9 points and 11.4 rebounds a game, scored 25 goals last year, is the teammate Clyde Drexler in the Nat- ional Basketball Association. Forward Michael Young, who played guard last season for the Cougars, is Houston's leading returning scorer. He averaged 17.3 points a game last season. "HOUSTON IS A GREAT team with great players." Brown said. "They have tremendous overall speed and a tremendous center in Olaijuwon, Olajuwon and Young are two great players." Guy Lewis is beginning his 28th season as head coach of the Cougars. He has a career record of 530-246. Lewis has lost Drexler and Larry Micheaux to the NBA. Micheaux is playing for the Kansas City Kings, and he also played former KU standout Darnell Valentine on the Portland Trailblazers. Transfer Braxton Clark and freshman Rickie Winslow are battling for the starting forward spot opposite Young. Last year's substitutes Reid Getty and Benny Anders are competing for Youngs's big guard position. Houston's other returning starter is point guard Alvin Franklin. Brown said he was not sure who would start against Houston. His starters against the Netherlands were Carl Henry and Kelly Knight at forwards, Greg Dreiling at center and Thompson and Tad Boyle at guards. KERRY BOAGNI came off the KU bench against the Netherlands and scored 12 points in the second half in leading the KU comeback. Henry and Thompson each scored 16 points against the Netherlands, and Knight added 15. Dreiling scored eight points and pulled down seven rebounds. JAYHAWK NOTES — CBS will televise the game nationally, but Channel 5 in Kansas City has announced that it will not show the game. The station has decided to televise the football championship instead. Houston was ranked No. 4 in the pre-season United Press International rankings, and was ranked No. 1 in the NBC Worldwide poll. Debut spoiled The University Daily Jayhawks lose first game Sports. p. 12 KANSAN FREEZING High, 25. Low, 15. Details on p. 2 Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas Vol. 94, No.68 (USPS 650-640) Monday morning, November 28, 1983 Bad weather may delay launch of space shuttle By United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL Fla. — Ground crews yesterday switched on the $1 billion European Spaceclab stowed aboard the Columbia, but forecasters warned that bad weather might delay today's blastoff of the shuttle program's most ambitious science project. The weather was the only question mark for the mission that will put five U.S. astronauts and a West German physicist in space for nine days of around-the-clock research. Technical problems already have caused a two-month delay in the Spacelab mission, a delay that ESA officials estimated cost at least $2 million. NASA officials were concerned about a cold front moving across the South toward Florida. A 40 percent chance of rain was forecast for the scheduled launch time of 10 a.m. CST. THE SHUTTLE'S CHECKOUT was proceeding flawlessly and NASA and European Space Agency officials eagerly awaited the bonanza of information they expect to reap from Spaceclab, the 23-foot-long cylinder mounted in the shuttle's cargo bay. ESA representatives and officials of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration yesterday hailed the joint undertaking as "the largest international cooperative space project Scientists in 11 European nations, the United States, Canada and Japan are involved with Sweden. THE MEMBERS OF the record-sized crew of six six. John Young, Brewster Shaw, Owen Gilman, Robert Parker, Byron Lightenberg and Gianni Malone = received their final briefings yesterday. Working 12-hour shifts around the clock during the nine-day mission, Garriott, Parker, Lichtenberg and Merbod will conduct 72 experiments aboard Spacelab. Winter requests corrections in computer payroll process BY BRUCE F. HONOMICHL State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, has made a formal request to the governor's office to "do whatever it takes" to at least temporarily correct problems caused at the University of Kansas by the state's new computerized payroll system. Staff Reporter On Nov. 1, KU and the Kansas Technical Institute became the first Board of Regents schools to distribute paychecks through the integrated Personnel Payroll System (KIPPS). An estimated 400 KU employees did not receive November paychecks. Several hundred more received other too much or too little pay or their holding incorrectly deducted from their checks. IS A LETTER mailed Friday to Michael Harder, secretary of the Department of Administration, Wintg asked for emergency funds to hire extra employees to rewrite computer programs or temporarily prepare paychecks by hand. “There were two schools of thought on what the problem was.” Winter said yesterday. “One was that there was incorrect data from KU being fed into the computers. But that's pretty much correct. The problem is that there is an inefficiency in software and that some programs need to be rewritten.” Harder said yesterday that he had not received Winter's letter. However, he said that Chancellor Gene A. Budg had asked state and federal officials to detail the steps needed to see that all KU See CHECK, p. 5, col. 1 ... United Press International proaching Madrid's Barajas airport, makes a silhouette in the early morning sky as Spanish paratroopers bring in coffins. Crash of Colombian plane kills 181 By United Press International An unofficial count listed 11 survivors, including a French couple, their 3-year-old daughter and 20 month-old son, and two people who walked away from the wreckage. MEJORADA DEL CAMPO. Spain — Searching among charred bodies and smoking wreckage, investigators yesterday recovered the "black box" flight recorder of a Colombian plane that crashed on treeless hills within sight of an airport runway, killing 181 of the 182 people on board. Civil air traffic officials said that it was a mystery why the Avianca airline Boeing 747, arriving from Paris, went down on a mostly clear night within sight of the runway of Bombardier. the jettier's four engines was on fire before the crash just after midnight yesterday, but aviation officials said that should not have affected its ability to land. AT LEAST ONE witness told police that one of The plane jerked, the wing exploded and it one survivor. Carmen Navas, 51, of Venice, Italy, died in a plane crash. See CRASH, p. 5, col. 4 Investigators recovered the "black box" flight 11 DENVER A motorist helps pull out an immobilized bus. The official snowfall of 21.5 inches made driving hazardous yesterday. Travelers' advisories were issued for western Kansas, and highways from Salina to Denver were closed. United Press International Lawrence escapes winter's first blitz By Staff and Wire Reports November was its usual dismal, blustery study in Lawrence over the weekend, but winter's icy fingers clutched parts of Kansas in a frosty grip as the state's first full-fledged blizzard lumbered through western Kansas and parts of Colorado and Iowa. Mark Watson, KU weather observer and Lawrence senior, said yesterday that Lawrence was spared the snow because of a unique pressure system that hoydrew over the area. The blizzard dumped 10 to 15 inches of snow on roads, stranding motorists who were driving home after a long day to seek shelter in churches and city halls. Although a few snowflakes fell in Topeka, most of the snow missed Lawrence yesterday. "It is a little unusual to have this many storms producing snow. We have had three or four in a row now, he said. "Usually this happens during a spring storm, there is enough warm air carrying twoango" warm-air pocket protected Lawrence from the snow, and instead showered 1.54 inches of rain on the area. The high yesterday was 56 degrees, and the low was 42 degrees. "We lucked out." Watson said, "because we could have had a lot of snow. They usually say that you get 12 inches of snow for every one inch of rain." Bikini Atoll still contaminated from atom bomb testing Two people died in north-central Kansas when their car collided head-on with a pickup truck on a snow-slicked highway, and the Nebraska State Patrol reported three people A WARM FRONT and a cold front moved across the state this weekend. Watson said. A WASHINGTON — Nearly three decades after the last atomic bomb tests on the Bikini Atoll, the Pacific islands are still $100 million away from being safely habitable, a private group of scientists said yesterday. Fish and rain water are safe on the 26 islands that make up the atoll, the study by five scientists said, but grow on the $100million island which would still be dangerously contaminated. By United Press International See WEATHER, p. 5, col. 3 the islands were chosen for nuclear testing in the late 1940s and the natives were evacuated. By 1958, 23 atomic and hydrogen bombs had been detonated over the atoll. BUT A BAN on growing would be unrealistic, committee members said. During the ill-fated resettlement in the 1970s "the failure to provide adequate imported food . . . caused the islanders to eat contaminated coconuts, leading to another evacuation in 1978." Physical examinations given to the islanders in 1787 showed what was described at one congressional hearing as an incredible one-year memory. "The islanders," scientists said the people living on Bikini may "If the Bikinians were to eat no produce grown on Bikini Island, resettlement could take place today," officials of the Bikini Atoll Rehabilitation Committee said. have absorbed the largest amounts of radiation of any known population. THE STUDY, DONE by a group led by Henry I. Kohn, professor emeritus of radiation biology at Harvard Medical School, was made public by a lobbyist for the islanders. The Bikini islanders are now living 425 miles south of their islands on 206-acre Kili Island, eating surplus food supplied by the Department of Agriculture. The $100 million would pay for scraping off the top 18 inches of contaminated soil and replacing it with fresh soil. Also, another layer of uncontaminated soil could be added or the soil could be treated with a potassium-rich fertilizer to chemically block radioactive substances. Award of $3 million offered in London gold, jewel heist By United Press International LONDON — Scotland Yard hoped yesterday that a $8 million reward would help turn up clues to the identity of bandits who stole diamonds and three tons of gold worth $7.5 million. Scotland Yard appeared to have few clues because the warehouse security guards did not see the gunmen's faces or the vehicle they used, apparently nobody saw them arrive or leave AUTHORITIES WERE NOT even sure how many people were involved in the heist. Scotland Yard officials said they thought that six robbers were responsible for the security guards never saw more than three at a time. The only clue Scotland Yard revealed publicly was that the robbers were thought to be men with a bad reputation. The heist is thought to be the third largest in history, surpassed in size only by a raid on Germany's Reichsbank by British and American banks. The heist involved about $400 million in nepotistic securities, and a raid on the British Bank of the Middle East in Lebanon by terrorists who stole $50 million. Insurance loss adjusters offered a $3 million reward for information leading to the recovery of the stolen loot: 6,300 ingots of pure gold and a quantity of diamonds. *In insurance terms, it is equivalent to the loss of a superlanker. *a London insurance expert* THE STOLE WARS were numbered and bore a retainer's stump, but bullet traders said the war was too long. The raiders struck about 40 a.m. Saturday (12:40 a.m. (CST), eliding security cameras, electronic alarms and automatic locks to enter their house 12 miles west of downtown London. Once inside, the masked men drew their guns on the six guards, handcuffed them, then doused one with gasoline and threatened to burn him. Another guard cooperated. Another guard was hit with a pistol. The gunmen loaded 76 gray cardboard boxes containing the gold into an unseen getaway vehicle. A guard struggled tree about two hours later and called for help. Popcorn lovers may shell out more for their favorite snack By CHRISPY FISHER Staff Reporter Popcorn at the movies or for late-night study breaks might become an expensive college tradition this year because students will be forced to shell out more money to munch their popcorn. Although popcorn prices will probably increase this year because of drought-damaged popcorn crops from the previous summer, price MONDAY MORNING increases should be small, popcorn industry sookesmen said last week. That's good news for American popcorn lovers, including many KU students. According to National Popcorn Institute figures, Americans consume more than 600 million pounds of EARLIER IN THE SUMMER, some officials were predicting a doubling of popcorn prices. But Bill Smith, executive director of the National Popcorn Institute of Chicago, said, "The average consumer will not be aware of price increases. It will be a matter of only a few cents." JIMMY POPCORN CAFE Art Vogel, president of Vogel Popcorn, Inc., Hamburg, Iowa, said that the retail market would only experience about a 10 percent popcorn price increase. "They have such a high profit margin that if the price goes up they try to absorb it," he said. "They don't pass it on to the consumer. The customer is made as much as those processing and popping it." Vogel said that the quality of this year's popcorn crop would suffer a little, but that the consumer was not likely to notice. The taste will be affected, but the volume of corn produced will HE SAID THAT because the cried dried up too fast in the drought, it did not expand as much as --- See POPCORN, p. 5, col.1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 28, 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Police battle young people at Aquino rallies in Manila MANILA, Philippines — Club-swimming police and riot troops firing rifles clashed with hundreds of youths hurling stones and homemade bombs yesterday in a violent climax to rallies marking the birthday of stain onson leader Benigno Anuino. Police and hospital officials reported 17 people injured in at least three separate clashes Five policemen were wounded by homemade bombs during a pitched battle with rampaging youths who were setting street fires in the suburb of New York City. Earlier, a 24-year old fisherman carrying a concealed knife was disarmed after he came within 36 feet of Aquino's widow as she sat on a stage during rally in downtown Manila. The fisherman, Rafael Ortonio, described by his mother as "mentally unbalanced," was disarmed by opposition leader Mel Lopez and later charged with carrying a concealed weapon. Spanish rightists march in Madrid MADRID, Spain — Thousands of ultra-rightists, their hands raised in the Fascist salute, yesterday staged a show of strength against the Socialist government and paid homage to the late dictator Gen. Francisco Franco. People of all ages, including several on crutches and others barely out of diapers, marched down Madrid's main Castellana Avenue in what was the start of a parade. organisms center a bright red and yellow Spanish flags flapped in the breeze as the demonstrators paused often to raise straight arms in the Fascist salute. "Franco. Franco." they chanted until their voices reached a fever pitch reminiscent of a football pep rally. Grevhound strikers vote on contract PHOENIX, Ariz. — Striking Greyhound workers yesterday completed a nationwide vote on a proposed contract calling for a 7.8 percent pay cut. One union official said that rejection was certain when results were announced today "It's going to be rejected — it isn't a question of how much," Ellis said of the international vice president, said on the 24th day of the nationwide walkout. Franklin said that final voting was conducted in Los Angeles and a few other cities yesterday. Votes of the more than 12,000 strikers were to be counted and results announced today. He said that the results would be announced at 3 p.m. CST Poll on Reagan re-election is split NEW YORK — Americans are split almost evenly on whether President Reagan should be elected to a second term, an improvement on Reagan's standing two months ago, a poll released yesterday showed. About 47 percent of those questioned in a New York Times survey said Reagan should not be re-elected, with 45 percent saying he should be returned to office. A CHS-New York Times poll in September showed that 62 percent Americans favoring Reagan's re-election while 51 percent opposed him. On the topic of the defeated Equal Rights Amendment, the poll found 54 percent of the men thought that another vote should be made for a different candidate. U.S. presses El Salvador on rights ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE — Administration officials, keeping pressure on the government of El Salvador to stop right-wing death squads, said yesterday that the United States considered improvement of human rights in the divided nation a top priority. "We would like to see some increased attention given to human rights issues," White House spokesman Larry Speakes told reporters aboard Air Force One. On Friday, Thomas Pickerling, the U.S. ambassador to El Salvador, made a blistering speech in San Salvador critical of the government's efforts to stop political murderers, warning that "the future of your country is at stake." Nicaraguans practice evacuations Thousands of Nicaraguans, leading children and elderly people by the hand, streamed from their homes to trenches and shelters in a practice evacuation in case of a U.S.-backed rebel attack on a Managua oil refinery, militia leaders said yesterday. Domingo Paladino, a civil defense leader in Las Brisas neighborhood on the western edge of Mananga, said the evacuation had been carried out with care. In El Salvador, U.S. officials said the reshuffling of high commanders in the army had affected some but not all of the suspected members of rightist death squads, thought to be responsible for most of the political murders in the country. Bike ride yields second trv at Armv PERRY, Fla. — A north Florida man who rode his bicycle to Washington to try to get into the Army got good news upon his return home for Thanksgiving — the Army is going to reconsider his application. William Turner Porter III, 22, an unemployed high school graduate from rural Perry, wants to join the military because he has concluded that he can serve. But all the service branches have rejected him on medical grounds because of an acrylic plate implanted in his head after a shooting accident when he was 12. Arriving in the capital on Nov. 18, he managed to see his congressman, Rep. Don Fuqua, D-Fla., who arranged for the Army to give him another test. WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-28-83 30.24 30.00 29.53 SEATTLE HIGH MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON FREEZING LOW CHICAGO NEW YORK SAM FRANCISCO DENVER COLD LOS ANGELES FAIR ATLASTA HIGHEST TEMPERATURES DALLAS NEW ORLEANS MIAMI 50 50 50 70 70 70 LEGEND (HP) RAIN SNOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW UP HEAVETHER FOCUS CAST Today, snow is expected in the Upper Mississippi Valley, and rain is expected over the Upper and Lower Great Lakes regions and throughout the Atlantic Coast states. Locally, today will be cloudy and cold with a 45 percent chance of light snow in the morning. The high will be in the mid-20s. Tonight will be cloudy and cold with a low of 15 to 20. Tomorrow will be cloudy with a high around 30. Syrians say they fired on an American jet Christians and Muslims shell Beirut area By United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — Muslim and Christian forces exchanged artillery fire in the mountains overlooking Beirut yesterday as President Amin Gemayel left for Rome and the United States to bring peace to his war-torn country. For the second day in a row, Syria said it had fired on a U.S. surveillance flight over Syrian forces holding the northern half of Lebanon. In Washington, a Pentagon spokesman said he was unaware of U.S. planes in Lebanon encountering ground fire Saturday or yesterday. F-14 reconnaissance flights have been fired on three times since they began Sept. 7. israel to the constant U.S. flights, accused Israeli Prime Minister Mityush Shakrim of visiting Washington in advance of a potential attack on a joint U.S. Israeli attack on Syria The Syrian communiqué said one U.S. plane flew over the Metn Mountains, a range overlooking Beirut, but also crashed near the plane, forcing it to flee to the sea. Shamir and Defense Minister Moshe Arens flew yesterday from Tel Aviv to Washington for a White House summit that Shamir said he hoped would boost "cooperation and coordination of action" with Washington. SYRIAN OFFICIAL RADIO, point- They arrived late yesterday at Andrews Air Force Base and flew by helicopter to the Washington Monument grounds. Shamir noted Israel and the United States had recently shared the full experience of manoeuvre "attacks on soldiers in Lebanon. The two were scheduled to meet President Reagan today and hold talks with Secretary of State George Shultz and Defense Secretary Caspar Wein ISRAEL RADIO SAID Shamir wanted $1.7 billion in military aid from Washington — all in outright grants — for fiscal 1984. The report said the United States already had agreed to naval maneuvers with Israel. Gemayel, seeking help to get Syrian and Israeli troops out of his country, left Lebanon as artillery battles raged near Beirut of Beirut, killing at least two people. Arriving in Rome, the Lebanese president was greeted by Defense Minister Giovanni Spadolini. They conferred privately for 20 minutes after reviewing an honor guard in a driving rain. fire between the Christian Phalange and the Drusse Muslim militia hit at least eight villages in the Shouf Mountains. --for Gemayel is to have an audience with Pope John Paul, who has repeatedly called for Lebanese reconciliation, and a group of 1,300 peace-keeping troops in Lebanon. IN MID-AFTERNOON, shells shammed into Hadad, southwest of Beirut near the U.S. Marines based at Beirut Airport, Beirut radio reported. Four Lebanese reportedly were wounded by a shell. The continued Syrian reports of tiring at U.S. jets underscored Gemaily's larger problem of getting a compromise from the United States, Israel and Syria on the presence of foreign troops in Lebanon. Syria is demanding the abrogation of a May 17 agreement between Israel and Lebanon, while Israel, supported by the United States, says the agreement should stand and demands that Syria withdraw first. HAWK'S NEST 9:00 am-3:30 pm M/F KANSAS UNION LEVEL 2 MARK ZUCKER Official Beirut radio said artillery SPECIALS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28 Pizza Pocket Small Tossed Salad 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $1.70 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29 Hot Ham Sandwich Onion Rings 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $2.10 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30 Double Cheeseburger French Fries 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $2.65 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1 Sloppy Joe French Fries 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $1.90 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2 Taco Hot Dog French Fries 12 oz. Fountain Drink (Blue Cup) $1.75 Now Serving Breakfast 9 a.m.-10:30 a.m. Secrest Leather A fine selection of traditional leather goods Traditional gifts in leather. 914 Massachusetts 842-6046 --- Breakfast at Vista NOVEMBER SPECIAL Ends 11/30/83 --for $1.89 Mon-Sat 6-10:30 Sun 7-10:30 Regular $2.75 Vista RESTAURANTS 1527 W. 6th A ham and cheese or bacon and cheese omelette made with three fresh eggs. Served with golden hash brown, toast or home made biscuits. NOVEMBER SPECIAL Enjoy our full breakfast menu ..including Sunrise Sandwiches! OPEN AUDITION UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY Monday Nov. 28,1983 6:00 P.M. 242 Robinson 864-5552 for more info. no solo material required --- University Daily Kansan, November 28, 1983 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Student office requests report on fatal accident at fraternity The KU Office of Student Organizations and Activities has asked the Stigma Phi Epsilon fraternity for a report on an accident last week from when the incident occurred. Tim Findley, Overland Park freshman, died of head injuries a week ago at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Findley had been injured the previous day when he fell from the roof of the fraternity house, 1645 Tennessee St., and landed on a concrete porch 10 feet below. "There is no reason to think that this was anything more than an accident." Ann Eversole, director of the office, said yesterday. "This is just a reckoning for us to do. We don't know what happened." Expelled cadet wants out of Army KANSAS CITY, Kan. — An Ottawa man who was expelled from the U.S. Military Academy just before graduating as an officer wants a federal court to stop the U.S. Army from forcing him to serve three years as an enlisted man. "They're saying, 'He's not good enough to be an officer, not officer material. He'd make a fine specialist Four.'" the man, Charles Hook, said in the Kansas City Star Sunday. "I say if I'm not good enough to be an officer then I'm not good enough to be in the Army." Hook, 22, had finished his academic requirements before being thrown out of West Point for disciplinary reasons days before commencement. Late last month, he filed a motion for a temporary restraining order in U.S. District Court to prevent him from having to serve three years as an enlisted man under an agreement he signed in 1979 when he entered the academy. The Army contends that Hook signed a contract with the government in exchange for four years of free room, board and education. West Point statistics in 1982 showed that it cost $151,000 to put a cadet through four years at the academy. A decision on the motion is expected after both sides file documents with the court in Kansas City, Kan., supporting their positions. Applications for Kansan staff due Applications for Kansan news and business staff positions for the spring semester must be turned in to room 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. tomorrow. The applications are available in the Student Senate office, 105 B of the Kansas Union, in the office of student organizations and activities in the State University Library. ON THE RECORD ABOUT $1,150 WORTH of clothing and about $1,445 worth of stereo and camera equipment were stolen sometime between 5 p.m. Wednesday and 7:20 p.m. Saturday from an apartment in the 400 block of Minnesota Street, police said. Entry was made by pushing in a rear door. ABOUT $1,560 WORTH of camera equipment was stolen between 5:30 p.m. Wednesday and 9:15 a.m. Friday from Wilbur Hess Photio, 915 Louisiana St., police said. Burglar broke a window and entered, police said FIVE CARS AND TWO motorcycles parked near 11th and Mississippi streets were damaged Saturday afternoon when an 18-year-old Pittsburgh man, angry at his girlfriend, lost control of his car and hit the seven vehicles, police said. The driver of the car said that the car fainted when he accelerated. No estimate of the cars' damage was made. Police said they had not issued a ticket. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansas news desk at (913) 428-4810 The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358 --- 39. 95 SALE WE HAVE THE FRAMES YOU WANT FOR THE LENSES YOU NEED At Hutton Optical, pick your favorite designer and purchase a complete pair of lenses and frames for only $39.95—regularly $65.00 to $100.00. Tints, oversize, cataracts and multifocals—additional charge. Designer frames available are: - Oleg Cassini - Mary McFadden - Arnold Palmer - Zsa Zsa Gabor - Vera - Anthony Martin Offer good through Dec. 3 Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames. Cannot be used in conjunction with any other sale. HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 Compromise sought on church building By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Leaders of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center and residents of the surrounding neighborhood are preparing to negotiate a compromise on the proposed construction of a new church at Angel and Crescent roads. The negotiations are in response to a request by the Lawrence City Commission last Tuesday that the two groups form a commission using the commission as a mediator. Paul Burton, a member of the Engel-Crescent Roads Neighborhood Association, said yesterday that the group planned to meet with church leaders to work out a compromise but that no date had been set. Area residents, led by association president B.G. Barr, formed the neighborhood association to block construction of the church because they objected to the size of the proposed complex. IN APRIL THE center announced plans to build a 424-seat church and a 100-seat chapel on its property near campus at the corner of Engel and Crescent roads. The plans also include expansion of the student center. On Tuesday the church's site plan for construction came before the City Commission. Barr billed an appeal of the site plan, saying that it did not include enough parking spaces. The commission deferred the issue. PRICE BANKS, CITY planning Mayor David Longhurst urged the groups to renew negotiations and to reach an agreement before the issue was passed. The commission for consideration in January. director, said that the site plan was properly filed, but that the commission was not present. The Board of Zoning Appeals will hear Barr's appeal Jan. 5, and the City Commission will review the site plan Jan. 10. "There is significant difference between your positions that can be reduced," Longhurst said. "Why would you want me to decide this issue? I don't live in that neighborhood. What do I care?" I'm not a Catholic. What do I care? In spite of the delay, the commissioners said the church and the neighborhood should solve the problem on their own. The other commissioners echoed Longhurst's sentiments. Longhurst told the standing-room only audience of about 125 that the commission could solve the problem, but that it would be better if the two groups worked the issue out themselves. The use permitted upon review would also be required of cemeteries, art galleries, museums and other public buildings and be constructed in residential areas. Commissioner Howard Hill sums, "After hearing the insistence of this commission to work out the problem, we have this golden opportunity to work together." The commissioners also said they would not consider any change in zoning laws pertaining to churches until the issue was settled. William Salome, president of KPS, said he had asked the company's gas supplier. Northwest Central Pipeline has burdened lower rates to big customers. The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission is considering an amendment of a zoning ordinance that requires the county to approve special use permits before building. COMMISSIONER NANCY SHONTZ said the use permits were a planning issue, not a political one. She also requested that Banks review existing guidelines for the church complex tell under different guidelines than a single church building. In other action Tuesday night the City Commission decided to go to arbitration with Kansas Public Service Co. a request to raise gas rates. KPS asked for an arbiter two weeks ago when it made the request to raise its rates at 18.87 cents per thousand euro. The banks now pay $4.24 per thousand net. The arbitration agreement, which is binding on both sides, will probably include a floating rate for KPS's largest consumers. In a related move, the commission contributed $5,000 in services to the Warm Hearts program. Warm Hearts is trying to raise $100,000 to help needy children. The city will provide typing and duplicating services for the Warm Hearts. City, Kan, consider rate relief for large customers, who can be notified that their gas will be shit off when the gas company runs low. THE UNIVERSITY OF Kansas, which consumes about 9 percent of the natural gas in the city, would switch to fuel oil if the rates increased. In her response, Shontz disagreed with seven of Longhurst's nine points. Because of that, the City Commission requested that the arbitration firm of Larry Sawyers accept the claim. Two weeks ago Longhurst read a statement supporting the Town Center Venture Co. and its plan for developing the 600 block SHORTLY ALSO RESPONDED to a recent incident about downward pressure on the river. She also said that she intended to place the issue of downtown redevelopment and the selection of Town Hall for the commission her Dec. 6 meeting. Earlier this month the commission voted 3-1-1 to negotiate with Town Center as developer. Shontz voted against the motion. Shontz said she wanted the other commissioners to explain to the community why she chose Town Center as her office location. The firm Sizerer Realty Co. in, Kemmer, La T Killing Us Softly Advertising's Image of Women THIS THIRTY-MINUTE DOCUMENTARY FILM EXPLORES THE WAYS IN WHICH STEREO-TYPES IN THE MEDIA AFFECT THE IMAGES THAT WOMEN HAVE OF THEMSELVES. DATE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1983 TIME: 7 - 8:30 p.m. PLACE: JANIAWK ROOM, KAWAII UNIV PLACE: JAYHAWK ROOM, KANSAS UNION THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER STAFF WILL FACILITATE AN INFORMAL DISCUSSION FOLLOWING THE FILM. - Admission is Free * Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women' Resource Center. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT ELISE PINNEY, 864-3552, 218 STRONG HALL. THANK YOU PHI DELTS Our #1 float "Blew 'em' Away" Love, Alpha Chi Omega KEY FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. VISA * 4188 9300 0000 0000 KEY FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. MasterCard 612-555-1222 714-555-1222 TIMESDAY APPLICANT CREDIT FOR STUDENTS VISA* and MasterCard* Credit Cards Now Available to students through TIRESERVER's BankAction Program! No minimum income or job requirements. Sign up to a coupon for complete information. Send to Thumbtack Headquarters Building / Name Student Dept / 1276 Wilkins Avenue / Rockville MD 20852 School Attending There's Never Been a Better Time to Get VISA* and MasterCard* Credit Card! Apply Today! Talk about a... Talk about a... GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION! NOVEMBER 26, 28 & 29 $1 PHOTO PROCESSING FOR ANY ROLL OF COLOR FILM! VALID: NOV.26,28,29 COUPON- Have you been saving all your exposed film waiting for a really super processing deal? THIS IS IT! Bring in your 35mm, 110, 126 C-41 or film or disc, and we'll process and print for $1 with this coupon. Picture Yourself 8 with a new 80-200 MACRO Macro Zoom Lens If you can buy only one accessory lens, this should be it. The ROKINON is several lenses all in one — and at ONE UNBEATABLE PRICE! ZOOM LENS $9895 STOCK UP ON FLASH BATTERIES by Phillips GENERIC GENERIC GENERIC 4 pack $250 each While They Last!!! Plus Freebies! — give aways, goodies, while they last Don't Miss It! Talk Photo & Graphic Arts Supply, Inc. 10WA 25th GIBSON'S Talk PAC 2201-B West 25th Street Lawrence, Ks. 841-1718 In the all new Business World OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 28, 1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kaman (USP$ 80-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffert Flint Hall, Lawrence Kan. $65 daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer sessions. Subscribes pay $10 each for six months or $27 each for six months. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 for a year outside the county. Student subscribes are $1 a semester pass through the student activity link: FOSTMATER.SEND. Send requests to USP$ 80-640. MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Author DON KNOX Campus Editor ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser DAVE WANMAKER MARK MEARS Retail Sales National Sales Manager LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager Tick, tick, tick JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser Sandwiched between football games and other television programming over the holiday period were glimpses of a nervous world, getting more nervous, more tense with each tick of the clock — the apocalyptic tick of the doomsday clock. The television news breaks and news programs were full of charges and countercharges, similar to the backdrop in "The Day After." Last week, shortly after the first missiles started arriving in Great Britain, the West German parliament voted to station U.S. medium-range missiles. The Soviets then replied that they would match this by stationing more missiles of their own. They also stepped away from the bargaining table in Geneva, Switzerland. And surprise, President Reagan was shocked. Just another example of belligerant Soviet behavior, he said. Yesterday, Italy started getting U.S. missiles. The superpowers, barely talking to each other now, step toward confrontation. Yet the people, not the paranoid governments, in West Germany, the United States, Great Britain and probably the Soviet Union cry for an to this madness. They want deterrence but they also want sanity restored. Most of all they want peace and a place where their children won't have to live the nuclear nightmare. This is evident in West Germany over the weekend, where demonstrators protested the distribution of Pershing-2 missiles in their country. It is evident in the United States, where 100 million viewers tuned in to "The Day After." But the governments continue with the missile build-up, not hearing the cries of those they are supposed to serve. Paycheck problems Despite the escalation, the Soviet Union and the United States must start talking again, and they must start talking seriously. Especially now, during the tensest of times. State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, has joined Chancellor Gene A. Budig and other concerned individuals who are trying to "do whatever it takes" to untangle the computerized mess the state passes off as its new payroll system. About 400 KU employees didn't receive their paychecks this month, the first month KU distributed paychecks through the Kansas Integrated Personnel Payroll System (KIPPS). Several hundred more received either too much or too little pay or had withholding incorrectly deducted from their checks. "The fundamental duty of an employer is to pay his employees," says Winter, "and certainly, that's not happening in this case." Exactly. If KU and the other Board of Regents schools have to use this new payroll system, then surely it's not too much to ask that the system work. After struggling for hours to add and drop classes with the new computerized adddrop system, students are in no mood to be told that another fancy-shmancy time-saving computer program has fouled up their pavchecks. And you can be sure that those employees with families are anxiously sweating out the hours until payday this Thursday, hoping that they may then see at least part of their money. If not, this holiday break may indeed be a less than joyous one for many. Either way, the new payroll system has caused unnecessary hardship and grief. It's obvious that there are many people working to correct this problem, but it shouldn't have happened in the first place. Put out that cigarette The most persuasive argument to quit smoking in the latest report of the surgeon general is the finding that the health risks diminish with cessation, no matter how long or how much someone has been smoking. The new report concentrates on the latest findings linking cigarette smoking with coronary heart disease. More smokers die of heart disease than cancer, but the risk of both diseases increases with cigarette smoking. "If you want to prevent yourself from having a coronary event, the most important thing you can do is quit smoking," Edward N. Brandt Jr., assistant secretary for health, told reporters. Cigarette smokers have a 70 percent higher coronary death rate, at least double the risk of sudden death and a twofold increase in the incidence of heart disease — fourfold for heavy smokers, those smoking two to three packs a day. Los Angeles Times THE CREECHMAN COPY OF THE TEBURNE COMPANY ICH BUY EIN BERL Western Europe The nuclear freeze and politics Only seconds away High Frontier' PAC WASHINGTON — For most of the 100 million Americans who watched, ABCTV's movie "The Day After" became a defining warear is survivable and winnable. But within minutes after the film was aired, Secretary of State George Shultz appeared on TV to perpetrate another myth; that the government would all it can to prevent "The Day After" from becoming a reality. Let's look at the facts. Ronald Reagan has more than doubled spending on nuclear weapons since he entered office, while slashing the budget for the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency by a third. President Reagan has shelved EDWARD J. MARKEY Democratic Representative from Massachusetts In the early days of the administration, Shultz spoke of using "nuclear warning shots" in a conflict. In testimony to Congress, his undersecretary said everyone could survive a nuclear war if there were enough shovels to go around to build shelters. In addition, President Reagan's confrontational policies toward the Soviet Union have made it seem very likely he will be the first U.S. president not to meet with the Soviet leadership since Hoover. negotiation for a comprehensive test ban treaty, has failed to make any significant progress at the strategic arms talks, and has adopted a stance on basing nuclear missiles in Europe that resulted in the Soviets walking out of the negotiation in Geneva. Now that millions of Americans have seen "The Day After," what will the reaction of the people who saw the movie be? I believe there was an awareness call for a freeze and reductions in both sides nuclear arsenals. It is no wonder, therefore, that the White House has launched an all-out publicity campaign against "The Day After." The administration is well aware that its policies are leading us rapidly into a more dangerous era. Our Kudels are hardworking on a frantic effort to build nuclear weapons designed to start wars, not prevent or deter them. The Reagan administration is spending billions of dollars on the MX, the Pershing 2, the Trident-21 and the cruise missiles. When are matched by their Soviet counterparts, they will be beetle; they will put the world on a hair trigger. The possibility of nuclear war will be seconds away. It is inevitable that the impact of "The Day After" and the reality of the Reagan record will combine to swell support for a mutual and freeze, which more than 85 percent of all Americans already support. In 1844, American voters who understand the message of this powerful movie will challenge President Reagan and other presidential candidates to explain how life after I do not believe a 'day after' I do not believe it is challenge President Reagan can meet. Edward J. Markey was a sponsor of the nuclear freeze amendment that was passed by the House. A similar proposal was defeated in the Senate. This column was provided by United Press International. The rapid growth of PACs, or political action committees, as a result of campaign reform laws that were passed by Congress in the 1960s has been a cause of concern to liberals and conservative political observers alike. In 1974, there were 608 PACs registered with the Federal Elections Commission. Today, there are more than 3,300. The purpose of PACs is to funnel contributions from individuals and corporations with special interests into the pockets of political candidates in order to influence legislative votes. Now, apparently, some PACs are reaching beyond their previous Amy ANN REGAN Guest Columnist attempts to buy the votes of legislators and are attempting to use their huge monetary resources to win in the fears of the ordinary citizen. Recently, Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative student group, sponsored a forum at the University of Kansas to counteract basal the nuclear freeze movement would receive from "The Day After." The speeches at the forum, which was well attended by students and faculty, were filled with references to the horrors of war and appeals to the patriotic love of Americans for the defense of freedom. None of the speakers — including former Congressman Jim Jeffries, R-Kan, Robert E. Dolan, national chairman of Young Americans for Freedom, Brian Dalean, a defense consultant for the Computer Science Corp. and former Congressman Robert J. Dorman, R-Calif — had thing good to say about nuclear war But they did have many good things to say about the need for America to have a strong system of deterrence. And they especially kept trying to sell one system in particular. The panel members continually referred to a system known as the "High Frontier," which was described as a "non-nuclear space-based defense plan designed to repel incoming missile attacks on the U.S. It just so happens that Dornan is president of a group called the American Space Frontier, which is the political action committee for the High Frontier. That makes the forum; it would seem, a deliberate and direct attempt by those with vested interests in the space and weapons industry to do the very thing that they repeatedly chiseled the "freezenks" for doing — attempting to use "The Day After" to manipulate emotions for their own benefit. The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-space and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansas also invites individuals to submit a short column. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansson office, 111 Stauffler-Flint Hall. The Kansson reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. And unlike the benefit nuclear freeze supporters hope for, the saving of human lives, the special interests that support the American Space Frontier P.A.C. is in it for the benefit of those who receive from defense contracts. The question students should be asking is, "Is it really in the best interests of KU to allow political action committees to present lengthy commercials, sponsored by KU student groups and involving KU faculty members, to play on the tears of concerned individuals?" Ann Begun, 31, is a Lawrence senior majoring in journalism at the University of Kansas. Democrats fight as Reagan rolls along WASHINGTON — It must be fun to be President Reagan's campaign manager these days. First, you have a candidate who ranks high in the polls. Whether or not they agree with him, the candidate will presumably like and trust Ronald Reagan. Then your candidate is president of the United States. That always makes the campaign manager's job more difficult. In an airplane, the president has his own. LETTERS POLICY CLAY RICHARDS Being president and being a Republican means fund-raising — probably the most difficult job in any campaign — is a whole lot easier. Ronald Reagan will raise and spend every penny allowed under the law and do it with ease. United Press International The White House communications office means never missing an important telephone call. Being president and being a Republican means that fund raising — probably the most difficult job in any campaign — is a whole lot more difficult will raise and spend every penny allowed under the law and do it with ease. Reagan's campaign manager must be happy with the way the economy is going. One political figure in recent years has true is that people vote their Unemployment is moving down, inflation is already down, and economists who seelom agree on any new stimulus but don't put a key turn for the worse. docketbooks. Yes, the budget deficits look bad for Reagan and take away from the Republicans their cherished label of being the party of fiscal responsibility. When was the last time a poll showed someone voting against a president because his budget deficits were too big? And this multiple-warhead missile also charges that Mondale is soft on defense and would seriously weaken the nation if he is elected. But most of all Ronald Reagan's campaign manager must be happy because of the state of the Democrats. Was this rocket launched by Republicans — who very likely All of a sudden comes a heat seeking missile charging that he will be the last of the big-time spenders, and that he is promising so many things to so many people it will cost the nation $90 billion we don't have. There is Walter Mondale, smoothly gliding on a path that could win him the Democratic nomination in a walk. No. It was launched by Sen. John Glenn, who woke up in November and found his own campaign going nowhere. would use all these arguments against Mondale if he got the nomination? Module of course could not leave the Glenn attack unanswered. He called Glenn's proposal to help balance the budget — a to 10 percent income tax surcharge, the most important measure of tax burden but the poor as hard as the rich. And Mondale said that when Glenn called for restraining entitlements, it was a code for saying he wants to cut Social Security benefits. Of course saving someone wants to cut Social Security is the line Democrats have used most recently against Republicans for years. So with Reagan already improving in the polls, the Democrats are ending the year before the election softening up each other. --- And for Ronald Reagan's campaign manager the only nightmare these days would be hearing Reagan say, "I've decided not to run for another term. University Daily Kansan, November 28, 1983 Page 5 Popcorn continued from p. 1 The Department of Agriculture said that farmers were harvesting the worst corn crop in 15 years. Vogel said that the hot, dry summer produced popcorn production about 50 percent But popcorn industry spokesmen have said that this year's crop would not be a total disaster because of a popcorn surplus from last year and because many companies had contracted with growers in the south to make up for the summer's losses. But, because returns on corn yields will not be complete until late December, the large retail popping corn companies are only guessing about how the industry will be affected. Bill Blodgett, director of corporate relations for Hunt & Wesson Products, Fullerton, Calif., the makers of Ovillle Redenbacher's Popcorn, said. "We don't expect a major increase in output but that's not to say that we don't expect it." "It's still too early to tell. We're still processing the corn so we don't know the yield." WREDE SMITH, PRESIDENT of American Popcorn, Sioux City, Iowa, the makers of Jolly Popcorn, said that he expected prices to increase by 10 percent in the next six to eight weeks. Smith said that if a popcorn shortage was going to occur, he expected it to show its worst effects by late next summer, just before the next harvest. Spokesman for Commonwealth Theatres Inc., American Multi-Ginema, Inc., and Dickenson Theaters national theatre chains, which operate in the United States, have been uncertain. Corn prices would probably increase this year. Jim Markley, operations manager for Dickenson Theaters said that about six weeks ago the chain's popcorn costs had increased about 20 to 30 percent and the price of coconut oil also had risen 5 percent. The movie theater industry has also expressed concern about rising popcorn prices. data recorder at daybreak. The crash-resistant container, actually painted bright orange for visibility, monitors vital instruments during a flight. continued from p. 1 HE SAID THAT he was trying to decide whether the chain would increase prices and that there was a strong possibility that prices would increase about 10 percent by Christmas. ONE SURVIVOR, HUGO BERNAL Cortes, 30, of Colombia, was dazed but uninjured after the attack. The plane hit the ground, flipped over, ripped apart and caught fire about five miles south of the airport near the town of Mejorada del Campo. "I was suspended by my seat belt, because the plane was belly up." Cortes said. "I somehow freed myself and kicked out one of the windows, and I escaped to escape. I don't remember anything else." Spanish Transportation Minister Enrique Baron, who will head the committee charged with investigating the tragedy said it was difficult to explain why the jet crashed. Among the dead were five children Swedish couples traveling to Colombia to adopt children. In Paris, Rododo Amaya, Aviana's European director, said the jet carried 192 people - 172 passengers, including four off-duty Aviana staffers, and 20 crewmembers. Earlier Aviana had said 194 were aboard. A complete passenger list was not immediately released. continued from p.1 ARLINE OFFICIALS IN Paris and Madrid said all but 11 of those aboard were killed, which is one more than in any other war. employees would be paid on the next state payday, which is Thursday. HARDER SAID THAT the report would probably be ready early this week. He would not speculate on what suggestions the report would contain. "We are definitely aware of the problem," Harder said. "With Christmas coming on, we have to make sure that everyone gets paid. And there is an internal roll system in place by the first day of December." "We've still got a few days to work on the problem. I'm confident that there will be a system in place by which to pay the University's employees." Winter said that state officials had told him that part of the University's payroll problem had been caused because KU had drawn payroll funds from several sources. "The Regents schools shuffle money around a lot. Some positions are funded by, say, half federal money and half state money, and some from private funds," he said. "A lot more data is involved. Also, a lot of students have no withholding in their paychecks." "But it's scary. Five more Regents schools also have to go to the system. And the state has estimated that it will take six to eight months to get the system straightened out here." Weather were killed yesterday in an accident involving three cars and a semi tractor trailer. continued from p. 1 Heavy rain also pounded eastern Missouri, northern Mississippi and northeastern Louisiana. Flash flood watches were posted for areas already saturated with rain. Planes were grounded at Denver International airport but were having no problems taking off from Kansas City International Airport. The plane said all flights from Denver had been canceled. A TRANS WORLD Airline spokesman said its flights in Denver had been grounded. "Flights from Omaha and Denver have been affected the most," he said. "The visibility is down and we have wings in ice over and away." Ralph Henne, a ticket clerk at the Lawrence Bus Depot, said, "Right now everything is closed from Goodland up to Denver. But anything from Salina on in has no problems. "But we have two bases from Denver, one at 4:45 p.m., and another at 10:25 p.m. It looks like you are right." "We've had a genuine bizzard all day," said Sgt Ltray Maple, Norton highway patrolman. "We've had winds up to 30 mph and a lot of blowing and drifting snow. Visibility is down to zero. Right now I can see about a block, but this is downtown." The Goodland airport was not operating and many roads in the area were closed. Crews said that it was futile to clear roads. Goodland and land was covered by snow, so the state have virtually closed down, Maple said. GOODLAND REPORTED THE most snow in Kansas. The town was buried under 12 inches of snow, and winds gusted up to 50 mph with a wind chill factor of 30 degrees below zero. Curtis Russell, a Goodland police officer, said, "There are a few four-wheel drives that are getting around, but other than that it's pretty much snowed in." What are "FUNFLOWERS?" 赞 They're Flowers for just. for the colorful bunch of flowers you enjoy. Put a little fun in your life. Pick up a book of many day. Hop on your bike to the FUNFLOWERS' today or any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 APARTMENT LIFE GOT YOU DOWN? "FUNFLOWERS" $400 € SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" 749-2912 A Let Naismith Hall take the "hassle" out of apartment living. Reserve a place now for spring 1984 or move in TODAY! Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Drive (843-8559) DOMINO'S PIZZA Domino's Pizza Delivers. 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One coupon per pizza. Expires: 1/23/83 Fast, Free Delivery* Good at listed locations. Weekend Special! $2.00 off any 16" 2-item or more pizza. Good weekends only. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 12/30/83 DOMINO'S PIZZA Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations. $1.00 Off! $1.00 off any pizza. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 12/30/83 HOMINGO'S PIZZA Fast, Free Delivery" Good at listed locations. 35104 / 60012 ENTERTAINMENT The University Daily KANSAN November 28,1983 Page 6 Astilbe. Skiing grows as local sport By Staff and Wire Reports When the first real snow falls in Lawrence, students will take to the hills — with sleds, trays, inner tubes or huge plastic garbage bags — anything that slides. But some will shim those toys for more sophisticated snow-sport equipment with which to glide over the snow - cross-country skis. Cross-country skiing is one of the fastest growing winter sports in the country, and experts have advice for this year's beginners to help them stay on top of the snow. In Lawrence, cross-country ski lessons are not available, Chuck Adams, an employee of Sunflower Surplus, said recently. The store offers equipment for a day of sking on the plains. Cross-country skiing is easy, say most of the experts, but it demands a little instruction to make it rewarding to the novice. There's no worse way, say ski instructors, than watching a potential skier give up in the snow and struggling in vain to get up. Going with a friend who knows how to ski is the best bet for beginners in Lawrence, but even that isn't necessary, said Adams, Towka senior. "You can learn on your own," he said. "There are plenty of skiers in Lawrence, and if you just went out, you could learn a lot by watching other people ski." Likely spots to find skiers are near Potter's Lake, and at parks and golf courses around town, Adams said. Some also ski cross- count at Mount Bleu. The basic stride can be learned in an afternoon, but maneuvering up and down hills makes it even more difficult. Adams said that he and others in the store could show customers a few of the techniques for turning and stopping on hills, but that "that's kind of like reading a book." "You can't really show them how to climb hills without being on the snow." Hills can be dangerous to the uninstructed sailer, especially if the woods are thick at the outer edge. "If you didn't know what you were doing and you got to the top of a hill, you could hurt yourself." Cross-country skiers, however, frequently tackle steep slopes in the same way alpine skiers do. It may not be advisable for a beginner, but "that depends on your philosophy," said Aaron He did, however, suggest that skiers learn to ski faster "a method for reducing speed on the slopes." Being 'in good shape also helps, but virtually anyone who can walk ski can, ski said. "The better shape you in, the more fun it will be." he said. "It's like swimming. It can keep you from drowning." Cross-country skis and poles are longer than alpine ski equipment, and the boots are attached to the skis at the toes but are free at the heel, unless down-kill ski boards. The arms are used more vigorously in cross-country skiing, to help with the rhythm of the stride. "It works all the muscle groups," Adams said. Thus, it can be tiring. Most Lawrence skiers go out for a couple of hours at a time. Beginning skipper often dress too warmly, said Tom Kellis a cross-country ski instructor to me. "They look outside and see it's only 10 degrees and they bundle up with all sorts of sweaters and jackets," Kelly said. "But they're wearing a half-kilometer and you are sweating to death." The best approach is to dress in layers, he said. A turtleneck or light shirt, a wool sweater and a windbreaker provide the most flexibility. Adams advised bringing a warm coat to wear after skiing, to keep off the chill from the sun. Wool knickers or baggy pants are good choices because they allow free movement and the wool stays warm when wet, Adams said. Wool socks are also advised, and cotton socks, which get and stay wet, should be avoided. Skis, boots and poles can be rented from Sunflower Surplus for $8.50 a day. Adams recommended also bringing the following items in a backpack: - bale for binding the boots - an extra ski tip - extra mittens, hat and coat - water, to avoid dehydrating Serious skiers who plan to be out all day should also bring food, a first-aid kit and a fish bag. Sousa's 'spitting image' to lead Wind Ensemble By PHIL ENGLISH Staff Renorter The spirit of John Philip Sousa will come to life tomorrow when the band leader's impersonator leads the KU Wind Ensemble in a concert of patriotic marches. Staff Reporter James Saired, a music company owner from Tulsa, Okla., has earned national fame as an impersonator and "spitting image" of Sousa, who died in 1932. For several years, Saied has toured the country, conducting university bands while dressed in an authentic Sousa costume and wearing a range of the composer who was known around the world. Said will lead the Wind Ensemble as part of a fall concert shared with the University Band. The concert will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Crafton-Pever Theatre in Murphy Hall. Sousa was born in Washington, D.C., in 1854. He was teaching music by age 15 and conducting two years later. He led the U.S. Marine Corps from 1890 until he formed his own group in 1892. THE TWO BANDS will perform separately THE Wind Ensemble's share of the concert is these two. He had achieved wide recognition as the greatest band leader in the world, and received the most prestigious military awards granted by England, France and Belgium before his death. Sousa's impersonator, a native of Ada, Okla, was a high school band director in Oklahoma for several years before he started a music company in Tulsa. A large color portrait of Sousa hangs on the wall of his stair, and telephone calls hear Sousa's footsteps. For the concert tomorrow, the Wind Ensemble will be reduced from 60 to 40 musicians to perform. SAIED WILL CONDUCT THE Wend Esemble in Sousa's "Semper Fidderi March," Saint Saens" "March Militaire Francee" and Herbert L, Clarkes" Bride of the Waves." After leading the audience through a singalong, Saied will close the performance with the famous Sousa march, "Stars and Stripes Forever." The University Band will perform before the Sousa portion of the concert. James Barnes, assistant to the director of bands at KU, will conduct the 90-piece band. Because admission to the University Band is open, it comprises an unusual variety of performers. "We've got some 60-year olds, some graduate students, a virtual 'Wha' who as far as majors is concerned." The director said the group comprised people who were good musicians in high school but who had little musical background. "AFTER A WHILE, they began to realize that there was something missing from their lives, and they needed it back," he said. "This is an error, the one that doesn't ever get the attention it deserves." The University Band will perform "Brass Allame" by John Cacavas, "Concert Variations" by KU alumnas Claude T. Smith, Choral Prelude, Es ist ein Ros' Variations, Es ist ein B & B by Johannes Brahm, arranged by Barnes, and "The Crowst March" by Henry Fillmore. The University Band has earned its share of bowls. Barnes said, despite its varied membership. Barnes sent a recording made by the University Band to the office of the Kansas Music Educators Association, which will make a concert and give a presentation of the music played on college campuses. KU artists to show handmade work at first SUA Arts and Crafts Bazaar "This is a great honor, because this puts the university Band in the same league as some of our local bands." Staff Reporter By ANA DEL CORRAL The University of Kansas will open its first Arts and Crafts Bazaar tomorrow, and a group of students with Student Union Activities is set to meet the fair a regular, yearly feature on campus. "There are many people on campus who have a lot of talent. I am really excited about it," Liz Krechman, Winnema, Ill., senior and chair, the UGA Arts and Crafts Committee, said recently. The bazaar will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Dec. 2, in the Kansas Union Gallery. Because the fair includes most of KU's art departments, it has the potential to reach more students than a single department's fair, Krottemar said. through Dec. 2, in the Kansas Unior Gallery Participation in the fair is open to students, staff, faculty and members of their immediate families. The Bazaar exhibits consist entirely of handmade items such as ceramics, woven goods, baskets, Christmas ornaments and cards photographs, and paintings The 10 percent commission paid by participants to SUA will go toward paying for advertising and for next year's bazaar. Kretchmer said. The artists are responsible for setting up the displays and handling sales, unless special arrangements are made with SUA If the Kansas Union Gallery is too small for the exhibits submitted, items will be displayed in the Union's lobby and hallways, said Michelle Kobler, a member of the organizing committee. "We hope to expand it next year," she said McKinney said that SUA wanted to have an international arts and crafts fair in conjunction with the international club and minority affairs. But because crafts from other countries are difficult to find, SUA decided to organize the fair with local art The purpose of the fair is also to provide material, on campus, for early Christmas shopping. Mckinney said Eventually, SUA will continue participation in the fair to all Lawrence residents SPARE TIME ON CAMPUS AUDITIONS FOR "OPGPs, Etc." and "Terra Nova" will be at 7 p.m. today in the Craften-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Call-backs will be at 7 p.m. Wednesday in rooms 209 and 341 in Murphy. Call-back lists will be posted by noon in the Murphy Green Room UNIVERSITY DANCE Company will have open auditions at a tonight in Dance Studio 421 in New York City. SUA FILMS WILL SHOW "Objective, Burma!" at 7.30 p.m. to tomorrow in Woodruff Auditorium at 9.45 p.m. THE UNIVERSITY BAND and the KU WIND Ensemble will present a fall concert. "A Sousa Concert," with James Barnes and Jemes Said conducting. The performance will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Admission is free. by SUA Films at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Wooldruff Auditorium, in the Union. Tickets are $1.50. STEVEN WISEMAN will present a doctoral recital of chamber music at 8 p.m. Thursday in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Admission is free. THE SPENCER MUSEUM of Art and the Center for East Asian Studies will present Wu Zuoren, artist from the People's Republic of China and visiting professor at the University of Missouri at Kansas City. The speech will be at tomorrow in the Spencer Museum auditorium. THE MOVIE "VIDAS SECAS" will be shown SUA FILMS WILL SHOW "Band of Outsiders" at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in wooddraft Auditorium in 4516 East 19th Street, NYC. Jayhawk Singers show love of music PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN during the filming of "The Day After" in Lawrence will be on display from 10 a.m. to p. t.m. tomorrow through October 5, when it will be part of Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE Volunteer members revive group, plan fall concert tomorrow By the Kansan Staff Almost every institution has its volunteers. Hospitals have their candy-stripers, baseball has its bat boys and the University of Kansas has its Javahawk Singers. The Jahayhwk Singers group is made up of seven KU students who volunteer their talents for local organizations and conventions. The group will present its fall concert at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The Chuck Berg Band will also be featured. Kevin Albert, Lawrence senior and assistant director of the Singers, said that the original group, the Singing Jayhawks, had to disband in spring 1981 because of budget cuts in the music industry. "Later on, I had heard that the K-State Singers were performing at a convention here. and I thought that was too bad that our rival school was performing for us," he said. Albert and the group's director, Ray Williams, decided to revive the group, now called the Jahyawk Singers. The original group had worked through the chancellor's office, then through the department of music education, and then through the music department. Now, the singers are on their own. Albert said that they received some money from Student Senate and were paid by the groups they perform for, but just enough to cover expenses, which include costumes for period dresses. He and Williams approached the KU Alumni Association early in the semester to say when they would available and to show photographs from previous performances. Later, the association asked them to play for a reunion of the class of 1958. The singers have also performed this year for None of the members of the Jayhawk Singers are music majors. The group has auditions every fall and spring semester and the only requirement is proof of enrollment. Some members dropped out this semester because they didn't realize how much time was spent on the job. "We practice for 10 hours per week for no credit and no money," he said. "We are just a group of students who love music and we love to perform." Because the students want to perform for all types of groups, they use as their motto, "Become a better person." The Jayhawk Singers will demonstrate their flexibility tomorrow in "A Salute to American Music." The choir will perform songs of every genre from Duke Ellington to Burt Barcharach. an oil marketer's convention and the Panhellenic Association. New coloring book is for adults By PAMELA THOMPSON Staff Reporter With a bokstel of crayons and an uninhibited imagination, adults are able to vent their innermost fantasies and frustrations outside of the office and inside the pages of a new coloring book. The anti-traditional coloring book, called "The Anti-Coloring Book For Adults Only," encourages outside of the pre-drawn boundaries to draw. The artist to draw within the confines of the pattern. Striker's coloring books allow for individual creativity by providing topics that provoke thoughts and feelings about day-to-day anxieties that can be expressed through drawing. Susan Striker, the coloring book's author and one of its eight illustrators, said in a telephone interview from New York last week that her book was designed to be therapeutic. The first of her books, published in 1978, was a campus cult item, according to Stirling. Anti-Coloring Book For Adults Only" after learning that adults were using the coloring books she had first designed for children six years before. The subjects include such timely and universal themes as the job, family, role in society, sexual values, the inner self and growing old. Striker was wanted to appeal to a diverse group of adults. Striker said she decided to write "The She said adults were embarrassed about coloring in the youngsters' books, which are geared for children between the ages of 8 and 14. In this book, the captions on the 29 partially illustrated pages raise such provocative themes as the best dream ever dreamed, the most appropriate tattoo for an arm, and the essential items required to live for five years on a deserted island. Striker, who has taught art therapy for 20 years, said she first got the idea for the children's coloring books after a child she knew would understand his nightmare better by drawing it. Children need to be able to break artistic rules to express themselves, she said. tries to make them like little adults so that when they grow up they pick up the feeling of "We never get a chance to express ourselves. We sew by patterns and pre-drawn outlines because we are so concerned about going outside of the lines," she said. "Society doesn't like children," she said. "It As a result of this type of regimented training, adults are often in the same bind as children, she said. "I was given dittos and paint-by-number sets when I was a child," she said. "Those preplanned kits were big then. People felt they had to have a guide to art." Natalie Chapman, Striker's editor at Holt, Rinehart and Winston, the New York-based publishing house which publishers her books, said last week that the adult edition was not X-rated, but had more to do with "psychology, counseling and fun." "Susan made up the title, which caused a lot of controversy," Chapman said. "The publisher felt 'anti-coloring' had a negative connotation. The company also designed a logo and made it a registered trademark." BLOOM COUNTY BY BERKE BREATHED HEY MACK... VER SUTTIN ON BIG DRINE DUDE'S BRINK BUD OFF MAKING YOU DON'T MISS PIPE, DON'T LIKE PEOPLE SUPPIN ON HIS BANK I SAID BLOW, YOU LITTLE COMPUTER THUGS! 2018 ALL DON'T MEE ONLAD, IW BEEN BEAUTY YOU'VE BEEN CHANGED FRAMED WITH BREAKING INTO CONDIMENTS DON'T DO IT. COMPUTER FREES. DON'T DO IT! I SWEAR. I DIDN'T DO IT! NOW WOULD YOU LAKE TO MAKE UP? FIND YOUR CRITER RATING SKINNER! IM MOVING! IM MOVING! MK. DALLAS, THE BEEN LISTENING TO YOU ALL DAY WE REPEAT OUR NESCAPHARE CONCLUSION. 4 YOU HAVEN'T THE BRAND TO SUCK SELFILLY PEEK YOUR NAME. MUCH LESS WORK A COMPUTER. NEXT CASE WHAM! WELL MAYBE I DID DO IT!! University Daily Kansan, November 28, 1983 Page 7 NELSON'S THE DAY AFTER Thanksgiving SURVIVOR SALE! After you've counted your blessings, it's time to count your savings at Nelson's "Survivor Sale." If the turkey and trimmings didn't blow you away, these prices will. No need to panic, but quantities are limited, so hurry on down! RECEIVERS SONY STR-VX250 139^95 20 watt ch. digital 15 watt ch. digital selection and presses selection and presses for reg. $100.00 (Sale) 100.00 MARANTZ SR-220 22 watt ch, with a 3-year warranty. See what warranty covers. 11995 Sale PIONEER SX-303 PHOENIX 3-509 16995 45 watt th. This one gives you the best price 85 watt th. 45 watt th. 45 watt th. 45 watt th. TECHNICS SA-210 TECHNICS SA-210 Sales 25 watts. chk. (alt. 14 preset stations. Reg. 19495 SONY STR-VX350 SONY SIR-VX350 19995 30 watts built-in digital keypad, via VX250, Reg. EA 97486908080000000000 Sale 19995 AKAI AAR 32 Sale 45 wks left; ch all function digital touch touch control Consumer Reports Best Buy, Reg 27995 18 MARANTZ SR-620 CX 55 weeks ich digital receiver, Bass, mid. high tone controls, CX noise reduction Batteries PIONEER SX-50 50 watts ch. digital present with simulated AM time tag. Fee $450.00 Sale 20095 29995 TAPE DECKS PIONEER CT-20 Soft touch controls. Dolby cue and review plus 2 motor drive system for durability. Reg $200.00 129^95 SONY TC-V7 Unique loading system. Dolby B & C, auto 24995 TECHNICS-M205 Soft touch controls. Soft due and review 9995 Sale 11995 SONY TC-FX25 Dalby, soft touch. Consumer Report best buy. Sale 11995 AKALHX-1 AKAI CS-F14 14995 Dalley B. Banker series. Lined, double control cards. For larger format for larger捆. Reg $199 95 14995 Sale 14995 SONY TC-FX500R SONY TC-FX500R Sale Dubai Bond Courts, revenue scan, hotline 914-267-8300 1995 www.sony.com ARAI M A-1 139⁹⁵ Dobby B fluorescent meters, and great 139 $ ^{9 5} $ MARANTZ SD321 Dolby B and C power off tape protection, Reg. $249.95 Sale 19995 15995 Buy any Turntable and Cartridge Combination, get a coupon for up to 10 FREEP LP ALBUMS with purchase of 10LPs. while supplies last TURNTABLES PIONEER PL-530 Semi-airate with graphite ionemand and dynamic moisture absorber. Reg. $135.00 Sale 79 95 AKAIAPD210 SONY PSLX-2 Sale Semi direct, side mount, low mass, tone am with integral head shell for low weight 89 95 www.olympus.com SONT PSLEX-2 Samiu auto, direct turntable with $BMC base retail 99.95 Sale 999.95 TECHNICS SL-BL3 TECHNICS SL-BL3 14995 Fully automatic belt drive, linear tracking Sales Price: $8,900.00 SONY PS-FL77 Sale 9995 Sale Direct drive fully automatic, front loading turntable with BIO-trace toner arm. You must be a certified Hp printer. 209 95 MARANTZ TT1080 Direct drive, semi-auto, turntable with gold-plated cartridge and output connectors. Reg. $149.95 Sale 14995 Sale 20995 10995 HOME SPEAKERS 1. MARANTZ HE-10 power. Reg. $269 95 each Sale 129 95 each 10" 3-way 150 watts of power. Reg. $269.95 each. Oooo FISHER DS-196 WIHER DS-196 15 ways 300 watts of power. Reg.$349.95 Sale 1499.95 **OINERE GCS-G20W8** 10 3-way 65 watts. Reg. $419 95 pair **pair** AR 38B 8' 3 way 100 watt power handling 50 ft. done tower with fertilizer for smooth high and low heat requirements $2999.95 Sale 1999.95 BOSE INTERAUDIO ALPHA 4 BOSE INTERAUDIO 10^4 way with passive antenna and innertest towteriter. Automatic twitter and system twitteriter. 229% efficiency. Sale 22995 ALPHA 2 10' 2-way 200 watts with omniwave radiation tweeter. Req. $239.00 each. 12995 each Buy any Turntable, Receiver, Speakers and get your EQUIPMENT RACK FREE. while supplies last MUSIC SYSTEMS SANYO SYSTEM 220 Sale 39995 FISHER SYSTEM 5560 BKOO BOO BOO Complete AM. FM receiver, cassette deck speakers, and audio rack - ready to go 59995 Sale AUDIO FURNITURE MARANTZ RM-3060 Sale 3995 3995 SANYO AF2000 Walnut finish, glass front and top. Reg. $159.95. Sale PAPER MACHINE HEAD PHONES KOSS K6XLC Ultra comfort with volume control. Reg.$39.95. KOSS PRO4AA A.M.S. 2995 KOSS K-20 High calorie leather weight BN $10.95 14^95 Fluid-filled ear cushions and padded headband, professional quality. Reg.$80.00. --- JUNEKER SE-L4 Min and standard plugs at reserved range drivers. Rep $49.95 Sale 0095 Sale 3995 CARTRIDGES Buy any regular-priced Indash Stereo, buy 1 PAIR 3 WAKEP SPEAKERS FREE. CAR STEREO while supplies last PIONEER KPA400 AM-FM cassette. Superfruit III loudness contour, music search tape guard push button presses and more. Reg $250.00 179^95 CRAIG T502 Sale 6995 SANYO FT C40 SANTO FI C140 AIF 65 cassette, 19 wav, auto reverse, remote search, remote playback, SD/SDHC, 329.95 * AUDIOVOX AVX 3000 AM FM stereo with cassette player Sale 59.95 PIONEER RP A50U Sale ACR Kit Supercard, supercard presents contact music. AIRCORD Guitar, bass and treadle 199 95 SANYO FT80 V8 AM FM (cassette with 19 watt, radio, reverse and metal) Sales 95 PIONEER KP-4205 149 $ ^{95} $ FM/MM/MC/E/F/W/R/S/T AM/MM/MC/E/F/W/R/S/T jam-proof tape mechanism. Reg. 12995⁹ Sate CRAIG T-690 AMPS/EQ/BOOSTERS CONCEPT PB 6000 DVD RW ALL AUDIO-TECHNICA 30 watts rcl rotary bass 8 watt rcl rotary off switch Reg $69.95 Sale 2095 MAGNADYNE EQ35 Sale 50 watt 2 handed meters, Reg Δ995 - Sale 50% OFF VOLTAGE HUMAN EFFECT HUMAN AUDIO MINIMUM MAXIMUM VOLUME AUDIO VOLUME AUDIOVIX AMP -700 Sale 100 watts power with 7 bands control and 129.95 peak meter. Reg. $239 95 Sale 89 95 CONCEPT EQ9090 CRAIG R-502 Sale 50 watt of power. Can be used on an 79.95 load. CAR SPEAKERS SANYO SP-6H Co-axial slim mount speakers. 20 watts. Reg. $54.95 pr. BROADWAY THEATRE 3995 CRAIG V-322 Sale 4 coaxial speakers with ferrofluid tweeters for 2095 MARANT L MZS-630 High power 3-way speakers. The best power choice. Sale 79⁹⁵ PIONEER TS-6904 PIONEER 13-6904 6x9* coaxial with 80 watts power. Very 6995 CONCEPT CP-816S MGT PR-6920T 6 coaxial speaker with 20 oz. magnets 90 watt headphone handling, Reg. 869 $ 34 95 Sale MARANTZ SS-140 JENSEN J-1369 64 watt 50 watt (coal burn) mount for easy in. $69^a$ MAKARTA 33-14V 4 full range for small cars. Reg. R441-61 2995 PIONEER TS-X8 TUMEREX TS-X8 80 watt 3 way motor surface mount. Reg. 11995 PIONEER TS6905 MONEYER 150709 4980 mway 3-way motorized a hot speaker! @pq $14.50 ... 0995 TPC-C TPC-C PERSONAL STEREOS 6995 SANYO MG-90 SANTO MIGU-90 Auto, rewind cassette sound. Reg. $79.95. Sole 4855 SANYO MG-36D Sale AM FM radio with Dolby Reg $119.95 89°95* SANYO MG110DT Sale Auto revise Dolby cassette with timer pick $199.95 129°95* PORTABLE STEREOS AM/FM stereo cassette with 2 way speakers. Reg ea0 ae SONY CFS-43 SANYO M9810K with 2 ways speakers, Reg $99.95 Sale 7Q95 SANYO C-9 SANYO M-9860 Dubly music search 2 way speakers and music search 159⁹⁵ SONY CFS-43 Sale Cure review and full range stereo speakers. Reg. W/90 8995 SANYO M-9860 30 watt system with phone inputs 29995 durable speakers, bellows, music speakers, loudspeaker PIONEER SK-350 AM/FM stereo with Dolby cassette, music search 1 0095 BLOW-OUT BUYS Limited Quantities AKAI AA-R42 AKAIMX-R5 CUSTOM CAR STEREO INSTALLATION AVAILABLE ANATOMY DATA 2018 Anatomy Data Check With Dudley B. C. Eve. Transcript Account Control. Reg $249 95 229^95 Sale Consumer Computer Digital Receiver With Touch Controls For DVD-ROM & DVD-Burner 280$ $ 100% FISHER ST-925 ANASONIC PV-1320 Solo VH1 Video Recorder. Cabby ready tuning. Die 4999$ --- 15 3-way System. With Mid-range And Rapidly Full, Fully Protected Circuits EACH **15995** $Repair $499.95 USD PANASONIC CT-9042 Date 19 Color With Random access Remote Control 20Q95 ITT PC-500 249.5 361.8 ITT PC-2500 Desk Phone, Touch Screen, Price $49.95 44'95 ITT PC-2200 ITT PC-2200 Trendline Tone Touch Desk Phone. Reg $P9.95 549.95 LLOYDS J-202 LLOYDS J-202 Am/Fm Digital Clock Radio With Battery Power 1495 MAGNADYNE EX-44 50W/18V 7.5HDEQBOSE(With Sale 7995 NELSON'S TEAM ELECTRONICS 2 WE ARE MORE THAN STEREO! II NELSON'S TEAM TEAM TEAM Home Electronics Super Store 2319 Louisiana Lawrence 841-3775 University Daily Kansan, November 28, 1983 CAMPUS AND AREA Page 8 Local self-service gas stations targeted by 'drive-off bandits' By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter But they don't wear black masks, steal money and flee on horseback. Instead, they drive cars without license plates with gas and drive away without paying. They are modern-day bandits These "drive-off bandits" became active in Lawrence a few years ago when many gas stations started selling gas pumped by the customer. Since 1986, nearly all gas stations have been targets for bandits as have stations across the country. "When they drive up," he said, either the tags on the cars will be off or not. Jeff Pettjohn, manager of a new E-Z Shop at 23rd Street and Haskell Avenue, said recently that he already had had two drive-offs at his shop although it had been open for only a week and a half. BOR THOMPSON, WHO works at the aPoe gas station at the Stop 2, Shop 1010 Third St., said that drive-off at his gas station occurred once a night during the weekend. Thompson said that drive-offs were unpredictable but that some people were very likely to get hit. "It happens," he said. "But it's not an unfair affair. They get $10 and up and they get $20." Thompson said, however, that he did not understand why the police sometimes told him to give a report over the telephone. "Sometimes the dispatcher will say, 'We'll get back to you,'" he said. Maj. Ron Olin of the Lawrence Police Department said that what probably happened in those situations was that another call had come in that was more urgent. "If a life threatening situation exists, we do not answer less important calls until the other call is handled," he said. HE SAID THAT it was standard protocol to respond to certain calls and that under some extreme circumstances, calls on non- Computerark KNOWLEDGE EDUCATION COMMODORE PERSON MOBIRD DEBIGNS VICIOR 900T ORKDATA 320d & Losantana MALL Shopting Center 814-0094 OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRINDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 803-2728 Christmas Story CHIPHY CHASE DEAL OF THE CENTURY Eve: 9:15 only Sacred Ground Eve 7:15 only Mat 2-15 a night of heaven Feb. 7, 15-35 May Cat. Sun. 2-16 HILLCREST 1 9TH AND IOWA JULIENSON 426-740-8100 life threatening situations could be put on hold for up to 45 minutes. "If you called at 8 tonight, I could not tell you how long it would to respond to that call," he said. "But I call with an average response time is three minutes." HILLCREST 2 5TH AND 10TH AFTER MATE HAYES FC Fluoridation Eve: 7:30 Mat Sat. Bun: 2:15 Eve: 6:20 Mat Sat. Bun: 2:15 Pettjohn said that he had been a manager at a station in Oatley and that three drive-offs a week occurred there. A person who paid a system had stopped the drive-offs. Flashdance Eve: 9:20 Mat. Sat., Sun. 2:15 He said it was still too early to tell whether he would have to start a game. if it will result in a decrease in sales, he will not 'use it unless things get out of control' ANOTHER CONVENIENCE STORE manager said, however, that he would not use the pre-pay system because it was an inconvenience to the customer. HILLCREST 3 8TH AND IOWA 7 THIRD AUGUST 2016 AMITYVILLE 3-D ORION Eve. 7:25-30 Mat. Sat. 2:15 HILLCREST 3 TIMELINE AND IOWA AMITYVILLE 3-D ORION POLYCENTRE Eve: 7-25 9-30 Mat. Sat: 2:15 CINEMA 1 TIMELINE AND IOWA TELEPHONE # 842 8600 RUNNING BRIDE PO Box Eve: 7-25 9-35 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 TIMELINE AND IOWA TELEPHONE # 842 8600 THE BIG CHILL COLUMBIA PICTURE Eve: 7-30 9-30 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 The manager said that he used an intercom system to try to stop drive-offs. He said that when the customer lifted the pump, a signal sounded that alerted the employee in the shop that someone was at the pump. The employee then used the intercom system to greet the customer. RUNNING Braze PGG Eve: 7:35-9:35 Mat. Set Sun: 2:00 CINEMA 2 THE BIG CHILL R COLUMN PICTURES Eve. 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 This system, the manager said, made the customer aware that someone knew he was there and also made the employee aware of the customer. THE MANAGER SAID that he still had about four to seven drive-offs a week, with an average weekly loss from $10 to $60. But he said that employees had been able to identify the cars of people who had driven off because they had noticed them when the intercom system signaled. He said that if the drive-offs continued, the self-service system would change, although he was uncertain how. Ballot validity to be examined by board By SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter The Judicial Review Board will conduct an emergency meeting this week to decide whether ballots rulled invalid by the Elections Review Board should be counted in the recent student body presidential election Momentum would present three complaints to the board. Kevin Walker, presidential candidate for the Momentum Coalition, asked for the emergency meeting so he could present his side of the controversy. The ballots were invalidated because they were marked "Momentum" instead of with the candidates' names. WALKER WILL ASK the board to review the deadline for election complaints, the question of whether Priority submitted an incomplete order after the ballots marked "Momentum" should be considered invalid, he said. Russ Ptacek, campaign chairman of the Momentum Coalition, said that Based on Student Senate rules the Elections Review Board set 5:30 p.m. the Friday after the election as the deadline for filing election complaints, he said. The deadline was extended to 9:30 a.m. Monday, but Ptacek said the extension was a violation of the Senate rules. He also said that Momentum Coalition members would present evidence that the Priority Coalition submitted an incomplete audit. Priority handed out pamphlets on Nov. 17 and Ptacek said that the pamphlets were not included in the audit that the coalition submitted before the election. Mark McKee, Momentum's vice-presidential candidate, said he was confident that the review board would make a decision this week. "They will almost have to act because they are under so much pressure," he said. MCKEE SAMD THE JUDICIAL Review Board "was the last word," in the ballot issue at the University level. Walker has said that the next step if the Judicial Board denied Momentum's request would be to take the matter to Douglas County District Court. Pitacek said that he was confident that after the board met Walker and McKee would be in office. Priority's Scott Swenson and Dennis Strickland officially take office after the last Senate meeting Wednesday. "But," Ptacek said, "I've heard that there will be a protest at the Senate meeting that night if they are still in office." MCKEE SAID HE wanted to settle the ballot issue before the end of this semester so that students would not forget about it and administrators would not have the opportunity to let the issue die. WOOLRICH. RAG WOOL... SHETLANDS STYLES FOR MEN & WOMEN SUNFLOWER804MASS A WORKSHOP DESIGNED TO IMPROVE AND ENHANCE INTERVIEWING SKILLS AND RESUME WRITING TECHNIQUES I'll just put it out there as it's not a very good representation of the time period. LAWRENCE-Barron's still has the best happy hour in town. 50c Draws and $1 Wells from 4-12p.m. plus twofers on all dairies, margaritas, and pina coladas after midnight. 7th & Mass. Downtown. Oread Room. Kansas Union Friday, December 2, 1983 2:30-4:30 p.m. HUACHA For more information call the Emily Tayler Team at Resource Center, 864-3552 Akai for Brenda Stockman MARKETING YOURSELF BORDER BANDIDO MONDAY MANIA BORDER BANDIDO MONDAY MANIA NO.1 REGULAR 99¢ MONDAYS 11 A.M.-10 P.M. BURRITO REG.$1.49 1528 W. 23RD. Video Games Across from Post Office 842-8861 PHONE AHEAD FOR SPEEDY CARRY-OUT SERVICE 842-8861 Write your message in the coupon below putting one word in each box. No ads over 20 words will be accepted. Then mail the coupon with your payment to Kansan Advertising (or stop by in person) at Kansan Media, Nov. 30 at 5 p.m. Space is limited so you get vours in early! A Kansan Holiday Message Is a great way to wish someone a happy holiday season or say goodbye 'til next semester. 20 words (or less) — $4.00* Send a friend some holiday cheer ..with a Kansan Holiday Message. - Price includes green color on border and ribbon of box. | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Name ___ Address ___ Phone ___ Amt. $ ___ one word per box Kansan Advertising 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall lawrence, Ks. 66045 This page will run Dec. 6th. Clip and bring to: - All ads must be prepaid. No refunds. FEATURE --- SUA Fine Arts presents the first annual ARTS & CRAFTS BAZAAR Nov. 29 - Dec. 2; 9am-5pm Kansas Union Thinking About Buying A Computer? STOP FIND OUT FIRST . . . - Do you really need a computer? - is there a cheaper way to get started? - Will a computer pay for itself? - How hard are computers to learn? - What is word processing? - What is an electronic spread sheet? COMPUTERENT has the answers! - RENT one of our computers for as little as $5.00 per hour. - Classes designed with the beginner in mind. - Learn what computers can do for you or your business before you commit to a major purchase. Call Us or Stop By Today and Find Out More! 841-0066 Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday thru Saturday FREE COMPUTER RENT One hour free with your first computer rental One coupon per customer. Maximum value of $10. 1 COMPUTERENT Making Computers Affordable 1000 Iowa Street Lawrence, KS 66044 A Division of IMS, Inc CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 28. 1983 Page 9 KU bioanalysis center approved by Regents By PAUL SEVART Staff Reporter The Board of Regents has ap proved an agreement that will allow a "Center for Excellence" in bio analytical research to begin operating with help from the KU Endowment Association. Todd Seymour, association president, said recently that the time was right for the association to invest in KU research and in the state economy through financing a new company. "We are looking at this as an effort aimed at making some money," he said. We think it is a challenge, and in the university of Kansas. THE AGREEMENT STATES that the association will first invest $200,000 in a for-profit corporation, Oread Laboratories Inc., whose primary purpose will be to finance research in the Center for Excellence. No individuals will own the stock. The Endowment Association has to work through Oread because it is a private non-profit corporation, Seymour said, and tax laws would not allow the association to enter the institution and keep its non-p profit status. The initial investment will qualify Oread for $135,000 in matching funds from the state. After the association purchases the remainder of Oread's stock,津价较付 at $550,000, be wholly owned by the association That money should be enough to keep Oread operating for a few years, Seymour said. He said he expected the company to earn profits in realities and through patents on inventions in bioanalytical research. THAT RESEARCH INVOLVES developing methods to detect, identify and analyze traces of biologically active compounds and environmental contaminants in living systems, according to Larry Sternson, professor of pharmacy and pharmacology. Sternson will be the scientific director of Oread, Seymour said. Howard Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy, and Takuru Higuchi, Regents professor of pharmacy and pharmacology, will also be involved in leading the research effort. Seymour said that inventions and patents could be forcoming from Oread within three to five years, but the study does not yield profitable results. THE ASSOCIATION COULD LATER gain by selling Oread to a larger corporation for a profit, Seymour said. But even if no profits come out of Oread, he said, the association will not consider its investment a "You have to look at it as in investment in KU research," Seymour said. "It is also a venture-capital situation, where we are attuned to the capital capacity into the state. It wouldn't be a loss in any case." The agreement approved by the Regents states that KU professors working in the Center for Excellence will be compensated for their inventions according to Regents policy. Under that policy, a researcher receives at least 15 percent of the royalties from an invention made while working for a university. By working through Oread, Seymour said, the association can finance the research without dealing with a company outside the state. Area fallout shelters not ready for attack By GINA K. THORNBURG Staff Reporter Students walking to class might seldom notice the gold and black fallout shelter signs posted on several campus buildings. out in the event of a nuclear attack, the signs would probably become more apparent to students seeking shelter in buildings. John Mullens, the public safety coordinator of the KU Police Department, said recently that although many campus buildings were official buildings, some residents might not know where to go during an emergency. NINE TIMES OUT of 10, people do not know where fallout shelters are located in the city, said Mullens, who worked with the Emergency Preparedness Board. He said the board had distributed a 16-page emergency preparedness But most people probably did not take the time to read the guide, which was included in an issue of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World and was also mailed to people who did not subscribe to the paper, he said. home guide to Lawrence residents earlier this year. The booklet gives detailed instructions of emergency procedures in Douglas County and lists 40 privately designated emergency shelters designated as emergency shelters. Phil Leonard, director of the Douglas County Emergency Preparedness Board, said the emergency shelters were no longer well-marked because people had removed the signs from the buildings. "The students decided they liked these little signs in their rooms," he said. HE SAID THAT the board had replaced the signs many times and planned to replace them again. Fallout shelters on campus, according to the emergency home guide. include the basements of Stauffer-Flint Hall, Strong Hall, the Kansas Union, Snow Hall, Mallet Hall and Robinson Gymnasium. Several other University buildings and all of the residence halls are community emergency shelters. Leonard said that the buildings designated for emergency use did not offer the same amount of protection, but he said they should withstand a nuclear blast or a fallout. In the event of a nuclear war, he said, local policeemen or night security officers could be deployed. Mullens said that if more people educated themselves about emergency procedures, a lot of confusion could be prevented. ALTHOUGH THE PROCEDURES detailed in the guide are current, the list of 40 fallout shelters in Lawrence is not up-to-date, he said. About 15 years ago, civil defense authorities surveyed the buildings on the list, he said. The list changed only to include names of buildings that have been razed KU MOUNTAINERING Association Room 7 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union STUDENT CREATIVE Anachronists will meet at 8 p.m. in the Union. NOMINATIONS FOR faculty members to be selected to receive Distinguished Teaching Awards are being accepted by Deannell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, in 127 Strong Hall. TODAY THE LIFE-ISSUE seminar "The Committed Marriage: A Christian Perspective" will discuss "Gifts of Extravagant Grace" at 4:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. OPEN AUDITIONS for "OPGRS", a play to be presented by KU Theatre for Young People, will be at 7 p.m. in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Some buildings that could be used as emergency shelters, such as Wescoe Hall, are not included on the list, he said. ON CAMPUS BASEBALL SIMULATIONS will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union. AN ARTS AND Crafts Bazaar sponsored by SUA will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Kansas Union Gallery. TOMORROW KU WSWORD and Shield will meet at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union TAU SIGMA DANCE Club will meet with students Dance Studio 242 in Robinson Center CAMPUS CRUSADE for Christ will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Broom of the CHAMPIONS! will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. CAMPUS/ CHRISTIAN Fellowship will meet at 7:30 p.m. at 116th Indiana Ave. But a few years ago, federal officials removed the emergency supplies when the dates on the canned and dried food and the medical supplies expired. Since then, the supplies have not been replaced, he said. ORIGINALLY, THE SHELTERS contained emergency provisions, such as camel water, food, radio equipment and first aid kits. Mullens said. ViIN Meisner Milstead Liquor When civil defense authorities wrote the original plans for the fallout shelters in the early 1960s, the plans included provisions for shelter supervisors. Mullens said Each supervisor was supposed to have an area of expertise. For example he said, an expert in biohazard protection medical treatment for radiation victims would be qualified shelter supervisors. Mullens said the emergency pre paredness board had attempted to have the list of shelters updated. He said Leenard made the request for a new survey more than a year ago, but he didn't have it. "We're trying to" get the Corps of Engineers to do another survey, he said. Wines for every occasion . . . . from exams to holiday parties! However, not enough people expressed interest in the supervisor. Initial Designs 842-4499 Sarders Ties/Scarfs Robes/Py's Inkates Shirts/Blouses 2104 B W 25th/Holiday Plaza Custom Monogramming—1/4" to 6" Table Linens Offering: Bed Linens Bath Linens X-mas socks Kitchen/ Bath Accessories Initial Designs custom monogramming ID (Greek Script) & block letters Children's designs. Sports designs initial set-up and the JAYHAWK! Call Now for Christmas Orders- 91307490861 Monday Night is PROGRESSIVE PITCHER NITE at SGT. PRESTON'S 1 a.m. $1.00 12 $1.50 11 p.m.$1.75 10 p.m.$2.00 9 p.m. $2.25 8 p.m. $2.50 7 p.m. $2.75 SGT. PRESTON'S OF THE NORTH BAR & RESTAURANT a reciprocal club SALT PRESTON'S OF THE MIDNIGHT BAR & RESTAURANT a reciprocal club D Tuesday Night Special check at SGT. PRESTON'S for this week's special Wednesday Night is Ladies Night 25c draws 50c bar drinks 7-2 815 N. Hampshire --we deliver 842-0154 MONDAY COME SEE MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL ON OUR BIG SCREEN 15¢ DRAWS $1 COVER 8-11 P.M. HAPPY HOUR 11-CLOSE 23rd & Ousdahl • So. Hills Center • 842-3977 GAMMONS SNOWBOARD 23rd & Ousdahl • So. Hills Center • 842-3977 PIZZA Shoppe PIZZA EATEN WITH YE FINGERS WE DELIVER! PIZZA Shoppe PIZZA EATEN WITH 12 FINGERS Monday Night Football Special (coupon) $8.75 plus tax 6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center Triple topping King Size Pizza and 32 oz. Pepsi DELIVERED! Extra Mozzarella FREE. By Mentoring This Ad! 17 Minsky's PIZZA Classic doesn't have to be costly Minsky's offers you the tastiest pizza for a lower price than the three other major full-service pizza shops. Compare Minsky's with the guys under the Red Roof and savor the flavor, and the savings. And on Mondays, Save More! $3 OFF any large pizza 6 packs to go 2228 Iowa No delivery on this special. Minsky's PIZZA ... for a slice of style. NATION AND WORLD Page 10 University Daily Kansan, November 28,1983 Army base fence torn in German protests By United Press International MUTLANGEN, West Germany — Demonstrators torre down a barbed-wire fence yesterday at a U.S. Army base during a second day of protests against stationing of nuclear-tipped Pershing-2 missiles, police reported. The protesters pulled up about 30 steel posts supporting the fence during an attempted blockade of a dept of the U.S. Army's 56th Field Artillery Brigade. No arrests were made, a police snooker said. In Washington, Richard Ovinnikov, deputy Navy ambassador to the United Nations, insisted that Moscow would not return to the talks on limiting nuclear weapons in Europe until the United States and its allies withdrew the Pershing 2 and cruise missiles now being installed in Western Europe. At the Vatican, Pope John Paul II told pilgrims gathered in St. Peter's square he hoped that the United States and Soviet Union would resume arms control talks, and he called for prayers that "the road of dialogue does not remain closed." BUT RICHARD PERLE, assistant secretary of defense, reiterated that the installations would continue regardless of the Kremlin's refusal to negotiate — or its plans to add new weapons closer to the United States. As he spoke, the first components for 112 cruise missiles arrived at NATO's Signona Naval Base for deployment in Sicily. Italy is the third NATO country to receive deliveries of the missiles and the missiles themselves and the only one in which anti-war forces did not immediately mount large demonstrations. In Panaji, India, leaders at the 48-nation Commonwealth summit, also expressing concern at deteriorating U.S.-Soviet relations, signed a declaration stating that the superpowers resume tasks aimed at bringing peace to the world. 1973 "Their first objective must be to work for the genuine political dialogue between themselves leading to a exclamation of tensions," the declaration said. MUTLANGEN, West Germany — West German police carry away a demonstrator protesting the stationing of Pershing 2 missiles in Europe. The protesters tore down a barbed-wire fence surrounding a U.S. Army base. China opposes U.S. plan to provide loans to Taiwan By United Press International PEIKING - China, already threatening to cancel an exchange of visits between Premier Zhao Ziyang and President Reagan, yesterday warned against U.S. legislation that provides loans to Taiwan. A commentary in Peoples Daily, China's leading editorial voice, refueled the mounting campaign to reevaluate Obama's plans to Reagan's desk for signing this week in Tokyo Saturday, China's visit commissum Party chief Hu Yaobang threatened a cancellation of visits by Zhao and Reagan next year if the United States does not undertake a suitable answer to another measure. On Nov. 18 China protested a Senate Foreign Relations Committee resolution that affirmed Taiwan's right to determine its future peacefully and without coercion from Peking, which considers the nationalist-ruled island a province of China. The resolution still needs approval of the Senate, which does not return to work until Jan. 23. DIRECTLY LINKING THE protest and the trips for the first time, Hu said. "If the reply is not satisfactory, then we'll have to reconsider whether to proceed with the exchange of visits." Zhao is scheduled to visit the United States in January. Reagan is to travel to China in April. The appropriations bill, passed by Congress on Nov. 18, provides $8.4 billion in badly needed money for the International Monetary Fund and supports Taiwan's continued membership in the Asian Development Bank, which receives U.S. money. China has applied for a seat in the 45-nation Asian Development Bank, based in Manila, but insists on the support of Taiwan, a founding member. Terrorists to step up violence Irish radical says in interview By United Press International DUBLIN, Ireland — A fugitive terrorist regardd as one of Ireland's most wanted men said in an interview published yesterday that he had killed about 30 people and taken part in more than 200 terrorist attacks in Northern Dominic McGlinney, 29, a member of the radical Irish National Liberation Army, said that the terrorist group planned to step up violence against him and force enforcement officers in its campaign to wrest control of Ulster from Britain. but denied that he was involved in last week's murders of three Protestants during a church service in Darkely, just over the border in Northern Authorities said that McGlinchy was their prime suspect in the attack in which masked gunmen fired into the church as the congregation prayed. "I have high hopes for 1984." Mike Breen interviewed with the editor of the Sunday Times. The article did not say how Tribune editor Vincent Browne arranged the meeting, and identified its location only as in the Irish Republic. Police said they planned to question the editor about the interview. Boys Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy S&P 500 Trade Gold Silver-Coins New Hampshire Stamps Watcher 913 847-8274 66644 8644 "We were involved mainly in the killing of UDR men (Ulster Defense Regiment) and policemen and we did a fair few bombings of police barracks and towns," he said. "I don't think a man wasn't billed up — they all got a touch. Late yesterday, with the newspaper interview on the stands, a joint force of police and the Irish army searching for McGlinchy combed houses, estates and farms in County Louth and County Monaghan. Both lie along the border. "It is not only the security forces that need to fear us. There are also those who want to attack us." people such as Ian Paisley. They cannot escape much longer the consequences of their words and actions." By United Press International Crisis-mired majority to face Japan's voters IN THE ARTICLE. McGlinchy admitted to numerous terrorist killings TOKYO — Prime Minister Yoshihiko Nakasone puts his political leadership on the line today by insisting that he signs his party could take a beating. Few analysts think that Nakasone's Liberal Democrat Party, suffering a severe image crisis, will win in next year's polls DCE 18 with its strength intact. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 1 402 Mass phone 843-1151 "The timing is surely bad for the LDP," said Sesaburo Sato, a political science professor at Tokyo University. "If worse comes to worse, the LPD could lose its overall majority." The LDP's popularity plunged after the October conviction of former Prime Minister Kakui Tanaka in the Lockehead Corp. bribery scandal. Political ethics has emerged as the dominant election force. NAKASON WILL DISSOLVE the lower house today and officially announce the election date. He will announce the confirmation on the date earlier this month. An opposition boycott of legislation, which is holding up a bill for a $2 billion tax cut, forced Nakasone to withdraw from the parliament to end the parliamentary stalemate. would vote for the opposition and 34 percent for the LDP, an 11 percent swing in favor of the opposition. A majority of those polled said the Tanaka issue would be a factor in the election. In an opinion poll released by the national television network NHK last week, 37 percent said they He played host to a string of foreign dignitaries this fall, entertaining President Reagan, West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl and Chinese Communist Party chief Hu Yaobang. A poor showing in the election would increase the likelihood of Nakasone's ouster in November and, after a term as leader of the LDPE ends. Tanaka's refusal to resign from the Diet fued opposition criticism of LHP ethics and put pressure on someone to test his mandate at the polls. NAKASONE, WHO TOOK power in a year ago with strong backing from Tamaka, has tried to distance himself from his mentor while shoring up his image as a world statesman. The lower house elections, coming seven months before the end of the representatives four-year terms, are a big exit out of government, analysts say. The LDP controls a substantial 246-seat majority in the 511-member lower house, while the Japanese Socialist Party, the largest opposition party, controls 106 seats. TUNTURI ROWER Total Body Exercise Versatile Cardiovascular & Strength Machine $295 RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 VERMONT • LAWRENCE, KS 66044 • (913) 841 6642 A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. A Message to Customers of the KU PRINTING SERVICE Please excuse the temporary inconvenience while our parking lots undergo major renovation. All visitor and customer parking has been moved to the area shown at the Northwest corner of the building during the period of construction. Entrance to this temporary lot will be through the West drive. 15th Street 15th Street N W E S West Lot Customer Entrance Customer Parking Enter Here Or Here Lot Under Construction KU Printing Service 2425 West 15th St. (West Campus) SONY SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER AT KIEF'S SONY DYNAMICron T-120 VIDEO CASSETTE SONY DynamicMicron T-120 VIDEO CASSETTE SONY DynamicMicron L-750 VIDEO CASSETTE SONY Dynamicron L-750 VIDEO CASSETTE For the next week at Kief's, you can buy Sony video cassette tape at special introductory prices and the price is the same whether you buy one tape or a case! SONY $ ^{\textcircled{8}} $ T-120 VHSVIDEO CASSETTE TAPE $988ea. Manufacturer's suggested retail: $24.95 ea. SONY $ ^{ \textcircled{1} } $ L-750 BETA VIDEO CASSETTE TAPE Manufacturer's suggested retail: $24.95 ea. $988 ca. ALL OF OUR TAPE IS PRICED TO SAVE YOU MONEY AT KIEF'S! CHECK OUR LOW PRICES ON VIDEO, CASSETTE, AND REEL-TO-REEL TAPES. KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE DISCOUNT STEREO shop HOLIDAY PLAZA Page 11 SPORTS ALMANAC University Daily Kansan, November 28, 1983 BASKETBALL Houston 91, Kansas 76 Riverhead 1.0 8.9 0.2. Knight 7.2 4.5 18.3 Drake 2.0 4.4 0.1. Boyle 6.0 10.6 Henry 7.9 13.4 Cannon 1.5 3.4 0.1. Gaye 6.0 10.6 Henry 7.9 13.4 Banks 1.3 3.4 1.4. Kelling 6.0 12.4 Turpure 6.0 12.4 Bankes 0.9 0.1. Total 10.8 29.4 70.7 Clark 04-2-4 2. Winslow 26-4-6 Ogilvie 01-8-3 8. Young 10-19 6. 0.2-0.2 Glen 0.2-0.2 Glen 11-47 1.47 0.2-0.2 Glen 0.2-0.2 Glen 11-47 1.47 0.2-0.2 Glen 0.2-0.2 Glen 11-47 1.47 Halftime - Houston 77, Kansas 28, Fouled by Houston 77, Kansas 28, Fouled by Foul's Kansas 12, Houston 28, Reboundes - Kansas 30 (Knight 41, Hourde by Knight 36), Houston 28, Turfed by Turfed 28, Houston 26 (Getty 19) by Getty 19 Women's Basketball Women's Basketball Minnesota Dial Classic In Minneapolis In Game's Game RANSAS (32) B. Adkins 3.0 1.6, Snider 8.5 8.21, Page 1.1 2 Myers 3.0 6.6, Platt 2.2 6, VAdkine 3.1 2 Web 2.6 0, Total 22.9 17 33 Fuerza 7.26, 1.6 Green 9.04, 2.8yle 10. Orschklii 0.1, 1.01 Gasser 4.4, 6 Webb 3.3, 18urus 3.0 0.6, William 3.0 0.4, 19 Matzia 6.22, 2.04, 6.0 Totals 10.4, 19 Halftime — Arkansas 36, Kansas 29 ouled out. Brown Totalfaults — Arkansas R. Kansas 18. Technical — none Saturday's Game Fiat 4.1, 0.2 Sunset 14.4-4.32, Aiden K. 7.12.21, Webi 2.0.4, Myer 2.2.6, Quarrell 3.0.6, Otto 2.4, Schell 1.0, Page 2. 10.6.14, Tensi 36.15-12.87 Porter 2.2.3.6, Caikins 2.0.9.4, Stubbs 4.5.5 *Starclub 3.0.8, Mignon 2.0.9, Kerrigan 4.5 3-5 11, Pettit 1.0 9.2, Ryan 2.1 3.5, DiVittas 0 4.4, Tualts 1.0 17.2 22.5 FOOTBALL College Football Standings Nebraska 2 W.L. T POs 3 W.L. T POs 4 W.L. T POs Nebraska 2 0.333 118 0.624 108 0.624 108 Okahoma 2 0.204 119 0.704 118 0.704 118 Okla St 2 0.204 119 0.704 118 0.704 118 Okla St 2 0.152 107 0.704 118 0.704 118 Okla St 2 0.107 105 0.704 118 0.704 118 Kansas 2 0.163 124 4 1.696 239 4 Colorado 2 0.163 124 4 1.696 239 4 Colorado 2 0.126 126 2.556 239 2.556 BIG EIGHT **conférence** W L F W F W L F W F Auburn 5 W l 0 155 76 17 W l 0 129 158 Georgia 5 1 0 140 74 1 W l 0 128 149 Florida 5 4 0 149 84 1 W l 2 127 134 Penn State 5 4 0 149 84 1 W l 2 127 134 Tenn 5 4 0 129 84 1 W l 2 127 134 Illinois 5 4 0 129 84 1 W l 2 127 134 Kentucky 2 4 0 87 151 4 W l 6 126 155 Miss St 2 4 0 87 151 4 W l 6 126 155 Miss St 2 4 0 93 165 4 W l 6 123 155 LSU 2 4 0 93 165 4 W l 6 123 155 Conference W 10 W 15 All Games Maryland W 1 0 0 554 711 W 1 0 8 299 236 Nor Carr W 1 0 0 554 711 W 1 0 8 299 236 No Carr W 1 0 0 554 711 W 1 0 8 299 236 Virginia W 1 0 2 147 106 W 1 0 8 222 213 Virginia W 1 0 2 147 106 W 1 0 8 222 213 Wake For W 1 0 1 509 218 W 1 0 7 251 281 Wake For W 1 0 1 509 218 W 1 0 7 251 281 Yclemon W 1 0 0 0 0 W 1 1 338 208 Yclemon W 1 0 0 0 0 W 1 1 338 208 ATLANTIC COAST (Final) SOUTHEASTERN Conference W. I. T. P.O. CP W. I. T. P.O. CP All Games Farmar W Car Chait Marsh VMI ETemps David W. I. T. P.O. CP W. I. T. P.O. CP 8 1 2 197 162 8 2 1 297 162 5 2 1 484 103 5 2 1 484 103 7 0 3 199 121 7 0 3 199 121 5 4 1 144 139 5 4 1 143 197 5 4 1 143 197 6 1 143 122 6 1 143 122 6 1 0 38 206 6 1 0 38 206 2 1 20 132 20 (y-ineligible for conf. title) SOUTHERN (Final) WESTERN ATHLETIC Conference All Games W. L. T. P. Off W. L. T. P. Off BYU 7 10 2911 48 W. L. T. P. Off Ai For 4 2 1084 139 8 2 0 320 117 Womzing 5 3 0 803 126 8 2 0 321 127 Hawaii 3 1 359 117 8 4 1 234 154 Hawaii 3 1 359 117 8 4 1 234 154 Utah 4 0 223 210 8 6 0 266 289 Utah 4 0 223 210 8 6 0 266 289 SDN 1 1 564 124 8 1 214 141 UTEP 0 0 114 204 8 100 210 159 UTEP 0 0 114 204 8 100 210 159 | Conference | WF | Conference | All Games | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | y-UCLA | 6.1121158 | 6.1412346 | 6.4012346 | | Wash | 5.2179519 | 6.0375615 | 6.3075615 | | Wash | 5.2179519 | 6.0375615 | 6.3075615 | | A-Arkansas | 4.3015128 | 6.1412346 | 6.4012346 | | A-Arkansas | 4.3015128 | 6.1412346 | 6.4012346 | | Calif | 3.1182124 | 6.1412346 | 6.4012346 | | Calif | 3.1182124 | 6.1412346 | 6.4012346 | | Stanford | 7.1022826 | 6.1412346 | 6.4012346 | y clinched conference title PAC COAST ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION x-eligible for conference championship y-clinched conference title | | WIRELESS | WIRELESS | WIRELESS | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | y Palmieri | 1 | 0.119 190 | 1.406 1341 | | y Palmieri | 2 | 0.119 190 | 1.406 1341 | | Long昌 | 3 | 0.09 190 | 1.626 1253 | | Sun Joy | 4 | 0.09 190 | 1.626 1253 | | Sun Joy | 5 | 0.142 150 | 1.626 1253 | | Prestis M | 6 | 0.142 150 | 1.626 1253 | | Prestis M | 7 | 0.100 115 | 1.624 1214 | | New Mex | 8 | 0.100 115 | 1.624 1214 | | New Mex | 9 | 0.00 000 | 1.621 1292 | BIG TEN | Conference | W T Paces | All Games | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Villanova | 7 10 328 | 9 10 458 | | Illinois | 8 10 364 | 9 10 488 | | Michigan | 8 10 369 131 | 9 10 483 175 | | Iowa | 8 10 289 131 | 9 10 475 175 | | Wisconsin | 8 10 425 196 | 9 10 459 234 | | Michigan | 8 10 425 196 | 9 10 459 234 | | Purdue | 8 10 424 279 | 9 10 459 234 | | Purdue | 8 10 424 279 | 9 10 459 234 | | Indiana | 2 10 737 136 | 1 10 201 160 | | New York | 2 10 737 136 | 1 10 201 160 | | Minnesota | 2 10 936 161 | 1 10 201 160 | KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS W Conference 1 W Conference 2 All Games No. III 8 7 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Toledo 7 2 900 146 14 9 2 927 162 Toronto 7 2 900 146 14 9 2 927 162 Chicago 7 2 900 146 14 9 2 927 162 Balt St 8 4 906 126 14 9 2 947 192 Balt St 8 4 906 126 14 9 2 947 192 Miami St 8 4 906 126 14 9 2 947 192 Miami St 8 4 906 126 14 9 2 947 192 Ottawa C 3 6 147 26 14 7 613 169 Ottawa C 3 6 147 26 14 7 613 169 Ottawa C 3 6 147 26 14 7 613 169 Ottawa C 3 6 147 26 14 7 613 169 MID-AMERICAN The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days or 2 Weeks 0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75 18-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80 21-25 3.15 4.15 5.25 8.05 For every 5 words add 3.50 50c 75c 1.05 AD DEADLINES POLICIES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words. * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words. Classified Display $4.20 per column tech - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only only * No responsibility is assumed for more than one in Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No twiewindows allowed. Screen size is at least 19 inches. No additional alloweds in displayed layouts. - correct insertion of any advertisement - no refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising with a valid order and sold by company chosen - Bind box ads—please add $2 service charge. - Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University Daily Kansas. - Birth Credit has been established. • Tapee sheets are not provided for classified on - All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS - Classified display advertisements. - *Classified display ads do not count towards mun thin earned rate discount - Samples of all mail order items must be submitted I found card can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kia business office at 864-4358. 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4258 ANNOUNCEMENTS Parnished 1 bedroom apartment available for sublease beginning Dec. 1, Jan. 1. Clears to campuses in Los Angeles and San Francisco. News and Business Staff Positions The University Daily KANSAN The University Daily Kanan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employee Applications are sought from all qualified people who are currently enrolled in sex, disability, veteran status or original origin, age or ancestry. The Kansas is now accepting applications for Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B.Kansas Union, in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union, and in rooms 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Tuesday, November 29 Kansan classifieds get results FOR RENT 1. & 2. bedroom apartments available immediately 3. private bathrooms 4. partnership utilities paid Contact Kawai Villey 2nd semester sublease, close to campus, 2 hrs, very quiet, nice carpet. $300 max. 841/846, evenings. 1 bedroom to sublease 2nd semester, near bus route. $49; Call Dan Winter. 841/032 or 843/250 4. to sublease Dec. 1st May Phone 841-7394 BOTTOM HALF REMOUDED OLDER LODE Near KL large bedroom, small bedroom, unlicenced, unfitted, unkids, no peds $335, 746-496 days STUDIO Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 3 room apt. Furnished. $220/mo. plus utilities Between campus and downtown, quiet and clean. 3 bedrooms. Wheelchair accessible. 4 bedroom Cape Cod Cip. 1/2 lease, all appliances, bighard. 6 yard. month lease. $350 per month. #43-1644 Apartment for rent 1144 Walk to KILE-street parking. please 2 bedrooms. Walk to KILE-street parking. AB apps have CA, gas heat,饿瘦, aru, Lease terms available to May 31, July 31, and Dec. 31. Call between 9 - 6 p.m on Fri. Mri. 843-4754 HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APTS. 1 BR Aps. $285 2 BR Aps. $340-$360 3 BR Aps. $415 COMPOUNTABLE CHEAP 1 BLEEP block from Uton at 1800 Onu, 1/2 bath for December, deposit $150.00 Duplex. 2pt, 1 bath duplies for rent. East Lawrence, Jan. 1 WK1 hookup. 749-2155 For Rent. 2 bedroom house, includes洗衣机, dryer, radiator, desk, cash deposit and utility fee. Call 618-956-4030. BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please come to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. 842-1876 or 841-1287 Furnished one-bedroom apartment, $180 per month. Gas and water贷. Call蒸宫, 841-7800. Large, one bedroom apartment with fireplace, located in a big old house, has separate entry and is located on the right side of the building. located in big old bone, has separate entry and is close to campa. 842-5160 try anything. Wait, the text is cut off after "campa". Let's look at the image again. The first word is "located". The second word is "in". The third word is "big". The fourth word is "old". The fifth word is "bone". The sixth word is "has". The seventh word is "separate". The eighth word is "entry". The ninth word is "and". The tenth word is "is" The eleventh word is "close". The twelfth word is "to". The thirteenth word is "campa". The thirteenth word is "842-5160". The thirteenth word is "try". The thirteenth word is "anything Low rent. Roommate for 2BR apt. $137.50 mo. until. paid. Rent: B43. 844-6969 MEADOWBROOK Studio for sublease. $100 off MEADOWBROOK Ask for UU 120 842-3200 NICE I BR APT $800 a month. All utilities paid good and good location. Call 841-4201. meadowbrook 1 nice bedroom apartment for sublease. 2 blocks from campus. Call 842 8436 or 847 608 days. One bedroom, Sundance Apts., on KU Bus Route, furnished very nice, water supply, available, lease term: 5 yrs. Reserve your studio now for the spring semester while the selection is good. Fully furnished, free cable TV, close to campus. SUBLEASE. female teammate needed for second job on campus (for free). Free bus to campus. $100/mo. plus 1.2% tax. Free bus to campus. $100/mo. plus 1.2% tax. 5th & Crestline Sparcron Townhouse available January 1 | 213 Hampton Place only! 5 locks from Watson, lage 2 bedroom. 112 ft². fireplace, pull-in garage, DW, WD locks, 600 sq ft. 2 bathrooms at 84.976 at 84.976 or 84.488 at 84.667 Campus subleisure subacre. Spacious 2 BH. Close to campus. Large kitchen, 1.1/2 bath. $68 / month. Large room, $500 / week. Save money, rent a 1 or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets, phone 481-4185. Room for rent near university and downtown. No pets please. 841-5500 Sullease EXCELLENT new studio with bedroom camera ceiling fan Available December 15th @929 829 929 --not too late to attend in NAVAL ROTC. Call 684-1961. Harvard School of Public Health is looking for a technical person to operate and an air monitoring station located in Topeka. Job suitable for a position in a degree preferred but not necessary. Part-time hours. Send resume and work history to Mr. Thomas Dumanyai, HBS Room 1322, 665 Huntington Ave. (021) 612-1148 or (021) 123-1148 or (021) 933-2358. Sublease 3 bedroom. bedroom wd. 3 Packs from Union Mills., Atlanta, Availabl 1 call. C841.8881. 401-ultima AvantiAvalon Cohort 1818 Living Community for second semester Contact E.C.M. Community for second semester ADJUSTMENTS West An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievably Slashed Rates! 1 & 2 BR Apts. From $200 featuring: * Year-round swimming * Free shuttle bus to campus 14 times daily COMPLETELY FURNISHED Studio, 2or 3 bedroom apartments available immediately. Great location in East of Manhattan. Don't miss this opportunity to engage with our progressive resident-oriented communities in this area. If you can't visit a situation call us. We work with the community. 842-4200 FOR SALE 842-4444 524 Frontier Rd. MADRIDHOUSE spacec 2 bedroom apartment available now thru May. Gas and water paid quarter. 2 bedrooms, carpet, closet, office, kitchen, laundry. 1966 VW Bug, black, good condition. Fun to run in winter or summer. Reliable transport. 1976 Honda Civic - runs good, must sell $1600 or best OFFER 4 speed. 844-661-681 - Excellent maintenance 1915 World RFV ISK P30 Like Towne Mk II XMP 400 Battery 24v 8Ah Very good condition. $600 or buy 700-825. Offer 425-825. Auction: compartment every Friday night, 7 p.m. Shoemaker: across Kaw River Highway, 2 miles Adds computer terminal model 17120 for use with Honeywell. Call 849-4455. HIKE - SR Alpine Sport 12 speed in good condition 175 OBO 8092 Bussy 4824 DON'T HENT NEXT SEMESTER Own your own mobile home 21 DIMM. all app stay! Mail b476-7278 phone 310-957-7100 www.mobilehome.com new radials, ps, pb, ac wheels, landpad etc. no rust good paint. The best $1.25 car you can find Gibson guitar 1976 Model HD Artist, w/cause built in amp. guitar plated hardware. Maint condition, clean. Guitar body cleaned. Great gifts, STONES, CONSTELLO POLICE WARREN MIDDLEBURY, HIGH POINT STEENEAN, MARRY WAY more HUGE GIFT Having trouble getting on the university computer terminal? You can purchase your own terminal to use with your phone and do your homework in your phone. You can also get a discount if you have reduced the price of the terminal for students, faculty and staff. For details and on demonstration call 6027 or Alphabet, 6049. Mass: Ask for Ralph Natural leather boots, size 7. Hardy worn, gift that didn't fit. Call $58. Call 824092 after 6. Limit your loss from AT&T & break up. Purchase your phone at AT&T's lowest price, fully guaranteed. A great HOLIDAY present. Cassette players, storefronts and computers are available. 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Don't. I miss out and get the new phones. Omega photographic enlarger 4 x 5 with auto focus and excellent condition $400; evening use only Police tickets for Nov. 24, Call 841-9689 SET OF PA Band speakers. Can handle 200 clean watts easily. Call 864-1154 Speakers, large beautiful walnut cabinets, 3 way transmission line Excellent sound Call Lists. Sharp biology Tc Torralba HS-Sport Square 3-sided, principial, practical and reliable for school Call 086-425-1788 Stereo television-view All name brands. Lowest prices. KV area Total Sound Distributors, 851-290-3640. PERSONAL Used furniture, SheaMaker's, across Kaw River Bridge. 2 miles north of Lawrence on 814-801-8067. Women's boat tee skirts, ski jumper and coat and pants. Women's golf shirts. Great Christmas ideas! Call Adrienne at 749-5660. Xerox 650 Memo writer, five pages storage, service required, very nice machine. $169. Earnings. A Gold necklace on side path behind Ellen go to Jaywalker Fowers. Call 641-8242. Arrive here in the library. Books and 3 notesbooks, in Learned Hall Labs. NEED my note. Please call Stu. 841-8243 turn in LOST AND FOUND HELP WANTED USED CAMPET dormitory sizes, $25 shags, $35 shags. Great clean. Great deals. 842-1131 AIRLINES ARE HIREING, NEW LOOK! Light Transportation! TOLL FREE: (800) 746-5233 TOURY PARTY: You interview (yours) 1-400-742-1122 Could you use an extra $400 a month? Start your business. Less than $160 investment unlimited Wanted part time custodian, evening hours: 15-20 per hour. Please Atkins Academy Center 811- 394-7264. Private room available in artistic environment Progressively thinking individual looking for creative space Blocks of Lawrence gatheries and Ars Center Urban Blocks Available immediately for the right man Available immediately for the right woman SWM graduate student seeks pleasant girl for companionship, dinner and out in movies, sports and shopping. We all love to be together. I'm really looking for someone to care for. If you're tired of the single scene and lonely too, please let me know! MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS PERS Skilllets Liquor Store needs one or two clerks for day and night help Contact Mr. Bedlaugh at 1909 Mass Southern Hills Firefight is accepting applications for the training Call 749-2912 or stop by 601 W. 32rd St. Stop: smoking or lose weight with acupuncture 749-4422. 9. 5. Summer Jobs. National Park Co.'s 31 Parks, 5000 Addresses: 8208 S.W. 49th St., Mount Rushmore Mission Co. 602 A.D. Ave. W, Kaiser Palmtail MN Sincere male wants to female fom 20:30 for last relationship. Write and send photo to P.O. Box 1256 Used furniture bought and sold. Pick-up available. Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont. MULTIPLE SWEATSHIRTS by Russell Athletic Athletic wear. Navy $14; white $16; blue wavy Navy $15; pink Pink Columbia blue Gray White $12; $13 each postpaid. Seed check to Betty Merrick at Betty's Club. A strong key outfit. Benetail Retail Lounge Chipped north of Memorial Stadium. 842/6722 Benetail Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine. 842/6722 Be sure to tie the Erc. The Erc. Shop Gifts. new fun comprehensive HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early, and augmented abortion; quality medical care. COMPETENCE HEREBY HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early, mid, and late pregnancy; confidently contacted area city area call center for pregnancy. No more missing out on Have them reserved at a discount at KWALITY COMICS For the best prices and service anywhere M-F: 11-7 New Connex 843-7239 Sat: 10-5 Every Saturday 107 W. 7th Curtis Matthes *Stopshowpers* 600 movies choose from: Rent a video machine and pre-recorded TV shows. FREE NAME IMPRINTING with purchase of two or more letters. Hardcover or Arboretum edition. $29.00 GOT SIK FIVER' LONGING FOR THE BEACH with OIA SIS on one of our 3 terrific spring break trips. PT LAUDERDALE, PADRE ISLAND. WINTER WORK. For more information call Instant passport, profile resume, naturalization, immigration ID, ID, and of course fine portraits. and not too early to order Christmas portraits for the children. PHOTOS: 869 Pennsylvania 814-4031 869 Pennsylvania 814-4001 ENCORE IN-BETWEEN ACTS AUDITIONS Individual acts. Bring a prepared song, bring a pencil, bring your phone. Troop dates: Nov. 28, 29 & 30 7 p.m. For more information call 684-4556 in the Burgee Auditorium or to any KU student. Held at Party room in Burgee Union. Auctions Dec. 3. Register to in BOOC Office III, 101 B Kansas Hill. Make this holiday season special with Mary Kay! Call Diane 814-4734 PREFERRED FOR FINALS Study Skills Workshop. Please visit www.nyc.edu/finals for registration required. The Student is required to pass a written examination. say forth and tuck on fabric shirt to start by Swells 79-1611. Special Fees on Christmas Portraits through December 15 at Swells Studio. Call for details 79-1611. SKI VAL/BEAVER CREEK call TOLL FREE 1-800-222-400 or CONSULT YOUR TRAVEL,AGENT FOR DISCOUNT RATES on lodging, gifts, and rentals. Start a European Tradition Your Home Today Special for students. Harcurs $7 and perms $25 Charm, ask for Dena Jerna. 843-3300 Now you have the opportunity to make this tradition your own with our festive advent calendar with a molded chocolate behind each door. In 18th Century Europe, a resourceful parent created a colorful box with 24 little doors, each door opening up a picture, toy or present. The child would open the door and find a little present Chocolate Unlimited Start a tradition for only $2.85 BIRTHRIGHT - Free pregnancy testing confidence counseling 843-821. 1601 W. 23rd St. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sense to use in the novel *The Book of Mystery*. 39 For exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' in Town Cyrer, The Bookmark, and Read Booktips. - Southern Hills Center - 749-1100 Two stores full of bargains and you are helping others while you shop. SA Thrift St., 16, Ft. Browning, 704-525-8900. Danger Signals! Headache, backache, arm pain, leg pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, call the Chiropractic Health Center and Doctor M E. Please indicate insurance accepted. No charge for consultation. Professores - grad students! Turn your knowledge, skills into a probate seminar. Highly successful seminar enterprise will help you. FREE courses: Jordi Seminars; Box 3134 Topeka, KA 6605 THIRT STORIES Appliances, furniture clothing, knipped knitting, Always good bargains 20% 15% off clothes Wholelife Sound Rental, P.A., Guitar, and Bass armms 814 645. SERVICES OFFERED Can write computer services; term papers, themes and manuscripts B411 840 580, m o r e d 4 A533 964 724 Artists with the written word * typing, editing* ornages. WORD ARTISTS Elon Bai 841.2722 English MA. 5 yrs mvv teaching exp, wintor in grammar凑, will edit, will preadress paper large amounts. HOME PET CARE: responsible care for your pets in home. Reasonable: 834 612 6420, 532 457 478 STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 613. Massachusetts; downtown. All haircuts. $5.00. No appointment. Alterations, mending, custom sewing. Cleaning carpet windows, airpots, office houses, laundry facilities. **Foreign Students:** Personal, efficient editing of your dissertation thesis, m.s. tech. instruction, report writing, dissertation preparation. VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL Management, Time Management, Listening and Noticing Skills. Exams. Foreign Language Study Skills. Showcase Exams. Professional Experience. Certified Student Assistance Center. L2 Strong. English. Racquetail tennis, tennis racquet stringing specializing in new graphite/hybrid stringing. Tennis Racquets for sale also. Head Printer. City, New York. Ec used. 842-350-769, 749-872-921 TYPING AAA TYPING Hello world ttypest ! 842-192-12 1 p.m. Mn. Fri & Sat all day Sat Sun A. A.A.A. AFFAILED TYPING SERVICE Fast, first quality typed word PROCESSING 841 0660 AAA TYPING: Heilqua good typet!^182-1942 after t Mon & Fri May & Sat Sun 8 hour typing All day, all night Extensive experience with all forms of typing. For all your work, please email resume to: info@honor.com AFORMALITY QUALITY for all your typing needs Call Job: JB421 After 6:00 pm Absolutely 'letter' Perfect Typing. Editing Bookkeep 'Proper', professional high quality text. Acurate, affordable typing Ask about speedy overnight service on 25 pages Call Mary Accurate, affordable typing through the holidays Call Nancy 841-1219 hekely's Typed Exceling model in reasonable rate IBM ISBN selective: pcell 842 688-0001 when in print ISBN selective: pcell 842 688-0001 when in print Typed Exceling models and editors. Verox 615 Memory Expert. Corrected ES:E000D D: 843-5675 Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, term- paragraphs, and footnotes. 8:42 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. 8:42 a.m. to 8:47 a.m. 8:43-8671, 11:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Elena Childhoff 824100 digital 8422 892400 8422-892400 after 5-30 and weekends Typed types,试卷s, dissertations, term papers, musc. IBM Correcting Selective Barb 8422 2310 after 5-30 Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations. IBM Correcting Selective Call Experimented typed Torn paper, sheets of all-purpose paper, and a few thick pieces of cardboard. Pen and will correct spelling. These 443 pages Mrs. Koehler will cover. Experienced typist will type disseminations, dittes. term papers, ee. Reasonable rates. Call 842-3027 Frustrated?Pressed for time? Let me type for you so you can concentrate on research and composition. Please call 842-3027 FOR GOOD WORK,TYPING WORD PROCESSING Reasonable rates.Call Tukor 842-3111. JANETTE SMAFFER TYPING SERVICE IBM SERVER III HP or Killer A846377 IBM SERVER III HP or Killer A846377 It's a Fast, Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing, Word Processor! you can afford it! 843-5209 ON TIME, VAPERS TYPE: FAST & EFFICIENT 843-3510 TYPING PLUS Theses, dissertations, papers, letters applications, resumes. Assistance with companion grammar spelling, etc. English for foreign students or Americans 841-6249 $ services at a location typing, editing and graphics WORLD ARTISTS, call Elen. 841-2722 TEXPING WORLD FREELANCE; IBM SELECTED, NYC TEXPING WORLD FREELANCE; IBM SELECTED, NYC Ward spitting correspondence, 91 West Park Road, Kansas Typing Dissertation, thesis, term paper, etc. Fast accurate, reliable Call 841-8372 Library Research - Typing - Editing - Will help research, outline, write: 812-8210 WANTED 1. female roommate needed for 3 bedrooms 2. male roommate needed for 2 bedrooms 3. hotel roommate needed for 12/24 room $12 per month plus 1.2 tuites. Please see www.hotels.com for more information. 2 Roomsmate to share 2 BR apt for spring semester $160 plus lce. 841-666. Nan at Lisa 2 female roommates wanted to share 2 bedrooms on rent; capitals $100 per month, all attic spaces. Desperately Needed Math 101! Book Fundamentals of Algorithms, a third by Swokowski. Must be 8th Edition. (978-1-5074-3692-6) Graduate student weeks not smoking female roommate $15.00 plus 12 minutes. Close to campus area. No smoking allowed. Female roommate wanted $55 plus (12 wives) water in toilet on bus route Park 25 interchange in Boca Raton FL. Male roommate wanted. Jan 1. Excellent deal 2 level househouse design, award-partially furnished $mo. $40 utilities. Five min from campus. Grad student. Dresser, desk, dresser. Call 825-6253 Grad student preferred Female roommate, inc. 3 bedrooms, After December 1, $200 monthly plus utilities, 10th and Mississippi Male roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath mat, with 2 other roommates $180 per month plus $60 per night. Male roommate, non smoking, semi-serviced to share 3 br. house with 2 others, over 21 br. Four blocks from campus, squares $160 plus 1.5 lull valuemounted during vacations. Avail now Jan. 1 Male roommate for extremely nice apt (Sundance) 1 bedroom with separate sleeping areas (sleeping up) Prefer non smoking, upper class or grad student $135/mo plus 1.2/each 824 6004 Male roommate wanted for new 1 bedroom bedroom apartment. $160 monthly plus 1 credit card. Please contact ASAP. Male roommate wanted for spring semester. Private room. On bare route. $815 a month + 1/2 utilities. Male roommate to share very nice 24hr apt with present roommate i am on bus route near me. I can deliver up to 500kg of heavy low $12.90 less low $142.50 plus 1/2 units. May substitute. Newly furnished, dishwasher. IA nicely carpeted room with good kitchen and bathroom possible or after Jan 1 Call Paul or Mark at 813-694-8466 or 813-348-8467 or 813-348-8467 Collect Need 12 rooms to share nice duplex in quiet neighborhood with 2 fun and energetic pets. Nonstomming female residence for 1 bedroom apartment with oo in room. Ou bus route: C, pool. Ou room: Ou apartment. Perfect duplex apt. by stadium! Modern, furnished jungle one room female dormitory starting just. in the first floor. Quire roommate will want to share 2 dftm at: 700 12 Alabama. Upper floor of hotel 2 dorm apt. from Community Mercantile. For details, please call: Hlasa Plaza Hotel at: m42 859. from 8:00 - 9:30. Reminders needed to share (contemporary) $125 (late December) August 8 options $125 (late December) August 9 options Reimmate wanted to share a furnished 3-bedroom house located at 100 Emery. Call 844-1494 Wanted: Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apt on route, has come to campus after 2908. $650/month. Wanted: Mature female non-smoker to share brand new townhouse at 9th and Michigan $50 plus a vacation. Wanted: mature female non-smoker to share brand new residence at 89 & Michigan $106 plus 1/2 dax. --- People read the Kansan classifieds to find homes, jobs, cars, typing services, etc. You can use the Kansan classifieds to sell anything from A to Z. Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045. Use the rates below to figure costs and watch the results. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading: Write Ad Here:___ Name: ___ Address: ___ Phone: ___ Date to Run: ___ Classified Display: 1 col x 1 inch-$4.20 10 Days of Time Work $6.75 --- SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 28, 1983 Page 12 Poor shooting hurts KU in 91-76 loss to Cougars By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor HOUSTON — At halftime of Saturday's KU-Houston game, Jayhawk coach Larry Brown told his team that it would be tough to contest against the third-ranked Cougars. "I was amazed that we were even in the game after shooting 12 for 37 in the first half," Brown said. "I felt we could shoot better, but we came out the second half and took three quick shots." The Cougars, led by Akeem Oaljavan and Michael Young, scored the first eight points of the second half on their way to whipping KU 91-76. Oaljavan scored with 19 points and 15 rebounds while Young took scoring honors with 25 points. Carl Henry led the Jayhawks with 23 points while Kelly Knight added 18. The nationally televised contest was the Jayhawks' first game of the year, while Houston was playing its second. The previous weekend, the Cougars lost to North Carolina State, also a nationally televised contest. "I felt we played like they did against tell. Brown said "We didn't shoot winter." KU shot 37.8 percent for the game, after the flywheels' disastrous 32.4 gain. "Most of the shots we took were good shots," senior forward Kelly Knight said. "We just couldn't get them to go down. That's not going to happen much this season when nobody can hit. At least I hope not." Houston harassed Kansas all day with a 1-3 I-half court traunt. Brown said that he thought his young squad could have been a little more patient. "We were trying to do things too quickly," Brown said. "Against the Netherlands, the kids responded very well after timeouts, but we didn't do that today. We talked about making the extra pass, but then we did it." Despite its poor shooting start, KU was in the game during the first half. When Olajuwan was called for goal-tending a Knight layup with 7:05 remaining, the Jayhawks grabbed and 18:17 lead. Otajuwon finished the half with 12 points and 11 rebounds. Young and point guard Ein Franklin each added nine pins. After the Cougars fast start in the second half, Olajuwon drew his fourth foul with 17.05 left in the game and the Jayhawks followed by outscoring Houston 8.2 over the next $2^{1/2}$ minutes with the 7-foot Olajuwon on the bench. But the Cougars, led by Olaijawu, coung and Benny Anderson, outscored Kansas 21-6. "I thought we had a chance when the big kid went to the bench," Brown said. "It was a little bit of luck." The lift was provided by Anders, Reid Gettys and freshman center Greg Anderson. Anderson had played only one minute against N.C. State but scored eight points and grabbed nine rebounds in 15 minutes against KU. The Jahwaysk could get no closer than 10 points the rest of the way, and Brown used a lot of players, including Cedric Hunter and Warp Kureen. "I thought the seniors played well, and the two little kids did well under the circumstances." Brown said. "Other than that, we left a little to be desired." TAN 0 KANSAS 33 HOUSTON — Jayhawk guard Tad Royle jumps over the top of Houston guard Alvin Franklin to block a shot during the first half. The Cougars spoiled KU head coach Larry Brown's debut in front a national television audience Saturday by defeating the Jayhawks 91-76. Women's team takes 3rd place in Minneapolis Seattle defeats Kansas City in overtime By the Kansan Staff The KU women's basketball team bounced back from a first-round loss and a cold shooting night in the four-team Minnesota Dial Classic to capture third place Saturday by defeating Miami of Ohio. 87-35. In the championship game at Minneapolis, the University of Arkansas defeated the University of Minnesota. 76-60. The Jayhawks were paced by senior guard Angie Snider in the consolation game with 32 points and 11 rebounds. Junior forward Barbara Adkins added 21 points and freshman center Renae Page 10 points for KU. Snider was also named to the Dial all-tournament team. This is the second all-tournament team for which she has been selected in as many outings. The first was the Lady Trial Classic last weekend in Lawrence. UK opened play in the tournament against the first lost of Arkansas at last night, 72-9 The Jayhawks were hindered by poor shooting the entire game, shooting only 40 percent from the field and 53 percent from the free-throw line. Snider, the only Jawhack to score in double figures, turned in a 21-point play. United Press International 195 United Press International SEATTLE — Kansas City wide receiver Anthony Hancock loses the ball as he is hit by Seahawk cornerback Kerry Justin in the first quarter. The pass was ruled incomplete. Seattle tied the game yesterday with a field goal with two seconds left and went on to win 51-48 in overtime. SEATLTE -- Rookie Curt Warner rushed for 207 yards and three touchdowns and Norm Johnson kicked a 42-yard field goal less than two minutes into overtime to lift Seattle to a wild 51-48 victory over city yesterday in a game that kept the Seahawks' hopes alive. By United Press International Johnson also kicked a 42-yard field goal with two seconds left in the fourth quarter to send the game into overtime. Zachary Dixon gave Seattle a big lift when he returned the opening kickoff in overtime 47 yards to the Kansas City 48. Warned carried 17 yards to the Chiefs' 31-yard line and followed with seven more yards on the next two plays. Seattle Coach Chuck Knox then elected to play it safe and scored on third and goal goal on a 2nd and 3 at the KC 24. Seattle, 7-6, twice overcame deficits in the see-saw fourth quarter to send the game into overtime. The loss virtually extinguished Kansas City's playoff hopes as the Chiefs fell to 5-8. Dave Krieg lost two more funibles to give him five in the last two games but also threw touchdown passes of 18 yards by Byron Walker, 27 yards to Dan Doornink and 14 yards to Paul Johns to keep the Seahawks in the game. He finished 16 of 31 for 280 yards. club record for rushing yardage in a single game. Bill Kenney, who had already passed for over 3,000 yards coming into the game, had another big day as he completed 21 of 38 passes for 311 yards and four touchdowns and scored twice on a pair of 1 yard runs. Warner, the AFC's lead rusher, scored on on a 28-yard run in the first quarter and added touchdowns to win the game. He scored on an 1-4 lindyard as he set a Seattle The Seahawks fought back from a two-touchdown halftime deficit to take a short-lived 31-28 lead midway through the third period. Kansas City moved back in front late in that quarter when Kenney was called up and forced leaping plunge into the end zone for his second touchdown of the day. Kansas City itUPed its lead to 42-31 with 11-04 remaining when Kenney hit Carlos Carson with an 18-yard three-play, a quick three-play, 55-vard drive. Seattle got back in the game when it marched 69 yards and 40 yards on its next two possessions for touchdowns. The first drive was high up, but after a few downs when wide receiver Steve Largent threw a pass to Krieg. KU's Dreiling too anxious in first game Akeem, Houston spoil the debut of Kansas center By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sport Editor HOUSTON — Larry Brown's first game as Kansas coach on Saturday was known in Houston as the "Return of the Giants." He led his Jaguars Phila Shama fraternity. Missing were forwards Clyde Drexler and Larry Micheau, both now playing in the NBA, but the Cougars still have "The Dream," 7-foot center Akeem Green and 6-foot left-center Javon Lewis, 91-76, the Jayhawks agreed that Olajuwon was a tremendous player. “He’s definitely the best center I’ve ever played against,” said KU center Greg Dreiling, who battled Patrick Carpenter in last year's all-star games. “It’s that simple.” Okajauw scored 19 points, grabbed 15 rebounds and blocked three shots and held Dreiling to four points and four rebounds. Dreiling, who sat out last season after transferring from Wichita State, was playing his first collegiate game in a year and a half. "It's good to get this game behind me. Troubling me, "I think it got a lot worse." Dreiling said that he might have been a little too anxious for his debut under the radar. "I knew Akeem was going to present a very big problem," he said. "I think I put a little too much pressure on myself. It caused me not to think about things I normally do when I play. I think I let it disrupt me." The KU center hit on two of seven shots, contributing to the Jayhawks 37-8 shooting percentage for the game. Several KU players said that their team was better at poor shooting performance as much as Houston's pittimidating front line. "We weren't passing the ball around the horn like we usually do in practice." Carl Henry, who led KU with 23 points. " said they were leaving us wide open and I don't think we realized where we were and we were shooting too quick Henry was the only Jayhawk starter to shoot more than 30 percent for the game. Dreling, Kelly Knight, Calvin Thompson and Tad Boyle combined to shoot a paltry 10 for 37 from the field for the game. "We didn't have any one person who got hot and that was one of the biggest reasons." Knight said of the loss "I felt like the worst shooting game of my career." One Jayhawk who played well in his debut was freshman Mark Turgceo. The 5-10-foot, 140-pound guard from Topka hit two of three shots from the ground. "It was about what I expected," Turgon said. But those guys were bad. After the game, many of the Jay- bawns said that they viewed the loss as a mistake. "We didn't do things quite as well as we wanted, but we learned a bit and we will try and grow from this." Dreiling said. FRAUGHT WITH FINAL FEVER? Attend the Study Skills Workshop Attend the Study Skills Workshop with emphasis on preparing for exams! Tuesday, Nov. 29 FREE 7:00 to 9:00 p.m AL JOONI GOOSE AUTHOR OF AL JOONI AUTHOR OF AL JOONI 300 Strong Presented by the Student Assistance Center 50 It's Not Just A Hamburger . It's A 1/2 Lb For lunch this week try STEAKBURGER! We deliver 2228 Iowa 842-1054 Steak... $2.50 THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA Style! Stress Management Workshop For more information Call 864-3546 Registration Deadline: Today at 5:00 p.m. in 208 Robinson Workshop will be held Wednesday, Nov. 30 at 6:30 p.m. Recreation Services Special Event JAY BOWL FALL HILL CHAMPIONSHIP BOWLING TOURAMENT SINGLES DEADLINE: 5.p.m. Tues., Nov. 29 COST: $5 WHEN: Tues., Nov. 29, 7 p.m. FREEDOM, price low, value high 100% FORMAT. Handicaps established in league play ELIGIBILITY: Only those participating in Jay Bowl Leagues. WHEN: Sat., Dec. 3, 1 p.m. COST: $5 PRIZES: Money 1st place $50.00 WHEN. Sat COST: $5 PRIZES: Money 1st place $50.00 2nd place $30.00 3rd place $20.00 FORMAT: 3 games—TEAM members must have handicap based on minimum of 12 games FLIGIBILITY: Top 3 Teams in each league 1. Monday Nite Mixed 3. Guys & Dolls 4. TGIF Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION NOW THAT IS A BREAK! GET FIT OVER BREAK FOR ONLY $15 Bring in this coupon before Dec. 5 and receive a membership effective throughout semester break for only $15. From Dec. 17 to Jan. 11 for only $15. NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER 1801 W.23rd Southern Hills Center 749-15011 We're just as particular about the quality of your purchases as you do The Diamond Love Knot Collection Care but a touch of love and beauty that withstands the first of time McQueen JEWELERS 809 Massachusetts • 843-5432 The Store Where Happy Decisions Are Made Middle East Reagan meets with Shamir Inside, p. 2 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas COLD High, 35. Low, 20. Details on p. 2. Vol. 94, No. 69 (USPS 650-640) Tuesday morning, November 29, 1983 U.S. compound shelled; troops on alert in Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon — Five heavy artillery shells slammed into the U.S. Marine compound yesterday, inflicting the first casualty on fresh American troops in Syria and the Americans in their highest stage of alert. The attack on the Marine position was the third in less than 24 hours. The new shelling came as President Amin Gemayel held talks with Italian leaders and Pope John Paul in Rome in an effort to bring peace to the region. The Italianians have 2,000 ceasefire troops in Lebanon A Marine spokesman said it was believed to have been the first time the unit, the 22nd Marine Amphibious Unit, had been shelled since March 1996; there had been exchanges of small arms fire. MAL. DENNIS BROOKS said the shelling slightly off one Marine. He was expected to return to duty. The Marines instantly went to Condition 1, the maximum security status that confines all of them. The Marine spokesman said the latest bombardment by heavy artillery shells came in one salvo of two shells and a second of three. All were fired from the ground behind near mountains held by Druse Muslim forces. The shelling followed a day of artillery fire. Two rounds slammed inside the Marine compound at dawn, and a barrage at noon along the Beirut coast east of the U.S. Embassy. With the situation in his capital deteriorating, Gamayel and Italian Prime Minister Bettino Craxi had a two-hour working lunch and agreed on the need to reopen national reconciliation talks held in Geneva during the first week or November, Italian officials said. THE LEBANESE PRESIDENT, who stopped in Rome on his way to talks in Washington with President Reagan, spent 40 minutes in the pope's study. He would not comment on his audience. Leaders of Lebanon's warring factions also converged on Rome for talks to solidify a cease-fire. Although Gemayel told reporters he did not know of any talks, his spokesman Rafik Shihla told government radio in Beirut a meeting with the government representatives, and possibly Gemayel. In Rome for the discussions were representatives of the pro-government Christian Phalange Party and of the Druse and Muslim Shiite militias, who are demanding more say in the government. The stepped-up attacks on the Martines began Sunday night when a rocket-propelled grenade was fired at their heavily armed spokesman said. The Martines returned first. AT DAWN YESTERDAY, two artillery shells of undetermined origin hit the runway area of Beirut airport, in the middle of the U.S. protected zone. There was no return fire. About noon, shells fired from the mountains east of Beirut, held by both Drusue and Syrian forces, crashed along the capital's coast. Witnesses saw two shells splash into the Mediterranean a half mile from the U.S. Embassy. Shelling was also reported on Lebanese army targets at Souk EI Gharb, on the first ridge inland from Berur. Berur radio said Christian and Drusse villages in the southern part of the mountains exchanged mortar fire. A ceasefire was supposed to have halted fighting there. See MIDEAST, p. 5, col. 4. [Illustration of a river scene with trees and shrubs, likely from the 1930s or 1940s] CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The Space Shuttle Columbia blasted off yesterday with the $1 billion Spacelab-1 aboard. Columbia is carrying a record six astronauts and will be in space nine days. KU scientists starting work with shuttle CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The space shuttle Columbia blazed into orbit yesterday, and the world's largest astronaut crew activated the European Spacecab to begin the most ambitious attempt yet to put space science to work. By Staff and Wire Reports IN A PLUME of dirty white smoke, the shuttle punched through the thin clouds overhanging the Cape and streaked along the Eastern Seaboard to an orbit that reaches farther north and south than any previous manned American space flight In West Germany, three KU scientists began to prepare for a series of experiments with the help of radar equipment on the Spacecab. The lab is carrying 72 experiments from the United States, Canada, Japan and 11 European countries. Columbia, outfitted with new and more powerful main engines since its last flight a year ago, thundered on the launch pad in a burst of yellow flame on time at 10 a.m. CST, just ahead of an approaching cold front that had given NASA forecasters some anxious moments. Columbia's two booster rockets were jettisoned 32 miles north of Cape Canaval, but the shuttle's three main engines kept firing until N.J. and 71 miles above the Atlantic Ocean. The smooth countdown and successful launch were especially gratifying to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and to the engineers who worked at Sensing Laboratory, because technical problems See SHUTTLE, p. 5, col. Regents OK fee increases for housing Downtown redevelopment is still on ground floor Staff Reporter By BRUCE F. HONOMICHL Staff Reporter The only schools that have lower costs than KU's for double rooms in residence halls are Fort Hays State University and Kansas State University, which no rate increase were recommended. The Board of Regents approved increases last week of up to $105 next year for room and board at five of its seven universities. But, despite the increases, most KU students in University housing will still pay less for room than students at other Regents schools. UNDER A PLAN approved by the Residential Programs Advisory Board in September and by the Regents last week, KU students will pay about $2,000 yearly for a room in a residence hall, and between $1,519 and $1,638 for space in most scholarship halls. See INCREASE, p. 5, col. 1 Officials at two Regents schools said yesterday that part of the reason for higher costs at other schools was that K-State and U-M are better options than the other Regents schools. By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter The recent selection of a new downtown developer by the Lawrence City Commission is the third big change in five years in plans to add more retail shopping space to the city. By selecting Town Center Venture Corp. earlier this month to be the new downtown developer, the City Commission made a decision that could result in anywhere from one to three lawsuits filed against the city for restraint of contract or illegal acquisition of land. In the five years that the city has considered redevelopment, the story has become increased. WHEN JACOBS VICSONI and Jacobs, a Cleveland developing firm, first proposed a suburban or "cornfield" mall, as it was quickly dubbed, most people in Lawrence didn't object, said Jack Arensberg, owner of Arensberg's Shoes. 819 Massachusetts St. Jacobs Visconsi and Jacobs, known as VJJ, purchased an option on a 62-acre tract on the But Arensberg did not consider a "corridifil mail" a benefit to the city and was on project basis. He declined to delegate responsibility to dole- So Aronsberg and 13 other Lawrence residents banded together to form Action 80, a corporation charged with the crime. "There was a real lack of knowledge," he said. "People thought a suburban mail mall was OK." THE GROUP DECIDED to negotiate with JV1 in private, a decision that Arensberg said was natural because no public interest had been aroused at the time. It turned out to be a fatal error for Action 80. After 10 months of private negotiations, JVJ presented the last of its several plans to the public, and the plan was met with horror. The plan called for leaving four square blocks downtown between Sixth and Eighth streets and the intersection with Park Avenue. "A number of people who thought they could make decisions for the city go together and become more efficient." Commissioner Tom Gleason said recently in recalling public reaction to Action 80. Dean Palos, city planner assigned to downtown redevelopment, described it as the "city's best." "They were going to destroy downtown to save it," he said. "The KU Center for Public Affairs did a survey, and it showed that 72 percent of the people wanted a new department store, but 64 percent didn't want an enclosed mail. The real moral of the story was that the public didn't want a mail." Downtown redevelopment timeline *JANUARY 1979: Jacobs, Viscusi and Jacobs of Cleveland announces plans to build a suburban mall on 62 acres of land south of the city. The developer asks the town to annex the land. *MARCH 1978: City approves land annexation for residential uses. City leaders express concern about the effect of a suburban mall on downtown Lawrence. - MAY 1979: Community leaders form Action 80, a private corporation devoted to pursuing downtown redevelopment instead of suburban development. JVJ later agreed to prepare preliminary plans. *SEPT. 20, 1978: JVJ presents the first of several downtown proposals. Action 80 enters into a 10-month series of private negotiations with JVJ. - JULY 6, 1980: The city hires Robert B. Teska Associates of Evanston, Ill., to make recommendations about downtown. - JULY 16, 1980: JVJ makes a public presentation of its final plan for downtown redevelopment in the Lawrence High School cafeteria. After public displeasure, JVJ withdrew the downtown proposal and re- See TIMELINE, p. 7, col. 4 PUBLIC REACTION KILLED THE JV3下 town plan, and Action 80 as well. But Arisenberg saw the opportunity to take a more drive. “There was quite a lot of resentment that negotiations took place behind closed doors, but we were Lawrence’s only line of defense,” he added. “Our greatest service was alerting the city.” Following rejection of the downtown proposal, JVJ returned to its plans for a suburban mail, and after the city rejected its request to rezone the property, JVJ left Lawrence. Former Mayor Marci Francisco said that some people thought JVJ never really intended to build downtown and always planned to return to the cornfield. Following JVJ's departure, the city found itself in the position of promoting downtown redevelopment, and the City Commission undertook a developer search. The city developed a prospectus for redevelopment, which it sent to 154 national developers. DURING THIS PROCESS, Lawrence voters elected the second of three city commissions that were created to oversee the city's budget. The commissioners — Gleason, Friscois, Barkley Clark, Nancy Shoott and Don Binns — soon became well known for disagreeing with one another. Downtown redevelopment, according to Binns, was one of the few things they could agree on. The Downstream Improvement Committee, which was created to review prospective development sites, met with the City Council. See DOWNTOWN, p. 7, col. 1 Arrival of winter adds to break for some students By the Kansan Staff Interstate 70 was open Sunday morning when two KU students packed their bags and started back to Law- rence. That morning, Thanksgiving break at home in Hays. By the end of winter's debut early yesterday, as much as 19 inches of snow had been dumped on northwest Kansas, leaving holiday travelers stranded and college students homebound for one or two extra days of vacation. 170 was closed from Salina west to Denver, and abandoned cars lined the road. Joyce Halbur, Garden City junior, said that more than 200 cars had been abandoned outside the city limits of the south-central Kansas town. Two ditches, four hours and 80 miles later, Sarah and John Larson pulled back into the driveway of their home to wait until Old Man winter had stopped flexing his muscles and the roads were cleared Standing room-only crowds filled armories, hotel rooms and high school gymnasiums in the small Kansas towns that dot I-70. The Goodland Holiday Inn had a "full house" after Saturday night, and night auditor Charles Lyon GARDEN CITY POLICE dispatcher Deb Miller said, "People are getting stranded everywhere. We have all the people working. We're rapping them ragged." and there were only a few hotel rooms left in the town Sunday. In Russell, families began taking in stranded motorists when all of the public accommodations had been filled and travelers kept coming. "I'm ready to hit the road," she said. Greg Bell, Lawrence senior, said that although the vacation was nice, he was ready to return to Lawrence. Bell is bound in Laramie, Wyo., where more than 18 inches of snow fell this weekend. Sarah Larson, Hays senior, said that in between "All My Children," "General Hospital," and a game or two of Monopoly, she occasionally glanced at the books that had been faithfully brought home. KU students said they had mixed reactions about being snowbound and mucking around. SOMEWHAT HESTANTLY, SHE said that the extra vacation days brought a needed reprieve from looming term papers and projects. Cindy Cheadle, Denver junior, also said she was anxious to get back to Lawrence. More than 20 inches of snow fell in Denver, and Cheadle said she But with finals scheduled to begin soon, she said she was concerned about the course. "Two or three days of just standing around is really bothersome," he said. See STRANDED, p. 5, col. 4. 1 HAYS — Stranded motorists find refuge at the Kansas National Guard Armory after a buzzard struck the northwest section of the state. Interstate 70 was closed from Salina west to Denver following the weekend's storm. Some KU students were unable to return to Lawrence until yesterday. Jewish mystics say apocalyptic war will begin today By United Press International TEL AVIV, Israel — Jewish mystics believe the war of Gog and Magog — the Old Testament vision of an apocalypse of fire, brimstone and hail — will start today and are asking for intercession Mystics began pilgrimages to the tomb of the Biblical patriarchs in Hebron last week to ask Abraham to see Jerusalem, the Jerusalem Post said yesterday. Three ultra-Orthodox Jews told soldiers guarding the tomb last Wednesday they had come to pray because one of them had had a dream that doomsday would take place Nov. 29, the newspaper said. Another 25 weeping and praying Jewish mystics visited the site Thursday. The doomsday war of the nations of Gog and Magog against the Kingdom of God is mentioned in the vision of the prophet Jonah, who visited the Old Testament's book of Ezekiel. "every man's sword shall be against his brother," the prophesy says. "With pestilence and with my blood I will enter into judgment with him and I will pour upon him, in his hordes and upon all the nations in his train, floods of rain accompanied by halites, fire and brimstone." Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 29. 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Japanese leader dissolves lower house, calls election TOKYO - Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone dissolved the lower house of Parliament yesterday and called a general election viewed as crucial to his young but scandal-plagued administration. Balloting is set for Dec. 18, with Nakasone's pro-U.S. foreign and so-called political ethics expected to dominate the 20-day impala. '84 to see more lung cancer deaths "Political ethics" has emerged as a buzz word in Japanese politics since former Prime Minister Kakei Tanaka, in defiance of the opposition and critics within the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, insisted that she is the Diet after his conviction in the Lockheed bribery case last month. . WASHINGTON — Lung cancer will surpass breast cancer as the top cancer killer of women next year, the director of the National Cancer Institute said yesterday. Vincent DeVita Jr. said death rates for many other major cancers declined between 1969 and 1980, but lung cancer deaths among women doubled. For men, the death rate increased by nearly one-fourth over the same period. "It is estimated that in 1984 lung cancer will exceed breast cancer as the leading cause of death from cancer among women," DeVita told the institute's advisory board. The statistics are the latest findings of the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology and End-Results Program, which monitors院院的。 Bolivian explosion kills at least 12 LA PAZ, Bolivia — At least 12 people were killed, 20 injured and about two dozen homes destroyed in a huge explosion in a southern Bolivian mining town, police said yesterday. The news reports said that the victims included children and adults and added that seven members of one family were among the dead. They said the cause of the explosion was being investigated, but radio reports from the area said the blast might have been caused by a large amount of explosives. The force of the explosion in Llallagua, a mining center 200 miles south of La Paz, destroyed about two dozen homes and damaged a high-tension wire, knocking out electricity to the area and to the important tin fields of Siglo Veinte and Cativa. Drivers strike in memory of Aquino MANILA, Philippines — Bus and streetcar drivers went on strike in the port city of Davao yesterday but most other Filipinos ignored opposition calls for a "day of rest" in memory of slain opposition leader Benigno Anuino. Police prepared criminal charges against 27 people arrested for mob violence that left two teen-agers dead and several injured during Sunday's demonstrations marking Aquino's 51st birthday. The demonstrations drew 200,000 people nationwide. But in the port city of Davao, 600 miles south of the capital, bus and streetcar drivers went on strike, halting public transportation in the city. lamaican left mav bovcott elections KINGSTON, Jamaica — Prime Minister Edward Seaga's moderate Jamaica Labor Party yesterday drew up a list of 60 candidates for surprise parliamentary elections Dec. 15, but the leftist opposition threatened to boycott the poll. Seaga, President Reagan's closest Caribbean ally and a strong critic of Cuba, announced Sunday that Parliament would be officially dissolved as a result. Former Prime Minister Michael Manley called a news conference late Tuesday, and sources in his People's National Party said that the leftist group would not participate in the elections because a new voters' list would not be ready until next year. BOSTON In a move to cut down on fraud, Massachusetts food stamp request the week before the first in the nation required to submit state-issue form. The move to require photo ID of all 156,000 heads of households on foodamps costing $1.7 million, drew criticism from civil libertarians and the Clinton Foundation. "It is humilating and degrading," said Mary Quinn of the Coalition for Basic Human Needs, an advocacy group for the poor. for basic human needs, an advocacy group for the poor. But Mary Covello, director of the Public Welfare Department project, said there have been no major resistance to the program by food stamp recipients. Man living atop pole to raise money ANNAPOLIS, Md. — A man trying to raise money for the Annapolis Opera by living in aid by a foot gingerbread house atop a 25-foot pole (which is about $10 per day). "We've got all the comforts of home," said Dennis Williams, 40, a developer who hopes his pole-sitting will raise $50,000 for the Annapolis Open. "It's actually cushier than being on a boat. There's more room in here than in a 50-foot boat," said Williams, who is armed with a heater and other equipment. Williams moved in Sunday. After his first rainy night, he said the only thing that hurts is his voice from talking with passersby below. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 11-29-83 HIGH 30.24 30.00 29.77 SEATTLE FAIR MINNEAPOLIS COOL BOSTON COLD CHICAGO NEW YORK SAN FRANCisco DENVER LOS ANGELES 10W ATLATA HIGHEST TEMPERATURES 10W DALLAS HIGHEST 40 NEW ORLEANS MIAMI 60 60 URL WEATHER FOTOCAST WEATHER FACTS Today, snow is expected in parts of the Rockies and Plains and in sections of the Upper Mississippi Valley. Locally, today will be sunny but cool with a high around 35, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tuesday will be no earlier with a late one. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy with a high around 30 CORRECTION Because of an editor's error, the Kansan incorrectly reported yesterday that Wu Zouen, artist from the People's Republic of China, would speak today on campus. He will speak at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art. LAGOS, Nigeria — A Nigerian airway on a domestic flight crashed yesterday as it prepared to land in the southern city of Engu, killing at least 33 of the 61 passengers and crew on board, officials said. Nigerian jet crashes, kills 53 on board Vice President Alex Ekwuwe, in a special radio broadcast last night, said there were 55 passengers and a crew of six aboard, and a Nigerian News Agency correspondent at the scene reported 53 people were killed. By United Press International Ekwuena called the crash one of the worst air disasters in Nigeria's history. He said an inquiry would be made into the cause of the accident. Airline spokesman Yakum Toba said the plane, a Fokker-VFW F-28 Fellowship, left Lagos at 6 am on a regularly scheduled flight. THE JET, A twin-engine short-haul transport developed by The Netherlands, crashed 1 % miles from the airport, about 300 miles east of Lagos. It was not immediately known how many foreigners were aboard the flight but a Briton among the survivors, Andrew Wimshurst, told the news agency that the pilot announced over the intercom only minutes before the accident that there was far and poor visibility. Only those sitting close to the emergency exit had any chance of getting out after the crash, Wimshurst told the news agency. Earlier, the office of Nigerian President Shehu Shagari said there were 71 passengers aboard the jetliner, but did not give the number new members and the news agency said 74 people were on the plane. The president's office said Minister of Aviation John Nwodo Jr. had fown to the crash site to assess the damage, and Nigerian radio reports said Minister of Transport Umaru Umuahoga official officials had left for the scene. All government offices were ordered closed in Anamba state, where Enugu is located, out of respect for victims of the crash. Kremlin cites U.S. missiles as barrier Kohl says Soviets may resume talks By United Press International BONN, West Germany — Chancellor Helmut Kohl said yesterday that the Soviet Union has signaled a willingness to reconsider its walkout from the Geneva arms talks, but Moscow said the new U.S. missiles in western Europe made further negotiations pointless. Kohl told a news conference that he received a letter from Soviet leader Yuri Andropov Friday in which Anastasia Gubareva described continuation of the East-West dialogue. The Soviet Novosti news agency also warned that the deployment of NATO nuclear missiles would make success in talks about long-range missiles more "The Soviet Union does not consider the situation that has arisen irreversible." Kohl quoted the Andropov letter as saving. THE WEST GERMAN leader said his interpretation of the letter was that the war had been fought on German soil. ine the present situation and possibly revise last week's decision to leave the talks about medium-range missiles in Geneva. The walkout came after West Germany approved the stationing of more U.S. missiles on its soil. But in statements issued by the official Soviet press yesterday, there was no indication Moscow was considering a softening of its position. The Novosti news agency said further talks about medium-range weapons were pointless while the new deployments continued. THE NOVOSTI ARTICLE, however, did not give any indication of what steps Soviet negotiators planned to take at the talks about long-range武器. Officials in Geneva thought the Soviets could make known their intentions today at the regular meeting at the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks. The START negotiators usually meet for two months, then recess for two months. The current round of talks is Act 3 and should recess in about 10 days. Kohl said Andropov's letter "shows that the Soviet leadership is aware of its responsibility and obligations . . . and wants to do its part so that things go on." Kohl revealed Andropov's letter came as demonstrators protesting the deployment of new Pershing 2 missiles tried for the third successive day to blockade a U.S. Army field artillery installation. The text of Androso's letter was not released and many said it was possible that Kohl was putting the most favorable light on the letter to combat the growing West German anti-missile movement. SIX PEOPLE were arrested in depot of the U.S. Army's 60th Field Artillery Brigade at Mütlingen, U.S. army trucks sped into the depot with what officials believed to be parts for the first battery of Pershing 2s. ANDROPOV SAID in a statement last week that the Soviet Union would not return to the Geneva talks unless it decided its decision to deploy the new missiles. Reagan, Shamir begin discussions By United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan and Isaiah Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir began laying the groundwork yesterday for a new phase of "strategic cooperation" envisioned as a warning catalyst for peace in the Middle East. Shamir, armed with requests for more U.S. aid, opened two days of extensive talks by meeting with Reagan for 30 minutes. Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes described the Reagan-Shamir meeting as "an introductory session" that allowed the two leaders to lay out their respective agendas for a longer period of more substantive discussions today. SHAMIR AND ISRAELI Defense Minister Moshe Asher later met with Secretary of State George Shultz at the Department under heavy security. Speakes said Reagan underscored the global and regional strategic importance of the Middle East and "underlined the close military ties and relations that we will continue to develop with all our friends in the region." As Shamir received red-carpet treatment, U.S. officials said his visit would underscore the strength of the 35-year-old U.S. Israeli relationship with America's commitment to defend Israel against any adversary, including Syria. In an apparent effort to lessen Arab fears of a strengthened U.S.Israeli military alliance, Speaks said Reagan "stressed that we will continue to increase our cooperation with Israel while at the same time continuing our close relations with the moderate Arab states." A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 Shamir leaves tomorrow, to be followed by the arrival in town of Lilian. Gemayel is on an urgent mission to find ways of bringing together his country's warring factions and prompt leaders in Israel,Israel, Syrian and Palestinian forces. THE U.S.-JISRAELI discussions focus on terms of what American officials described as a new phase of "strategic cooperation" in military and economic ONE AMERICAN OFFICIAL, noted Shamir was the first prime minister to visit Washington in 18 months. The visit also suggested relations have improved since Shamir succeeded Menachem Begin. Speakes said Reagan told Shamir he still regards his September 1982 peace initiative, which the Israelis rejected, cornerstone of his Middle East policy. U. S. officials made clear this cooperation — which included possible joint military maneuvers, the prepositioning of U.S. military equipment and visits to Israel ports by U.S. naval vessels was imitated in home to the Syrian coast in the region that there is no gap in thinking between the United States and Israel." He also said U.S. officials certainly understood the economic problems Israel faced and would consider them in weighing aid requests. One possible option is the conversion of U.S. loans to grants. **SNIRYS REFUSAL** TO remove its forces from Lebanon or recognize the May 17 withdrawal agreement between Israel and Israel has frustrated peace efforts. "This is a meeting between good friends, which comes at a time when our relations are very good and when we want to be together made even better." U.S. official said. Computerark 23rd & Louisiana Malla Shopping Center 841-0094 JAY BOWL FALL HILL CHAMPIONSHIP BOWLING TOURNAMENT KNOWLEDGE SERVICE EDUCATION COMMODORE EPSON MORROW DESIGNS VECTOR 9000 KAYPRO OKIDATA SINGLES WHEN: Tues., Nov. 29, 7 p.m. DEADLINE: 5 p.m. Tues., Nov. 29 COST: $5 PRIZES: prize money returned 100% FORMAT: Full Handicaps established in league play 12 game minimum ELIGIBILITY: Newly licensed in league ELIGIBILITY: Only those participating in Jay Bowl Leagues TEAM WHEN: Sat, Dec 3, 1 p.m. COST: $5 PRIZES: Money 1st place $50.00 2nd place $30.00 3rd place $20.00 FORMAT: 3 games—TEAM members must have handicap based on minimum of 12 games ELIGIBILITY: Top 3 Teams in each league 1. Monday Nite Mixed 2. Greek 3. Guys & Dolls 4. TGIF TACOMA Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Advertising's Image of Women THIS THIRTY-MINUTE DOCUMENTARY FILM EXPLORES THE WAYS IN WHICH STEREO-TYPES IN THE MEDIA AFFECT THE IMAGES THAT WOMEN HAVE OF THEMSELVES DATE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1983 TIME: 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. PLACE: JAYHAWK ROOM, KANSAS UNION Killing Us Softly Advertising's Image of Women THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER STAFF WILL FACILITATE AN INFORMAL DISCUSSION FOLLOWING THE FILM. - Admission is Free * Sponsored by The Emily Taylor PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA Women' Resource Center. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT ELISE PINNEY, 864-3552, 218 STRONG HALL. PLAZA TOYOTA·MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA·MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA•MAZDA KEEP THE TOYOTA FEELING... SPARK PLUGS $1.99 $1.25 AIR FILTERS $4.95 WITH TOYOTA QUALITY SERVICE AND PARTS. DIL FILTERS $3.75 FUEL FILTERS $3.39 COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL $21.95 Japanese Imports Only • Pressure test cooling system • Drain & install one (1) gallon of permanent-type anti-freeze • Check belts & hoses PLAZA TOYOTA•MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2191 Coupons must be presented at time of write up Coupon TUNE-UP SPECIAL All Japanese imports $29.95 Electronic ignition Includes all parts and abbreviated models slightly higher. We recommend: • Install new spark plugs • Set engine recommended weight • Adjust specification of intake adapter • Install new fuel injection system • Install new turbocharger and turbosystem • Today engines included PLAZA TOYOTA•MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2191 Coupons must be presented at time of write-up $36.95 Standard ignition Includes all parts and abbreviated models slightly higher. We recommend: • Install new spark plugs • Set engine recommended weight • Adjust specification of intake adapter • Install new fuel injection system • Install new turbocharger and turbosystem • Today engines included WE KEEP YOUR TOYOTA CHEAP·2·KEEP PARTS AND SERVICE COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL $21.95 Japanese Imports Only • Pressure test cooling system • Drain & install one (1) gallon of permanent-type anti-freeze • Check belts & hoses LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-1291 Coupons must be presented at all of your visits. Coupon TUNE-UP SPECIAL $29.95 All Japanese Imports Electronic ignition Included all parts and labor for all tuner higher • Installed new spark plugs • Installed new fuel pump • Manufactured & specified • Impact operation of head • Impact operation of stock • Installed new丰田玛卡和 Toyota toyota LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-1291 Coupons must be presented at all of your visits. Standard Ignition Included all parts and labor for all tuner higher • Installed new spark plugs • Installed new fuel pump • Manufactured & specified • Impact operation of head • Impact operation of stock • Installed new丰田玛卡和 Toyota toyota TUNE-UP SPECIAL $29.95 All Japanese imports Electronic ignition includes parts and service tools modes slightly higher We will: • maintain new spark plugs • setting engine specifications • adjust fuel injection • inspect operation of house • inspect operation with Matsuda and Toyota only PLAZA TOYOTA·MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2131 Coupon will be presented at time of entry Standard Ignition includes parts and service tools modes slightly higher • install new spark plugs • setting engine specifications • adjust fuel injection • inspect operation of house • inspect operation with Matsuda and Toyota only WE KEEP YOUR TOYOTA CHEAP-2-KEEP PARTS AND SERVICE AZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA PLAZA TOYOTA MAZDA University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1963 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Woman asks for new trial in murder conspiracy case OLATHE — Sueanne Hobson, who is serving a life sentence for bribing her son and one of her son's friends to kill her 13-year-old stepson, is seeking a new trial based on claims by one of the confessed murders that she is innocent. Associate District Judge Robert Jones, who presided over the Hobson trial last year, has set a Dec. 21 hearing date on the request for the new trial. According to affidavits filed in Johnson County District Court, three jail acquaintances of Paul Sorrentino have sworn that Mrs. Hobson's son, James Crumm, planned the murder of Christen Hobson and that the two men acted alone. Warm Hearts to wait on gas refunds The Lawrence Warm Hearts program fund drive to help needy people pay their fuel bills this winter is being delayed until it can be coordinated with the start of the mailing of refund cheques from the local gas company. The fund drive, which was scheduled to begin Thursday, will begin Monday and run through September 16 as state Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Missouri, chairman of the program's originating committee. As part of the campaign, businesses and residents will be asked to contribute part of the gas refund they should receive next week from KKR. The company will be returning about $445,000 to customers for overcharges between December 1981 and October 1982. The refunds were originally going to be mailed by Thursday, but were delayed, in part, because the envelopes were being stuffed with requests for Warm Hearts donations. Senate accepting staff applications The Student Senate office will begin accepting applications for committee and paid staff positions today, Scott Swenson, student body Applications are available in the Senate office B-105 Kansas Union Paid staff positions include student executive council chairman, regional board member, or member of the board. Applications for the staff positions will be accepted until 5 p.m. Friday. Swenson said that staff appointments would be made next week. Kansan applications due at 5 todav Applications for University Daily Kansan news and business staff are for the following semester must be turned in to 200 Stauffer Flint Ball by blls@uak.edu.au The applications are available in the Student Senate office, B105 Kansas Union; in the office of student organizations and activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. ON THE RECORD ABOUT $40 OF clothing and stereo equipment was stolen between 9 a.m. Wednesday and 1 p.m. Sunday from a KU student's room in Jayhawker Tower D, KU police said. No signs of forced entry were found. The police have no suspects. CLOTHES WORTH ABOUT $1,290 were stolen at about 10:45 p.m. Sunday from a car in the parking lot of the 500 block of Fireside Drive, police said. The thief opened an unlocked door and carried the clothes away, police said. They have no suspects. CANDY BARS AND motor oil were among $764 worth of items stolen. Thanksgiving eve from the Midland Farm Store, Route 3, the Douglas County jail, was made between 6 p.m. Wednesday and 7:30 a.m. Thursday by breaking a window and removing the bars. The police have no suspects. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tp, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 483-4810 The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. 39. 95 SALE WE HAVE THE FRAMES YOU WANT FOR THE LENSES YOU NEED At Hutton Optical, pick your favorite designer and purchase a complete pair of lenses and frames for only $39.95—regularly $65.00 to $100.00. Tints, oversize, cataracts and multifocals—additional charge. Designer frames available are: - Mary McFadden * Anthony Martin - Oleg Cassini - Vera Offer good through Dec. 3 - Zsa Zsa Gabor * Arnold Palmer Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames. Cannot be used in conjunction with any other sale. HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 In 1966, he established a KU scholarship to provide financial support for students from the Bartlesville, Okla., area, where he now lives. ANOTHER CONTRIBUTOR, KATHRYN L. Nelson, established a $4,000 music scholarship in her name at the request of her late husband. She said that her husband wished to establish the scholarship in her honor and she chose to give up a career as a professional singer to become his wife. scholarships. Nelson, a 1933 KU graduate, said that she preferred the award be given to a senior or graduate student dedicated to teaching. "I have heard a voice student must endure to excel." By CHRISTY FISHER Staff Reporter KU donors give funds for many reasons PARKER ESTABLISHED THE scholarship because he wanted to assist students from that area, who must pay Parker said that he could sympathize with needy students because his loan was worthless. Some think that endowed scholarships are given to the University of Kansas because the donors are wealthy and they have nothing better to do with their money. Staff Reporter "The main reason I gave is because I felt an obligation to the school for what it did for me," said Paul Parker, who received his undergraduate degree from KU in 1930 with the help of a student loan. "A voice student must be his own musical instrument," said Nelson, 935 Avalon Road. "They must give up too much. They can't stay out late. They don't play with other players in football games. Because if you're going to use it, you better take care of it." But Steve Menaugh, coordinator of public relations for the KU Endowment Foundation, said the project is "going to be a big success." Not all donors are rich, he said, and contributors have various reasons for giving. BUT BULLARD. A resident of Austin, Texas, has done more than just pay back his $2,000 scholarship to the university; he also offers another advantage of giving endowments. "Nothing is more satisfying than to help a youngster with his education," he said. "I feel very strongly that you must have a well educated public in a democracy. We should have the best motivation we can offer for our youngsters." Even though his parents were poor and his father had just a sixth-grade education, Kanehi said that they let him go to college in college in to help curtail expenses. William Bullard, who was one of the original Summerfield Scholars when he graduated from KU in 1933, said that he also was grateful for his scholarship and met the obligation of repaying the award. out-of-state tuition, and because he is proud of his alma mater. "I wasn't sure I could attend school." Bullard said. "The Summerfield Scholarship was the difference between my life and being comfortably or making it the hard way." "Quite frankly, I have a good deal of money, and it has worked out that the tax benefits have helped me tremendously," he said. a dedication to his parents' respect for higher education, and because he was grateful to KU for his success. Francis O. Kaneli, a 1925 KU graduate, established a scholarship as While in school, Kanebi said, he did n receive any type of aid, but he did not. KANEHL, WHO NOW resides in Bartow, Fla., said that his only stipulation for the scholarship was that the student must have financial need and that the students should try to work their way through school. Kanel also held that the scholarship recipients have a deep respect for the U.S. Constitution. Other scholarships are established as a memorial for a loved one. Menagha entrance fee is $100. By Staff and Wire Reports Many scholarships have been established as a memorial for KU students who died before they reached their graduation dates. The Roger N. Wooldridge Journalism Scholarship Fund, established in 1973, and the William King Candlin Award, established in 1967, are among many memorial JIM PALMER, OVERLAND Park, never attended KU. But the Pennsylvania native established the Eastern Seaboard Scholarship to give financial support to students wanting to attend the University from the east coast. Two-time candidate for governor dies of cancer CHIERRYVALE — Frank Shelton Jr., an outspoken conservative who often enlivened Kansas political campaigns with his bull's eye directness, died early yesterday on his Freedom Sentry Ranch. He was 76. "I like the campus, the atmosphere of Kansas and the political climate. he said." Mr. Shelton, twice an American Party candidate for governor in Kansas and once the party's nominee for the presidential race in Kansas, died of spinal and thoracic cancer, a cancer associated with Potts Chapel in independence said. Mr. Shelton, who lived on what he called the Freedom Sentry Ranch near the small southeast Kansas town of Cherryvale, learned that he had cancer during the 1982 gubernatorial campaign. THE CHAPEL SPIKESMAN said that services were not yet arranged. No stranger to controversy, Mr. Shelton in June 1979 made headlines when the Minneapolis branch of the American Party called off his scheduled speech because of comments he had made at a news conference. Then 72, Mr. Shelton had recommended sterilization of welfare recipients and felons, deportation of government employees, voting rights. Secretary of State Jack Brier, the state's top election official, said that Mr. Shelton's contribution to Kansas politics could not be measured by votes in the state. Mr. Shelton never garnered a large share of votes in his statewide races. "I'm not about to have people censor my thinking or sensor my conclusions after having exercised my right to vote GOV. JOHN CARLAN, a Democrat, that represented the "true intrepid man." thies to his family and friends.'' Mr. Shelton was born Feb. 2, 1907, in the Independence hospital built by his parents, both of whom were physicians. He became a lawyer and engineer who held numerous jobs, many of them in the state highway department of Ohio but also in American Telephone & Telegraph Co. as an attorney. "He was never afraid to speak his mind, regardless of how few people he found to agree with him." Carlin said in his book "The Other Side of the Trap." I want to express our deepest sympathy. MR. SHELTON RAN for governor in the 1978 and 1982 races and in 1980 was the American Party presidential candidate for Kansas. M. Shelton is survived by wife, Gayleen; two daughters, Kersten Knox Shelton and Gretel Glum Shelton; one grandchild, M. Shelton II and five grandchildren. - THE POLICE-SYNCHRONICITY · MEN AT WORK-CARGO · ASIA-ALPHA · BOB DYLAN-INFIDELS · LIONEL RICHIE-CAN'T SLOW DOWN · ROLLING IT'S BACK! THE 99¢ RECORD RENTAL SALE ALL WEEK LONG RENT ANY UNSEALED RECORD IN THE STORE FOR ONLY 99 CENTS PER DISC. CHOOSE FROM THOUSANDS OF TITLES. ALL RECORDS GUARANTEED TO BE IN PERFECT CONDITION. C90 RECORDS MONEY-WHERE'S THE PA HOURS 11-6:30 NSTADT-WHAT'S NEW UB40-LABOUR OF LOVE SPECIAL WAY • NAKED HOURS 11-6:30 1422 W. 23rd St. 841-0256 NSTADI-WHAT'S NEW • ODED • DEBARGE-IN A PECIAL-TOUR DE FORCE WCC Vietnam Memorial 1984 VIETNAM MEMORIAL DESIGN COMPETITION Partially funded by the Student Activity Fee Specifications, additional information and application forms are now available in the Student Senate Office, B105 Kansas Union, Application deadline; Jan. 16, 1984. SVA FILMS PRESENTS TONIGHT Action tonight Errol Flynn in Objective, Burma! A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. A wartime actioner directed by Raoul Walsh 7:30 p.m. Woodruff $1.50 Aud. Wednesday, November 30 Pereira dos Santos ' classic example of Cinema Novo, Viescas Seca (7.30p. Wooldauf. Audit $1.50) Thursday, December 1 A-Juean- Godard classic: Band of Outliders (7:30p.m., Woodruff Aud. $1.50) Friday,Saturday, December 2.3.Walt Disney's Mary Poppins Ron Howard directs Henry Winkler in Nightshift (9:30 m. Woodruff Aud. $1.50) Midnight Jack Nicholson, Peter Fonda, and Dennis Hopper in Easy Rider (Woodruff Aud., $2.00) Sunday, December 4: The Last Picture Show, directed by Pete Bogdanovich. OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 29,1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kannan UNPS 606400 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Fini Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 605201 daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer sessions. Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 for each outside the county. Student subscription fees are $4 per month through the DU CUSTOMER. Send SUBSCRIPTIONS to THE UNPS 606400. Lawrence, Kan. 605201 MARK ZIEMAN Editor MARK ZDEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Editor DON KNOX Campus Editor PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager DAVE WANAMAKER Retail Sales Manager MARK MEARS National Sales Manager LYNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser Think about it Americans have such short memories, and it won't be long until all the talk about the possibility of nuclear war fades from the public consciousness. It has happened before, and it will happen again if concerned citizens and groups don't keep the candle burning in this vigil for peace. But now the issue is clearly before the public, and another reminder has come across the news wires: The Bikini Atoll, a group of 26 islands used for nuclear testing in the 1940s and 50s, still is contaminated from radiation and will take $100 million to clean up. Americans, reminded by "The Day After" of the holocaust we potentially face. must remember, just as the Europeans and Soviets must remember. Otherwise, the horrors will sneak up on the sleeping people of the Earth. It will take that much to make the islands safely habitable, though a couple of decades have elapsed since the last of the the 23 bombs was detonated over the atoll. The Bikini islanders now live 424 miles south of their islands on another island. The islanders could now return to the island, but there would be a catch. "If the Bikinians were to eat no produce grown on Bikini Island, resettlement could take place today," officials of the Bikini Atoll Rehabilitation Committee said. The islanders tried moving back in the the 1970s, but they had to eat food grown on the islands and were exposed to large doses of radiation. They were evacuated again in 1978. Imagine that the islands, instead of being just a few dots in the Pacific, were the whole world. And imagine that the United States and the Soviet Union let the missiles fly. Imagine the larger-scale contamination, the starvation, the destruction — we, unlike the islanders, would have no place to take refuge — and remember that we can't allow it to happen. Thanks to a zealous group of "animal lovers," a deer hunt scheduled to start yesterday at a wildlife refuge in Massachusetts was canceled. The "animal lovers," however, have not helped the problem, but aggravated it. A deer problem The hunt, designed to kill 75 deer of a herd of 185, was recommended after an eight-month study by researchers who were concerned about overcrowding of deer at the reserve. For each of five days, 75 hunters were to enter the refuge. Protesters, however, so loved the deer that they announced plans to sneak into the refuge and protect the animals by acting as human shields. Refuge officials decided to forgo the hunt and not endanger people. The scenario calls to mind visions of Bambi and her friends in the forest, and for good reason; the demonstrators obviously are lost in a world of fantasy and imagination — in this world, nothing dies, resources are unlimited, and hunters represent a threat that must be stopped. Meanwhile, in the real world, alternatives to the hunt are not pleasant. Refuge officials have suggested resettlement, an expensive option. Otherwise, the overpopulation of deer is expected to cause starvation, danger to vegetation, and the spread of disease. One protester, when informed of the hunt's cancellation, said, "I'd rather see them starve to death than shot." Another protester said, "This is my Thanksgiving, that our deer have been saved." As these protesters and their associates enjoy their leftover Thanksgiving turkey or other fowl or meat — procured for their tables through the killing of animals — they should ponder the deadly, costly mess they have caused. Media manipulation The policy that banned journalists from Grenada during the first days of the American invasion represented one of the many attempts the Reagan administration has made to define the truth of what has, or has not, happened on that tiny island. A strikingly evocative example of media manipulation appeared in television and newspaper photos of the captive leaders of the Grenadian ruling group. Bernard Coard and Gen. Hudson Austin, being brought back to the island after several days aboard a U.S. aircraft carrier. Television viewers may have remembered the infamous picture of blindfolded American diplomats with hands tied behind their backs, facing the cameras and the rabid crowds before the American Embassy in Tehran. The two bearded black men were stripped to the waist, wearing what looked like lifejackets and hospital-issue pajama bottoms. Ostentation white blindfolds covered the upper part of their faces. Their hands were bound behind their backs . . . like captured savages, the "brutal thugs" President Reagan had said they were. This was not the kind of thing a civilized people would ever do, Americans told themselves in 1979 and 1980. This was barbarism and cowardice, said American political leaders. Boston Globe The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan also invite individual groups to submit guest columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns. Breakdown in Geneva Some questions and answers on the breakdown of U.S.-Soviet talks on medium-range nuclear missiles: Q: What are the talks about? Q: What are the talks about? A: The negotiations, which began two years ago, cover American and Soviet nuclear missiles in the region. The weapons are known as "medium-range." LETTERS POLICY Q: What is the goal of the negotiators? A: To agree on a balance in the numbers of the missiles. Q: What are the disagreements between the Soviets and Americans? Q: What caused the breakdown? A: There are many, but one of the most important concerns the nuclear missiles of France and Britain. The Soviets say these missiles should be counted as part of the NATO total, since these countries are U.S. allies, but the United States says the weapons are independent. Britain and France agree. A: The Soviets said they would not continue to negotiate after the West German parliament voted to accept new U.S. medium-range missiles on German soil. C: Who's it? A: The Soviets say the new U.S. missiles are a threat to their security because the weapons can reach the Soviet Union within minutes. Previously, the United States had such weapons based in Europe. UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Q. Why is the United States putting the new missiles in Europe? A. U.S. and NATO officials say they are needed to counter a build-up of new Soviet SS-20 missiles aimed at Western Europe. The United States maintains no comparable force of missiles in the region, but does have nuclear-armed submarines and bombers o. Will the talks resume? Q: Are there other arms con trol talks in progress? A. U.S. officials say the Soviets probably will come back after a few months. In announcing their walkout, the Soviets said simply that they were halting the "pressure" on them from any date for their resumption. A: Yes, American and Soviet officials are also holding talks, called START, on long-range nuclear weapons, those that can reach Soviet soil from the United States, and vice versa. Q: Will these talks be affected by the Soviet walkout? A. U.S. officials say they don't think so. The Soviets made no mention of the START talks in their walkout statement and another session is scheduled next week. "THE DAY AFTER" WAS AN ABC PRESENTATION. NOW STAY TUNED FOR THE LATE NEWS... GOOD EVENING THE GENEVA ARMS TALKS ARE NEAR COLLAPSE TONIGHT AS NEW NATO MISSILES ARE DEPLOVED... ...THE DAY AFTER" WAS AN ABC PRESENTATION. NOW STAY TUNED FOR THE LATE NEWS... A man sitting in a chair watching television. He is exaggerated with a wide grin and his hands are raised as if to mimic the sound of thunder. The television screen is blank. There are no other discernible objects or people in the image. ...GOOD EVENING. THE GENEVA ARMS TALKS ARE NEAR COLLAPSE TONIGHT AS NEW NATO MISSILES ARE DEPLOYED... Z. Leaks disturbing to Reagan WASHINGTON — It took two months for the report to leak that President Reagan had ordered a crackdown on illegal immigration of leaks in the White House. In seeking leakers, Reagan is falling into the tradition of his predecessors. From early on, he has become irate when he has read in the newspapers some of the attacks against him and has even said, albeit jokingly, that there are "bugs in the chandeliers in the Cabinet room." There have been several investigations of news leaks in the White House, but the so-called guilty group has not apprehended, are never identified. His decision to invade Grenada was a well-kept secret at the White House when several aides, who usually are in the inner circle, were kept out of the loop. But it also caused some of the aides to suffer a credibility setback. Furthermore, it was no secret to HELEN THOMAS United Press International many Caribbean countries and people or to reporters in the region or to the Soviets or Cubans who often kills it were about to take place. Secrecy often is insidious, and when an administration begins giving his detector tests to its own employees, he will be personally humiliated for those subjected to the tests, not to mention the creation of an atmosphere of suspicion. When it comes time for Reagan to write his own memoirs, as all his recent predecessors have, one wonders whether he will apply the same rules of secrety to himself and others. Reagan has his personal recollections that inevitably must involve some of his private dealings with world leaders. Reagan's latest investigation of leaks was ordered in September after television networks broadcast stories saying Robert McFarlane, a former CIA officer, the Middle East, had recommended U.S. air strikes against Syrian positions in Lebanon to protect the U.S. Marines stationed in Beirut. Women pipers WASHINGTON — The defeat of the Equal Rights Amendment in Congress last week by no means changed that the women's liberation movement. One way that women in the future are likely to assert their equality is by playing bagpipes. That prediction comes from the authority of Nancy Crutcher, now the only American female who plays bappins professionally. I use the word "play" in this editorial with more of a bow to tradition than any attempt at linguistic accuracy. Male or teenage players are an amateur, baskup players all sound pretty much alike to me. Nevertheless, Crutcher insisted a trained ear could distinguish light In an interview, she estimated that there were several hundred women in the United States who were amateur pipers. And she said that they originally had been a male bastion, the number was bound to increase United Press International DICK WEST tunes and marches from classical bagpipe music and could even tell a difference in the way they were rendered. By way of demonstration, she struck up a chorus of 'Scotland the Brave', which she identified as the bagpipe No.1 on the bagpipi hut parade. I would be less than honest if I didn't admit that, to me, it sounded a great deal like "Who Threw the Killis in Mrs. MacTavish's Haggs?" So how did a nice, young woman like Crutcher get involved with baggies? Well, it happened to years ago when she was a Yale undergraduate and switched her allegiance from the clarinet. Crutcher said that it and been the "small sound" that turned her off. She insisted that most women had enough lung power to keep bagpipes inflated. The trick, she said, is to breathe when to blow and when to squeeze. Blowing or squeezing, since mastering the pipes, Crutcher has been in big demand in New York for performances at Scottish festivals, parades, weddings and the like. She also represents the Scotch Whisky Association, which sponsored her visit here. She came by the latter association honestly. The phrase "to pay the piper" originated in Scotland, where pipers are compensated by the "quich," a silver cup containing a wee dram of scotch. When not quaffing quauches, Crutcher gives bagpipes lessons to 25 students, about half of them female and not all misguided. I took a lesson, only to discover there is more to bagpipes than meets the eye, which usually ennure them with their cowlhead and the teacher's legs. Despite some clarinet training, I couldn't even play "Who Threw the Kits in, etc." It was a bit like trying to make music on a Hoover vacuum cleaner. Obviously, I blew when I should have squeezed. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Board mishandled student elections To the Editor: The initial election results naming Priority candidates Scott Swenson and Dennis Strickland as winners would have been fine had the Board not excluded the 114 Momentum votes. The Board agreed the votes weren't said because it wasn't clear whether students were voting for Kevin Walker and Mark McKee, Momentum candidates or for the entire Momentum party. Who else could one vote for on a presidential ballot other than presidential candidates? I would like to know how stupid the Elections Review Board members think the KU population is? The handling of this year's student elections shows they don't give us very much credit. Then came the ballot counting. The Nov. 21 edition of the Kansas reported that the ballots were counted four times on election night without problems before Swenson was declared the winner. The same story quoted Julie Menzel, Election Board committee chairman, as saying that Friday's recount produced a new winner after the same discrepancy was found twice. After a third recount Monday Swenson and Strickland were again declared winners. Finally, I come to the number of votes counted. The first counting gave the following results: Priority, 1,049; Momentum, 1,036; Costume, 1,004; and Freedom, 246. This totals 3,335 and with the 114 Momentum votes not counted, it becomes 3,449 total ballots cast. Yet in the latest totals Priority had 1,054. Costume, 1,052. Momentum, 1038, and Freedom, 245. This comes to 3,389 and 7,053. Where did the extra 54 votes come from and where were they in the first count? I think the Election Review Board as student officials owes the student body an explanation. Why doesn't an impartial party, not affiliated with KU, run the elections? We wouldn't have to deal with inept poll workers, inaccurate ballot counts and manipulation of election rules. Most of all, it would be fair. I think we deserve it! Brian Courtney DeSoto sophomore under "someone's thumb" in our own lifetime gives our children or their children the chance to work for a better way. Elections snafu To the Editor: So another Student Senate election has come and gone. Before I begin, let it be known that I have voted in every Senate election held during my five years at the University of Kansas. During those years I have witnessed the rise and fall of many a coalition and marvelled at the lack of progress made by each victor. I expected this year to be no different than the rest, but the present election ballot snauf has topped anything I've ever seen. Suffice it to say that I have now lost all hope for an intelligent and valuable entity called the University of Florida. And I forgive me, I'm forgetting that after all, isn't this what higher education is really all about? See you at the polls next year. William A. Siebenaler Bloomington, III., senior Nuclear illogic Last week we watched the "Nightline" panel discussion of Lawrence's reaction to "The Day After." During the discussion, a woman expressed her opinion that "living under someone's thumb" was worse than the holocaust shown in the movie. To the Editor Government systems do not last forever, and bad systems of rule are nuclearity rather short-lived. Nuclear war, on the other hand, is not a choice. There is no hope, no future, no freedom. She said she was willing to fight for freedom even if it meant the total destruction of the entire planet. While we appreciate the strong bonds that our people have, statement, we were deeply shocked by her use of the word "freedom." Freedom is the ability to choose, to make decisions about one's life unencumbered by the edicts of government. America's creation as a nation was based upon freedom from the tyranny of foreign rule. Yet the nation has been given a free line'*spoke of was a great distortion of the freedom upon which this country was based, for freedom is not just for her but for everyone. If she "chooses" global destruction, where is our freedom? How is it that she can choose a "freedom" which kills not only animals but plants and friends, and every living organism on earth? To make a choice to live It is frightening enough when an unthinking person makes such a statement, but when the same sentiments are expressed by world leaders who have the ability to carry freedom, hope or for any future dims. Slogans like "Give me liberty, or give me death" make life simple. No one has to think — just pull out your ready-made philosophy and paste it on the end of a stick and your position is justified. The only thing that sets humans apart from animals is the ability to think, argue and discuss. That is our special tool for survival. If we rely on mankind's unintelligible phrases, we close off our only chance to make things work. Let's push for the creation of a human dialogue between Ronald Reagan and Yuri Andropov. It’s a conversation of doigma and began the discussion. John Helyar Lawrence senior Linda Knappenberger Lawrence senior University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1983 Page 5 Shuttle continued from p. 1 had caused a two-month delay in the flight "it was real excited about the launch," Ulary said "everything's fine — everything's moving beautifully." ULAYB SAID CRAIG Dobson, project manager at the remote sensing lab, sent a telegram to him from West Germany shortly after he received the report. In the experiments we proceed amphibiously. American customers officials almost prevented Dobson and two KU assistants from traveling to West Germany because of the radar equipment they had installed. But customer finally approved the trip Thursday. The three scientists now are near Munich at West Germany's equivalent of NASA Ulaby said. They will stay there until Wednesday, when they will travel to a site near Bonn to set up the radar and other equipment they will use for the KU experiments. The KU team will conduct its experiments when the space shuttle passes over the West German experiment site, Ulaby said. The shuttle is scheduled to make this crossover at 11:30 a.m. Sunday West German time, which is 5:30 a.m. CST. The team will have one second to do the experiments. Ulaby said. The pulses returned by the transponders will create bright dots on black and white photographs taken on the space lab. This experiment will help determine how well the equipment will provide a uniform reference scale for scientists to use in future calibrations of radar. DURING THAT ONE second, the space shuttle will beam 10,000 high-frequency radar pulses at radar receiving equipment, or transponders, on the ground set up by Dobson and his crew. After receiving the radar pulses, the transponders will beam the radar pulses back to the space shuttle. Another experiment will use high-frequency radar to map vegetation in the area around Bonn. High-frequency radar is useful for mapping crops and monitoring off-living matter and does not penetrate it. A third experiment will use radar to determine the amount of water in soil at the experiment site. WHILE INTERNATIONAL INTEREST was high, there were indications the launch was not successful. "There was a relatively small crowd." Florida Highway Patrol LB. Bill Stringfield said of viewing sites of the space center. "I doubt if there were 100,000." The crowd for the Aug. 30 night launch was estimated at 250,000. Media interest also was down, with just 867 media representatives, 114 from other countries. Their day was divided into 12-hour shifts for around-the-clock research in Spacelab, a 23-foot-long cylinder mounted in Columbia's cargo bay. Columbia flight commander John Young, co-plot Brewer Shaw and four other shuttle crew members had little time to admire the view as they circled the world at 17.900 mph. HUNDREDS OF GUESTS gathered at the West German space center in Cologne to applaud Columbia and physicist Ulf Mertold, the first West German to fly in space and first foreign to ride in an American space vehicle. Millions of West Germans gathered before television screens in bars, homes and offices to watch a live transmission of the shuttle launch. "It was a picture-book take off," said Science and Technology Minister Heinz Riesenhuber. "Europe has entered the area of manned space flight for the first time." Spacelab was developed by European Space Agency at a cost of $1 billion and donated to NASA as Western Europe's contribution to the U.S. space program. Increase continued from p. 1 In contrast, students at Pittsburg State University will pay about $100 more than most KU students for similar residence hall room and board plans, according to rate furnished by the Repsents. Students at Winston State University will pay up to $200 more. At Pittsburgh State, a double room and 18 meals a week — a similar plan to the one used in KU residence halls — will cost $2.124. At Wichita State, a double room in an air-conditioned apartment will cost $2.240. All KU residence hall contracts include payment for 20 meals a week. KU'S MOST EXPENSIVE residence hall will be Hashinger Hall, which will cost $2,100, according to the Office of Residential Programs. McCollum Hall will cost $2,010; Oliver Hall will cost $2,025; GSP, Corbin, Lewis and Ellsworth halls will cost $2,000; and Joseph R. Pearson and Templin halls will cost $1,989. But only 390 students live in Hashinger, which means that about 4,100, or more than 90 percent of the students living in KU residence centers, live in McColum houses about 900 students, and Ellsworth and Oliver house about 650 each. Ellsworth and Oliver house about 650 each. KU men's scholarship halls will cost $1,626. Douthart and Sellards halls, the two women's scholarship halls providing both room and board, will cost $1,519. About 400 students live in KU scholarship halls. ALL OF K-STATE's housing, including its one scholarship hall, will cost $1,820 next year. Double rooms at Fort Hays State, with 20 meals a week, will cost $1,966. Comparable to KU's costs are those of Emporia State University, where a double room and 18 meals a week will cost $2,010 for next year. At Kansas Technical Institute in Salina, a double room and 19 meals a week will cost $1,995. At Wichita State, where a double room and 19 meals a week in the school's two air-conditioned residence halls will cost $2.240 next year, the variety of services offered to students adds to the cost, said Randy Alexander, director of housing. a non-air-conditioned double room and 19 meals a week at Wichita State will cost $245. "At KU," Alexander said, "You have no seconds on meals. We have unlimited “And the students don't want to give up the extras that they get. We could easily knock $30,000 out of our budget if we eliminated, say, the seconds in the meals. But we wouldn't want them, and so did they didn't want us to stop doing those things. So, not coincidentally, they pay more.” seconds. We have four meal plans, which adds to the amount of work that goes into preparing meals. One of our halls has a swimming pool. We also have a smaller operation — 900 students as compared to your unit — but suffer the same administrative costs. EVENT THOUGH A room and 10 or 15 meals can cost as little as $1,933 at Wichita State, he said, such limited meal plans are available only five days a week. Fred McElhenean, director of the KU Office of Residential Programs, agreed with Alexander, saying that having only one meal plan probably helped hold down costs. "It probably does mean less work for the cafeteria people in each hall, even though I'm no expert on food." McEllenbie said. "It's a little far away. Less to prepare, I would imagine." IN NORTH-CENTRAL, Kansas, a snow-skidened highway about five miles north of Alta Vista caused an automobile to slide into an abandoned lane Sunday and collide with a pickup truck. wouldn't be back for classes until tomorrow "I need to get back for school but I also need to work on my math." The occupants of the car, Otis E. Cross, 63, and his wife Ida, 59, of Lincoln, Neb., were pronounced dead at the scene, the Kansas Highway Patrol said. wouldn't be back for classes until tomorrow Stranded continued from p. 1 A blizzard warning was issued in northwest Kansas early yesterday as northwest winds of 25 to 30 mph occurred. SNOW ENDED IN THE Goodland area about 4 a.m. yesterday, and skies began clearing and wind tapered off. Visibility was improving, but it was still foggy and closed. Drifts up to 6 feet deep were common. At 3 a.m. yesterday, 19 inches of snow had accumulated at Goodland and 3 inches at Dodge City. As of midnight, Garden City had 8 inches and Concordia 6 inches. Predawn temperatures ranged from around 10 degrees in the northwest corner to the lower 30s In north-central Kansas, ice on power lines and trees created power outages in a number of In northwest Kansas, Sherman County Deputy Kevin Armstrong said snowfall and high winds prevented workers from clearing roads Sunday night. "You can' even see your fingers stretched out in front of your face." Armstrong said. "The town (Goodland) is at a complete standstill. Nothing is going on." IN GOODLAND, NATIONAL Weather Service meteorologist Ernie Workman said that winds had been gisting to 44 mph and that drifts had piled high along roadside. "I guess you could call it a full-fledged blizzard." he said. A similar situation existed in southwest Kansas where a Finney County sheriff's dispatcher said many business plans planned to be completed in the district districts in northwest Kansas canceled classes. The one police car in Rawlins County was stuck in the snow Sunday and sheriff's dispatcher Joyce Parker said she would stay in the office "for the duration" of the snowstorm. All roads in and out of Atwood were closed, she said, and power failures were reported. Roads were closed in all directions out of Tribune in Greely County, which borders Colorado, where snow drifts were as high as 8 feet. “四 wheel drive drives won't last very long.” Greeley dispatcher Cindy Miller said Sunday. “DOT (Department of Transportation) crews are trying to open the roads, but they are closing up right behind them as fast as they get them open.” FREEZING RAIN AND sleet coated tree limbs and power lines with ice a quarter to a half inch thick in north-central and northeast Kansas Sunday. The Marshall County sheriff's office was without power at least three times Sunday, dispatcher Sam White said. Other parts of town were quiet, with no activity, as were Waterville and Astell, she said. "The trees are terrible." White said. "Things are falling like crazy, My TV antenna fell on the roof. Fences are lagging over, almost touching the ground." She said she had received 102 calls about the weather in six hours Sunday from worried parents. POWER OUTMES WERE "off and on" in Nemaha County on the Nebraska border in northeast Kansas, Undersheriff Frank Gray said. Mideast continued from p. 1 In Damascus, Arab peacemakers hoping to end the Palestinian civil war yesterday ordered Yasser Arafat's men and the opposing Syrian forces to leave Tripoli and return to their refugee camps. DAMASCUS RADIO SAID former Lebanese Prime Minister Rishad Karmani announced plans for the dispersal of the warring PLO factions in settings in the Syrian capital with Tripoli officials. There was no immediate response from Arafat or the Syrian backed rebels to the plan — part of the Syrian Saudi cease-fire agreement reached last week. The rebel leader Col Abu Muosa said Sunday, however that his men would not surd the berdiere of the Nahr or Nahr of refugee tribes in Germany. "As for the dissident fighters, they must return to the camps, not precisely Bedawi or Nahr e Bared, but to whatever regions where they are continuing their national obligations." Karami said. Karami said the 4,000 to 5,000 men who traveled to Tripoli with Arafat in September and the guerrilla leader's local PLO forces must leave the city within two weeks. But he said they could return to their homes in the nearby refugee camps. LADIES NIGHT TONIGHT! MEL AMIGOS METROCENTRAL ELEGANCE RESTAURANT 914-627-3030 FREE TACOS 4-6 p.m. SUA Fine Arts presents the first annual ARTS & CRAFTS BAZAAR Nov. 29 - Dec. 23; 9am-5pm Kansas Union 50° Margaritas $1 Highballs HAPPY HOUR 12 NOON-6:00 7 DAYS A WEEK GET FIT OVER BREAK FOR ONLY $15 NOW THAT IS A BREAK! ❤️ Bring in this coupon before Dec. 5 and receive a membership effective throughout semester break for only $15. From Dec. 17 to Jan. 11 for only $15. NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER GAMMONS SNOWS 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 TUESDAY FREE DRINKS $2.50 COVER 8-11 P.M. HAPPY HOUR 11-CLOSE GAMMONS SNOWFLAKE 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center 749-1501 Pizza Hut pizza for less. Pizza Hut. Pizza Hut Personal Pan Pizza Supreme Only $1.69 Regularly $1.99 Dine-in or Carryout Ready in 5 minutes or your next one is FREE! Please present coupon when ordering. One coupon per cupa visit. Valid Monday thru Saturday between 11 a.m and 4 p.m at the store or online. Valid Tuesday through Saturday is NOT valid in combination with any other Coupon Hui* offer. Five minute guarantee applies 11 a.m to 3 o'min to 10 o'min on their selections on orders of two or less per table, or three or less per carryout customer. Offer expires December 24, 1983. Lawrence— 1606 W.23rd St. 804 Iowa 932 Massachusetts St. Pizza Hut $2 $2/$1 OFF Get $2.00 off any large pizza, or $1.00 off any medium. Dine-in or Carwout Please present coupon when ordering. One coupon per party visit at the Pizza Hut* reception combination with any other Pizza Hut offer. Good only for regular menu prices through December 26. Lawrence — 1606 W. 23rd St. 804 Iowa 932 Massachusetts St. Pizza Hut. CAMPUS AND AREA Trivia poses a challenge to the teams in Quiz Bowl By the Kansan Staff Who was the Norwegian painter who painted "The Cry?" Who directed the movie "A Clockwork Orange?" University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1983 Page 6 These are some of the trivia questions that KU students compete in next spring's College Quiz Bowl can expect, Nancy Burns, co-chairman of the Quiz Bowl committee, said yesterday. This year, students taking part in the bowl will have access to sample question and answer sheets to help them prepare for the competition, said Burns, Henderson, Tenn., sophomore. In these sample questions and answers, students will find that Edward Murray won "The Kid Who Loves a Rubber Band" and Stanley Knibb directed "A Clockwork Orange." Also, students will learn about the kinds of questions they can expect during the Quiz Bowl. The Quiz Bowl, sponsored by Student Union Activities and by the sophomore honor society Lambda Sigma, will take place from Jan. 30 to Feb. 2. Burns said The winning team will compete at Central Missouri State University in Warrensburg, Mo. the KU competition will take place in the Kansas Union, she said. The last round between the two finalists will be Feb. 2. Each year, about 40 five-member teams compete in the bowl, Burns said. The winning team will get a travel trophy in addition to the opportunity of taking part in the regional competition. The competition is open to all KU students, she said. Applications will be available next semester from the SUA office. The organizing committee is providing about 35 sample questions to help teams prepare for the quiz. The application fee for each team is $12. County leaders suggest taxes other proposals to legislators By PAUL SEVART By PAUL SEVAR Staff Reporter Douglas County would benefit from a sales tax through increased revenue and more equitable taxation, County Commissioner Robert Nees said yes. The commission met with area legislators to discuss ideas and proposals for the 1984 session of the Kansas Legislature. A county-wide sales tax was one of several suggested ways to improve the county's financial picture. A sales tax would have to be approved by the commissioners and by the voters in a referendum, Neis said. Lawrence might be reluctant to approve a county sales tax because Lawrence already has a $1-3 cent tax of "I think that there is a possibility that voters would go for something like that," Neis said. "A sales tax is more appropriate than taxes on your land. I would like to see it put to a vote of the people." MANY KANSAS COUNTIES have asked their voters to approve sales taxes instead of increasing property taxes, to make up for income lost when the property taxes on farm machinery and railroads were discontinued, and when some counties dropped the intangibles tax. But property-fix adjustments will have to be made sometime also. Neis said, although they might not be appropriate in legislative session or in the post-1973 Neis said he favored legislation to begin property reappraisal based on market values, although several conditions would be necessary. The state also wants to figure and record the new property valuations in a central computer, Neis said. But that responsibility should be left to the computer to avoid the mistakes that would inevitably be made in such a large system. For instance, he said, some form of classification of land property would have to be devised so that farmers could find a place in the tax burden, compared to homeowners. STATE REP. JESSIE Branson. D-Lawrence, predicted that the Legislature would spend a great deal of time this spring discussing the issue of reapraisal, and that it could become a significant issue. Another underlying issue will be how to recover the losses in revenues that have occurred throughout the state in the past two years, she said. Reappraisal would be one way to aid counties financially through increased revenue. The dominant issue, however, will be education, Branson said. Most of the attention will be focused on elementary education, she said. ANOTHER ISSUE OF concern to counties is the problem of liability insurance to cover agencies that employ violators who have chosen to perform community service instead of serving a jail sentence. "I would like to see higher education included in that discussion." Branson said. "There are a number of legislators who want to cut down on duplication of programs at Regents schools." Kansas' stiffer DWI penalties, took effect in July 1982, allow many first-time offenders to be placed on a diversionary program, which sometimes includes community service, instead of a jail term. Some agencies have been wary of using such workers for certain tasks because of the threat of personal liability lawsuits. Managing stress is workshop's goal By the Kansan Staff Final exams usually cause a great amount of stress for students, but a counselor in KU's continuing education program deals with students' deal with that stress before it hits. Carol Hartman, the counselor, will conduct a Stress Management Workshop tomorrow from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at 202 Robinson Center. The workshop, sponsored by Recreation Services and the KU Adult Life Resource Center, will focus on defining the causes of stress and related physical ailments. DEBORAH FISH, ASSISTANT director of Recreation Services, said yesterday that the free workshop was being offered for KU students who may now be facing added stress with coming finals. She also said that offering more diversified activities was a part of Recreation Services' efforts. "I believe that at this time of year with finals coming up for a lot of students there is a real need for stress relief," she said. "Physical things happen to the body when we feel stress and we have to compensate for that at best in a physical manner, and that's what stress management techniques do." "Recreation is more than just intramurals." Fish said. "For some variety, I've been trying to set up a variety of workshops for students." The workshop will cover both the external and internal elements involved in causing stress, Hartman said, and will include learning exercises and meditation techniques to help ease the problem Hartman said that a group discussion among those who participate would be more useful. BECAUSE OF THE workshop's interpersonal nature, Hartman said, the number of participants will be limited to 30. "My experience is that individuals have weak points, and you have to learn to deal with each person's problems separately," Hartman said. "For instance one person may develop a slight headache or press, while another may develop some other symptom. We each tend to respond in different ways." As of yesterday, Fish said, about 20 KU students had registered. ON CAMPUS TODAY AN ARTS AND Crafts Bazaar sponsored by Student Union Activities will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Kansas Union Gallery. NOMINATIONS FOR faculty members to be selected to receive Distinguished Teaching Awards are being accepted by Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, in Room 127, Strong Hall. CAMPUS CRUSADE for Christ will meet 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the KU SWOOD and Shield will meet at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union. TAU SIGMA DANCE Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Dance Studio 242 in Robinson Center. CHAMPIONS! will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. CAMPUS CHRISTIAN Fellowship will meet at 7:30 p.m. at 115th Indiana St. THE BIBLIICAL Seminar 'Gospel of Mark', Triumph, Through Suffering' of the Cross. Holiday Special Buy 1 Year—Get 1 Year FREE Attention Student Bodies! 1/3 off for students! For Women Only...you'll enjoy personalized service and the most modern facilities available. Vacation Time Honored... you'll pay only for the time school is in session. Student I.D... gets you an additional ½ off Magic Mirror's already low prices. * Convenient Terms... choose your method of payment from several convenient options. Visa & Mastercard gladly accepted. - I.D. must be current and validated. FIGURE SALON Magic Mirror 601 Kasold 843-4040 DUNGEONS AND Dragons will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. PUBLIC RELATIONS Student Society of America will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union ical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Oread Ave. will sponsor an open poetry reading at 7:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Union. GRUBB STREET Literary Magazine TOMORROW STORRUM 1841 SCH A. A. SOM FRAUGHT WITH FINAL FEVER? Attend the Study Skills Workshop with emphasis on preparing for exams! Tuesday, Nov. 29 300 Strong Presented by the Student Assistance Center Did You Know That . . . TUESDAY at THE SANCTUARY You Can Now Buy $20 Worth Of Cover Charges For Only $10 2? THAT'S DIME DRAWS NIGHT! (Reg. Tues, Night Cover $1) Purchase your card on Tues. Night or during office hours only 1401 W. 7th (bet. Michigan & Florida) 843-9703 SANCTUARY 1802 W. 23rd • 7 a.m.-11 p.m. 106 SPECIALS AT ZARDA DAIRY - Gigantic Zarda Banana Split with chocolate, vanilla and strawberry ice cream. Banana, chocolate, strawberry and pineapple toppings with whipped topping, nuts and a cherry for only $1.06 (Reg. $2.39 value) This Banana Split is huge. You won't believe how big it is KLZR 106 Debaters place in national tournaments By the Kansan Staff While most students were relaxing over the Thanksgiving break, 12 KU debaters were working hard in various ternational tournaments across the country. At Wichita State University, the debate team of Robert Bradley, Wichita freshman, and David Thomasanek, third place out of 36 teams in the event. Two KU debate teams tied for fourth place in that tournament. They were: Grant Hayden, El Dorado freshman, and Patty Feeney, Santa Fe, N.M., freshman; and Al Pitzer and Steve Ellis, both Wichita freshmen. Hayden placed first, Ellis placed second and Pitzer placed ninth out of 72 debaters in individual speaking events. At Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C. the team of Jerry Gaines, Houston junior, and David Klein, Houston junior, took eighth place out of 82 teams. At Georgetown University, Washington, D.C., Rhaesa and Gaines tied the KU team of Eric Christensen, Nampa, Idaho, senior, and Jim Reed, St. Louis, Mo., junior, for fifth place out of 38 teams. Rhaesa placed first and Gaines placed tenth in individual events in the Georgetown tournament. Commissioners at conference hope to apply ideas at home Staff Reporter By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter Commissioner Mike Amyx said in a telephone interview that a workshop on competing for new development would highlight the importance of the city's Economic Task Force. Two Lawrence city commissioners who are attending the Congress of Cities conference in New Orleans said yesterday that they expected to bring back several ideas to apply to Lawrence city government. "I was struck by the fact that you don't want to go overboard giving tax incentives," Amyx said. "You have to stand your ground and show that you're working hard to attract new industry." Commissioner Howard Hill agreed. "Apparently tax incentives are not the main reason companies locate in a city," he said. "Other elements such as labor training and training are just as important." 8,000 delegates from across the nation are attending the conference. HILL AND AMYN, along with Mayor David Longhurst and City Manager Buford Watson, are delegates at the 2014 Cities Conference of the National League of Cities. About Because the three commissioners are at the conference, there will be no City Council. Amyx said he was struck by the stories he heard about problems in other cities. Both Hill and Amyx also said that many of the seminars and workshops focused on changes in society and corresponding changes in government "I'm amazed by the number of cities across the country that are having HILL, WII SPENT Saturday at a seminar dealing with cable television, said he saw a number of intriguing topics for using cable to benefit the city. "It all sounds very '1984', but this is 1983, so it's high time we got involved in Hill also said he was moved by Gretta Scott Kirk's speech on the position of justice. Syracuse, N.Y., is using cable as part of their fire alarm system, he said, and some communities are using it as a community calendar. 2nd Annual Polar Bear Fun Run 3 miles in length and open to KU students, faculty, & staff. Sunday, Dec. 4, 11 a.m. at 23rd & Iowa, Shenk Complex Entry Deadline: Fri., Dec. 25 p.m. 208 Robinson Walkers Are Welcome --- USDA Choice club steak includes choice of potato and roll all for only $199 Not valid with any other offer SIRLOIN STOCKADE® 1015 Iowa Lawrence, ks. Tuesday Special USDA Choice club steak includes choice of potato and roll all for only $199 Not valid with any other offer. SIRLOIN STOCKADE® 1015 Iowa Lawrence, ks. Steamboat A Flurry of Excitement January 2-8 Full package price of $299 includes sleeper, transportation nights lodgir The Ranch u- dos, lift tickets for 5 days, ski rental and a wine & cheese party. Sign up in the SUA office before November 30. Another happier holiday from SUA. HURRY AND SIGN UP TODAY! Steamboat A Flurry of Excitement January 2-8 Full package price of $299 include: sleep transpor nights The R dos, lif 5 days, and a w. cheese p. Sign up in l SUA office br November An hr Hu SIGN U SUA TRAVEL University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1983 Page 5 Shuttle continued from p. 1 had caused a two-month delay in the flight "I was real excited about the launch." *Ulah* said, "everything's fine - everything's moving beautifully.* ULABY SAID CRAMG Dobson, project manager at the remote sensing lab, sent a telegram to him from West Germany shortly after he returned. The data for the experiments were proceeding smoothly. American customers officials almost prevented Dobson and two KU assistants from traveling to West Germany because of the radar equipment installed on their customers finally approved the trip Thursday. The three scientists now are near Munich at West Germany's equivalent of NASA Ulaab said. They will stay there until Wednesday, when they will travel to a site near Bonn to set up the radar and other equipment they will use for the KU experiments. The KU team will conduct its experiments when the space shuttle passes over the the West German experiment site, Ulaby said. The shuttle is scheduled to make this crossover at 11:30 a.m. Sunday West German time, which is 5:30 a.m. CST. The team will have one second to do the experiments. Utab said DURING THAT ONE second, the space shuttle will be mounted 10,000 high-frequency radar pulses at radar receiving equipment, or transponders, on the ground set up by Dobson and his crew. After receiving the radar pulses, the transponders will beam the radar pulses back to the space shuttle. The pulses returned by the transponders will create bright dots on black and white photographs taken on the space lab. This experiment will help determine how well the equipment works and will provide a reference scale artists to use in future calibrations of radar. Another experiment will use high-frequency radar to map vegetation in the area around Bonn. High-frequency radar is useful for studying cloud phenomena, off living matter and does not penetrate it. A third experiment will use radar to determine the amount of water in soil at the experiment site. WHILE INTERNATIONAL INTEREST was still present, Mr. Goffin's surprise was not the crewdraw, it had been of no interest to him. "There was a relatively small crowd." Florida Highway Patrol Lt. Bill Stringfield said of viewing sites off the space center. "I doubt if there were 100,000." The crowd for the Aug. 30 night launch was estimated at 250,000. Media interest also was down, with just 867 media representatives, 114 from other countries, Their day was divided into 12-hour shifts for around-the-clock research in Spacelab, a 23-foot-long cylinder mounted in Columbia's cargo bay. Columbia flight commander John Young, co-pilot Brewster Shaw and four other shuttle crew members had little time to admire the view as they circled the world at 17,500 mph. HUNDREDS OF GUESTS gathered at the West German space center in Cologne to applaud Columbia and physicist Ulf Merbold, the first Western German to fly in space and first foreigner to ride in an American space vehicle. Millions of West Germans gathered before television screens in bars, offices and to watch a live transmission of the shuttle launch. "It was a picture-book take off," said Science and Technology Minister Heinz Riesenbauer. "Europe has entered the area of manned space flight for the first time." Spacelab was developed by European Space Agency at a cost of $1 billion and donated to NASA as Western Europe's contribution to the U.S. space program. Increase continued from p-1 In contrast, students at Pittsburgh State University will pay about $100 more than most KU students for similar residence hall room and board plans; according to rate information furnished by the Repsigns. Wake State University will pay up to $200 more. At Pittsburgh State, a double room and 18 meals a week — a similar plan to the one used in KU residence walls — will cost $2.124. At Wichita State, a double room in an air-conditioned building will cost $2.240. All KU residence hall contracts include payment for 20 meals a week. KU'S MOST EXPENSIVE residence hall will be Hashinger Hall, which will cost $2,100, according to the Office of Residential Programs. McCollum Hall will cost $2,010; Oliver Hall will cost $2,025; GSP, Corbin, Lewis and Ellsworth halls will cost $2,000; and Joseph R, Pearson and Templin halls will cost $1,989. But only 390 students live in Hushinger, which means that about 4,100, or more than 90 percent of the students living in KU residence may attend McColum houses about 900 students, and Ellsworth and Oliver house about 650 each. Ellsworth and Oliver house about soe each KU men's scholarship halls will cost $1,626. Douthart and Sellards halls, the two women's scholarship halls providing both room and board, will cost $1,519. About 400 students live in KU scholarship halls. ALL OF K-STATE'S housing, including its one scholarship hall, will cost $1,820 next year. Double rooms at Fort Hays State, with 20 meals a week, will cost $1,966. Comparable to KU's cost are those of Emporia State University, where a double room and 18 meals a week will cost $2,010 for next year. At Kansas Technical Institute in Salina, a double room and 19 meals a week will cost $1,995. At Wichita State, where a double room and 19 meals a week in the school's two airconditioned residence halls will cost $2,240 next year, the variety of services offered to students adds to the cost, said Randy Alexander, director of housing. A non-air-conditioned double room and 19 meals a week at Wichita State will cost "At KU," Alexander said, "You have no seconds on meals. We have unlimited seconds. We have four meal plans, which adds to the amount of work that goes into preparing meals. One of our halls has a swimming pool. We also have a smaller operation - 900 students as compared to your unit - but suffer the same administrative costs. "And the students don't want to give up the extras that they get. We could easily knock $30,000 out of our budget if we eliminated, say, the seconds in the meals. But we surveyed our students, and they said they would do it anything else. Things So, not coincidentally, they pay more." EVEN THOUGH A room and 10 or 15 meals can cost as little as $1,983 at Wichita State, he said, such limited meal plans are available only five days a week. Fred McElheneh, director of the KU Office of Residential Programs, agreed with Alexander, saying that having only one meal plan probably helped hold down costs. "It probably means less work for the cafeteria people in each hall, even though I am no expert on food." McEhnie said. "It's hard to say anyway, only to prepare, I would imagine." IN NORTH-CENTRAL Kansas, a snow-scheeked highway about five miles north of Alta Vista caused an automobile to slide into an ammoniating lane and collide with a pickup truck. Stranded wouldn't be back for classes until tomorrow 'I need to get back for school but I also need to be home' continued from p. 1 The occupants of the car, Otis E. Cross, 63, and his wife Ida, 59, of Lincoln, Neb., were pronounced dead at the scene, the Kansas Highway Patrol said. A blizzard warning was issued in northwest kansas east of Nixa, as northwest winds of 25 to 35 miles per hour poured across the state. SNOW ENDED IN THE Goodland area about 4 a.m. yesterday, and skies began clearing and wind tapping off Visibility was improving, but no clouds were present, closed Drifts up to 6 feet were common. At 3 a.m. yesterday, 19 inches of snow had accumulated at Goodland and 3 inches at Dodge City. As of midnight, Garden City had 8 inches and Concordia 6 inches. Predawn temperatures ranged from around 10 degrees in the northwest corner to the lower 30% In north-central Kansas, ice on power lines and trees created power outages in a number of In northwest Kansas, Sherman County Deputy Kevin Armstrong said snowfall and high winds prevented workers from clearing roads Sunday night. "You can't even see your fingers stretched out in front of your face," Armstrong said. "The town (Goodland) is at a complete standstill. Nothing is going on." IN GOODLAND, NATIONAL Weather Service meteorologist Erne Workman said that winds had been gusting to 44 mph and that drifts had uled high along roadside. "I guess you could call it a full-fledged blizzard " be said A similar situation existed in southwest Kansas where a Finney County sheriff's dispatcher said many businesses planned to be closed as a result of the district in northwest Kansas canceled classes. The one police car in Rawlins County was stuck in the snow Sunday and sheriff's dispatcher Joyce Parker said she would stay in the office "for the duration" of the snowstorm. All roads in and out of Atwood were closed, she said, and power failures were reported. Roads were closed in all directions out of Tribune in Greeley County, which borders Colorado, where snow drifts were as high as 8 feet. "四 wheel drive drives won't last very long." Greeley dispatcher Cindy Miller said Sunday. "DOT (Department of Transportation) crews are trying to open the roads, but they are closing up right behind them as fast as they get them open." FREEZING RAIN AND sleet coated tree limbs and power lines with ice a quarter to a half inch thick in north-central and northeast Kansas Sunday. "marsilson" "odynny shevrn'i's office was without power at least three times Sunday, disputed by other parts of Marysville also were without power, as were Waverville and Axtell, she said. "The trees are terrible." White said. "Things are falling like crazy My TV antennae fell off the roof. Fences are lagging over, almost touching the ground." She said she had received 102 calls about the leather in six hours Sunday from worried moms. POWER OUTGES WERE "off and on" in Nemaha County on the Nebraska border in northeast Kansas, Undersheriff Frank Gray said. Mideast continued from p. 1 In Damascus, Arab peacemakers hoping to end the Palestinian civil war yesterday ordered Yasser Arafat's men and the opposing Syrian rebels LO rebelled to leave Tripoli and return to Lebanon. DAMASCUS RADIO SAID former Lebanese Prime Minister Rashid Kardam Karami announced plans for the dispersal of the warring PLO factions in the meetings in the Syrian capital with Tripoli officials. There was no immediate response from Arafat or the Syrian-backed rebels to the plan — part of the Syrian-Saudi ceasefire agreement reached last week. The rebel leader Col. Abu Moussa said Sunday, however that his men would not surprese the Benedictans or Nahr el-Rahg refugee army, was the result. Karami said the 4,000 to 5,000 men who traveled to Tripoli with Arafat in September and the guerrilla leader's local PLO forces must leave the city within two weeks. But he said they could return to their homes in the nearby refugee camps. "As for the disillusion fighters, they must return to the camps, not precisely Beddawi or Nair et Hared, but to whatever regions where they are deployed, to continue their national obligations," Karami said. LADIES NIGHT TONIGHT! MEL ANGOS MERCADO NATIONAL 2600 IOWA FREE TACOS 4-6 p.m. 50º Margaritas $1 Highballs HAPPY HOUR 12 NOON-6:00 7 DAYS A WEEK 2600 IOWA 843-4076 MELAMIGOS THE CAFE 148 W. 39th St. NW 600-752-6222 1 --- SUA Fine Arts presents the first annual ARTS & CRAFTS BAZAAR Nov. 29 - Dec. 2; 9am-5pm Kansas Union Bring in this coupon before Dec. 5 and receive a membership effective throughout semester break for only $15. From Dec. 17 to GET FIT OVER BREAK FOR ONLY $15 NOW THAT IS A BREAK! GAMMONS SNOW 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 TUESDAY FREE DRINKS $2.50 COVER 8-11 P.M. HAPPY HOUR 11-CLOSE 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER 601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center 749-1501 Pizza Hut pizza for less. Pizza Hut. Pizza Hut Pizza Hut Personal Pan Pizza Supreme Only $1.69 Regularly $1.99 Dine-in or Carryout Ready in 5 minutes or your next one is FREE! Please present money when ordering. One coupon per pizza per visit. Void Monday through Saturday between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. at the restaurant. If you order, your offer is not in combination with any other Pizza Hut* offer. Five minute guarantee applies 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. to our two selections on orders of five or less per table, or three or less per carryout. Register at 24.1983. Cash redemption rate is 1.20c Lawrence— 1606 W. 23rd St. 804 Iowa 932 Massachusetts St. Pizza Hut $2/$1 OFF Get $2.00 off any large pizza, or $1.00 off any medium. Dine-in or Carryout Please present coupon when ordering. One coupon per party visit at the Pizza Hut® restaurant or any other location for a complimentation with any other Pizza Hut offer. Good only on December 28, 2013. 1983. Each intimation value is 1/006 Lawrence — 1606 W. 23rd St. 804 Iowa 932 Massachusetts St. Pizza Hut CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 29.1983 Page 7 Downtown continued from p. 1 after which the City Commission selected Sizerel Realty Co. Inc. from Kenna, La. SIZELER WAS ASSIGNED the task of planning a redevelopment project for the 700 and 800 blocks of downtown east of Massachusetts Street, in keeping with the city's comprehensive plan. Sizeler was instructed to save many existing storefronts, to integrate the project with the existing downstreet and to add two department stores to the area. After working with Sizer for seven months, the City Commission approved one of four Sizer redevelopment plans, known as Scheme 1. In addition to the plan that the city wanted Sizer to work on A month later, the new commission, the third to deal with redevelopment, took office. It consisted of Shontz, David Longhurst, Mike Amvrz, Alexine Antoine and Howard Hill. THE ELECTION OF the new commission marked the beginning of the end for Sizer. Six months after the election, Sizerel was replaced as developer of record by Town Center Venture Corp., a local government developers organization that only days before the company began considering the company's plan. With that move — a new company and a new location — the site for redevelopment changed "It took Iowa City 10 years," he said. "You have to get government involved to build a meaningful shopping center downtown. Once you become involved, you become embroiled in politics." the future of development now that the City Commission had decided on a plan. He played an important role in the decision. He also attributed the change in developers to local politics. "All the delays were caused by a local political election," he said. "People originally in formative years had to wait." Bruce Heckman, vice president of Robert B. Teska Associates of Evanston, III., spent several months working on the city's comprehensive plan as a consultant. MOST OF THE political accusations have focused on Longhurst and Amyx, who both rent buildings and own businesses in the area of their town. They were the first to vote against Sizeler. In a paper on redevelopment called "Learning to Be a Partner," Heckman says, "The 'partners' may be deeply suspicious of each other, and their cautiousness tends to keep the first-stage agreements more general than their equivalents in the private sector." 'Redevelopment was following a straight line. The main reason it became convoluted was the new ideas of the new commission. If the old commission had stayed on, we would have chosen Sizeler.' Barkley Clark. Former city commissioner from the 700 and 800 blocks of Massachusetts Street to the 600 block. Sizerel president Tom Davidson said his firm would not press the issue, but many people involved in redevelopment have said privately that they expect Sizerel will sue the city for replacing the Louisiana company with Town Center. MANY WHO HAVE been involved with downtown redevelopment say that the new commissioners are responsible for negating the work of the previous commission. "Redevelopment was following a straight line," said Clark, who was on the City Commission for 12 years before resigning last year. The effort to refurbish the dilapidated was the new ideas of the new commission. "If the old commission had stayed on, we would have chosen Sizerel." However, Clark said he was optimistic about HE GOES ON to say that subsequent negotiations are hamstruck over details, and the negotiations are marred by having to maintain a stable position. The adversarial position, all under public scrutiny. Heckman said that this happened with Sizerel something that cost the company the edible root of a plant. "The average cynical developer would say this is typical," he said. "It was particularly frustrating in Lawrence because we bent over backward to try to avoid it." Gleason said Sizerel was also slow to recognize how serious the city was about making changes in **Scheme 4**, which was "the straw that broke at least some people's hacks." Gleason said he perceived the Town Center plan as bad and hoped that Sizerel may be able to overcome it. a assessment that downtown redevelopment takes a long time, saying that it is "never easy to do." GLEASON ALSO AGREED with Clark's Steve Jansen, director of the Helen M. Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St., stressed the need for a historical perspective on the situation. “It’s clear to me that this town has been wrestling with the downtown retail situation "The present City Commission is dealing with the proliferation of satellite shopping centers. It You have to get government involved to build a meaningful shopping center downtown. Once you get government involved, you become embroiled in politics.' — Barkley Clark, Former city commissioner was so piecemel that no one saw the effect Now, in the 1920s, you realize that allowing those to see was not possible. PALOS, WHO HAS worked on the project for the planning office for three years, said he was concerned about where redevelopment was headed. "I think we lost sight of what the community wants. There's lots of confusion in the data." "We initially wanted to have a design competition, but we found out it's no longer done that way, so we had developer competition. With the addition of Town Center, we were able to have the design competition that we originally intended. "We are fortunate to have so much interest in downtown redevelopment. It appears to me that we are a lot further along than we were when we started." Few see a calm future for downtown redevelopment. Most people expect the lawsuits to become reality, particularly as long as local developer Ron Holt and local attorney Lance Burr continue to voice objection to the redevelopment selection process. BURR, WHO OWNS downtown property, has maintained that taking land by eminent domain is illegal unless the property is blighted. He contends that buildings downtown are not blighted if the shops are occupied and the owners are paying taxes. City Attorney Gerry Cooley has said that potential blight is all that is needed to condemn buildings for redevelopment. Holt owns a building in the 600 block downtown, where the Town Center project would be completed. Holt has his own, private development project underway along the Kansas River next to City Hall. Steve Clark, who is working with Holt and the University of Missouri, caused by court fights would benefit Holt's fund. BARKLEY CLARK SAID that Town Center would be the city's last shop downtown. If delays caused the opportunity to falter, he said, development would be back to a cornfield mall. "It's certainly a divided commission and that's the way the public will see it," he said. Despite the City Commission's approval of Town Center, former commissioner Binns said that the direct confrontation between Town Center and the merger had probably killed downtown redevelopment. "The project has its Burts and Holmes." "Clark plan." "I'll take time, but we've got a reasonable essay." Heckman, who has consulted on several redevelopment projects in other cities, and that the city could expect substantial problems in the FRANCISCO THINKS THAT the city was divided into two camps by the confrontation. "The city was fragmented because it wasn't an orderly process. People took up sides," she said. While there have been countless public hearings and meetings in the last three years, the public has never had a chance to express its opinion in a vote. Yet sometime in the spring, the city may find itself starting over on another redevelopment plan. The biggest obstacle for Town Center now is expected to be financing because the City Commission included in its negotiating agreement that it would vote on the financing it would have to pay for. “It’s very complicated.” Clark said of downtown redevelopment. “It’s infinitely difficult than building in a cornfield. You’re using a square ppg into a round hole downtown.” Timeline quested commercial rezoning for the suo urban mall site. continued from p. 1 *MARCH 1891: The City Commission denies the rezoning request. JVJ abandons plans to develop in Lawrence. - DECEMBER 1981: Tesla completes its comprehensive downtown plan. The City Commission adds the report to Plan '95, the city's master plan. - MARCH 1982: The city — now interested in downtown redevelopment — sends out a prospectus asking interested developers to apply for developer selection. Six months later, the commission selected Sizer Realty Co. Inc., Kenner, La., to be developer of record. *MARCH 23, 1983: The City Commission in principle approves Sizerel's Scheme a downtown proposal and requests that Sizerel address 15 reservations the commission has with the plan. ★ AUGUST 1983: The City Commission votes 3.2 to accept Schedule 4, but Mayor David Longhust asks for a delay because of concern over public support. *SEPT. 13, 1983: The City Commission delays signing an agreement with Sizeler Longhurst asks that the commission consider any local developers who come forth with a plan. *OCT. 6, 1983: Town Center Venture Corp. formed two days earlier, sends a letter to the city asking for permission to present a plan - OCT. 13, 1983: Town Center unveils its plan for redevelopment in the 600 block downtown - OCT. 18, 1983: The City Commission votes 3-2 to again delay its decision on developer selection. - NOV. 8, 1983: The City Commission votes 3-1-1 to accept Town Center as the new developer for downtown NOTICE - Administrative Assistant - Student Senate Staff Applications Are Now Being Accepted - Executive Secretary - Treasurer - Applications are available for these salaried positions in the Student Senate office, B105 Kansas Union - Applications are due at 4:30 p.m. Friday, Dec.2nd - Interviews will be held on Dec. 5th and 6th For more information please contact the Senate office at 864-3710. TAKE AN ACTIVE PART: GET INVOLVED Funded by the Student Activity Fee XO Send a friend some holiday cheer .. with a Kansan Holiday Message. A Kansan Holiday Message Is a great way to happy holiday season or say goodbye 'til next semester. Write your message in the coupon below putting one word in each box. No ads over 20 words will be accepted. Then mail the advertisement to Kansan Advertising (or stop by in person). The deadline for your message is Wed., Nov. 30 at 5 p.m. Space is limited so get yours early. 20 words (or less) — $4.00* A Kansan Holiday Message Is a great way to wish someone a happy holiday season or say goodbye 'till next semester. *Price includes green color on border and ribbon of box Name ___ Address ___ Phone ___ Amt. $ ___ one word per box Clip and bring to: - All ads must be prepaid. No refunds. Kansan Advertising 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Lawrence, Ks. 66045 Looking for the excitement of a high quality graduate school research environment? The University of Texas Health Science Center at Dallas is a major center for research in the field of occupational therapy. Opportunities are available for highly individualized graduate research training programs with an outstanding faculty of 25+ researchers. Attractive students are available Areas of specialization include Biochemistry Molecular Biology Pharmacology Biophysics immunology Physiology Cell Biology Microbiology For further information contact J Stuil Ph D Associate Dean of Biomedical Sciences University of Texas Health Science Center 5323 Harry Hines Phone: 214-688-7235 Phone: 214-688-3810 UTHSCD is an equal opportunity university. MISTER GUY MISTER GUY Christmas '83 in clothing from Mister Guy for MEN and WOMEN . . . Christmas Hours: m-t-w-11:30 8:30 sat 9:30-6:00 sat 1:00-5:00 TGIF THIS FRIDAY 920 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 842-2700 What are "FUNFLOWERS?" 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 They're flowers just for fun. By the same rules, you can enjoy to arrange and enjoy. Put a little fun in your life. Play games on any day or today. Specially priced. For in-town delivery C O S T N E R T I N G I pick up a book or an "FUNFLOWERS" today of any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Our nice fresh casual bunch of SOUTHERN HILLS Florl&Gift "FUNFLOWERS" $400 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammons" 749-2912 COMMONWEALYN THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-3789 - Christmas Story Eve, 7:30, 9:15 Mat, Sat., Sun, 2:15 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 813-1055 CHRISTIAN CHASE DEAL ON THE CENTURY Eve: 9:15 only Sacred Ground Eve: 7:15 only HILLCREST 1 9TH AND 10TH TELFONE 842-2400 a Night Heaven Eve. 7:35 9:25 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 MARCHEST 2 9TH AND 10TH APRIL 2ND FOOD BAR NATE (FU) Flashback Eve 7:30 Mat Sat, Sun 2:15 Eve 9:20 Mat Sat, Sun 2:15 Flushburn Eve: 9:20 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 3 9TH AND 10TH APRIL 7:30 AM TO 8:30 PM AMITYVILL 3-D ORION Eve. 7:25-9:30 Mat. Sat. 2:15 CINEMA 1 31ST AND IOWA TELEPHONE 854-6400 RUNNING BRAZZ (PT.) Eve 7.35-9.35 Mat. Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 FESTIVAL AND WEBINAR 8 THE BIG CHILL 42 COLUMN PICTURES Eve: 7:30 - 9:30 mkt Sat 2:00 www.cinema2festival.com University Daily Kansan, November 29, 1983 Page 8 NATION AND WORLD Gold is attracting hundreds to Thai-Cambodian border By United Press International BANGKOK, Thailand — Word that gold had been discovered on a tapia plantation sent hundreds of prospectors rushing to the Thai-Cambodian border, it was reported yesterday. Newspapers reported that the gold rush was sparked by the news that Boopeng Intharasu found a large rock on his tapioca floor with gold dust when broken apart. The value of the gold was not known. The newspapers said hundreds of prospectors arrived in the Sa Kaeo district about 120 miles east of Bangkok. The rain lasted for another day of the gold strike. Despite the dangers of the Thai-Cambodian border area, where Vietnamese troops and Cambodian guerrilla groups operate, police said more than 400 prospectors and that a number turned up seeking instant wealth. But the lack of information did not deter the would-be prospectors who set up a tent city and leased a square yard claims for $782 each. PHOENIX, Ariz. - Striking Greyhound employees yesterday overwhelmingly rejected the bus line's request for a pay cut, calling the proposal unjustified and excessive, union officials saft. Greyhound employees reject pay-cut plan By United Press International Union officials asked for an immediate resumption of contract talks to end the nationwide walkout, which began 3 and has been marked by periodic violence. Greyhound spokesman said the com- mission on the development until today. The contract offer, which called for a 8 percent pay cut, was voted down by 146 to 59. union officials said in a news conference. The vote was 325 in favor of accepting the pay cut and 9,181 against. "We striking Amalgamated Union members sent an unmistakable message to Greyhound today when they rejected the company's latest offer of union membership and benefit cuts," said Harry Rosebush, president of the Amalgamated Council of Greyhound Union Locals. "In light of this vote and in order to expedite a resumption of negotiations between the parties, I am openly offering to return to the bargaining table at the earliest possible time and reopen substantive dialogue with the company on all unresolved issues presently facing us. "We stand ready as we have from the beginning to settle our differences with Greyhound through the collective bargaining process but not on a take-it-or-leave it basis. That format does not provide for meaningful negotiations nor reflect good faith bargaining." PRIOR TO the union announcement, Greyhound officials said the company chairman John Tests would hold a news conference on Tuesday to announce Greyhound's future plans. More than 12,000 Greyhound employees went on strike after union leaders rejected a proposed 9.5-percent pay cut and a reductions in benefits. The nation's largest bus company began hiring replacement workers Nov. 14 and resumed limited service on Nov 17 When negotiations between the union and the company resumed, Greyhound offered the smaller pay cut with reduced benefits. Union leaders criticized it, saying it predicted it would be rejected, but submitted it to union members anyway. Bosenhlum said the striker "would be thrilled to death to return to work." He said they did not want to lose their jobs "but they don't want to return because the contract offer nullifies their desire to be a loyal employee." Ellis Franklin, an international vice president of the union, said the company's total offer would actually work for workers 19 percent in least benefits. Passengers not warned before jumbo jet crash By United Press International MEJORADA DEL CAMPO, Spain — Survivors of a Colombian jumbo jet crash that killed 181 people said yesterday that they did not know anything was wrong as the plane approached the Madrid airport. Spanish government officials, families and friends of the victims packed a funeral service in an airport chapel while investigators, including a fourman team from the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, site for the cause of the crash of the Avianca airlines Boeing 747 on Sunday. The NTSB investigates all crashes of U.S. made commercial aircraft. MEDICAL EXAMINERS CONTINUE patients of victims of an airport hanger Pedro Tena, director of Spanish Civil Aviation, said the search through the charred, scattered debris would continue for several days. "This is a Sherlock Holmes kind of investigation because little things can change." Roldolo Amaya, Aviana's European director, said the airport's final plan would be to upgrade the runway. passengers and crew aboard had died. One of the 11 survivors, Patrick Negers, 29, who lives outside Paris, said he "thought it was a nightmare" when he found himself and his family in the flaming wreckage. Negers, whose wife, Elizabeth, 26, and their two children, Kathy, 4, and Ludovic, 20 months, also survived, said. The couple's stewardess as the jet came in to land "Suddenly the plane lost altitude very quickly." he said. THE LAST thing he remembered, he said, was seeing flames coming from the roof of his house. "I saw the airplane in flames and I thought it was a nightmare and I touched the ground to see if it was real." She said. "I didn't know I'm here and I'm with the children." He said that during the first moments I saw no one else, no bodies, not the ones we were in. The jet came to rest belly up, torn to pieces that were strewn over the ground. Another survivor, Hugo Bernal Cortes, in his 30s, from Colombia, said that he did not hear a warning before the crash either. Cortes found himself hanging upside down by his seatbelt School desegregation is not money scheme,lawyer says By United Press International ST. LOUIS—An attorney for the St. Louis School Board yesterday denied charges that the landmark voluntary desegregation plan was only a play for the city to finance these improvements in its schools. "We're using every available dollar to desegregate our schools." Kenneth C. Brostron, the attorney, "The city board isn't reaping benefits. We aren't; paying anyone dividends. It's for the kids." The cost of the plan was the main topic of a two-hour hearing before the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The court previously denied financing of the plan and heard oral arguments to resolve them. THE COURT TOOK the case under advisement and was expected to issue a ruling in January. Attorneys for the state and the Justice Department questioned parts of the plan which required Missouri to pay half of the costs to desegregate St. Louis schools, which was estimated at $50 million. Broston taught the school board and the St. Louis County school districts that have agreed to participate in the program were following a federal mandate to integrate St. Louis schools. ALTHOUGH NEITHER THE state nor suburban schools have been found guilty of discriminatory actions, proponents of the desegregation plan said blacks were routinely bused into the city before the historic 1954 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that outlawed such practices. Under the plan, which went into effect this fall, Inner-city blacks can voluntarily transfer to predominantly white schools in suburban St Louis County. By 1988, as many as 15,000 black city students are expected to attend suburban schools. Charles J. Cooper, a Washington attorney representing the Justice Department, said the desegregation plan would be acceptable only if a suburban jail the state and suburban schools were liable for the program." 'Human shield' threat forces halt to deer hunt By United Press International IFSWICH, Mass. — "Human shield" protestors vowing to throw themselves in front of hunters' rifles forced the cancellation of a controversial deer hunt yesterday at a coastal nature reserve. "They were going to put themselves in danger and put themselves in a position that they would have to be arrested," said Wayne Mitton, a spokesman for the 1,400-acre Crane Memorial Reservation. "We were not prepared to have that kind of confrontation." A small group of animal lovers who had picketed the scenic reserve over the weekend had planned to sneak inside. when the hunt began yesterday, they planned to act as human shields to prevent the shooting of 75 of the 185-member white-tailed deer herd — which wildlife experts said was needed because of overpopulation. DOZENS OF HUNTERS who expected to participate in the state-sanctioned, five-day hunt were told late Sunday that it had been canceled. were going to stand up and keep them from shooting the deer," said protest organizer Dorothy O'Brien of Plymouth. "This victory is just like a dream. This is my Thanksgiving, that our deer have been saved." The Trustees of Reservations, a charitable corporation that manages the Crane Memorial Reservation, decided to call off the hunt, which would have been the first time in three years deer hunting was to be allowed there. "When the hunters came around, we The trustees and wildlife officials will review other options for reducing the herd, such as resettlement, Mitton said. The trustees and the Ipswich Board of Selectmen along with state wildlife officials had approved the hunt by 75 persons a day. SUPPORTERS CONTEND CRANE'S Beach was overpopulated with deer, which would lead to many of the animals starving, endangerment of vegetation and the spreading of disease. **but the animal lovers said that the deer were virtually tame because they were so accustomed to seeing people and such a slaughter would be inhumane.** Boys Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy-Sell-Trade Gold-Silver-Coins 731 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 60044 913-842-8773 THE CASTLE TEA ROOM 107 Mass phone: 843 (115) ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT SERIES VIA WIDEOUTRE Friday, December 2; 1:30, 2:30, and 3:30 p.m. FREE * Listening and Notetakri * * Textbook Reading - Textbook Reading * Preparing for Exams Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358. SAC THE STRONGEST WAY 1994 - Foreign Language Study Skills Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 Register to attend at the Student Assistance Center. 121 Strong Hall. 664-4064 OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRUNDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 Join one of the five newly formed standing Senate committees TAKE AN ACTIVE PART IN STUDENT SENATE Cultural Affairs Finance Minority Affairs Student Rights University Affairs - For more information please contact the Senate office at 864-3710 - Applications are due by 4:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 2nd - Applications are available in the Student Senate Office, Room B105 Kansas Union Funded by the Student Activity Fee Without Your Help It Will Not Get Done. J. HOOD BOOKSELLERS QUALITY USED BOOKS FINE HARDCOVER TITLES IN ALL FIELDS 25,000 1/2 PRICE PAPERBACKS THIS SEASON GIVE A GIFT THAT LASTS A GIFT OF KNOWLEDGE Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday 1 p.m.-6 p.m. LUF TOWN 14th & Masse. 1401 Massachusetts 841-4644 Put a Little Weekend in Your Week! MICHELOB MADNESS TONIGHT at THE HAWK MICHELOB! (Reg. $1.00) 2 p.m.-Midnight Michelob Bottles ONLY NOW! Enjoy the beer you've always wanted to drink. From its distinctive bottle to its rich, pure flavor, it radiates the quality and style that created a legend . . . 75 $ ^{¢} $ It Could Only Happen at . . . THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO 3 COWBOY Dozens of Beer Signs and other items will be given away during the evening! J' Ever Eat A FOOTBALL? Come in to THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA For French Bread Pizza Night all you can eat—$2.95! Tuesdays & Thursdays 2228 Iowa 842-0154 No Carry Out Or Delivery On This Special THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA Minsky's PIZZA KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS November 29,1983 The University Daily KANSAN The University Daily The University Danby KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Days Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days or 2-weeks 0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75 16-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80 21-25 2.90 4.15 5.25 8.03 For 5 wards add 3.10 4.50 75c 1.05 AD DEADLINES Classified Display...$4.20 per column inch Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. Classified Display advertisements can be only cute column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues are allowed in classified display advertisements except for log-ons. POLICIES KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE - Classified display, why do not count towards only earned rate this month - Blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS this earned rate this count Samples of all mail ordered must be submitted until publication of advertisement - Words set in ALL CAMS count as 2 words - Words set to BOLD FACE count as 1 word - Deadlines same as Display Advertison - - 10 mins. (upper) Tanya Kansan • All advertisers will be required to pay in advance - Deadlines same as Display Advertising, working days prior to publication individual can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. There also can be placed person simply by calling the Kauai business office at 840-4358. - Teachshirts are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements. - until credit has been established * Tear-off cards are not provided for classified or - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions, only ANNOUNCEMENTS - No responsibility is assumed for more than one to correct informent of any advertisement. - No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertisements. News and Business Staff Positions The Kansan is now accepting applications for Spring Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union, in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in rooms 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m., Tuesday, November 29. - Blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge • Checks must accompany all classified ads marked to The University Daily Kanan Kansan classifieds get results The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employment Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people with foreign origin, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry. a ride call 864-3948. 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358 Hillel & AEΠ present a Hanukkah Party L. J.C.C. - 917 Highland Refreshments provided Thurs., Dec. 1 (note new date) 7:00 p.m. L. J.C.C. — 917 Highland Refreshments provided 0 For more information or a ride call 864-3948 Now you know about the "Day After" but what about the "Day Before"? At 10 a.m. in Kaiser Room at SKL-10K, p. to. m: 10:00 to 10:30. FOR RENT - 2 & 3 between apartments immediately adjacent to each other. - 1 & 2 between units joint. Contact Kaw Valley Manage 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom for rent $255 monthly, min from campus, on bus route Call: John 748.188.188 "MAID SERVICE!!" "THE FOOD!" "NO UTILITY BILLS!" These are just three reasons people live at Naismith Hall Check us out! 1800 Naismith 843-8559 2 bedroom house full basement. Some utilities paid. 1/2 blocks from campus. AvailableDec. 1. Dec. 2. Dec. 3. Dec. 4. Dec. 5. Dec. 6. Dec. 7. Dec. 8. Dec. 9. Dec. 10. Dec. 11. Dec. 12. Dec. 13. Dec. 14. Dec. 15. Dec. 16. Dec. 17. Dec. 18. Dec. 19. Dec. 20. Dec. 21. Dec. 22. Dec. 23. Dec. 24. Dec. 25. Dec. 26. Dec. 27. Dec. 28. Dec. 29. Dec. 30. Dec. 31. Dec. 843-8559 2nd minister sublease | clear to campus HW, very close to campus HW, near bus route 3 | bedrock to sublease 2nd minister, near bus route 3 | 2nd minister sublease | clear to campus HW, very close to campus HW, near bus route 3 | 4 bedroom Cape Cod, 1/2 baths, all appliances, bachelor room, 6 month lease. Bungalow $350 per month, 843-4644. Apartment for rent: 141 Tenessee. Spacious, pleasurable, walk-in. Walk to OK. Office building. Call 843-6541. BOTTOM HIGH HEMECORE OLDER HOME BOTTOM HIGH HEMECORE OLDER HOME CHIP WID hookup, A C appliance, utilities no, chip wid hookup, A C appliance, utilities no, Reserve your studio now for the spring semester while the selection is good. Fully furnished, free cable TV, close to campus. meadowbrook 5th Covenant Church COMPORTABLE ROOM CHEAP 1账锁 from Union at 1250 Onn, 1/2 bath for December, deposit, 25% per month. 1/2 bath, 1/2 bath, 1/2 bath. Duplex. 2 b. 1 bath doubles for rent. East Lawrence. Jan. 1. W&D hookup 749-2155 For Rent: 2-Bedroom house, includes洗衣, dryer, range & Fridge. 82% month plus deposit and utilities. Rates vary. BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please come to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. 842-1876 or 841-1287 Furnished one bedroom apartment, $180 per month. Gas and water paid. Call evening, 814-7800. Large one bedroom apartment with fireplace: located on the second floor. Entry and is clone campus. 892-5500) try admission. Looking for occupant to assume Hainault Hall Con- ference Centre. Please contact your guardian yourself a wist in the door (C 7901461) www.hainault.com HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APTS. SURLEASE. female roommate needed for second room. Room is furnished and includes: free book to campus; $100/month plus 2/3 utilities on credit; free bus to campus; $160/month plus 2/3 utilities on credit; free laundry service; 24-hour phone service. All apes, have CA, gas HEAT, retigu, refugi route. Lease terms available to May 31, July 31, and Dec. 31. Call between 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 843-4754 1 BR Apts. $285 2 BR Apts. $340-$360 3 BR Apts. $415 Low rent. Roommate for 25R apt $137.50/mo usel. Call Bill: B43. 849-1689 32-129 NICE 1 BR APT $80 a month. All activities paid Quiet and good quality. Call 841-2812 SUBASEANCE. *Nice Quail Cookie att.* 3 b; 112 land; businesses. *Nice Quail Cookie att.* 3 b; 112 land; businesses. One bedroom, Sundance Apts, on KU Bus Route, well ventilated, very nice water paid, available with air conditioning. MADBOOKROW Studio for sublease $100 off December rent. Ask for U120 842-4300 Room for rent near university and downtown. No pets please. 841-5900 - Four-hour Winnings * Free shuttle bus to campus 14 times daily * Laundry facilities * Excellent maintenance Don't miss this opportunity to join progressive, resident-staffed this area. If you're unhappy with all us. We work WITH you! Roommate wanted, $110/mo 1/3 utilities, H20 paid 14th & Ohio. Available now or at semester break 749 or 841 or 8407 842-4444 524 Frontier Rd. Save money, rent a i 1 or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campus. No pets, phone 842-4138. Spacious Townhouse available January 1. 213 Hanover Place only 1 bedhouset from Wareau, large 2 bedhouses 1/2 bath fireplace in -garage, DW, laundry room, TV, kitchen, office. Call Urbana at 843-4138 or驰乌兰 at 843-6657. STUDIO Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 Sublease EXCELLENT now studio with bedroom ceiling fan fan Available December 15th spring semester sublease. Sparcosis 2 BH, Close to campa. Large kitchen, 1 1/2 bath, $265 / month COMPLETELY FURNISHED Studio, 2 or 3 bedroom apartment available immediately. Great location. *Silhouette* 3'80" Birthday WD 3 Weddings from Union 140- utilities Available Jan 1 Call 841-7802 Vacancies in the Romania Christian Living Compass in Romania Contact E.C.M. 1294, Dread 841-493 for information FOR SALE MEADOWBROOK apusici 2 bedroom apartment now available the day before. Gas and water paid, quiet 2. Room: 310 sqft Price: $195,000 1966 WV Bug. black, good condition. Fun to run winter or summer. Reliable. Transportable. 1976 Honda Civic - runs good, must sell $1600 or BEST OFFER 4 - sale 844-6618 1973 Mazda KT-RS GS, Low mileage, AC-AM FF, sunroof,垫, etc. Very good condition. $60,400 or less. Auction: consignment every Friday night, 7 o'p m. p. Give us a call at 212-843-6911; Bridge, 2 miles of leave from law enforcement at 212-843-6911. Adds computer terminal model 17129 for use with Wallphone. Call 842-4455. BIKE - SR Alpine Sport, 12 speed in good condition. 1570 BEO. Sonny B42-4294 own your own mobile home 2 BHUM, all apples. For sale 175 Cultivate Supreme Great cond. fresh V8 new radials, ps, pb, acs, wheels, landau top, etc. good n paint, good price. The $1.25乔 car you will find Gibson guitar 1979 Model RD Artist, w/case, built in amp, gold plated hardware. Maint condition inside. Furnished. Free delivery on orders over $500. Great Gifts STONES, COSTELLO POLICE, MALEMAN MAKE, more HUE GIFT #498286. Italian leather boots, size 7. Hardly worn; gift that didn't like. $5. Call 842 6420 after 6. Having trouble getting on the university computer terminal? You can purchase your own terminal to work on the university homework in your dorm or apartment. Zemhil will reduce the price of the terminals for students, faculty and staff. For details and/or demonstration of these features of the terminals, visit Assistance Hamilton. RADIO SHACK MODE 1, 2RK, Disk Drive, U/Lower > see Monitor, many programs. I, 586, 2064 Sharp looking, 70 Corolla SKS Sport Coupe 3.5pc, AC, AM FM Stereo, Extra snow tires, Fun clean, practical, and reliable for school; Call 842 7763 Speakers. large beautiful walnut cabinets, 3 way transmission Excelence speaker Call Lista. BUSINESS PERS. Stereo-television video. All name brands. Lowest prices. KIa area. Total Sound Distributors. used furniture. Shoemaker's across Kaw River has two backpacks, a pair of women's Boot ice skates, ski jumper and coat and three quarter length rabbit coat. Only used one of these ideas. Call Adreine at 748-966-0000. Keep trying. LOST AND FOUND USED CARDIPET dermium sizes $30, shags $35, chocolate pies. Great deals, clean stuff 842-133 FRESHMEN-SCHOOLSHIPS AVAILABLE. It won't late to learn in NAVAL HOTT! Call 684-1361. Harvard School of Public Health is looking for a full-time instructor in the monitoring station located in Topkaka, Jutain suitable for upperclassman or grad student. Associates degree preferred but not necessary. Part-time hours: Monday through Friday, 9am to 5pm, Dumyah, IBSH Room 1312, 665 Hunton Ave. Boston, Mass. 02115 or call 12/17 or 12/13 only. BOSTON-EAST COAST ADVENTURE. Explore open space and water activities for children. Child care worker, immediate opening. 1 year commitment. Contact Child Care Placement Service, 140 buckminster Road, Brooklyn, MA 02136 AHUHNES AHUHNES NOW! FLIGHT Attendance Attendance PAY YOUR INTERVIEWS Call 1-800-792-1121, PAY YOUR INTERVIEWS Call 1-800-792-1121, Wanted part-time custodian, evening hours, 15-20 hours per week. Apply Adams Amani Center 811- 736-9450. National Journal $1,495. Opening Hours: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Opening Budget $5,000. Park Report Mission Mtn Go 1024 3rd Ave W. N. Kailanell, MPIT HELP WANTED PERSONAL MISCELLANEOUS Used furniture bought and sold. Pick-up available Everything But Ice, 6th and Vermont. Southern Hills Firs is accepting applications for part time floral designers. Must have experience or education in landscaping. ARGLEY SWEATSHIRTS! by Russell Ament White shirt w/RedNavy pattern. Light blue shirt w/Columbia blue. Columbia blue Gray w/RoyalWhite $17.50 each. Box 317, Brookhaven, MS 39601 or 610 835-1035. Box 317, Brookhaven, MS 39601 or 610 835-1035. A strong key outlet. Remonti Retail Laundry. Clu- lled in the southern side of the north. March of Memorial Magnum 864, Illionee 812, Illinois 800. Private room available in artistic environment. Proximity thinking individuals look for room with a high level of creativity, awards gallery and Art Center. Urban space is well located to provide the most available immediately for the right man. low weight, low lift, low HP stop smoking or lose weight with acupuncture 740 4422 9 5 www.neuropathica.com Sincere male wants to meet female 29-34 for lasting relationship, write and send photo P.O. Box 1256. Benedict's Wine Selection includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine. BM Illinois. R937-8729. SKI GETAWAY In Keystone Colorado with Pyramid Pizza! Feb. 2-6 239 per person Trip includes . . . Roundtrip motorcoach transportation from Lawrence. 2 nights' lodging in 2-bedroom, 2 bathing condos, sleeping at, Keystone Lodge Condominium located in the heart of Keystone resort near shopping, spots and night spots. 3 days of ski rental. 2 days of lift tickets 3 days of lift tickets * Keg of beer on the bus! Pre-tour pizza party! Ens. For $10. reservations call or visit Maupintour travel service O 749-0700 fe sure to stop by the Etc. Shop, gifts, new fun sunglasses 72 Massachusetts 841-061 MEMORANDUM OF HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early moments of care after birth. Contact: care. confidentialize. Kansas City Area. Call (317) 542-8900. Curtis Mathes *showstoppers* 600 movies; choose **Hire a video machine** and pre-recorded videos. KANSAN Classifieds reach the campus community FREE NAME IMPRINTING with purchase of two or more boxes of Hallmark cards. Arbethal's Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits. it's not too early to order Christmas portraits (or PHOTOS) of Pennsylvanian 1841-1802. I appoint: Joseph S. W. GET FIT OVER BREAK FOR ONLY $15 being in this company Before Delay $ 5 and Leave a membership throughout threemonths break for only $ 15 From $ 10 If you are willing to accept this offer. --- NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER 1604 W 73th, Northern Hills Center, 749-1511 Make this holiday season special with Mary Kay's Call Diane 841-4734 PRESAMING FOR FINALS Study Skills Workshop. Workshop on test preparation. Free to register required. The Student Registry is available at www.finals.edu. 190 VAIL-BEAVER CREEK call TOLL FREE 1-800-222-4800 or CONSULT YOUR TRAVEL AGENT FOR DISCOUNT RATES on lodging, lifts, and rentals Say it on a shirt, custom silkscreen printed. T-shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt拭目 Swells 749-1611. Special Price on Christmas Portraits through December 1 at Stuart's Studio for call details. 749-1611 Danger signs* Headache, backache, arm pain, arm pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, call the Chiropractic Health Center and Doctor M.E. for treatment. Insurance accepted. No charge for consultation Start a European Tradition in Your Home Today In 18th Century Europe, a resourceless parent created a colorful box with 24 little doors, each door opening up a picture, toy or present. The child would open the door and find a little present. Now you have the opportunity to make this tradition your own with our festive advent calendar with a molded chocolate behind each door. Chocolatr Unlimited - Southern Hills Center * 749.1100 Professors .. grad students! Turn your knowledge, skills into a profitable seminar. Highly successful seminar entrepreneur will help you FREEP NFOH, Jordan Seminars, box 124, Topeka, KS 69055 Wholesale Sound Rental, P.A. Guitar, and Bass amps 841-649. Start a tradition for only $2.85. Special for students. Haircuts $7 and perms $25. Charm, ask for Deena Jenna 843-3300 SERVICES OFFERED Two stores full of bargains and you are helping them find what you're looking for. Shop SA *T AIR* stores 16, E 6th & 14th Verizon. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization Notes to see how he uses to use it in his work. See Chapter 31 for exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Crier. The notes are free to read. graphics. WORD ARTISTS Elene ml2017 272 The image contains text that is partially obscured or illegible, making it difficult to accurately transcribe. However, I will try to provide as much detail possible. 1. **Graphic Illustration:** The image shows a graphic illustration of a scene featuring two figures standing on a grassy field with a small house in the background. The sky is clear and blue. 2. **Text:** In the foreground, there are two lines of text: - "Word Artists Elene ml2017" - "272" 3. **Background:** The background consists of a green field with some fallen leaves. There is a small house situated in the middle of the field. ENGLISH M. 4 yrs, mtev teaching exp, wint尔州 grammar camp, will edit, prodroof paper large journals. Ertoll now . In Lawrence Drive School, receive transportation provided by Transportation provider, drive now, pay later. STADIUM BANER SHOP. 1003 Massachusetts, downtown, All Hallows. $9.00 No appointment Alterations, mending, euton sewing, Cleaning carpets, windows, apps, offices, houses laundry warehouses. VIDEOPARETS OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT SCHORES: Time Management, Listening and Speaking. Language Studio Skills Shown Friday, February 16. Language Studio Skills Shown Friday, February 16. Assistance Center (21) Strong, 842-604-6443 **Foreign Students:** Personal, efficient editing of your dissertation, ms. s. technical report, research proposal. A A A A AFFABLE TYPEING SERVICE. Fast, first quality typing. WORD PROCESSING 641-0006 BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing _confidential counseling 842-8421 TYPING AAA TYPING H. good typist? 841 192-42 after p. m, Mon Fri & all day Sat Sun 12:00pm - 5:30pm 24 hour typing. All day, all night. Extension exe- tences with all forms of typing. For all your typing APFORDABLE QUALITY (for all your typing needs) Call Dugge, 882-7945 after 6 p.m. Absolute Letter Perfect Typing, Editing, Book Writing and Publishing high-quality service at 800-661-6911, bloomington, IL 60620. Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed, over- night service (under 25 pages). Call Mary K-841-6673. Accurate, affordable typing through the holidays. Call Nancy K-841-1219 Becky's Typing Excellent typing at reasonable rate IBM (sensitive) Call 624-898-4881 before 10 a.m. Callerry for your typing needs. letters, term- papers, and mail. Send us using adclicite 842-475 or 842-6971, 11:30 a.m to the address above. Call TIP TOP TYPING 1203 iowa Experienced callers and editor Xerox 6125 Memorywisher Royal Telephone 800-742-9111 Elvie could judge. Shakespeare could write my *melat* typing. Call 642 8043 after 5:30 and weekends. Experienced typist thesis, desserts, term papers, correcting and Correcting Silicate Barb 842 2110 after 5:00 Experienced typist will type letters, theses and dissertations. IBM Correcting Selective. Call 512-654-3200. Experienced typist. Term papers, those all used in research. Must be proficient in Pda and will correct spelling. Posts 443-5448, Mrs. Joyce. Frustrated? Pressed for time? Let me type for you so you can concentrate on research and composition. Read Typing Service Just eat it at campus: 648-6880 WORKING TYPING BOOK PROCESSING 648-6880 WORKING TYPING BOOK PROCESSING Experienced typist will type diversion theses; term papers, ete. Reasonable rates. Call 842-3037 --firmly intimate needed for nice Bedroom apart. 18-month old needs nice Bedroom apart. per month plus 7/12 months. In call in early morning. It's a Fact. Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing Word Envelope. TYPICAL TEAMS. TEAM SERVICE. IBM JEANTHAPPE TEAMS. TYPEC SERVICES. IBM ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT 841-3510 TYPING PLUS: Thesus, dissertations, papers, textbooks, research articles. grammar, spelling, et al. English tutoring position, grammar, spelling, et al. English tutoring Typing - Dissertation, thesis, term paper, etc. Fast. accurate, reliable. Call 841-4537 DYND WORK PROFESSING - IBM Selectric and IBM IBM SYSTEMS - 100 Ward Park, Kansas - perfect spelling. 100 Ward Park, Kansas 3 services at 1 location typing, editing and graphics. WORD ARTISTS, call Eileen. 841 2127 Word Processing plus typing Dictation plus transcription from cassette plus microcardia Plus pickup plus graphs plus photography Plus pickup & delivery Plus library Research. Yarning Editing. WO help Library Research - Typing - Editing. Will help research, outline, write). 812-8240 2 Roommates to 2 BR apt. for spring semester $116.66 plus elec. $814.646 Nun or Lisa 2 female roommates wanted to share 2 bedroom apts 8 bedrooms, all utilities included. Call 844-3252 after 6 p.m. Female roommate wanted Prefer grad, student 810+man plus. 1.5hrs. Dishwasher, microwave, oven, refrigerator. Desperately Needed Math 10th! Book Fundamentals of Algebra 4th ed. by Snowskates. Must be 8th ed. (9th ed.) or higher. Mail to: School District Office, 236 N. Broadway, New York, NY 10017. Female rostrimate wanted $153 plus 1/2 utilities, water is paid on hour. Park 25x Availabli with a discount. Female roommate for spring semester. Bag full wardrobe, 12-inch TV, bluetooth speaker, male roommate wanted. Jan 1: Excellent deal! Slevel roommate in design apartely furnished with carpet, desk, office chair, standard neat bed, dress desk [B4 82920] and bedside lamp. Male renaissance needed for extremity apt. Sami. Student must have 3 yrs of experience in cleaning hats. Prefer non-smoking upper class or lower class accommodations. Req's masters degree. Male pennantmate will want to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath ap, with 2 other roommates $180 per month plus $200 per month. Male roommate, non-smoking, semi-serious to share 3 br. house with 2 others, over 21 yr. Four blocks from campus, spaces: 816 m², plus 1/2 low tilt unit, 450 m², plus 790 m², collectors' collection during vacations. Avail now then 31. Male roommate wanted for new 1 bedroom furnished apartment. 14.69 per month $1.01 a month (14 & West) and $1.27 a month (West). Male roommate requires for spring semester. Private team. On base hire $115 a month plus 1.2 hours per week. Male roommate, female term, share 2 BR apt. on campus. Utile, cabble TV paid 843-6891 Male roommate to hire a very nice 2-bed apt with present roommate. Apt in on bus route, near extention of kitchen. Roommate will pay $142.50 per 2 / unit(s). May substitute. Need for dishwasher, AC; newly carpeted and painted walls. Needed to move in as soon as possible or after completion. In-house delivery. Nr. 916-8499 or nr. 913-8383. COLLECT. HURRY 1. treat will pay for $100 deposit. Call 749-4411. Need 2 i tomates to share nice dupe in quiet, neighbor neighborhood with 2 fun and easyguy guys 240& Kasold 843-3104 Nominating female roommate for a 3 bedroom apartment, with own room. On bus route. A, pool. $100 per night. Perfect duplex apt. by stadium*. Modern, furnished. girls need one female roommate starting JAN. Feb. to Mar. for rent in the U.S. Non, quiet non-messy FEMALE roommate to share modern b3 triple bdq $160 plus one / 3 utilies. Partially furnished. A/C W/D, private bath. Refrigerator. Wet/dry storage. red, reference keys. Call 841-7459 after 6 p.m. Quiet roommate will share 2 bdrm ap, at 700 1-12 Akubra. Uppet floor of 3 new house 2 rooms from Community Merchant. For details, please call from Community Merchant. For details, please call 800-944-8487 (8-9-09) or 509-944-8487. Reminders needed to share contemporary furnishings are available on Friday, August 17. Leave December 3rd August 18th, calls *CALL* Roommate wanted to share a furnished 3-bedroom house located at 900 Emery. Call 843-6849. Roommate wanted immediately. 2 BR apartment, $169.00 plus 1/3 units. 3 blocks from union Wanted: Female roommate to share 2 bedrooms a bus route, close to campus. After Dec. 24th, $148 per week. Wanted Mature female no smoker to share brand new houseware at 10th and Michigan $190 plus Wanted: Non-smoking, female to share mine. Quit study atheism. No parties. $250.00 Wanted: mature female non-smoker to share trunk newtownhouse at 8th and Michigan $100 plus/12 hrs People read the Kansan classifieds to find homes, jobs, cars, typing services, etc. You can use the Kansan classifieds to sell anything from A to Z. Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 118 Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045. Use the rates below to figure costs and watch the results. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading: Write Ad Here: __ Name: Classified Display: Address: 1 col x 1 inch = $4.20 Phone: Date to Run 16 1 Day 2-3 Days 4.5 Days 15 weeks to foster $2.60 $0.15 $3.75 Additional foster 25c 50c 75c 10 Days of Two Weeks $6.75 --- 1 SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 29,1983 Page 10 KU returns official reply to sanctions Thomas says announcement might be soon The University of Kansas has sent its official reply to the NCAA regarding sanctions against the Jayhawk athletic program, the University general counsel said yesterday. By COLLIN HERMRECK Staff Reporter Vickie Thomas, the general counsel, said that KU had sent its reply during Thanksgiving break and that an announcement by the National Collegiate Athletic Association continued against KU was expected soon. FIVE FORMER KU football coaches, including Don Fambrough and John Hadl, and Jay Hawkys athletes and several other University officials appeared before the Intractions Committee on Oct. 28. Thomas declined to say whether KU had accepted or appealed the NCAA sanctions. Bill Hunt, head of NCAA enforcement, said yesterday that he would not verify that the NCAA office had received KU's reply. He also declined to say when an investigation would be made. The KU investigation would be made. KU received a letter from the NCAA on Nov. 14 and was given 15 days to accept or appeal the NCAA action against the NCAA Committee on Infractions. If the school appeals the sanctions, Hunt said; that appeal is reviewed by the NCAA Council at its meeting. The school's schedule is scheduled to meet in January. Hunt said that after receiving the school's reply, the NCAA would announce sanctions imposed on a teacher who had accepted the penalty. Hunt said the council would review the findings and the school's reply, as well as hear arguments from representatives of the college about which sanctions they wanted to appeal. When a case is resolved, Hunt said, the NCAA must be the first to announce the findings and final sanctions. KU 15 BOUND to secrecy until the official NCAA announcement. If KU were to release the information before that time, it would risk further sanctions or court action by the NCAA. Once the case is resolved, Hunt said, the results are issued as news releases to United Press International and the Associated Press. The Lawrence Daily Journal World reported on Nov. 14 that the NCAA had placed KU's football program on a two-year probation. The newspaper, which did not disclose it sources, said that KU would be restricted from television and bowl appearances for the 1984-85 season but not for the 1985-86 season. Women's team working hard for third tournament By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer Women's basketball coach Marian Washington said after a good workout yesterday that her team was working even harder now in practice to get ready for the Lady Techsters Dial Classic this weekend in Ruston, La. "We're trying to definitely work every moment to get the most out of the time we have." Washington said. "The players are beginning to grow up. We just have to be patient. We're learning from every game." Washington said that her team must play as well as it did Saturday in the first round of the playoffs. Washington said that the Jayhawks played their best game Saturday against Miami of Ohio by using good ball control in Ohio and dominating in rebounds. Classic in Minneapolis to keep up with first-round opponent Louisiana Tech "I EXPECTED MIAMI to be a good challenge for us," Washington said. "But we played intense defense and were in control from the beginning." The Jayhawks did not seem to have control of the game in Friday night's game. "They did not play well at all," Washington said. "Basically, it was a lack of intensity. We had a good talk about that after the game." Washington said that the players were at a stage now at which she would not accept anything but a maximum effort. "What I saw Saturday is that they can do it if they want it," she said. The Jayhawks will need to be in top form this weekend for their first-round game in the Lady Techsters Dial Classic, Louisiana Tech finished with a 31-2 record last year and advanced to the finals of the NCAA women's basketball championships, where it was defeated by Southern California. THE LADY TECHSTERS are a veteran club coached by Sonja Hogg, who has a 248-48 record in her 9-year coaching career. 'Our schedule is challenging.' Washington said. "My approach to the Louisiana Tech game is to just do the Washington also said that her team should gain something from playing a good team such as Lousiana Tech because it would help the Jayhawks later in the season when challenging for the Big Eight Conference title. Sophomore center Vickie Adkins, who has been out with a strained hamstring so far this season, returned to KU's lineup against Arkansas but the hamstring and might not be ready for the Dial Classic in Louisiana. Adkins played 23 minutes against the Razorbacks and scored seven points. minutes of the contest. Washington said that Adkins' condition would be evaluated each day this week. Freshman guard Sherri Stoecker missed the Minnesota tournament because of an injured knee. She is also questionable for this weekend. "SHE JUST NEEDS time," Washington said. "Then we will have a solid ballplayer back. She has a good feel for positioning inside." Trainer Pam Lund said yesterday that Stoecker's pain and swelling in her knee had gone down but that she did not have full extension of the knee yet. Her will see a physician later today to determine when she will be ready. Marino leads Dolphins over Cincinnati, 38-14 By United Press International MIAMI — Rookie Dan Marino drilled three touchdown passes, two to Mark Duper, last night to lead the Miami Jets to 18-14 rout of the Cincinnati Bengals. The victory was especially satisfying for Miami coach Don Shula, who only a few hours earlier announced that he had signed a multi-year, multimillion dollar owner Joe Robbie. Shula's previous contract was set to expire in February. Miami's sixth victory in seven games raised the Dolphins to 9-4 and gave them a two-game edge on Buffalo in the AFC East with three game remaining. Cincinnati suffered its second loss in the last six games and dropped to 5-8, ending any play-off hopes. Marino, who has led the Dolphins to a 6-2 record since taking over as a starter Oct. 9, completed 18 of 29 passes for 217 vcts. He opened the scoring with a 7-yard flip to Duper, a speedy second-year receiver, and then added a 15-yardter to the score, giving Dan Johnson, end Dan Johnson, Tony Nathan, whose 22-yard halftabback option pass to Bruce Hardy set up Johnson's touchdown, scored Miami's second touchdown from a yard out in the second quarter. Uwe Weber had a strong goal and Andra Frankel closed the scoring on a 5-yard run with 6:02 left. Cincinnati's first score came early in the second quarter on an 80-yard pass from Ken Anderson to Isaac Curtis. Pete Johnson plunged over from a yard out with 17 seconds left in the half to make it 17-14 at halftime. Duper's 15-yarder after Cincinnati punter Pat McCain manglehed a 20-yarder, giving the Dolphins possession on the Bengals' 42. Johnson's score was set up when William Judson intercepted an Anderson pass on the 38-yarder and 17-yarder score came one play at Marino found Joe Rose for a 37-yard gain. The final 30 minutes belonged to the Dolphins. The second-half scores by Duper and Johnson were both set up by Cincinnati mistakes. The Dolphins took a 7-lead with 6:16 left in the opening quarter when Marino escaped from pressure, rolled to his left and pulled in. Then he ended zone for a 7-yard touchdown. 50 13 MIAMI, Fla. — Miami wide receiver Mark Paper leaps high in the air to pull down a Dan Marino pass. Duper and Marino combined for two touchdowns as the Dalhams whined Cincinnati 38-14 last night. KU bowling team finishes in top ten at national match By the Kansan Staff The KU men's bowling club finished ninth out of 48 teams Saturday at the National Collegiate Team Match Tournament Nov. 25-26 at St Louis. Kelly Coffman, Topaka freshman, led the chawks with an 11 game average of 199. "They did really well," said Warren Booster, KU bowling club coach. "They were in second place Friday night, which was great for them to be doing so well in a 48-team tournament. I'm happy with the way they finished." The KU bowlers dropped from second to ninth place Saturday but still placed higher than any other Big Eight school in the tournament. The Jayhawks finished ahead of Oklahoma State, Kansas State, Missouri and Nebraska. Universities University Junior College, Vincennes Ind., was the tournament champion. Other KU finishers were Jim Mack, Kailua, Hawaii, senior, 197 average; Ned Istas, Lyons senior, 191 average; Dave Passage, Arlington Heights, III, senior, 190 average; and Howard Shaw, Lawrence senior, 189 average. Coaches receive use of cars in athletic department By the Kansan Staff "It is an essential part of our athletic program," Frederick said. "It's very important for us to get such gifts to be given." He added that Larry Brown and Nilke Gottfried. One of the most significant benefits given to the KU athletic department is the use of new automobiles donated by state and area car dealerships, said Bob Frederick, director of the Williams Educational Fund. "The cars are also essential for recruiting trips by our assistant The donated automobiles are gifts in-kind given through the Williams Fund. They are loaned to the athletic department for about 6,000 miles — depending on the individual dealer — at which time they are called back by the dealer for resale. A newer automobile is then given in place of the used one. The athletic department is responsible for supplying the license tags for the wearer. Frederick said the Nebraska athletic department has a waiting list of automobile dealers wanting to donate vehicles for the staff to use. "THEY HAVE MORE cars to be used than they have personnel to use them," Frederick said. "The big attraction in Nebraska right now for the dealers are season football tickets, and for Cornuskuser fans, that's a tremendous Life at KU is not as luxurious, but it has always looked for new beneficiaries. "Right now we have 31 automobiles for use by the athletic department and administrative staff. That's an investment from last year," Frederick said. THE ATHLETIC STAFF members and administrators who get to use the facilities in the gymnasium. Williams Fund, are not determined by Frederick but rather by Athletic Director Monte Johnson, who gets the use of a new car himself. Frederick said some of the coaches and administrators who head the gift list are basketball coach Larry Brown, his assistants Ed Manning and Bob Hill and football coach Mike Gottfried. Brown also receives a second car for his wife to use, as does football coach Mike Gottfried. Gottfried's entire staff also enjoys the luxury of using new vehicles. They include John Fox, Bill Baldridge, Mike Sheppard, Tommie Liggins, Vic Eumont, Mike Solari, Jay Bonds, Ron Timmons, and Brian Vance. The car to be used by an assistant coach whose hiring has not yet been announced. Ken Graff, first-year strength coach, Mike Fisher, academic adviser, and Dean Nesmith, athletic trainer, also receive a new car for their use every THREE COACHES of non-revenue sports receive vehicles through the Williams Fund: baseball coach Marty Pattin, golf coach Ross Randall and track coach Bob Timmons. Band member Robert Foster also gets to use a new car. Although the list of new car recipients is impressive, there are not many. Marian Washington, who has been the women's head basketball coach for 12 years, Gary Kempt, men and women, and Billy Simmons, Women's Swim Coach of the Year, Frederick said the reason women's head coaches are left out is that non-revenue sports must wait behind the revenue sports such as football and basketball for their chance at a new car. THE REASON non-revenue coaches such as Pattin, Randall and Timmons have one is because it was something we needed to do to complete the package to get them to come to KU.' Frederick said. On the administrative side, Frederick and his assistant Richard Konzem, Dong Vance, sports information director, Tom Hedrick, sports network director, Mike Hamrick, administrative assistant to the Athletic Director, Jon Flood, Temple assistant athletic directors all receive courtesy vehicles. Marian Washington at one time had the use of a car through the Williams Fund but lost the privilege when the car was stolen and Dick hard economically, Frederick said. Jayhawks' Kallmeyer named to Kodak All-America squad By the Kansan Staff Kallmeier will appear on Bob Hope's Christmas special on NBC television. He is the 11th KU player to earn All-Star honors since quarterback David Jaynes in 1973. Carla Coffey, women's track coach and Bob Stancill, women's softball coach Bruce Kallmeyer, the all-time scoring leader for kickers in the Big Eight, will be named to the Kodak All-America Football team today. "I can only sit here and wonder when I will get another one." Washington said, but without one although it would be a good help to our program if we had one. Kallmyer finished his career breaking two NCAA, eight Big Eight and eight KU records. His national records were most points scored by a kicker in a game with 21 against Wichita State and best field goal percentage for field goals under 40 yards with a 89.19 percent. Offensive linemen Paul Fairchild and Reggie Smith will both participate in the Blue-Gray Football Classic on Christmas Day in Montgomery, Ala. Fairchild has also been named to the Japan Bowl. 6. 000 miles The Kodak team was selected by the American Football Coaches Association. Kallmeer previously had been named first-team all-Big Eight by both the Associated Press and United Press International. Several other Jayhawk seniors will be playing in all-star games around the country. Quarterback Frank Seurer and the Senior Bowon Jan. 14 in Mobil, Aloa. Kallmeier also has been selected to participate in the Hula Bowl in NFL Standings American Conference SPORTS ALMANAC FOOTBALL | | Team | W | L | OP | Pts. | W | L | OP | Pts. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Pittsburgh | 9 | 4 | 0 | 69 | 284 | 24 | 3 | 0 | 75 | | Boston | 1 | 4 | 0 | 68 | 295 | 24 | 3 | 0 | 75 | | Cincinnati | 1 | 4 | 0 | 68 | 295 | 24 | 3 | 0 | 75 | Miami W L T O Pct PF PA 18 Buffalo 9 4 0 60 52 245 NY Jets 6 7 0 462 282 257 New England 6 7 0 462 282 257 Railings 6 7 0 462 282 257 x-LA Raiders 10 3 0 70 769 236 284 Denver 10 3 0 70 738 237 254 Seattle 7 6 0 358 352 354 344 Kansas City 7 6 0 358 352 354 344 LA Dodgers 10 3 0 70 769 236 284 National Conference W L T Pct PF PA x Dallas 11 2 0 43 417 277 Central Minnesota 7 6 0 538 281 302 Detroit 7 6 0 538 281 302 Green Bay 6 7 0 462 365 379 Tampa Bay 6 7 0 462 365 379 Tampa Bay 2 1 1 0 191 191 8 Washington 11 1 2 0 848 342 794 9 Houston 11 2 0 848 342 794 Philadelphia 11 2 0 848 342 794 Indiana 11 2 0 848 342 794 Thursday's Results Detroit 45, Pittsburgh 3 Dallas 35, St. Louis 17 Sunday's Results Cleveland 10, Miami卫38 Tampa Bay 12, New Orleans 17, Minnesota 16 N Y Jets 14, New England 3 Washington 20, Philadelphia 24 Chicago 18, Seattle 14 San Diego 11, Denver ? L.A. Harra Miami San Francisco 8 5 0 6 513 319 286 New Orleans Boston 8 5 0 651 376 287 Dallas MISSOURI KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Mark Olberding, right, battles Portland's Mychal Thompson for a loose ball. The Kings, led by Larry Drew, who scored 26 points and handed out 17 assists, beat the Trailblazers 113-104. Former KU star Darnell Valentine scored 19 points for the Trailblazers. Eddie Johnson added 24 points and Mike Woodson 19 as the Kings won for the fifth time in their last six games and ended Portland's three-game winning game. The loss knocked the Trail Blazers out of first place in the Pacific Division. Drew gets 26 as Kings win By United Press International DREW AND LASALLE Thompson scored four points apee during a 10-0 spurt that put the Kings ahead for good at 10-4 four minutes into the game. Drew went on to score 10 points and deal out nine assists, and the Kings shot 61 percent from the field to expand their lead to 61-47 at halftime. But Mychal Thompson and Jim Paxson scored 13 points each to help the Trail Blazers cut the lead to 85-75 through three periods, and Darnell McCormack scored six openings opening eight minutes of the final quarter to reduce the deficit to 99-96. KANSAS CITY, Mo — Larry Drew collected 26 points and a career-high 17 assists to carry the Kansas City Kings to a victory night over the Portland Trail Blazers. Drew then made two steals 17 seconds apart, scoring the first time on a lay-up and then feeding Eddie Johnson for a layup to trigger a 10-3 gain that gave the Kings a comfortable 109-99 lead heading into the final minute. Mychal Thompson scored 28, Valentine 19, Paxson 17 and Calvin Matt 16 for the Wildcats. Blazers fell one-half game behind idle Los Angeles in the Pacific Division. 1 Budget initiatives Rep. Roberts wants to cut deficit Inside, p. 6. The University Daily KANSAN BRRRRR High, 35. Low, 13. Details on p. 2 Vol. 94, No. 70 (USPS 650-640) Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas Wednesday morning, November 30, 1983 U.S. and Israel to strengthen military ties By United Press International WASHINGTON — President Reagan and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shalam, seeking to bury past differences and foster a new era of peace, yesterday agreed to a sweeping series of new laws. the threat to our mutual interest posed by increased Soviet involvement in the Middle East. Israeli annexation of the Golan Heights. The difference is that the new agreements' terms are not put on paper. Reagan, following two days of talks with Shamir, announced the formation of a joint political-military committee with Israel that would deliberate joint military maneuvers and planning between the two countries, and the establishment of U.S. military equipment on Israeli soil. The agreements appeared to signal closer U.S. Israel relations at any time since before the first bombing in Gaza. 'I return to Jerusalem strengthened in my conviction that with the aid of the United States of America, and fortified by the friendship of its people and government, a strong Israel can indeed achieve peace.' "Among the specific areas to be considered are combined planning, joint exercises and teamwork." IN EFFECT, the decision revived the Memorandum of Understanding between the United States and Israel that was suspended a month after it was signed Nov 30, 1981, following The announcement marked a change from the often strained relations under Shamir's predeceased father. Israeli Prime Minister agreements also come at a time when U.S. Marines are bogged down under fire in Beirut, and Israel's economy is in its worst shape since the Jewish state was born nearly 36 years ago. In announcing the joint commission to "enhance U.S. Israel cooperation," Reagan said that the United States will maintain its "unwavering commitment" to the The joint military committee is to conduct its first meeting in Washington in January. ment in Israel " AMONG SPECIFIC STEPS agreed on is the lifting of an embargo on the shipment of cluster shells to Israel, imposed more than a year ago amid allegations that the weapons had been used against civilians during the Israeli invasion of Lebanon. A senior U.S. official said the sales would resumel, however, only in accord with "a document that provides a definitive guarantee against violations." In addition, Reagan said the United States would "take a number of other concrete steps aimed at bolstering Israel's economy and security," including better terms for military assistance and negotiation of a free-trade agreement. As he left the White House, Shamir said the United States and Israel "proceed on the road to peace with increased vigor" as a result of the ongoing unrest. He underlying sticking points had been overcome. "I RETURN TO Jerusalem strengthened in my conviction that with the aid of the United States of America, and fortified by the friendship of the international community, a strong farcid can indeed achieve peace." See REAGAN, p. 5, col. 2 JACK PARKER LIFE Mr. Bullard Miss Williams Cadets stranded in blizzard maintain record of last hours By United Press International GOODLAND — Teenage sweethearts at the Air Force Academy kept a "log" of the hours before their death by carbon monoxide poisoning during a Thanksgiving trip, officers said yesterday. The bodies of Brian Bullard, a high school football star and second-string defensive tackle at the Academy, and his girlfriend, Diane L. Williams, a member of the Academy's woman's snow in their home-drive vehicle under a bridge on Interstate 70 "THE YOUNG MAN left notes, kind of a running diary," said acting Coroner Kenneth Austin. "He was well aware of what was going on." He said about every piece of scratch paper that he had." Sheriff Jack Armstrong said the couple, both 19, had driven from Colorado Springs, Colo., to Salina for Thanksgiving dinner with Williams' family. On Sunday they headed back to the Academy. Entries in the "log" Bullard kept indicated that the two ignored a road barricade about 2.30 p.m. Sunday at Colby. A later entry said they got stuck about 9:49 p.m., indicating they had required seven hours to travel 35 miles to near Goodland. Kansas Highway Patrol Capt. Don Pickert said, "By the time the roads are closed, it has been determined that those roads are simply not passable." WILLIAMS FATHER, Ronald Williams of Cameron, Mo., said Ballard was probably worried about being late. He was on the varsity football team and an important game coming up Saturday. They had finals coming up too, and that was probably also on their minds. The blizzard, packing high winds, heavy snow and sub-freezing temperatures, moved across western Kansas Sunday and early Monday. Nineteen inches of snow fell in Goodland. "They stopped in the worst place they could have stopped." Austin said. "They stopped underneath an overpass, which snowed them in like an igloo." If they had done either one of two things — park in the open or run the motor only for short periods of time — there wouldn't have been any problem. THE CORONER SAID he had not seen the notes, but was told by a nurse and a relative that they contained messages written by Bullard to John M. Coulter when he realized the situation was homeless. Neother Williams' father nor Bullard's father, let. Air Force Major Barry Bullard of Colorado Skipper. Bullard and Williams met at the Air Force Academy, where Bullard's mother, Betty, is a professional at the campus Eisenhower Golf Course and a former women's golf team coach. Customers opt to do the harvesting on entertaining Indiana family farm By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter That's when he decided to make the switch from commercial farming to retail farming and agriculture. Joe Huber wasn't making a go of it financially on his family farm in 1967. Huber, with his wife, three sons and their families, raises 56 different types of fruits and vegetables on his 362 acre pick-your own farm. He also opened the Joe Huber Restaurant on the farm Last night Huber described the secrets of entertainment farming to about 370 people who attended the annual Lawrence Chamber of Commerce event and volunteered at Lawrence Holdme. 200 W. Turnipke Access Road "PEOPLE WHO COME to our farm have a good time." Huber told the farmers and businessmen. "They enjoy the atmosphere. We make it neat, clean and easy." Today, Huber's Starlight U-Pick Farms, in Starlight, Ind., is making a nice profit, and Huber is spreading his marketing strategy to other farmers. HUBER CREATED AN eight-foot pumpkin out of polyurethane that was dubbed "The Great Pumpkin," and he installed a public address system inside. Huber said that six groups of kindergarteners a day came to the farm to talk to The Great Pumpkin. Longhurst calls for a summit for nuclear war alternatives apple butter, and they sell chili, sandwiches and hot cider. He also has a witches hut during Halloween where children can play in the straw, and he had a Halloween dress-up contest for the people who are still going to year to encourage them to get into the spirit of it. Huber's entertainment philosophy revolves around giving people more than one reason to come to the farm and giving them a reason to come back. In October, during apple season, Huber's entertainment plans reach their peak. Huber said the restaurant had been successful beyond his wildest expectations. The Huber family is serving 4,500 to 5,000 people a week in the 236-seat restaurant. "HOW MANY PEOPLE have tasted truly fresh sweet corn? We never serve sweet corn that is more than three hours old in our restaurant." "People come back year after year because their kids want to see the Great Gumpton," he said. He has square dance clubs perform and has a bluegrass band on a pontoon boat on the lake. His music is performed by a band. "We felt if we could put out country cooking like my wife and the other ladies can, we would cook better." The addition of the restaurant increased sales at his farm market this year by 142 percent from By JOHN HOOGESTEGER Staff Reporter "It's almost just like a big old country fair," Huber said. In addition to entertainment, Huber trades on cleanliness, high quality, wide variety and an NEW ORLEANS — Lawrence Mayor David Longhurst yesterday again encouraged U.S. and Soviet leaders to get together and talk about alternatives to nuclear war. Mayors Ernest Morial of New Orleans and Young Andrew of Atlanta joined Longhurst in his request during a morning news conference at the annual Congress of the National League of Cities. Longhurst is at the congress representing Lawrence, along with Commissioner Howard Hill and City Manager Buford Watson. The five-day conference is designed to help leaders become better leaders by improving skills. More than 8,000 delegates from cities around the nation are attending the conference. See MIXER, p. 5, col. 4. The mayors also suggested diverting defense dollars to cities. EARLIER THIS WEEK at the convention, Coretta King Scott, king of widow of Martin Luther King, told delegates that nuclear war was the most important municipal issue — more important than poverty, race relations and other humanitarian issues. "I WOULD ENCOURAGE presidents Reagan and Andropow to initiate a personal dialogue." Longhurst said. "Our expectations would be raised to high levels if the dialogue takes place." Jason Mauelder was since he took office in April. In May he invited Soviet President Yuri Lugachev to lead a delegation to conduct a summit meeting in Lawrence. The invitation, which followed the visit of Soviet athletes to the Kansas Relays, was quickly dubbed as the "Sunflower Summit." Longhurst said the world's leaders needed to examine alternatives to nuclear destruction, the focus of the ABC-TV movie, "The Day After." He also warned that new threats of a nuclear assault and showed the calamities effects of it. All other issues pale in comparison to nuclear war, she said. "Such alternatives cannot be initiated if we won't talk to each other." he said. Last week, at a town meeting following the broadcast of the movie, Longhurst resuscitated his in "We think that if only some of the billions of dollars going to build nuclear weapons were diverted to urban service programs, we could immediately eradicate much of the needs of the people within the cities of America as well as in the rural and suburban areas." Moral said. LONGHURST also VOICED his sentiments about nuclear war during the Midwestern Governors' Conference in October, and when "The Day After" focused nationwide media attention on Lawrence. Longhurst was again at the center of the nuclear issue. Longhurst has been continually outspoken about nuclear war since he took office in April Young said his city council was in favor of a nuclear freeze, and Morial said U.S. defense dollars would be better spent on solving the problems of the nation's cities. "We want to make the point that it is a municipal issue, and give the delegates something they can take back to their own communities," he said. The bodies are widely believed to be those of former Prime Minister Maurice Bishop and three of his ministers — one of whom was pregnant with Bishop's child — killed by government troops six days before the Oct. 25 invasion by troops from the United States and six Carribean nations. U.S. pays up for damages in Grenada American forces could withdraw before Christmas Coroner Lyle St. Paul said yesterday he was awaiting a report from the St George's police commissioner before he decides to hold an inquest on four unidentified bodies inspected by U.S. army pathologists. ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — The United States has paid about $115,000 to more than 100 Grenadians who have claimed non-combat damages suffered as a result of the Oct. 25 American led invasion, a U.S. Army officer said yesterday. GRENADIAN AUTHORITIES took possession of the bodies yesterday after U.S. military officials said they could not conclusively identify the bodies. "We are taking claims for negligence by our people," said Capt. Mark Warren, a legal officer who works in the U.S. Army's claims office in the Grenadian capital. "We would pay for acts done by our soldiers such as if one of our vehicles accidentally hit a Grenadian vehicle and the like." Some Grenadians said they were dissatisfied with the army's initial negative response to their claims, but officials from the U.S. Agency for International Development said most would be helped from other congressional funds. Warren said since the military opened its claims office in St. George's Nov 7, he has received thousands of claims, most of them alleging combat damage. But the office has only approved a handful of them, he said. By United Press International SOME $115,000 had been paid out over the last three weeks to 113 Grenadians whose claims had been approved, Warren said. Claims for damages suffered in actual combat are not honored under American law. Staff Reporter By SUSAN WORTMAN Special Olympics are the highlight of students' year The Indoor Special Olympic games — they will not be quite like those that will take place next year in Los Angeles, yet the feats of the athletes are as great and the medals will be just as brilliant Five teenagers, who are students at Cordley Elementary School, have been trained for the last three to four weeks for these games, which will take place this weekend in Lawrence. Each hopes to bring home one of the shiny gold medals. The students said yesterday that they had been waiting for this weekend all year. The events will take place at different locations around Lawrence. SPECIAL OLYMPIES ARE like the regular Olympic games except they are for handicapped See related story p. 14 people, said the students' teacher, Maxine Gover. The games are the highlight of the students' year. "We stress their competing with themselves. We tell them that they did better this year than last year," she said. Gover added that the games help build the confidence of the participants. Special Olympics also gives students an opportunity to compete in athletic events and meet others who have handicaps. Some of the athletes come from or international Special Olympics, Gover said. THE INDOOR SPECIAL Olympic events include swimming, volleyball, basketball, gymnastics. The athletes from Cordley will not be participating in volleyball or swimming. They will go skating, but will not compete in skating events. Bowling is their main event, Gover said. "The bowling will be at Hillcrest. Then there will be a shuttle bus to the skating rink. Then they can go to J Watson's for drinks and a place to eat. You'll see that there. That is something new for them," she said. Every part of the Olympics is a special event, Gover said. "It is fun for the kids," she said. "They love it." Gary Smith/KANSAN See SPECIAL, p. 5, col. 4 GRAY SIMON ANNANY Yvette Bell, 15, shoots a basketball at a goal at Cordley Elementary School. She and her classmate, John Baughman, 12, hope to have a ball at this weekend's Special Olympics where their goal is to do well in the bowling competition. 1 1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1983 NEWS BRIEFS From United Press International Dow Jones average hits record high trading mark NEW YORK — After a sluggish start, the Dow Jones industrial average soared to a record high yesterday in an afternoon rally paced by blue chip stocks that pushed volume past the 100 million-share level. In addition to blue chip issues, stocks involved in takeover situations scored big gains in the surge. The Dow Jones industrial average, which dropped 7.62 Monday, climbed 17.38 to a record 1,287.20 surpassing the previous mark of 1,284.65 set on October 10. The Dow has risen 72.36 points in the past three weeks. The Dow Jones transportation average jumped 7.29 to 611.08, and the Dow utility average increased 0.19 to 136.99. Commonwealth seeks troop pullout NEW DELHI, India — The British Commonwealth summit conference yesterday called on the United States and the Soviet Union to withdraw troops from both Grenada and Afghanistan in a sweeping communique that appeared to equate the two invasions. The communique, issued at the conclusion of the Commonwealth's weeklong summit, covered nearly every major international issue — touching on Cyprus, the Middle East, Cambodia, Central America, Namibia and the Indian Ocean. The document was coupled with the so-called "Goa Declaration," named for the former Portuguese enclave on India's west coast visited by the leaders, urging the superpowers to resume nuclear arms control talks. Relatives to identify crash victims MADRID, Spain — Authorities asked grieving relatives yesterday to help identify the charred remains of victims in the crash of a Colombian jumbo jet that killed 181 people. investigators said that they still had few clues on what caused the Avianca Boeing 747 to crash as it approached the Madrid airport in early morning darkness Sunday. Only 11 people survived the accident. It infrequently received an earlier decision not to allow relatives to see the Officials reversed an earlier decision not to believe the gruesomeness remains of the victims, but who were badly burned and not yet been identified. more than half of the victims included passengers from South America, France, Italy, Sweden and West Germany, and an American identified only as A. Kane. Lavelle denies she lied in testimony WASHINGTON — Declaring "I had no reason to lie," Rita Lavelle emphatically denied yesterday that she had ever perjured herself in congressional testimony about her handling of the EPA's toxic waste cleanup program. cleanup program. Lavelle, 35, is charged with perjury and obstructing a congressional investigation into the Superfund waste cleanup program, facing penalties of up to 25 years in jail and $21,000 in fines if convicted. The counts stem from allegations that she lied under oath; impeded an investigation into a controversial toxic waste enforcement case involving Aerojet-General Corp., her former employer in California; and used the $1.6 billion Superfund program to help Republican candidates. Warnings against aspirin delayed WASHINGTON — The government said yesterday that it had delayed a campaign to warn the public about a suspected link between aspirin and the childhood illness Reye's syndrome but denied it had bended to industry pressure. The Department of Health and Human Services commented on the campaign after a consumer group accused the administration of caving in to the industry by canceling the program. A spokeswoman for the Public Health Service said the program, which was to begin last month, had been delayed to revise and clarify its plan. The consumer group wants warning labels affixed to aspirin bottles telling parents to use caution in administering aspirin to children who have the flu or chicken pox. Supreme Court hears Title IX case WASHINGTON — A Reagan administration lawyer asked the Supreme Court yesterday to narrow the scope of a key women's rights law that bans sexual discrimination in schools and colleges receiving federal aid. The court is considering arguments on a case brought to it by Grove City College, a small private school near Pittsburgh which never has been accused of sex discrimination and wants to stay free of federal intervention. Grove City contends it should not be subject to the women's rights law, Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, because it receives no federal money. nifederal money Women's rights groups say the college benefits from federal aid because some of its 2,200 students receive federal student grants and loans, which they use to pay tuition and room and board. Times Sauare tower razing planned NEW YORK — A really company wants to buy and tear down the historic Times Square tower, the building where the traditional dropping of a ball brings in the new year, the company said yesterday. A spokesman for Park Tower Realty, the firm designated to build four office buildings in a Times Square redevelopment project, has offered $10.5 million to TSNY Realty Corp., owners of the 26-story tower, a spokesman said. The plan is to demolish the 78-year-old building and build a plaza that would include sculptures and four buildings forming a semi-circle. Plans for the new complex call for the ball-towering ceremony to be moved to a 49-story office tower that would be erected on the south side WEATHER FACTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORREAST to 7 PM EST 11-30-83 SEATTLE 30.00 29.77 MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON COOL FAIR COLD NEW YORK SAN FRANCisco DENVER CHICAGO LOS ANGELES MILD DALLAS ATLAINTA HIGHEST TEMPERATURES NEW ORLEANS MIAMI 40 40 60 60 LEGEND RAIN SNOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORCECAST to 7 PM EST 11-30-83 2400 AM UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST Today, seasonally frigid air will flow over most of the Northern and Central states. Locally, today will be partly cloudy with a high near 35, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tomorrow will be warmer,but cloudy,with a high near 40. West German protesters try to halt trucks BONN, West Germany — Police arrested protesters blocking a U.S. base yesterday for the fourth straight day, hauling demonstrators from the path of a heavily guarded truck conveyor carrying parts for nuclear missiles. By United Press International Four of the 27 protesters were arrested, bringing to 46 the number arrested at the U.S. artillery base at Maltungen, near Stuttgart, since Sat The arrests came as West German military experts told a parliamentary committee the nuclear arms race was dangerous and threatened to run out of A POLICE SPOKESMAN said 27 protesters sat and lay in a road leading to the main gate at 3 a.m. in freezing temperatures as a military convoy of 14 huge truck transports escorted by 10 police cars tried to enter the base. The Pentagon has confirmed Pershing-2 parts arrived in West Germany but neither Washington nor Bonn has said where the weapons would be stored while being prepared for distribution. The protesters said the vehicles carried components for new U.S. Perishing 2 missiles arriving for storage before being made operational by the end of the year. under the current NATO plan, 108 Pershing 2 missiles will be stationed in West Germany and 464 cruise missiles in Britain, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and West Germany during the next five years. As West German officials sought to calm tensions increased by the arrival of the U.S. missiles in the country, scientists and military experts testifying to the parliamentary Defense Council's军事检察院 policy had to be rethought. WEST GERMAN ARMY Gen. Lothar Domrose, former head of NATO's planning section in Europe, told the Klaus von Shubert, from the West German Army Training School in Munich, said the world had to return to the concept of minimal deterrence and secure a ban on chemical weapons before the arms race ran out of control. "It would leave nothing behind it," "Domroe said" "NATO as well as the Warsaw Pact knows nuclear weapons completely unsuitable for fighting a war." committee a nuclear war was no longer "wasteable" In another development, London's Daily Telegraph newspaper said Soviet President Yuri Andropov had sent a tough letter to British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, calling the distribution of cruise nuclear missiles in Britain a "threat" to the Soviet Union "that must be removed." OTHER LETTERS have been sent to West Germany's Chancellor Helmut Kohl, Italian Prime Minister Bettino Craxi, Belgian Prime Minister Wilfred Martens and Denmark's Prime Minister Poul Schulter. It was not known exactly how many messages were sent by Andropov, who has not been seen in public for more than 100 days. One notable Western leader, however, has not received an Andropov note — President Reagan. Western observers commented that the omission was a slap in the face for Reagan and an attack on the United States by appealing directly to West European governments. IN LONDON, diplomatic observers said the letters showed the Soviet messages were an indication Moscow was over governments rather than electors. In Moscow, a Western observer said: "The Soviets want to make a difference between the Americans and those Western Europeans who are nothing but White House. It's part of the old attempt to split the western alliance." Spacelab scientists test effects of weightlessness Ry United Press International SPACE CENTER, Houston Spacebacl the scientists hopped, dropped and were shocked in orbit yesterday to test their adaptation to weightlessness, and that they are not static about results so far from the space shuttle science expedition. "If you look at what's happened so far, you've got to be excited about what's coming," said chief scientist Charles Chappell at mission control, anticipating a scientific bonanza from the nine-day voyage. "Now there's a new capability available to us. It opens new horizons." LARRY BOURGEOIS, the flight director during much of the day, said in an evening report that both the Columbia and the Spaceclab were working well. "We're looking real good for a complete mission and a total Flight commander John Young and the two scientists on his 'red team,' Ulf Merbeld of West Germany and Robert Parker, completed their 12-hour shift at midday and handed operations over to the second shift — co-pilot Brewster Shaw and scientists Owen Garrott and Byron Lichtenhove. Young and Shaw were tending to operations of the shuttle Columbia in the cockpit while the scientists worked in the 23-foot-long Spacebacl in the shuttle's cargo bay. The flight deck and lab are linked by an 18-foot tunnel. The four scientist astromats served as guinea pigs much of the second day of the nine-day mission in an effort to learn how weightlessness affects the body, particularly the intricate inner ear system that keeps people balanced THEY WHIRLED ABOUT in a rotating chair, they denoted strange headgear to let scientists see how their eyes responded to body moves, and they underwent the hop, drop and shock tests in the name of science. The hop and drop experiments, using elastic cords to simulate the pull of gravity, tested the effect of the lack of gravity on basic postural reflexes. The shock and drop test applied a mild electric current to the lower leg nerves of Garritt to measure muscle cues from "falls" in orbit. Such life science experiments were concentrated in the beginning phase of the mission because the delicate inner ear balancing system of humans adapts rapidly to the pull of gravity on Earth and the lack of it in orbit. Doctors hope that what they learn will help them find ways to prevent space motion sickness, which affects to percent of all space thievers. "We think that we're doing extremely well and we're demonstrating that you can conduct this rich variety of science and conduct it successfully with this very nice mix of ground and air expertise." said Lt. Gen. James Abrahamson, the head of the shuttle program. OTHER RESEARCH WAS carried out yesterday. In all, 21 of the 72 experiments aboard the European spacecraft Spacecraft launched by the mission of the flight WINTER FITNESS COSTS LESS! ask about our rental program BICYCLE WITH STOPPER OMNI 2000 Home Cycle New lower price $229.95 quiet, fully adjustable compact RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 VERMONT • LAWRENCE, KS 66044 • (913) 841 6642 Rent it Call the Kansan nabil's RESTAURANT Public Holiday Private Club DAILY SPECIALS—Sun. thru Thurs. - Lamb in Onion Sauce - Beef Kabob - Lamb in Onion Sauce - Beef Kabob your choice - Beer Rabbit Spanish Chicken - Spanish Chicken 6.95 - Trout Almondine Entrees include salad, vegetable and homemade bread Recipient with other Kansas Clubs 925 Iowa in the Hillcrest Plaza 841-7226 & 841-7227 Smokehouse HOG HEAVEN RIB SPECIAL The finest in deep pit B.B.Q. flavor Sm Come see Beez of the Mistletoe PEPSI No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Big End $3^{75} Half Slab Small End $475 Half Slab Full Slab Go Go Only $750 This special good Wed., Nov. 30 Sun., Dec.4 TAMANU TAMANU 719 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence FREE * Listening and Notating * Textbook Reading ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT SERIES VIA VIDEOTAPE - Listening and Notetaking - Time Management - Foreign Language Study Skills Register to attend at the Student Assistance Center 123 Stall Hall, 664-4064 Friday, December 2; 1:30, 2:30, and 3:30 p.m. TOWN OF LOS ANGELES CITY OF CALIFORNIA Taco Salads 99c Reg. $1.49 Super Salads 1.99 Reg. $2.69 Guacamole Salad 99c Reg. $1.49 Wednesdays 11a.m.- 10 p.m. All you can eat Taco Salad Bar $2.99 all day Video Games 1528 W. 23RD. 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Box 8338 Fort Collins, Colorado 80525 J University Daily Kansan, November 30. 1983 Page 3 NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Funeral services to be held today in K.C. for KU junior Funeral services will be today for Sally Howe, Kansas City, Mo. junior, who died Monday at North Kansas City Memorial Hospital. Services for Howe, 21, who was majoring in psychology at the University of Kansas, will be at 11 a.m. today at St. Theresa Catholic Church, Parkville, Mo., said a spokesman for McGilley's Antioch Chapel, Kapel, City City, Mo. Services will also be conducted at 11 a.m. tomorrow at St. Augustine's Catholic Church, Milo, Iowa. Burial will be at Belmont Cemetery in Milo. She is survived by her parents, Rita and Charles Howe, and two brothers, Scott, of the home, and Dave, of Rome, New York. Gas supplier's rate increase rejected A price increase in natural gas rates that was expected to be passed on to Lawrence residents by the company that supplies the area with gas was rejected yesterday by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The increase had been expected in early December, but William Salome, president of Kansas Public Service Co., the local gas company, said that it is "not yet ready" to begin. Northwest Central Pipeline Corp, which is the wholesale supplier for KS, had asked for an increase of 9 cents per thousand cubic feet of water. The rejection will have no effect on KPS's request to increase gas rates 18.87 cents per mcf. The Lawrence City Commission passed on the local request to an arbor. The commission regulates KPS rates but does not control "pass-through" increases by Northwest Central. An official from the energy commission said the request was rejected on a technicality. House fire kills woman, injures son KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A 28-year-old woman was killed and her 5-year-old foster child was hospitalized in critical condition from injuries suffered in a fire at their house about 6 a.m. yesterday, fire officials said. Authorities arriving at the scene said they saw Charles Williams standing on the porch of the house screaming that two people were still there. The man's wife, Delores Williams, was carried from the house with the boy, Donald W. Williams, who is in critical condition in intensive care at Boston Medical Center. Investigators are attempting to determine the cause of the blaze, said Capt. Joe Galetti, a fire department public information officer. Damage to the house was set at $20,000 with $10,000 in damage to the contents. Hutchinson representative to resign TOPEKA — State Rep. John L. Myers, D-Hutchinson, said yesterday that he would resign his legislative seat next month to work in the state budget office as one of three policy analysts. Myers, 33, was appointed to the House in 1977 to first an unexpired term and then was elected to his first full term in 1978. He presently is a member of the U.S. Congress. The representative said he expected to leave his House seat Dec. 12 and to begin his new $31,000 job the same day. He will be responsible for various general policy areas and will report to budget director Lynn Muchmore. Myers, who now is a consultant in community education, said the move to Topeka would help him more easily complete his doctorate in education at Kansas State University and would also be a career advancement. Democratic precinct committee members in Myers' district, which includes the Hutchinson area, will choose a successor to fill his House seat. Injections against hepatitis planned KANSAS CITY. Mo. — Students and employees at James Elementary School will be inoculated this week against infectious hepatitis, a disease that was diagnosed last week in a dining room worker, health officials said. The disease, an infection of the liver, can be transmitted by food contamination, said Gerald Hoff, chief of the Kansas City Health Department. However, the school's principal, Eugene Wolley, said the woman only supervised children during lunchtime and did not prepare or handle While the faculty and the 400 students may have been exposed, officials were concerned about people who attended a Parent Teachers Association meeting Nov. 19, when the worker apparently helped prepare food. The woman, who was not identified, was diagnosed last Wednesday. The illness is most contagious before the appearance of the symptoms, which include an upset stomach, jaundice and discoloration of urine or feces. Hoff said. The illness has a 15-day incubation period. Panel to discuss education report The Associated Students of Kansas will sponsor a panel discussion tomorrow afternoon in the Kansas Union about improvements in prison reform. Area legislators and educators such as State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Rawrence; State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-DLawrence; Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan.; Carl Knox, superintendent of Lawrence Unified School District 497; and Wendell Lady, member of the Board of Regents, will discuss changes that might be proposed to the legislature during its next session. The panel will discuss increasing class requirements and increasing teachers' salaries as recommended in a government report. "A Nation at Risk," the National Commission on Excellence in education report published in February, is the main inspiration for the fora established by the UN. The educational controversy has dragged on since the report was released, he said, but this forum was planned as "an end of the cycle." The discussion will be at 5:45 tomorrow afternoon in the Kansas Room of the Union. "The conference will be a resource tool so the legislators will know how people feel about the issue." Edmons said. ON THE RECORD TWO INCIDENTS OF INDECENT exposure were reported to Lawrence police Monday afternoon. A 14-year-old girl reported that a man in an orange Pinto with a white interior exposed himself about 3:30 p.m. Monday near Kansas Street and Utah Court. An 11-year-old girl said that a man in a small red car exposed himself about 4 p.m. Sunday in the 900 block of Tennessee Street. Police said that in both incidents the man had asked the girls for directions and then exposed himself. Police think that the same man was involved in both incidents. A REEL-TO-REEL TAPE recorder worth $2,000 was among items stolen between 8 a.m. Saturday and 8:30 p.m. Monday from a residence in the 1600 block of West Fifth, police said. Burglars entered by by forcing open a door. A cassette tape deck, an amplifier and a receiver were also stolen. Police have no suspects. GOT A NEWS TIP? Do you have a news tip, sports tip or photo idea? Call the Kansan news desk at (913) 864-4810. The number for the Kansan Advertising Office is (913) 864-4358. December graduates plan informal ceremony By ANA DEL CORRAL Staff Reporter tunity to walk down the hill. Many or they can't come back in May because they live too far away or because they have work obligations, he said. Staff Reporter Graduation ceremonies at the University of Kansas this fall might not be what most people would call formal. But even if graduates wear a bathrobe and a baseball cap instead of the traditional cap and gown, they will be able to say, "I walked down the hill," Stephen Sachs, Prairie Village senior, said yesterday. "It might be snowy and cold, but when you've been here four years you can endure a little cold weather," said Eileen Hodgson, of the December graduation ceremony. "If you don't have a job, it's kind of embarrassing." Sachs said. "December graduates kind of lose out on the ceremony. It is like getting a test back four weeks after you took it — it doesn't do anything for you." OFTEN, STUDENTS WHO graduate in December miss out on the oppor- The lack of a graduation ceremony in December at KU prompted Sahs to get together a group of December graduates who wanted to walk down the hill such that they would agree to organize an event and the tongue-in-cheek ceremony he said. "We are doing it for fun," he said, "but the motives are serious." Kansas State University invited December graduates to his house every year for a semi-formal ceremony which parents can attend. "Here you just kind of pack up and leave." he said. About 25 students graduating in December have said that they would join the staff of the college. SACHS SAID THAT the president of Sachs is circulating a petition to coax the KU band to play ceremonial music, but if the students can't get the band to play ceremonies they can easily way to have music at the ceremony. "We will have our own rendition of pump and circumstance," he said. "I'll bring it to you." Scott Seyfarth, Oak Brook, Ill., senior said he had decided to participate in the 2014 NCAA women's basketball tournament. fun. But he said he hoped that in the future, KU would conduct a graduation ceremony." "We are not trying to put the school down," he said. "We are doing it for fun. That's part of being in college — having fun." BUT THE CEREMONY will also mean that, even it he doesn't make it back for commencement. Seyfarth will be able to tell his friends he walked down the hill and to show them some pictures of the ceremony. Sachs said he hoped to find a speaker for the graduation ceremony. "If it is fairly warm I'll probably get somebody good," he said. The bathrobe and the baseball cap are required, he said. Champagne is on top. Hearing to resume on Fourhorn's trial for murder By the Kansan Staff A hearing to decide whether the jury acted improperly during the first-degree murder trial of James Chademo, 46, Friday in Douglas County District Court. The hearing on a motion for a new trial began yesterday, but Mike Malone, Douglas County district court associate judge, continued the hearing on Monday. The motion was filed by Fourhon's court-appointed attorney, Harton Hazlett. Computerark WOWLEEDGE EPSON EDUCATION COMMODORE MOVRORE DESIGNS VICTOR 9000 KAYPOR OKDATA 23rd A Louisiana Multi Shopping Center 841-0094 FOURHORN HAD BEEN charged in late June with the first-degree murder of Harry Puckett, 94, and with aggravated burglary in connection with a break-in of Puckett's home on June 24 in a convicted Oct. 23 of both charges. Hazlett said that some of the jorrs had matched Fourtorn's shoes to some blood impressions on a plywood board from Puckett's home. Hazlett said that as a result of matching the shoes to the blood-stained shoe impressions on the board, the jurors concluded that Fourhorn's shoes A FULL SPECTRUM OF OPTICAL SERVICES 4 East 7th St. 841-1113 could have made the impressions. But evidence that the blood-stained impressions matched Fourhour's shoes produced during the trial, Hazel said "Examination of evidence is fine." Hazlett said. "Experimentation is not." SPECTRUM TEXTON 841-1113 He said that Robert Olsen of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation had testified during the trial in October that Fourhorn's shoes did not make the impressions, although Olsen had not conducted any scientific tests. DURING DELIBERATIONS, two of Boyds Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy-Sell Trade Gold Silver Coins Antiques-Watches New Hampshire Lakewood 66044 913-842-8773 the jurors thought it might have made a difference if the shoes had been matched to the impressions while there was weight in the shoes, he said. Because of the jurors questions, such a test was conducted. The effect of the test, Hazlett said, was to introduce evidence outside the trial that the defendant had no chance to rebut. Malone said that jurors would be called to testify during the hearing on Friday so that he could determine what tests, if any, had been done. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM THE END OF CRAMMING FREE LESSONS NEAR CAMPUS THIS WEEK ONLY! INCREASE YOUR READING SPEED ON THE SPOT (BRING A FRIEND) Anthology POEM Writing Nest YOU CAN DO IT! It gets down to what you want to do and what you have to do. Take the free Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics lesson and you can do it—handle all the work college demands and still have time to enjoy college life. You can dramatically increase your reading speed today and that's just the start. Think of the time, the freedom you'd have to do the things you want to do. For twenty years the ones who get ahead have used Reading Dynamics. It's the way to read for today's active world — fast, smooth, efficient. Don't get left behind because there was too much to read. Take the free Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics lesson today. You can dramatically increase your reading speed and learn about dramatic storytelling that one free lesson. Make the college life the good life. With Reading Dynamics you can do it. LOCATION Univ. Lutheran Church 2104 W. 15th St. (Corner of 15th St. and Iowa . . . West side of campus) SCHEDULE OF FREE LESSONS THIS WEEK ONLY! Come try speed reading for yourself Come try speed reading for y Tues., Wed., Thurs. Nov. 29 Nov. 30 Dec. 1 2 p.m. or 4:30 p.m. or 7 p.m. Fri., Dec. 2 ONLY 12 noon or 2:30 p.m. or 5 p.m. SEATING IS LIMITED DON'T MISS OUT EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Plan to attend the earliest possible demonstration. OPINION The University Daily KANSAN November 30, 1983 Page 4 The University Daily KANSAN Published since 1889 bv students of the University of Kansas The University Daily Kaman (USP$ 60-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, KA 60053, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer sessions. Subscribes are $15 for six months or $25 for three months. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $25 for three months. Student subscribes are $3 a semester while the student activity is POSTMASTER. Send us your information to usp@ku.edu. MARK ZIEMAN Editor MARK ZIEMAN Editor DOUG CUNNINGHAM STEVE CUSICK Managing Editor Editorial Editor DON KNOX Campus Editor PAUL JESS General Manager and News Adviser DAVE WANAMAKER MARK MEARS Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager LYNNE STARK Campus Sales Manager JOHN OBERZAN Advertising Adviser ANN HORNBERGER Business Manager The big picture A state legislative committee spent a full day Monday listening to business owners complain about the way their property is valued for tax purposes. Fortunately, the interim Assessment and Taxation Committee didn't buckle under to the wishes of the businessmen and recommend that the "trending factor" method of amoizing property be abandoned. The method uses inflation and the equipment's expected life as a way of placing a value on it. Such a method seems to be a reasonable way of determining the value of equipment — and a company's ultimate tax bill. Business and industry representatives, however, call the method an unfair one. To them, decisions about the value of property can mean a difference of thousands of dollars in their tax bill. The method, they say, puts an unfair burden on business and industry, especially when businesses provide jobs. The committee luckily decided that the state's tax system as a whole — rather than just this one part of it — needed to be studied by the 1984 Legislature. If the committee were to have recommended that this particular method be abandoned, it would have addressed only one part of the problem. The root cause — that some properties are valued differently than others — would not be addressed if the shortsighted solution sought by the businessmen were to be used. Instead, the Legislature would do well to look at "the big picture." For example, personal property is appraised annually. Real estate values, however, are set on the same basis as they were in the 1960s. This leads to differences among various types of property. Also, variations among counties can lead to discrepancies among similar businesses, because county appraisers from around the state often use different procedures. The businessmen are seeking what is a laudable goal, for them—they want a lower tax bill. Lower taxes might be used by some to provide another job or two, or to modernize the company's equipment. Others, however, might consider the lower tax bill solely in terms of increased profit. Congress' swift action The legislative committee balanced interests that sometimes are in competition. The committee was wise to consider the benefit to the state as a whole, and to look for what will be a more just solution anyway. President Reagan's plan to sell the nation's weather satellites to private industry has been shot out of the sky. That's not surprising. What is surprising is the suddenness of the proposal's death. The idea of selling the weather satellites came up during the Carter administration, and was part of a proposed sale of land-sensing satellites to private industry. "Landsat" information deals with oil, minerals and agriculture, but the market for it was considered so small and unprofitable that the weather satellites were included in the package to sweeten the deal. satellites. Then the storm began In spring 1983 Reagan officially proposed the sale of both types of The particular issues are complicated; the sale was of questionable merit. One need not feel heartbroken that Reagan had to kill his own idea when he signed a vital government appropriations bill that contained an amendment forbidding the sale. The sale was studied, debated and finally voted on by Congress. While such longstanding matters as immigration and budget deficits fester, some issues are able to grab the rather swift attention of Congress. The sale of satellites is one such issue. Another such issue may turn out to be security in Washington because it is difficult to protect — bombs are difficult to neglect. More CIA controversy Controversy embarrassing to President Reagan has dogged multimillionaire William J. Casey ever since he was appointed CIA director in January 1981. Much of it has centered on Casey's substantial private investments. He could have averted questions by putting his holdings in a blind trust before receiving access to secret government economic intelligence. But Casey arrogantly resisted congressional pressure to do so until last month. It's not enough for CIA lawyers and government ethics officials to assure us there have been no conflicts of interest. The opportunity for such conflicts exists, and that smells — especially in a government agency that more than others demands a high degree of public trust. The CIA had enough scandal to live down before Casey came along. held stock in several firms doing business with the CIA, and he continued to acquire stock in such companies after taking the post. Now a suit filed with the federal government has smoked out censored documents revealing Casey -Chicago Sun-Times The University daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 300 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff information. The Kansas and guest individuals and groups to submit guest columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or rejectletters and columns. LETTERS POLICY THAT'S IT! THAT'S WHERE EARTH USED TO BE DIDN'T THEY DO ANYTHING TO TRY TO PREVENT A NUCLEAR HOLOCAUST? THAT'S IT! THAT'S WHERE EARTH USED TO BE DIDN'T THEY DO ANYTHING TO TRY TO PREVENT A NUCLEAR HOLOCAUST? OH, YES, RUSSIA AND THE U.S. SPENT YEARS TALKING ABOUT DISARMAMENT, DEMONSTRATIONS AGAINST NUCLEAR WEAPONS BROKE OUT ALL OVER THE GLOBE. THERE WAS A MOVIE CALLED "THE DAY AFTER" AND COMPREHENSIVE SCIENTIFIC STUDIES PROVED LIFE AS THEY KNEW IT WOULD END. THE PROSPECT OF NUCLEAR WAR BECAME SO DISTASTEFUL THAT BOTH SUPERPOWERS AGREED TO STOP DEPLOYING THE WEAPONS ALTOGETHER. WELL? THEN WHAT? KHADAFY BLEW UP THE WORLD. OH,YES. RUSSIA AND THE US. SPENT YEARS TALKING ABOUT DISARMAMENT, DEMONSTRATIONS AGAINST NUCLEAR WEAPONS BROKE OUT ALL OVER THE GLOBE. THERE WAS A MOVIE CALLED "THE DAY AFTER" AND COMPREHENSIVE SCIENTIFIC STUDIES PROVED LIFE AS THEY KNEW IT WOULD END. THE PROSPECT OF NUCLEAR WAR BECAME SO DISTASTEFUL THAT BOTH SUPERPOWERS AGREED TO STOP DEPLOYING THE WEAPONS ALTOGETHER WELL? THEN WHAT? THE PROSPECT OF NUCLEAR WAR BECAME SO DISTASTEFUL THAT BOTH SUPERPOWERS AGREED TO STOP DEPLOYING THE WEAPONS ALTOGETHER. WELL? THEN WHAT? KHADAFY BLEW UP THE WORLD. © 1973 MAMI NEWZER KHADAFY BLEW UP THE WORLD. © 1973 WILLIAM N. WATSON Tower: an unabashed hawk WASHINGTON — In the waning hours of the recently completed session, Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, carved out time to lecture Congress on its tight-fisted treatment of defense spending. And, Tower said, the country would have gotten "a much bigger Tower, using blunt language, told his colleagues that more money spent in the last two years would be saved to big savings in the years ahead. White House the final day of the session. STEVE GERSTEL bang for the buck" with just a little foresight. "The vested interests we have in various areas of the world that must be defended are constants that do not go away, and yet to save a few from the marginal impact on the defect, we understand our defense requirements." United Press International That kind of talk, coming from Tower, is not surprising. A Navy veteran who served on a gunboat in the Pacific during World War II, Tower is a hard-line commander in military matters, an unabashed hawk. Tower's views do not predominate in the 8th Congress but considering his expertise, they are more than enough to defeat over defense spending. "We should do more," he said. "The nature of the threat that confronts the United States of America tends to grow at a relentless pace. The Texan said he was "enormously disappointed" in the $250 billion military spending package that was approved and sent to the As chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Tower was given serious consideration by President Reagan for the post of military secretary and may get the nod after he retires following the next session. To make his point, Tower said that in each of the last three years, the administration has made concessions on the defense budget before it was sent to Capitol Hill, the congressional budget resolution has lowered the total and then appropriations bills dues even deeper. These are the figures Tower provided; for fiscal 1982, the final figure was $7 billion below the administration request; for fiscal 1983, the reduction was $18 billion, for fiscal 1984, the drop was $18 billion. "Let us be very careful about how we point a finger at our NATO brethren." Tower said. Yet, Tower omits some major points in his summation. Tower said the defense appropriation bill represented a mere 3 percent increase in defense spending, which he noted was smaller than the one included in Great Britain's defense budget. One is the inescapable conclusion that the defense budget sent to Congress is inflated. realized that Congress would trimm military spending. Therefore, it would make eminent good sense to submit a budget with fat for the trimming. From the outset, the administration numbers players must have Tower, while mentioning that Congress cut, does not point out that Congress also provided the Pentagon with every big-ticket weapons system, including the MX missile. The only system that did not survive was a new generation of nerve gas weapons. The nature of the threat that confronts the United States of America continues to grow at a relentless pace. John Tower, Republican Senator from Texas A third point, one which unloudly does not rank high with Tower, is that Congress was in a vicious squeeze. The anticipated deficit grew almost daily and the cuts in domestic programs had already shredded Reagan's "safety net." There was no more that could be cut in that area. That's why Congress chose to prune the defense budget. There was no other fat left. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Movie was just another TV event To the editor: I say yes in answer to the question posed by Roger Holden in a column in the Nov. 21 Kansan, "We have to our misfortune, learned to live with the bomb, as we have learned to live with fast food and automobiles?" That is exactly what we are doing in accepting a television program like "The Day After" as an evening's entertainment. For all of its supposed support of anti-nuclear sentiment, it can only serve to undermine that sentiment in the long run. We, as the viewing audience, have become so accustomed to less radical forms of violence on TV, such as armed robberies, kidnappings and kidnapping, that reports of such events in real life often fail to elicit any response at all. We have a dangerous familiarity with such deeds — almost an acceptance of them as endemic to life in the 20th century. But we cannot afford to accept as commonplace to daily life something that portends the very end of that life itself. While our initial reaction to "The Day After" may be one of horror and may lead temporarily to outbursts of anti-nuclear activity, how effective will it be as a rerun? How motivating will possible sequels and spin-off series be? Can we afford to become comfortable with and accustomed to the scenes of nuclear disaster? That is what we are doing, albeit unconsciously, in viewing and supporting such television "events." survive this dilemma is an informed citizenry. This can only be achieved through propagation of the hard, cold facts of nuclear weaponry. It will not result from the exploitation of these facts in form of sensation-alized entertainment. ABC has done no favor for those of us truly concerned with nuclear sanity. What we need in order to Antha Cotten-Spreckelmeyer Lawrence graduate student How absurd To the editor Regardless of whether "The Day After" had a political slant, the ABC program was a movie. Allowing the peace-through strength defenders their say after the show was political by nature. The anti-freeze response should have been restricted to the same mode of expression, a flick. Think about it. Roll 'em -- two middle-aged men, both kind of overweight, are sitting on a couple of charred stumps. It's a bit chilly out, but they have on their official winter Air-Force parks, with little fur hoods. One of the men reaches down into a bag of potato chips, while the other gets up and kicks some sense into a crusty Zenith black and white. Dust and ash spring in his face and he waves it away with a 1978 Alabama football program. "Boy, it sure is great ever since the nuclear holocaust came to town. No more taking the wife out to eat, no more of those punk rockers, no Middle East crisis." "You said it, friend," says the other man. "Kind of cloudy all the time, but a hallway lot more peaceful — like the good o'l days, when a man had a little breathin' room of his own " Fade out. Is there any logical rationale for the existence anywhere of weapons capable of annihilating the entire human race? We've got them. They're all ready to go. The film reminded us of that. There's no missing it, not from the word go. Man is a curious and investigative animal who has arrogantly asked for everything, including the anodyne for his own sake. Hitler comes around every so often. A friend, after watching the film shrugged and said, "It's just as well. I wouldn't want to have us left loose to terrorize the rest of the cosmos." Another said, "When they push the buttons, I'm going to walk outside, open my shirt and take the brunet of it." Man ate the apple. He'll use the bomb. If not today, tomorrow. So relax, and forget about it. I'm selfish. I can only hope the rolling roil doesn't come during my time here. Soon, they'll be fighting in the streets over whether to have the weapons or not. The lines are being drawn. The topic is highly divisive and they still their trenches deeper. And where will that leave us? As a contemporary New York writer, Lou Reed, said, we're 'beyond redemption ever. No Freud will work here. We're past that. There's no obedient today — it’s too late for that of kind explanation.' It's time we realized how absurd this all is and go get a stiff drink. Robert Wiseman Lawrence senior Puerto Rico is unknown to America Christopher Columbus discovered Puerto Rico 490 years ago this month; it is high time that America discovered Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico's standing, in the eyes of most Americans, is illustrated in a letter written by a "middle-aged mother," as she said herself, from rural Oklahoma to the governor of Puerto Rico. "I like so many in this country do not know one thing about Puerto Rico," she wrote earnestly, if not with grammatic precision "We never see it in our news, unless you be bad, so to we Americans you might as well be on the other side of the moon. For if you were on the moon, we sure would know all about you." Although the American flag has flown over Puerto Rico for 90 years, and only 23 of the 60 states have a national flag, the island remains virtually unchanged. GEORGE MCDOUGALL known to tens of millions of Americans Puerto Rican Government Official Granted, no one really suffers when the stamp and coin collectors request samples from Puerto Rico, not realizing that American postal and monetary systems apply to the island. On the other hand, the American public's ignorance of Puerto Rico needlessly humiliates a great many individuals and their families, sometimes causing hardships: - Relatives on the island sent a money order as a Christmas gift to a Puerto Rican couple in South Carolina, where the husband was serving in the Navy. To their astonishment, the couple found that the manager of their credit union refused to accept the order until it had been converted into "American dollars." - A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School applied for employment with the Export-Import Bank. His resume listed his birthplace as New York, but he was rejected. "As an agency of the United States Government," wrote a personnel officer, "the Export-Import Bank is restricted by law to making appointments only to United States citizens." The bank unaware that Puerto Ricans have been natural-born American citizens since 1917. This type of discrimination undoubtedly occurs daily across the nation. Although it is probably prompted less by outright bias than by a pervasive ignorance, this discrimination is inexplicable. The regrettable likelihood, however, is that so long as this predominantly Hispanic island languages as a U.S. territory, its leaders are ceded as "outliers," and even as "foreigners," by many of their fellow American citizens. In all probability, that barrier will not begin to crumble until Puerto Rico becomes the 31st state. Copyright 1983 New York Times . a University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1983 Page ! Soviets stay at START table despite walkout By United Press International GENEVA, Switzerland — The United States and the Soviet Union yesterday resumed talks on long-range nuclear weapons despite the Soviet leader's refusal to hold talks on medium-range missiles in Europe. U. S. and Soviet delegations at the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks, or START, met for three hours and 15 minutes and agreed to meet again tomorrow. Last Wednesday Moscow had broken off talks on Intermediate Nuclear Forces, or Euriummissiles, after the West German invasion of Lebanon. The United States and Pershing 2 missiles in Western Europe. THERE HAD BEEN speculation that the Soviets would also break off the long-range talks but the delegation turned up for the scheduled session. But chief Soviet negotiator Viktor Karpov, upon coming out of the START session, accused US officials of mistreatment. "There is no progress up to now." Karpot told reporters in English. "As I have explained many times, the position of the American side is not for an agreement." Despite the Soviet Union's threats to break off the Geneva arms talks, it never made fully clear whether it meant only the INF negotiations or START as well. The latest session had been watched as an indicator of Moscow's willingness to nuclear arms control talks with the United States. Western observers said they did not anticipate any breakdown in the START talks, although the Soviet news agency Novosti said the arrival of U. s. missiles in Europe had neonated START. Novosti送 the missiles made the INF talks "pointless" and "are sharply changing the situation" at START, presumably because they can reach Soviet territory. WESTERN OBSERVERS SAID they expected to receive the talks and schedule a resumption. A recess would most likely come next week, according to the regular pattern of each round lasting two months with two months in between for consultations at home. The basic U.S. position centers on one-third reduction in strategic headaches to 5,000 for each side and scrapping two old delivery systems for each new one deployed. Moscow has stuck to its original proposal to limit each side to a 10-km delivery systems / heavy delivery systems. IN LONDON, U.S. arms negotiator Paul Nitze said he expected the Soviets to return to the intermediate-range missile talks, although he said the two sides were still far apart. Nitze, on a tour of NATO governments, said the stumbling block was over the central issue of whether Moscow should have a monopoly on modern nuclear missiles in Europe. "We hope and expect they will continue the negotiations," Nitze said, adding he had no firm evidence that the Soviets would do so but that it was in their interest. IN RECENT MONTHS. Nitze said the two sides had made progress on what would happen to independent French and British nuclear forces, whether to consider aircraft carrying nuclear weapons, and the geographical limits of an agreement. He gave his account of a controversy over a proposal calling for no new NATO missile deployment and the Soviets' reduction of their air force level of the British and French independent forces. The Soviets leaked the proposal as if it had originated with the United States, which then opposed it. Nitzke said Moscow's negotiator told him if the United States made this proposal, the Soviet Union would have to accept. ON CAMPUS TODAY PUBLIC RELATIONS Student Society of America will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Pine GRUBB STREET Literary Magazine will be held at the St. Luke's Church 30 p.m. in the Contemporary Room of the Union THE CONTEMPLATIVE Prayer session will consist of silent prayer and the Merton reading, "Soltitude is not Separation," at 7:45 at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. UNIVERSITY FORUM will feature Rep. James Statterly, D-Kan, speaking on "The State of the Economy." The Crisis of Federal Education and the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. DUNGEONS AND Dragons will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. **ARTS AND CRAFTS Bazaar sponsored by** SHE for crafts from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the open宫殿 at the Garden Hall. NOMINATIONS for Distinguished Teaching Awards are being accepted by Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, in Room 127, Strong Hall. TOMORROW GAY AND LESBIAN Services will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Oream Room of the Union. WU ZOREN, an artist from the People's Republic of China, will speak at 7:30 p.m. in the Spencer Art Museum auditorium. J. STOHLMANN, adjunct associate professor of classics, will speak on "Cologne at the Time of Martin Lauter" at a KU German school at 3 p.m. in Room 402, Wescoe Hall. continued from p. 1 Shamir, formerly Israel foreign minister, succeeded in September. Monday was his twelfth birthday. U. S. officials indicated that Shamir had maintained his opposition to Reagan's September 1982 Middle East peace plan and was accused of being a leader in the issue of Jewish settlements on the West Bank. But Regan said he and Shamar "agreed on the need to increase our cooperation in areas where The U.S. official said the new areas of military cooperation clearly were meant as a message to both Syria and the Soviet Union but said 'it is not the Arabs or threat of a military axis against the Arabs.' SHAMIR BRANDED SYRIA as "a major threat to the peace in our area by occupying more than 60 percent of Lebanon and by its own forces" in the Israeli armed arms and personnel on Syrian territory." Reagan said he and Shamir "found a common concern with the Soviet presence and arms buildup in Syria" and reaffirmed their "comprehensive goals of a sovereign, independent Lebanon." With Lebanese President Amin Gimayel due to arrive Wednesday for urgent talks on ways to remove foreign forces from Lebanon, Reagan and Saamir remained firm in their support of a May 17 withdrawal agreement flatly rejected by Syria. Other measures announced by the administration included: - *Permission for Israel to use about $550 million in military assistance funds for development of the Lavi aircraft and for Israeli weapons* the production of certain U.S. weapons systems. - Consideration of additions and changes to the aid package, such as converting loans to grants, in recognition of Israel's economic importance, half of its $650 million in military and aid. - Negotiation of a free trade area that would facilitate Israeli exports to the United States to ease a trade imbalance. Shamir said U.S. and Israel's diplomatic relations, the sacrifices made by 'brael', over the years. in the Israel-occupied West Bank, Jewish settlers yesterday began a sit-in at a Biblical tomb in the most populous Arab city on the West Bank, near Jerusalem. The Israeli army provides better security for them. About 70 representatives of the Council of Jewish settlements in the Israeli-administered territories sat on benches under a tent behind the Israeli embassy, a site of a Yeshiva, a Jewish religious college. The defiant act followed an ax attack on a Jewish settler Monday, and what the settlers charged was a spate of rock throwings by Arabs against Jewish vehicles on West Bank roads. The sit-in coincided with the 36th anniversary of the U.N. partition resolution dividing Palestine into an Israeli and an Arab state. The Arab state was never set up. In New York, the leader of Israel's Labor Party called for an end to new settlements in densely-populated areas of the West Bank to avoid turning Israel into a "bi-racial state." Shimon Peres, the Labor Party leader, also called for a withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanon. He said Israel should not condition its withdrawal on a Syrian withdrawal because that could create an incentive for Syria to remain to keep Lebanon divided. Special continued from p.1 Jay Turnbull, 18, son of Rutherford and Ann Turnbull, is excited about games. "Yeah, pizza," she said, hiding her brown eyes and shiny cheeks behind her hands. Vyette Bell, 15, daughter of Fay Bell, said she was entered in Friday's basketball competition. big bag, "she said" to "tget a ribbon" Vyette said eating lunch was her favorite part of the Olympics THE STUDENTS IN Gover's class have competed in the games before. Last year, Yvette won a bronze medal in bowling. She thought she had improved her skills and said she had "heat Mrs. Gover in bowling," last week. To Jay, the best parts of the Special Olympics are the dancing, the bowling and the banquet. After the games Friday night, the Special Olympics committee has arranged a banquet and a dance for the athletes. "And guitar and drums and horns." Jay said. He stoned to think and added, "and horns." "We boogie." Jay said, swung his arms to imaginative music. Gover said she could not remember how long Lawrence athletes had participated in the games, but it had been more than five years, she said, before the games were moved to Lawrence. The Indoor Special Olympics for the eastern half of the state will be conducted in Lawrence. The games used to be held in Salina, but to avoid bad weather, officials decided to have the games in two sites. More than 1,000 handcaped players are expected to compete in these Special Olympics Peruvian peasants killed by leftists for voting, government report says By United Press International LIMA, Peru - Thirty-four Indian peasants massacred earlier this month probably were killed by leftist Shining Path guerillas as punishment in municipal elections, police said yesterday. The findings, contained in a preliminary government report on the slaughter, came on the same day police found two witnesses to the mass slaying shot to death in a ravine. Interior Minister Luis Percovich said initial findings in a government-ordered investigation of the Nov. 13 massacre indicated the peasants had all been members of the Government's Popular Action Political Party and were shot by the Maosist Shiming path guerrilla group. The Indians were killed in the Andean village of Sococ on the day nationwide municipal elections were held. Among the victims were 12 men and 4 women ragged from a wedding party and shot to death. The villagers said the killers wore police uniforms. Percovich said the government's probe showed the killers were "dressed in green pants and blue coats to imitate police. "Our information is that the peasants, including the governor of Soccer, a Popular Action member, were killed by Shining Path guerrillas in reprisal for having supported the party in that conflict," she said. He said the final conclusions would not be available for several weeks. continued from p.1 emphasis on the fact that he has a family farm, with three generations of Hubers working on it. Huber's farm, which is about 17 miles north of Louisville KY, is not near any main roads. "People who come to the farm have made a definite commitment to find me," he said. Huber said that 3,500 to 4,000 people a day went through the farm. Huber also said that the entire farm was mowed once a week to keep it clean and to keep the lawn free of weeds. "I GUARANTEE YOU that no city woman will come out of the city and stick her new hair in a ponytail." "If you want to see somebody move," he said, "watch a city lady spot a snake." He also said he hadn't had a snake on the farm in 15 years. Huber's product mix also encourages a lot of increased sales, he said, as they have 15 to 16 different items ready to be picked at any time. He recommends water, cawberry, cabbage, peas, spinach and raspberries. "WE TRY TO RAISE anything people will ask us for," Huber said, using red beets as an example. "No woman is going to buy many beets. The only reason they buy beets is so they can a couple jars because they look pretty. But if I can get that woman out there to buy beets, then I will get another $25 to $30 out of her when she buys other things." He also said that quality, not price, was what brought customers back. "No housewife is going to drive 30 miles to buy 20 pounds of strawberries for the price," he said. "They're smart enough to figure these things out." Huber has a central parking area at the farm and he uses tractors to move customers around. "T'S A GRAVE mistake to keep kids out of the field," he said. "The kids will never forget their day on the farm, and they will want to come home, if kids pick more, then people will buy more." Huber's wife, Bonnie, has encouraged sales by preparing brochures filled with recipes on every product they raise, he said, because many cooks need them. "Brochures would aid food and wouldn't buy it without the helpful hunts." "If we get him out there once, then we've got him hooked." Huber said. "You'd be surprised how many people want to come back and pick from the same tree." SCHUMM FOODS COMPANY EMPLOYEES NEEDED Food Service & Table Service —One year experience mandatory —Must have Mon., Wed., Fri., 10 a.m.-3 p.m. availability Apply at: Schumm Food Co. office 719 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. "above the Smokehouse" between 9 a.m.-3 p.m. TAKE AN ACTIVE PART IN STUDENT SENATE Cultural Affairs Minority Affairs Join one of the five newly formed standing Senate committees Without Your Help It Will Not Get Done. University Affairs - Applications are available in the Student Senate Office, Room B105 Kansas Union - For more information please contact the Senate office at 864-3710 - Applications are due by 4:30 p.m. Friday, Dec.2nd Funded by the Student Activity Fee Finance Student Rights TONIGHT: at THE SANCTUARY All You Can Drink! Beers & Bar Drinks ($3.00 Cover) 7:30-Midnight 1401 W. 7th (Between Michigan & Florida) Reciprocal with Over 180 Clubs 843-9703 Order Your Jostens College Ring NOW.. NO PAYMENTS UNTIL FEBRUARY 1984! SAW WILDFERS - NO DEPOSIT - NO INTEREST WARNING WARNING GO STATE UNI Ask Your Jostens Representative For Details NEW STARTE US 1 DATE Wed. Nov. 30 TIME 10 a.m.-4 p.m. PLACE KU Bookstore Trail Room Lobby Josten's VISA MasterCard THE NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. --for $500 Bring in this coupon Expires Sat., Dec. 31 PAC-CHOP Game Tokens 50 WIN A NEW ATARI GRAVATAR VIDEO GAME Original Cost $2500.00 Win A New Video Game Win A New Video Game Name___ Address___ Phone___ --- Fill out the above form Fill out the above form and drop it in the registration box at the New Yorker. No purchase necessary. Drawing Dec. 31st, 1983 Lawrence Book Open Daily 9 a.m.-11:45 p.m. Sun. Noon-11:45 p.m. No other coupons accepted with this offer PEPSI ) 1. CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1983 Page 6 Panel to review Kansas taxes and send evaluation to Carlin By Staff and Wire Reports Lt. Gov. Thomas Docking yesterday organized his Kansas Tax Review Commission that includes a University of Kansas law professor and told the members he hoped they would be "freed" in their consideration to the tax system. The professor, Martin Dickinson, and Douglas County Commission Nancy Hiebert are two Lawrence residents among the 12 members on the commission. Docking, a Wichita tax attorney, said the group would meet monthly in different areas of the state because the police stock of all the time to need to have blinders. THE LIETENANT GOVERNOR said he thought the review committee was the most important thing he could do to prevent arbitration because of his tax background. Dickinson said he probably was chosen for the group because of his expertise in tax law. In addition to his teaching, Dickinson works as a consultant for the Lawrence law firm of Merrison, Emerson, Six, Springer and Zinn. "Generally, we would first seek to obtain a general understanding of the Kansas tex system and how it works," Dickinson said. Until now, the group will analyze its findings and write a report to the governor. Dickinson said he expected the governor would do everything before the report would be completed. The group's work will be supplemented by help from Docking's staff and from the department of revenue, Dickinson said. Also, he said, Darwin Daicoff, KU professor of economics, will probably be consulted by the group. Daicoff has done economic forecasting for the state. DICKINSON HE could not predict what the group's findings would be, especially in regard to the complex nature of property and reappraisal The lieutenant governor also said he would not attempt to analyze the tax system until the "comprehensive response" had been made, which he said would take several months. The commission should not limit itself to state taxes such as income, sales and inheritance, Docking said, but should include a look at local taxes. COMMITTEE MEMBER Ivan Wyatt, president of the Kansas Farmers Union, said, "Over the years we've seen this tax structure build up like one patch on top of another. We need to peel back patches and get down to the foundation." Docking he had received "more than a few cynical questions" asking whether his commission would be looking for justification of taxes instead of interest, then to review the rest and then make recommendations to the governor. Steve Perkins, vice president of corporate planning at Fourth National Bank and Trust of Wichita and a member of the commission, said that if the panel attempted to look at revenue needs, it would never finish its job. Docking said the commission would use research already completed by others and seek the aid of universities and other groups in reaching a "full-blown" picture of the tax system." The KU athletic department will not file charges against four people who have been identified in helping to tear down the goal posts in St. Louis. The University of Kansas' football victory over the University of Missouri Nov. 19. Johnson decides against pursuing goal post charges James Denney, director of KU police, said that Monte Johnson, KU's athletic director, called him yesterday morning and said that he would not file charges against the four people. By the Kansan Staff The district attorney's office has been notified of the athletic department's decision. Demesnay said, "We have there assaulted may still file charges. Denney said that Johnson did not want to minimize the seriousness of what had happened and that Johnson specific reason for not filing charges. Denney said that police had had difficulty identifying people who assaulted the officers because it was hard to identify the tape of the incident was taken. But he said that the department would continue to try to identify people who assaulted officers. Denny said last week that the videotape showed that about 3,000 people had gathered on the sidelines seconds before the game ended. He said that the north goal posts were torn down and that the south goal posts were torn down about 1 1/2 minutes later. Congress should advocate a freeze on military and general spending to reduce the federal budget deficit, Rep. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., told about 40 members of the KU College Republicans during a speech at the Kansas Union last night. Bv BRUCE F. HONOMICHI. Roberts advocates limit on military spending Staff Reporter "I would have voted for a freeze on military spending if it had come to a vote," Roberts said. "We should spend as much as is necessary in response to the threat from our adversaries." But we also have other important things to address. "ON DEFENSE, the president pushed for a 13 percent increase in defense spending. He got something like 3½%, or about a $240 million budget. I'd settle for a 2 or 3 percent across the board increase. But we're getting spending bills too." Roberts was the only Kansas member of the House to vote last year against both the MX Missile and financing for nerve gas, two weapons that President Reagan favors. Roberts said that nerve gas was not only expensive but illegal, according to international law agreed to at the Geneva Convention. The Senate finally approved the MX last month, despite objections from some Senate Democrats who wanted to trim the number of seats. Roberts also told the group that farm problems and foreign policy were entwined. Roberts, who represents Kansas' first district, criticized previous administrations for putting embargoes on certain farm products to countries that had opposed U.S. policies. He said the actions had hurt farmers. AGRICULTURE IS THE main industry in nearly all of the 58 counties in Roberts' district, which stretches from Marysville, in Northeastern Kansas, to the Kansas-Colorado border, and south to the Oklahoma border. "We've gained a lot of benefits over the years from farm income," he said. "But farmers have had some problems. You don't see Robert Byrd, the senator from West Virginia, say that the coal miners in his state are going to give up 25 percent of their income because of an embargo on coal for the attack on the Korean jetliner. "BUT THAT'S WHAT you tell a Kansas farmer when you embargo his wheat." PETER G. BERGER Stephen Phillips/KANSAN Rep, Pat Roberts, R-Kun., tells KU College Republicans that increases in spending by the federal government, including defense spending, should be frozen for a year. Roberts spoke to the group last night in the Kansas Union. Legal Services for Students Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE! - Advice on most legal matters - Preparation of a letter of negotiation - Preparation & review of legal documents - Notization of legal use. - Many other services available. 8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday 117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665 Call or drop by to make an appointment. Unplanned pregnancy? Decisions to make? Understanding all your alternatives makes you really free to choose. Replace pressure and panic with thoughtful, rational reflection. For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and to talk with you. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING Funded by student activity fee. PATRICK SMITH Birthright 843-4821 AREN'T YOU HUNGRY? BURGER KING Whopper 99¢ each (no limit) Please present this coupon before ordering. Not to be used with other coupons or offers. Void where prohibited by law. This offer good thru Mon., Dec. 5, 1983. Good only at: 1301 W. 23rd. Lawrence, Ks. 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Inc University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1983 CAMPUS AND AREA Storm goes north; Lawrence remains wet and snowless By Staff and Wire Reports The first big blizzard of the winter drifted from the snow-swept Midwest into Canada yesterday, leaving towns to shove out from head-high drifts. The departing six-day storm, which spread snow from the Rocky Mountains to the Great Lakes and left at least 50 dead in California, was Kansas but spared the Lawrence area. The light snow that fell in the city last night may be followed by more snow today, but no accumulation is predicted, Curt Hosterman at the Kansas University Weather Service said yesterday. THE NATIONAL WEATHER Service in Topeka predicts a high this afternoon of about 35 and a low tonight for theerman said that northeast winds wail. The minor upper-air disturbance that has brought the flurries will move northeast out of the area today, and a low of 17 are predicted for tonight. A large storm brought rain and snow to the West Coast yesterday after two days of hovering over the ocean, and then fell back into the sea or rain on snow to the Midwest by Friday. Hugh Crowther of the National Weather Service in Kansas City, Mo., said a second, smaller storm had followed the first. The piggyback storm "looks like it will be mostly up there in the mountains," he said. "We expect just 2 to 3 inches of snow elsewhere." The National Weather Service said the new blast would not come close to matching the weekend storm, which killed six people each in Colorado, Nebraska, Georgia, Kansas, Minnesota and Iowa. DENVER — This parking lot at a rental agency is covered with snow as another storm sprinkles Denver with about 5 more inches of snow. By DAVID SWAFFORD Staff Reporter CLINTON — One November after noon at dusk, a woman raking leaves in her yard across from the Clinton Store at what the store had closed for the season. Clinton residents find reservoir changed lives "Now the store closes in the fall and doesn't open again until spring. But when Mr. Anderson had it though, never closed down," the woman said. "A lady owns it now and she's down in Oklahoma for the holidays." Hanging above the store's front door is a rusty Sunbeam bread sign — a sign from ages past. A peek through the front window reveals shelves lined not with Sunbeam bread, but with fishing tackle and beer coolers. CLARENCE ANDERSON and his wife, Iola, bought the old, white country store in 1954. They ran the business, serving about 100 families, for the next 24 years. The couple said they took pride in supplying the basic needs for their customers. That meant even stocking some shelf space with school supplies for children attending the local elementary school. When the Andersons bought the store, rumor had it that the government was going to build a reservoir and that people would have to leave. "It was the only complete country store for miles around." Anderson said while sitting in the living room of his new, ranch style home, two blocks east of our customers' calendars every year as time. We knew them all quite well. AS HE TALKED about the past, Anderson's brown eyes conveys the message that he really enjoyed life in college. He's talking about the reservoir, he lost that look In 1978, the Andersons sold their store because the reservoir became a reality and people left. Fifty families left, to be exact. "In the late 1960s and early 1970s," he said, "small country stores started going out of business because of bad economic conditions and because the construction work at the reservoir had run the roads to their supply sources." He said that when the government bought the land for the reservoirs required to comply with the law. With a hint of resentment in his voice, Iola complemented his observation by saying that it used to take eight minutes to get to Lawrence before the reservoir was built. She said it now took twenty minutes. HAVING SPENT HIS whole life in the same area, Anderson knows the Clinton community well. He said Clinton was named after a town in the eastern United States and that the town's constitution was drawn and signed in 1857. According to Anderson, the country store was built in 1854. Before running the country store, he worked as a dairy farmer. Now he spends his time doing carpentry work for his neighbors and friends. Initially, Anderson said he quit dairy farming and bought the store because the farm work was causing him back strain. But later on he said he just went to town. Besides, it said, it would be better to raise his two daughters in town. Douglas Co. Road 6, a two-lane paved road, runs through the heart of this tiny town on the western edge of the reservoir that was named after it. The country store sits in the center of town, facing Road 6. A big, orange Gulf oil tank stands next to the store, even though the store no longer sells Gulf gas. "WHEN WE FIRST bought the store in 1954, we sold six-ounce bottles of Coca-Cola and Pepsi for 5 cents. Now we buy soda again now because soda pop wasn't as popular as it is now, but they still always fought over who got the front of the rack." Anderson said. Anderson said he could not explain why their store survived. He thought it could be because he and his wife started going after their supplies when they were closing. No longer get through because the reservoir blocked the familiar roads. Anderson made the decision to sell the store one day while sitting on the tailgate of his pickup truck. A married apportion approach and asked him what role would they take. BUT CUSTOMERS AFTER the reservoir wanted different supplies. And that is why he sold the country store five years ago. New people were coming in and they wanted a new product — fishing gear. "I told them I'd have to go home and taunt it with my wife. he said." We were all ashamed. He sold the store to a couple named Vaughan. Rose Vaughan now operates the store during the spring and summer. Before the reservoir, the community was larger than its present population of about 70 and it was relatively quiet all year long. Now the place goes almost dormant in the winter and in the summer, as Anderson put it, "you'd think you lived on the Kansas Turnpike." "WE FIGURE WE'VE got it, we might as well fish in it," he said. "The wife and I go down and fish quite a bit. She catches most of the fish. We never fish on the weekends, though. We leave for the idiots. Sometimes, we don't fish on Mondays if there were a lot of skiers during the weekend." Anderson's life resembles the character of Clinton in many ways. The town has changed from an agricultural community to one oriented toward recreation. And the man who used to be the mayor of Clinton Lake Museum. But like the old, country store, the museum is only open in the spring and summer. RUSTY'SIGA FOOD CENTERS LAWRENCE KS WESTRIDGE * 6th & Kasold * 841-0411 HILLCREST * 9th & Iowa * 843-2313 NORTHSIDE * 2nd & Lincoln * 843-5733 SOUTHSIDE * 23rd & Louisiana * 843-8588 SIGA DISCOUNT Prices Effective Nov. 30-Dec. 6 DISCOUNT Prices Effective Nov. 30-Dec. 6 DO ALL YOUR HOLIDAY SHOPPING AT RUSTY'S SAVE 30¢ LB. Fresh Lean CONTAINS NON ORANGE JUICE Frozen Concentrated Orange SAVE 26¢ 5 lb Package or Larger LB. 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CAN it feels so fluffy soft Soft'n' pretty 79 If make no fluffy soft SUPER SAVER SOFT 'N' PRETTY Bathroom Tissue 4 ROLL PKG. diet peps 2 for 1 on sale PEP SAVE 60¢ Main eW Pepsi Free 99 PEPSI, DIET PEPSI MT. DEW, or PEPSI FREE 2 LITER BOTTLE THE MISSING WOMAN ALUMNI AUCTION SAVE 60¢ CRISPY TASTY PIZZA JENOS 10 OZ. PKG. PIZZA.89 KRI Sunshine KRI SUPER SAVER SALTINE CRACKERS SUNSHINE 16 OZ. KRISPY .69 CRACKERS Pillsbury's BEST XXXX Flour BAKE YOUR BEST WINE MISS SURVEY'S BEST SAVE 50¢ LB. Pillsbury's BEST xxxx Flour EAST YOUR BEST PILLSBURY'S WIST Pillsbury's BEST WX SUPER SAVER Pillsbury's BEST Wx SUPER SAVER Fairmanall NO. 273 Pork Sausage PLUS SAUCE FOR TOMATOES SUPER SAVER NO. 273 Pork Sausage PLUS SAUCE FOR TOMATOES PILLSBURY'S FLOUR 5 LB. BAG SUPER LB. SELECT PORK STEAK $1^{19} SUPER SAVER FARMLAND LB. PORK SAUSAGE .89 PILLSBURY'S .89 FLOUR 5 LB. BAG Gaines' Cycle 1 PUPPIES Gaines' Cycle 2 ADULT Gaines' Cycle 3 LEMON AUDUBON Gaines' Cycle 4 OLDER SUPER SAVER U.S. NO. 1 TEXAS RUBY RED GRAPEFRUIT 8 DOUBLE CO Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's off coupons and get free coupons. Do not include "coupons for beer" or "coupons for tobacco." Not to include retailer; free coupons (guarantee) than one dollar or exceed the coupon value. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES DEC. 7, 1983 CYCLE DOG FOOD ALL VARIETIES 14 OZ. CAN U.S. NO. 1 TEXAS RUBY RED GRAPEFRUIT 8 FOR .99 Amt. Int. DOUBLE COUPON Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's off-coupon and get delivery. Off-coupon and get delivery. Offer does not include coupons to beer, tobacco or alcohol. Not to include retail, free coups, coupons greater than one dollar exceeded the limit of one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and first 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES DEC. 7, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 334 — DOUBLE COUPON — Present this coupon along with any one manual for the coupons and get double the savings from Rusty's. Other needs not include coupons for beer, tobacco and alcohol. Not to include retailer, free coupons, coupons issued on one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES 1/9, 1983 DOUBLE C Present this coupon along with any one custodian's first coupon and get double the sweep. No coupon or gift not include beer, tobacco Not to include retailer free, coupon courier greater than one dollar or exceed Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES DCE 7, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 334 — DOUBLE COUPON — Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get double the savings from Rusty's Offer does not include coupons to beer, tobacco items and fluid milk products. Not to include retailer, free coupons, coupons greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES DEC. 7, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 334 — DOUBLE COUPON — Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get double the savings from Rusty's Offer does not include coupons to beer, tobacco items and fluid milk products. Not to include retailer, free coupons, coupons greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES DEC. 7, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 334 — DOUBLE COUPON — Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get double the savings from Rusty's Offer does not include coupons to beer, tobacco items and fluid milk products. Not to include retailer, free coupons, coupons greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES DEC. 7, 1983 OUPON — Amt. Int. Shipyard DOUBLE CO Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get discount. Please note that not include coupons for beer, tobacco, alcohol, etc. Not to include redeem coupon; coupons greater than one dollar are exchanged. Limit one coupon per manufacture's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES DATE 7, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 334 -- DOUBLE COUPON -- Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's credit off coupon and get fuel rebates from rusty's. Of these does not include fuel milk products. Do not include fuel milk products. It includes real coupons, coupons greater than one dollar or exceed the minimum cost of a coupon per family. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit four coupons per family. EXPIRES DAY 7, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 334 DOUBLE COUPON — Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get delivery savings from Rusty's Offer does not include coupons for beer, tobacco or milk product. Not to include retailer or free coupons coupons greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the coupon. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES DEC. 7, 1983 Amt. Int. Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cent off coupon and get delivery savings from Rusty's Offer does not include coupons for beer, tobacco or milk product. Not to include retailer or free coupons coupons greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the coupon. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES DEC. 7, 1983 COUPON — Am. Int. NO. 35 -- DOUBLE CO Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get doubles the savings from Buy One Get One! tobacco items, and fluid milk products. Buy one coupon, free time coupons, coupon greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family. EXPIRES DATE 7, 1983 RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO. 334 — DOUBLE COUPON — Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's "cent" coupon and get it off! The discount offer is limited to not include coupons for beer, tobacco and child products. Not to include retail, free coupons, coupon greater than one dollar or exceed the value of the item. Limited one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit $1 coupon per family. EXPRESS DEC. 7, 1983 OUPON — ANN. BEL. HUMORATEL lorem maris 眼 INVOKED from service IMPORTED FROM MEXICO JUAREZ SINVERSOR TEQUILA NO TALCULA FABRICADO Nº 1942 THE MAGIC OF MEXICO. IMPORTED FROM MEXICO JUAREZ SILVER TEQUILA THE Magic of Mexico. COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA TELEPHONE 943-7180 Christmas Story Eve. 7:30, 9:15 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 VARSITY DOWNTOWN DEAL OF THE CENTURY Eve. 9:15 only Sacred Ground Eve. 7:15 only Mat. 2:15 HILLCREST 1 RANDOM IOWA Eve. 7:35-9:25 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 2 RANDOM IOWA NATE HAYES PO. Eve. 7:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 FLASHBURN Eve. 9:20 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 3 RANDOM IOWA MITTY VULK 3D IMPORTED FROM MEXICO JUAREZ TEQUILA NO FRANK Product of Mexico SAGAR LOS NIÑOS The Magic of Mexico. COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 805-1788 Christmas Story Eve, 7:30, 9:15 Mat. Sat., Sun, 2:15 Sacred Ground Eve: 7:15 only PSI Mat: 2:15 CHRYSA CHAUSS DEAL CENTURY Eve: 9:15 only VARISITY TELEPHONE 803-1055 DRIVE CHAIN DEAL CENTURY 21 Sacred Ground Eve: 9:15 only Eve: 7:15 only Mat. 2:15 HILLCREST 2 NAT HAYES Eve 7:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 Eve 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 MILLCASTLE a night in heaven Eve 7:35 9-25 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2/15 HILLCREST 3 MITYVILL 3-D ORION Ever: 7:25-9:00 Mat. Sat. 2:15 CINEMA 1 375 S. AND WAY TELEPHONE # 212-4600 RUNNING BRAZ VOD. Eve: 7/3-9 35 Mat, Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 1 TICKET AND DOWN TELEPHONE NO. 916-240-8700 RUNNING BRAE. Eve 7:35-9:35 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 TICKET AND DOWN TELEPHONE NO. 916-240-8700 THE BIG CHILL COLUMBIA PICTURES Eve 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat-Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 THE BIG CHILL R COLUMN PICTURES Eve 7:30-10:30 Mat Sat 5:00-2:00 4 CAMPUS AND AREA Page B Film charges ads show women as sex symbols By GINA K. THORNBURG Staff Reporter A magazine advertisement shows a nude woman from behind as she lies on her side. The caption says, "She's built like all our protraits - heavy when she lifts her arm over the strait." The ad, which is for construction products, was one of many depicted in "Killing Us Softly: Advertising's Image of Women," a film shown last night in the Kansas Union by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. IN THE FILM, Kiligoure gave a slide of magazine ads and album covers of his work. University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1983 Jean Kilourge, the narrator of the film, said that advertising in the United States exploited women in a variety of ways. She was making them appear as objects. Ads portray women either as sex symbols or as moronic housewives "pathologically obsessed with cleanliness" she said. Some ads often only depict one part of a woman's body to sell a product made specifically for that part of the body, but in some cases it might be shown in an ad about hosiery. Many ads portray a certain kind of woman who is supposed to depict the masculine ideal. "our bodies are dismembered in advertising," Kilgour said. "IT'S AN IDEAL that cannot exist," she said. "It's a flawlessness that's inhuman, and it's our only standard of female beauty." Elise Piney, assistant coordinator of the women's resource center, said, "The photographs that you see in a magazine are products of sophisticated lighting, makeup and all kinds of gadgets to make women look a certain Pinney led a discussion of the film which was shown to an audience of about 30 people. Kilogue said in the movie that many ads made women think, "To be loved, to have a home." She said that the ads showed, "Being beautiful is a result of products that we buy, and is not something that comes from within." Ads also promote competition among women, Kligura said. FOR EXAMPLE, one ad had the caption, "They're going to hate you back home a lot longer." A smiling woman is rounded by trowning, hostile women. Kilogue said, "There's a clear message: if you achieve the look, you're going to alienate yourself from other women." Pinney said that although advertising often promoted a negative image of women, the negative message was not always evident to everyone. She said that when she thumbed through a magazine, she usually did not think of the negative way in which ads portrayed women. But, she said, "When you sit down and analyze it, obviously what the designer is committing to doing." Kiloure said that ads also exploited his sexuality, though not as much as his own. She said that men in ads were often portrayed as aggressive and brutal, whereas women were depicted as passive. SHE SHOWED SEVERAL slides of ads with men and women. The woman in each ad was looking beseemingly at the man or clinging to him, while the man was looking away, apparently ignoring the woman. The message in ads such as these is that men are in control but women are not to be taken seriously, Kilogure said. One ad showed a woman running with a shadow behind her on the wall. The caption said, "He pursues me." This ad plays on a woman's fear of being raped, Kilgour said, and contributes to the image of women being abused by men. The ads show the 'tragedies of the culture,' she said, that all human qualities are divided into what is feminine and into what is masculine. WE DELIVER! PIZZA Shoppe 6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center KINGSIZE TRIPLE TOPPING UDK AND 32 oz. PEPSI plus tax DELIVERED $8.75 KINGSIZE TRIPLE TOPPING ukk AND 32 oz. PEPSI plus tax DELIVERED $8.75 Mark Warren, left, and Robin Moore, both Lawrence policemen, demonstrate their skill in Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation at a training session at the Douglas County Ambulance Service. The entire police department is required to be certified every year in CPR. Police certification will take place today. The department had no written policy about videotaping and that decisions about videotaping were made by Olin and Richard Stanwix, Lawrence police chief, Wildcat said. But Olin agreed to put the department's policy in writing. By MICHAEL PAUL Staff Reporter Wildcat said, however, that Olin told him he would not immediately stop videotaping public events. Videotaping such events is legal. Olin said. He said that after he received the letter, he set up yesterday's meeting with Olin to discuss what the department's videotaping policy was and what the department's plans were for videotaping. Police plan to write guidelines for videotaping public protests SHOORTLY AFTER THE demonstration. Olin had said that the police 307 WILDCAT SAID THAT Rhonda Neugebauer, a member of Latin American Solidarity who helped organize the demonstration, had sent him a letter complaining about the videotaping. The Lawrence Police Department will soon be writing guidelines to use when videotaping public demonstrations, the president of the Lawrence American Civil Liberties Union said yesterday. PIZZA Shoppe 6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center Daniel Wildcat, the president, said that the department had agreed to put its policy in writing after he and other Lawrence residents met with Mau] Ron尼尔昨天 morning to discuss why she decided to deaplate a demonstration on Nov. 12. The demonstration protested the united military intervention in Cairo. IN A STATEMENT he gave to the police, Wildcat said, "It's our feeling that the practice of video surveillance of political demonstrations, regardless of who has a chilling effect on the exercise of free speech and peaceful assembly. "Besides questioning the supposed efficiency or benefit of the practice from a police perspective, one must ask the fundamental question of whether the public values efficiency more than freedom." Wildcat said that during the meeting it became apparent that there was a "sizable gap of the police conception of what I called efficiency in operation and our conception of the chilling effect on exercise of peaceful assembly." "The ACLU is fundamentally op-posed to the surveillance of any politically motivated groups." He said that he planned to institute a public debate in Lawrence about the proposed bill. department did not develop files on people involved in political activity But Wildeat said that he thought the argument was weak Wildcat said that Olim told him that the department had video-taped demonstrations whenever there was a possibility of violence. Wildcat also said that Olin told him that when the police department videotaped demonstrations, the video ringing the deter those who might become violent. Coalition to testify for restraint regulations in autos Olin also had said after the Nov. 12 demonstration that videotapes helped the police accurately determine the location of events that preceded any violence. Sy SUSAN WORTMAN Staff Reporter .25 DRAWS & $1.00 DRINKS TONIGHT!! UNTIL 10:30PM EVEN MORE SPECIALS AFTER 10:30PM GAMMONS SNOWMES 23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center 842-3977 Inflation may not be the only force driving up the price of new cars if the Department of Transportation reenacts passive restraint regulations. The department will hear testimony in Overland Park tomorrow and Friday GAMMONS SNOWMAG Linda Grant, a member of the National Coalition to Reduce Car Crash Injuries, said Monday that the hearings would help the department decide whether U.S. auto manufacturers should be required to install passive "Outsiders say that we don't need mandatory laws for passive restraints," she said. "But now, only to 10 people, American drivers wear their seat belts." Auto manufacturers said that installing passive restraints might increase the cost of a car by $200 to $320. manufacturers is opposing passive restraints, Grant said. They are concerned because passive restraints will increase the cost of cars. restraints such as full torso seat belts and air bags. "We are pro-auto restraints," Grant said. "We want automatic seatbelts." BOTH SIDES WILL have the opportunity to testify at the hearings. THE COALITION IS a group composed of medical, insurance, highway safety and public health organizations. The Coalition, D.C., for passive restraints in cars The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration adopted the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard in 1967. The set of regulations required all American-made cars to have manually operated seat belts. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration acted in an "arbitrary and capricious" manner when it repealed the Mandatory Passive Restraints Act. In 1970, the traffic administration expanded its regulations to require automatic restraints in vehicles by 1973. parts of the country. The first began yesterday in Los Angeles. The second will be in Overland Park, and the third will be in Washington. The Department of Transportation is sponsoring three hearings in different At that time, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the passive restraints did not work. NOTICE - Applications are available for these salaried positions in the Student Senate office, B105 Kansas Union Student Senate Staff Applications Are Now Being Accepted A group composed largely of auto - Administrative Assistant - Applications are due at 4:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 2nd - Interviews will be held on Dec. 5th and 6th For more information please contact the Senate office at 864-3710. - Executive Secretary - Treasurer TAKE AN ACTIVE PART: GET INVOLVED Funded by the Student Activity Fee Sponsored by Student Activity Fee KU German Club "Cologne at the time of Martin Luther-as seen through the eyes of an Artist & Poet" 4067 Wescoe 4 p.m. Thur., Dec.1 Lecture by: Professor J. Stohlmann C. Our Oliver Steinnagel is now at Salon Klaus on the Country Club Plaza. Oliver is pleased to announce something exciting for the students in this area ... All $43.75 haircuts for only $40.00 After intensive training at Sason, Redken, and other Seminars. All $13.75 haircuts for only $10.00 All perms & colors at 20% off regular price Give Oliver a try when you're in Kansas City ... You will be pleased. Please present your student I.D. card Salon Klaus Country Club Plaza Square PLAZA- 444 Ward Parkway, Kansas City, Mo 64112 185/313-1835 CORINTH- 4034 West 83rd Street, Prairie Village, Ks 66208 182/642-5300 Bring in this coupon before Dec. 5 and receive a membership effective throughout semester break for only $15. From Dec. 17 to Jan. 11 for only $15. GET FIT OVER BREAK FOR ONLY $15 NOW THAT IS A BREAK! 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center 749-1501 NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER O O X 39. 95 SALE WE HAVE THE FRAMES YOU WANT FOR THE LENSES YOU NEED At Hutton Optical, pick your favorite designer and purchase a complete pair of lenses and frames for only $39.95—regularly $65.00 to $100.00. Tints, oversize, cataracts and multifocals—additional charge. Designer frames available are: - Mary McFadden - Oleg Cassini - Anthony Martin 8 - Vera - Zsa Zsa Gabor * Arnold Palmer Offer good through Dec. 3 Boutique frames excluded from sale. Please no special order frames. Cannot be used in conjunction with any other sale. HUTTON 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8 Sat. 10-2 eg NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1983 Page 9 South African villagers get eviction reprieve By United Press International MOGOPA, South Africa — Defiant black villagers facing government eviction from their traditional lands yesterday got at least a day's reprieve from officials who agreed to discuss alternatives to the forced move. The villagers had said they would rather die than leave the settlement founded by their ancestors, the Bakwene tribe, in the early 1900s. Village leaders, faced with the deadline, yesterday said they might be willing to move to Bethani, home of Bakwena Paramount Chief in Lebanon, who would not be compensated for their land or given transportation unless they agreed to the relocation near Pachsandra, 60 miles away. NICHIOLA HAYSOM, THE tribespeople's lawyer, said senior government officials had agreed to put off forcing the people to leave until at least Thursday while alternate arrangements were severed, television, however, said the eviction had been postponed to Wednesday. The government is acting in terms of the Black Administration Act which allows relocation of blacks if "deemed in the public interest." The law makes no mention of compensation for evictions. Since Friday, when the tribe lost a court battle against the eviction order, a few families have already moved to Bethani at their own expense. The villagers vowed to stay in defiance of strict apartheid laws dictating removal of blacks from white rural areas, but most said they feared that the law would OVER THE PAST 30 years, 3.5 million South African blacks have been forcibly removed from areas declared for whites only to resettlement areas in so-called “homelands,” regions that are impoverished and often barren. Haysom said the discussions scheduled for Wednesday would include compensation and a possible move to Bethani. settlement without consulting the villagers. The residents are not only bitter about leaving their traditional home, but also about resettlement in the homeland. They claim a government-backed headman negotiated the re- "There is a lot of fear. We expect the authorities to come any time, village." The government did not publicly explain its failure to evict the 300 families in Mogopa, 84 miles west of Maracaibo. The government's 20 deadline announced ten days ago. In Washington, the State Department said it deplored the white-rules South African government's forcible removal of any blacks from their villages. "The United States has consistently made clear its view that South Africa's problems cannot be addressed constructively by the arbitrary relocation of immigrants or ethnic or racial basis within South Africa," spokesman John Hughes said. 1983 trade deficit is likely to exceed $70 billion By United Press International WASHINGTON — Rising oil imports and sagging soybean and coal exports helped boost the U.S. merchandise trade deficit to a record $8.9 billion in October, the Department of Commerce reported yesterday. The nation's trade shortfall, at $55.56 billion for the first 10 months of 1983, threatens to exceed $70 billion for the year. That would be nearly double the previous deficit of $48.7 million in 1962, posted in 1962. "It will probably go above the $70 billion range for sure now," department trade economist David Lund deporters after the figures were released. THE ENORMOUS SIZE OF October's red ink was a surprise for analysts, although the trend for the year has been upward. The U.S. economy ever since the U.S. economic recovery got a head start on the rest of the world. goN near a ship and build the appetite for imports, which climbed 11.7 percent from September, while exports still are hampered by a dollar considered to be overvalued in relation to other currencies. OCTOBER EXPORTS FELL 2.5% percent from September to $16.95 billion while imports jumped to $25.9 billion after seasonal adjustment. "I hope it's not a long-playing record." Lund said of the figures. The previous monthly record for the merchandise trade deficit was August's $7.2 billion. October was the sixth month to show more than $3 billion in red ink "It goes without saying imports were up strongly," Land said, "reflected particularly by non-Imports imports from $1.7 billion the previous month." "It's as across-the-board as I've ever seen." Land said of the deterio- Federal employees' unions hurt by high court decision By United Press International FEDERAL EMPLOYEE UNIONS, which cannot strike, had been hoping the court would rule in favor of continued payments in order to strengthen their hand in collective bargaining. WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court dealt a financial blow yesterday to unions representing 1.2 million federal workers, ruling that the government may refuse to pay them their salaries or union-related travel and expenses. While the workers' salaries can be paid, the Supreme Court held civil service law does not require reimbursement for all allowances and travel expenses. The justices, 9.0, spared federal agencies from continuing to pay out an estimated $2 million a year in worker expenses to workers in union bureaus. Government subsidies had helped shore up the unions' financial base, which is fragile because U.S. taxes are not required to pay union dues. Writing for the court in a California case, Justice William Brennan held that Congress, in passing legislation, did not intend to "equalize the economic positions of union and management." Rather, the provisions of the law "certainly suggest that Congress contemplated that unions would ordinarily pay their own expenses." The case arose when an employee of the Treasury Department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms was denied travel exp. She was taken to Madera, Calif., to examine a proposed employee relocation site. DONALD PRUETT, representing the National Treasury Employees Union, negotiated on parking facilities for certain employer employees and other items. When the National Treasury union asked for reimbursement for the 300 miles he traveled and for his per diem, the federal agency refused. The 90th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco upheld a Federal Labor Relations Authority ruling that civil service law required the reimbursement. But the Supreme Court overturned that ruling yesterday. "The Supreme Court ruling is a major setback for the rights of federal employees and union representation in the federal sector" said Pearce, president of the National Federation of Federal Employees. OPEN TIL 9 PM EVERY NIGHT THE GRUNDER MAN WE DELIVER! 704 MASS 843-7398 What are "FUNFLOWERS?" They're Flowers just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to arrange and enjoy. Put a little fun in your life. Pick up a bunch of FUNFLOWERS this week at a special price that adds to your fun tool! Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 Specially priced! *For in-store delivery SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center *Next to Gambrils* *749-2912* SUA FILMS Tonight Presents: VIDAS SECAS What are "FUNFLOWERS?" They're Flowers just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to arrange and enjoy. Put a little fun in your life. Pick up a bunch of pick-up or any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 Specially priced! "For in-town delivery SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammon's" 749-2912 SNA FILMS Tonight Presents: VIDAS SECAS Founding film of Cinema Novo. Directed by Nelson Pereira dos Santos. 7:30 p.m. Woodruff, $1.50 Aud. Thursday, December 1.A Jean-Luc Godard classic: Band of Outsiders (7:30 p.m. Woodruff Aud., $1.50) Friday,Saturday,December 2.3.Walt Disney's Mary Poppins (3:30.6:30 p.m. woodruff Aud., $1.50) Ron Howard directs Henry Winkler in Nightshift (9:30 p.m. woodruff Aud., $1.50) MidnightJack Nicholson;Peter Fonda, and Dennis Hopper in Easy Rider. (Woodruff Aud., $2.00) Sunday, December 4: The Last Put on show, directed by Pat They're Flowers just for fun. By the colorful bunch for you to orange and enjoy at a litter fun in your life. "FUNFLOWERS" pick up a bunch of today or any day this week at a special price that adds to your fun, too! Our nice fresh casual bunch of "FUNFLOWERS" $400 Specially price! For *in-stock delivery* SOUTHERN HILLS Floral&T Gift 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center "Next to Gammon's" 749-2912 SUA FILMS Tonight Presents: VIDAS SECAS THE MUSICAL BY ROBERT W. HENRY Sunday, December 4 The Last Picture Show directed by Pete Bogdanovich JAY BOWL PALL HILL CHAMPIONSHIP BOWLING TOURNAMENT TEAM N: Sat., Dec. 3, 1 p.m. COST: $5 PRIZES: Money 1st place $50.00 2nd place $30.00 3rd place $20.00 FORMAT: 3 games-TEAM members must have handicap based on minimum of 12 games ELIGIBILITY: Top 3 Teams in each league 1. Monday Nite Mixed 2. Greek 3. Guys & Dolls Jay Boul KANSAS UNION --- Nov. 29 - Dec. 2; 9am-5pm Kansas Union ARTS & CRAFTS BAZAAR --- --- Clip and bring to: SUA Fine Arts presents the first annual - All ads must be prepaid. No refunds. Send a friend some holiday cheer .wth a Kansan Holiday Message. Kansan Advertising 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Lawrence, K. 66045 This page will run Dec. 9th. A Kansan Holiday Message Is a great way to wish someone a happy holiday season or say goodbye 'till next semester. Write your message in the book below putting one word in each box. No ads over 20 words will be accepted. Then mail the coupon with your payment to Kansan Advertising for stop by on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Nov. 30 at 5 p.m. Space is limited so you get yours early! 20 words (or less) — $4.00* Name ___ Address ___ Phone ___ Amt. $ ___ one word per box Minsky's PIZZA Classic Combo Night You already know it's Colossal, but we'd like to remind you that it's a Classic... true Italian COMBINATION PIZZA Minsky's Style! $3.95 ALL YOU CAN EAT! 6 packs to go 2228 Iowa (children just $2) No carry out or delivery with this special Other specials not valid with this offer ... for a slice of style. we deliver 842-0154 A MOOSE FOR ALL SEASONS Imported Moosehead. Stands head and antlers above the rest. BRAKE FOR MOOSEHEAD.WHEN YOU DRINK DON'T DRIVE. Brewed & Raised by Canada's Oldest Independent Family Brewery, Noted Brewing Business MOOSEHEAD CANADIAN LAGER BEER St. John New Brunswick & Dartmouth, Nova Scotia Canada NATION AND WORLD University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1983 Page 10 Beirut receives heaviest fire since start of the cease-fire By United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — Druse Muslim militias shelled Christian sectors of Beirut yesterday in their heaviest artillery bombardment of the capital in two months, forcing Lebanon to evacuate two television news broadcasts. In a statement telephoned to United Press International, a Drusse spokesman warned Christian communities not to send their children to school today because more artillery battles are likely. Beirut radio said late yesterday that an explosion shook the southern suburbs of Israeli-occupied Seidar, about 82 miles south of Beirut. The official broadcast quoted an Israeli military spokesman that one Israeli soldier was wounded in the explosion. THE EXPLOSION, apparently aimed at the Israeli troops occupying south Lebanon, was the first reported attack since Israel released 4,500 prisoners it held in the southern Arab detention camp. A spokesman for government television said a Druse fact had warned "if you broadcast news this evening we will shell you." The contacts were delayed, while contactes were made with the concerned parties. When government television news finally was broadcast — 40 minutes late for the French broadcast and 30 minutes late for the Arabic — it hit a nerve. The military had the capital been hit by mortar, artillery and rocket attacks. Radio reports said that the Drusen barrage swept from the Christian town of Jounieh near of Beirut, through the Christian neighborhoods RESIDENTS SCRAMBLED for (cover in basements and hallways as 700 shells crashed down, according to Christian Phalange radio. Phalange radio said that seven people were dead and 30 were wounded. east of the capital and onto the southern suburbs near the U.S. Marine base. It was the heaviest shelling of Beirut by the Drusse forces in the two months since their attacks against Jerusalem, and the mountains east of the capital. A main power station was reported hit, forcing贝irut back onto power rationing after only a one-week break from three months of the oppressive streets made a 3-month p.m. curfew even more oppressive. After Christian Phalange militiamen kidnapped several Shiite Muslims on the highway south of Beirut, Muslim gunmen retaliated by killing 250 students and Christian employees of Middle East Airlines, the Lebanese flag carrier. Intervention by the committee of Lebanon's warring factions that supervises the often broken 2-month-old cease fire reportedly in Syria, the airline employees and the other kidnap victims after two hours. DRUSE ARTILLERY shells crashed into army positions on the ridge above Beirut, down the slopes a mile from the presidential palace. Shells also landed around Khalee. The shells were based on the southern edge of Beirut. But the Marines, after being on a maximum Condition 1 alert since Monday evening, were given all the aid and meals the prisoners suckers and enjoy a quiet breakfast. BONN, West Germany — The government of Chancellor Helmut Kohl was rocked yesterday with the announcement that Economics Minister Count Olivier Joffriff will be charged for $0.00 in bribes in a corporate tax scandal. Bonn public prosecutor Johannes Wilhelm announced the charges against Lamsdorf and said that four corporate and political figures, including the president of the giant Dressner threw had already been charged in the affair. W. German official to be charged in tax scandal By United Press International Wilhelm said that he had asked that Lambsdorff's parliamentary immunity from prosecution be lifted so that the charges could be pressed. If found guilty, Lambsdorff would face a maximum five-year iail term. LAMBSDORFF, QUESTIONED by reporters in Brussels after a meeting of Common Market officials, said only, "I A government spokesman said Labbarddworf was innocent "until a law judge intervened." Lambsdorff is one of West Germany's most distinctive and colorful politicians. Known as a brilliant orator in Parliament, he deflects abuse from opponents by hurling it back with a polished, assured wit. The announcement was a serious embarrassment for Kohl's 14-month-old coalition government and is likely to lead to cabinet changes. will make a statement about it in Bonn." OPPOSITION SOCIAL Democratic Party leader Hans-Joen Vogel immediately called for Lambsdorff's resignation. German Flick conglomerate in return for massive tax concessions. Wilhelm said Lambsdorff, 56, who has held the post of economics minister since 1977, would be accused of corruption and receiving $50,000 in payments made by the giant West Charges of corruption have already been filed against Hans Friderichs, the president of West Germany's second largest bank, Dresner, former Flick deputy chairman Eberhard von Niemitz and former Nemitz and former Rhineland Palatinate State Economics Minister Horst Ludwig Rüder, Wilhelm said. Friderichs asked to be suspended from his duties as Dresner president while the charges against him stold. But Von Brauchitsch described the charges as “baseless” and said they were “politically motivated.” A Bonn prosecutor's spokesman said that there was no indication that Lambsdorf took the bribes for his own personal use. But the West German news magazine Der Spiegel, which has conducted an investigation of the affair, claims that the bribes were channeled into political party funds. THE PAYMENTS BY Flick were said to be intended to gain a government write-off of $175 million worth of taxes following Flick's sale in 1975 of its 29 percent stake in the Daimler-Benz mobile concern to the Deutsche Bank. Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher, leader of the Free Democratic Party to which Lambsdorff belongs, said that he maintained his full trust in Lambsdorff and was convinced of his innocence. Lambsdorff's family dates back to a thirteenth century order of knights. TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills: 6.00-7.00 $0.75 7.00-8.00 $1.00 8.00-9.00 $1.25 9.00-10.00 $1.50 10.00-11.00 $1.75 11.00-11.45 $2.00 It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK 1340 OHIO Lamsdorff served in a tank unit during World War II and lost his right foot and ankle after being wounded in battle. After studying law, he followed his father into the insurance business and became a director of an insurance company before entering Parliament in 1971. First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills 6.00-7.00 $0.75 7.00-8.00 $1.00 8.00-9.00 $1.25 9.00-10.00 $1.50 10.00-11.00 $1.75 11.00-11.45 $2.00 Use Kansan Classified. KIHK and POWER PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS FROM BOSTON SCHOOL'S OUT BASH! FRIDAY, DEC. 2nd 9:00 P.M. AT THE LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE WITH PILLBOX & LIONS & DOGS $3.00 - 3 BANDS - BYOB. Computerark COMPARE THE EPSON QX-10 FROM COMPUTERARK, AND THE ZENITH Z-100: EPSON QX-10 Display 640 x 400 pixel screen 16 x 8 pixels per character Keyboard Detachable, adjustable angle Function keys Meaningfully labeled; used by word processing Disk storage 340K per disk Clock Built-in calendar/clock Printer EPSON RX-80FT with friction feed, tractor feed, and graphics; 100 characters per second Audio Programmable speaker (compare for yourself!) Noise level Expansion slots 5 Memory 256K without add-on boards Operating system and languages VALDOCS, CP/M, Microsoft BASIC Maximum file name length 50 letters, indexed on up to eight words Word processing and other software Valdocs document processor, with ON-SCREEN underlining, bold-facing, italics, & other type styles, and integrated calculator, calendar/scheduler, and graphics AND Peachtree Peach-Pak: Peachtext, with Random House Thesaurus, Peachcalic/Supercalc, Mailing List Manager, and Random House Dictionary ZENITH Z-100 Display 640 x 225 pixel screen 9 x 8 pixels per character Keyboard Attached to main unit Function keys Labeled FO-F13; unused by word processing Disk storage 320K per disk Clock Requires reset on power-up Printer MPI 99 with tractor feed and graphics; 80 characters per second Audio Alarm Noise level Expansion slots 4 Memory 192K without add-on boards Operating system and languages Z-DOS, CP/M, Microsoft & Z-BASIC Maximum file name length 11 letters, unindexed Word processing and other software Wordstar (extra) Z-Chart (extra; not integrated) Multiplan Condor 1 (extra; not integrated) COMPARE THEIR PRICES, EQUIPPED AS ABOVE: $2912.50 (our price good through December 31, 1983 for KU students, faculty, and staff only) 711 West 23rd Street in the Malls Shopping Center 841-0094 M KU Vietnam Memorial 1984 VIETNAM MEMORIAL DESIGN COMPETITION Partially funded by the Student Activity Fee Specifications, additional information and application forms are now available in the Student Senate Office, B105 Kansas Union, Application deadline; Jan. 16, 1984. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * NEW SHORT COURSE ON MICROCOMPUTERS Additional Information at 206 Strong Jan. 12 to Feb. 8 One Hour Credit LA&S 140 --- Line # 36748 (Not Listed in Timetable) H. Madrigal Dinner Dressed in authentic costumes the members of the Lawrence Voci di Camera bring you song and tradition of medieval times. We hope you will join us in this festive Christmas celebration. Come with us to Merrie Old England of the 16th Century and enjoy the charming dinner traditions of the Wassail Bowl, strolling minstrels, and the madrigal singers. The evening will begin at 6:30, December 3, and at 12:30, December 4, Kansas Union Ballroom. Cost is $11.25. For additional ticket information please contact the SUA office at 864-3477. THE GRINDER You Want It? Ham & Cheese Canadian Bacon Genoa Six Foot Party Sub HERO ITALIAN SAUSAGE Club Turkey Ham on Rye Roast Beef Italian Meatball Reuben PEPPERED BEEF Pepperoni Pastrami ITALIAN STYLE HAM Italian Cheese "White, Wheat, or Rye Breads" We Got IT! THE GRINDER MAN 704 MASS DOWNTOWN WE DELIVER! 843-7398 OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL 9 P.M. University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1983 NATION AND WORLD Page 11 Panel calls organized crime 'insidious cancer' on society By United Press International WASHINGTON — Organized crime reaches into every aspect of American life, costing taxpayers billions of dollars, threatening per-百万美金数额的美国人 and national nation's law enforcement testified yesterday. "Organized crime is a subject that affects all of us every day but generally is hidden from public view. Attorney General William French has said that the organization President's Commission on Organized Crime." "It causes our taxes to go up, it adds to the cost of what we buy, and worst of all, it threatens our personal safety and that of our families — indeed our very freedom." SMITH JOINED FBI Director William Webster and Drug Enforcement Administrator Francis Mullen in describing organized crime as an "insidious cancer" on society. The crime panel, established last year by President Reagan, has two years and a $5.5 million budget to explore the nation's organized crime problem and recommend ways to combat it. “Our mandate is a broad one, as is the danger to society posed by organized crime,” said the commission chairman, Judge Jivek Kaufman of Irvine. The irrevocable criminal as an institution continues unabated. The panel acknowledged that there are no easy answers to combating the mob in America Webster said that the nation is plagued by the traditional La Cosa Nostra families, which had their roots centuries ago in Italy, as well as the newer crime syndicates of prison and motorcycle gangs that have flourished in the last decade. "ALTHOUGH THESE CRIMINAL groups have often been glamorized in books, movies and television, they are associations of career criminals."[1] We ask our laws and the rights of others. "Webster said, "In short, they are purveyors of crime, violence, death and human misery." There are few businesses and industries that are not affected by organized criminal enterprises, costing Americans billions of dollars each year. Webster said. "Such organizations are involved in every conceivable type of crime, including extortion, pornography, labor racketeering, bribery and theft. The organization that engages revenue, however, are narcotics and gambling." Webster said that two areas need more attention — organized crime's infiltration of DEA Administrator Mullen said organized crime groups are involved "across the whole country." "They grow or manufacture drugs domestically, obtain illicit substances overseas, arrange for importation and establish elaborate distribution networks without the United States." Mullen told the panel. 1982 WASHINGTON - FBI Director William Webster testifies before the President's commission on organized crime. He says few businesses or industries are not affected by organized criminal enterprises. Grevyhound will hire non-union drivers to resume bus service By United Press International PHOENIX, Ariz. — Greyhound Corp. Chairman John Teets said yesterday that the bus company would move "full bore" toward resuming service by 2015 for striking workers and may transfer the carrier to non-union operators Teets said a final company offer of a 7.8 percent pay cut, rejected by the strikers, was 'the best we can do,' and that the workers could take it or leave "If we cannot do it with current employees we will do it with new hires." he said at a news conference in the Greyhound Tower, national headquarters for the corporation. "Now we will go forward full bore. We have reached the point of no return in protecting the jobs of our employees." MORE THAN 12,000 union employees went on strike. Nov. 3 in a 27-day walkout that has been marked by periodic violence. A spokesman for the Amalgamated Transit Union said that he was not surprised by Teet's statement, and that his company had a bus company of using strike breakers. In San Antonio, Tex., a striking bus driver, Eddie Bunte, 53, was released yesterday on $2,500 bond after being charged with aiding a sniper attack on a bus Nov. 23. He is accused of topping a sniper at a highway overpass. On Monday night, a bullet shattered the onewindow of a Greyhound bus near West 47th Street. He said that the corporation was considering franchising the bus company to non-union operators. Teets said Greyhound would continue hiring permanent replacements for strikers who refuse to return to work, however, and go into "Phase 2" to double the line's present limited service. Teets said that the company's final contract offer would be outlined in full-page advertisements today in about 200 U.S. newspapers. TEETS DENIED THAT THE CORPORATION, of which Greyhound Lines is a subsidiary, was trying to dump the bus company, which he said lost $16 million. Charlie Hughes, spokesman for the ATU, said Greuthwets's decision to withdraw from the conference was the right thing. "they haven't changed anything," Hughes said. "They are trying to restore service with scabs and strike breakers with disregard for their employees, nearly 13,000 of them, who are waiting for a fair and just contract." Hughes also rejected an accusation by Teets that the union election was a sham. "It's like saying any vote you cast, whether it is a union election or not, is a sham and that John Teets makes the determination." Hughes said. UNION OFFICIALS announced Monday that 96 percent of those voting rejected the company's offer, which aside from a 7.8 percent pay cut called for benefit reductions. Union officials said they would cut the company's 13 percent in labor costs. The strike has been a windfall of sorts to Greyhound's competition. Trailways Bus System officials said yesterday that the 26-day Greyhound strike has created a ticket boom and has allowed the company to recall all employees laid off during the usually light fall season. Spokeswoman Trisha Barnett, however, said Trailways was aware that the boom will end with the settlement of the strike and that the company had no plans to assume a larger market share. Steamboat A Flurry of Excitement January 2-8 Full package price of $299 includes: sleeper-bus transportation. 4 nights lodging at The Ranch Condos. lift tickets for 5 days, ski rental and a wine & cheese party. Sign up in the SUA office before November 30. Another happier holiday from SUA. HURF AND SIGN! 3DAY! "There must come an end to the process of consideration and recruitment." THE COURT HANDED down a three-page, unsigned opinion that stressed Sullivan's case had been argued and reviewed repetitively before state and federal courts for a decade. BARNETT SAID RIDERSHIP on Trailways, the nation's second-largest bus company, with headquarters in Dallas, had, about doubled" nationwide, a record round strike began, although exact figures would not be available until Dec. 10. She said that about 500 employees had been furious for the tradition-ally slack fall season when 12,700 workers in the transit unit worker unions struck Greyhound. Why do so many experienced students sell their books at the Jayhawk Bookstore? Quick cash, High$$ Fast lines Free parking Discount coupons THEY'VE LEARNED! Now through Finals mon- fri. 8-5 sat.10-4 Justices William Brennan and Thurgood Marshall dissented, saying the high court "had only 24 hours to examine the voluminous stay application and exhibits that have been filed on Sullivan's behalf." But Brennan and Marshall, who traditionally cast their votes against capital punishment, called the majority decision hasty and said it "means only that Sullivan's claim has not received the thoughtful consideration to which it was submitted." He also again rushed to judgment, apparently eager to reach a fatal conclusion." "I emphasize that this case has been in the courts for 10 years and is here for the fourth time." Burger wrote, "This suggestion of a 'rush to judgment' suggests a It's Not Just A Hamburger . . . It's Not Just A Hamburger . . For lunch this week try Steak... $2.50 It's A 1/2 Lb. STEAKBURGER! THE ORIGINAL Minsky's PIZZA We deliver wa 054 Style! Steak... $2.50 We deliver 2228 Iowa 842-1054 STEAKBURGER! THE ORIGINAL Minsky's- PIZZA Style! Sullivan, who exhausted his final appeal last night when the Supreme Court turned down a stay of execution, was convicted 10 years ago of the murder of a Homestead. Fla., motel client clerk. "We've brought back all furfled workers." Barnett, said. THE CONDEMNED MAN had received support from Pope John Paul II, who made an unprecedented plea Monday that the execution be set aside. Chief Justice Warren Burger concurred in the Supreme Court's 7-2 vote on the request. EARN OVER $1,000 A MONTH THROUGH YOUR SENIOR YEAR If you're a Math, Chemistry, Physics, or Engineering major, the Navy has a program you should know about. It called the Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate (NUPOC) Program, and if qualified you could earn $1,000 per month, for up to 24 months prior to graduation. SOME OF THE BENEFITS INCLUDE: - $3,000 Bonus upon acceptance Florida officials scheduled the execution of Sullivan, who has spent 10 years on Florida Death Row, for 9 a.m. Tuesday hours before the death warrant expires. - 1 year of graduate level education - Unequalled hands-on training and experience using the most - Immediate management responsibility - $23,000 starting salary—over $42K annually after five years * Free medical and dental insurance STARKE, Fla. — The Supreme Court refused late last night to block the execution of condemned killer Robert A. Sullivan, 36, who has been on Death Row longer than any inmate in the nation. The NUPOC program can help you not only to complete college, it can also be the start of an exciting career. If you'd like to find out more, contact your placement office or call. By United Press International ENGINEERING OFFICERS PROGRAMS • 800-821-5110 Court refuses convict's plea for clemency ENGINEERING OFFICERS PROGRAMS * 800-821-5110 NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST. --offer good through Dec. 15, '83 with this coupon ALL PRESCRIPTION EYEWEAR $20 off 24 HOUR SERVICE ON MOST EYEGLASSES AND REPAIRS SPECTRUM OPTICAL 841-1113 4 E. 7th Downtown Lawrence SAVE BUCKS. Open 'til 3:00am Pizza by the slice all night WILD WEDNESDAY Save $1.50 Large Pizza —Two or more toppings —double cheese exp. 11/30/83 842-3232 PYRAMID PIZZA Open 'til 3:00am Pizza by the slice all night! 842-3232 PYRAMID PIZZA PYRAMID University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1983 Page 12 NATION AND WORLD IRS to check tax shelters, audit abusers By United Press International WASHINGTON — The head of the Internal Revenue Service declared war on "tax shelter schemes" yesterday and said taxpayers abusing such loopholes were sure to have their 1983 audits. IRS Commissioner Roscoe Egger said the returns would be mailed to the nation's 90 million taxpayers Dec. 23. The 1983 forms will be nearly identical to last year and the six to eight weeks necessary for a refund will not change. United Press International Egger said the chances of having a tax return audited depended primarily on "four factors." He listed them as, "tax shelter, tax shelter, tax shelter, tax shelter." The chance of being audited climbs to 100 percent if the returns involve what Egger called "abusive tax shelter" and relief benefits to unrealistic amounts. Each of the IRS's 63 districts has a staff member responsible for tracking down every tax shelter being offered in that area, he said. "This is an effort to help taxpayers identify the tax shelters schemes that are being pledged in each district." Under a new procedure, when the 108 find that a return offers more tax savings than allowed, the taxpayer can waive that shelter is considered abusive. WASHINGTON — Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Roscoe Egger speaks as Al Brooks, assistant director of forms division, looks on during a press conference. The officials are introducing a laser-assisted mechanical reader that will scan the simplest tax form, the 1040 EZ, and transfer it to a computer. Study says Social Security problems common IROC By United Press International WASHINGTON — An Ohio retiree told Congress yesterday he has yet to insure the red tape created when the social Security Administration deemed him dead a year ago and took 14,000 back benefits of his bank account. James Badgero of Worthington, Ohio, joined other Social Security pensioners and their relatives in telling the Senate Special Committee on Aging about their troubles in dealing with the currency. Problems are relatively common, with a General Accounting Office study showing 20 percent of all Americans are likely to receive at least one wrong Social Security check, GAO official Joseph Delice testified. Committee Chairman John Heinz R.Pa., agreed, complaining of "persistent and prevalent problems" that have left the Social Security Administration frequently unable "to get the right back to the right person at the time." Acting Social Security Commissioner Martha McSteen, on the job less than three months, acknowledged the agency's problems. But she also told the secretary that "revealization of SSA's delivery of service" and that she expected improvements would accompany the modernization of the outdated Social Security system. Badgero, who asked lawmakers to "understand that I harbor no ill will against the Social Security Administration," voiced concern about the threat to "enter into my bank account and retrieve money without the process of law." The money has since been returned to his account, Badgero said, adding that the agency also has reclassified him as living. Latin American officials denied visas BORGE TOLD REPORTERS by way of a telephone call to the Nicaraguan Embassy that the administration wanted to deny Americans the Nicaraguan viewpoint and that President Reagan turned down the visa because he "does not want to give the impression of softening up. By United Press International WASHINGTON — The administration yesterday rejected visa requests by a senior official of the leftist government in Nicaragua and a rightist leader in the U.S.-backed government of El Salvador. "This can be interpreted as a hardening of the line of the government State Department spokesman John Hughes said no connection existed between the denials for Tomas Borge, Nicaragua's interior minister, and Roberto d'Aubisson, leader of the rightist AENA party in El Salvador. Subman Delivers Yello Sub 5 p.m.-Close 841-3268 KANSAS BANK NOTE CO. DEPT KU 601-587-3291 FRECHADE 864728 State Department officials had indicated that they had favored the visa for Borge but were overruled by the White House. COLLEGE OF FOOTBALL FOR 200 CHECKS 10 DOLLARS COMMITTEE OF CUSTOMER CHECKS BANK OF PARKS QUALIFICATIONS: U.S. cit. Ages 19-29 College graduates or seniors/juniors, BS-MS Technical majors only. BENEITES:up to $1,950 start salary; over $33,000 in four years. Over $1,000 per month for selected students during Jr. and Sr. years. Full medical and dental coverage. 30 day's earned annual paid vacation. Opportunity for Navy-financed post-graduate education. Family benefits. Instructors needed to teach math, science, or engineering at the Navy's Nuclear Power School in Orlando, Florida. guan government has to say," said State Department spokesman John Hughes. TEACHERS NEEDED IN FLORIDA Hughes said the United States favored a political dialogue in Central America, but through the joint efforts of countries such as Venezuela, Mexico, Colombia and Panama, which are known collectively as the Contadora Call Navy Officer Programs Toll free 1-800-821-5110. THE ADMINISTRATION WAS concerned that the main purpose of Borge's visit was not to promote communication with Washington but to attain a public forum to criticize Reagan's policies. "There are plenty of other opportunities for hearing what the Nicaragua "I think all opportunities the Nicaraguan government put forth, the U.S. government will put an obstacle in front of" Borge said. PERSONALIZED K U JAYHAWKER CHECKS Some White House officials encouraged by the quick U.S. victory in Grenada, appear to favor a military solution to the Cuban and Soviet support regime in Nicaragua, as reflected by the millions of dollars in aid for some 10,000 CIA-backed rebels fighting the Sandinistas. MANAGUA, Nicaragua — In an apparent attempt to keep alive claims of a planned U.S. invasion, Nicaragua charged yesterday that U.S. warships entered its waters and American planes flew over a key port. By United Press International THE SHIPS SIGHTED were thought to be carrying out maneuvers some 13 miles off the resort town of El Velo, located near Puerto Sandino, the main Pacific port city 36 miles northeast of Managua, the ministry statement said. Reagan has said he doubts any political settlement with Nicaragua is possible while the Sandimista regime is in power. Last week, Nicaragua began making overtures to its domestic opposition and foreign critics in apparent response to the United States' WU plans to launch an invasion The United States denied it had any warships off the Nicaraguan coast. D'ABURUSSON, PRESIDENT of El Salvador's Constituent Assembly, was permitted to visit the United States in May but he is no political favorite of the government. He has worked with the growing carriage of rightist militia death squads in El Salvador In Washington, Navy officials said there is one American frigate off the Pacific coast of Costa Rica, the only one on the Pacific side of Central America. ANALYSIS U.S. plans invasion, Nicaragua says "These proposals are merely the continuation of a policy of peace of Borge reiterated that Nicaragua had accepted American proposals off a weapons freeze in Central America, a departure of all military advisers and an end to arms smuggling and foreign military bases. Nicaragua, "Borge said. "They are not the fruit of pressure of anyone. One U.S. official said in response to the Nicaraguan allegations. "We hear a lot of it," he said. of the United States. Apparently they think the continuation of this hard line will make Nicaragua give concessions." WE DELIVER! 843-7398 704 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 P.M.! 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Manufacturer's suggested retail: $24.95 ea. $9 88 ea. $988 ca. Manufacturer's suggested retail: $24.95 ea. According to Sandista authorities, two combat planes Monday took off from the ships and circled an electrical plant in Puerto Sandino. In a strongly-worded letter to the government, the moderate Christian Democrat Party said security forces were emulating the terror tactics practiced by former President Lucas Garcia. "There is no precise information of how many North American warships there are, but all of them are maneuverable in national waters," the ministry said. ALL OF OUR TAPE IS PRICED TO SAVE YOU MONEY AT KIEF'S! CHECK OUR LOW PRICES ON VIDEO, CASSETTE, AND REEL-TO-REEL TAPES. Meanwhile, in Guatemala, the leading opposition party said that government security forces protected by "high officials" were responsible. A ministry spokesman said the Marxist-led regime is preparing a protest note to send to the U.S. government to mentionation of territorial waters and airspace. ment MORE THAN 250 religious leaders signed a letter yesterday from Clergy and Laity Concerned, a national interfaith peace group, that demanded an end to U.S. support of efforts to overthrow the Nicaraguan govern- During Garcia's four-year rule / he was ousted in a coup in March 1982 / hundreds of students, journalists, labor leaders and youth members were kidnapped and killed A spokesman for the National Police, which has been accused of numerous kidnappings, rejected any association with the killings. KIEF'S GRAMOPHONE DISCOUNT STEREO shop MASS. STREET DELI 041 MASSACHUSETTS served with potato chips and dill pickle spear $1.50 Reg.$2.35 HOT OR MILD SMOKED SAUSAGE SPECIAL used with potato chips and dill pickle spear Wed., Nov. 30 thru Sun., Dec. 4 BURGER No coupons accepted with this offer Mon-Thurs - 10:30-9 Fri & Sat - 10:30-11 Sun - Noon 9 p.m GET GREAT LOOKS! Y w. b you can't miss with Le Tigre's bold rugby stripes! A definite hit made from heavyweight combed cotton & polyester. Pick the look you want from our large selection today! You can't miss Le TIGRE 831 Massachusetts MasterCard VISA Travel Care 843-6155 Open Sundays 1-5 p.m. itwin's 1 University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1983 Page 13 The Best Food Store In Town! FLORIDA OP FROST FROZEN CONCENT ORANGE JUICE 69¢ FLORIDA TOP FROST FROZEN CONCENTRATE Gift Ideas for Christmas PLUSH STUFFED ANIMALS Mouse, Bear or Dog $1.99 Bear in Overalls $2.19 2 Color Bear $2.99 Large Dog $5.99 Bear, Dog, Mouse $5.99 Standing Bear $6.69 ORANGE JUICE 69¢ 12 oz. CAN Pot Pies 3/$1 FRESH FROM OUR Bakery DEPARTMENT DILLON'S FRESH BAKED Olympic Meal Bread BONUS Special! 20 oz. LOAF MORE BONUS SPECIALS: Cake $1.99 Danish Rolls 4/$1 ASSORTED FRAMED & MATTED PICTURES BONUS SPECIAL! EACH $500 VALUES TO $19.95 BONUS SPECIAL! Bake-Rite A/V SHORTENING 42 oz. CAN 99¢ 3 DIAMONDS CHUNK LIGHT MEAT TUNA IN WATER OR OIL PACK, 6.5 oz. can 59¢ POTATO CHIPS Ruffles REGULAR, BAR-B-Q, OR SOUR CREAM & BACON, 8 oz. BAG 79¢ FOOD CLUB CHERRY PIE FILLING 21 oz. CAN 99¢ MORE BONUS SPECIALS! DURKEE PEPPER Ground Corn Bake 4 oz can 59¢ SNICKERS BAR King Size 4 oz 3/99¢ COMET CLEANSER Handheld 1 oz 3/99¢ CHEER DETERGENT Laundry 1 oz $5.69 EVEREADY BATTERY Energizer D-A-C bars 2 pk $1.29 EVEREADY BATTERY Energizer AA bars 4 pk $1.69 EVEREADY BATTERY Energizer each $1.29 SPRAD THE MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY 1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789 Ritz-Carlton Hall in Hall BOGG NOG NATURAL GRAIN CHIPS & NUGGETS SERVICES MORE BONUS SPECIALS! Baking Chips Bakey Chocolate Flavored 12 oz pkg 79¢ Egg Noodles Mint or Marshmallow Martha Gushi Milk or Water or Medium 12 oz bag 2/99¢ Soft Spread Taker Good 2 oz hb. 79¢ Kraft Cheese Moon Longhorn Cheddar or Colly 18 oz pkg $1.99 Half & Half Dilton Print Carton 3/$1 Egg Nog Dilton Quart Carbon 89¢ Danish Rolls Food Club Refrigerated Condensed or Orange 12 oz bag 79¢ Texas BONUS Special Ruby Red $2.99 GRAPEFRUIT 18 LB MESH BAG Texas BONUS Special! Ruby Red $298 GRAPEFRUIT 18 LB MESH BAG LARGE SIZE BONUS Special! PINEAPPLE 25 LB. MORE BONUS SPECIALS! BROCCOLI Fresh Bunch ... BUNCH 89¢ CABBAGE Fresh Green LB. 21¢ POTATOES U.S. 11 LB. 25¢ AD PRICES EFFECTIVE MOV. 09, DEC. 09, 1983 LIMIT RIGHTS RESERVED Texas BONUS Special! Ruby Red $298 GRAPEFRUIT 18 LB. MESH BAG LARGE SIZE BONUS Special! PINEAPPLE 25¢ LB. MORE BONUS SPECIALS! BROCCOLI Fresh Bunch BUNCH 89¢ CABBAGE Fresh Green LB. 21¢ POTATOES US $41 LB. 25¢ AD PRICES EFFECTIVE NOV. 30, DEC. 6, 1983. LIMIT RIGHTS RESERVED Let Dillons be your Santa's Helper. Gift Ideas with a Holiday Flavor. *Fruit Baskets *Steak Baskets *Deli-Cheese Baskets (IN STORES WITH FULL-SERVICE DELIS) *Jelly & Preserve Gift Boxes Build Your own Gift! SELECT THE ITEMS YOU WANT AND WE'LL PACK AND WRAP THEM FREE OF CHARGE! (INCLUDES CELLO WRAP, BOW AND COURTESY GIFT CARD.) Let Dillons be your Santa's Helper. Gift Ideas with a Holiday Flavor. *Fruit Baskets *Steak Baskets *Deli-Cheese Baskets (IN STORES WITH FULL-SERVICE DELIS) *Jelly & Preserve Gift Boxes Build Yourown Gift! SELECT THE ITEMS YOU WANT AND WE'LL PACK AND WRAP THEM FREE OF CHARGE! (INCLUDES CELLO WRAP, BOW AND COURTESY GIFTCARD) DILLONS PHARMACY THOSE ITEMS AVAILABLE ONLY INSELECTED STORIES WITH PHARMACY DEPARTMENTS LOW EVERYDAYPRESCRIPTIONPRICES! SLOW-N (Ciba) Potassium Chloride 100 ct $7.20 OVERAL TABLETS (Wyeth) (0.5 Mg. Norgestrel 0.05 Mg. Ethinyl Estradol) 1 pack $8.58 TAGAMENT TABLETS (Sk & F) 300 Mg. (Cimedine) 100 ct $27.99 DYAZIDE CAPSULES (Sk & F) (Tramterene 50 Mg. Hydrochlorothiazide 25 Mg.) 100 ct $13.37 INDERAL TABLETS (Averis) 10 Mg. (Propranolol Hydrochloride) 100 ct $6.66 The purchase of these drugs require a prescription. Prices are based on quantities indicated. Unit prices WE RECYCLE ALL ALUMINUM CANS SMASH 'EM AND CASH 'EM 24¢ LB. ROYAL COLOR GREETING CARDS This Holiday Season send your family a friend Photo. ROYALCOLOR GREETING CARDS This Holiday Season send your family a Friends Photo Greeting Cards from Royalcolor. Choose from 4 color envelopes. Prices include matching envelopes and are based on size and color chosen in design. See more information at Royalcolor drop box. 25 Cards $7.95 50 Cards $11.95 150 Cards $40.25 75 Cards $20.25 200 Cards $53.45 P SELECT BEEF BONELESS CHUCK POT ROAST BONUS SPECIAL! $128 LB. 15 FRESH-SINGLE TOPPING Thick Crust PIZZA Sausage Beef or Pepperoni FRESH FROM OUR Deli & Cheese SHOP 2/$7 MORE BONUS SPECIALS! Hot Pepper Cheese ... LB. $2.39 P & P Loaf Swift ... LB. $2.19 Strawberry Dessert Bavarian ... LB. $1.39 THESE ITEMS AVAILABLE IN STORES WITH SERVICE DELIS. MORE BONUS SPECIALS! CHUCK STEAK $1.48 Sweet Beef Boneless LB. STEW MEAT $1.48 Lean Boneless LB. Wild Slice Free Salad Chicken Boneless Whole in Bag LB. TOP SIRLOIN $1.79 LINK SAUSAGE $1.59 Fresh Pork LB. MANNINGS CHILI $1.39 16 oz. BAR "S" WIENERS Meat or Beef 12 oz pkg 79¢ SHRIMP CRISPS Golden Shire Breasted 12 oz pkg $2.59 BEEF LIVER Fresh Sliced LB. 69¢ Dillons the best food store in town! ARCDE FOMNIK MOBIL CORSTA WYTA THE SESAME STREET TREASURY NEWS AFFILIATED JON MENNER & SEAMAN WROUGHT TO: THE SESAME STREET TREASURY VOLUME 12 $269 FUNK FUNK FUNK GIVEAWAYS FUNK GIVEAWAYS SLIPPARTS SLIPPARTS PUCTURE PUCKER PUCTURE PUCKER LANGUAGE LANGUAGE SPANNING MOON We Support The United Way 生命安全 Avante Woodenware Americana Collection This Weeks Featured Item! Cookie Jar $9.99 One Gall Reg. $18.99 1 SPORTS University Daily Kansan, November 30, 1983 Page 14 Lifting Continued from p. 16 Washington, who has conducted extensive research in weight training and conditioning as part of her research at the University, provide the best program for athletes. Her interest in strength conditioning stems from her background as an athlete. She was both a basketball and a field standout in high school and college. She earned a degree in physical education and health in 1970 from West Chester State in West Chester, Pa., and a master's degree in Biodynamics and an associate's degree in the KU in 1975. Her thesis evaluated a weight program that she had designed. WASHINGTON SAID EAST Germany was a country studied for its weight-training programs because East Germans were in the labs doing research "that 10 years ago would have been unheard of." " Their times in swimming and running are just incredible," she said. At the conclusion of the 1880 Olympic Games in Moscow, East Germany held 11 of 14 women's swimming records and six of 15 track and field records. the United States' only Olympic record was set by Wilma Rudolph in the 100-meter race in the 1960 Olympics. The American team that record in the 1968 Olympics The East German women also hold eight world records in track and field. The weight program now used by the KU women's basketball squad, Washington said, was well thought out and was not developed hastily. It was somehow required small changes to progressed until the right combination was found. Washington said that in the past she had her team work on maintenance — or routine lifting — two days a week. Now she hopes to have the players work out at least three days a week to continue to build their strength. "IN THE OFF-SEASON, you hope we have motivated the athlete enough to have her return in better shape," she said. "We are doing a lot of recording this year so the athlete knows what kind of shape she was in when we started." Washington also said she had always been an advocate of good conditioning in basketball and thought it was important to continue research to expose her athletes to the best way to remain in top physical condition. Washington said she and her staff were building a program that her staff would use. "You have to look at your sport to see which program is best for you," she said. "Areas such as leg explosion, crunch and endurance are muskts for basketball." "My rookies are in a great situation now. This is something that will be there for them for four years. For us to feel we are carving out new ground." "NO MATTER WHAT sport you are, in weightlifting is very important," he said. "We use weightlifting to try to develop stronger muscles, but the newly found strength in the water." Both coaches said that in the off season, athletes concentrated on a larger number of repetitions with less intensity. During the regular period, athletes begin more intensive training with greater weights and less repetitions. "The advantage of a weightlifting program is that if you have two athletes with the same ability, the person who is heavier will have more strength, will have the advantage." Kemp said. Coaches at KU work closely with fitness director and strength coach Ken Jasper. "Basketball players require a great amount of endurance to be successful, therefore we stress drills that provide conditioning and endurance." Graff ONE GROUP of athletes that has consistently maintained a high level of fitness is the Soviet Union women's Olympic basketball team. The Soviet team has lost only two games in 25 years of international competition and is considered a favorite in the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. One advantage is its year-round training program, compared with the six to eight-week training period for the U.S. basketball team. Would he be able to concentrate? How did he feel, beginning his senior season with the loss of his father? "WHEN IT FIRST HAPPENED and I started to get a lot of calls from reporters, that kind of bothered me." Seurer said recently. "But I settled down from there and started thinking about the whole deal." Seurer Continued from p. 16 Seurer quickly settled down and began concentration on the job at hand. He was the centerpiece of a passing offense brought in by new head coach Mike Goffried, who had thrown 30 to 40 times a game. "I knew the possibilities were there, because of the type of offense we had," Seurer said. "There was a lot of high percentage stuff with a lot of option space for me to handle that. It is a good chance for the quarterback to do well." But the questions persisted about whether Swerer would be able to deal with the emotional drain of the investigation. The Thursday before KU lost its opener to Northern Illinois, the preliminary hearing began. Lawrence police officers testified that Bell had confessed on Aug. 17 to stabbing Frank Seurer Sr. THREE WEKES LATER, the Jayhawks were a disappointing 1-1-1 going into the Sept. 24 game against Southern California. For Seurier, the return to Los Angeles Coliseum brought memories of his father to mind. Seurer hadn't said much about his father since the beginning of the season, but after upsetting the Trojans 26-20, he said that "Pops" had been with him. "That was the big game for him. "That was the game he wanted to see more than anything," Seurer said. "I really did feel him there and knew that he was watching. I know from that he had the best seat in the house. The Huntington Beach, Calif. native responded with his best day a Jayhawk, connecting on 26 of 38 up for 385 yards and a touchdown. His performance on the coast earned him national exposure. Seurier was named Offensive Player of the Week by Sports Illustrated magazine. Suddenly, talk of a possible All-America birth sprang up. Seurier was becoming a familiar name to the nations' football fans, as was expected when he came to KU as a freshman. "I think the USC game was more of an emotional game for me, because of the situation that was happening — going back home, playing in front of my friends and the people that I knew," he said. BUT SEURER WASN'T always at the top of his game. Inconsistency, interceptions and questions about his father's death plunged the senior throughout his final season as a Javhawk. "It was kind of up and down," Seurer said about this season. "You had your bright moments and you also had your very dark moments. That's one thing that might have led to our season as a whole." KU opened its conference schedule two weeks after the UCS upstreet with a loss to struggling Iowa State. But Seurer again was on target the next week against cross-state rival Kansas State. Oklahoma State came to Lawrence next, and the Cowboy defense shut down Seuer, knocking him out of a first half with a hyperextended knee. PHYSICIANS SAID SEURER would miss at least the next two games. He battled back and started against Oklahoma the next "First of all, you have to want to play football because you go through so much crap just to play," he said. "It's always been worthwhile for me. When game time comes around, you sure as hell want to play because you've been working too hard not to." Searer threw for two touchdowns against the Sooners, but also had two interceptions. The next week he scored 14 touchdowns in KU's 34-23 loss to Colorado. The next game was against Nebraska. "The trial was the whole week before the Nebraska game," Seurer said. "The way it affected me was that I missed two practices, didn't get in to watch a lot of film and missed some meetings. I don't think I was bummed out or anything like that." HE HAD BECOME accustomed to the post-game questions about the murder, but it wasn't easy for him. "Sometimes it was hard to keep my emotions out of it, especially after a long game, when you’re the last one getting out of the locker room and you wanted to get out with your parents or your friends." Seurer said. "It got old some times." Suerer closed out his career in style with the victory over Missouri. He threw for $54 yards and two touchdowns, as the career surer as the big Eight's top passer "I don't think there could have been any better way to go out," Seurer said. After the game Gottfried praised Seurer for the toughness he had shown during the season "Frank's had a great year," Gottried said. "He's had his share of adversity, but he's fought from day one" SECHER LATER SAID, "I don't ever remember giving up at anything, anything at all. You've got to keep fighting, especially in football. You've got to go out and make people respect you personally." Seurer can stop fighting for a while. His career at Kansas is over, and so is the trial, although an appeal of Bell's conviction is likely. He is looking forward to an appearance in the Senior Bowl in January and a possible chance to play professional football. But now he can relax, spend some time with family and friends and enjoy himself. No more practices. The long season is finished. Larry Brown selected head of area games By the Kansan Staff KU basketball coach Larry Browns has been named honorary chairman of the Kansas Special Olympics Indoor Games East in Lawrence Friday and Brown said yesterday that despite KU basketball games tomorrow and Saturday, he and the Jayhawk basketball team would try to make appearances Friday night at a Special Olympics evening banquet following the first day's events. "I think it is a wonderful program," Brown said. "I got involved with helping Special Olympics when I was in Denver coaching the Nuggets. I'd like to continue that involvement here and I also want our kids to get involved." "It's going to be a busy weekend but we're going to all try and go to the beach." GROWN'S DEDICATION to the program was the main reason for him being honorary chairman, said Mr. Schoenberg of the Special Olympics in Lawrence. "I had heard very favorable reports from Special Olympics people around the country about coach Brown's involvement and dedication," Hahn said. "We also tried to get someone who would be visible to the public." "Couch Brown has been very helpful and cooperative with us in organizing activities for the weekend. He has also been added to be more helpful down the road." More than 1,280 handicapped athletes from the eastern half of Kansas are expected to participate in the Special Olympics in Lawrence Hahn said. The athletes will compete in three indoor sports, swimming, roller skating and volleyball. Fantasyland, 3210 Iowa St., will be the site of Fridays roller skating competition, and Robinson Center will indicate the volleyball events Saturday. SPORTS ALMANAC FOOTBALL NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCE Scoring Touchdowns Riggs Washan 21 21 02 rec rct pts Brown St. 21 21 03 rec rct pts Green St. 12 02 12 rec rct pts Qquick Phi 11 01 01 02 W. Wilson No 10 9 1 00 Golfman G. H 10 9 1 00 Coffman G. H 9 8 0 0 0 Kicking ep-a fg a l g pts Moseley, Wash 50-41-39 50-41-39 Septiun Shaul 50-38-25 50-38-25 Davis, SF 30-38-25 52-104 Riccardo, Mila 30-30-25 47-99 Haji-Shahkha, Gia 21-22-24 47-99 Gilbert, Sla 43-35-24 48-91 Murray, Dex 35-35-17 48-91 Luckhurst, AL 33-35-19 49-78 McIntosh, CO 33-35-19 78 O'Donough, SL 36-37-13 102 assign pct_pds td int 360 232 361 4117 22 10 374 239 63 9.835 19 5 374 239 63 9.835 19 5 374 239 63 9.835 19 5 Lomax, Slt. 372 277 167 60.3 10 198 Montana, Srt. 373 167 60.3 19 424 Montana, Srt. 329 173 60.3 24 211 Jaworski, Wrh. 329 173 60.3 26 311 Mchahon, McH. 329 173 60.3 29 611 McChahon, McH. 376 228 60.3 30 691 J. Thompson, TB. 312 184 59.0 10 235 Kent, Kent. 184 179 59.0 10 235 Hippe, Dct. 314 184 59.0 11 288 Bruner, Giants. 351 180 51.3 14 286 Bruner, Giants. 351 180 51.3 14 286 Rated on base per game. agd yg, trees Pass Receivers Receptions no yds avg td Brown, Wash 68 1079 15.9 7 Green, SL Gray, Giants Grant, Oakland D. Clark, SF Wilder, TB Jones, SL R. Johnson, All B. Johnson, AI Barber, Ramers Lafont, GB Pearson, Dall Pearson, Dall Andrews, AI Andrews, GB Coffman, AI Coffman, GB 61 1037 16.0 12.5 63 934 19.8 15.5 67 562 15.2 14.8 75 652 11.4 12.1 51 1214 21.1 11.1 52 605 11.4 11.6 52 605 11.4 11.6 49 566 11.4 16.3 49 566 11.4 16.3 48 1036 22.6 17.6 48 1036 22.6 17.6 45 523 12.7 16.5 45 523 12.7 16.5 44 452 10.3 13.0 44 452 10.3 13.0 43 384 13.0 13.0 43 384 13.0 13.0 NICE BACKPACK GENERAL Foods INTERNATIONAL Coffees Irish Mocha Mint IRISH STYLE INSTANT COFFEE BEVERAGE MAIL-IN CERTIFICATE Backpack Offer This holiday backpack will save the burden of books, ideal for the cross-campus trek. It's a good gift for a friend or yourself. A $17.95 suggestion retail value. To receive your backpack, send $10.29 plus one proof of purchase to: Backpack Offer: General Foods Corp. 3 Street Drive, PO Box 3600 Kansas City, Kansas 68062 Name Address City, State, Zip Offer expires June 30, 1984. • Limit one per person • Offer valid in Hawaiian, Puerto Rico, and where prohibited taxed or otherwise restricted • Please allow 5 weeks for processing • No proof of purchase will be accepted other than those凭证 • Offer expires July 1, 1984. • A proof of purchase is the sign with RETURN CUT from the plastic. 30¢ MANUFACTURER'S COUPON OFFER EXPIRES 6/31/84 Here's 30¢ to help you relax with General Foods® International Coffees. 30¢ This coupon good only on purchase of any flavor of General Foods international Coffees. Any other use constitutes fraud. COUPON NOT TRANSFERABLE. LIMIT ONE COUPON PER TRIAL. In Hawaii, General Foods Corporation will reimburse the federal value of this coupon plus 8¼ as submitted in compliance with General Foods Corporation's Retention Policy U.C. 1.1. Repurchased herein by reference. Valid only if redeemed by retail distributor's own business or anyone authorized by general food corporation. Cash award 1.00, Mail, Inc. General Foods Corporation, P.O Box 3600, Kankakee, IL 60902 How To Ease The Burdens Of Campus Life. J. Washington, Wash 41 410 9.5 5 Bailey, Al 42 687 10.6 6 L. Thompson, Det 40 729 16.2 3 Tilley, SL 40 729 16.2 3 Tilley, SL 40 487 12.2 0 Jones, De 40 413 10.3 1 T. Brown, Minn 40 386 10.3 1 Anson, Jackson, SL 40 386 10.3 1 Yard, yds no avg id 11 Quick Phi 1214 155 9.5 11 Lofton, IL 1214 155 9.5 11 Brown, IL 1079 68 15.9 12 Green, SL 1037 68 15.9 12 G. Thomas, Wash 994 63 15.8 5 Thompson, Det 722 60 15.5 3 Jefferson, IL 722 60 15.5 3 N8016684 0.2 5 43000 84830 Available at: Kansas Union Bookstore 30¢ Hanley, All 607 42 18 14 6 Haley, All 607 42 18 14 6 King, Stef 605 39 14 14 6 T. Hill Dall 625 34 14 14 6 Tibbler, All 625 34 14 14 6 Tisha, All 625 34 14 14 6 Caffrey, GH 604 43 14 14 6 Coffman, GH 604 43 14 14 6 Carber, T.B 604 39 14 14 6 Carber, T.B 604 39 14 14 6 Elms, Al 356 47 11 14 2 McGuire, Wohm 356 47 11 14 2 Moore, Wohm 352 43 11 14 2 Murphy, Wash GIBSON'S no yds lg td 8 127 48 0 PHARMACY PHARMACY 25th & Iowa, Lawrence 842-6325 Pharmacists: Farrell Mitchel Mark Smith Mon. Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Prices effective Sunday, Dec. 4 Gibson's Pharmacy offers you . . . DISCOUNT PRESCRIPTIONS & PATIENT PROFILES & FREE MEDICAL EXPENSE RECORDS ... compiled by the latest in computer equipment ... ideal for personal use or tax records. • we accept student health insurance claims • we fill welfare prescriptions master charge VISA att vkg avg kfv L Dickerson, LA 106 153 8.69 16 Doestell, Dall 234 154 4.77 16 Desert, Chn 211 112 4.77 16 Riggins, Wash 162 112 4.77 16 G. Regers, NO 193 165 4.24 16 Sni, De 162 165 4.17 16 Sna, De 162 165 4.17 16 G. Guarts 173 160 4.07 16 L. Gover 173 160 4.07 16 Pn NO 7 186 31 Revo Gear T.II B 7 24 30 Wright SF 6 110 60 Tornner Mini 6 37 14 Centrum 100+30 Tablets 30 FREE WITH 100 Centrum Hours: Mon.- Sat. 9 a.m.- 9 p.m. Sun. 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. Centrum Candram SPECIAL GIBSON'S PHARMACY PRICE only one coupon per person exp. 12/04/83 $6.49 Nivea Lotion NIVEA PROFESSIONAL BODY WASH For all skin types SPECIAL GIBSON'S PHARMACY PRICE $2.45 15 oz. only one coupon per person exp 120/883 Offer Not Valid without coupon limit one item per coupon 1 1 a The University Daily KANSAN KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS November 30,1983 Page 15 CLASSIFIED RATES CLASSIFIED RATES 1-Day 2-4 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days of Workweek Words 1-15 2-15 3-75 6-75 0-15 2-15 3-75 6-75 10-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80 21-25 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.05 21-25 % words add. 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. POLICIES Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues allow for classified display advertisements except for logos. Logo sizes are limited. - Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount * The ads submitted to the publisher may be submitted - until credit has been established * Tearnabets are not provided for classified or - Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words * Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words - Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only - Inquiry * No possibility is assumed for more than one in-copriment insertion of any advertisement. - Checks must be accompanied all classified ads addressed to The University Daily Kansas - correct insertion of any advertisement * No re-prints on cancellation of pre-paid classified - Blind box贮物 - please add a $2 service charge FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kaiser Business office at 864-431-5807. ANNOUNCEMENTS An open Poetry Reading, sponsored by the Grumbit Group at 7:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of Union the reading should leave their name with the Poets in the Activities Room, Box 601 Kansas City. This is a free event. Come buy your homemade Christmas cakes, humme baked bakes, cakes and other goodies at the holiday fair. Lawn Furniture Arts Center 9th & Vermont Ave. Lincoln Park, Hot Dogs, Too! Central Junior High Ice Cream Hillel & AEII present a 10 Thurs., Dec. 1 (note new date) For more information or a ride call 864-3948. Kansan classifieds get results L. J.C.C.—917 Highland Refreshments provided ENTERTAINMENT FOR RENT School out loud at the opera House Friday. Dec. 2. Eric Perry, Sarah Fitzgerald, David Bowers, Bill Fink, Linda & Dave's $14 admission fee. Don't miss the Headquarters Birthday Party! It's Saturday, May 13 at Lawrence Home. There will be a celebration of your birthday. 1 BR ap. 1280皂.00 $160 per month, all utilities paid 844-8728 or 594-3529 STUDIO 1. & 2 Bedroom apartments immediately admitted by Custodian. 3. Partial utility paid. Contact Kaw Valley Custodian. Cheerful and spacious studio apartment in a quiet studio building. 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 1 bld. apt. in Meadowbrook $62 a month, Dec rent paid. extra locks, central are sliding glass door to the room. 2 bld. apt. in Meadowbrook Courant $49 a month. 3 bld. apt. 1 bld. prep from KU租金, $225, all utilities paid. 911-885 or 841-817.8 2 bedroom. 1 bath duplex for rent $225 monthly. from min. campus, on bus route. Call Jon. 749-2600. BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSES AT SUNRISE PLACE 9th & MICHIGAN If you are tired of noise in dormitories or apartments, please come to visit our brand new townhouses at Sunrise Place. They are energy efficient, well landscaped and only 2 blocks from campus. Some have fireplaces and finished basements. They are ideal for groups of 2 to 4. 842. 1878 or 841.1287 2 bedroom house (full basement). Some utilities paid 1.12 bids from campus. Available Dec. 1. Dec. 2017. A 1 LUXURY LIVING at Pauper's Price! Splendid a lovely room at Nasimith Hall for spring semester. beibons, unlimited food, swimming pool, infinity irrational instruction. Make new friends! 749-402 Apartment for rent 1414 Humboldt Spacious Bedroom, Walk to KU, Off-street parking of building 2,付 pH 2,11 O120,843-2263 3 bedroom to bathroom 2nd en suite near bus stop 4 bedroom to bathroom 4th or 843-2264 4 bedroom Cape Cod 4.1/2 baths all appliances, bed 4 month home $350 per month 843-4164 BOTTOM HALF KINGSTONEL OLDER HOME BOTTOM HALF KINGSTONEL OLDER HOME BOTTOM HALF KINGSTONEL OLDER HOME BOTTOM HALF KINGSTONEL OLDER HOME BOTTOM HALF KINGSTONEL OLDER HOME HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APTS. 1 BR Apts. $285 2 BR Apts. $340 $360 3 BR Apts. $415 All apns, hence CA, gas heat, resting, bus lease. Leave terms available to May 31, July 31, and Dec. 31. Call between 9 am or 6 m on Friday. 843-4744 Brand new studio for sublance. I book from U nii 8411. Any time, keep trying. Dupuis, 2 in. 1 inch duplex for rent. East Lawrence, 1937. W411 bookings: 284-715. For rent. 2 bedroom house, include water, driver, raft and lodge $75; monthly plus deposit and utilities. Available from: **630** Broadway, NYC 10024. Reserve your studio now for the spring semester while the selection is good. Fully furnished, free cable TV, close to campus. meadowbrook Farmed studio apartment $200 month plus electricity 824-466 Large one bedroom apartment with fireplace; located in large old building has separate entry and is handicapped-accessible. APARTMENT LIFE GOT YOU DOWN ? THINKING OF MOVING BACK TO THE CAMPUS LIFESTYLE? THINK OF NAISMITH HALL ON CAMPUS CONVENIENCE WITH AN OFF CAMPUS LIFESTYLE! 1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559 Looking for occupant to assume Nannah Hall guardian for your property in the dorm call 754-826- guarantee yourself a spirit in the dorm call 754- 826- Meadowbrook studio sublue. Large with 1 BR Meadowbrook studio sublue. Large with 1 BR gas and water pay $25/month. Jan. through Feb. 2013. NICE 1 BRAT $300 a month. All utilities paid. quiet and good location. Call 841-4201 paid: CaB Bell B43, 843-1869 paid: CAB Bell B40, Music studios (for outside) $100 off payee: Bob Hirschi B43, 843-2400 Lawn rent. Roommate for 2 HR apct. $137.50 mo. util. call. Ball Cn. 843 1690 Low rent. Roommate for 25K apt. $137,50 mo. utl. Low rent. Max rent. $149,50 mo. utl. SUBLEASE. Nice Quaid Frees air 18:1 (l/2 bath), all conservances, pool, clubhouse 10:39 call. $750 for one room at Sunnybrook, 441-237-6632. Sublease EXCELLENT new studio with bedroom and ceiling fan can Available December 19th, 2018 Room for rent near university and downtown. No pets please. 415-5500 paid. Call Bill; 843-1869 Low cost for Rent-Base for 2 bpt apt; $17.50/mo until One bedroom, Sondance Apts. on KU Rua Borto, furnished, use, water paid, available, absence required. Save money, rent a 1, or 2 bedroom, or studio apartment next to campers. No pets. Phone 842-4835. Spacious Townhouse available January 1. 213 Hanover Place! only 1 block from Waste, large 90% space. Free parking. Roommate wanted $110/mo 1/2 utilities. RRd paid 4th & 6th Avail now or at a semi-fresh rent. Spring semester sullesse. Sparium 2B Clr. Hose to carpape. Large kitchen, 1/2 bath, $62/month. 8402 8302 Sublease: 3 bedroom apt. WD 3 blocks from Union Street. Spacious Townhouse available January 1 - 19 825 Spadina Blvd, Toronto, ON M4S 1P3 bathroom 1/2 bed, 6 floorplans, in garage. DLL kitchen, laundry room, office, outdoor space. Sublease large 2 bedroom apt. On bus route. Rent $495.00 Available. NM-81399 bedroom, 1.12 ft2 bath, fireplace, upstairs $349, downstairs $269, monthly $780. Call Carb at 843-4428 or Jeff at 843-6607 vacancies in the Kominion Christian Living Community for second season Contact E.C.M. C $845/mo. Available now 811-2390 vacations in the Christiania Kirchner Living Center, ECM C.M. --adventure furniture, Shoemaker's across Kaw River Bridge. 2 miles north of Lawrence on 841-541-8067. Three-story home with brick garage. Fourteen-foot length rabbit rack. Only used once for great Christmas train calls. Call Adriane at 749-560-8363. APARTMENTS West An Offer You Can't Refuse! Unbelievably Slashed Rates! 1 & 2 BR Apts. - Laundry facilities * Excellent maintenance - Year-build * Awshifting * * Free shield from to campus 14 times daily * * Free access to library Don't miss this opportunity to give the greatest resident-oriented ap dition. You are unhappy in your present room. Call us. We work WITH you. WANTED 3 mature people to share super power 4 warmrooms, large fireplaces, big fireplace, fully equipped kitchen and laundry, 2 garage, lovely yard but not busy, 2 humeral preferred. From jar (or car) or 1680+ month plus. Email: jason@miller.com COMPLETELY FURNISHED Studio 2, on bedroom apartments immediately. Great location for a variety of sports and activities. FOR SALE MADE-BROWN BOX spaces 2 bedroom apartment available now this Oak. Can stay and pay twice. Same room rate as a private suite. **WV** Bug, black, good condition. Fun to run winter or summer. *Belle Transport* availability. 191 Camaray, FM VC Cam carie, one owner, many rebuilt parts, body and engine in good condition. Carriage 1963 Honda Civic - runs good, must sell $1600 or BEST OFFER 4 - speed. 842-6618 1987 1.2 Subaru WD weapon. Many extrays, this owner. Great snow car. Best reasonable offer on fuel. *Dalat Dalmil*, 2003, speed air, safety inspected, exellent condition. 841-306 early editions. 103 Mazda KY5R GSed Low mileage, AC AFM surround 3 speeds, etc. Very good condition, $6,400 or more. 1mm (4mm, door, air, fire, FWD) *great in snow;* AM/FM, super condition. $1,600.79 1346 Auction: consignment every Friday night 7 o'p.m. Shaehner's, across the Omaha River Bridge, 2 miles from downtown. HIKE. SR Alpine Sport 12 speed in good condition 175 OBO 849 424-894 DON'T RENT IT! BEST BUY IT! DON'T RENT IT! BEST BUY IT! BIM all stay* call 882-7827. Electric teleporter. IBM Executive Pro- portion spacing, smaller under service contract, cost of all metal type stander on wheels. $400 per year. For sale I a living room set, brown, tn rust, plaid $200 or best offer. Top of the line Pioneer stereo cabinet, never used, glass door, built in headphone jack. $75.00 or originally $178.00. Call 749.269, keep Great Gifts. STONES, CONTELLO POLICE, MARSHALL WALEY, pirate HIGHWAY fc98828 Having trouble getting on the university computer terminals? You can purchase your own terminal to use with your phone and do your homework there. The terminals have KU which has reduced the price of the students for faculty and staff. For details and for instruction call 814 6027 or Alphalea at 664 Mass. Ask for Ralph RADIO SHACK MODEL 1. 128K, Disk Drive, U/Lower case, monitor many programs. l. 658. 2064-2064 Speakers, large beautiful walnut cabinets, 1 way transmission line Excelcerol call Sound Labs Stereo television video. All name brands. Lowest video area. Total Sound Distributors. 138, 6000. Stark helps to Control S&P Sportscape 300w practical, reliable and durable for school! Call practical and reliable for school! Call SKI- KC4. 710, 185 cm = volumen 277 bundling Good condition. $160 (KC4 842-464) LOST AND FOUND HELP WANTED Found items in HIllcrest Laundry Dyer Call to identify 249.286 CHOCOLATE CARPET *dorm room sizes* $30, shags $35, chocolate piles. Great deals, clean stuff 842-113 **MISCELLANEOUS** A stuff Sandwich Shop. Now taking applications for full or part time positions. Apply in person or online. BOSTON - EAST COST ADVENTURE Explore opportunities of exciting city life and work as live in job training at our location, with mentorship. Contact Child Care Placement 149, Buckminster D. Brookhill, Mass. 02146. Found Four November 21, 2009 golden tabby kitten wearing blue collar shirt and white cap. Society of America. 843 6635. Found. A gold necklace on side path behind Elliott river to jackson Tower. 641-8424 123 ABLINES ARE HIREING NOW! Flight Attendant and Captain for our job at AMC Theaters! PODCAST YOUR interviews! Call 1-866-722-7119 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT at one of the first camps in the United States, located near Exes Park, Colorado. We are looking for persons with leadership capacity and persons interested in working in the camp setting as support staff in the leadership capacity or assistance in portage and maintenance crew. Must be 19; college sophomore or older. From mid-June to end of August, apply for an allowance. Personal interviews on campus the end of January. For application, write or call (855) 703-6252, Box 6525, Denver, Colorado 80226, 303/77-3617. FRESHMEN-SCGILARSHIPS AVAILABLE. It too late to notate in NAVAL ROTC Call 864-3161 Harvard School of Public Health is looking for a mechanical school student located in Topeka Job suitable for upperclassman or grad student Associates with flexible resume or flexible resume of work history to Mr. Thomas Dumyat, H3ST Room 1321 665 Huguenne Ave, 912-0315 or call 121 or 123 only 912-3535 BOSTON-EAST COAST ADVENTURE: Explore op- portunities in the Bay Area and learn of the community's large openings; 1 year com- mittent; Contact Child Care Placement Service; 19 backroom Road, Brooklyn, MA 02136 844-735-2000 PART TIME RADIO NEWS REPORTER. To cover weekend news and some evenings at KLW/KLZR in Lawrence Journalism training and formal broadcasting experience. Position immediately available. Send tape and resume to: NeuroDirector KLW/KLZR, P Box 806, Lawrence. Want part time custodians, evening hours 15-20 hours per week for Adams at Adams Center & 618 Square. Please call (314) 595-3233. GUTTARST for working rock band (mostly weekends): Must have experience and ability to handle a variety of styles. Background vocal ability preferred. Must be able to start immediately. Call Al Summer John National Park Cvw 21 Forge, 906 Sage Creek Rd, Lafayette, LA 70548 Mission Mts. Gb 610 2a3 10 Waltsep Mtl BRESEARCH ASSISTANT Work study eligibility required Office of Affirmative Action $3.25/hour Fee for Male $10/hour Strong Hail Position open immediately. Appointment through 5/17 Applicated deadline: 12/8 Southern Hills Floral is accepting applications for part time jobs with experience or a background in hospitality (912) 292-1200 or 912-292-1090. MISCELLANEOUS PERSONAL Used furniture买回 and sale. Pick up available Everything But ice, sith and Vermont ATTENTION. ALL FALL GRADS! This is our college. You must graduate before you earnered. No longer do you need to be ignored. No longer do you need to have your parents, grandparents and aunts at high school. Starting at high school on December 17 we will give them the university's recognition and else the university refuses to recognize us, but we aren't gone yet. All you need is a hats and a graduation cap (optional). Don't miss to walk down the steps and page optional). Don't miss to walk down the steps and page optional). The Tradition Begins. (March music will be Stop smoking or lose weight with acupuncture 749-4422. 9.5 Douglas Hang in there, only 8 more months. I love you, Betas Private room available in articu environment. Progressively thinking individuals look for roommate in downtown area apartment, within 2 blocks of Lawrence galleries and Arts Center Urban space with private bathroom. Available immediately for the right man. Phone 913-749-5416 whenever convenient* Sincere male wants to meet female 20-34 for lasting relationship. Write and send photo to Box 1256, Boston, MA 02217. To my M, A 4.5 friends. The time has come to say Goodbye. My school has been fun! "It's now the New Year," she said. "I'll be back to school classes strife I will soon be out with the rest of you, but for pure joy with each other." I write, "PLEASE WRITE!" BUSINESS PERS MARGLE SWEATHINTHIS by Russell Athletic Wilson's w/ Red Nets pattern, Light Blue Nets with Black Lakers shirt, Light Blue Wowal Wowal W 21 w/ sweat postpaid Send check to Bennett Retail Boutique A large strong keg outlet Bennett Retail Boutique Liquidated A strong key outlet. Bennett Retail Laundry Chilled from Raleigh, NC. Located north of Menton Stadium, 8412 North. 8412-723-9600 We MEET Or BEAT TRAVEL CENTER + Any Available Air Fare We Have Every DISCOUNT And REDUCED Rate Colorado Springs $100 Cincinnati $118 Chicago $150 Houston $130 Denver $150 New Orleans $150 Dallas $150 Phoenix $180 Las Vegas $180 Los Angeles $209 Ft. Lauderdale $198 New York $198 Washington, D.C. $190 Honolulu $350 St Louis $78 London $693 TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd Receive $100,000 Flight Insurance with every airline ticket purchased at no additional cost. 841-7117 BIRTHDAY CAKES, special occasion cakes and decorated professional cake. Call 841-3388 BLINKIES and PILLBOX at Louise's West Wed. 11/20, 42 cover M-F 9-5:30 * Sat. 9:30-2 Alpha Leasing we rent Cars-Trucks-Vans as low as $9.95 per day to a wine tasting includes over 600 bottles of chilled wine 846 Illinois. 842 0722. Be sure to stop by the E.T. Shop, Gifts, new fun snapshots 73 Massachusetts. 843 0611. (plus mileage & ins) Located at Smith Motors 1231 E. 23rd 842-8187 Dell & Delivery are available COMPRESENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES, early medicare enrollment, health insurance, confidence-qualified Kansas (73) area clinics Curtis Matthes Showcases! **60** movies to choose from a variety of titles and movies, plus pre-recorded videos. In 18th Century Europe, a resourceful kid created a colorful box with 24 little doors, each door opening up a picture, toy or present. The child would open the door and find a little present. European Tradition in Your Home Today Start a Start a tradition for only $2.85. Chocolate Unlimited Sun.-Thurs.—Noon 10 p.m. Fri. & Sat.—Noon 10:30 p.m. Southern Hills Center • 749-1100 - Southern Hills Center * 749-1100 FREE NAME IMPRINTING with purchase of two or more letters of Hallmark, M.Athens or Whitman. Improve口袋, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course fine portraits. A personal touch. Barb's Vintage Rose 9181/2 Mass. M-S 10-5 841-2451 Thurs. 10-8 It is not too early to order Christmas portraits or prototypes. PRINTS 509 Penny (Nyama 841 490). By appr ease, please contact: PERFECT FOR CHRISTMAS! College awnings for Russell Athletic. Harvard, Davidson, Duke, Villanova, orderly, orderly, orderly, 12/9 or Christmas delivery. $14.00 each postpaid Sand check to Box 317, Brockley, Md. 95017 or GET FIT OVER BREAK FOR ONLY $15 NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER 1801 W. 32nd W. Northland NCR Center 749-1501 SKI VAIL BEAVER CUEER & WILL FELL FOR Skiing. Will fall if you do not SKI DURATION RATES on lodging (10-25) and skiing lessons. by it on a shirt, custom silkscreen printing. T shirts, jerseys and caps. ShirtArt. Shrift 749-6161 6161 When you need not talk to someone you can call or drop by 1626masters. We're at 1627 Massachusetts. Our number is 1627. We are friendly and confident and WE NEVER CLOSE. Special Press on Christmas Portraits through December 15 at swell Studio. Call for details COLORADO SKI VACATIONS Special for students. Harcurs $7 and peres $2. Cherokee ask for Dr. Dennis K431-530 Vacation Clearinghouse 1-800-821-4488 Two stores full of bargains and we are helping you shop. S.A. Thrift Stores, 16 E. H and Gavin Vernet, 301-759-8222. Western Civilization Notes Now on sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sure to use one of the following books: 1. 30 First Exam preparation - 'New Analysis of Western civilization' available now at Town Center. 2. 30 Second Exam preparation - 'New Analysis of Western civilization' available now at Town Center. BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing, confidential counseling N4E-8212 Barb's Vintage Rose has Vintage gifts for Christmas turs, jewelry & silks has Vintage girls for Christmas furs, jewelry & silks 9181/2 Mass. M-S 10-5 841-2451 Thurs. 10-8 Danger signals! Headache, backache, arm pain, arm pain, numbness. For complete spinal evaluation, call the Chiropractic Health Center and Doctor M-E. Request health insurance acceptance. No charge for consultation THRIST STORES Appliances, furniture, clothing, knife-steel, bedding Always good bargain! bathroom toilets Always good bargain! Professors - grad students! Turn your knowledge, skills into a proficient seminar. Highly successful seminar entrepreneur will help you FREE INFO MATHON, Jordan Seminars, box 824. Takes 5 weeks. Wholesale Sound Rental, P.A., Guitar, and Bass amplifiers 814 6495 SERVICES OFFERED Artists with the written word Tying editing, graphics WORD ARTISTS. Ellen B41-3722 Can write computer service: term papers, books, and manuscripts. Call 844-3690 - ib, and 844 - 7565. www.victoria.edu.uk $\rho(n)$ Custom sewing and alterations Mary Torneden Q297 English MA 5. 75% mtu, teaching exp. will wint to grammar课, will win; preadored teachers large number of students. Looking for a "superior" for someone special? Call the Bedtime Company - A tuck service in 811-8041 VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT Research Skills Training. Prepare for Foreign Language Reading, Preparing for Exams for Foreign Language Study Skills. Showed FPRF. Prepare for Math and English Assistance Center (21, M87. 604-984). Eron now! In Lawrence Driving School, receive driver's license in four weeks without examiner's test. Transportation provided, drive now, pay later. 842-9615 STADIUM BARBER SHOP. 1033 Massachusetts, downtown all harbor. $5.90. No appointment. PROFESSIONAL LOOKING COMPUTER Compiled Repair Kit for Computer Package. Typeset Printed Resume Service. Hire Quality Cont. Request Free Brochure. Genl Specially Corporation, to Campaign Drive, Albany, New York Foreign Students: Personal, efficient editing of your dissertation, thems., m.t. technical report, research paper or other work. instructions, mending, custom sewing. Cleaning and washing aks, offices, homes, laundry & Zona Handling. Statistics Tutoring Individual or small group Reasonable call. Call 841-8734 TYPING 24 hour typing. All day, all night. Extra experience with all forms of typing. Extreme experience. A A A A A Affordable TYPING SPENCER quality typing WORD PROCESS quality typing WORD PROCESS 1942 1942 p.m. Mon-Fri & all day Sat-Sun AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs. Call Lady: 842-7950 a.p.m. Absolute Letter Perfused Editing, Book Keeping, Printing professional papers 94-6980 www.knowledgeofprinting.com Becky's Typing Excellent typing at reasonable rate HMIS selective phone. Call 812-460-8090 in office. Call TIP TOP TYPING, 1202 loca Experimental Research Center, 875 W. 3rd St., Raleigh, NC, Local Corresponding SE0000 841-8427 Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed, over night service (under 25 minutes). Call Mary; 841-6072. Accurate, affordable typing through the holiday. Call Nancy; 841-1219 EKM GRAPH 819B for HP ICM Correcting Selectric Hard 842 3210 after 5.00 Use HP ICM Correcting Sellectric Hard 842 3210 after 5.00 Call Terry for your typing needs. Letters, teem papers, desserts, etc. the IBM office has you covered. Experienced typist will type documentation. Measures term papers, etc. Resumes called: 621-583-0794 1 Is a Fax Fast, Affordable, Quick Tracing, Word Processing you can offer? (843-2200) Experienced typist, Term paper, theoretical paper, and research papers. Send resume to Ms. Pena, and will be assigned paper. Please email resume to jpina@univ.upa.edu. SPECIFIC HOME FURNISHING DOB 56/08/20 ON TIME, EXPIRIES PRIST FAST & EFFECTIVE Fronstretze! Pressed back for time! Call and tip your server so you can concentrate on research or presentation. Send a message to us from your GOOD WORK, TYPING WORD PROCESSING REASONABLE rates. Call Tel: 842-3111 FAPING WORLD PKSSS FKSSS, IBM Society for Software Engineering, 20th Street, New York, NY 10022 Well contracted software. 528 Word Packaging. Well maintained database. Resumes to: fapingworld@ibm.com 3 services at 1 location typing, uploading and grafting WORD AINTSTATS. call Ellen B411 842 7122 GYPING PULS. THESS, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, recuses. Association with composition, grammar spelling, etc. English tutoring for foreign students, or Americans. 841-6249 Typing. Dissertation, thesis, term paper, eFlat. Accurate, reliable. Call 814-452 6730 Word Processing plan lighted, the illustrations are black with white outlines. The artboard chart plans graph plus plan plus Library Research - Typing - Editing (Will help online research, outline N21240) WANTED 2 Roommates to share 2 hpl apt for spring semester $16.66 per month . 841-4966 . Nan or Liss Permanent residence in NYC Permanent residence in NJ Permanent residence in MD and Boston (123) per month plus 1-2 annuities. Discounts apply. Apply online at www.fairlearning.com. 2 female roommates wanted to share 2 bedrooms on right on campus. Only $18 per month, all bills included. Send resumes to RMCS@vistara.edu. Commuter or resume to share fellow apt. app. $16/month plus 4 lbs. ice packs. Negotiable upon availability. Desperately Needed Math 10th Book Fundamentals of Algebra 4th ed. by Swokowski. May be for 8th or 9th graders. (Available through Scholastic.) Female roommate for spring summer (the formal equipment): $13 plus 1 cellphone. Call (847) 269-2000. Female roommate skilled in computer use. Call (847) 269-2000 for details. $14 plus 1 cellphone. Female roommate, non-smoker. Call (847) 269-2000. Female roommate wanted $150 plus 1.5 million water is paid on the basis Parks Availability. Roommates to rent in NYC only. Female resume要求 wanted Profer grade student $100 plus mla plus耻辱. Duties: interview, recruit Female remote, non-smoker student实习 for displays by Wakamu $150 monthly (in 2023). $890-$1299 per month. Apply on: www.wakamu.com. Kale commute warrant,Jan 1. Excellent deal 3-level townhouse design award partially $163 mo. $49 utilities. Five min from campu- landment. Need bed, desk, dresser. lift 62ft. Male roommate will charge 2 bedrooms, 3 baths male with 2 other rooms. £180 per month plus charges for extra bedding, furniture and toiletries. Male roommate wanted for new 1 bedroom furnished apartment $360每月 plus 1.82% FIA & APR Rates. Please email info@newpax.com Male roommate will pay for spring semester. Private room. On five course $115 plus monthly life insurance. Male roommate to share very nice 28-inch apis with present roommate. Ap is on an uphole, near exterior skimmer area, has privacy screen, large windows. Newly dishwashed, dishwasher. AC, newly carpeted and potted plants. Needed to move in as soon as possible after Jan. 14th. R Male roommate, spring term, share 2 HPL apt on *sangus* UBLC, cable TV paid $44.00 Male roommate needed for extremely new age (18+) students in a college dormitory. Must be a full-time student, sleep lab, and non-smoking adult. Send resume to Roommate Services, 320 East 57th Street, NY, NY 10001. Nainash. Female needed to take over spring rope till I pay for $100 deposit. Call 784-4434. Need 1.2 rooms to share two duplex in quarters and 6 rooms with 3, fan and exquisite gourmet kitchen & Baskin-Robbins with 4 we need one restraint for heater from campus rear seat. $106.65 plus 1.2 l free airbag. North Saskatchewan. Nominating kinkable roommate for a bedroom apartment, with own room. City bus route 1A, U.S. postal code 90265. Perfect duples *apt* by albatross' Modem; furnished gadgets need our female commuter starting for her job. Quiet non-smoking FEMALE remunerate station to share 3 hard bldg. 3dph $160 plus $10 utilities. Partially turned in. A (C, W), private home. On-site medical care. Reservations referenced, help required. Call 841 9451 after p. 69. Roommate requests to share 2 bbm apt at 1021 Abbuman. Upper floor of 2 bpm apt, 12th floor of 2 bpm apt from Community Mercyville. For details please contact Holiday Plaza Office at 842-693-0060; from 0-693-0060. Roommate wanted to share a furnished 2-bedroom located at 100 Emery. Call 643-8049 Roommate was immediately 7 BBL apartment. $116.67 meal, plus 1.3Utilities, 2 blocks from main street. Broommate wanted for 3 bedrooms to house starting Jan. $140 plus 1 / utilities: 844-443-4411 Recommend needed, please in computer and document- ial format. Send resume to: SUNY New York School of Engineering, Upperclassman or graduate ("U") for phone: (314) 678-2900. Wanted: Mature female man interested to brand new townhouse at 9th and Michigan (810) x90 **Discounted Offer:** $50 off one room rental. Wanted: No smoking, female to older man. Quit study at睡着. No partage $125.00 per hour. Wanted: mature female tin smoker to share brand new housewaid at 8th & Bathl. $109 plus 6% SPORTS The University Daily KANSAN November 30, 1983 Page 16 Study says women also can benefit Weights are not just for men By JANELLE MARTIN Sports Writer Women athletes long have wrestled with the traditional question of just how physically active they could be. For example, folklore says that women will develop male characteristics and too many muscles if they work with weight. But all that is changing. Earlier this month a survey of physicians and weightlifting experts said that most American women were vastly undmuscled and should not fear that they would overdevelop their muscles endurance-building weight training. The survey was part of a White House Symposium on Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine in Washington, D.C. The symposium was co-sponsored by the President's Council on Physical Fitness and the Campbell Soup Co. Speakers at the symposium said that a large number of women were not close to being physically fit and should not fear tears. The booth was biky, buky, and the appearing muscles. "MANY AMERICAN women are so undermissed that their basal metabolic rate is lower than 1.4 kg/m² and Richard O Keeler, physician and Camden, N.J." health and fitness expert. Also at the symposium, Harvey Newton of the U.S. Weightlifting Federation, said women were able to improve quietness when taking part in a competition. Newton cited a study compiled in Arizona that involved five female national track and field champions between the ages of 12 and 14 who were placed on a seven-month weight-training program. At the end of the study, he said, the girls had made substantial gains in strength. They improved upper-body strength by 37 percent and lower-body strength by 29 percent. Despite these improvements, only small increases in muscle bulk. Wayne Osness, professor of health, physical education and recreation at the University of Kansas, said he had noticed an interest in strength development by women in the past 10 years and participated in the past five years. He said that physiologically the balance of hormones in an individual's body would prevent women from becoming muscular. "GIRLS WILL ALWAYS be girls and boys will always be boys as long as their hormonal balance stays the same in the room, that they do in the weight room," he said. He also said that in the past females had been weaker in upper body strength, but the difference in potential between men and women had closed. "This limits the things they can do and is largely due to societal pressure." Parents and society in general, he said, are concerned about girls looking He said that the goal of weightlifting was to develop one's body to accomplish what one wanted to do and that a skill required strength was required to do anything. "We have quickly learned when a female is involved in activities that will improve her strength, she will improve according to her genetic makeup," he said. "The myth of girls like looking boys is far from the truth." MARIAN WASHINGTON, head wrestler at the gym coach, is glad with the myth dispelled. "We are becoming a nation that is fitness conscious," she said. "Women are just beginning to reap the benefits of a good weight program. For many years we were inhibited because the lack of exercise could generate masculine characteristics. This has impaired physical progress in many sports." See LIFTING, p. 14, col. 1 BASKETBALL KU freshman guard Toni Webb concentrates as she works out in the weight room at Parrott Athletic Center. Working with free weights and machine weights is an important part of head coach Marion Washington's conditioning program for the women's basketball team. Stephen Phillips/KANSAh Nebraska still atop UPI poll Close call at OU does not affect coaches' choices By United Press International NEW YORK — Not even a narrow escape for Nebraska did much good for No. 2 Texas in this week's UPI Coaches' college football ratings. Despite a scary 28-21 victory over Oklahoma, the Cornhuskers received 33 of a possible 36 first-place votes and 53 points. Texas, which also finished its regular season, gained two more first-place votes than last week to give the Longhorns three votes for the top spot and 54 points. It isn't good enough for Texas coach Fred Akers. "Right now I don't think we're second to anybody," he said. Nevertheless, the Longhorns find themselves in precisely that situation entering the bowl season. The last regular season ratings will be released next week and the final rankings to be released by the champion will follow the bowl games. THE TOP 11 teams remained the same after a light weekend. Nebraska and Texas are followed by No. 3 Auburn, No. 4 Miami (Fla.), No. 5 Illinois, No. 6 Southern Methodist, No. 7 Georgia, No. 8 Michigan, No. 9 Brigham Young, No. 10 Iowa and No. 11 Florida. Boston College moved three spots up to 12th after its 20-13 victory over Alabama knocked the Tide from 12th to out of the rankings. Roundting out the Top 20 are No. 13 Ohio State, No. 14 Pittsburgh, No. 5 Maryland, No. 16 Florida, No. 17 Baylor, No. 18 Virginia Tech, No. 19 West Virginia and No. 20 Oklahoma. Texas. Southern Methodist and Georgia finished their regular seasons with victories Saturday. The Longhorns crushed Texas A&M 45-13 to finish 11-0 and win the Southwest Conference title outright. SMU melted Houston 34-12 in the Mirage Bowl Sunday morning in Tokyo for a 10-1 finish and Georgia nipped Georgia Tech 27-24 to improve to a 9-1 final. OKLAHOMA, 7., tumbled four spots after losing to Nebraska. Idle Maryland, Air Force, Baylor and Virginia Tech all moved up two places. Idle West Virginia, #3., rejoined the rankings at a one-week absence. Nebraska was ranked first since the pre-season and solidified its rating with a 44-6 season-opening victory over Penn State. The Cornhuskers are an Orange Bowl victory against Miami away from a perfect season. Nebraska hopes to add to its stellar season by copping top individual awards. I-back Mike Rozier is the leading Heisman Trophy candidate and guard Dean Steinkuhler is in the running for the Outland Trophy and Lombardi Award for the nation's best lineman. "To go 12-0 is a tremendous feat," Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said, "but we still have a tough game left in the Orange Bowl." The Big Ten has the most ranked teams of any league with four. The SWC and Southeast Conference have three apice, followed by the Big Eight and Western Athletic Conference with two and the Atlantic Coast Conference with one. Five independent schools are in the Top 20. KANSAS 10 52 87 KANSAS 10 | | Att. | Comp. | Int. | Yards | TD | Pct. | Long | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1980 | 146 | 64 | 11 | 797 | 5 | 43.8 | 72 | CU | | 1981 | 176 | 89 | 11 | 1199 | 4 | 50.5 | 62 | CU | | 1982 | 259 | 127 | 15 | 1625 | 7 | 49.0 | 80 | OSU | | 1983 | 353 | 187 | 15 | 2789 | 14 | 53.0 | 74 | USC | | Tot. | 934 | 467 | 56 | 6410 | 14 | 50.0 | 74 | OSU | Seurer: a season of glory and grief Seurer's Career Passing Stats 6 Senior sets records despite adversity By JEFF CRAVENS Associate Sports Editor Stripped to the waist, the tall, young athlete leaned against the locker room wall surrounded by a group of sports writers. Weariness was etched in his face. Kansas quarterback Frank Seurer was going through the ritual of another post game interview, this time after the Jayhawks had lost, 67-13, to Nebraska. when I about the game. "How much did the trial affect you?" How much did the trial end yet? The writer was asking about the murder trial of Bryan Keith Bell, who two days before the game had been convicted of murdering Seurer's father, Frank Seurer Sr. Patiently, Seurer turned to the topic, as he had many times before, with the same attitude, the same rehearsed tone: "The way it affected me was that I missed two practices, didn't get to watch a lot of film and missed some meetings. That's really the only way it affected HE REFUSED TO USE the trial as an excuse for his performance against Nebraska, a game in which he had two interceptions. He had already accepted the offer. Seurer's final season with the Jayhawks was one of celebration and consternation. He became the Big Eight's all-time leader for passing yardage in a season and a career, but watched the Jayhawks stumble to a 4-6 record. His father's death and the subsequent turtle further complicated matters. The murder was always lurking omniously in the background during the season. Before the season began, Seurer's father was stabbed to death in Pop's Bar-B-Q, 2214 Yale Road. The elder Seurer had purchased the restaurant in February so that he could move to Lawrence and watch his son play his final Testimony during the trial revealed that Bell, who was fired from Pop's, had entered the restaurant on the morning of Aug. 20 to ask Seurer to hire him back. An argument ensued and Seurer was killed,抓获 23 times with at least two different weapons. The murder occurred seven days before Seurer was to begin two a-day workouts in preparation for the season. The media swarmed in, wondering if Seurer would be able to deal with the tragic loss. Would he be able to play? See SEURER, p. 14, col. 3 Big 8 attendance number of KU fans increases slightly Staff Reporter By COLLIN HERMRECK Staff Reporter Despite a one year drop in Big Eight Conference football attendance, 1983 figures showed an increase of more than 10 percent for the Big Eight office reported this week. The total approximated attendance turned in by the eight schools was 2,508,963 for 49 games compared with 2,434,753 last year. On the average, 89.4 percent of all the seats in conference stadiums were full each game this season. Those totals made this season the fourth best draw in conference history. In 1980, more than 2.6 million fans filled stadiums for the largest JAMES ATTRIBUTED much of this year's increase to Nebraska, its Heisman candidates and their No.1 one ranking the entire season. "We think the conference is recog- nized across the country as a quality conference," Big Eight Commissioner Carl James said yesterday. He also credited the addition of KU coach Mike Gottfried and coach Jim Criner at Iowa State for the renewed enthusiasm. "Certainly the offenses at Iowa State and Kansas created a lot of excitement, " Although KU also showed an attendance increase this year of almost 20,000 or 3,434 fans a game more than last season, the team still ranked next to last in the conference. KU averaged about 35,016 a game this year in 51,500-seat Memorial Stadium for 68 percent capacity, lowest of all eight schools. Kansas State, the last place finisher in the conference standings, also finished last in average attendance with 32,338 a game. THE BIG RED fans of Oklahoma and Nebraska were responsible for much of the attendance increase. The fans from OU and NU not only filled Memorial Stadium in Lincoln, Neb., and Owen Field in Norman, Okla., for each home game but much of other stadiums as well. Memorial Stadium in Lincoln has a capacity of 79,650 but the Cornuskers jammed almost 2,000 more fans in the stadium each game. No seats were open once again this year in 75,008 owen Owen Field Nebraska led the conference in attendance with six sellouts and a single-game average of 76.334. The Cornhuskers were followed closely, however, by Oklahoma with an average of 75.008. Missouri was third with 52,029, followed by Iowa State with 49,277. Oklahoma State 48,788, Colorado 39,612, KU and K-State. More Sports, p. 14 Days of the strong Kansas City defense are in the distant past By RICK GOSSELIN United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Remember that great defensive tradition of the Kansas City Chiefs . . . the defensive tradition woven by the likes of Bobby Bell, Buck Buchanan, Willie Lanter, Jerry Mays, John Robinson, Emmitt Thomas and more recently Art Still, Gary Green and Gary Barbaro? Well, the Chiefs apparently have forgotten it because they are playing as a team. Kansas City's offensive unit, for the first time in a long time, is playoff caliber. In the past two weeks the Chiefs have rolled up 69 points, 55 first downs and 863 yards. Quarterback Bill Kenney has been a particular standout, passing for 648 yards and six touchdowns and rushing for two more scores. down and rushing for two more scores. But for all the might of that offensive explosion, the Chiefs stand 0-2 in their past two games to fall out of playoff contention with a 5-8 record. Take a bow, defense. THE CHIEFS HAVE allowed 92 points in those two road games at Dallas and Seattle. Kansas City was dented for a 108-yard rushing performance by Tony Dorsett of the Cowboys and a 207-day day by Curt Warner of the Seahawks. Danny White picked the Kansas City secondary apart for 237 passing yards and Seattle's Dave Krieg blitzed that unit for 280 more. Kansas City lost to Dallas 41-21 and then fell to Seattle 51-48 in overtime. "Dallas had something to do with our (defense) not playing well against them," Kansas City Coach John Mackovic said. "But in the Seattle game I think both defenses played about the same. Our defensive play wasn't attributable to one thing. It wasn't one person here or one person there. We broke down everywhere. 4 "Players who had been making plays all year long weren't making them. We didn't play our positions collectively or individually. When you get going the wrong way, someone inevitably tries to pick up the slack and instead of doing one job right you put it on top. When you try to pick up the slack and it becomes a domino effect. Rarely does it all get put back together."