The University Daily
Bill contains stricter penalties
Inside, p. 7
}
Drivers beware
KANSAN
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Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 94, No. 90 (USPS 650-640)
WARM
High, 62. Low, 30.
Details on p. 2.
Wednesday morning, February 1, 1984
Includes no large spending cuts
Reagan to present '85 budget
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — According to documents released by congressional sources yesterday, President Reagan will propose a $262 billion election-year budget for fiscal 1985 that seeks no large spending cuts or tax increases but raises military spending. The documents also said that a projected $180 billion deficit will accompany the budget.
The budget, which the president will send to Congress today, sees a 13 percent "real" inflation-adjusted increase for military spending, $5 billion in social welfare spending cuts and millions of new jobs, according to the leaked documents.
one the $7.8 billion in new taxes next year, $3.9 billion would be provided by requiring employees to pay Social Security and income taxes on employee-paid health insurance pre-tax and $4 billion would come from closing tax loopholes.
The proposed budget projects a deficit of $177 billion in 1868 and $180 billion in 1867, congressional sources said. Fiscal 1955 begins Oct. 1.
THE LARGE, CONTINUING deficit may be an election-year issue for critics of Reagan. Reagan vowed in his 1980 presidential campaign that he would try to balance the budget by 1984. Taking advantage of another may have been less likely.
Taking advantage of another major,
election-year issue — education — the
country is facing.
from money deposited in special accounts, used to pay future higher education expenses of dependent children be excluded from federal income taxes.
Taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes under $40,000 would be allowed to deposit up to $1,000 a year in these accounts tax-free and those with incomes between $40,000 and $60,000 would be eligible for a partial tax
Federal student aid based on need would fall by about $325 million, but certain programs, such as college work study, would be increased as part of the administration's emphasis on self-help.
Rep. Jim Jones, D-Dokla, chairman of the House Budget Committee, said there were "no surprises" in the Reagan budget proposal. "It's sort of an update of the '84 budget," he said after a Capitol Hill briefing.
SENATE REPUBLICAN leader Howard Baker was briefed along with other Republican leaders on the budget early in the day by administration officials. He called the deficit figures "scary," but said it was "a good bid."
SENATE DEMOCRATIC leader Robert Byrd called the proposal "another spend and borrow budget," saying it would be at the same time as Medicare cuts.
The plan proposes $305 billion for the military, which includes the right to
enter into long-term contracts and spend money over several years. This is an increase of $47.4 billion from this year, because the increase, after accounting for inflation
The budget, they said, proposes $2 billion in spending cuts in social welfare programs. The cuts are a huge investment to be made in each of his past three budgets.
In addition, Reagan will seek another $8 billion for development and production of nuclear weapons, congressional budget, compared to last year's $6.4 billion.
THE LARGEST OF THE cuts — totaling 8.2 billion — are in Medicaid, Aid to Families with Dependent Children, subsidized housing, energy assistance, food stamps, school lunch and child nutrition programs. Supplemental Security Income and other low-income programs
No cuts are proposed in the basic Social Security program.
Another $1 billion would be cut from the Medicare program — only half of the amount Reagan initially suggested and $1.2 billion would be cut by delaying and limiting cost-of-living increases and federal retirees, Capitol Hill sources said.
The spending cuts actually would be restraints on the growth of spending, holding it back from levels it otherwise would attain through inflation.
See BUDGET, p. 5, col. 1
Reagan's proposed budget
Taxes
Jobs
Social Programs
Reagan's proposal will include $7.9 billion in tax changes and loophole closings for fiscal 1985, including a new levy on people whose companies provide generous health insurance plans. It also allows for tuition tax credits for parents who send their children to private schools.
Reagan will make a strong budget plea to Congress to enact a $2.50 an hour youth subminimum wage, saying the regular $3.35 an hour minimum wage is a barrier to them getting summer jobs. The budget projected average unemployment of 7.8 percent in 1984.
The president will ask Congress for a record $318.1 billion for health and welfare programs and will renew past proposals for Medicare and Medicaid patients to pay more of their medical bills. The proposal reflects a $21.9 billion increase in spending over last year.
Education
President Reagan will recommend that the Education Department receive $15.5 billion for fiscal 1985, about 1 percent more than this year. About 48 percent of the request is for elementary and secondary schools and 42 percent for assistance to college students.
Space
The president will propose a $7.37 billion fiscal 1985 budget for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration — up $302 million over this fiscal year — to begin a space station, resume the Mars exploration program and complete the final space shuttle, Atlantas.
Nutrition
Reagan will propose a reduction in spending for federal nutrition programs by 3 percent to $17.2 billion, with part of the cut coming from an expected reduction in unemployment that could reduce food stamp rolls and another from increased aid from states.
Justice
Reagan will propose a record $3.7 billion for the Justice Department, with key increases to help share more illegal drugs, drug dealers.
KUMC walkway is called useless by students, staff Construction funds ran out before bridge finished as designed
By DAVID SWAFFORD Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — The 130-foot steel expansion bridge that stretches over 39th Street at the University of Kansas Medical Center apparently is the path not taken.
Ridicuie is often heard. And some students and staff members are calling the $300,000 structure
"I've never used it. I've never seen anyone use it," said Sonja Brown, Meriden junior in the School of Nursing. "I think it's stupid. It's easier walking across the street."
The enclosed bridge was built last summer as part of the $5 million Archie I. Dykes Library
Originally, the bridge was supposed to connect the library, on the north side of 39th Street, with the rest of the Med Center on the south side of the street.
BUT BECAUSE OF construction delays and inflation, the University ran out of appropriated funds.
As a result, construction ceased. To walk across the bridge now, one must walk to the sidewalk beside 39th Street, enter the glass enclosed structure, walk up four flights of stairs, pause, walk down four flights of stairs and exit back outside on the opposite sidewalk.
See BRIDGE, p. 5, col. 2
Dynas Library
KANSAS CITY, Kan. – The $360,000 expansion bridge that hovers above 39th Street at the University of Kansas Medical
Center doesn't get much use. These medical students walking under the bridge yesterday said that they never used it.
KU building needs repairs to stop fumes
By STEPHANIE HEARN
Staff Reporter
But KU officials said the new system for eliminating toxic toxins emitted by art materials has made the process easier.
An architect has begun designing a new exhaust system to alleviate problems created by hazardous fumes in the KU Art and Design Building.
"I have no idea when the exhaust system will be installed," said James Canole, associate director.
A recent report conducted by two KU employees detected serious ventilation problems in the building's silk-screening and spray-painting rooms.
Joe Waters, of KU architectural services, is working on a design for an exhaust system that would send polluted air out of the silk-screening room instead of allowing the toxic fumes to escape.
A committee studying the problem met Friday but has not yet decided how to remedy the ventilation problems in the spray painting room or in other areas of the building, he said.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS has access to $30,000 that the Board of Regents had authorized for work on the building at a Regents meeting last October. Canole said
If the money needed for repairs exceeds that amount, he said, KU officials will submit a request to the department.
since the building opened in 1977, fumes have lingered in classrooms, causing complaints of bad air.
Waters said that one reason faculty and students had been bothered by fumes was because rooms in the building were being used differently, or they were way they were designed to be used.
Jerry Moore, associate dean of fine arts, will meet next week with fine arts faculty members to determine how the rooms need to be changed to accommodate the instructors.
After assessing what materials will be used in rooms and what kind of ventilation is required to use these materials safely. Moore said he would give the information to Canole.
Raymond Schweigler, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Hospital, said that over the last six years, students had come to the hospital for acute poisoning and irritations because of exposure to toxic fumes.
PHIL BLACKHURST, art department chairman, said a few repairs to correct design problems in the ventilation system had been made when the University's budget allowed
In 1880, Eileen Murphy, associate professor of design, suffered from a rash when vapors from laquer thinner drifted down a hallway and into her office.
Richard Varney, who teaches in the windowless spray painting room, has told his students that he can make paintings with water.
To convince the students, Varney blew his nose during a spray-painting session. When students saw all the colors on the tissue, they believed him.
According to the Center for Occupational Hazards in New York, continued exposure to many art materials can result in chemical pneumonia, asthma, skin problems, liver and kidney damage, and mercury and lead poisoning.
Car chase in county slowed by lack of road identification
By JILL CASEY Staff Reporter
Eventually the driver weaved his way into Lawrence during the evening rush hour, and the officers stopped chasing him. Members of the Kansas Highway Patrol later apprehended the 17-year-old driver in Lawrence after he had bailed out of the car.
For nearly 20 minutes Monday, law-enforcement officers were involved in an automobile chase that reached speeds of 85 mph over a maze of gravel county roads.
THE DANGEROUS pursuit may have ended sooner if the officers had been able to communicate their locations on the rural roads. Sergeant Don Dahlquijot said yesterday
In the car, the driver had been carrying a 12-gauge shotgun. No shots were fired.
"There was confusion about where they were at as they were going along those streets."
Law enforcement officers aren't the only ones who have had problems dealing with the problem.
In the past, ambulance and fire emergency vehicles have often been slow in reaching their destinations in rural parts of Douglas County Commissioner Nancy Hebert said.
County road signs are few and far between, she said, which has hindered drivers who are used to driving in the city.
The new system will number township roads according to their distance from the south and east Douglas County lines. For example, a township road with the number 1500 will be west county line. A road with the number 1550M is 15.5 miles north of the south county line.
The Douglas County Commission recently approved a grid system for classifying the
"But we had to make the decision on the bottom line of the emergency needs that could be made."
Some people who live in the rural areas of the county are opposed to the number system,
DURING AN EMERGENCY, callers could provide their location with a grid description.
Although no one was hurt during Monday's chase, Liebert said, "there have been really bad accidents and emergency vehicles can belo more if more time is saved."
AT ONE POINT during the high-speed chase, five squad cars were involved. The incident began after Lawrence police responded to a domestic disturbance in the 600 block of Woodside Avenue, where parents had called to report that their son had left home with the car and shotgun.
Templin mail-holding policy illegal
Bv TODD NELSON
Staff Reporter
Templin Hall violated federal postal service regulations when it refused to give mail to residents who had failed to pay fines imposed by a U.S. postal service spokesman said yesterday.
Hershel Ferguson, acting superintendent of postal operations in Lawrence, said that Templin's policy of withholding mail from residents violated postal rules because the mail
became the addressee's property when it was delivered.
Ferguson said he knew of only two residents who had their mail withheld. But Templin officials said mail had been withheld several times in the last two years.
THE PROBLEM HAS been cleared up, Ferguson said, and the hall will no longer withhold mail. He did not say whether further action would be taken.
Fred McElhenie, director of residential programs, said that although the office of McElhenie is not responsible for the data.
residence halls use in collecting fines, he had not approved the mail-withholding policy.
McElhennie said that he first heard of the policy after it had been changed.
Bill Watkins, Templin Hall assistant resident director, said that for the last two years the hall's policy had been to withhold residents' mail when they refused to pay lines or when they refused to discuss the problem.
Mike Osterburk, who became director of Templin last semester, said that he was
See MAILHOLD, p. 5, col. 2
Candidates criticize Reagan foreign policy
By United Press International
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Seven of the Democratic presidential contenders last night repeatedly attacked President Reagan's handling of foreign affairs, particularly in Central America and the Middle East, in a debate at Harvard University.
Sen. John Glenn urged the Reagan administration to scrap its hardline approach to Nicaragua and open negotiations with the Sandinistas.
Former Vice President Walter Mondale criticized in general the administration's use of the military, saying "the principle has to be that
As the candidates debated, the House Democratic leadership, intensifying pressure on President Reagan, last night proposed a resolution calling for the "prompt and orderly" withdrawal of the 1,500 U.S. servicemen in Lebanon.
force is used as a last resort and not as a first resort."
THE RESOLUTION, which was to be submitted to the House Democratic caucus today, sets no deadline, but House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, D-Mass., said the language means withdrawal should be "immediate or right away."
It also says that within 30 days after passage of the non-binding resolution the president should explain to Congress how the withdrawal of the
U. S. members of the multinational peacekeeping forces are accomplished or why it is important to O'Neal's O'Neal
O'Neill indicated the Democratic caucus may not take a final position on the legislation today, and said any legislation would not come to the Senate. O'Neill said Feb. 21 from the Washington's birthday祭.
HOUSE DEMOCRATS are scheduled to meet Wednesday to discuss a resolution telling Reagan to come up with a plan within 30 days for the withdrawal of the Marines, who suffered their 259th casualty Monday since being ordered to peacekeeping duty in September 1982.
In the debate, Glenn complained that "we see
See DEBATE, p. 5, col. 5
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
News briefs from UPI
Protesters in Manila march want Marcos' resignation
MANILA, Philippines — About 500,000 protesters, many chanting "revolution" and "Marcos resign," packed the streets of the capital yesterday in the largest anti-government demonstration in the city since the funeral of Renmino Animo.
since the failure of Dengue Aquino. Police said the demonstration against the 18-year-old rule of President Ferdinand Marcos was the largest since 2 million people attended Aquino's funeral five months ago.
The protesters jammed rooftops, sidewalks and overpasses to welcome a crowd of about 30,000 demonstrators who joined the last leg of a 90-mile protest march the government vainly tried to stop.
It began Friday in the birthplace of the slain opposition leader in northern Tarlac province. It will end at the site of his assassination on Aug. 21 at Manila Airport on his return from three years of self-exile in the United States.
Khmer Rouge claim military victory
BANGKOK, Thailand — Khmer Rouge guerrillas yesterday claimed an important military victory over Vietnamnesse forces in Cambodia, saying they had captured and briefly held Hanoi's main logistics center in the western part of the occupied country.
in the Western part of the Occupied Paris. The Khmer Rouge said they overran Siem Reap, 150 miles northwest of Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital, after an artillery and rocket attack Friday night.
The communist Khmer Rouge, whose leader, Pol Pot, presided over a brutal regime in Cambodia from 1975 until the Vietnamese invaded in December 1978, now have the largest faction of the Cambodian guerrilla resistance.
resistance. The claim, broadcast yesterday over the clandestine Voice of the National Army of Democratic Kampuchea, could not be independently confirmed.
Astronauts await launch of shuttle
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Five astronauts flew to the spaceport yesterday for launch Friday morning on a space-shuttle mission one said was "full of very spectacular novelties."
Mission commander Vance Brand, rookie co-pilot Robert Gibson and mission specialists Bruce McCandless, Robert Stewart and Ronald McNair — the second U.S. back to fly in space — landed at the oceanside launch base in four jets after a 1-hour, 40-minute flight from
Blastoff is scheduled for 8 a.m. Friday
Bishop is scheduled for a visit. The mission's major goal is to launch two communications satellites
— one for the government of rhodiashe and the duke-to-treated soldiers. On the fifth day of the eight-day mission, McCandless and Stewart will put on new jet-propelled backpacks and become the first humans to fly outside their ship without safety lines.
Pot smokers start young, study says
NEW YORK — One out of every 16 high school seniors smokes marijuana daily and about three out of five smokers had their first experience with the drug between the sixth and ninth grades, a survey showed Tuesday.
The survey was taken for the National Institute on Drug Abuse by the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research. The results were printed in the latest edition of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.'s statistical bulletin.
The 1982 survey involved 17,700 high school seniors from across the United States.
results showed marijuana was the most widely used illicit drug with 6.3 percent of the seniors using it daily. The survey showed 59 percent of the seniors reported some use during their lifetime, 44 percent reported had used it in the previous year and 29 percent reported marijuana use in the previous month.
U.S. Steel suffers billion-dollar loss
RITTSBURGH—U.S. Steel Corp., the nation's No. 1 steelmaker, said yesterday that it lost $1.16 billion during 1983, its second straight yearly loss and more than triple its previous record.
The loss was more than three times U.S. Steel's previous record loss of $616 million in 1962, the domestic steel industry's worst year since the Depression.
But the Pittsburgh-based steelmaker predicted it would show this year its first profit since 1981, when it earned $1.1 billion.
"As the economy continues to strengthen, we anticipate that our three major business components in total will be profitable throughout 1984," Chairman David Roderick said. Roderick was referring to U.S. Steel's ownership of Marathon Oil Co. and its holdings in chemical companies and real estate.
VW dumping Rabbit for larger car
NEW STANTON, Pa. — The Volkswagen Rabbit, which had a sales peak when small, diesel-fueled cars were popular, will be discontinued in favor of a larger, more efficient car. Volkswagen of America Inc. officials said yesterday.
The company will spend about $200 million to retrain workers and retool its Westmoreland County plant, about 20 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, spokesman Chet Bahn said.
promotion of the Rabbit will end in June. The new car has not yet been named, Bahn said.
Jackson accident may spark lawsuit
LOS ANGELES — Singer Michael Jackson may file a negligence lawsuit in the accident that set his hair ablaze during filming of a television commercial, his attorneys said.
"We are thoroughly examining all of the facts that contributed to this traumatic injury, including the possibility of negligence," said a statement issued Monday by Jackson's attorneys.
The attorneys said a decision whether to file suit would be made after a review of five tapes and film footage of the accident, which occurred Friday during a film sequence involving pyrotechnics.
WEATHER FACTS
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 2-1-84
30.00 29.77 FREEZING SEATTLE COLD MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON COLD CHICAGO NEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO DENVER FAIR ATLANTA LOS ANGELES HIGHEST TEMPERATURES DALAS HIGHEST NEW ORLEANS MIAMI LEGEND (4+) RAIN SNOW SHOWERS AIR FLOW
Sunshine and mild weather will dominate the Great Plains tomorrow. Locally, tomorrow will be sunny and mild. The high will be in the low 60s. Tonight's low will be around 30. Tomorrow, the sunny weather will return with a high in the mid-50s.
December new-housing sales soar
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — In an unexpected revival of the housing boom, sales of new homes soared 28.5 percent in December. The increase was the biggest monthly increase in more than five years, the government said yesterday.
The December improvement helped make 1893 the best year for new house sales since 1979, with 625,000 units sold. That was a record annual improvement. The statistics were 51.7 percent more during recession-tarnished 1982.
The rush to buy houses did not drive up prices, however. The average price of a new house remained $91,000, the same as in November.
The housing industry already knew it had enjoyed a good year, but analysts had not expected December to be by far the cheapest, economist Michael Simmichra said.
"It is a surprise month at that level," Sumitrich said, speaking for the National Association of Home Builders. "It is probably going to be strong as well."
808.000 UP 28.5%
New Home Sales
Seasonally adjusted annual rates in thousands of larger family homes.
UFMAMJJASON D
1983
UPI
THE INDUSTRY'S BENCHMARK annual rate of sales for December alone reached 800,000 after seasonal increases. It was also for a single month since October 1978.
The report of exceptionally strong house sales overshadowed the modest 0.6 percent gain in the government's real estate spending Friday by the Commerce Department.
"As long as interest rates remain at current levels we could have the best spring since the boom years of 1977 and 1978," said Pete Herder, Tucson, Ariz., developer. He is this year's president of the national home builders association.
ON THE STRENGTH of December's sales performance the association immediately raised its forecast for 1984 to 207 million units, 100,000 more than in 1983.
Housing starts are the first step in construction and are the best measure of the rate at which the industry gobbles up steel, glass, bricks, appliances and other supplies from the rest of the economy.
THE AVERAGE PRICE of a new house in 1983 was $9,400, 6.6 percent more than 1982's average of $83,900, the commerce department said. That was about twice the yearly inflation rate of 3.2 percent for all consumer goods.
The jump in home sales "reflects a great sense of optimism among Americans." Herder said, "Housing consumers are more confident about their own jobs as well as the general state of the economy."
"As much as anything, it tells you that the price of money is not inhibiting
the selling of houses" said William Dunkelberg, economist for the National Federation of Independent Business. Mortgage rates ended 1983 close to where they began the year, with loans running at about 13.5 percent.
The housing industry, bolstered by a decline in mortgage rates in 1982, got a head start on the rest of the economic recovery. But a tapering off of the housing industry's boom last year led most analysts to predict the industry's additional contribution to economic growth in 1984 would be negligible.
The South, where half of all new houses were sold last year, did the most to boost December sales, reporting a record one-month juml of 66.1 percent
But in the upper Midwest, where cold weather discouraged discourage people from shopping for houses, home sales were down 39.1 percent. Northeast states showed a moderate 4.5 percent. Northwestern states were virtually unchanged.
The December construction increase left an estimated 388,900 new houses on the market uninsured, a supply that would increase at December's high rate of sales.
Party chairmen disagree on school prayer
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Democratic National Chairman Charles Manatt criticized Republicans and President Reagan yesterday for making God a partisan issue in the 1984 presidential campaign.
But his Republican counterpart, Frank Fahrenkopf, said polls indicated that the American public strongly favored making school prayer constitutional and that it was a legitimate campaign issue.
In a joint appearance at the Washington Press Club, the two chairmen
traded views on several topics likely to be debated in the presidential campaign.
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'great majority' favor a constitutional amendment permission prayer in publ
He echoed a theme sounded by President Reagan in his State of the Union message last week and again for years. He called the international Religious Broadcasters that a
He added that Congress had better begin listening to the voice of the people.
FAIRENKOPF SAID Republicans would "expand the fight for excellence and discipline in our schools, with their influence, bring the opportunity in prayer.
Manatt said, "I gather God has become a central issue in this campaign this year. Let's keep God from being a partisan issue."
Fahrenkopf said, "The president believes that school children in this nation should have a right to have a moment of voluntary prayer. How it politically is, I guess, if you agree with him perhaps you'll support him. If
Reagan said, "If we could get God and discipline back in our schools maybe we could get drugs and violence out."
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MANATT DISAGREED THAT school prayer would be an issue
"I think the issue will in certain parts of the country not be that relevant as far as voter turnout," Manatt said. "I think it just again underscores the view that the count has, which is out of step with the vast majority of voters in America."
I think schoolchildren and even adults should have a private moment of silence in their life for God or whoever they like to worship," he said. "But we don't need it institutionalized through the educational system.
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University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1984
Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA News briefs from staff and wire reports
Kansas water law violates '82 ruling, official testifies
TOPEKA — A state law that makes it difficult for other states to take water out of Kansas is unconstitutional, a state Board of Agriculture official yesterday told a State Senate committee.
David Pope, chief engineer and director of the Division of Water Resources, said that the Legislature should pass a bill under current law to regulate water.
The present law sets strict requirements for a state to take water out of Kansas wells. The state receiving the water must grant Kansas the right to take some of its groundwater.
Debate team wins honors in 4 states
KU debaters returned home Monday night with top awards from tournaments in four different states, Donn Parson, the director of forensics said yesterday.
Two KU junior division teams tied for first place among a field of 22 teams at the University of Oklahoma.
At Dartmouth College, in Hanover, N.H., and at the University of Utschaug Lake State University, senior division teams placed fourth out of 45 and sixth, respectively.
In individual speaking competition at Northwest Missouri State at Maryville, Mo., Mice Stimanean, Salina senior, took first in Prose Interpretation and Extemporaneous Speaking, and third in Impromptu Speaking.
Center to sponsor skills programs
Students who have trouble learning a foreign language or writing research papers can get help this week at programs designed to improve skills in those areas.
The Student Assistance Center is sponsoring "Learning a Foreign Language" 7130 to 9 p.m. tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas State University.
The "Research Paper Writing Workshop," also free, will be from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union.
The center will conduct three sessions on reading for comprehension and speed. 7 to 9 p.m., Feb. 16 and 23 and March 1. The fee for the classes is $15. Students should register in 121 Strong.
KU Police to engrave valuable items
The KU Police Department will engrave identification numbers on valuable items from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. today and Thursday in the first floor lobby of Learned Hall.
The project is being jointly sponsored by the police department and Tau Beta Pi, the National Engineering Honor Society.
Kurt Swaney, Lawrence senior and project coordinator, said that although the project was originally intended to provide a chance to have calculators engraved, other items will be accepted.
WHERE TO CALL
Do you have a news tip or photo idea? If so, call us at 864-4810. If your idea or press release deals with campus or area, ask us for Jeff Taylor, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, check with Christy Entertainment editor. For sports news, speak with Jeff Craven, sports editor.
For other questions or complaints, ask for Doug Cunningham, editor, or Don Knox, managing editor.
The number of the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising,
is 964-4358.
KU core-curriculum proposal may get caught in legal snag
By JENNY BARKER
Staff Reporter
A proposal for establishing a core of classes for all KU students to follow might not be legal, a member of the University Committee on Core Curriculum said yesterday.
James Carothers, the committee member and associate professor of English, said some question existed as to whether the University of Kansas had the legal right to establish a University-wide core curriculum.
Under the present system, each school within the University deter- tion is a community.
Staff Reporter
A core curriculum would establish a core of classes for all KU students, regardless of the school in which they are enrolled.
DEANELL TACHA, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said at last.
week's Senate Executive Committee meeting that the University Academic Policies and Procedures Committee would be asked to review the core curriculum proposal and determine its legitimacy.
Al Johnson, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that the committee had been working on the proposal for more than a year and should soon have it ready for distribution to faculty.
The committee will collect comments from the faculty and then review the committee's recommendations.
Carothers said the proposal would eventually go before the University Senate, which is composed of KU faculty and members of Student Senate.
MICHAEL YOUNG, committee member and associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said the reason it had taken more than a year to create a core curriculum proposal was because designing a core
The committee members have been unable to agree upon the number of hours that should be required and what disciplines should be included.
curriculum to fit students in every school was difficult.
Young said he expected the committee to release recommendations for core curriculum over a period of time, and he would release an entire proposal all at once.
He said the first proposal would be one easy to agree upon and implement — such as English and mathematics requirements.
Committee members agree upon the need for University-wide English and mathematics requirements. Young said, but have reached no definite agreement on other possible requirements.
Young said he hoped that the first part of a core curriculum could be used for the fall 1984 semester, but that he never knew if this was a realistic estimate.
Shontz chides mayor for letters
By SHARON BODIN
Staff Reporter
Last night's Lawrence City Commission meeting ended tensely when commissioner Nancy Shontz announced that she had "stumbled upon an amazing thing" - a folder filled with evidence of the case, which the commission had never seen.
"Many were letters to our nationally elected officials and White House officials about matters 1, as a city official, that had not been consulted about," Shontz said.
Shontz specifically referred to letters Mayor David Longhurst had sent to President Reagan, Soviet President Andropov and the governor of Michigan.
LONGHURT SENT TWO letters to both Reagan and Andropo suggesting a summit meeting between the two officials in Lawrence.
The first set of letters were read publicly before being sent, he said.
However, Shontz maintained. Longhurst sent the first set of letters before they were submitted to the City Commission for approval.
She reminded Longhurst that the commission had elected him mayor and that as such, he was accountable and responsible to the commission.
SHONTZ SAID LONGHURST also sent that letter without consultation with other commissioners.
"If he wishes to carry out his own desires and prejudices through this role as man, she said, he should be working toward changing the form of government.
"I found the letter to be repetitious, intermediate and unnecessarily sarcastic," she said. "If the mayor had consulted the commission before writing the letter, a more calm-headed, yet effective letter could have been written."
"Until that happens, so long as he is mayor, he is the ceremonial head of the city, and representative of the commission when given permission by the City Commission to do so on a particular matter."
with any of my activities, I would invite them to tell me so," Longhunter said. "I am not going to explain my behavior, and I am certainly not going to apologize
COMMISSIONER HOWARD Hill defended Longhurst's actions, saying that the commission intentionallyitetected his statements to make the politic to represent the city.
Longhurst said that probably 95 percent of the letters in the file merely extended the mayor's congratulations to him on his achievement an award or honor in the community.
The commission has been working on the letter since a study session with the DIC two weeks ago about its role in downtown development. The letter outlines how the DIC will assist the commission in the downtown project.
In addressing regular business, the commission approved a letter the mayor had written to the Downtown Improvement Committee with one change. Commissioner Ernest Angio asked长靛hurst to mention meetings between the commission and other groups about downtown development less specifically and to call meetings as needed.
THE TOWN CENTER Venture Corp. plan for downtown calls for a mall in the area between Sixth and Seventh streets and the alley east of Massachusetts and Kentucky streets. The city recently approved a new office, which enables Town Center to contact department stores for the mail.
Last week, Longhurst gave a critical letter to Michigan Gov. James J. Blanchard in response to the governor' comment that Kansas was
buring. The letter said that Blanchard was not welcome in Lawrence, where he attended the Midwestern Governor's Conference last fall.
Fourhorn to receive new trial
WE WANT YOU AT SGT. PRESTON'S
The Kansas Supreme Court ruled yesterday that James Fourhour should again stand trial for murder and denied a request from the Douglas County district attorney's office to let the original conviction be overturned.
On Jan. 20, District Attorney Jerry Harper filed a petition with the Kansas Supreme Court requesting that it overrule Douglas County Assessor District Judge Matthew to allow Fourth军 to be retired
Fourhour was found guilty in October for the first-degree murder of 98-year old Harry Puckett. He was found guilty of aggravated burial.
Malone ordered a retrial after Stanton Hazlett, Fourhorn's attorney, proved that the jury in the first trial had acted inappropriately when viewing some of the evidence. He will stand trial again March 5.
In its decision yesterday, the Supreme Court did not elaborate on its reasons for rejecting Harper's petition and said only that the petition was an "inappropriate remedy."
In his request for a new trial, Hazlett said that the jury in the first trial had made an unscientific comparison between one of Fourhurn's shoes and a dogood Godparent in a courtroom. Puckett's kitten, 109 Delaware St.
"If the commissioners are unhappy
The jury looked at the footprint and one of Fourhorn's shoes during the first trial and found that they matched, Hazlett said. But laboratory tests run at the Kansas Bureau of Investigations in Topeka showed the trial showed that the footprint and shoe did not match, he said.
Harper's petition against a retrial said that it had been impossible for the jury to deliberate the case without intensive examination of the exhibits, including the shoes and the plywood.
By JILL CASEY Staff Reporter
State high court determines jury acted wrongly
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OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
February 1, 1984 Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Karnal (USPS 60/640) is published at the University of Kansas, 181 Stuaffer Hall, Lawrence, KS 60045, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday for summer session. Excursions are $75 per person, subject to availability. By mail are $15 for six months or $27 in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $35 for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $14 semester paid through the student account FOSTMART. Send address changes to: University of Kansas, 181 Stuaffer Hall, Lawrence, KS 60045.
DOUG CUNNINGHAM
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Sen. Edward M. Kennedy spoke plainly in his speech Monday at Kansas State University, more than he does typically.
A critical look
He attacked President Reagan in virtually every area. From arms control to economic policy, he pointed out what he saw as the failings of the Reagan presidency.
The items Kennedy mentioned were many:
- "The numbers do not lie Since 1980, 5 million more people have fallen below the poverty line."
- "Why does this administration exalt government when it builds bombs and missiles or interferes with fundamental liberties and individual privacy, but scorns government when it vaccinates a child or feeds the poor or helps a young family to own a home?"
- "In 1984, we must also demand that America's role in Central America be stated, debated and resolved."
Kennedy's speech was the 61st in the Landon Lecture Series. His
remarks were critical and stinging in their accusations against the president. Some of them are true.
But in other instances, Kennedy failed to do some critical thinking of his own.
He said that Reagan's State of the Union message "was carefully crafted to fit the coming campaign." Did Kennedy expect less? After listening to it, one would gather that Kennedy's speech had as its basis the same partisan politics that he criticized.
Kennedy called for a look to the future instead of the past in the 1984 presidential campaign. Let us hope that the critical appraisal Kennedy speaks of is made by voters of all philosophies as they consider the choices for the next president.
Moreover, Congress hardly is blameless when considering the country's present problems. Indeed, many of Reagan's programs passed through the same Congress that Kennedy is a member of.
Keep death toll down
Another U.S. Marine died during heavy fighting in Beirut Monday. The death toll keeps rising. And Americans are becoming increasingly unwilling to stand for more loss of life.
The government's position is clear: President Reagan thinks he must at all costs prevent the Lebanese government from falling under Syrian control.
But at this point, the only way to prevent the Syrians from taking charge is by regaining the support of Lebanese who are allied with Syria against their government.
If these forces can be turned around, the government in Beirut could survive and the Syrians would eventually have to leave.
Lebanese President Amin Gemayel could take several steps to draw these lost sheep back into the fold. And the Reagan administration should require that Gemayel take concrete steps toward reconciliation before more American lives are lost.
Reagan has put America on the line in Lebanon to the point that abandoning our allies there could bring about the worst military loss since the Vietnam War.
A victory by the Syrians would also send a foreboding signal to other countries who rely on U.S. support and would present the Soviet Union with a significant victory. And it would mean that America acquiesced in the destruction of a pro-Western government.
Reconciliation measures might include opening government offices to leaders of opposition forces, doing away with the six-to-five ratio of Christians to Muslims in parliament and conducting new elections.
The United States needs to convince the opposition in Lebanon that its position is best when it is talking rather than when it is fighting and that the United States has more to offer than does the Soviet Union.
Striving for greatness
"America has always been greatest when we have dared to be great. We can reach for greatness again. We can follow our dreams to distant stars — living and working in space for peaceful, economic and scientific gain."
With these words, delivered during his third State of the Union Address last week, President Reagan launched a new American dream. It was one of his administration's most productive and popular moves to date.
We applaud the president for this initiative, because to realize a dream of this proportion takes a strong beginning fueled with vision.
The dream is to put a permanent operating U.S. manned space station in Earth's orbit within the next decade.
It is not too large a price to pay for the benefits that the space station will give us.
peaceful, economic and scientific gains will become a valued catch phrase during the construction and use of the station, and that we shall all eventually share in the project's benefits.
The estimated final cost of the space station project is $8 billion and Reagan has already approved $150 million for the project in the budget.
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 Kansas also invites guest columns to group up to invite guest columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. The Kansas reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
LETTERS POLICY
THE OREGONIAN MOVEMENT BY THE THRONE COMPANY
AMERICA IS BACK...
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Turning our Back...
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WOMEN'S RIGHTS
THE OREGONIAN
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19th CENTURY
WOMEN'S RIGHTS
This column was supposed to be fiction.
Senate elections absurd
But the reality of the Student Senate presidential elections is far more absurd than anything a simple columnist could make up.
The story soon will be on United Press International's regional wire. An article, datelined Topeka, an article, datelined in the Wichita Eagle-Begon.
People are laughing. The story ranks right up there with the one about Notre Dame students rioting on Tuesday and run out of Captain Crunch cereal.
I keep waiting for somebody to fish the ballot box out of Potter Lake. It's got to be there.
As a columnist the whole thing reminds me of semi-por baseball; not all that competent and a lot of catch. As a student, I confused.
I understand why Kevin Walker is angry. He lost an election by 13 votes that he should have won.
In the November election, 114 ballots were invalidated. Some of them were marked "Momentum" instead of with Walker's name and the name of Mark McKee, his running mate.
The rationale behind the decision was simple. "Momentum" could not stand for Walker and McKee because they had missed an Oct. 17 filing deadline. Therefore, election officials could not be 100 percent sure that a vote for "Momentum" was a vote for Walker and McKee.
The recounts were next. According to Walker, Dennis "Booq" Highberger's Costume Party won the first one, by one vote, Scott
Right, guys.
Swenson and Priority won the second one.
Walker said a tally sheet was lost. Jim Clark, chairman of the elections committee, said the tally sheets were added incorrectly.
At a recent forum on student government, Jim Cramer, student body vice president, said that an auction had to be fair and appear fair.
But that doesn't mean I would have voted for Kevin Walker.
I would have appealed the election too.
The wonderful irony of the situ
JOHN
HANNA
Staff Columnist
On Oct. 24, Walker enrolled, and on Nov. 23, he was disenrolled. Presently, he is not enrolled and has no tuition. He has said he cannot pay his tuition.
ation is that the candidate who should have won the election didn't deserve to win it.
Fine. But he should have taken care of his financial obligations before he ran for student body president.
What's particularly funny here is that Walker doesn't have to be a student to run a write-in campaign Frankly, if the University lets him, he could wait until after the election to enroll.
Although I would have agreed with Swenson's feelings, I wouldn't have appealed the decision to the University Judicial Board.
Swenson's appeal has only delayed an election that he might have won because of Walker's enrollment problems.
Fortunately, Loren Busy, veteran student senator, has arrived on the scene to save the credibility of the Senate. Hooray for Loren.
Undoubtedly, Busy is sincere about his desire to rescue the Senate's reputation, but anybody who would choose to run now is also a shrew politician. Because he has not been directly involved in the previous election, he looks good as a candidate.
But I saved the really good news for the end.
Busy could win a race that he probably wouldn't have won before, which, quite frankly, wouldn't be all that bad.
The Senate decided Friday to form a new Elections Committee. Cramer said this group may recommend changes in present elections rules and present those recommendations to the Senate Foley.
But everyone knows that already, and there's a chance that the new committee might actually do it.
Obviously, the Senate needs to change its elections rules and bring in an outside group to conduct its own studies of voting of a similar spectacle next year.
This movie epic of the absurd might actually have a happy ending.
NOW THAT WE HAVE A SPACE STATION, WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO WITH IT?
WELL THE BIG POD IS WHERE WE HIDE THE UN-EMPLOYED THE SECOND POD IS FOR PRO-ABORATIONISTS AND THE THIRD POD IS FOR PEOPLE OPPOSED TO SCHOOL PRAYER...
Lectures trouble reporters
WASHINGTON — As one of the last acts of his life, Martin Herz, a diplomat, teacher and writer who died last year of cancer gave a series of four lectures at George Washington University. The Vietnam War in Retrospect.
Some of Herz's conclusions
The talks, which have now been published by the university, raised some interesting questions for de- and for journalists in particular, and for journalists in general.
The United States is not capable of waging a protracted war, especially one that is complex and difficult to understand.
He was talking about combat and Vietnam, but his point could just as easily be applied to Lebanon and the U.S. wish to salvage the situation in that tangled swamp of contradictions by sending a U.S. peace-keeping force as an expression of American resolve.
If Herz was right, then so is Syrian Foreign Minister Abdul Khalm Khaddam when he says. "The Americans are short of breath, and will eventually drop Lebanon behind them." He popularized to quick fixes.
The lack of American staying power, Herz said, is partly the result
JIM ANDERSON United Press International
of the shortcomings of the American press, which tends to report all wars in terms of good guys vs. bad guys.
In Vietnam, the conventional wisdom of American reporters was that the South Vietnamese government was corrupt, repressive and hostile.
But in retrospect, he said it was clear that the South Vietnamese government was making military progress in fighting the war, and that it was generating popular support, while the Viet Cong were increasingly dependent on forced inductees from the North.
Herrz said the American press — particularly television, with its enormous political impact — had a lot of bad news that was bad for the home team.
The lasting impressions of the Vietnam War are photographing; South Vietnamese soldiers clinging desperately to helicopter skids. Gen. Loan summarily executing a Viet Cong leader in Saigon, bodies laid out in the U.S. embassy compound after the 1980 Tet offensive.
He said these vivid impressions, which had immense political impact on the U.S. public and Congress, obscured the more subtle but difficult larger truths: The South Vietnamese troops generally fought well and they were improving toward the end of the war; and the Tet offensives were so devastating that command forces that decimated the Viet Cong and forced the North Vietnamese to take over the fighting in the South.
Herz offered no solution to the problems he posed.
But he thought the lack of American ability to back up its worldwide commitments would lead to more Vietnamesis (and Lebanons).
He concluded, in his final lecture, the last writing of his life:
"All I can do is point out to you that what happened in Vietnam has had repercussions almost everywhere because it affected what we think we can and cannot do, as just as it is. The people they think can do with impunity.
"This is not a good situation and it cannot last."
The mayor hopes for a lasting peace
Initiative, as they say, built this country of ours.
More specifically, initiative and the resolution to go out on a limb has shaped our particular section of the country.
Midwesterners have justifiably been trademarked as ground breakers willing to voice their common sense opinions. But some folks in Lawrence would like to discredit an obvious positive initiative in favor of unfounded skepticism and insecurities.
David Longhurst is a Lawrence businessman, and like most of us he is tired of being a silent partner in the disarmament system. Longhurst, the mayor of Lawrence, is also very impatient with the present impasse in high-level nuclear discussion.
And he is ambitious and intelligent enough to see how initiative can join with intelligence and position to raise a louder voice on the issue.
He has used that voice in the past year to send letters to Presidents Ronald Reagan and Yuri Andropov urging them to start talking, and offering our city to them as a place for meaningful discussion.
Now, if he uses his voice to present an unpopular message to local people, that message better please him. A man of old-fashioned tar-and-feathering.
But the message in his campaign is, “Let's talk peace.” What message can be as positive and peaceful as that?
And I'll bet the ranch that at least 90 percent of the rest of us in Lawrence agree we want Longurst's kind of peace, and most of us would welcome any kind of summit, anywhere.
But some people in Lawrence would like to think that if another city got a summit instead of Lawrence, Longhurst would be found the following morning in some alley, in the throes of a serious drunken stupor — downbrotten, slightly, unappreciated and screaming. "There goes my Senate seat; there goes my life."
GARY
SMITH
Staff Columnist
No, Longhurst isn't trying to be commissioner of the United States. He just wants peace.
seed of thought within each of us who do not possess his voice
Recently the mayor related a story to me that both defines his intentions and reflects a frustrated
"The day after the movie 'The Day After', a radio reporter asked me a question that no other reporter had yet asked me.
"He said, 'God forbid something like this (nuclear war) ever happening, but how would you feel? if it ever did?' I thought about it for a
moment and told the reporter that it did happen that I would feel that I did not do everything in my power to stop it.
"You see. I have to do everything I can within reasonable limits or I will feel responsible. That's why I sent a second letter asking Reagan and Summit. If I hadn't sent it, I would've been doing all that I could."
No matter how small the response was from Washington, there was a response; someone was listening to David Longhurst. And through his singular voice, the rest of us who Lawrence home were also heard.
Instead of criticizing Longhurst, we should be congratulating him for sticking his neck out and speaking Our Midwestern mind.
G
In the ABC-TV production, it wasn't the movie that was important, it was the message. Likewise, it is not Mayor Longhurst's hope for a future with the public as important; it is the message that dialogue is needed anywhere that is.
If a summit was announced tomorrow, human nature would forgive Longhurst a bit of disappointment if his hometown was ignored in favor of another city. However, he would more likely be found the next morning explaining to his son what the summit could mean if those folks from Washington and Moscow began listening to the loudest voice instead of the most insane.
1
Now that would be a popular revolution this world can live with.
University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1984
Page 5
Budget
continued from p. 1
The budget seeks to cut other non-defense discretionary programs such as education, legal services, jobs programs, mass transit and economic development grants by $4.2 billion, but adds $4.5 billion for increases in research and stocking of strategic materials.
PART OF THE space increase would be for development of the permanent manned space station that Reagan proposed in his State of the Union address last week.
A congressional source said the foreign aid increase included $2.8 billion over four years for Central America, part of the $4.8 billion in congressional recommendation for that part of the world.
The administration also is proposing the largest personnel increase in the history of the Immigration and Naturalization agencies, all aliens, Justice Department officials said yesterday.
Reagan also will ask in his budget message that Congress enact constitutional amendments requiring a balanced federal budget and providing the president with the power to vet individual items in appropriations bills. The bills are now signed or rejected as a whole.
The budget projects total federal spending of $926 billion and receipts of $745 billion, creating a deficit of $180 billion even if all of the savings cuts and tax hikes are enacted into law.
CONGRESS REJECTED Reagan's past two budgets and his new one is likely to meet the same fate. Republican leaders have said non-defense domestic programs have been defeated, and they say he gave Reagan only half of his proposed 10 percent increase in military spending.
"I would anticipate there will be a reduction in defense," a congressional aide
"ITS A GOOD budget," Senate Republican leader Howard Baker told reporters. "It's a realistic budget. It is not bad as some people had bad and not as good as some people had hoped."
"I underscore that it is a credible budget," said House Republican leader Robert Michel of Illinois. "There are no phony baloney figures in it."
Jones and Sen. Lawton Chiles of Florida, ranking Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee, said some assumptions in Reagan's budget would depend on whether the president's proposed bipartisan panel achieved the $100 billion in savings that the president wanted.
continued from p.1
Bridge
EARL FARLEY, director of the library, said that if the bridge were completed as had been planned, it would provide more room to install computer cable from the library to rest of the building. In order to do that, it was necessary between the library and the rest of the Med Center runs in a small channel under 39th Street.
"If we turned it into a large aquarium it would serve a better purpose," said Debbie Wirick, a Med Center laundress
Farley said that original plans called for the bridge to be connected by an elevator to different levels.
But he laughed and said that such construction was probably a long way off. Farley said that even during winter storms he hadn't seen anyone using the bridge.
GERALD IMMING, director of facilities planning at the Med Center, said that unfinished construction work was always ridiculed. He said the lack of training in occupational skills because it doesn't understand the difficulties.
"I haven't even used it myself," he said.
"We could avoid the construction and ridicule, but that wouldn't be the prudent or responsible
Imming said that two auxiliary plans were in mind for the bridge's completion. One plan is to extend the main underground corridor to the north end of the bridge. Pedestrians could use an elevator to get to the bridge from the underground corridor.
The University originally intended to extend
the underground corridor to the north side of 39th Street. But because Kansas City, Kan., has water mains and utility cables running parallel to the underground corridor could not be extended.
In the 1983 Jayhawker, M.D., a student publication for medical students, a group of first- and second-year medical students offered some suggestions for what could be done with the unfinished bridge;
- Make an aerial bowling alley.
- *Keep it for the city inspectors to check on their way to Waid's.
- Make an MX missile launch site out of it.
* Open a deli inside it.
- Open a deli inside it.
Mailhold
THE OLD POLICY was in effect when Watkins
name assisted resident director. Ostburh铰
unaware of the withholding policy until residents complained to him in October.
Osterburu said that he had changed the policy in November after postal service officials told him to stop sending letters.
"He came in assuming that was the way things were done," Osterbear said. "The desk assistants never understood that it was against postal regulations."
Watkins said that last semester he denied mail service to about five residents who owed the hall money because they had failed to pay fines or discuss the problem with him.
"All I was trying to do was to get them to take responsibility and grow up," Watkins said. "The rest of us were doing that."
Watkins said that mail was suspended primarily as a threat to students to pay fines.
primaryity as a bureau to get residents to pay their Hall policy requires residents who lose hall items or do not return items on time to pay a fine. Watkins said.
"If nobody paid fines or returned equipment
doesn't have any equipment." Watkins said.
Osterbuhr said that the fines were intended to keep residents from monopolizing hall equip-
RESIDENTS WHO REFUSE to pay fines may still have their meal services or desk privileges suspended by the hall, Watkins said.
Watkins said the hall decided to withhold mail as an alternative to suspending meals because it had an obligation to feed residents.
"I'm not going to deny anybody the right to eat," Watkins said.
PHIL SCHROEDER, Oeder freshman, said that he had his mail withheld from him for a day in late November because he hadn't paid a 50-cent fine incurred after he failed to promptly return a tape measure he borrowed from the hall.
"They were also try to keep me from eating because of the fine," Schroeder said.
Schroeder said that the problem was corrected after he spoke to Osterbuhr and paid the fine.
Gromyko accuses U.S. of inciting arms race
MOSCOW — Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromky, speaking to factory workers in Romania, accused the United States of trying to "whip up the arms race."
speech, which came mid-way through his three-day visit to the Romanian capital for talks with President Nicolae Ceaucescu.
Romania is the only East bloc nation that has publicly opposed Moscow's walkout at the Geneva arms talks. The official Romanian news agency ignored the Soviet foreign minister's
Gromyko's speech yesterday in Bucharest, came as the official Soviet news agency Tass dismissed suggestions by U.S. arms negotiator Edward Rowny that a breakthrough at Geneva was possible if the Soviets returned to the negotiations.
In his speech to workers at the "August 23" factory, Gromyko said the Soviet Union would not return to the nuclear arms talks until U.S. forces erasing 2 missiles were removed from Europe.
Calling the United States "the main threat to
Campy," Grumky denounced the U.S. missile
deployment and said the Soviet Union and its
sales were compelled to take counter-measures.
By United Press International
The Soviets last month began deployment of medium-range nuclear missiles in East Ger-
tany.
States, also defended the Soviet position. Romania is the only East bloc nation that has publicly criticized the Soviet decision to deploy nuclear missiles in Eastern Europe.
Romania often follows an independent foreign policy line.
Gromyko accused the United States of trying to "whip up the arms race, gain military superiority and flagrantly middle in the affairs of other countries."
He said the Soviet Union wanted a dialogue with the United States but said it was up to Washington to take the first step by removing its missiles from Europe
Gromyko's speech, while attacking the United
earlier, Tass said the Soviet Union could not accept trade-offs suggested Monday by Rowan at a hearing in Manhattan.
- Open a bar.
- Send it to the Med Center's Wichita branch
• Move it to Lawrence
Last week, several yards from the south side of the bridge, a middle-aged man defended the bridge.
"To me, that choice makes it worthwhile. In no damn way is it a white elephant."
"People have a choice. They can either risk their lives walking across 39th Street or walk over the street in safety of the bridge," he said, declining to be identified.
With that, he turned around, passed the south entrance of the bridge and walked across 39th
Debate
continued from p.1
some signs that perhaps in Nicaragua there's some signs of giving-in in that area" by the government.
"They've opened up some dialogue with the Catholic church, for instance," the Ohio Democrat said, pointing to the administration's open efforts to undermine the Marxist-led
"There has been some movement there that I think we should jump on and try to negotiate."
Several other candidates agreed, including Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-South Carolina, who said, "We should be talking to them now," and California Sen. Alan Cranston, who urged the White House "stop seeking military intervention and seek negotiations."
the program, sponsored by the Boston Globe and Harvard University, covered a broad spectrum of foreign policy issues, with all of the materials generally sticking to, previously stated positions.
THE REAMKS WERE interspersed with humor, including former South Dakota Sen. George McGovern, who praised Jesse Jackson "bringing civil rights into foreign policy," an apparent reference to Jackson's Syrian trip to win the freedom of captured U.S. flier Robert
McGovern also complained about U.S. foreign policy, saying, "It's based too much on what we're against and not what we're for."
JACKSON DREW LAUGHS from the audience when he prefaced a question to Glenn by saying "I've been waiting for this for a long time, Mr. Right Stuff," a reference to a book and movie about the astronaut program.
SCHOOL OF ALLIED HEALTH PRE-PROFESSIONAL ADVISING
Respiratory Therapy: M—10 AM-12PM
Physical Therapy: W—9AM-4PM
SAH(All Programs): 2nd/4th Wed/mo
Contact the Office of Undergraduate
Advising (864-3504) for an appointment.
BLACKS IN COMMUNICATIONS
TRUST
will meet every Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union
Freshmen, Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors are encouraged to attend. Funded by the Student Activity Fee
PEPSI-COLA
Wednesday, February 1
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY
SKILLS PROGRAM
FREE Wednesday, February 1 7:30 to 9 p.m.
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
Note: Presented for the last time this semester.
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
Old Carpenter Hall
Smokehouse
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Sun., Feb. 5
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SAC
STUDIO AGRICOLA
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FILING DEADLINE
FOR THE SPECIAL ELECTION OF 1984
STUDENT BODY PRES. & V.P.
If You Want To Run:
1) Pick up declaration of candidacy at Student Senate Office B105, Kansas Union.
2) Have the dean of your school or college certify your enrollment and year in that school or college.
3) Follow the guidelines set forth on the Declaration of Candidacy form.
4) Return your declaration NO LATER THAN 4:30 P.M. FRIDAY, FEB. 3, 1984.
Paid for by Student Activity Fee
.
University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
Coffeville asking for state aid
By United Press International
TOPERA — Coffeivey's new city manager yesterday asked the state to help the city stave off its looming bankruptcy, and city commissioners put their heads together to try to understand city's pocketbook from going empty.
If nothing is done, the southeast Kansas city of about 16,000 could be in the red by $700,000 to $900,000 by the end of the year under a worst-case scenario, City Manager William Snell said.
That would represent about one-fourth of the city's $3.7 million general fund 1984 budget, which excludes utility income.
If spending cuts are not made immediately, and city officials are looking at the reductions — the city is under the red within the next two months, he said.
"We're a government." Snell said.
"Obviously we can't shut the doors to it."
BILL ERVIN, chief of the Municipal Accounting Section of the state Administration Department, said that Snell had asked for the state's aid. Within the next few days, state workers from Ervin's office will go to Coffeville to try to confirm budget figures and advise the city on its financial mess.
Snell, who started work in Coffeyville just a few weeks ago, last week declared that the city was in a financial crisis and would go bankrupt unless it cut spending immediately. He said in a telephone interview that he was confident the city commission would not let the city go bankrupt.
THE FIVE-MEMBER commission met during the weekend, on Monday and yesterday and planned another day to try to sort out the dollars dilemma.
Commissioners have made no firm
decisions on what to cut, but Snell estimates they will have to save $1 million from the current 1984 budget, which covers the calendar year.
Mayor Jack Anderson said the commission would decide today whether to shut down one of the city's two fire stations.
About 75 percent of the budget is labor, and because many of the 200 city workers workers are union-covered, contracts are fairly strict, Snail said.
Part of the city's problems were caused by revenue drops. Snell said. In the past few years, three large workers laid off more than 1,200 workers and the city lost municipal franchise fees. Most commercially located where Coffeville is located near the Oklahoma border, has consistently topped the state's jobless figures in recent years. Sales also have dropped in the area.
Increased aid sought for shelters
By ROB KARWATH Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - Shelters for battered women in Kansas are operating on shoestring budgets and the legislature should provide money to keep them open, six witnesses said yesterday during a Senate hearing.
Two representatives from shelters for battered women, two officials from social agencies, and two state legislators met in a joint committee that, despite a growing demand
Barbara Smith of the Lawrence-based Women's Transitional Care Services gave the committee a first-hand account of how demand for shelters is increasing, but money is hard to find.
for shellers, budgets to operate the shelters were not increasing.
"In fiscal year 1982 we served 238 women; in fiscal year 1983 we served 359 women," she said. "That's an increase of 69 percent, but at the same time we had our budget cut from $84,000 to $44,000."
Smith said that almost all of the $40.00 lost was private financing.
if the legislature filled that gap, she said. "more private donations might aid" her effort.
And yesterday, during the senate committee's third day of hearings on domestic violence, representatives of both the Crime Victims Reparation Board and Social and Rehabilitative Services said that if money were used to shelter prisoners shester the funds to finance existing shelters and to be build new ones.
"The financial assistance these shelters are receiving is obviously not enough," said Ken Bahr, chairman of the Crime Victims Reparations Board.
JOHN M. RUSSELL
Steve Johnson, a former Jesuit priest, quotes from the Koran while addressing members of the Muslim Student's Association. Johnson spoke to about 25 people last night at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union and stressed the values of human rights through the teachings of Islam and the prophet Mohammed.
Jim McCrossen/KANSAN
Mild weather gives County weed worries
Jerry Kemberling didn't expected to be firing musthist weed in February.
But unusually high temperatures have brought the dreaded battle against noxious weeds to Douglas County earlier than in past years.
Kemberling, the Douglas County director of noxious weeds, said that the Noxious Weed Department would begin to investigate and arrest the weed either today or tomorrow.
Musk thistle is the worst weed in the area to combat, he said. The pesky plant has nodding, musky flower heads and flourishes biannually.
The best way to treat the weed is to spray it with a chemical called Tordon 22-K when the weed has just begun to grow. Kemberling said.
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
"It's the only way we can get a fighting chance," he said.
The county will spray private farms for $16 an hour plus a charge for the chemical. The musk thistle flourishes in the soil and is a common main dermant in the ground year round.
The weed branches out and pushes the grass away, leaving pastures bare.
By ROBIN PALMER Staff Reporter
"Cattle can not graze on the land and the farmer loses his pasture. Kemberd."
phone: 843-1151
Although the spreading plant kills pasture grasslands, he said, the real threat is not loss of habitat.
Musk thistle produces at least 10,000 seeds a plant. he said.
Staff Reporter
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1984
16
Page 7
THE FLEETMAN
TOPEKA — The Jayhawk mascot wings it with State Sen. Merrill Werts, R-Junction City. Phil Schmitt, Hutchinson junior, donned the garb yesterday at the direction of state Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, and went into the Senate to present a KU cap to Werts and to remind him that the University of Kansas beat Kansas State University this weekend in basketball. Last year when K-State won, Werts pulled a similar prank and gave a K-State cap to Winter during a Senate meeting.
Official urges stricter traffic laws
By ROB KARWATH Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — Violators of Kansas traffic laws are getting off too easily and stricter penalties are needed, a Senate committee studying driver's license suspension rules was told yesterday.
Letting violators off easily has become the rule rather than the rule, and it is a fact that they do.
John Smith, director of the state Division of Motor Vehicles, testified before the Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee that judges across the state were abusing their power to lessen punishment for traffic violators.
**"ANYTIME YOU GRANT exceptions, minimums or exclusions, it's easy to make that the rule," he said.**
Smith said that the judges' power to reduce punishment should be used only in special cases when the law would punish the offender too much.
The committee voted to introduce the bill to the Senate and then hold further hearings before deciding whether to recommend it.
He asked the committee to recommend that the Legislature pass a bill that would take away almost all of the court's power to punish violators and give it to the state Department of Revenue.
Under the present system, the courts are solely responsible for punishing violators. But officials of the Kansas Highway Patrol and the Department of Revenue thought judges were being inconsistent in giving out different penalties for the same offenses, and this led to the bill's formation.
The bill, written by officials of the Kansas Highway Patrol and the Department of Revenue, would put the department in charge of punishing violators and suspending driver's licenses using a point system.
The Department of Revenue would keep track of the number of points
drivers accumulated for convictions of traffic offenses. More serious offenses would be worth more points under the plan.
SPEEDING WOULD BE worth one point, careless driving — two points, speeding in a school zone — four points, running in an open liquefied container — six points.
Driving while intoxicated and vehicular homicide would both be worth 10 points. The most serious offense, worth 50 points, is driving with a suspended license.
The bill would require a driver to attend a driver improvement clinic after receiving four to five points. After six or seven points, the driver could drive only when necessary, such as to work outdoors, supported after eight or more violations, and the suspension would last 10 days for each point on record.
Smith said that these punishments would be tough on serious offenders and repeat offenders, and that the department would not have discretion to lessen them.
less tense in STATE SEN. JOSEPH Norwell, D-Hays, said that he did not want to take away the power to punish from judges. He said he was worried that all violators would be punished the same way, which might be unfair in some cases.
FRED CARMAN, assistant revision of statutes, said that the bill would not transfer all the power of the courts to the Department of Revenue.
Nerville used drunken driving as an example. He said that often the state's blood alcohol legal limit of intoxication, 0.1 percent, did not truly indicate how drunk a person was. Some drivers might be far above the limit and be fine, he said, while others could not. He explained, and be "blushed out on their mind."
Judges could still punish, he said, but only above and beyond the penalties imposed by the Department of Revenue.
House panel pondering a variety of bills
By LORI DODGE Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — A House committee yesterday heard testimony on a variety of measures — from a bill that would raise the maximum small-claims court award, to a bill that would limit the wholesale costs of prescription drugs.
limit from $500 to $1,000.
The House Ways and Means Com-
munity is expected to vote on the bills
State Reps, Dennis Spaniel, R-Wichita, and Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, testified in favor of a bill that would raise the small claims court
BRANSON SAID THAT Lawrence had more than its share of landlord-tenant disputes because of its large population of students. She said the bill would provide some people, who might not have the means to get legal help in a higher court, with an effective method to recover their losses.
Committee chairman Bill Bunting,
opposed, at the $00 limit had been
bypassed.
ROBERT HARDER, secretary of Social and Rehabilitative Services, testified in favor of the bill, saying that it would require uniform pricing of prescription drugs sold to Kansas pharmacies.
The committee also heard testimony on a measure that would prohibit drug manufacturers and vendors from selling prescription drugs to Kansas
pharmacies for prices higher than what they charge other pharmacists across the country.
Harder said the measure would also assure consumers of prescription drugs
Bunten said that questions about whether they could coaltie or trust laws should be raised.
request the secretary of corrections to conduct a population and program analysis of the state's correctional institutions.
The resolution also includes a provision that would require the secretary to conduct an analysis of converting the Kansas Correctional Vocational Training Center in Topkapi into an institution that could house women inmates.
STATE REP. Wanda Fuller, RcWichita, said that the female inmate population at the state's prisons was increasing at an alarming rate and the increase was expected to continue.
The committee also heard testimony yesterday on a resolution that would
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IGA DISCOUNT Prices Effective Thru Feb. 7
DISCOUNT
WIN $1000 CASH SWEEPSTAKES
NEW AND DIFFERENT NUMBER POSTED DAILY
CHECK EACH LOCATION FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN A SEPARATE JACKPOT IN EACH STORE
RUSTY'S SIGA DISCOUNT
FOOD CENTER LAWRENCE KS
WESTRIDGE • 6th & Kasold • 841-0411
HILLCREST • 9th & Iowa • 843-2313
NORTHSIDE • 2nd & Lincoln • 843-5733
SOUTHSIDE • 23rd & Louisiana • 843-8588
Prices Effective Thru Feb. 7
IGA TABLELITE BONELESS CHUCK ROAST 128
IGA TABLELITE BONELESS LB.
CHUCK STEAK LB. 145
GOOD VALUE 16 OZ. CAN PINK SALMON 139
BONUS BOTTLE—6 OZ. FREE WESSON OIL 38 OZ. BTL. 189
SEVEN VARIETIES BANQUET DINNERS 12 OZ. PKG.
BLUE BUNNY REG. OR LO-FAT COTTAGE CHEESE 24 OZ. CTN.
ALL VARIETIES JENO'S PIZZA 10 OZ. PKG.
ASSORTED FLAVORS BLUE BUNNY ICE CREAM ½ GAL. CTN.
STRAWBERRY Nonfat Yogurt 8 VARIETIES TV FLAVORED YOGURT POST TOASTIES CORN FLAKES 18 OZ. BOX .99 FOR 5 8 OZ. CTNS.
Star-Kis CHUNK LIGHT TUNA PACKED IN OIL 6⅓ OZ. OR WATER CAN STAR-KIST CHUNK LIGHT TUNA HUNT'S TOMATO PASTE 3 6 OZ. FOR 1 .69 PEPSI MOUNTAIN DEW DIET PEPSI MOUNTAIN DEW OR PEPSI FREE 2 LTR. BTL. PEPSI COLA CARNATION HOT COCOA MIX 12 OZ. PKG. .99
WASHINGTON FANCY RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS APPLES FRESH CRISP HEAD LETTUCE EA.49 FOR 10 8 OZ. CANS HUNT'S TOMATO SAUCE 4 8 OZ. CANS HUNT'S RICH TOMATO KETCHUP 32 OZ. BTL. .99
NORTHERN WHITE & ASSORTED COLORS NORTHERN BATH TISSUE 4 ROLL PKG. ABSORBENT BOLT PAPER TOWELS BIG ROLL .79 PEPSI MOUNTAIN 10 LB. BAG CAT LITTER HARTZ MOUNTAIN 10 LB. BAG CAT LITTER PUREX BLEACH WITH THE 15¢ OFF LABEL GAL. JUG .69
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO.032 DOUBLE COUPON
Prepare this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get double the savings from Rocky Mountain Institute for beer, tobacco products, 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 four coupons per family.
EXPIRES FEB. 8, 1984
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO.032 DOUBLE COUPON
Prepare this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get double the savings from Rocky Mountain Institute for beer, tobacco products, 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 four coupons per family.
EXPIRES FEB. 8, 1984
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S NO.032 DOUBLE COUPON
Prepare this coupon along with any one manufacturer's cents off coupon and get double the savings from Rocky Mountain Institute for beer, tobacco products, 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 four coupons per family.
EXPIRES FEB. 8, 1984
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
COMMONWEalth THEATRES
GRANADA DOWNLOAD
Educating Rita PG. Eve.7:15, 9:30 p.m. Mat.5 p.m., Sat.Sun.
VARSITY DOWNLOAD
STEVE MARTIN LONELY GUY Eve.7:30, 9:15 p.m. Mat.5:30 p.m., Sat.Sun.
HILLCREST 1 Come to terms.
Terms & Endorsement PG Eve.7:25, 9:45 Daily Mat.5:00
HILLCREST 2 Buddy System Eve.7:30, 9:30 Daily Mat.5:00
HILLCREST 3 HOTDOG Eve.7:30, 9:20 Daily Mat.5:00
CINEMA 1 BUY ONLINE ONLINE
The Man Who Loved Women Eve.7:25, 9:30 Mat.5:00 Sat.Sun.
Good Value
Pink Salmon
SEASONED WITH SALT
Value
Pink Salmon
STARCHER WITH SALT
IGA TABLERITE BONELESS CHUCK ROAST IGA TABLERITE BONELESS LB. CHUCK STEAK LB. 145
Family banquet favors
Spaghetti & Meatballs Dinner
Spaghetti and Meatballs in Tortilla Taste Corned and Pine Curls Burnt
NET WT 12 OZ (345 g)
GOOD VALUE 16 OZ. CAN
PINK SALMON
BONUS BOTTLE—6 OZ. FREE
WESSON OIL
38 OZ. BTL. 1 $^{89}$
Chicken & Dumplings Din
Dinner and Dessert Buffet with Chicken and Dumplings
For 4 or more people
JENO'S CRISP'n TASTY PIZZA JENO'S CRISP'n TASTY PIZZA ALL VARIETIES JENO'S PIZZA 10 OZ. PKG. .89 ASSORTED FLAVORS BLUE BUNNY ICE CREAM 1/4 GAL CNT. 149
INNOS CRISP'n TASTY PIZZA
SEVEN VARIETIES
BANQUET 12 OZ.
PKG.
DINNERS
BLUE BUNNY REG. OR LO-FAT
COTTAGE CHEESE
24 OZ. CTN. $69
ALL VARIETIES
JENO'S
PIZZA
10 OZ.
PKG.
ASSORTED FLAVORS
BLUE BUNNY ICE CREAM
⅓ GAL CNT.
149
.89
Strawberry SWEETSTRAW
Nonfat Yogurt
Strawberry SWISS STYLE
Nonfat Yogurt
Strawberry SWISS STYLE
Nonfat Yogurt
8 VARIETIES
TV
FLAVORED
YOGURT
POST TOASTIES
CORN FLAKES
18 OZ. BOX
,99
5
8 OZ.
CTNS.
FOR 1
Star-Kis CHUNK LIGHT TUNA IN SPRING WATER Star-Kis CHUNK LIGHT TUNA
Star-Kis
CHUNK LIGHT TUNA
IN SPRING WATER
PACKED IN OIL 6½ OZ.
OR WATER CAN
STAR-KIST
CHUNK
LIGHT TUNA
HUNT'S TOMATO PASTE
3 6 OZ. FOR
CANS 1
PEPSI
PACKED IN OIL 6½ OZ.
OR WATER CAN
STAR-KIST
CHUNK
LIGHT TUNA .69
HUNT'S TOMATO PASTE
3 6 OZ. FOR
CANS 1
PEPSI
MOUNTAIN DEW
DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN DEW
OR PEPSI FREE 2 LTR. BTL.
PEPSI COLA
CARNATION
HOT COCOA MIX .99
12 OZ. PKG.
Hunt's tomato sauce
NEW Thicker & Richer
Hunt's tomato sauce
NEW Thickera Richer
Hunt's tomato sauce
NEW Thicker & Richer
Hunt's tomato sauce
NEW Thicker & Richer
41 8 OZ. CANS FOR
Hunt's tomato sauce
NEW Thickener & Richer
HUNT'S
TOMATO
SAUCE
4
8 OZ.
CANS
FOR
HUNT'S RICH
TOMATO KETCHUP
32 OZ. BTL.
.99
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
NO. 032
— DOUBLE COUPON —
Present this coupon along with any one
member of your family and offer two
doubles the savings from Rusty's Offer does
not include: free coupons
given per dollar received the value of the item.
Limit one coupon per manufacturer's
coupon and fill in the form with family.
EXPIRES FEB. 8, 1984
NORTHERN NORTHERN
NORTHERN
NORTHERN
WHITE & ASSORTED COLORS
NORTHERN
BATH TISSUE
4 ROLL PKG.
ABSORBENT
BOLT PAPER TOWELS
BIG ROLL
.99
.79
Amt. Int.
HARTZ
CAT LITTER
10 LB. BAG
HARTZ MOUNTAIN
CAT LITTER
.99
PUREX BLEACH
WITH THE 15¢ OFF LABEL
GAL. JUG .69
DOUBLE COUPON —
Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's center off coupon and get the free gift card if you fill out the form. Do not include coupons for beer, tobacco items and fluid milk products.
For more information, visit our website at www.browniesandcoffees.com.
Coupons greater than one dollar or exceed the value of one cent per coupon may be limited to one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family.
EXPIRES FEB. B, 1984
NO. 032
DOUBLE COUPON
Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's keys off coupon and get double die savings from Roast's Offer does not include coupon for tea, 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 FEB. 8, 1984
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
NO.032
DOUBLE COUPON
Present this coupon along with any one
money paid to 'cents' of coupons to Rusty's.
Do not include coupons for beer, tobacco
and fuel products.
Not to include retail, free coupons,
coupons greater than one dollar or excess
of the value of one dollar.
Limit one coupon per manufacturer's
coupon and limit 4 coupons per family.
EXPIRES FEB 8, 1984
Yello Sub Delivers
house door
9 in. close
841 3268
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
First Pitcher—Regular Price
Refills:
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11.00-11.45 $2.00
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1984
Page 8
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
THE FOURTH ANNUAL Undergraduate Art Show will be on display through Feb. 10 in the main gallery of the Art and Design Building.
TAU BETA PI and the KU Police Department will sponsor "Calculator Engraving Days." from 8 a.m. to 12 noon, at 12th floor of Loreal Hall.
ECKANKAR will sponsor a discussion on "Soul and its Five Bodies," at 7:30 p.m. in the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union.
TOMORROW
WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS will sponsor a job seminar "Focus on the Future," from 7 to 10 p.m. in 100 of Stauffer-Fillt Hall.
WILLIAM STAFFORD, KU's poet-in-residence, will read from his works at 8 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
FUTURISTS, Barbara Hubbard and Willis Harman will speak on "After 'The Day After' What Can We Do?" at b.p.m. in the Ballroom of
THE BROWN BAG CONCERT Series will present the Kansas Woodwind Quintet at 1 p.m. in the Strong Hall rotunda.
PUBLIC RELATIONS Student Society of America will meet with the Student Senate to discuss promotion of the Vietnam War Memorial at 6:30 p.m. at the Wagon Wheel Cafe; '07 W. 14th St.
if you love donuts ... you'll love
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Sweetener tests show trouble
Despite the recent findings, however,
NutraSale is also regarded as having
and researchers are not yet willing to recommend that the product be banned.
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — NutraSweet, the newly developed sweetener often found in soft drinks, has been found to cause brain damage in laboratory rats.
"There are a lot of questions about it," said Deborah Kipp, a dietician and nutritionist at the University of Kansas in St. Louis, who said long-term effects of it are a concern."
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Kipp said that researchers had given high doses of aspartame, the generic term for NutraSweet, to laboratory rats and found that it raised the amino acid
"They found that high levels of aspartame slowed the neurotransmitters in the rats' brains," she said. "That basically means that too much aspartame in the system may cause damage."
Kipp said that she did not think aspartame would cause cancer because of its amino acid composition. She said that cyclamates and saccharin, artificial sweeteners that were banned in many countries, were chemical compositions and that the chemicals probably added to the cause of cancer.
level in their brains, hindering certain responses.
But Kipp quickly added that the large amount of aspartame given to rats may not be an accurate representation of what happens when humans consume aspartame.
Another negative aspect of aspartame, Kipp said, is that people with phenylalanine, a liver disease, could
"You have to give great amounts in a short amount of time to see the long-term effects on humans," she said. "But most people would most likely never have that large of an amount in their systems."
Because it is sweeter than sugar, smaller amounts can be used, the larger amounts should be used.
not consume large amounts of it because of its amino acid composition. But not all aspects of the sweetener are negative.
According to a pamphlet published by the Searle Corporation, which manufactures NutraSweet, aspartame is 200 times sweeter than sugar and has no bitter or metallic taste like saccharin.
More KU students studying abroad
not consume large amounts of it
because of its amino acid composition.
Bv the Kansan Staff
More students are studying abroad the semester than ever before a study abroad program.
This semester, 129 students are studying abroad, she said, and 108 students studied abroad last fall.
"I think the reason for the increase is because we've expanded a lot of what we offer." Heidi Gregori-Gahan, study abroad advisor said. "I think we have more opportunities than we ever had in the past."
The most popular place to study is Costa Rica, Gregori-Gahan said. Thirty students are studying in Costa Rica this semester, she said.
Students probably choose to study there because it's inexpensive, she said. In some cases it costs less to study there than at the University of Kansas, she said.
Several years ago Britain increased tuition for foreigners and many KU students lost interest in the program, Gregori-Gahan said.
Britain is another popular place to study, she said. More than 20 students are studying in various locations throughout the country this semester.
But since that time, the study abroad office has negotiated with several universities in Britain for reduced rates for KU students, she said.
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Feb. 3, 4, 5
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A meeting for all those interested in serving on a committee or being a committee chairperson will be held Thurs., Feb. 2 at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
SUPERDANCE Committee People Needed (Benefitting Muscular Dystrophy Association)
Committees are: Recruitment, Facilities, publicity, prize entertainment, food, medical, finance and security.
Questions call 864-4643
Make a weekend of it at The University of Kansas February 4 & 5... we've got everything from Bach to Basketball!!
--available.
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*Spencer Museum of Art:* "Diane Arbus: In Print 1960-1971"; "Paris and Modern Art from the Alex Hillman Family Collection"; 9 a.m.4:30 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 4; 1:4:30 p.m., Sunday, Feb. 5."
* *
Chamber Music Series: Canada's Orford String Quartet,
in concert, 8 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 4, Crafton-Preyer
Theatre, Murphy Hall; tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall
Box Office, 913/864-3982.*
Women's Basketball: The Lady Jayhawks meet Colorado, 2 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 4.
Men's Basketball: The Jayhawks meet Wichita State, 1 p.m., Sunday, Feb. 5.
.. A University Arts Festival Presentation
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Whatever you need in photo and video equipment, Wolfe's Camera is your one stop headquarters. Wolfe's has new and used in most popular brands plus many unusual and scarce items. We take old equipment in trade. Our prices are competitive and we have a friendly sales staff to assist you. We are easy to find at 7th and Kansas Avenues in Downtown Topeka.
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1
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1984
Page 9
U.S. to accept Salvadoran election
By United Press International
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Secretary of State George Shultz said Tuesday the United States will accept the outcome of March elections even if winner is the candidate allegedly linked to rightist death squads.
Shultz conferred with Salvadoran officials for five hours before flying to Caracas Tuesday night to attend the UN General Assembly in Salvadora's new president, Jae Lusinigui.
Shultz said he heard Salvadoran presidential hopeful Roberto d'Aubuinson, accused by human rights groups of directing the death of a peasant who speak "eloquency" about the principles of democracy at a luncheon.
"We believe under those circumstances you accept the verdict, whatever it may be, of the people who do the voting," Shultz said at a news conference at the presidential residence.
A victory by d'Aubuisson may easily erode congressional support for Eliott
D'Aubuisson, also the former president of the Constituent Assembly and leader of the rightist ARENA party, has rejected calls by the U.S. to arm itself as of many as 25 military and civilian leaders suspected of terrorism.
The March 25 elections have attracted six candidates, including moderate Christian Democratic Party leader Jose Napoleon Duarte, but no candidates will be representing the leftist guerrillas, who fear they will be murdered if they lay down their arms.
Shultz said the United States would not provide vital economic and military aid unless the guerrillas were freed, and participate in the electoral process.
In other news from Central America:
*Salvadoran military authorities questioned and released three women Tuesday in connection with the alleged resale of food supplied by the U.S. Agency for International Development.
selling food supplied by AID for refugees in areas where the army is carrying out U.S.-designed "pacification" programs.
Reporters visiting San Vicente, 28 miles east of San Salvador, said a news story Wednesday.
A spokesman for the National Commission for Restoration of Areas, an army relief agency known as the Army Aid Food and AID food was being illegally resold.
- Judicial sources in El Salvador said that prosecutors and defense attorneys have reached a verbal agreement to bring to trial five former national guardmen charged with plotting the leaders of four American churchwomen.
The guardmen are charged with the murders of Maryknoll nuns Ita Ford and Maura Clark, Ursuline nun Terry Stone and Donovan social worker Jean Denovan.
The non-binding agreement must be reviewed by the judge in Zacateca before a trial date is set for the court. A judgment may be submitted in Salvadoran courts for three years.
- Nicaraguan government forces killed 200 anti-Sandinista rebels in a northern province in January, defending a city and declare it a liberated zone.
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Iraqi gunboats and jet fighters destroyed five Iranian 'naval targets' and an American bombing squad in the battle on the Persian Gulf, Iraqi said.
By United Press International
Iraq's official news agency quoted a military spokesman in Baghdad, Iraq, as saying "a convoy of enemy naval targets had been detected this morning in the coastal sea," in the northeastern Gulf near the Iranian oil port of Bandar Khomeini.
Iraq says it destroyed Iranian targets
Iran had no immediate comment on the latest Iraqi claims of victory in the 40-month-old war between the Persian Gulf neighbors.
The Iraqi said their air and naval units struck "with surprise" for an hour beginning just before noon and managed to destroy five naval targets.
casualties and did not say what kinds of ships were destroyed.
The news agency had no estimate on
The Iranians scrambled American-made Phantom warjets and sent them roaring into action five minutes after the attack.
"But our air force units intercepted them and engaged them in a dogfight in 1945."
"One Iramian Phantom jet was downed and seen falling in flames while shooting."
Soviet bombers kill Afghan civilians
By United Press International
Muslim rebels fighting the 105,000 Soviet troops supporting the Karmal government have headquarters in Russia but raiding spikes across the rugged frontier.
NEW DELHI, India — Soviet-led forces in Afghanistan killed hundreds of civilians in bombing raids on villages in the eastern part of the country, Western diplomats said yesterday.
The reported raids, which could not be independently confirmed, coincided with what Pakistan said was the worst cross-border attack by Afghan MiGs since Moscow installed President Bashkir Karmal in Kabul at the end of 1979.
Diplomats said the attacks on Afghanistan's Shomali Valley began on Jan. 19 and lasted through Friday, the same day that Afghan MiGs reportedly shot down the cross-border raid on the village of Adda, in northwestern Pakistan.
"Heavy bombing and shelling of villages with some ground action by Soviet and Afghan regime troops"
focused on the village of Ghaza, north of Kabul, one diplomat said.
In Islamabad, Pakistan, a Foreign Office spokesman made the charge that two Afghan MiGs deliberately intruded into Pakistani territory Friday, killing
The government originally said 40 people died and 60 were injured in the attack.
The spokesman said Afghan Air Force planes have violated Pakistani air space 411 times since the 1929 Soviet invasion, killing 53 people and injuring 104.
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"The clock of probable human self-destruction has just moved from 4 minutes to 3 minutes to midnight!" The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists
AFTER "THE DAY AFTER" What can we do?
A Citizens' Forum on Positive Alternatives for the Future.
Speakers: BARBARA HUBBARD, futurist, author, and first woman candidate to seek the Democratic nomination for Vice President of the United States. WILLIS HARMON, futurist, author, and Senior Social Scientist at Stanford
WILLIS HARMON, futurist, author, and Senior Social Scientist at Stanford Research Institute International.
Moderator: David Longhurst, Mayor of Lawrence
Time: Thur., Feb. 2, 1984 8 p.m.
Sponsors: Kansas University Dept. of Political Science,
KU Chapter of World Future Society, Lawrence,
8 Campus Coalitions for Peace and Justice.
IN '84 MORE THAN EVER BEFORE, THE FUTURE
IS THE ISSUE! COME BE A PART OF IT!
Place: Kansas Union Ballroom, University
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Thursday 10-8:30
Sunday 1-5
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NATION AND WORLD
5
University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1984 Page 10
United Press International
FBI
MIAMI — FBI agents escort a man thought to be George Clarence Bridgette, the one of the FBI's 10 most-wanted fugitives, into custody. The man, taken into custody Monday, maintains that his name is Odel Davis. Bridgette, 37, is wanted in California for the drug-related murder of three adults and a child in September 1977. Bridgette had previously been convicted of armed robbery, parole violation and auto theft.
NAISMITH HALL Too good to be true!
A hand holding a tray with various food items.
BUT IT IS! Even as an off campus resident you can enjoy the famous unlimited seconds cooking at Naismith Hall Cafeteria.
Don't believe us? — Now you can purchase meal cards consisting of breakfast at $2.40. Lunch at $2.88 and Dinner at $3.40 per meal.
The meal card is designed for 5 meals per 21 days from the date of issuance. All you need to do is stop by the front desk at Naismith Hall, 1800 Naismith Drive, or call 842-4488 for details.
So, hop on a bus and join us for lunch or breakfast or dinner. Tickets are available at the front desk and redeemable while KU is in session.
Testimony heard in officer's trial
MIAMI — The detective who led the investigation into policeman Lus Alvairez' killing of a young black man testified yesterday that the Cuban-born officer told him his revolver went off when he was said his victim was reaching for a gun.
By United Press International
Detective John Buhrmaster, the first prosecution witness in the manslaughter trial of Alvarez, told the jury that the shooting in a ghetto video arcade touched off violence so quickly that it turned into a publicity stunt before he could finish his investigation.
Alvarez, 24, originally claimed he shot Novell Johnson, 20, by accident. But his attorney said in opening arguments that the policeman fired in
Over defense objections, prosecutor Abraham Laeser asked Bhrummaster, the lead detective in the investigation, "Was there ever any word spoken to you by this defendant where he said Johnson went for his gun?"
self.defense when Johnson reached for a nistel in his belt.
Buhmhramer said when he reached the Overtown arcade, The Recreation Establishment, the evening of Dec. 28, 1982, a crowd of about 300 angry blacks was milling around outside the game room.
"No." the detective replied.
He said Alvarez had put in an emergency call for help in a "very excited" voice. Then, Alvarez reported, "They are calling me off and I've got a black male down."
Alvarez' service pistol, finding one round had been fired, and recounted the story Alvarez gave him on the scene. Alvarez, he said, told him he spotted a concealed pistol in Johnson's belt and set out to arrest him.
"He said the individual turned toward him suddenly and he jerked back and his gun discharged," Buhrmaster said.
"Did he say anything like, 'I shot him because he was going for his gun?'"
bawled.
Bubrmaster testified that he checked
"No." said Burhmaster.
Under cross-examination, Buhrmaster, a police officer for 36 years, admitted he was nervous because an angry mob was pounding on the arcade's windows. He also said could he ballots richecotting off the building.
By United Press International
Reagan to declare war on terrorism
WASHINGTON — President Reagan will send to Congress soon a package of legislative proposals to combat the nuclear terrorism, alides said yesterday.
They said the Justice Department was putting the final touches on the
Reagan signaled the move in his State of the Union address last week. Speaking of terrorism, he said, "We have seen this ugly spectre in Beirut, Kuwait, and Rangoon. It demands international attention."
The president said he would be "seeking support from our international allies for concerted action."
The proposals would:
- Make any conspiracy to commit violence abroad a violation of U.S. criminal statutes.
- Implement existing international conventions such as the U.N. resolution on hostage-taking and other inter-aircraft conflict aircraft sabotage and hijacking.
- Authorize payment of government rewards for information on terrorist activity
- Limit personal phone calls from terrorists
- Prohibit the training or support of U.S.-based terrorist organizations.
Reagan is also expected to propose other measures dealing with cooperation.
Aides confirmed that terrorism would be on the agenda when Reagan signed a new executive order.
Yugoslavia, meet at the White House today.
State Department officials reported Monday that the United States and its allies were beginning a massive effort to counter international terrorism.
U. S. officials held two days of meetings last week with representatives from the "summit seven" countries in a continoung joint efforts on protection.
The seven nations who meet annually at the economic summits are Britain, Canada, France, Japan, Germany, Italy and the United States.
O'Neill vote anticipated for Mondale
WASHINGTON — House Speaker Thomas O'Neill will endure Walt Mondale for president today, Capitol Hill sources said yesterday.
O'Neill, who in 1980 refused to endorse either President Carter or Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, has decided to reverse his normal stance on the issue of importance he places on beating President Reagan, the sources said.
By United Press International
O'Neill aides refused to confirm or deny the reports, saying that the speaker will not make any statements until today, after the Democratic Caucus makes its official selection of 164 house members as delegates to the Democratic National Convention.
A majority of those delegates,
selected earlier in regional caucuses,
by the Democratic Steering and
have publicly endorsed Mondale.
O'Neill said he would not make any statement "until after I elected as a delegate," today in the Democratic caucus.
On Monday, O'Neill greed all the Democratic candidates to be tougher on Reagan. He told reporters that "1064 is not Ronald Reagan's year" and that his policies are unpopular. But he maintains his criticism of Reagan, but "others who are out there should do it more often."
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Call the SGA office at 864-3477 for information on its two other spring break trips: Padre and La Florida. Hurry and sign up for your spring trip.
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Expires Sun., Feb. 5
No other coupons accepted with these offers
Put down your books, pick up some skis and experience five glorious days of skiing in Colorado's Rocky Mountain High. The mountains of Winter Park and Mary Jane offer a variety of slopes where you can be a beginner or a seasoned skier. Skateboard rentals are available on 4 nights lodging at the Hi Country Haus, ski rental, lift tickets, and wine & cheese party. For lodging and lift tickets only, pay $209. $335/$209 (lodging & lift tickets) Sign up before Feb. 9
Robert's Jewelry
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Mars, sat. 5:30; 9:30
Thurs. open until 8:30
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University of Kansas FEBRUARY 1984
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
"A JAZZY EVENING WITH RON McCURDY" AND THE
K.U.
K. U. Jazz Ensemble & Choir
8 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 1, 1984
Kansas Union, Ballroom No $$
SPONSORED BY THE OFFICE OF MINORITY AFFAIRS
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}
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 Weeks
0-15 2.00 3.15 3.75 6.75
16-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80
21-29 3.15 4.15 5.25 8.85
For every 5 words add: 26 50 75 105
AD DEADLINES
Classified Display ... $4.20
per column inch
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Classified Display advertisements can be only one width wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is no more than. Newer devices include a classified display advertisement, except for longer displays.
POLICIES
ANNOUNCEMENTS
February 1, 1984 Page 11
- Team sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements
- Deadlines same as Display Advertisement - 2 working days prior to publication.
- Not permitted in certain cases.
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD FACE count as 2 words
- advertising
· Blink box ads—please add a $2 service charge.
· Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed.
- Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount
AIRELINES JHUNG STEWARDESSES.
STEWARDESSES
Directory Guide. Newsletter 1/91/94-0440 EXT
1/91/94-0440 EXT
land titles can be admitted 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 804-4538.
> Able rates based on consecutive day insertions
only
> Able rates for more than one in
only.
• No responsibility is assumed for more than one in
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
Hayrack Rides Also
ATTENTION. Sincere persons wishing to travel next April to Lexington for the 140th American Ancient Altair Convention contact Jon at n46-401. Deaths from COVID-19 are reported in the citizens' forum on positive alternatives for the future. Speakers: Barbara Hubbard and Willis Hobson. Email: willis.hobson@kauai.edu; 2. 8:00 p.m. Kansas University Ballroom.
Horseback Riding
$6.00 per hour
KOA Campground
842-3877
correct insertion of any advertisement
* No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified
Auction-weekly consignment every Friday 7 p.m.
Showmakers. Across Kaw River Bridge, 2 miles
Balletton Library Service Poster Design &
Handbasket Rates, References Tickel 8342-1348 or
Almanac
CRUSSEPS HIHPS $16.500-$400 Carburetor
NEWLEASES 1-9191 $944-4440 EXT
NewOrder 1-9191
Kansan classifieds get results
from KC-inclusive
May 26-June 15
$2800 *
from KC-inclusive
SOUTH CHINA TOUR
- For details, call Del & Carol Shanklet at 842-1646 or G. Faye Watson at 842-6925
Learn WordPress in your office or home. $45 for
a 30-minute course.
Hamilton Hills Alpa Alpha Computer Center,
917-627-3855.
ENTERTAINMENT
ELIMINATE PROBLEM BEHAVIOR This semester several elimination of self-defeating behavior workshops will be offered to students between the ages of 18-30 who are experiencing self-defeating behavior and study ineffective shyness, slyness etc. Participants who complete the workshop and follow-up will be paired $40. To find out more, by the university office, or to lead an information form for the workshop.
FOR RENT
1.2 and 3 bedroom apartments available
immediately GUO. Good campus location on our route
to Manhattan, New York City and NYC.
Email: cory@batescollege.edu
2 Bedroom in basement of beautiful home 5 minutes from campus. Garage-Private parking and free Wi-Fi. Call 617-349-8000.
Apple Craft A/C Heat & Water. Quiet Luxury on the edge of snow campion 1 BBR 872* 741 W/188. WB 650. NW 380.
Are you sick of dorm life? Try a refreshing alternative! I will pay you $100 to sublease my Nathalim Hait contact Green food pool friends, the
Brand new 1 bedroom apartment located at 5th and Colubrida. Starts booking of FEB $36/month offer for this room in the brand new 1 bedroom apartment located at 5th and Colubrida. Start
**Help)** Sublaze modern efficient two bedroom ap. **Help)**
A61 339-2480 or 2 p.m. Keep trying!
A61 339-2480 or 2 p.m. Keep trying!
Large, upstairs apt 5 rooms, bath and fifth Floor. Close to campus Private entrance Call 612-794-0302
Luxury living 1,83/1.4 bath, FP bar, appliances,
carpet & pool 400 plus dep. plus flr. 841-3270
MEADOWBROOK - nice furnished studio available.
CALL 212-345-7890, back room laundry facility. Call
212-345-7890, back room laundry facility. Call
MEADOWBROOK still available one and two bedroom furnished and unfurnished upstairs. Heat and water included. 2 blocks from campus, and excellent location with access to Chelsea Mainstreet apartments. 15th & Creulay. 824-8000
FOR SALE
Save $125 per month. 2 bedroom apartment—like new and 1 back from KU. Call 843-4798.
Beautiful new Yamaha guitar with delicate hardware case included 4308. Work much more. Kathy
Summer sublease
study apt. furnished or
classroom to campus, on bus route. Call (718) 265-0192 after 8 a.m.
(I) Students we still have a few fully furnished classrooms and 432-room apartments available near campus. (II) We provide an orientation program for new students.
977 Yamaha RD 400, excellent condition. Call
41-7828.
BASS GUITAR FUYTER T-40, new; diluted cases,
12.5 oz.; with 6-string neck. Great water set up $60 or separately. Make
wife's water set up $60 or separately.
Electric Guitar and AMP: ELECTRA LDS Paul coap with Ovex Black Stage Amp. Grade condition #290 & RIBBON $500.00
FOR SALE! 1801 Honda CM290T, excellent
buyer package. warranty. asking $900.
call (844) 756-2233. call (844) 756-2233.
For Sale - Used flipkick dabs. Satch quality or
better? Flipkick dabs. For $250 each,
excludes 1. minimum 10m (Also limited quanti-
sion of single or double sided, 5m² hard sectored). Mark or
buyer direct. 844-739-6442. 844-739-1928. C
First for availability and directions.
For sale. Post oak drawing table with palerner
Almost new. $75 841 6975
For sale Hatad Detector "Fox XH" Brand new
Also sell AFM FM receiver plus 2 speaker
HONDA CF359-F100, excellent condition, quarter
fairing with light, 2 helmets. $1000, first
buyer.
Intensive learners 100 W each $70). Kastle prairie skis i'sk8 190 W. Wilson staff golf clubs (woods): 3, 4, 600). Taylor made driver 7:10 t (tour burner) $45). Taylor made original driver $46, 941 - 800).
Sample Sales—Women's and men's sports apparel,套装 sales, shorts suits, T-shirts, men's 60% off clothing.
Save $$$ Computers Discount prices Catalog Save $$$ Computers Now available Save $$$ Computers now available. Send $2 ($endif on first order) Emerald City Computer Mail Order Emerald City Computer Mail Order Love's Sounds Love's Sounds Love's love, seat arm, chair two, lamps two, lamp
Sola, love sea, arm chair, two lamps, two lamp tables, table tea, and 10 to 12 carpet 462-007 860-229
Wait, the numbers are:
10 to 12 carpet 462-007 860-229
Yes.
One more thing. The image is a bit blurry, but it looks like a set of instructions for a room setup or a list of items.
Final check of the text:
Sola, love sea, arm chair, two lamps, two lamp tables, table tea, and 10 to 12 carpet 462-007 860-229
Solid maple oak twin bed frame $42, twin mattress $30, Sturdy bunge bed frame $64, CallsRich, Rug $15.99
Stereo-television video All name brands. Lowest price PCT video Total Sound Distributors,
USED CARPETS - dorm room sizes, mostly shags,
$30, leave message, 842-1433
Technics Turntable fully automatic, direct drive with $100 Shore cartridge and tape; $180. 844-2835.
Texas Instruments Programmable Calculator TL-98
For sale from TL-98, 710 6020, Rusty
U.S. and U.N. stamps, mint and used, bargain
collectors. Collectors call 843-5189, earnings.
Used furniture at Shekminer's across Raw River Bridge, 2 miles north of Lawrence on 29-59 Highway.
dress cameras, large selection, C & T
*photographs* 0131 Santa Fuca, Overland Park, KS
WOMEN'S SAMPLE, SALEM Women's Sale at
Nordstrom. $19-$35. Swimwear ($19-$19) or
blazer and plaid blouses and polo
shirts ($29-$49).
Western Civilization Notes; including New Supplement on Sale Make uses them to use them:
"New Analysis of Western Civilization exam preparation"
"New Analysis of Western Civilization available at town Tier. The
THELETASRF For Sale, complete sheets, letters,
formal symbols, letraton, $30 sheet,
852 0024
AUTO SALES
1981 Datum 2000 ZX GLP, 5 speed, read rear,
read front, read rear, drive, maintain, sharp, malt, sharp or best offer #492-3001.
942-3001
Cruise ship are hired $180-$300. Carribean,
New York, New Jersey, Florida, California.
New York $19. 1916 $94-144. 84th St.
Seattle $25. 1916 $94-144. 84th St.
1912 Dodge Charger, AC, PS, PB, new Auto. Trans.
Suede good carpet mileage, nanotech 892-547-3007
2019 Ford Mustang V6, automobiles. All extras. stercosaro PTCC with speakers. 748-537-8278 or 748-537-8279
1725 Vega. Good condition. No rust. Must sell. First
6000 take it. 840-615 or 843-9038.
1862 WV HAB IIhb good condition Cat.76-754
D11 Dionston 310XN 416xP Super cone Loaded
Clean Loaded
Experienced electrician technician. Part time during school and full time in summer. Send resume RM1352-0892-7168.
For sale. 78 Datson 200 SX. Runs good, looks nice.
For info call 841 8329. John.
HELP WANTED
LOST AND FOUND
keys, found in 205-206 Blake. Contact political science deed. 504 Shall Lake.
Found: Gold bracelet in parking lot at 948 Alabama on Jan. 23. Call 811-4547 to identify
Airlines are hiring!
Flight attendants
Director, Newsletter. 930 944-4400. Emt
Found-Contact lenses outside of 108 Strong on Jan.
BOSTON AVENTURE-Explore opportunities of exciting city while working as a livein childcare teacher. 149 Birchside Avenue, Allee Fusch, Childcare Placement Service, 149 Buckhinder Road, Brooklyn, MA 02124
19.0 %
To pick up or to book and in touch with:
10.0 %
to the university or to book at:
10.0 %
STAFF AWITED FOR Camp Lincoln/Camp Lake Hulbert, a Minnesota resident summer camp. A strong commitment to working with children, required, along with skill and experience in activities. Sign up early at the University Placement Center for interviews on Camp Wednesday. February 8th.
Hire apply in person or by telephone.
Now hire day female bartenders and night male
bartenders. Apply online or call 441 Ronnies, S30 wisc.
Ask for fokner. No calls please.
Help wanted—an experienced waitperson for Nahils
Habib. Apply in person M-F between 1-5 p.m.
Female to assist disabled female with care. No experience required. SKIP if you are pregnant. Call 1-800-392-5400 or visit www.nurseapp.com/pages/about/advance-care. p.m. 7-10 p.m. fax: 1-800-392-5400
Least and Found items at Watson Library include numerous Ids. Ask at the Circ. Desk.
Applications are being accepted for half-time graduate teaching assistants in Western Civilization, May 17-23. Applications must be submitted sections per week and aid in other instruction-related tasks. Requirements: Must be a bona fide graduate student at the University of Kansas working toward a doctorate degree in the humanities and social sciences. Appointment for nine months, beginning in the fall of 1984; salary of $165,000; deadline for application: February 17, 1984.
MARKETING DIRECTOR
Maupintour, a well-established travel company headquartered in Lawrence, Kansas, is seeking a self-motivated individual to be responsible for planning and implementing future growth, developing of media advertising, marketing plans, promotions, sales alds and marketing research.
The ideal person will have a proven track record of success with at least 10 years of experience in marketing, sales or customer service to the President of the company.
Send resume and salary history to John Gibson, Personnel Director, at the address shown below.
MAUPINTOUR, INC.
1515 St. Andrews Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Position offering: Assistant to Orientation
work from February 18-19th, 20 hours per week from February 18-17th, 15 hours (including Saturday day) from May 18-17th, 15 hours (including Sunday or Monday), total salary. Standing. Salary total approximately $4,200/3.59 per hour. Qualifications: Good organization.
For a complete job description, please to Office of Administration, HR, Office 6, 212-812-1400, p.m. Monday through Friday. Deadline for submission of application: 5 p.m. February 16.
Resumes now being accepted for (6 management
positions), including the following:
- necessary College graduate preferred; Fugate
graduate preferred;
- Master's degree preferred.
Considered about your income and your education?
Have you considered a college program which is designed to help you with both.
A few hours can turn you 40+ 60 weekly as well as help you get into college. You can attend Youth American Enterprise P.O. Box 604 Kokau Missouri.
MISCELLANEOUS
COMPUTER SCIENCE STUDENTS
If you are a student in the computer science department, you know that our department is in need of students to enroll in courses, the quality of our education, the future of our department and the Academy. The ACM student chapter at KU has established this Spring student advocacy committee to help cope with the fall fall. We have organized the Committee (PAC) will continue the ACM efforts of last Fall to collect statistics which document the crises in computer science. We maintain an office on campus where we have meetings and more importantly, however, PAC will hold regular open meetings to discuss questions and problems related to our faculty and students held the first Thursday at 4 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas University. The first meeting will be held this Thursday, February 13th from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. (Funded by Student Funds)
VAIL/BEAVER CREEP - 3 bedroom townhouse with amenities close to both areas. Reservoir for now. Rental fees: $1,000 a month.
Motown Dance Party! That's right, come dance your winter blues away this Wednesday. Fear it. Aler at the Hwy Crossing. Party begins at 8, brought to the Show Splash Productions and its absolute freedom.
PERSONAL
Diplomacy: Anyone interested in playing this classic availon hill game, call 941-8498. Keep calling. Hey 21D, you throw one hell of a party. Let's do it again real soon!
Karen Personalized instruction in weight bench
Shower, mousse massailable - satisfaction
feedback.
Brook Creek Kid Care Center has openings for toddlers and pre-school age children. Call 842-K185 COLLEGE SWEATSHirts! Many schools in stock. Please contact your local school. Many colors. Call 801-815-805 or write box 317, brookhaven, Mississippi 36060 for more information. Mail: Kid Care Center, 10 West 7th St., 842-719-805. Sale at Kawaiyama College, 10 West 7th St., 842-719-805.
Bicycle through Europe June 11-July 11, 6
Countries College credit available
ATTENTION. Only 86 more days until the THORGOOGO DAYTY.
COME OUT AND TALK ABOUT IT. Meet new members of the Support Group Meeting. Meet Kwansun, a Korean union. Meet Dong Seok, an activist.
Laurem may the hair under your arms never tangle
Happy Birthday. Love. I & L.
We Meet or Beat
Bart's Vintage Rose
BUSINESS PERS
Support group: Gay men come in and outis. Org. Mkgs. 386-701-4498, kansas. Kansas. More info: www.386-701-4498.com
A strong靴 outlet/Bennett Retail Taperl Chilled
Wine-Kegs-Cold Ice Herb
birds north of
Mexico
ALL SPRING CHARTER FLIGHTS
ENJOY FIRST
Roundtrip Discount or
Independent Aviation
St. Louis $76
Colorado Springs $100
Chicago $120
Houston $130
New Orleans $130
Denver $150
Washington, D.C. $160
Las Vegas $180
Tampa $188
Orlando $198
Fort Lauderdale $198
Phoenix $200
New York $208
Los Angeles $218
London $608
841-2451
NEW ARRIVAL
Victorian dresses
silk lingerie
cotton petticoats
91% Wax, St.
K.C.-Frankfurt $599
C.London $599
Chicago-Indiana $599
Chicago-Paris $569
Chicago-Madrid $679
Düsseldorf $609
Restrictions May Apply
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. 9:30-2:00
HEALTH INSURANCE
41-7117
R
Cambium Diet January Clearance. Making room for new shipment up to $2 off an admissible flavor. Free shipping on all orders over $100.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
Topics include overcoming mental barriers to learning, reading, writing, speaking, and listening comprehension. Wednesday, February 1, 7:30 to 9:30 a.m.
Presented for the last time this semester, presented by the Student Assistance Center, 123 Strong Hall.
Call us
Bilton
Dutton Insurance, Ltd.
Bilton Brugacity.
842-0515
www.biltonbrugacity.com
Available for students.
Herbale Slim and Trim program. The amazing benefits of this program, made up of 10 to 29 pounds per month, supply an all-natural nutrients, naturally cleaning the system, mutually curbing the appetite and burning excess calories.
Impatient passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits.
Modeling and theater portfolio shooting now
beginning in professional positions. Call for information
Beginning in 2019.
ocean surfing
& Health Spa
Send a BINGUIN TELEGRAM - a unique alternative
phone number for your business. Pass through Fee-
10, Call Andrea @ 864-1610 1610.
1 FREE TRIAL SESSION
Jazz Exercise & Aerobics
Say it on a shirt, custom silk-screen printing, T-shirts,
and one eye. Shipped by Stylish 209-6111.
Suz Exercise & Aerobics with weight room privileges Classes Now Forming
TANLIME
European Suntanning
with this coupon
holiday Piazza no membership required 841-623
Special for students, Harcouts $7 and perns $12.
Charmase, ask for Deena Jensen. 943-5300
--accurate- guaranteed perfect .824_6012
A A A A A A A BETTER TYPING FAST. First step.
RESEARCH PAPER WRITING SKILLS
The library uses a variety of resources, use the library manage your time. Thursday February 2, 6:30 p.m. in the Big Rooam, Kansas Student Assistance Center, 121 Strongway, Hiaweyne, 664-8944.
THRIST STOOPES. Appliances, furniture, clothing,
knit clothes, bedding. Always good bargains
in stock.
**Believe tension -- gird/girls** - The Touch - is for you
You're in the middle of a private of your own place. Message only.
*Believe tension -- gird/girls
Name: ___
--accurate- guaranteed perfect .824_6012
A A A A A A A BETTER TYPING FAST. First step.
Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to:
The Etc. Shop, 722 Mass. has formal wear, vintage,
and classic clothing. Open 11 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday
through Saturday. Thursday until 8:30 p.m.
p. 843-0611
SKI VAIL,BEAUMEIRE CREEK call TOLL FREE
Ski Rental for Winter Skiing or for DECOUNT DISPOSITIONS on rented lifts, and
ski lodging.
4-5 Days 10 Days or Two Weeks
$3.75 $6.75
University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading:
The Keeper - 16101.9 w 2 Wird, KEG SALE; Busch $35,
COR2 or pump set ups. 841 9450
Our reputation for creating skinless fashion has stood unquestionably in Texas. We use sophisticated equipment together with scientifically prepared formulas that allow the skin to clean and revitalize. Mentions this ad and receive 25% off cosmetic hair removal and skin care.
--accurate- guaranteed perfect .824_6012
A A A A A A A BETTER TYPING FAST. First step.
Derma Care
Classified Display:
1 col x 1 inch—$4.20
Ultimate
WHOLESALE SYSTEM RENTAL, P.A. systems.
DIOAC System, Guitar and Bass Amp. 814-645.
SCIENCE CITY FILM PAPERBACKS, 3 for $15 & K
Kailian Books, 6 for $25. Comics:
UMC #842-728, 107 West 70th, Lawrence
749-0771 14 E.8th
SOUTH PACIFIC ISLAND TEXAS $38 per person
for 8 day/7 nights. New deluxe beach side condo
for pool Spring Limited. Space available. Call
you campus rep. Charles at 843 2317.
--accurate- guaranteed perfect .824_6012
A A A A A A A BETTER TYPING FAST. First step.
SERVICES OFFERED
NCH 18M DRD will hole make
ENGLISH FILM will help make your writing clearer.
ENGLISH FILM will help make your writing clearer.
Tutoring, English, 101, 102, 103, call Ms. Calm
Tutoring, English, 101, 102, 103, call Ms. Calm
Experienced child care In my home Quiet neighborhood 749-5080
Need help in math? Experimented math tutor can help you do well in the semester. Special rate for students with special needs.
Learn to fly. Experience (Flight Instructor) Very
reasonable rates. B1-841-7944 802-9926 Ask me
for details
Photography, bridal pantographs, wedding albums,
ceremony programs, team presentations, teams and participants. Tull Foal 5602 814-8000 every evening.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841.5716
SPANISH TUTOR translator Native speaker Experiences with beginning intermediate and advanced Spanish
STADIUM BARGER SHOP. 1033 Massachusetts,
downhill all day. $6.00 No appointment
ULTIMATE hair and skin Care Center invited you to an amazing or beautiful saloon located in downtown Lawrence, Massachusetts. Our consultation and $3 off haircut and $2 off permis. FREES NUXS SAMPLES 14 east 18th Street
TYPING
Typing--accept no substitutes! 842 1942
24-hour typing All day all night
3 Services at 1 location. Typing, editing, graphics
WORD ARTISTS. Eleni B41-2172
Rate Typing? The original (and only) AAA
x10ne-accept no substitutes: 842 1942
Experienced, theses, resume, papers, Fast,
accurate, guaranteed perfect 842-0012
A A A A A. Affordable TYPING SERVICE. Fast, first quality typing. WOOD PROCESSING 841 6600
APPOROUND QUALITY for all your typing needs
Call Judy. 8749-7495 at 9 p.m.
Accurate, affordable transfer. Ask about speed,
overnight service (under 25 pages). Call Mary
Absolutely Letter Perfect Typing Editing
Bookkeeping Professional, high quality
Microsoft Word
Affordable & Accurate . word processing. Call Susan,
749-3112
Carry Terry for your typing needs. letters, terms, special characters. 8:42 - 9:44 a.m.
8:42 - 9:44 a.m. or 8:35 - 10:30 p.m.
CALL TIP TYPING 1201 Iowa Experienced typists and editor. Xerox 600 memory writer, Royal Press.
partnered word processor or IBM Correcting
Selectric used by experienced typists for a
professional format for your dissertation, thesis,
notes, etc. Call 842-27/44
Elvin could wake, Shakespeare could write a
mild talent. Call *842 6094* after 5:30 and weekends.
Excellent typing at reasonable rates. **HUM* Selectric*
**pica.)** Call *842 6088* before 10 p.m.
Fast, accurate typing at reasonable prices IBM
Correcting Call. Callite at 831-0901
JEANETTE SHAFFER TYPING SERVICE IMM
ISECTURE III Pica or Elite B443/877
Information, Client Typing,
Processing, you can call
JEANETTE SHAPER TYPEING SERVICE, HIU
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED. FAST & EFFICIENT
841-3210
TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers,
letters applications, resumes. Assistance with
competition grammar spelling etc. English
for foreign students or American:
841-6254
P.5.1 processing. Theses, resumes, dissertations
and publications.
843-7929 843-7929 or 843-7925 coverage
www.pastelabs.com
Word Processing plus transcription from cassette
Plus pickup & delivery *Alts Art's Plus 79230*
*Burke Press*
Typing, Thesis, Dissertation, Term Fapers, etc.
Fast, accurate and reliable. Call 814-4357
Call now **MF** for a BR contemporary barbeque in Baltimore or Washington, DC. 830-675-2933, 830-675-4901, 830-675-6901. 830-675-6901. 830-675-6901.
Computer or roommate for 2 bedroom apartment
$895mm plus hall airties, negotiable. Call
(314) 620-7572.
Female roommate 850 or 130 plus 1/3 utilities. Call
Sue at 841-4106
WANTED
FEMALE ROOMMASTER to share large furnished apartments within UTIBERS with 18 students. Call Sabine 842-942-0361
Female needed immediately to坐2 bedroom
apartment with private bathroom.
$125/month, plus物业。Call 892 344 8456
**CALL FOR VIEWING**
www.delivery.com
Female roommate to share 2 BHT 4 plen. D. Wally,
carpeted, carpeted. $135 per month plus 1/2 usher.
Maximum occupancy: 80%.
- en suite roommate to share plen 2 HI ducples $130 per month plus 1/2 months. Pets OK 749 260 after 5.
Female roommate wanted for 3 bedroom townhouse 841 0251
Female roommate needed to share 230ff apartment.
Private room, charge to company. $650 plus 1/2
months.
1 need 2 roommates to share 3 bedrooms, pool, and cable. Req K & M 414) + 1 unit/m²
MALE roommate need 2 HOUR train townhouse.
Male roommate need 616 $m. 48 $m.叫 842 8989
Male roommate needed 500 all items included
Male roommate need Harvard Square Apartments,
on bus route. 749-3233
NO RENT TILL MARCH! Female roommate need for 2床. Applicant appartment. On less than 3 bedrooms. No deposit required.
Non-smoking female roommate for secure, 2 HI; partially furnished apartment. Storage, on bus route, near KU; prefer Grad Student. January rent already paid $310 – utilities 749-3710
Non smoking male to share 2 BR ap close to downtown, cownstreet, 142+1/2 mm units. (Cash)
Non-smoking male to share a nice house. Close to Campus own room. W/D. 130 plus usher. 490-769. ROWMATE. Male or Female to share nice duplex. Available in dorms, fully furnished, 1pm plus 1/2 meal. 841-3830.
Roommate. Serious, non-smoking female to share new home with 2 girls. Ocean room and both rooms have carpet.
Roommate wanted to share furnished 3 bedroom house at 100 Emery. E84.0649
Roommate wanted 3 bedroom house on bus route
4100 plus ma 1/3 utilities. 749-5129
4100 plus ma 1/3 utilities. 749-5129
Roomsmate wanted for a 4 bedroom house close to campus, off street parking $150 plus 1 full month.
- large quiet house close to campus with six sirtimes cooperative students. Christian belief and household responsibilities. Male or female on-campus and household responsibilities. Male or female on-campus and household responsibilities. Utility: Call Darryl or Brenda 814 7682
National Park Vehicle II at Park View
Opening Hours: 9am-5pm
Repair Mission Mn. Cn. 601 2nd Ave. W.N.
Repair Mission Mn. Cn. 601 2nd Ave. W.N.
Two female roommates to share an apartment at Jawahar Tower. Utility paid $121/month.
**Wanted Roommate:** for a two bedroom duplex in New York City. Must be able to pay $100/month for parking. **Rent:** $250/month. 1 bed plus 1 bath.
K
SPREAD THE WORD!
Say it in the KANSAN'
Tell someone special how you feel with a special Valentine's Day Message. You can say it in one of two ways. Either way you'll get your message in color!
1. Say, "Be my Valentine" in 15 words or less for a mere $2.60. For each additional 5 words you pay only 25¢.
2. Make your message stand out. You can say, "Be my Valentine" with a border around the message for only $4.20 for a full column inch.
To place your special Valentine's Day Message, drop by 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 9.
1
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
February 1, 1984 Page 12
OU moves into Big 8 lead Sooners rout KU
By JEFF CRAVENS Sports Editor
Wayman Tisdale scored 28 points and the Oklahoma Sooners shot better than 60 percent from the field to rout the Kansas Jayhawks, 103-84, moving OU into first place in the Big Eight Conference.
The victory movedOU.4-1 in the conference, to a one-half game lead overKansas.UU will be in action with a win in Wichita State in a non-conference game.
The Jayhawks took a 4-2 lead early in the first half, but Oklahoma, behind the long-range shooting of Tim McAlister, outscored the visitors 22-8. McAlister finished the game with 27 points despite playing with an injured foot.
CARL HENRY, an Oklahoma City native, led KU with 18 points while Kelly Knight added 17.
It was Henry who scored six consecutive points to pull KU to within 11, 35-24, with just over eight minutes left in the first half.
Oklahoma, ranked No. 13 in the country on the latest UPI coaches poll, then scored the next 10 points with Tisdale getting six of them. Reserve guard Shawn Clark scored OU's next 13 points and the Sooners led 58-37 at halftime.
Oklahoma was red-hot in the first half, shooting 62.8 percent from the field. The Jayhawks shot 53 percent from the field, but committed 16 turnovers and measured deceive score scored 12 points in the first half while Clark added 10.
KU slowly creep back into the game
early in the second half. Tad Boyle and Ron Kellogg helped spark a Jayhawk comeback.
TRAILING 76-57, KU scored the next 10 points to close the gap to 76-67 with a little more than eight minutes left in the game. But two consoles turnovers led to a loss off KU.
After seeing its lead dwindle to nine, Oklahoma relied on the next 10 points, including two free throws by McAlister after a technical on KU coach Larry
Tisdale made 12 of 17 foul shots for the game following a week in which OU coach Billy Tubs complained about the treatment of his All-America center by league officials. KU shot 2 free throws for the game, making eight.
Both teams traded baskets in the final five minutes as Sooner fans rooted for OU to break the 100-point barrier. Two free throws by Jian Pannell gave Oklahoma a 101-82 lead in the final minutes.
Greg Dreiling, who brushed his right leg in the second half, finished the game with 11 points, and Kellogg added 10 off the bench.
Clark finished the game with 16 points to Calvin Pierce added 14 and 17.
Oklaahoma's David Johnson and KU's Calvin Thompson, high-school teammates, each scored six points. Thompson was in foul trouble the entire game.
JIAWHAK NOTES—Although the KU-Wichita State game is still being shown nationally, NBC's No. 1 team of Dick Ereng and Al McGuire will not be the announcers as had originally been stated. Bucky Waters and Marv Albert will describe the action in the nationally televised contest.
WALE 29
WAVL 25
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Wales Conference's Don Maloney of the New York Rangers falls to his knees after being named the Most Valuable Player in the National Hockey League All-Star Game. Maloney had one goal and three assists last night to lead the Wales Conference over the Campbell Conference, 7-6. Maloney's four points tied an All-Star game record set last year by Edmonton's Wayne Gretzky.
First-half surge guides Sooner women past KU
By the Kansan Staff
The KU women's basketball team, suffered a five-minute scouring drought in the first half of last night's game against Oklahoma and never could recover, losing to the Sooners in Norman, Okla., 87-84.
With 14 minutes, 40 seconds left in the first half, Kansas trailed 9-4. Oklahoma outscoated the Jawhays 15-1 in the next 5-18 to go up 23-7.
The Jayhawks pulled to within three points of the Sooners in the final minute of the game, but could never get any closer.
Joining Adkins in double figures for
Jayhawk center Vickie Adkins turned in another dominating performance, leading all players with 32 points and 10 rebounds. He led the team in both the field and all 16 of her free throws.
Kansas were Angie Snider with 23 points and Barbara Adkins with 15. The Jayhawks were more accurate than Oklahoma from the field, hitting 53 percent of their shots to Oklahoma's 51 percent.
Lynn McCurdy led the Oklahoma scoring with 23 points. Three other Sooner players scored in double figures.
Six players fouled out of the game,
four of them Jayhawks. Vickie and
Barbara Adkins, Snider, and Cindy
Platt were all whistled for five foals.
Kansas dropped to 3-2 in the conference and 7-10 overall, while Oklahoma improved its record to 3-2 in the conference and 14-3 overall. The game puts the Jayhawks and the Sooners into a second place tie in the Big Eight.
The Jayhawks return on Saturday to face the Colorado Buffaloes. Game
Adkins is player of the week
By the Kansan Staff
The Kansas men's and women's basketball teams made a clean sweep of this week's Big Eight Conference honors. Wendy Collins was named the All-Waterloo #1 player.
Carl Henry Monday was named men's player of the week. Both Henry and Adkins went to high school in Oklahoma City.
"I've had a chance to coach All-Americans and I'm on the regional Kodak board that looks at players all over the country," women's head coach Lisa Washington said. "I think Vickie is one of the finest sopromoes in the country.
Adkins, a 6-foot-1 sophomore, led the Jayhawks to a stunning 71-58 upset of nationally ranked Kansas State Saturday, recording game-high totals of 29 points, 10 rebounds and three blocked shots.
Earlier in the week, Atlkns scored 25 points and pulled down 12 rebounds, helping the Jayhawks to a 98-89 victory over Nebraska.
Adkins leads the Jayhawks in scoring and rebounding in conference play, averaging 21.5 points and 10 rebounds a game.
"She's been effective all season. She's been playing at both ends of the court."
Express cuts two former Jayhawks
By MATT DeGALAN
Staff Reporter
Less than two weeks ago, former KU wide receiver Darren Green left Lawrence and headed to the training camp of the Los Angeles Express.
Green, who caught 24 passes for 482 yards last season, was overlooked in the United States Football League draft, so he signed with the Express as a free agent. John Hadi, head coach of the Express and former assistant coach at KU, had already drafted former Jaheway players Frank Seurer, Kerwin Bell and K.C. Brown
For Green, it seemed to be an ideal opportunity.
Friday, however, the Express trimmed its roster to 70 players and Green, who sacrificed a semester of teaching toreek tryout, returned to Lawrence
"It's slightly disappointing. Now I'm going to wait and see what happens with the NFL," Green, a Lawrence High graduate, said yesterday. "But I'm glad it did because it shows what of what goes on at a training camp."
"My only regret is that I had to miss out on school," he said.
Brown, a starting offensive guard for KU last season, was also cut.
He could not be reached for comment.
Former KU quarterback Seurer.
who set numerous passing records in his four years at KU, is behind former UCLA quarterback Tom Ramsey on the Express depth chart, but is doing very well, according to Bob Rose, the Express' public relations director.
Bell, KU's leading rusher last season with 545 yards, survived the first cut, but will face stiff competition. Both more players are cut Feb. 13, Rose said.
Both Bell and Seurer have said they would return to KU next fall to finish undergraduate work. Green said he planned to start school again in the summer — unless he was in a special Football League training camp.
The NPL has not set a specific date when the program usually begins in late or early Q4.
USFL training camps opened Jan. 20, about the same time many universities started second semester classes. Players such as Green, Brown and Bell, who couldn't be separated, were forced to choose between completing their educations and playing professional football.
Because of this, the USFL has been criticized for disrupting football players' educations and for placing unnecessary pressure on them.
One such critic is Lonny Rose, KU assistant athletic director for NCAA interpretations.
"I think the USFL is a hindrance to
academic achievement and the completion of a degree in the right amount of time," he said.
Some USFL teams have agreed to pay the tuition of players who want to attend.
But a problem, Rose said, is that players aren't likely to return to school after playing football for six months.
"If you're doing what you love to do and getting paid for it you'll hard to look ahead and see the importance of an education," Rose said. "But what happens if the league folds in two or three years?" he said.
Another problem, he said, is that in the fall some players count on playing in the USFL and don't concentrate on their studies. Then in the spring, if they aren't drafted, they drop out of school.
And there are players such as Green, who leave school hoping to make it in the USFL and wind up being cut after the first week.
Mike Gottfried, KU head football coach, took a more positive approach to the USFL.
"I think it offers some opportunities to some people," he said.
He said he had encouraged the KU players who went to the Express to return in the off-season to finish college.
"If their educations can be continue, it can be a really good thing," he said.
Dupree quits Southern Miss, may try USFL
By United Press International
The National Football League said in a terse statement it would have nothing to do with Dupree until 1987, but an official statement from the league said it might be interested in.
HATTIESBURG, Miss. — Marcus Dupree, a 235-pound running back who made honorable mention All-America in 1982 while a freshman at Oklahoma, dropped out of his second college in less than six months yesterday to consider turning pro.
At the time of his transfer, the NCAA ruled he would not be eligible to play college football again until the 1985 season and there had been speculation that Dupree would not remain at the university if he had to sit out the 1984 season.
Dupree switched from Oklahoma to Southern Mississippi in October because he said he couldn't please Sooners' coach Barry Switzer and because he wanted to be closer to his Philadelphia. Miss., home.
dealing with him.
doesn't want to make any comments," said Hattiesburg, Miss., book store owner Ken Fairley, a close friend of Dupree's. "He says he has a little time right now and his main interest is playing football in 1984."
Because he transferred schools, the National Football League declared Dupree ineligible for the NFL draft and he was hired after his Oklahoma class graduates.
"Right now he is just laying low and
However, USFL Commissioner Chet Simmons said that it was too early to tell whether his league would attempt to sign Dupree.
Dupree will tempt new league
The ongoing saga of Marcus Dupree's unpredictable odyssey through the collegiate football scene has apparently ended after less than two years.
Dupree, who became disenchanted with Oklahoma coach Barry Switzer, left the Sooner football program in the fall during the middle of his sophomore season for life back home at Southern Mississippi.
And people thought Larry Brown moved around a lot.
Before the formation of the United States Football League, Dupree would have had no choice but to wait until his team was named by the National Football League.
The NFL HAS a strict policy that no player will be drafted before he has gone to school for at least four years. For decades people argued about the rule, but the league held fast. No choice was available.
Then along came a running back named Herschel Walker, who led Georgia to a national championship. Walker talked about challenging the rule, saying that it infringed upon his right to work.
The NFL replied by telling Walker to go ahead and challenge the establishment, a court battle that would have been fought in 1965, longer than his college career.
Up stepped the fleidling USFL. As the league was entering its first season, it needed a big name — a drawing card. And Herschel Walker fit the bill.
Walker signed, sending tremors throughout college football. Many said it signaled a mass swolve of undergraduates. But the USFL swore up and
down that Walker was a special case and that no more undergrads would
With Dupree shopping around for a team, the controversy has started again. The NFL has rules that Dupree must wear a long waitant or (for a player without a school).
SUDENLY THE USFL is hedging on its promise not to sign any more umbrella.
"Dupree could fall under much the same circumstances," USFL Commissioner Chet Simmons said yesterday. "But we just have to wait and see."
"We're not talking about every kid,
JEFF CRAVENS
Sports Editor
but we need to have some kind of middle ground that establishes some circumstances where a kid can be allowed to go pro early."
What Simmons is suggesting is much like the hardship ruling in the National Basketball Association. The rule began by making the athlete prove he needed the income. But that is far from what is now. Any undergraduate may apply.
It's obvious Simmons has had a change of heart. The USFL is grabbing every chance it can to get into the playoffs and graduates would be a sure way to do that.
Already, seniors drafted by the league must give up their final
semester if they want to play. That was the case with KU players K.C. Brown, Darren Green, Frank Seurer and Kerwin Boll Brown and Green have already been cut by the Los Angeles teams and are unemployed and out of school.
THE LEAGUE TRIES to show how "interested" it is in the players' education by guaranteeing some that it will pay them to finish school. For one, that does not take into account players like Green and Brown who do not make
Granted, those two knew the gamble they were taking by trying out. But how many college students would turn down an opportunity to take a job, doing what they enjoy, that would pay them at least $20,000 a year?
Players who do make it must play from January to July. Then, to return to school, they have to be back in January or take a break. They then start football again in January.
The USFL concerned with itself, not a player's education. If education was as important as the owners want us to think, they would not start the season until after the seniors have had a chance to finish their final year.
Dupree is a confused young man, but don't point the finger at him; point it at the USFL. Dupree sees himself as no different from Walker, and the league seems to agree. Soon he will be a criminal, and many more are bound to follow.
Simmons and his league give many players an opportunity to play football, which is good. But the USFL should stop using the forcade of being considered a competition. The league is out to compete with the NFL, apparently at any cost.
SPORTS ALMANAC
BASKETBALL
Oklahoma 103. Kansas 84
Thompson 3:4-0:0 6-0:0 7:5-1:4 7:5-1:4 Dresling 2:1-1 11:1 Henry 8:10 2:5 11, Turgeon 7:4-0:0 4, Martin 3:4-0:0 6-0:0 Boyle 3:4-2 1.2, Kellogg 8:5-0 10, Banks 10-0 6, Marshall 2:0-0 4, Tallats 8:3-0 8:4 84
Johnson 0.5 and 0.6; Pierce 4.7, 6.8 and Tidale 1.2
Johnson 0.5 and 0.6; Pierce 4.7, 6.8 and Tidale 1.2
Johnson 0.5 and 0.6; Pierce 4.7, 6.8 and Tidale 1.2
Johnson 0.5 and 0.6; Pierce 4.7, 6.8 and Tidale 1.2
Halftime-Oklahoma 39. Kansas 37. Fouled
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2480, 2481, 2482, 2483, 2484, 2485, 2486, 2487, 2488, 2489, 2490, 2491, 2492, 2493, 2494, 2495, 2496, 2497, 2498, 2499, 2500, 2501, 2502, 2503, 2504, 2505, 2506, 2507, 2508, 2509, 2510, 2511, 2512, 2513, 2514, 2515, 2516, 2517, 2518, 2519, 2520, 2521, 2522, 2523, 2524, 2525, 2526, 2527, 2528, 2529, 2530, 2531, 2532, 2533, 2534, 2535, 2536, 2537, 2538, 2539, 2540, 2541, 2542, 2543, 2544, 2545, 2546, 2547, 2548, 2549, 2550, 2551, 2552, 2553, 2554, 2555, 2556, 2557, 2558, 2559, 2560, 2561, 2562, 2563, 2564, 2565, 2566, 2567, 2568, 2569, 2570, 2571, 2572, 2573, 2574, 2575, 2576, 2577, 2578, 2579, 2580, 2581, 2582, 2583, 2584, 2585, 2586, 2587, 2588, 2589, 2590, 2591, 2592, 2593, 2594, 2595, 2596, 2597, 2598, 2599, 2600, 2601, 2602, 2603, 2604, 2605, 2606, 2607, 2608, 2609, 2610, 2611, 2612, 2613, 2614, 2615, 2616, 2617, 2618, 2619, 2620, 2621, 2622, 2623, 2624, 2625, 2626, 2627, 2628, 2629, 2630, 2631, 2632, 2633, 2634, 2635, 2636, 2637, 2638, 2639, 2640, 2641, 2642, 2643, 2644, 2645, 2646, 2647, 2648, 2649, 2650, 2651, 2652, 2653, 2654, 2655, 2656, 2657, 2658, 2659, 2660, 2661, 2662, 2663, 2664, 2665, 2666, 2667, 2668, 2669, 2670, 2671, 2672, 2673, 2674, 2675, 2676, 2677, 2678, 2679, 2680, 2681, 2682, 2683, 2684, 2685, 2686, 2687, 2688, 2689, 2690, 2691, 2692, 2693, 2694, 2695, 2696, 2697, 2698, 2699, 2700, 2701, 2702, 2703, 2704, 2705, 2706, 2707, 2708, 2709, 2710, 2711, 2712, 2713, 2714, 2715, 2716, 2717, 2718, 2719, 2720, 2721, 2722, 2723, 2724, 2725, 2726, 2727, 2728, 2729, 2730, 2731, 2732, 2733, 2734, 2735, 2736, 2737, 2738, 2739, 2740, 2741, 2742, 2743, 2744, 2745, 2746, 2747, 2748, 2749, 2750, 2751, 2752, 2753, 2754, 2755, 2756, 2757, 2758, 2759, 2760, 2761, 2762, 2763, 2764, 2765, 2766, 2767, 2768, 2769, 2770, 2771, 2772, 2773, 2774, 2775, 2776, 2777, 2778, 2779, 2780, 2781, 2782, 2783, 2784, 2785, 2786, 2787, 2788, 2789, 2790, 2791, 2792, 2793, 2794, 2795, 2796, 2797, 2798, 2799, 2800, 2801, 2802, 2803, 2804, 2805, 2806, 2807, 2808, 2809, 2810, 2811, 2812, 2813, 2814, 2815, 2816, 2817, 2818, 2819, 2820, 2821, 2822, 2823, 2824, 2825, 2826, 2827, 2828, 2829, 2830, 2831, 2832, 2833, 2834, 2835, 2836, 2837, 2838, 2839, 2840, 2841, 2842, 2843, 2844, 2845, 2846, 2847, 2848, 2849, 2850, 2851, 2852, 2853, 2854, 2855, 2856, 2857, 2858, 2859, 2860, 2861, 2862, 2863, 2864, 2865, 2866, 2867, 2868, 2869, 2870, 2871, 2872, 2873, 2874, 2875, 2876, 2877, 2878, 2879, 2880, 2881, 2882, 2883, 2884, 2885, 2886, 2887, 2888, 2889, 2890, 2891, 2892, 2893, 2894, 2895, 2896, 2897, 2898, 2899, 2900, 2901, 2902, 2903, 2904, 2905, 2906, 2907, 2908, 2909, 2910, 2911, 2912, 2913, 2914, 2915, 2916, 2917, 2918, 2919, 2920, 2921, 2922, 2923, 2924, 2925, 2926, 2927, 2928, 2929, 2930, 2931, 2932, 2933, 2934, 2935, 2936, 2937, 2938, 2939, 2940, 2941, 2942, 2943, 2944, 2945, 2946, 2947, 2948, 2949, 2950, 2951, 2952, 2953, 2954, 2955, 2956, 2957, 2958, 2959, 2960, 2961, 2962, 2963, 2964, 2965, 2966, 2967, 2968, 2969, 2970, 2971, 2972, 2973, 2974, 2975, 2976, 2977, 2978, 2979, 2980, 2981, 2982, 2983, 2984, 2985, 2986, 2987, 2988, 2989, 2990, 2991, 2992, 2993, 2994, 2995, 2996, 2997, 2998, 2999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022,
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Vol. 94, No. 91 (USPS 650-640)
nursday morning, February 2, 1984
Concerts on Parents Day may get financial gong
By MATT DeGALAN Staff Reporter
Country music star Roy Clark came to the University of Kansas for Parents Day last year, but the athletic department lost money on the concert because not enough people bought tickets, an athletic department official said yesterday.
Susan Wachter, the official and the athletic department's business manager, said that the department would probably scrap Parents Day concerts.
The department's first two attempts, one featuring comedian Bob Hope and the other Clark, have lost the department more than $13.000, she said.
$15,000. She said:
WACHTER SAID THAT the Clark show Oct. 22 lost $6,500. She said 2,500 people attended the show in Allen Field House.
The concerts were originally intended to promote football ticket sales and to give parents something to do after the football game on Parents Day.
Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director, said the field house had a capacity of 12,000 for concerts and about 15,000 for athletic events.
in a collector, she said. But Monte Johnson, KU athletic director, said a decision had not yet been made on the fate of Parents Day concerts.
"There just doesn't seem to be enough interest in a concert," she said.
Wachter said she didn't think Parents Day concerts would continue.
"WE HAVE TO MAKE sure we don't lose any money," he said. "But the concert has more benefit than simply money. There is a certain amount of public relations involved. If people show an interest in keeping the concert, it could influence our decision."
Mike Hamrick, administrative assistant to the athletic department, is in charge of all promotions and helps plan the Parents Day shows. Hamrick could not be reached for comment.
Hope gave a concert in Allen Field House on Parents Day in 1982. Hope was paid $48,000 for his performance, Wachter said. The athletic department also paid his hotel and travel costs.
Although 5,200 people attended the show, it lost $6,669.
For the 1983 show, the athletic department decided to hire a less expensive performer. The
World's mysteries defy formulas, KU poet says
See PARENTS, p. 5, col. 4
By KEVIN LOLLAR
Staff Reporter
"It took World War II to uproot me from Kansas," says Hutchinson-born William Stafford, KU poet-in-residence this week.
but 70-year-old Stafford, whose many volumes of poetry include "West of Your City," "Traveling Through the Dark." "Allegiances" and "Stories That Could Be True," didn't join the armed forces when he was drafted.
armed forces he was in," Mr. brother, Bob, went to Manhattan and into the Air Force," he says, "and I went to KU and into a conscientious objector camp."
inRafael's second spent the war years in a series of conscientious objector camps throughout the United States, doing "alternative service of national importance."
AND IN HIS OFF-DUTY time, he wrote. But he hesitates to call what he wrote poetry.
"Even then and even now, when I write, I don't really know what's going to happen," he said yesterday. "I just start writing. So I could say, 'He's going to draw!' He draws! I draw!' a little bit to indicate that ambiguity."
to indicate that although he has first poetic principle remains that he never knows where he is going when he begins to write, a curious stance in one so prolific. He says that he doesn't even begin with a solid idea about the point he will make in a poem.
point the way we write. "People say, 'Well, you start with the idea, you know what you're going to write.' But where do you get the idea? There must be a time when you didn't have it, and then a time when you did have it. That's the crucial interval, and that's what's skipped when people say, 'Get a good idea and then . . .'"
STAFFORD, WHO RECEIVED a B.A. in English from the University of Kansas in 1937, compared the peace movement of the 1930s to that of the 1970s.
that of the 1970s.
"We knew that war was coming," he says.
"My teachers at KU told me again and again that something big was going to happen. And the peace movement was strong even among standard people, like Methodists and so on, not just Friends and Mennonites, so it was just part of my teaching.
"The way I view that time is that, when the war came, other people changed. So the question for me was, 'What happened to you that you went into the Army?' "
into the Army.
After the year, he earned a masters degree from KU, taught high school for a year in California, and then, in 1948, began teaching at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Ore., where he remained for 30 years. In 1954, he earned a Ph.D. from the University of Iowa.
catered
and in his free time, he continued to write,
usually in the pre-dawn dhours.
Stafford denies that his poems come from a definite plan.
"Plans come about through the interaction of human sensibility with emerging elements of a situation in the world, and when I try to describe the process of writing, I try to get back there to that time when there isn't anything and then is something.
"IN THE MORNING when I get up, I take my pen and get some paper and get comfortable, and in effect I'm saying, 'All right, world, I'm listening. Start talking.' "
See POET, p. 5, col.1
Wendy Risjord, Shawnee junior, takes advantage of the warm weather and sketches Stauffer-Flint Hall.
O'Neill,100 delegates endorse Mondale
By United Press International
Convention and as many as 100 of them supported Mandale.
WASHINGTON — Former Vice President Walter Mondale enjoyed one of the best days of his presidential campaign yesterday, picking up the endorsement of the nation's most powerful Democrat. House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill.
supported abundance.
"Today an overwhelming majority of the Democrats in the House who are going to be delegates support me," Mondale said. "Your endorsement is your judgment on who can best lead this country."
leadership it has become much more dangerous."
At the time of the endorsement the House Democratic Caucus ratified the selection of the first 164 delegates to the Democratic National
MONDALE SPIKE briefly at a reception attended by more than 50 of his House supporters and assailed President Reagan, who he said "had not led us into a safer world. Under his
ouS.
The House delegates actually were selected last week, but they could not be named officially until Feb. 1.
O'Neill, who remained neutral in the 1980 battle for the Democratic nomination, told a news conference he was backing the former vice president because it was critical to defeat Ronald Reagan.
See DEMOCRATS, p. 5, col. 4
Reagan's budget makes Democrats see red
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - President Reagan proposed a $253.5 billion even-year budget yesterday with record military spending, no significant taxes and a $180 billion deficit. Democrats immediately announced plans to cut the red ink.
"We'll call you, and we'll raise you." House Democratic leader Jim Wright said in response to Reagan's budget. He told reporters that Democrats would offer measures to cut deficits by $200 billion during the next three years.
THE PLANS WILL INCLUDE some reductions in Reagan's increased military spending and a reversal of some tax cuts, the Democratic leader said.
THE BUDGET FOR FISCAL, 1985, which begins Oct. 1, 1984, proposes only $5 billion in spending cuts in federal benefit and social-welfare programs — a fraction of the cuts Reagan sought in his past budgets — plus $7.9 million in minor tax increases.
House Republican leader Robert Michel called it a "iphony-baloney budget," but Democrats denounced it as a do-noty, election-year plan that would increase the national debt $800 billion over the next five years, even if all of Reagan's spending and tax proposals were enacted.
Democratic butcher's proposal. Republican's budget proposal got a predictable partisan reception in Congress.
program. But up to 60 billion of those savings are achieved by scaling back the administration's original military increase proposals and from lower interest costs on the national debt. Actual spending cuts and tax proposals amount to only $60 billion in savings over three years.
and $7.9 billion to minor tax increases.
Spending for foreign aid, nuclear research and the space program is increased, while education, legal services, jobs and mass transit programs are cut.
proposals were blown back. Reagan once made a 13 percent increase in military spending that would make it the largest defense budget since World War II, even surpassing the peaks of the Korean or Vietnam wars if measured in constant dollars.
DEMOCRATS IMMEDIATELY attacked the budget for failing to address the issue of massive deficits that many fear will keep interest rates high and send the economic recovery into a tailspin.
The budget includes $150 million to begin designing a permanent manned space station that Reagan hopes to get into orbit by the early 1990s. It also provides $2.5 billion of economic aid to be given to Central America over four years, based on the Kissinger Commission's recommendations.
rates night and send the committee "The budget is, simply put, an election-year document which dodges the serious issues." Sen. Lawton Chiles, senior Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee.
Harold Davis
WASHINGTON — Sen. John Warner, R-Va., right; Gen. John Vessey Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, center; and Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger discuss the proposed 1985 defense budget.
FOR THE FIRST TIME, the proposed budget also sets aside money — $1.8 billion — to launch Reagan's ambitious goal to erect a nuclear defensive shield over the United States by the year 2000, possibly with Star Wars-like beam weapons.
The budget proposes $305 billion for the military to enter long-term contracts and spend money over several years. That is a $44.8 billion increase over this year, or a 13 percent increase after accounting for inflation.
inflation:
In addition, Reagan is seeking another $7.8 billion for development and production of nuclear weapons, raising the national defense budget to $131 billion. Last year's nuclear military budget was $6.7 billion.
From Staff and Wire Reports
Today is Groundhog Day, and if the little rodent sees his shadow, legend says that six more weeks of winter are in store for the nation. If he doesn't, that means an early spring.
If he does it, that must be For years, Punxsutawney Phil, of Punxsutawney, Pa., has been the official ground hog of the nation.
Puxsunlawney, a town of about 8,000 about 65 miles northeast of Pittsburgh, has stepped into the limelight each year since the first Groundhog Day on Feb. 2, 1887.
Early this morning, a foot-and-a-half long brown rodent popped from his burrow to tell the nation whether to expect an early spring.
Yesterday the attorney general of Wisconsin, Bronson La Follette, declared "Jimmie," the ground hog of Sun Prairie, Wis., the official ground hog of the United States.
BUT SOME CONTROVERSY has emerged recently about whether Phil is the right ground hog to watch.
growth of the Punxusutawney Phil has perpetrated a colossal fraud on the people of America," La Follette said.
Jimmie has been 90 percent correct since 1948, and Phil has been right only 17 percent of the time. La Follette said.
HE CLAIMED THAT Phil's promoters made annual predictions using a stuffed animal resembling a ground hog.
KIPPS smoother this time around, but Winter says KU should dump it
By JENNY BARKER
Staff Reporter
Although most KU employees were paid on time yesterday, the University of Kansas would still be better off without the Kansas Integrated Personnel Payroll System, said state Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R.Lawrence.
Winter Jr., R. LAWRENCE
Winter said that despite improvements in KIPPS, the system was still dangerous because it was overloaded.
it was overloaded.
My understanding is that they are running 97 percent capacity. "Winter said." "The standards of the industry are much lower, about 70 percent."
"THE SYSTEM APEARS to loaded up to the absolute maximum," he said.
observe maximum i.e. is the
The School of Journalism and Mass Communi
cations and the School of Pharmacy were each missing two checks from yesterday's payroll.
Payroll offices in the Schools of Fine Arts, Law, Education, Architecture and Urban Design, Law and Engineering in the College of Business. Services received on-plants about paychecks yesterday.
plains about payrolls. Dick Mann, KU director of information systems, said that increased experience on the part of KU and Topeka payroll officials, the installation of more terminals and a faster communications link between KU computers and KIPPS computers in Topeka helped the system to work more smoothly.
"We've learned at least enough now that every payday might not be a crisis," Mann said.
KEITH RATZLOFF, ASSOCIATE compilator at the University, said that there were a few
See KIPPS, p. 5, col. 4
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1984
NATION AND WORLD News briefs from UPI
Brazilian authorities study charge of herbicide deaths
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — Investigators fought tropical rainstorms in the Amazon jungle yesterday as they sought evidence that the spraying of an illegal herbicide smiliar to Agent Orange killed at least 17 people.
The controversy over environmental damage in the Amazon that has killed wildlife through large stretches of virgin mangrove swamp has led to renewed debate.
Brazil's environment chief, Paulo Nogueira, said he would fly to the mouth of the Amazon river next week to investigate reports that the herbicide, Tordon 155, was used in clearing a 140-mile path for power lines.
Last week, health officials in the state of Para began a detailed check on 17 deaths alleged to have been caused by the herbicide, and the Interior Ministry said it would sue the company that had handled the job.
Doctor saves 'heart' will be common
BOSTON — Artificial hearts similar to Barney Clark's may become common in 15 or 20 years but not without great debate, an artificial heart is being tested.
Pierre Galletti, dean of the Brown University Medical School, made his prediction on the basis of a medical report on Clark's operation in the latest New England Journal of Medicine.
The report, written by William C. DeVries, head of Clark's transplant team, said that the results "should encourage further research in artificial-heart transplantation."
Galletti said experience with mechanical devices used to replace human organs indicated that artificial hearts would not be used widely
Proposed taping ban bugs senator
A proposed amendment that would forbid federal employees to tape conversations without permission has hindered a sweep of the aweeping
"I don't know if the purpose is to embarrass the president or what the purpose is," said Thurmond, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
WASHINGTON — Sen. Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., suggested yesterday that a proposal to ban secret taping by government officials was offered by Democrats to embarrass President Reagan.
The amendment was prompted by the revelation that U.S. Information Agency chief Charles Wick taped telephone calls without informing those on the other end of the line.
Iraq says it sank three Iranian ships
BEIIRUT, Lebanon — Iraq said it sank three more Iranian ships in the northern Persian Gulf yesterday.
Teheran denied earlier Iraqi threats that it lost five ships in similar attacks Tuesday in the 40-month-old Persian Gulf War.
Iraq said all its fighter jets and warships returned safely after their mission yesterday to Khor Mousi, a navigational channel leading to the Iranian port of Bandar Khomeini, 40 miles east of the Iran-Iraq border.
The "Iraqi navy and air force attacked enemy sea targets in the Khor Mousa channel," the Iraqi news agency said. "They succeeded in sabotaging an ISIS ship."
Iacocca sees recession by mid-1985
WASHINGTON — Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lee lacocca said yesterday that mounting budget and trade deficits were "devastating" to industry and warned that another recession could hit by mid-1985 if nothing was done about them.
The defict situation is "devastating," Iacecca told a House Banking subcommittee on industrial policy. It's screwy, it's out of control. It was a case where the SEC had to intervene.
He said the next recession "may be closer than we think. In the car business, we believe that a recession could start as early as mid-1985 if nothing is done about the $200 billion federal budget deficits and the $100 billion trade deficits that are forecast."
NATO official refuses reinstatement
BONN, West Germany — Chancellor Helmut Kohl yesterday reinstated Gen. Guenter Kiessling, who was fired in a homosexual scandal, but Kiessling said he would not return to his post as deputy NATO commander because of ill health.
Kohl's offer, made at a 45-minute news conference, and Keissling's refusal were considered a compromise to restore the general's honor without sending him back to NATO and to defuse a mounting political crisis for the conservative government.
It will also allow Defense Minister Manfred Woerner, who dismissed the Kiessling from the allied command, to remain in Kohl's Cabinet.
Woman slams punk bands with suit
SANTA ANA, Calif. — A 46-year-old architect who said her leg was broken last summer by "slam-dancers" at a punk rock concert has filed a $115,000 suit against the concert hall and two bands that allegedly incited violent behavior.
Mary Ann Spencer of Irvine said her injury occurred near the end of an Aug. 20 concert at the Pacific Amphitheatre featuring Oingo Boingo
She said she was tossed around by a group of 40 young "slam-dancers" who surrounded her on the lawn of the amphitheater and that she was struck by one airborne dancer.
She was then "tossed around like a human volleyball" on the shoulders of the other dancers until she landed on her head.
WEATHER FACTS
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 2-2-84
SEATTLE 30.24 30.00
FREEZING 29.77
MINNEAPOLIS 15W WARM BOSTON
COLD GOLD CHICAGO NEW YORK
SAN FRANCISCO DENVER
LOS ANGELES
HIGHEST TEMPERATURES 32
FAIR DALLAS ATLANTA
NEW ORLEANS MIAMI
LEGEND
RAIN SNOW
SHOWERS AIR FLOW
URI WEATHER FOCUS
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 2-84
Today will be fair except for snow in the upper Great Lakes region. Locally, today will be mostly cloudy, windy and cooler with a high around 50, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Tomorrow will be clear to partly cloudy with a high in the low to mid-40s.
CORRECTIONS
Because of a reporter's error, the name of State Sen. Joseph Norvell, D-Hays, was misspelled in a story about traffic laws in yesterday's Kansan.
Reagan talks with Yugoslavian president
WASHINGTON — President Reagan assured Yugoslavian President Mika Spiljak yesterday that the United States would be "flexible and realistic" in trying to persuade the Kremlin to talk on nuclear arms reductions.
Spilak, the first East European leader to meet with Reagan, called for U.S. steps to expand dialogue with Moscow and revive the stalled arms talks. The discussion at the White House lasted nearly two hours.
Bv United Press International
A senior administration official said Spilak, who has been scheduled to meet with Soviet leader Yuri Andropov
BUT THE OFFICIAL also said that Spilak believed progress was jeopardized by a "great distrust between both sides" and a "deep distrust between the two" by historical differences as well as Reagan's policies and rhetoric.
in Moscow, told Reagan that he detected "a general, gradual and difficult improvement" in East-West relations.
"In a very cautious way, there are some positive signs on the horizon," the official said. "However, both sides in today's talks were cautious about that. Both underlined that it will not be easy and quick."
In departure statements to reporters on the South Lawn, Spiljak voiced
"deep concern over the continuation of the arms race)" and emphasized "the release of international tension in negotiation has no alternative."
"WE SHARE THE concern over the present dangerous developments and further deterioration of the situation in the world." he said.
Reagan, who began the year by trading his harsh anti-Soviet tone of the past for a call for a "constructive, working relationship" with Moscow, and then embarking on deeper commitment to reach agreement with the Soviets on arms reductions.
"Such agreements would be in our interest, the Soviet Union's interest and in the interest of all mankind," he said. "We're flexible and realistic in pursuit
of this task, and share the president's hope that the negotiations will resume.
In an interview with the Chicago Tribune, published yesterday, Reagan said, however, "it is questionable" whether he would be able to "achieve a better achiever in improving relations with the Soviet Union by the end of his term.
REAGAN TOLD THE Tribune the rhetoric from Moscow 'sounds harsh,' but said, "They're waging a propaganda campaign that's all a part of their negotiating strategy. I'm not sure there's a deep freeze on between us."
Top Soviet to visit Peking after Reagan's trip
By United Press International
PEKING — China has invited a top Soviet official to Peking this spring soon after President Reagan's visit a significant gesture aimed at improving its strained relations with Moscow, Western diplomats said yesterday.
Soviet First Vice Premier Ivan Arkhipov would be the highest-ranking Soviet official to visit China since the two communist giants drifted apart more than 20 years ago in an ideological rift.
Chinese and Soviet sources confirmed that "discussions" are under way concerning a visit by Archipov, Kuznetsov, and Boris Reagan's planned trip to China in April.
OFFICIALLY, BOTH SIDES have refused comment. But Chinese sources confirmed the visit was "under disguise" and that Chinese sources leaked word of the invitation.
Western diplomats said they have been informed by "infallible" Chinese sources that the invitation was extended. They said Vice Premier Li
Peng, a Soviet-educated engineer, will serve as Akhipov's host.
The two vice premiers are likely to confine their talks to fairly routine trade and scientific exchanges first discussed when Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Mihail Kapisa visited Pele last September, the diplomats said.
But given Arkhipov's rank, the visit is much more important as a symbolic gesture, they added. It was Arkhipov whom the Kremlin sent to France this week after French President Francis Mittertand signaled that he hoped to
EPA wants no asbestos in schools
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency may force schools to eliminate cancer-causing asbestos, a top official said yesterday, because local authorities in many cases voluntarily to remove the hazard.
Deputy EPA Administrator Alvin Alm said an agency study found its rule calling for voluntary action against asbestos has been largely ineffective.
Since last June, the EPA has required schools to inspect buildings to
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"THE IDEA BEHIND that was that you would get enough pressure from the parents and workers to clean up." Alm said.
But, Alm said, "What our program showed is that a lot of school districts weren't even doing the inspections, or were not informing the parents."
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technical problems in deciding what asbestos is dangerous. Microscope fibers pose the health danger, so if it is cut off it is not considered dangerous.
The EPA study showed few schools had plans to get rid of asbestos, and most that did were in rich districts.
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improve relations with the Soviet Union.
"IF ARKHIPOV COMES, it won't be to do anything so much as it will be just to come and be seen as having come," one Western diplomat said.
Several sources said they believed the idea for the visit originated with the Soviets and that China obliged as "a gesture of equivalence" following President Zhao Ziyang's visit to the Straits last month and Reagan's return trip.
Although there has been some improvement in trade and cultural exchanges, Chinese-Soviet relations remain blocked by what Peking calls three "major obstacles" — the Soviet invasion, the fighting with the Chinese-Soviet border, its occupancy of Afghanistan and its support of the Vietnamese in Cambodia.
members of the Bahá'í Faith are
spreading the principle of race unity
one heart at a time
--the Baha'i Faith*
Uniting the world one heart at a time
To the Bataha Faith:
Thursday, Feb. 2, 7:30 p.m.
For more information call 843-1053
Room 403, Kansas Union
Everyone is welcome
WSU-KU SPECIAL HOT SPOT SUNDAY
WATCHING THE GAME AT GAMMONS ON OUR FOUR BIG VIDEO SCREENS IS BETTER THAN BEING THERE! WE'VE GOT A MID-COURT SEAT WAITING FOR YOU AT THE HOT SPOT.
- FREE BEER AT GAME TIME FOR HALF HOUR OR UNTIL THE KEG RUNS DRY.
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University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1984
Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA News briefs from staff and wire reports
Journalism school chooses new broadcasting director
Max Utsler, an assistant news director at a St. Louis television station, has been named the new director of broadcasting for the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications, the dean of the school said yesterday.
Del Brinkman, the dean, said that Utsler would come to the University of Kansas sometime in April, after leaving his job at KU.
Before taking the job at KSDK, Utsler was chairman of broadcasting at the University of Missouri at Columbia for 10 years.
"He's a good person," Brinkman said. "He blends academic and professional backgrounds very well."
Director wants program to continue
The new director of the prevention department of the Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism said yesterday that she wanted to continue the department's alcohol awareness programs for students in kindergarten through college.
Sonia Ann Charley, who took office yesterday, said that although she directed all the prevention programs, the "Starting Early Program," which is taught in three-fourths of Lawrence elementary schools, was of special interest to her.
"The idea is to give the children responsible attitudes toward alcohol so that when they get the keys to the car they can make responsible decisions."
KU gets stocks worth $1.25 million
The University of Kansas has received stocks worth $1.25 million from a former K11 student, Chancellor Gene A. Budg宣发 yesterday.
Ronald G. Harper, the former student and now the chairman of a computer software firm based in Tulsa, Okla., donated 45,000 shares of the company to the University.
The gift will be used to establish the Ronald G. Harper Distinguished Professorship in the School of Business. The professorship will be filled
Harper graduated with a bachelor's degree in engineering from KU in 1961 and with a master's degree in business administration from KU in
"We are proud of Ron Harper's success," Budig said
News show to recruit sports anchor
The cable-TV news program "Fifteen Minutes," produced by KU journalism students, will be auditioning people Feb. 8 in Jolliffe Hall for the show.
The sports anchor will be responsible for the sports broadcast on "Fifteen Minutes" (for the remainder of the semester.
Candidates must be available 3:30-5 p.m. Wednesdays. Auditions will be on a first-come basis. Prospective sports anchors should bring one minute and 30 seconds of sports copy with them to read during the audition.
Do not wear a white shirt. A sports coat and tie are recommended. The auditions are limited to people who are enrolled in a recognized sequence at the University.
Slaughter speech moved to Monday
The Black History Month keynote address by scientist John B. Slaughter has been moved from Tuesday to Monday.
Slaughter will speak at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Kansas Union Alderson Auditorium. His talk is titled "Black Americans and the Racial Clash."
Slaughter is chancellor of the University of Maryland, College Park, and former director of the National Science Foundation.
Democrats file for Kansas caucus
TOPEKA — All eight Democratic candidates for president have filed to eligible to receive delegate from the Kannas caucus conventions, state Republican Party officials said.
Yesterday was the deadline for filing to be eligible for the March 24 caucus, and the candidates were required to present a petition with at least three thousand signatures.
Former Vice President Walter Mondale filed a petition with 2,410 names and Sen John Glenn, D-Ohio, a petition with 1,084 names. Glenn also filed a petition with 155 names.
Rueben Askew, Alan Cranston, Gary Hart, Ernest Hollings, Jesse Jackson and George McGovern all paid the fee.
"Kansas will be the only state holding a caucus on the March 24 date when our process begins with the local conventions and because of that is expected to end soon."
ON THE RECORD
ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT and firearms worth a total of about $1,180 were stolen Monday night from Gibson's Discount Center, 2525 Iowa St., police said. Police have no suspects.
A BEATLES BANNER WORTH $300 was stolen Tuesday night from Hillcrest Theaters, 9th and Iowa streets, according to police reports. Police have no suspects.
WHERE TO CALL
Do you have a photo tip or photo idea? If so, call us at 864-4810. If your idea or press release deals with campus or area news, ask for Jeff Taylor, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, check with Christy Fitzgerald, entertainment editor. For sports news, speak with Craevens, sports editor.
For other questions or complaints, ask for Doug Cunningham, editor, or Don Knox, managing editor.
High hopes activate VP candidate
STATE OF TEXAS
Barbara Hubbard, 54-year-old futurist and lecturer, will announce her candidacy for vice president of the United States today at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 W. Turnippe Access Road. A central theme of her campaign is that there are positive alternatives to the threat of nuclear war. Hubbard, who proposes a bilateral nuclear freeze, will be at the Kansas Union tonight speaking about "The Day After."
File photo
Barbara Marx Hubbard thinks the time is ripe to elect a woman to the second-highest office in the United States.
Hubbard will announce her Democratic candidacy for vice president at 10 a.m. today at the Holiday Inn Room, 200 W. Turnpike Access Road.
At 8 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Ballroom she and futurist Willis Harmon will speak on "After 'The Day After': What Can We Do?"
By GRETCHEN DAY Staff Reporter
HUBBARD, A 54-YEAR-OFT-dult author, lecturer and educator, calls herself a "potentialist" and is running a "Campaign for a Positive Future."
"I'm running on the platform of building an office of the future," she said. "I'm offering a process of bringing the ideas of peole together."
The office of the future would expand the duties of the vice president to deal with long-range problems and potential solutions.
She said that if she were to run for the presidency she would at best be 52nd.
"The vice presidency is a genuine opportunity," she said. "There are 150 people running for president and one for the vice president."
ALTHOUGH SHE SAYS that she has a slim chance of being chosen as the
"The vice-presidency is under-developed," Hubbard said. "It's mainly used to get votes and money. It is the land of the most important office in the land."
SHE SAID THE NUCLEAR issue had beaten up slowly until "The Day After" was declared.
Hubbard, who lives in California, said she chose to announce her candidacy in Lawrence because of the media attention of the movie "The Day
running mate of the democratic nominee, she thinks there is enough plausibility in her candidacy for it to be a genuine opportunity.
"We felt the heat," she said.
The nuclear issue, she said, will trigger an awareness of the ethe of love and cooperation.
"We have to aim quickly because time is of the essence," she said. "There is a time bomb — tick, tick, tick."
Workers protest parking costs
A central theme of her campaign is that there are positive alternatives to the threat of nuclear war. She proposes that, mutually suitably nuclear freeze.
"The Day After" was negative, but positive possibilities also exist, she said. The health revolution, the information revolution and the space program are some of the positive aspects of the future.
By DAVID SWAFFORD
Staff Reporter
Mike Feldkamp, a nuclear medicine technician at the University of Kansas Medical Center, parks his car in a residential area several blocks from the center and walks to work. In fact, he was hired in his department do the same thing.
"We do it as a kind of protest," he
said. "We're all more or less a bunch of radicals."
"IT'S EXPENSIVE." Feldkamp
employees, we shouldn't have
to pay it.
Feldkamp and other employees and students at the Med Center say they are not parking in the center's parking lots because they don't want to pay for the space. Many have reverted to parking in their neighborhood, which made residents tired.
Regents would find money for the parking services, the problem would
But some say that if the Board of
"In the next 20 years, we could have a new environment in space," she said.
"The people who aren't parking don't want to pay. Fowler said. "That's the city."
A reserved space in the 750-slot parking garage across from the Bell Memorial Hospital costs $400 a year. And, according to the director of parkings services at the Med Center, only one-third of the slots are sold. But Robert Fowler, the director, also said that the green zone, which cost $50 a year and is the cheapest zone to park, isn't full.
FOWLER SAID THAT the Regents did not provide funding for the parking lot.
should go toward academic research,
not parking lots.
"We aren't budgeted. The revenue generated by permits and fines is the only money we have," he said. "Our projected earnings for 1984 are $296,000. We are going to toward snow removal, improvements, new equipment and supplies."
Jay Spier, a professor in diagnostic radiology and nuclear medicine at the Med Center, lives within blocks of the med center and knows how area residents feel. He is a former president of a local neighborhood coordinating council.
"In 1979, when enough residents spoke out about having multitudes of cars parked throughout their neighborhoods, the city finally reacted by parking two-hour parking signs throughout many neighborhoods," Spicer said.
State may dam flood of professionals
Staff Reporter
By ROB KARWATH
That study came one step closer to becoming reality yesterday when the state Senate unanimously passed a measure authorizing it.
The measure, which now goes to the House of Representatives for approval, authorizes the Legislative Coordinating Council to appoint a committee of legislators to conduct the study and to complete it by December.
TOPEKA — The Legislature may reduce enrollment at the University of Kansas Medical Center if a proposed law there is too many doctors in the state.
BESIDES THE MED CENTER,
Washburn University's School of Law
and Kansas State University's School of
Veterinary Medicine could have their
State Sen. Michael Johnston, D-Parsons, said the study was intended to avoid a flood of doctors, lawyers and veterinarians in Kansas. He said the Legislature had the power to limit the enrollments at the Med Center, Washburn and K-State because they were all state schools.
enrollments reduced if the study finds there are too many lawyers or veter-
"My principal concern is that we are on the verge of having too many of these professionals in the state," he said. "I'm not going to presume any more about the study has been completed. It's something we at least ought to look at."
and veterinarians moved to Kansas from other states. But, he said, cutting enrollments at the three schools is the only way the Legislature can reduce the number of these professionals in Kansas.
JOHNSTON SAID HE REALIZED that all professionals graduating from the three schools did not stay in the state and that many doctors, lawyers
The measure called only for the Med Center's enrollment to be studied when Johnston introduced it last April. But the Senate Ways and Means Committee amended the measure to include enrollments at Washburn and K-State.
The Med Center has an enrollment limit of 200 students for each entering course.
Richard Von Ende, the KU executive secretary to the chancellor, declined to comment yesterday whether he thought the study was good or bad. However, he said the Board of Regents was now conducting a similar study.
By the Kansan Staff
Sen. Winter might attend Berlin talks
TOPEKA - State Sen Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, is scheduled to fly to Berlin later this month. A conference on U.S. foreign policy
Winter learned yesterday afternoon that he was one of 15 Americans tentatively selected by the Aspen Institute for the Humanities, a non-profit group in Denver, to attend the expenses-paid conference Feb. 19-22. He is expecting a call today confirming his selection
He said 20 other world political leaders would be at the conference, including representatives from the United States and several East Bloc countries.
"From what I understand they want more input from people closer to the public as opposed to top government officials," he said.
WINTER SAID HE was shocked but pleased to learn he might be going. Officials from the Institute didn't want the participants to be involved directly in their countries' governments.
The topic of the conference will be "Where is the USA Heading?" Winter said the role of America's foreign policy would be a major issue.
One reason the institute selected him was because Lawrence has recently dined international attention from the film, "The Day After." Winter said. Part of the movie, which depicts a nuclear attack on Kansas City, takes place in Lawrence.
Senate committee allots funds for new presidential election
By the Kansan Staff
The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee last night passed a bill to alot $2,000 from the unallocated funds of the new student body presidential election.
The Senate will vote on the bill Wednesday.
However, Mark Rossi, Senate treasurer, said the election could be more expensive.
If the new Elections Committee decided to bring in an independent
organization to run the election or to use voting machines, he said, the
The new Elections Committee, which was selected by the Senate Committee Board last Monday, will meet at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
LAST WEEK, THE SENATE accepted the proposal of a special elections committee that the Senate consider using an independent organization to work at the polls and to tabulate votes.
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THE
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS
OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Final Hall, Lawrence, KS 60482, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer session, excluding weekends. Students for who register for the summer session by mail are $15 for six months or $27 in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $35 for a year outside the university. Student subscriptions are a $13 semester payment through the student activity page. FOSTMATER: Send address changes to UsPS at usps@uakron.edu.
DOUG CUNNINGHAM
DON KNOX
Managing Editor
SARA KEMPIN
Editorial Editor
February 2,1984 Page 4
Business Manager
JEFF TAYLOR ANDREW HARTLEY Campus Editor News Editor
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U. S. legislators seem to have belatedly acquired a sense of responsibility for their misdeeds, but the taxpayers must pay the price. The nation should not stand for further negligence.
The government authorized use of Agent Orange, and now, taxpayers must make up for governmental negligence.
Paying the price
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
The House of Representatives recently passed a bill that would give $5 million a year to veterans who suffer from the effects of Agent Orange and radiation from nuclear explosions.
And although critics of the bill complain that too little is known about the effects of Agent Orange, the defoliant used in Vietnam has caused thousands of veterans to contract chloracne, a skin disease directly linked to exposure.
The compensation to veterans who suffer from the effects of the defoliant is to last for about four
The House has shown its willingness to act for the people in these two areas, and because this is an election year, the Senate and Reagan will probably give their consent to the measure.
years, or a year after the Center for Disease Control wraps up an investigation into the matter in 1987.
The bill may ease the nation's conscience as to the horrible effects of the dioxin-containing chemical until evidence is found to the contrary. This help to veterans is late and costly, but it is also necessary.
And although the spending bill seems destined to pass — as it should — the nation should keep a better eye on its government to prevent having to pay for such mistakes in the future.
Just lines on a resume
The responsibility for Agent Orange also extends to its responsibility to the men who helped conduct atomic tests in the 1940s and 1950s.
But student leaders themselves last week leveled what might have been the harshest attack to date on the state of KU student government.
Last semester's election problems have made it easy for many to criticize the present Student Senate.
Jim Cramer, student body vice president, said at a forum in Stauffer-Flint Hall that the Senate was run by "only eight or nine hard-working senators." The other 52 senators, he said, merely are spectators who use the Senate to gain lines on their resumes.
number of people getting involved and staying involved.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, attributed the Senate's problems to a decline in the
Present student leaders, he said, do not cultivate their successors, so the only experience some students have before becoming senators is "assistant scrapbook chairman in their housing unit."
Presidential candidate Loren Busby, who two years ago called the Senate "a bunch of mindless idiots," said that senators were not experienced in the spirit of compromise necessary to accomplish anything.
Cramer, Busby and Ambler seem to underscore what may become one of the Senate's biggest concerns this term. For whatever reason, student representation at KU is weakening.
Four years ago, the Senate dealt with absenteeism problems by halving its membership. The move appeared to be drastic at the time, but the Senate actually was able to deal more effectively with its agenda.
It's too early to advocate another reduction in size. But the integrity of the Senate must be revived before its crumbling system finally collapses.
Near-misses frequent
Walking, riding a bike or moped, or taking the bus are also choices for getting from here to there.
One of the characteristics that makes Lawrence such an attractive University town is being able to get around without a car.
But there are several extremely dangerous intersections in the city that make those who are not in a car vulnerable.
With cars and trucks whizzing by, those on foot or riding a bike or moped have an even harder time dodging traffic.
The report cited several one-way streets in the Oread neighborhood that have dangerous intersections because they are extremely busy. Near misses are frequent.
The seriousness of the situation was recently dramatized when the victim of a traffic accident died, although he had been driving in a car.
TrafTran Engineering conducted a study and determined several hazardous traffic intersections in
Lawrence. Nearly all of the 10 most dangerous intersections are in an area of the city that has a significant amount of foot traffic.
According to the engineering firm's information, improvements suggested in their report would decrease the number of accidents at any of these dangerous intersections by as much as 80 percent.
This is a significant reduction for those on foot or driving. Safer traffic patterns would benefit everyone, whether on foot or in a vehicle.
The engineering firm's report has been submitted to the Lawrence City Commission for review. The next step needed is action.
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 town 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 Stauffer Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
LETTERS POLICY
The battle against overt discrimination continues. Government units on the national, state and local levels spend a phenomenal amount of money and time helping the nation's minorities.
Rampant discrimination
And although our government has exceeded its duty on this issue, discrimination is still a problem, because of obvious sense, but in a covert sense.
VIII. 21. 2000
Cotie B got
Lawrence, for example, suffers from rampant covert discrimination.
These neighborhood organizations seem to think themselves sacrosanct, beyond integration. And they must abandon this attitude if we are to end discrimination.
The Lawrence Board of Zoning Appeals will hear one such case of this quasi-discrimination today. It is the case of the proscribed building
Within the last year, several neighborhood organizations have denied residence to some people of different socio-economic backgrounds. And although the neighborhoods excuses for protesting themselves, they wonder whether the reasons in most instances simply are bigotry.
PARKER
MICHAEL BECK
of a Catholic Church at Engle and Cresent roads.
Staff Columnist
The church, however, has demonstrated that its plans for parking will be in accordance with city ordinances, which stipulate that the church provide one parking space for every four seats.
The request to move into the neighborhood was properly filed, and the proposed building seems to meet city guidelines. Yet residents remain obstinate about the center and have refused to negotiate with church authorities about the building.
Residents of that neighborhood, claiming that their "cultural environment was in danger," convinced the Board of Zoning
Another instance of this trend of discrimination is the Breezedeale neighborhood's refusal to permit a house at 2343 Barker St. to be used as a counseling center for students at Haskell Indian Junior College
other roads.
The neighborhood organization argues that the number of people attending the church, chapel and student counseling center the Catholic Center plans to build will create a traffic hazard and that the area cannot handle the parking needs of the church.
Those same residents also complained that their neighborhood would self-destruct when the Lawrence City Commission voted to allow Lawrence Indian Center to move to 22nd and Massachusetts streets.
One resident of the area said, "They are taking a chip here and a chip there. As they start adding up the chips, I am surprised the re segregation of our neighborhood."
Appeals not to allow the zoning variation for the center.
Some reasons stated for not wanting the Indian Center rang from traffic problems to the unsightly garbage that residents knew the Indians would throw about the neighborhood.
Such vague and unfounded reasons for stopping expansion of effective programs is not new. This summer Cottonwood Inc. asked the City Commission for permission to build three homes for the mentally handicapped in residential areas around Lawrence.
Residents of that neighborhood then gathered enough names on a petition to keep the Indian Center out.
tonwood's requests, but not before hearing complaints by residents. Some said that the mentally handicapped residents would create traffic hazards after they entered the neighborhood's children.
The commission approved Cot
Cottonwood, however, pointed to its track record with regard to its housing programs, and the city approved its request.
The agency will now have a total of eight group homes in Lawrence, the first one being about seven years old.
Such integration in neigh borhoods is at times inappropriate, but in most instances, neigh discrimination is an intolerable evil.
And the resistance to change should be forfeited. Most of the groups wanting to move into residential neighborhoods have proved their community spirit; they are not adversaries.
They do not want to destroy the homogeneity of Lawrence's neighborhoods; they want to capitalize upon it.
Our governments cannot cure all our ills. We must attack the menace discrimination on our own:
Health union without unity
It underpins the sense of shared purpose on which Lane Kirkland relies to keep the AFL.CIO united in a crucial candidacy of Walter F. Mondale.
NEW YORK - Solidarity is the glue that holds organized labor together its global stretch makes it possible for workers in Poland's suppressed free trade union.
But it is deplorable absent in what for a quarter century has been one of the few exemplars of dynamic growth and social inventiveness in a sagging labor movement, the National Hospital and Health Care Employees.
Its logo, 1199, has become a magic number for tens of thousands of bedroom emptiers, operating-room staff and nurses in hospitals all over the country.
The battle between 1199 and its parent revolves, as do many destructive intra-union squabbles, over issues of money, power and ambition, with all the disputate, hastily proclaiming their own virtue.
The parent organization seeks to cancel a decade-long agreement under which 1199 keeps for use among hospital workers three percent of the $5 million in dues it would otherwise pay to headquarters.
What makes this fight different is the danger that it will stifle the drive and resources it has used so effectively to lift out of degradation
a group that has long ranked among the worst exploited of the working poor.
When 1199 refused to bow to a rule by a temporary trustee, the international union dragged it into
federal court, only to meet a fresh rebuff from Judge Leonard Sand. He rejected the parent union's plea for an injunction and urged that the row be resolved inside the labor movement.
A.H. RASKIN
Journalist
Under AFL-CIO rules, the hospital workers cannot move into another AFL-CIO union if they leave their present unhappy home. The teams will have to ask the Teamsters, cast out of the federation in 1957 for corruption, is
already extending its tentacles as a potential protector.
The intractability of the internal dispute is heightened by a falling out between the national leadership of the hospital union and the head of the big New York local from which it grew — a local embracing fully half of the 135,000 unionized hospital workers.
Intervention by the AFL-CIO might revive a peace formula that had seemed on the lip of acceptance in 1981 and one that could benefit all factions. It called for a merger of the parent union and the much larger labor union, which is also strong representation among hospital workers.
The parent union broke off the merger talks after a letter bomb exploded in the office of its president, Alvin E. Heans.
Now the stage seems set for a verbal shootout among all the disputants at a meeting in Heaps' headquarters today. All labor would be the loser if the chief casualty was the national hospital union.
A. H. Ruskin was for many years chief labor correspondent of the New York Times
A realistic solution is needed
WASHINGTON - Wishful thinking is a powerful force in shaping American perceptions of the Middle East.
Recent talk about negotiations between Yasin Arafat, President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and King Hussein of Jordan are no exception.
Every hint of Palestine Liberation Organization temperance, Syrian flexibility or Jordanian willingness to join negotiations with Israel is misread as a promise of imminent breakthrough.
The political situation has changed significantly in the last 18 months. The P.L.O.'s weakening, its internal schisms and conflict with radical Islam — all open prospects of possible war and possibly P.L.O. cooperation in negotiations over the Reagan plan, proposed in September 1982, for a
BARRY RUBIN
Author
West Bank-Jordan federation and real Arab recognition of Israel.
Yet these hopeful developments are only part of the story. The obstacles are created by divisions among Arabs. They include:
- The P.L.O. still hopes to rebuild relations with Syria. Arafat's meeting last month with Mubarak showed Damascus that the P.L.O can move toward Syria's enemies, and Jordan and Japan may make an alliance with them unless巴基斯 macus will open a chance for reconciliation.
- Syria will oppose the Reagan plan with all its might for one simple reason: Damascus will never counterance giving the West Bank and the Palestinian card to its rival, Jordan.
- *Arafat must deal with three opposing or potentially dissident P.L.O. factions; the pro-Syrians, the so-called "neutrals" tilt toward Damascus, including those who claim to be "Marsik" and the "loyal opposition" so far still in his camp.
- Close Soviet ties with the “neutrals” and the “loyal opposition” leader Abu Iyad — who favors offering Moscow a base in any Palestinian state — suggest that the Kremlin has abandoned Arafat or may do so if he accepts an American plan.
- King Hussein's brave call for Arab decisions by consensus rather than unanimity is unlikely to change the basic fact of Arab politics — the radicals' ability to block any moderate initiatives and arouse the Arab public through demagoguage and subversion.
Those who believe that an act of American will is sufficient to solve the Arab-Israeli conflict often call on Washington to press Jerusalem.
Certainly, the Israeli government wants to keep the West Bank, and it enjoys considerable popular support for this policy — largely because the security and permanent occupation are skeptical about Arab intentions
Nothing that Washington can do will change this attitude. Only a clear and unequivocal Arab commitment to peace can move Israel toward the possibility of compromise.
What are the chances of that? Neither American aid nor Israelt withdrawal from Lebanon can push Jordan to make such an offer — and the King Hussein and Arafat will be hostage to the politics of the Arab world.
Barry Rubin is a senior fellow of Georgetown University's Center for Strategic and International Studies and author of the forthcoming "Secrets of State: The State Department in U.S. Foreign Policy."
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Raising the roof
To the editor:
As an invidual KU basketball fan, there is an nothing more enjoyable than venturing into tradition-rich Allen Field House to support the Jay-Z exception when teams such as Kentucky and Kansas State visit Lawrence.
During these games, seats are set up directly in front of the student reserved section, which is located behind each basketball goal.
Students, who are mainly responsible for 'raising the roof' of Allen House, are being cheated! Fans are being indicted by inconsiderate people who are
Let the students see the game instead of the back of someone's head. Tickets should be allotted in proper sections of Allen Field House or not at all!
determined to stand throughout the entire game.
Give us students a break; it's we who wait outside in frigid temperatures and wait up to three hours with gametime to see the Jay hawks.
We should at least be able to see the game for all the time and effort put forth.
Mike J. Cannon
Lawrence junior
How are students expected to see the likes of Coach Brown and Mark Turgueon, who don't exactly tower
-
above the Dreilings and Knights.
That was news to me.
To the editor:
Need more taste
"What is that thing?" I asked to ask myself and others. Now I have finally found out. It is "art."
Bravo to the author of the Jan. 11 editorial "Scrap iron." I have lived in Salina most of my life, and since it was displayed near a large thoroughfare, I have seen "Salina Piece" countless times.
Well, I thought, at least it was donated. At least no money was spent on it.
Well, I guess I was wrong. I just don't see how people can take money out of their own pockets just to support the construction of that piece of trash when they could donate it to some departments in this University that could really use the money.
It would be nice if someone donated money to something the students could benefit from rather than vandalize.
I appreciate abstract art, but I agree that the line between "art" and "scrap iron" has been crossed. I remember when Kansas had a little more taste.
Katherine M. Allen Salina freshman
University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1984
Page 5
Poet continued from p. 1
For Stafford, the words, the images, the ideas always seem to come.
"The world is always talking. If you don't hear it the first time, you just have to tune up your ears or turn your head, and there's a little crick in your neck, and you start writing about that."
Stafford's disdain of poetic formulas comes, to a degree, from the mystery that he views as the essential quality of both life and poetry. In a poem called "Lit Instructor," the speaker declares the ideal of the college: "Right has a long and intricate name. And the saying of it is a lonely thing."
He says that "mysterious" could be substituted for "lonely."
"It's mysterious because I haven't finally
arrived there." Staffard said. "But on the other hand, it's sequentially knowable. I don't know if it's ineffable. It's partly effable, and we nibble away at the effable parts in learning.
. Stafford turned 70 on Jan. 17, and he views his
maser as merely another change in his life.
"I SOMETIMES THINK of it as like Daniel Boone going over into Kentucky. There's something there, and there are various stories about it, and gradually I'll find out. I'm finding out. Each increment seems real, but there's a few that don't. It isn't really Kentucky. It's not that it's ineffable where I've got. It is that it's ineffable where I haven't got." Part of what makes the mystery of life and poetry attractive to Stafford is its purity, he says. This same purity makes animals a favorite
"It's different," he says. "Retiring is different. I want to cherish that difference. There are trade-offs, losses and gains. I've retired from teaching.
In his own favorite poem, "A Walk in the Country," Stafford's speaker is a traveler who has carried the mountains of the world and now stubbornly holds to where he lives. And in the final two lines, he looks into the faces of the contentious masses and presents to them a mystery. It's the mystery of the world and of poetry, and of humanity:
"Oh friends, where can one find a partner for the long dance over the fields?"
POWER CITY WA
United Press International
ST. LOUIS — More than eight units respond to a general-alarm hour traffic jams and sent a cloud of heavy billowing over fire in a six-story Flower City warehouse. The fire caused rush-downtown St. Louis yesterday. No injuries were reported.
Student Sports Council recommended Clark,
who was paid $0.000.
Parents continued from p. 1.
Wachter said another problem was the poor acoustics in the field house. Patrons in the upper level had a hard time hearing the Hope show, she said, and they were unwilling to come back for Clark's show.
ANNE STUCKER, CHAIRMAN of the council, said Clark wasn't the first choice, but he was the best available at that price. Much of the problem, she said, is in the difficulty of finding an entertainer who will please both students and their parents.
In addition to the economic problem, the athletic department is having difficulty scheduling Parents Day, Band Day and Homecoming because next year's five-game schedule offers only two possible dates for the scheduling of the events.
"It was a good idea, but it just didn't fly," she said.
Jewish holiday Yom Kippur. The Oklahoma game, Oct. 27, conflicts with the 100th anniversary celebration of the Sigma Fraternity. The Nebraska game, Nov. 10, would not be practical, Johnson said, because Lawrence will be on duty in the hospital and hotel accommodations will be difficult to find.
Though the concerts may be cut, Wachter said there were no plans to eliminate the rest of the park.
"Parents Day will remain a tradition at KU," she said.
The Oct. 6 game against Iowa State falls on the Jewish holiday Yom Kippur. The Oklahoma game, Oct. 27, conflicts with the 100th anniversary celebration of the Sigma Chi fraternity.
Democrats continued from p.1
"I'm fearful for the nation and the condition it's in," O'Neil said. "Thirty-two years I've been here and never have I been as frightened of the cold war as I am today."
"I WILL DO ALL in my power to make sure that Walter Mondale is elected president of the United States."
Three hours after O'Neill's endorsement, Mondale told the speaker, "I'm very, very honored by your support. The strength of my faith and strength in you is amazing." about how I will cooperate with this Congress."
Mondale said that by his count O'Neill was in the 100th delegate in the House caucus, but O'Neill was not. The fact is that the majority of
"I think you've been a covert delegate for a long time," Mondale replied.
The caucus officially made O'Neill the first delegate elected in 1984 — 20 days before the Iowa caucus and 28 days before the New Hampshire primary.
MONDALE, ACCORDING to a United Press International count, has at least 77 endorsements among the Democratic delegates, far more than the 17 of rival Sen. John Glenm, D-Ohio. The Mondale camp and O'Neill said 10 delegates were publicly or privately committed to the front runner. Several members said they would support a private support public in news conferences shortly.
"The next four years present a terrible challenge, 'O'Neill said. 'Somehow, some way, we know he is going to win.'"
KIPPS
KIPPS continued from p. 1
problems with yesterday's payroll but that he didn't know of anyone who hadn't been paid on them.
KU's records-keeping computer and supplemental checks are printed, he said.
About 125 checks were for less than the correct amount. Ratzloff said, but those checks were much lower.
A KIPPS report issued before payday now enables KU officials to compare the payroll with a list of KU employees' salaries to detect discrepancies, Ratzloff said.
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Mann said KU and Topека officials would continue working to improve the KIPPS process. Because of the INCESS could be improved is by simplifying the KIPPS process for student employees. Mann said.
Martin Jones, associate director of business affairs, said that student paychecks were now run through the same process as classified and unclassified employees' paychecks.
A Sink is the friendship of the world
INTERNATIONAL CLUB
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS · LAWRENCE
ATTENTION
ATTENTION
NATIONAL CULTURAL ORGANIZATION
We need your participation for the forthcoming International Festival of Nations on the 7th of April. Please get in touch with us before the last week of February.
International Club 864-4824
Dr. Clifford Ketzel 864-3523
Dean Clark Coan 864-3617
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University, Daily Kansan, February 2, 1984
Page 6
KU is halfway to goal of $3 million for grant
By the Kansan Staff
The University of Kansas is halfway to its goal of raising the $3 million required to secure a federal grant for $1 million, a Kansas University Endowment Association official said yesterday.
James B. Martin, the official and the director of private support programs at the Endowment Association, said that a provision in the grant agreement with the National Education Bureau of the University to raise the $3 million by July 31, 1985.
Martin said he thought KU would meet that deadline.
GEORGE WOODYARD, the head of fund raising for the grant, said that the $1.5 million KU had raised so far included donations that the University had received since March 1, 1981, for use in the humanities.
Although the grant agreement was not made until March 1983, the National
Endowment for the Humanities allowed KU to pledge money donated since March 1981.
Woodyard, also an associate vice chancellor for the office for research, graduate studies and public service, said half the grant money would be given to the KU Center for Humanistic Studies. The other half of the grant will go to KU libraries for purchases of books, he said.
The Center for Humanistic Studies is now studying how to distribute its $500,000.
Martin said large contributions toward the required $3 million had been received from private individuals, corporations and foundations.
THE SOLON E. SUMMERFIELD Foundation of New York donated $40,000 last December. The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, also of New York, donated $200,000 in 1981. The Ahmanson Foundation, of Los Angeles, contributed $250,000 in 1982, he said.
Cynthia Pistilli/KANSAN
Fawnzw Ulaby, KU professor of electrical engineering, speaks about the uses of radar information from space for Kansas farmers. Ulaby yesterday told an audience at the University Forum that this information could help farmers predict crop yield.
"IN THE PAST, WE'VE always had problems finding those who have moved," he said.
Patterson said it wasn't unusual to get some W-2 forms out after Jan. 31, the date required by state and federal laws that employers must furnish employees with the withholding tax forms.
Professor says radar could help farmers
Staff Reporter
Patterson said that his office had been working to get the forms out by Jan. 31, but that it had been difficult to do so because the office hadn't received the forms from the Kansas Department of Administration.
W-2 papers in the mail for most KU employees
The University of Kansas has mailed W-2 tax forms to most KU employees, the KU comproller said yesterday.
Hadar images from space could help Kansas farmers predict the yield of their crops, a KU professor of electrical engineering who designed a radar device for the last space shuttle said yesterday.
By PHIL ENGLISH
Fawwaz Ulaby, the professor, said "The shuttle can be used partially as a radar test ground to monitor farm conditions and warn of cold warnings, and irrigation scheduling.
HE SAID THE GOVERNMENT should sponsor a program to make radar information available to farmers. He predicted that such a program would be possible in 10 to 15 years.
In a speech for the University Forum in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1204 Oread St. Ulysbp spoke about information from space about the earth.
John Patterson, the comptroller, said the forms had been sent to those employees for whom the University had addresses. The office of the comptroller is trying to track down the addresses of several thieves who may have graduated or left KU without leaving a forwarding address; he said.
By the Kansan Sta $ ^{ff} $
"If all the farmers had a small home computer, they could subscribe to a service that would provide them with access to social media and just like getting pay TV," he said.
radar microwaves from a platform to a scientist on earth who then constructs an interpretation of the data, and puts it into a computer. The audience told an audience of about 35 people.
Radar in space involves sending
HE SAID THE PROCESS would be similar to the one used by radio and television stations in receiving weather or meteorological reports from sat
Once the testing is done, Ulaby said he hoped that a permanent space platform could be used for more accurate radar operations.
"From the images he receives, and a simple technique, he can monitor stress on plants due to disease, insect or vegetation or water stress," Uliah said.
On the last space shuttle mission, the remote sensing lab at KU helped to design a calibrator for a radar device built in Germany.
"The first test of radar in space was in 1978, when a NASA satellite called 'Seasat', was launched. After three years, use the satellite went dead," he said.
The only other space radar tests were on shuttles, "Columbia" and "Challenger," he said.
New tank increases county's firefighting ability
By ROBIN PALMER
Staff Reporter
Douglas County is trying to make sure that county firefighters will no longer run out of water while fighting fires.
The Douglas County Commission yesterday approved the purchase of a 2,598-gallon water tank for a township fire truck. The tank should be delivered
within six weeks.
The tank, which commissioners said would cost about $4,500, will be paid for by county funds. The commission will purchase the tank from the Emergency Vehicle Sales Division of Haulmor Corp.. Valley Falls.
MEMBERS OF THE DOUGLAS County Firechiefs Association agreed that many of the townships do not have tanks large enough to provide water to fight large fires.
Louie McElhaney, chairman of the association, said that the water tank and truck would be beneficial to Palmyra and Willowsprings townships because they were just starting their own fire services.
Hiddleston said he knew of several townships that had run out of water and had been unable to save burning buildings.
CURRENTLY, THE PALMYRA township has access to 1,400 gallons with its three trucks. Access to the larger tank by all of the townships in the county is something that everyone can benefit from, he said.
Bob Hiddleston, fire chief for the volunteer fire department in Palmyra township, near Eudora, said most townships had water tanks that would handle fire fires but did not have enough capacity for a structure fire.
Fire protection for Palmyra township used to be handled through Baldwin.
--but he thought the earth was flat and he knew nothing about D.N.A. He had no doctorate, nor did he publish. They even tried to make him perish.
124
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JESUS WAS A PROF
One wonders about the quality of education in those days. Until we realize that he redeemed the school of hard knocks by showing a God of software.
So they called him, "Rabbi" (meaning, "teacher").
JLC
—by CAJ
University Lutheran
15th G Iowa -843 6662
Sunday Worship 10:30 am
catch us
UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY
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1
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1984
Page
(1)
Larrv Funk/KANSAN
Although reserved tickets were sold out for the New York City Opera National Company's performance of "LaBoheme," these opera enthusiasts hope to get extra tickets at the Murphy Hall box office. The performance was at 8 p.m. last night in the Crafton/Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall.
ASK will request aid increase
By CINDY HOLM
Staff Reporter
To help students meet the continuing costs of education, the Associated Students of Kansas will ask the legislature for increases in student financial assistance programs, the KU director of ASK said yesterday.
Chris Edmonds, the director, said in a news conference that ASK would lobby for increases in the state work study program, the State Scholarship Program, campus student salaries, the state research chairs and graduate research fellowships.
EDMONDS SAID THE state work study program, which was ASK's top priority during the last legislative session, should be maintained and supported. We helped students work their way through college with career-related jobs.
ASK will also support the teacher scholarship bill. Edmonds said.
He said that ASK would request an increase of $180,000 over last year's allocation of $281,000 to the Regents schools.
ASK also will request an increase of $150,000 for the State Scholarship Program, which in his proposed budget Gov. John Carlin recommended be maintained at its current level, Edmons said.
State scholarships are awarded to graduates of Kansas high schools on the basis of American College Testing scores and financial need, he said.
Reductions in the federal State Student Incentive Grant program had forced the Board of Regents to reduce the maximum award in the program from $500 to $350 and future reductions are possible. Edmunds said.
"WE BELIEVE THE state should increase its contribution. This would replace some of the cuts suffered in recent years," he said.
Although the governor recommended a 5 percent increase in student campus salaries, he said that ASK would request a 7 percent increase.
Salary increases for students who work corporate jobs is another concern. Edmondson's report
"The universities need additional student salary money to provide higher wages to "some students who have demonstrated superior work and to increase the hours of other students," he said.
STUDENTS WORKING for minimum wage in 1980 needed to work 76 hours to earn enough money for one semester's tuition, Edmonds said. But in 1985 under Carlin's proposal, students would have to work 134 hours.
"Because full-time students usually can only work a maximum of 20 hours a week, there are very real limits on earnings," he said.
ASK also plans to lobby for three programs that Carlin did not include in
Edmonds said that ASK would support a 15 percent increase in graduate student tuition waivers. The universities can now provide a 60
percent fee waiver for graduate teaching assistants.
"This increase will help keep Kansas graduate programs competitive with the rest of the nation."
GRADUATE STUDENTS are not eligible for many other forms of aid, he said, so ASK also want to create an educational partnership Program for graduate students.
Emdons said the proposed graduate program would provide 230 $1,000 grants to selected research assistants at the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and Wichita State University.
In addition to supporting scholarships for graduate students, ASK will continue its support of the proposed teacher scholarship pill, which would allow new unequivocal scholarships of $1,950 to student majoring in education. Edmonds said.
To qualify for the scholarship, the bill says, students must be enrolled in, or have been accepted to, a certified education school in Kansas. They also must complete a competitive exam designed by the Regents.
Upon graduation, scholarship recipients must teach in Kansas for the equivalent number of semesters that they received a scholarship.
"We believe this program would be an adequate incentive to improving both the quality and quantity of education students." Edmonds said.
ASK representatives testified in
in-house trials on Jan 17 in the House
Ways and Means Committee.
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Work-study still available
K
By JANICE SHARON Staff Reporter
A service of the KU Student Senate
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About $73,000 remains available for eligible KU students who apply for the State College Work Study Program, the state's student employment said yesterday.
Come on in and see the rest of the Bandolino Collection
Pam Houston, the director, said only 17 students were now employed under the program, which pays half of the wages for jobs off the KU campus.
BANDOLINO
One reason why so few students have applied for the program is that many students prefer to work on campus with their teachers and work study program. Houston said.
THE STATE PROGRAM is different from the federal program because it gives students the opportunity to work in industry or to careers for which they are studying.
"We try to provide students with jobs while they're in school so they can cut down on their debts," Houston said. "At the same time we're providing experience for them so they can get a job when they graduate."
The program began last August after
the Kansas Legislature appropriated $89,000, she said. The Associated Students of Kansas lobbied for the program.
To be eligible for the program, applicants must complete the 1983-1984 American College Testing Board financial aid packet and return it to the office of financial aid services said, but said, the cadmille, she said, but the money may run out in June.
HOUSTON SAID SIE WAS not sure if the legislature would continue to vote for a new law.
Students applying for only the work study program are not required to send the packet to the ACT processing center in Iowa City, Iowa, she said.
The office will process the information itself to determine the student's eligibility for the state program for this semester.
The office determines a student's eligibility by checking the parents' income and assets and seeing how much of their dependents are in college.
A student who is eligible for the federal program would be eligible for the state program because the protections the same guidelines, Houston said.
Out-of-state students are also eligible for jobs under the program, she said.
AVAILABLE JOBS ARE posted outside the office.
If students are qualified for a job that is not posted at the office, they can go directly to an employer and apply for the job. Houston said.
The amount of wages a student may receive under the program is limited, based on data from the financial aid packet.
One student was hired last month by Sunflower Cablevision, 644 New Hampshire.
The student was hired to design graphics and do illustration for advert-
The company would not normally be able to employ a full-time artist, Clark said.
3 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT!
The program offers a student a chance to gain experience. "It's an example of a joint partnership between university and local businesses," he said.
Dave Clark, Sunflower Cablevision's general manager, said Steve Lamas, Lawrence senior, had been doing good work for the company.
12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
"The clock of probable human self-destruction has just moved from 4 minutes to 3 minutes to midnight!" The Bulletin of Atomic Scientist
AFTER "THE DAY AFTER"
What can we do?
A Citizens' Forum on Positive Alternatives for the Future.
Speakers: BARBARA HJBBARD, futurist, author, and first woman candidate to seek the Democratic nomination for Vice President of the United States.
WILLISE HARMON, futurist, author, and Senior Social Scientist at Stanford Research Institute International.
Place: Kansas Union Ballroom, University
Moderator: David Longhurst, Mayor of Lawrence
Time: Thur., Feb. 2, 1984 8 p.m.
Sponsors: Kansas University Dept. of Political Science KU Chapter of World Future Society, Lawrence 8 Campus Coalitions for Peace and Justice.
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University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1984
Page 8
Segregation battle fought at lunchtime
By MARY SEXTON Staff Reporter
At a lunch counter 24 years ago yesterday in Greensboro, N.C., four college students helped to change the course of history.
For black residents of Greensboro, the counter lunch at the Woolworth's store had been a source of embarrassment, said B.J. Battle, a Greensboro resident and state treasurer of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
"IT WAS IRRITATING to go into Woolworth's to shop but not be able to sit down at the lunch counter to eat." Battle said.
But on Feb. 1, 1960, David Richmond, Jibreel Joseh, Joseph McNeil and Fy inkain McCain, went to the Woolworth's lunch counter to pick up dinner, but it sit there until they were served, but they were never served, he said.
The Rev. Eddie Mayes, of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, 900 New York St., said that this form of segregation was prevalent at this time throughout the South.
"When I was in the South, segregation was an accepted thing," Mayes said* "We had separate schools and we sat in the back of the bus."
"It became like a challenge," Battle said, who said he knew the members of the sit-in.
"The whole idea was to begin a movement." Battle said, "but I don't think the full ramification was felt by anyone."
The lunch counter incident was the moment of truth in the South, Mayes said. Sometimes it took someone to call it to your attention,
As a result of the Greensboro lunch counter sit-in, more than 70,000 students — white and black — attended in sit-ins in the next 18 months.
City settles with family of auto-accident victim
By the Kansan Staff
Lawrence recently settled out of court for $12,500 with the parents of a former Haskell Indian Junior College student who was injured when two cars struck her as she crossed the intersection of 23rd Street and Barker
City Manager Buford Watson said the city agreed to settle the suit that Albertine Myron's parents filed on her behalf.
Watson said a pedestrian-activated signal had been installed in the 1960s but that "continued vandalism had broken it and resulted in its removal."
HER PARENTS, who live in Tuba City, Ariz., charged in the lawsuit that the city was negligent because it did not recognize the traffic signal at the intersection.
Myron, who was 20 at the time of the November 1981 accident, broke a leg and received severe head injuries that caused brain damage, said Jerry Brown, his corner. Myron was treated at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Donnelly said that the Kansas Department of Transportation recommended in 1978 that the city upgrade the intersection and at least replace the pedestrian-activated signal. Donnelly said the changes were not made.
Since the accident, the city has received permission from the Kansas Highway Commission to upgrade safety on the corner and will continue with its plans, Watson said.
Bill might aid deaf witnesses
By the Kansan Staff
Paulette Strong, assistant director of the Student Assistance Center at the
University of Kansas, said that she favored a bill before the House Public Health and Welfare Committee that would require students to pay for qualified interpreters.
TOPEKA — Witnesses or principal parties in court cases or state proceedings who are deaf or have hearing or speech impairments should receive state-appointed interpreters, an official of the KU Student Assistance Center told a House committee yesterday.
The Kansas Commission for the Deaf and Hearing Impaired measure would maintain a list of qualified interpreters.
Strong said that having a list of qualified interpreters would insure consistency and effectiveness in the interpreters hired by the state.
Council to consider research policy
By the Kansan Staff
The University Senate Executive Committee yesterday approved sending proposals for classified research and grievance procedures to the University Council for consideration.
James Carothers, chairman of SenEx, said the classified research proposal was very different from the current policy.
The proposed policy would permit researchers to classify private research, Carothers said.
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Tax perks on college gifts could help KU
TOPEKA - More private businesses may be knocking on KU's front door with presents in hand if the Legislature passes a bill currently before a Senate committee.
Staff Rep
The bill would provide tax credits for businesses that donated equipment such as computers and computer software to colleges and universities.
The businesses could subtract 30 percent of the value of the new businesses from their own revenues.
UNDER CURRENT LAW, GIFTS to schools can be claimed only as tax deductions. However, credits save donors more money than do deductions.
Bill Henry, executive vice president of the Kansas Engineering Society, said the bill would help modernize equipment at the state's engineering schools.
Educators strongly endorsed the bill yesterday in the last day of testimony before the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee.
of used equipment from the bottom line on their state income tax forms.
The equipment being used now is outdated and not very useful, he said.
"Today, each school has equipment that dates from the 1950s and is not representative of modern industrial practice," he said.
If the bill became law, more companies would make donations, and this might convince many teachers to stay in school so that more of entering private industry, he said.
"ONE WAY OF RETAINING our qualified instructors is to see that they have up-to-date equipment with which to experiment and perform research," he said. "The condition of our equipment today at the schools of engineering in the state of Kansas simply does not provide that incentive."
Stanley Kopik, executive director of the Board of Regents, suggested that the committee broaden the language of books to donate books and technical manuals.
"Under the current language, I'm not sure books would be allowed," he said. He said rewording the bill to include such titles would be helpful to buy equipment they really needed.
“A SCHOOL COULD BUY something on today's market rather than having to make adjustments for a piece of equipment that was a gift,” he said.
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1984
Page 9
Troops kill guerrillas in eastern El Salvador
By United Press International
Government troops killed 25 leftist guerrillas in three separate clashes with insurgent forces at the battlefront in eastern El Salvador, the Salvadoran Defense Ministry said yesterday.
The bloodiest clash was registered Tuesday when troops of the 3rd Infantry Brigade killed 12 guerrillas at the hamlet of Los Argua, 56 miles northeast of San Salvador in San Antonio, said a ministry communicate.
Soldiers killed all 11 rebels in a fire at eil Tablon, a village in northwestern Morazan province close to where an American woman was shot to death last Thursday. A guerrilla bank attack killed many from the capital, the communiqué said.
The guerrillas said government troops shot to death Linda Caile, 23, of Calver City, Calif., who was killed by
gainteur when her bus was stopped near a presumed rebel roadblock last week.
The rebels did not back up their charges, which were broadcast on the radio.
In Guatemala City, two unidentified gunmen shot and killed police official Melesio Tirado Gomez, 40, as he drove in his sports car on the outskirts of Guatemala City Tuesday night, police said yesterday.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.
TIRADO GOMEZ, A CHIEF of police technical investigations, was shot at point-blink range and did not have a weapon. The revolver he was carrying, police said.
In Managua, the leftist Sandinista government said it would free the regime's first defense minister, sentenced to seven years in prison for plotting to kidnap all nine directors of the Sandinista Front.
Iranian, Syrian governments linked to bombings in Beirut
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Intelligence services have uncovered a complex series of incidents that led the governments to shut down bombings, it was reported yesterday.
THAT FACTOR AND A $50,000 check presented by a Lebanese financial emissary to the Iranian Embassy in Damascus are thought to be links between the two governments and the attacks, the newspaper said.
The Washington Post said, on the basis of information obtained from the CIA and French, Israel and Lebanese intelligence sources, explosives used in attacks were highly secreted and hard to obtain outside government military channels.
Syria insisted, however, there is no proof of any Syrian involvement in the bombings.
"Syria never runs away from declaring responsibility for any action it undertakes nor does it hide any such evidence," said the state radio monitored in Beirut.
SAMURAI SINISTER
United Press International
BATTLESHIP
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Members of the Air Force and Recovery team rehearse their rescue procedures with a mock-up of the space shuttle cabin. The shuttle Challenger is scheduled to be launched at 7 a.m. tomorrow.
Shuttle leaks fixed; time to enter space
By United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The countdown cruised toward tomorrow's shuttle launch and an official said yesterday he was 99.9 percent sure engineers had resolved turbine leaks blamed for two small fires on the last day.
"We're go for launch," said test director Stan Gross.
Blastoff time is 7 a.m. CST.
Canada will send its first astronaut into space aboard another shuttle flight this October, more than a year earlier than planned, Canadian Science Minister Donald Johnston announced yesterday.
JOHNSTON SAID THE United States had asked Canada to provide an astronaut for the third mission of the shuttle "Discovery," which will be launched from Cape Canaveral with a six-member crew.
The astronaut, to be selected from among six people chosen for astronaut training by the government last December, will be a "payload specialist" to perform specific experiments in cooperation with other crew members.
Russell Newlin, project engineer in charge of Challenger, said at a news conference that engineers had "put to bed" the fuel leaks that started the fires aboard the shuttle Columbia in December.
He said technicians were 99.9 percent sure the leaks were caused by stress corrosion — metal deterioration resulting from prolonged exposure to acidic chemicals. The Columbia was not damaged by the incident.
EVEEN THOUGH THE three hydraulic system turbines aboard Challenger
were not involved, engineers replaced the
chassis units from the newest
mildle disc. Discose
The turbines provide power to move the spaceplane's three main engines during launch and to move the rudder and wing control surfaces during flight.
Five men and one woman were picked for the Canadian astronaut program from among 4,000 applicants. It has not yet been decided which of the six will be chosen for the October mission.
"This opportunity has arisen in a very short time frame," Johnston told reporters. "After studying it we thought we should accept astronauts as to have an astronaut in space at an early date and it will help with other experiments."
CANADA'S OVERALL $3.6 million bill for the space program will be affected only marginally, he said.
James Beggs, the head of the American space program, said in a statement that the mission would take place on October 23 to cooperation" between the two countries.
Brand, Stewart, Robert "Hoot" Gibson, Bruce McCandless and Ronald McNair spent part of yesterday flying relaxing aerobatics in jet trainers.
THE SHUTTLE'S TWO pilots, Brand and Gibson, also practiced emergency landings at the spaceport runway in a jet that mimics the way the shuttle handles.
Challenger is scheduled to end its eight-day orbital voyage with a landing at the Kennedy Space Center runway shortly after dawn Feb. 11.
The countdown for the nation's 10th
shuttle flight began on schedule at 1
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University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Flames roam killing seven in inner D.C.
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Children leap from windows as the worst fire in the nation's capital since 1976 swept three row houses in an impoverished neighborhood yesterday, killing at least seven people and injuring 15 others.
Four of the dead were children, officials said.
"When we arrived, people had started to jump out the windows. We caught children jumping from the stairs and into the street. District of Columbia Fire Department.
"I SAW PEOPLE jump out the window, young and old," said Charles Jenks, a computer operator at a nearby bank. "They tried to stick the ladder up there but they took the ladder back because the smoke was so heavy."
United Press International
Police spokesman Jim Battle said the cause of the fire was not immediately known but that arson had been ruled out. One relative of the victims said the fire was accidental and undergoing electrical work. Another said the family used space heaters.
FIRE EXPLOSION AT THE BROWN STREET BUILDING.
WASHINGTON — Firefighters respond to a three-alarm fire that spread through three row houses. The fire killed seven and injured 15 yesterday and was described as the worst in Washington since 1976.
Beirut tension heightens with fighting, threats
Bv United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Muslim gunners rained heavy salvys of artillery and rocket fire yesterday on densely populated Christian areas around Beirut, killing four people just hours earlier. A bomb was warned a "decisive battle" was near
The fire by the gunners in the mountains east of the capital, coupled with the threat by Druse leader Walid Jumbliatt, raised new fears of all-out civil war among Lebanon's religious factions.
Offshore, sailors on U.S. 6th Fleet ships off the Lebanon coast said yesterday that extra precautions were being taken to guard against kamikaze
"NEW ANTI-AIRCRAFT missiles have been installed on the skin," said
Green boxes on either side of the decks bear the label "rocket ammunitions with explosive projectiles" to explain, sailors said missiles were inside.
one of the sailors, who declined to be identified, on the Fort Snelling, a 10,500-ton dock landing ship. Navy sailors did not neither confirm nor deny the statement.
The Pentagon has confirmed reports that stinger anti-aircraft missiles portable missiles that can be fired by a helicopter rushed to 6fth Fleet ships off Lebanon.
White House officials have warned of the possibility of suicide attacks with weapons like those used in the attack.
A MONTH AGO SYRIAN Defense Minister Mustapha Tlas said his country had "kamikaze plots and attacks on American citizens themselves," to attacking the American
One shell blew up in a gasoline station in Sin el Fil, igniting a huge fire that lighted up the sky over Christian east Beirut. Explosions thundered across the capital and the Phalange radio said in part it also fired Soviet-made GRAD rockets.
BEIRUT RADIO SAID the artillery fire had hit Sin El Fil, a densely populated neighborhood in Christian Marsh, the outskirts of Kuwait.
A top source in the Lebanese government said earlier that talks with Jumblatt and his backers in Syria were "frozen" and the government was considering a last chance to restore the Lebanese army to impose a security ring around Beirut.
south of Beirut, state-run Beirut radio said.
Attempts to arrange a cease-fire failed, but the shooting began dying down shortly before midnight local time.
The fierce shelling crept about an hour after nightfall, the radio station of the Christian Phalange Party reported. At least four people were killed, including a retired Lebanese army officer, it said.
warships off Lebanon's shore.
The shelling deaths brought the day's death toll to seven. Three Lebanese soldiers were killed earlier by smper fire in Shiite Muslim neighborhoods
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Agrava, 68, a retired judge, made the comments Jan. 3 in a meeting with Manila-based foreign reporters.
Aquino said she and her family "lived a life of fear, humiliation and loneliness" while her husband was detained under anti-subversion decrems from 1972 to 1980, when he was allowed to go to the United States for heart surgery
"BUT THEY HAVE NOT pardoned me or at least one of them has not. MEMORIAM."
Aquino widow critical of government inquiry
"Why, therefore, is it 'unfortunate' that I do not believe in the possibility of justice under Marces?" she said. "On personal grounds, how can I expect justice from the hand that brought so unjustice and suffering into my life?"
By United Press International
Aquino said she expected the five-member commission to forgive her for being skeptical about any inquiry set up by President Ferdinand Marcos, who kept her husband in detention for 7½ years.
MANILA. Philippines — The widow of slain opposition leader Benigno Aquino yesterday strongly criticized the leader of a commission investigating her husband's assassination
In response to comments about the Aquino family made by Corazon Agrava, chairman of a panel looking into the Aug 21 slaying, Corazon remained "steadfast in my reusal to have anything to do with this commission."
By United Press International
Four other Soviets not stationed in Norway but linked to the scandal were also stripped of their diplomatic rank and gave them away. Strav announced at a news conference.
OSLO, Norway — Norway expelled five Soviet diplomats yesterday in a protest to Moscow stemming from the rejection of a diplomat as a spy for the Soviet KGB.
Stray said the expelled officials "acted contrary to their status in this country and have broken the rules of diplomatic conduct between the two states," which in diplomatic jargon generally means espionage.
Norway expels five Soviets says diplomats were spying
THE NEWS CONFERENCE came after Soviet Ambassador Dimitry Polynsky was summoned to the foreign ministry to receive an official verbal protest
The five Oslo-based diplomats were expelled in the wake of the use by the
SUPERDANCE Committee People Needed (Benefitting Muscular Dystrophy Association)
In a statement last night, the Soviet Embassy said that the expulsions were "unfounded" and "an unjustified attack on the activities of Soviet institutions."
THE STATEMENT WARNED that the Soviet government reserves the right to attack any of its allies.
KGB, the Soviet intelligence agency, of foreign ministry press chief Arne Treholt as a spy. Stray said, Treholt said that shook Norway's officials, scandal that shook Norway's officials.
A meeting for all those interested in serving on a committee or being a committee chairperson will be held Thurs., Feb. 2 at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
He said the incident had undermined "the confidence which is an important prerequisite for the development of relations between two countries."
"The Soviet authorities must bear the full responsibility for the damage that has been done in the relations between the two countries." Strav said.
Committees are: Recruitment, Facilities, publicity, prize entertainment, food, medical, finance and security.
Norwegian security police identified one of the five. Leen Makarov, who left Norway before Treholt was arrested in the current head of the Kildbjerk in the country.
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INVITES YOU TO HEAR THE 1984 BLACK HISTORY MONTH KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Dr. John B. Slaughter CHANCELLOR, UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK TOPIC:
Black Americans and the Struggle for Excellence in Education ALDERSON AUDITORIUM, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FEB. 6, 1984 7:30 p.m.
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Alpha Phi Fuzzy Duckers get psyched for Friday TGIF*
ATTENTION! Sincere people wishing to travel next April to Lexington for the 14th American annual Humanitarian Awards. *After* "The Day After" 'What Can We Do?' a citizens' forum on positive alternatives for the future. Speakers Barbara Hubbard and Willie Mumford, of the University, Feb. 2-6: 8:00 p.m., Kamasan Union Bailout.
Horseback Riding $6.00 per hour
KOA Campground 842-3877
Havrick Rides Also
correct insertion of any advertisement.
* No refrences on cancellation of pre-paid classified
Applications are now being made for Sushen
Officials for 1984 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter
Wednesday, April 23); 1985 Kansas Relays (April 16-
21; Easter Wednesday, April 23); 1986 Kansas Relays
(April 16-21; Easter Wednesday, April 23);
1987 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23); 1988 Kansas Relays (April 16-
21; Easter Wednesda y, April 23);
1989 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
1990 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
1991 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
1992 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
1993 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
1994 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
1995 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
1996 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
1997 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
1998 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
1999 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2000 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2001 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2002 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2003 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2004 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2005 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2006 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2007 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2008 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2009 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2010 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2011 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2012 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2013 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2014 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2015 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2016 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2017 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2018 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2019 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2020 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2021 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2022 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2023 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2024 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2025 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2026 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2027 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2028 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2029 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2030 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2031 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2032 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2033 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2034 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2035 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2036 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2037 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2038 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2039 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2040 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2041 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2042 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2043 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2044 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2045 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2046 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2047 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2048 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2049 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2050 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2051 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2052 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2053 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2054 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2055 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2056 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2057 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2058 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2059 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2060 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2061 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2062 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2063 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2064 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2065 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2066 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2067 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2068 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2069 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2070 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2071 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2072 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2073 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2074 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2075 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2076 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2077 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2078 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2079 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2080 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2081 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2082 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2083 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2084 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2085 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2086 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2087 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2088 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2089 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2090 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2091 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2092 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2093 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2094 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2095 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2096 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2097 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2098 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2099 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2000 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2001 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2002 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2003 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2004 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2005 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2006 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2007 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2008 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2009 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2010 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2011 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2012 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2013 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2014 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2015 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2016 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2017 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2018 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2019 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2020 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2021 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2022 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2023 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2024 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2025 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2026 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2027 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2028 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2029 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2030 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2031 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2032 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2033 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2034 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2035 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2036 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2037 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2038 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2039 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2040 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2041 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2042 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2043 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2044 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2045 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2046 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2047 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2048 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2049 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2050 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2051 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2052 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2053 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2054 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2055 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2056 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2057 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2058 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2059 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2060 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2061 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2062 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2063 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2064 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2065 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2066 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2067 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2068 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2069 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2070 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2071 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2072 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2073 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2074 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2075 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2076 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2077 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2078 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2079 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2080 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2081 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2082 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2083 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2084 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2085 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2086 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2087 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2088 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2089 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2090 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2091 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2092 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2093 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2094 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2095 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2096 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2097 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2098 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2099 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2000 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2001 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2002 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2003 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2004 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2005 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2006 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2007 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2008 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2009 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2010 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2011 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2012 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2013 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2014 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2015 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2016 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2017 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2018 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2019 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2020 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2021 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2022 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2023 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2024 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2025 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2026 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2027 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2028 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2029 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2030 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2031 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2032 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2033 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2034 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2035 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2036 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2037 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2038 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2039 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2040 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2041 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2042 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2043 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2044 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2045 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2046 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2047 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2048 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2049 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2050 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2051 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2052 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2053 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2054 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2055 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2056 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2057 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2058 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2059 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2060 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2061 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2062 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2063 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2064 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2065 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2066 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2067 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2068 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2069 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2070 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2071 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2072 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2073 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2074 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2075 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2076 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2077 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2078 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2079 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2080 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2081 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2082 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2083 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2084 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2085 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2086 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2087 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2088 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2089 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2090 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2091 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2092 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2093 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2094 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2095 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2096 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2097 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2098 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2099 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2000 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2001 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2002 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2003 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2004 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2005 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2006 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2007 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2008 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2009 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2010 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2011 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2012 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2013 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2014 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2015 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2016 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2017 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2018 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2019 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2020 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2021 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2022 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2023 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2024 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2025 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2026 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2027 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2028 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2029 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2030 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2031 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2032 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2033 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2034 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2035 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2036 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2037 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2038 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2039 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2040 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2041 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2042 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2043 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2044 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2045 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2046 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2047 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2048 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2049 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2050 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2051 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2052 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2053 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2054 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2055 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2056 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2057 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2058 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2059 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2060 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2061 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2062 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2063 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2064 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2065 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2066 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2067 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2068 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2069 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2070 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2071 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2072 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2073 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2074 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2075 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2076 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2077 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2078 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2079 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2080 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2081 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2082 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2083 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2084 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2085 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2086 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2087 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2088 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2089 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2090 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2091 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2092 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2093 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2094 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2095 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2096 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2097 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2098 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2099 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2000 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2001 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2002 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2003 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2004 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2005 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2006 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2007 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2008 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2009 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2010 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2011 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2012 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2013 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2014 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2015 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2016 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2017 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2018 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2019 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2020 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2021 Kansas Relays (April 16-21; Easter Wednesda
y, April 23);
2022 Kansas Relays (April 16-2
...
Auction weekly consignment every Friday 7:0p.
Showmanstr. Ace, Kaw River Bridge, 2 miles
Sun-N-Fun with Summit call for info 749-0048
SPRING BREAK in PADRE
for $139
Kansan classifieds get results.
Bulletin Board Services Pointer Design & Replacement Rate Reasonable Rates, Reference K6324 or 8324
CRUISER HIRING $160-$300 Caribbean,
NEWJERSHIPS 1/916 944-444 EXT
NEWYORK 1/916 944-444
Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansan Call 864-4358
Learn WordStar from your office or home. 44 for
Mac, 30 for PC. Learn Alpha Hamilton, Alpha Byte Computer Center,
Alpha Macintosh.
TONGITT Which is more important, watching Hill Stace Blows tiles or becoming part of a realistic plan to halt the nuclear arm race? It all depends on what we want to do. After. What can we do? 8 p.m. Union Ballroom
FORRENT
1. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments available immediately; good campus location, on bus route 78 to UCF.
Apple Craft A/C Heat & Water. Quilt Laundry. On
average, 1 BR, 875W. 741 W, 188 L
843-8220
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
Help! Sublease multiple efficient two bed apt.
water cable paired. Block S: from 21rd. Red Oak
sheds. Block W: from 22nd. Blue Oak
sheds.
Large, upstate apt 5 room and both, bth & lath Close to campus. Private entrance (call)
Are you sick of dorm life? Try a refreshing alternative! I will pay you $100 to submise your Nasmish Hall contest Great food, pool friends. Call 749-4072 for a bathroom and swimming pool. Call 749-4072
MADROOOKBOROUGH still available one and two bedroom furnished and unfurnished afters. Heat and water included. 2 blocks from campus, and excellent parking. Meadowborkaors. 15th & Crestline. 842-4300
MEADOWHOLGK - nice furnished studio available on the meadow balcony - best room for laundry facility. Call 610-352-1820.
Save $125 per month. 2 bedroom apartment—like new and I took him from KU. Call 843-4798
West
Excellent Rates!
February Rent Free!
1 & 2 BR APTS FROM $200
- Free Campus Transportation
24 hour Maintenance
* Year round Swimming
* Lawn day Facilitation
Need a lease through May!
CALL US TODAY!
842-4444
Open Sat.
524 Frontier Road
Sublease lease 1 bedroom apartment. Water pard, close to campus downtown. Off street parking.
KU Students we still have a few completely furnished
and two bedroom apartments near campus.
**Sublease:** 1 BR apt. apt. to campus/downtown,
center of campus, and/or home office.
Submit our 25B apt. w/W docking, redwood deck,
airconditioned, carpet, fridge and fridge and keep our 3000 deposit for yourself we will pay 1/4 of the deposit.
**Summer sublease:** Studio apt. furnished or
unfurnished, close to campus, on bus route. Call
us.
FOR SALE
Used cameras, large selection, C & T
graphics, M13 SantaFe, Overland Park,
KS 750.
1977 Yamaha RD 400, excellent condition. Call
841-7828.
BASS GUITAR, Peavey T-40, fitted (final count, 5)
Guitar amplifier, guitar amplifier with
great set up 3600 or separately Mixture.
78 Renault Le Car, GLT, $1400 3 woodstores $95 each
749-1103
For Sale -Used floppy disks. Seatch quality or better? 5" double sided, double seated, soft sectors (40+), single or double sided, "5" hard sectored). Mark or Jinnie Finger. 249 Open联系 841-775 (175)
sleful new Yamaha guitar with deluxe hardshell case included $80. Worth much more. Kush
HAPPY BIRTHDAY CEEC! We party tomorrow night!
I love you. Love you. Love you.
Sarah, Saheer. Heather
FOR SALE 1811 Hoda CM20T7, excellent condition, still in warranty, asking 1900
Used furniture at Saimaena's, across Kaw River Bridge, 2 miles north of Lawtonen at 34-69 highway.
jensler Dual Diacron Color head with besselier屯铣 stabilized power supply for color photography
of the LCD television. Drafting table 40 x 36. Wood frame, vinyl top,
adjustable height, adjustable light, one year old
For sale Radar Detector "Fox XR" Brand new.
Also "realistic" AM/FM amplifier plus 2 speakers.
Call 843-8000
Panasonic microassette recorder $44, French fli
$25, Harquectack Basket $20. All in excellent
condition.
For sale: Post oak drawing table with paraliner
Almost new. 773 841 6875
Sample Sale - Women's and Men's sports apparel,
socks, hoodies, sweatshirts, most items 50% off,
Call 789-2189 (or information)
Ladies eekilin leather boots. Size 9 with "3" dress heel.
Call 842-2801
HUNDA CB76F-708. excellent condition, quarter
fasting. Offer valid until the end of the
fasting period will be accepted. 843-116-96
Solid mapleleaf twin bed frame $42, twin mattress $35,
Sturdy bank bed frame $62, Call Rich,
$100.
Western Civilization. Notes, including New Supplement. Now on Novembr. Makes use of use in exam preparation for Western Civilization. For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town River. The exam preparation is free.
Soda, love seat, arm chair, two lame, two lampets, two table, two chair, 10 to 19 carpet, 842-6007, keep out.
Stereo television video. All name brands. Lowest KO area. Total Sound Distributors. 913-846-5200.
Save $$$ Computers. Discount prices. Catalog supplies for Zenith hardware and software and accessories now available. Send $2: refundable on first order. Emerald City Computer Mail Order; $5: refurbished.
USED CARPETS - dorm room sizes, mostly shape,
> leave message. 842-413-313
Technics - Turntable fully automatic, direct drive
Tower, TPC12840. Direct drive. Texas Instruments Programmable Calculator T156
Texas Instruments Programmable Calculator T156
LETRASTAR For Sale, complete sheets, letters,
arctural structural sheets, letraton $30/$50 sheet
AUTOSALES
U.S. and U.N. stamps, mint and used, bargain
collectors. Collectors kit 845-3189, evening.
THEATRICAL MAKEUP KIT-Large, loaded,
tackle box 405 firm Call 841-4734
1979 WV RABBIT - Well cared for. Must sell. $1,000.
424 6123 after 6 months, after time limit.
Ford Mustang V6, automatic. All extras.
stereo Samsung PTXC4 with speakers. 749-325-3972 or
749-325-3981.
Snow, good gas mileage, negotiaton $1,000
1979 WT RV-Well cared for. Must sell $1,000
1912 Dodge Charger, AC, PS, PB, new Auto. Trans.
George-paulen greene, equities 834-5077
www.dodgecharger.com
1901 VW Habitat 1S, 4-door, ACD, stereo, Cass, 25,000 miles
$4000. $841-9573
Datum Datum 280 ZX, GLP, s speed, read loaded,
2 tone black 7 inch power 290,000 watts, kilo pounds,
D1014 Dixon 10.5X .app. Super cool. Cleaned. Must see & drive. Kelly 864-2645.
For sale. 78 Dainton 200 SX. Runs good. looks nice.
for info call 841-8329. John
Found: G gold bracelet in slot lot at 2408 Alabama on Jan. 23. Call 841-4574 to identify it.
LOST AND FOUND
Gold get set with large high-resolution panel computer
Roomals. Call Us at nma1457 (8:35 p.m.) or 842-9600.
Roomals. Call Us at nma1457 (8:35 p.m.) or 842-9600.
keys, found in 205-206 Blake. Contact political science dept. 510 Hull Lake.
HELP WANTED
Airlines are hiring.
Flight attendants
Directors, Newsletter.
910-844-4444. Exit
910-844-4444. Exit
Lost and Found items at Watson Library include numerous IDs. Ask at the Circ Desk.
Applications are being accepted for half-time graduate teaching assistants in Western Civilization, 210 Wescott Hall. Duties: teach eight discussion sessions per week. Requires: Master's or equivalent. Requirements: Must be a bachelor fide graduation student at the University of Kansas working toward a degree in humanities or the humanities and social sciences. Appointment for nine months, beginning in the fall of '104; salary dependent upon level of grade work. Deadline for application: December 31.
CAMP STAFF WANTED for Camp Lanes/LampCamp Lake Hutchet, a Minnesota resident summer camp. A graduate student at the college required with skills and experience in camping, two years of experience on Campus 223 Currall Hall for interviews on Campus.
Cruiseship are hiring! 816-300-0000 Carribean,
USA; 816-300-0000 Florida; 919.6 944-4440 ETC.
BANANAHISPICE
MARKETING DIRECTOR
Maupintour, a well-established travel company headquartered in Lawrence, Kansas, to seeking a self-motivated industry leader who is able and implementing future growth, developing of media advertising, marketing plans, promotions, sales strategies, and communications.
The ideal person will have a proven track record of success with at least 6-10 years of experience in marketing, technology or directly to the President of the company.
Send resume and salary history to John Gibson, Personnel Director, at the address shown below.
MAUPINTOUR, INC.
MISCELLANEOUS
Experienced electric technician. Part time during school and full time in summer. Send resume to RXWGJRU@aol.com
"Considered about your income and your education?" you ask. "Do you know how to show us your program which is designed to help you? Our boys can learn surry $40-60 weekly as well as help them make more money?" American Youth Enterprises, P.O. Box 600 Kamasana
1515 St. Andrews Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Now hiring day female bartenders and night made up bartenders to apply in person between 1 and 4 Routines, 350 with no waiting time. Contact us at info@thebar.com.
Female to assist disabled female with care. No experience required. Short hours. Mornings or afternoons. Call 800-362-1271.
COMPUTER SCIENCE STUDENTS
Resumes now being accepted for 6 management positions. Please email resume to: collegepreferred@wgu.edu; necessary. Collegepreferred preferred. Fugate University. Email: fugate@wgu.edu.
Warm, relatable babysitter for Saturday mornings.
Saturday, 9am-1pm. Contact me at $2hr.
girl my home, close to campus; $4hr.
boy my room, near campus; $6hr.
supervision and management experience prefer
for 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Deadline for
application of application : 5 p.m. February 7
M. Sunday
Position opening - Assistant to Orientation Coordinator. Position appointment: 20 hours per week (excluding Saturday) (including Saturday day) from May 18 August 17. Open to current enrolled student in good academic standing. Salary total approximately $42,900. 20% of salary is based on supervision and management experience preferred. For a complete job description, please come to Office of Admissions, 129强 Hall, a 3 m² room / 1 p.m. 5:30 p.m. phone number: (866) 279-2000.
If you are a student in the computer science department, you know that your department is in business. We are seriously concerned about our ability to enroll in classes, the quality of our education, the future of our department, and our own academic programs. Our student chapter at UH has established this Spring student advocacy committees to help cope with these doubts and problems. The Positive Action Group (PAG) will lead the Fall in collection statistics which document the crash in computer science. We maintain an office in 2Brighall fall where you may walk in and chase the GAP groups. We open meetings to discuss questions and problems which you may have. These open meetings will be held the first Thursday of each month at 4 p.m. in the morning and the second meeting will be held this Thursday, February 2. Plan to come to your voice be heard.
PERSONAL
(Funded by Student Activities Fund)
Diplegia- Anyone interested in playing this classic availon bill game, call 814-8499. Keep calling Karen Personally instruction in weight bench exercise. Check for satisfaction guaranteed. 744-2767 Jerry's Gym
COME OUT AND TAKE ABOUT IT. Meet some new issues.
Support Group (SIG) Meeting. Meet a Kansas union,
the American Federation of Teachers.
Meeting 7:00 p.m. Ft. Walsh & Waltham Room, Kansas
Towns. More info: info. ks4011 GLEOSK
A strong key outfit (Bennett Retail Lauger. Chilled Wine Ridge Ice Cold Beer) bites, north of Mackenzie and the Rockies.
Bicycle through Europe, June 11- July 11
Countries, College credit available, Call Gig
BUSINESS PERS
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK - 3 bedroom townhouse with amenities close to both areas. Reservoir for new construction.
COLLEGE SWEATSHIRTS: Many schools in stock, available for immediate delivery. $14 each postpaid. Many colors. (call 601-855-1050 or write Box 317. Brookhaven, Mississippi) for more information.
Make Your Spring Break Travel Plans Now!
HERE COMES THE SUN!
We offer:
- Guaranteed lowest air fare
- Eurail passes
- Student flights to Europe/iceland Airlines reservation and tickets
- Amtrack tickets
- Flight insurance
Amtrack tickets
749-0700
900 Mass/KU Union
COMIC BOOK BAGS B9 for $100 or $125 for $1,000. Sale at Kawatty Comics, 70 West, 743-829, 743-829
*MMPREFEISED HEALTH ASSOCIATES; early
researchers from the University of Kansas,
career-passionately greeted Greater Klamath City
and was invited to participate.
CAMbridge Diet January Clearance. Making room for new shipment up to £6 off on select flavors of the season. 10% off all meals.
extremely Sim and Trim program. The amazing magic of natural herbs. Designed for typical weight gain, this program helps the body nutrients, naturally cleaning the system, mutually curing the appetite and burning excess calories.
NOTICE
Call us
Bidton Dutton
Dutton Insurance.
9th & 6th Flr.
842-0151
HEALTH INSURANCE
Important passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, vita, ID, and of course fine portraits.
RESEARCH PAPER WRITING SKILLS
uses the library, manage your time. Thursday, February 2, 6:30 p.m. in the Rig B loom, Kanaan Union FIRE. Presented by the Student Assistance Program.
MODES WANTED. At Ultimate Hair & Skin Care
Center 14 Eighth St. Tel. 619-7071
Modeling and theater portfolios shooting now
Beginners to professionals. Call for information
European Suntanning
Menthol Tree
Jazz Exercise & Aerobics with weight room privileges Classes Now Forming 1 FREED TRIAL SESSION
FREE
European Suntanning & Health Spa
Special for students. Haircuts $7 and permits $23.
Charm, ask for Dena Jensen 843-3580.
TRIUMF STORES: Appliances, furniture, clothing,
TUCKER STORE: Always good burgers 628
Vernon, 16 E. 3rd St.
SEND a SINGING TELEGRAM - a unique alternative for Valentine's Day! Special price through Feb. 24.
The Rfc. Shop, 323 Mass has formal wear, vintage
clothes and high shoes for guests through
thursday. Saturday until 8:30 p.m.
through Sunday.
USENCE SCIENCE FICTION paperbacks, 3 for $4 or Kessler
& Company, 5 for $7 or Kessler & Comme,
848-7230, 10 Went Week, Lawrence
winnie 'boupon'
no membership required
841-6232
2468 room
SERVICES OFFERED
The Kegger--16101 9 w 22rd. KEG SALE. Bunch $35,
COP or pump set up. 841-9450
WHOLESALE SEMI RENTAL. P.A. systems.
DICEO Systems, Guitar and Bass Amp. 841-6495.
Experienced child care. In my home. Quiet
*borthood* 749-5800
ENGLISH PLED will help you write your clear, written English essay. Your essay will be taught by Tutoring, Turing, Engl 101, 103, 202, etc. Call me Mr. Jerry.
2449 LOWE
expires 2/12/84
Relieve tension, *girls guys*. "The Touch" is for you when you're in a private, private of your own place. *Massage only*, not touching.
Learn to Fly. Experienced flight instructor. Very
reasonable Rates. 841-749-8026. Ask for
Kevin Miles.
KENYA
taken on a PC 95 per click
ALPHA LEARNING
842-8187
Credit cards not required
Teaching thinkers by de Born, de Born is a Rhodes Scholar $90 of frightish children use this book. Ben.
ar-truck-var
Need help in math? Experimented math tute can help you do well this semester. Special rate for math tutors in NYC.
SVAIL/REAVER CREEK call TOLL FREE 1-800-224-480 or CONSULT YOUR TRAVEL AGENT FOR DISCOUNT RATES on lodging, lifts, and rentals.
Credit cards not required We rent to.18 year olds
Photography, bridal, paerturetis, wedding albums,
wedding portraits, family portraits, individuals,
and individuals. Full Face 720x480 328-hour
filming. Phone number: (516) 292-4967.
STADIUM BARBER SHIP 1033 Massachusetts,
downstairs. All haircuts. $9.00 No appointment.
Barbys
Vintage
Rose
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
Buy it on a shirt, custom silkscreen printing. T-shirts, tensers and cans. Shirt印刷 by Swells 749-1611.
NO KIDDING! South Padre Island, Texas for Spring only 89 per person for the week in new deluxe beachside condos with pool. Limited space Call your campus phone. Charles at 843-2317
SPANISH TUTOR translator Native speaker Experience with beginning intermediate and advanced English.
841-2451
NEW ARRIVAL
Victorian dresses
silk lingerie
cotton petticoats
8189 Maule, St.
Chelsea, London
ULTIMATEHair and skin Care Center invited you to visit us in our beautiful adorable location in downtown Kansas City. We will provide consultation and $3 off haircut and $4 off permisfies. NEXUS SAMPLES 14 and 8th east Street
TYPING
February 2, 1984
3 services at 1 location. Typing, editing, graphics
WORLD ARTISTS Ellen B41-272
i1st Rate Typing* The original and (only) AAA Typing*
-accept no substitutes! 842 1942
accurate - guaranteed perfect 842.0612
accurate - guaranteed perfect 842.0612
Memorex THINKING BACK First Time
24-hour spinning day, all night.
Fast accurate- guaranteed perfect. 842-6021
quality typing. WORD PROCESSING 841 000
APPROVABLE DAILY for all your typing needs.
Absolutely Letter Perfect Typing, Editing,
Bookkeeping Prompt, professional quality
with the best support.
Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed,
overnight sleep (under 25 hours). Call Mary
Affordable & Accurate word processing. Call Susan, 741-5981
CALL TIP TOP TYPING 120a Iowa. Experienced typists and alexor Xeron 600 memory/video logical processors.
Call Terry for your typing needs: letters, terms papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting selective dictionaries.
Computerized word processor or IBM Correcting
Electronic used by experienced typists for a
professional format for your dissertation, theses,
listings for your applications, resumes, lists,
etc. call 842-7474
Page 11
Word Processing plus transcription from cassette
Plus pickup & delivery His/Ars Acts 489-7230
Elvis could wiggle. Shakespeare could write it,
talent-typing. Call 842-4963 after 5:30 and weekends.
Excellent typing at reasonable rates. IBM Selectric
(pica). Call 842-4963 before 10 p.m.
Technical
specialist typed. Term papers, theses, all
miscellaneous. IBM Correcting Selective, Eltc
or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544, Mrs.
Wright
Fast, accurate call at reasonable prices. ISM
Correcting Selective: Call Judy at 843-6911
A face is Faint. Affordable. Flat typing. Word
composer. Typewriter. Typing service.
FEARFUL SPAFEL. TYPING SERVICE.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT
481-3510
Stop: Call 841-5942 for all of your typing needs.
P.3.1. processing. Themes, resumes, dissertation
reports. 841-7529. Bid: 841-7529. averages
841-7529.
Call now. MIF for a BH contemporary home with
$385 plus 14% discount. 849-703-6430. Great deal for
a modern kitchen with natural light.
TYPING PLUS Theses, dissertations, papers,
letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with
composition, grammar, spelling, etc. English
for foreign students or Americans.
B1-604-2
Typing, Thesis, Dissertation, Term Papers, etc.
Fast, accurate and reliable. Call 814-4357
WANTED
Female roommate to share plant 2 BI hyders $150
month plus 1.2 utilities. Pets OK: 749/207 after 5.
Female roommate wanted for 3 bedroom townhouse
841-0251
Female roommate 85 or 130 plus 1/2 utilities. Call
Nur at 841-4106.
Computer or roommate for 2 bedroom apartment
483-207. Leave message.
Leave message.
Female needed immediately to share 2 bedrooms duplex with two females. Located across from stadium $12/month plus utilities. Call 842-2445 between 5 and 7 p.m.
Female roommate needed to share 2 BLM apartment
Private room, close to campus. $650 plus 1%
room fee.
1 need 2 male roommates to share nice 1 bedroom
2 need 1 female roommate. Tent is #411 plus 7 bedrooms.
住位电话 831-6943
Housemate wanted, pleasant far east home 2 miles
away. Welcome to Avery's, $410 plus 1/2
units. Frances 842 919 5056
Male Roomset 2 need 12 HR hour to housewife 5 mm from campus $165 mn. $45 mn. Call 848-2828 Male roommate need $109 all units included. completely furnished. Harvard Square Apartments
Not among students roommates for secure, 2 HL
students, not among college students. A senior,
earl knot, priced Grad Student, Jannette牢
graduate student.
NO RENT TILL MARCH 14. Female roommate needed for 3 bed. Applicant apartment, on basement, close to library.
Non-smoking male to share a nice house. Close to campus. Own room. W. (1) 320. plus utility 470-896. BOMMATE. Male or Female to share nice duplex on Trainbridge. Own room. Fully furnished. Non-smoking female to share a nice house.
Roommate wanted to share furnished 3 bedroom at 109 Eumire. Em4-0849.
Roommate wanted 3 bedroom on bus route.
$100/mo plus 1/3 utilities. 749-5129
www.roommate.com
Roommate wanted for a 4 bedroom house close to
camp. of school parking, $155.00 per 1/4 unit
Summer Jobs. National Park Co. 21 park, 2000
Mission Point. National Park Co. 61, 2100
Report Mission Point. Min. Cc. 61, 2100 Ave.
W. 35th St., Brooklyn, NY 11204
Two female roommates to share an apartment at Jaqueline Hawker School. Utilities paid $121/month.
BURRY, examine needed for NEW FARMED
plantation; inspect buildings and equipment;
guest party宴会 (hard $250, 800 $300).
COMMON SERVICE:
I Love You!
SPREAD THE WORD!
Say it in the KANSAN!
Tell someone special how you feel with a special Valentine's Day Message. You can say it in one of two ways. Either way you'll get your message in color!
1. Say, "Be my Valentine" in 15 words or less for a mere $2.60. For each additional 5 words you pay only 25¢.
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To place your special Valentine's Day Message, drop by 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 9.
1
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
February 2.1984 Page 12
Nebraska tops OSU in overtime, 54-52
Bv United Press International
LINCOLN, Neb. — David Ponce hit a short shot jump with two seconds left in the first overtime last night and gave Oklahoma a conference victory over Oklahoma State.
The victory snapped a three-game losing streak for Nebraska as the Huskers raised their record to 12-6 overall and 2-3 in the conference. They led by a single game and 3-2 in the Big Eight. Oklahoma leads the conference with a 4-1 record.
Nebraska trailed 31-22 at halftime and the Huskers' comeback started with a four-point outburst outskirting the Cowboys 16-4 in the first four minutes and 12 seconds. Stan
Cloudy gave the Huskers a 38-35 lead by finishing the rally with a three-point play.
IN OTHER BIG EIGHT ACTION,
Kansas State, 1-4, got its first conference victory of the season by defeating Iowa State in Manhattan, 75-69.
Jonas Cody scored 20 points, including a basket and two free throws in the final 15 seconds, pacing the Wildcats over the Cyclones, 2-3.
In Columbia, Mo., Malecolm Thomas scored 20 of his game-high 28 points in the first half and lead the Missouri team to an 89-31 triumph over Colorado.
The victory broke a two-game losing streak for MU and lifted the Tigers to an undefeated season.
1984 Big 8 attendance tops last year's record
By the Kansan Staff
After 76 games, Big Eight basketball attendance is averaging nearly 100 more fans a game compared to last year's record-setting pace, according to a Big Eight report released yesterday.
Combined average attendance a game for all eight schools is 8,965 which is 73 percent of arena capacity. That figure compares to last year's average of 8,421 against the current year. The average attendance is 11,067 - 92.2 percent of capacity.
"At this point in the season, the figures are impressive. We could break last year's record if the pace is kept up," said Tracy Dittemore, associate service bureau director of the Big Fight.
Monte Johnson, KU athletic director,
said the increase didn't surprise him.
*When you have guys like Wayman Tisdale and even Mark Turgeon you're
going to have a lot of fan interest," he said. "It's a combination of a lot of schools being competitive and having fine coaches and players."
The University of Kansas has averaged 11,227 fans for 11 games, or 73 percent of the 15,200 capacity in Allen Field House. KU is second to Iowa State in average total attendance. The games are averaging 12,174 fans a game.
Terry Johnson, KU's interim ticket manager, said ticket sales had picked up since the start of the Big Eight season. The KU football team State sold out last Thursday, he said.
Oklahoma ranks third in attendance for all games with an average of 10,211. The Sooners, however, have come out on top and have a percent of the seats filled each game.
Nebraska ranks fourth with an average attendance of 9,419 followed by Missouri, 7,632, Colorado, 7,324, Kansas, 7,088, and Oklahoma State, 5,688.
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The University of Illinois has received an official inquiry from the National Collegiate Athletic Association into alleged recruiting violations in its football program, Chancellor John Cribbet announced yesterday.
"The university has cooperated fully with the NCAA and will continue to do so in the course of the review of the official inquiry," he said.
From Staff and Wire Reports
"This official inquiry follows a preliminary inquiry by the NCAA into the university's football program," Cribbat said in a statement. The NCAA has been conducting an ongoing investigation of alleged recruiting violations at the university.
Ex-Bill says Cribbs agreed to clause
SPORTS BRIEFS
BUFFALO, N.Y. — A former top official with the Buffalo Bills yesterday said running back Joe Cribbos agreed to a right-of-first refusal clause in the contract he signed with the NFL team as a rookie in 1980.
Cribs, whose four-year contract he signed with the Bills in 1980 expired yesterday, has signed a contract to play with the Stallions in 1984. The Bills, however, say his old pact contains a right-of-first refusal clause.
Stew Barber, who served as the Bills' vice president of administration from 1980 to 1983, testified at a federal court hearing held to determine whether Cribs could play pro football for the Birmingham Stallions of the United States Football League.
Illinois receives inquiry into alleged wrongdoings
Buffalo says the clause gives them a chance to match any offer Cribbis received from another team.
Barber said he conducted contract negotiations with Dr. Jerry Argovitz, Cribs' agent, in late May and June of 1980, and offered Cribbs a five-year contract with an option year.
Barber said Argovitz, however, sought a four-year pact with no option year for Cribbs.
United Press International
Attorneys for KC player want sentence reduced
$2.00 off haircut
all semester
with KUID
Silver Clipper
842 1822
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Kan — Attorneys for former American League batting champion Willie Wilson have requested a reduction in his drug-related sentence saying the athlete had an "excellent record" prior to the his federal offense and was no threat to society.
WILSON'S ATTORNEYS are asking for the 1982 batting champion's release from the remaining six weeks of his sentence because he is "no danger to society and" "any benefits of his release have now been achieved."
Last week, U.S. Magistrate J. Milton Sullivan denied Martin's December request for a sentence reduction. The judge, who sentenced all four men, said the sentence length was "valid and appropriate."
"His public humiliation is complete," attorneys said in a motion filed in federal court last week. "No one can be held responsible." That he received favored treatment.
Wilson was one of four members of the 1983 Kansas City Royals who pleaded guilty to charges stemming from a federal drug-trafficking probe originating in the Kansas City area. Jerry Martin, Willie Aikens and Wilson each pleaded guilty to attempting to possess cocaine. All were sentenced to a year in a Federal Prison with that term suspended. Wilson and Aikens were also fined $0,000 and Martin was fine $2,500.
THE MOTION ASKED that the athlete be allowed to work toward gaining his self-respect and return to a productive life.
consequences which can result from the most causal involvement with the child.
Wilson, the first baseball player sentenced to prison on a drug-related incident, was suspended from baseball for a year following his three-month prison sentence and $5,000 fine. The prison will be reviewed, however, in May.
IN MARTIN'S MOTION, attorney10
said it was imperative that the player
be allowed to participate in an exercise
program to condition himself for the
1984 baseball season. The Royals did
not renew Martin's contract.
Wilson's request said the athlete was an active and productive member of society and has been severely punished. Wilson is "a symbol of extreme
If you love dunns ... you'll love
CAROE LEWIS
10 W. 9th St.
1234 W. 23rd
842-3664
"It would appear that Mr. Wilson's sentence to prison resulted not only from the unusual sentencing considerations and retribution and rehabilitation, but also to set an example which would encourage attention, "the document said."
Wilson, immediately after he was sentenced, cursed and angryly told reporters that federal officials had "made an example out of me." He has since promised to help establish a dietary drug rehabilitation program.
The motion asked that the athlete be allowed to work toward gaining his self respect and return to a productive life. Former Co' Young Award winner Winner of the "Athlete of the Year" cocaine possession and is also serving three months of a one-year sentence.
Seventeen people were indicted or pleaded guilty last fall to charges stemming from an investigation into a Kansas City area suburb.
BOSTON — The ball is knocked away from the Celtics' Gerald Henderson, who is grabbed by Kansas City's Eddie Nail during second-quarter action at the Boston Garden. Boston won its seventh straight game last night by defeating the Kings, 119-110.
SELI
43
To Your Good Health The Student Health Service
Leonard, the former world welterweight and World Boxing Association junior middleweight champion, retired in November, 1982, after undergoing surgery to repair retinal damage to his left eye. He has not fought since he knocked Bruce Finch in the third round of a Welterweight title defense in February 1982.
He announced his comeback two months ago and will face Howard at the Centrum in Worcester, Mass., in a broadcast on cable by Home Box Office.
Watkins Hospital presents
NEW YORK — Sugar Ray Leonard, in training for his Feb. 25 comeback fight against Kevin Howard, yesterday in blast at critics of his return to the ring.
Howard, a 23-year old native of Philadelphia, is 19-4-1 with 10 knockouts. He has lost two of his last three fights, dropping a 12-round decision to Marlon Starling and a 10-round decision to Mark Medal.
By United Press International
LEONARD, WHO IS NOW 27, retired with a 32-1-0 record with 23 knockouts. His only loss was a 15-round decision to Roberto Duran in June 1880, and he averaged the defeat five months later by stopping Duran in eight rounds.
DIABETES MANAGEMENT
UPDATE
Feb. 4, 1 to 4:30 p.m.
Leonard says he's the same fighter
*
SPORTS ALMANAC
"As a fighter, I was always opposed to the use of thumbless gloves because like other fighters, I was leery of things." Leonard said. "But after using them in the gym, I saw that they didn't hamper me at all. There's greater safety and I actually feel as if I punch harder, especially to the body."
Assumption 80, AIC 82
Bloomburg 85, Cheyney 46
Bridgewater St. 84, Nichols 71
Buckleford 83, Cheyney 46
Buffalo U. 56
California Pa. 71, Frostberg 60
Carmelo-Meirie Th. 78 Lion 11
Tulsa St. 71, Tulsa Th. 69
Drew 110, Vassar 74
E Stroudsburg 79, Shippenburg 78
Garrison St. 103, Ana Maria 77
Framingham St. 103, Ana Maria 77
Frank & March, Haven 79, Haven 56
England 63, England 63
Genesee Bk. 30, Brockert 71
Gettsbury 65, Morven 74
Beerville Bk. 22
Indiana Pa. 71, Garnon 63
Jersey City St. 70, Ramage 80
King's Al. 71, Algheny 67
Mountain View 73, Algheny 73
Lafayette Le. 70, Lehigh 52
LeMoyne St. 72, John H. 68
Lewisville Cs. 72, Lewisville Cs. 65
Mercyhurst Bk. 30, Pitt-Redford 74
Merrimack 74, New Hampham College 74
McMurray St. 69, McMurray 68
Mc St. Mary's 71, Johntown 70
New Hampham St. 71, Vermont 63
New York City 71, New York City 67
Oneonta 67, Pottsdam 66
Plattsburgh Al. 81, Albany 77
Pittsburgh Cl. 71, Clarksville 65
Providence St. 88, Pittsburgh 66
BASKETBALL College Basketball Results
A workshop designed for the individual with diabetes and those interested in diabetes education:
thumbless gloves be used in his bouts.
Feb. 4, 1 to 4:30 p.m.
- home glucose management
"The only thing the same between us is the name Sugar Ray."
"PEOPLE HAVE TRIED to make comparisons to me and Sugar Ray Seales," Leonard said, referring to the former Olympic champion who went blind from eye injuries sustained in the ring. "These people are jerks. Sugar Ray Seales and I lived two different lifestylees. His injury was a lot worse than mine. He didn't do anything about the injury. He fought for five years with the eye damage. I had it taken care of immediately.
The only concession Leonard will make to the eye injury is to insist that
- insulin administration methods
- contraception, pregnancy, sexuality
- diet and exercise
"I had surgery and the eye is 100 percent," Leonard said. "I have no sense of psychology when I don't worry about training it. I don'tavor the eye. There is no change at all."
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO REGISTER:
Call 843-4455 ext. 31
- stress management
Purchase 58, W. Conn. St. 57
Queens 78, Dowling 64
Scranton 92, Valley Mountain 74
Gwagner 69, Wagner 43
Skidmore 97, Bard 40
Shipley House 88, Westminster 74
Stanford 71, Lyme 64
St Francis 77, Lyme 64
St Joseph's Me 132, New Eng. U. 87
St Thomas 71, New England 87
Stonehill 77, Abelm's 63
Wash & Jeff 50, Bethany 45
Watson 78, Bethany 45
Wm. Paterson 82, Keen 66
About 25 percent of the estimated receipts have already been collected by the committee. Hussey told Koulouris.
"Before collecting the advances, you should have asked us what our position was and what our reactions were. I will be asking children, you may find other sources for financing their activities." Koulouris said.
Belmont Abbey 49, Wingate 17,
Columbus Calli 50, Troy St. 56
Chelsea Highland 38, Sullivan St.
Florida 78, LSU 60
Groveville 77, Davis & Ekinke 84
Groveville 77, Davis & Ekinke 84
Greenbreezer 77, Methodist 67
Guilford 74, Lenny-Horse 65
Hawksborough 72, Wellington 65
James Madison 60, Old Dammon 67 (a)
K. Wesleyan 81, Wright St. 69
K. Wesleyan 81, Wright St. 69
Marshall 68, Marquette 67
N.C. Wesleyan 78, N.C. Greenbreezer 57
No Georgia 103, Georgia Cul1 63
Handlip McDonald 46, Longwood 36
Mississippi 58, Murray St. 66
Mississippi 58, Murray St. 66
Transayville 77, Centre 37
W. Va. Wesleyan 78, W. Va. Tech 77 (a)
W. Va. Wesleyan 78, W. Va. Tech 77 (a)
W. Marytown 103, Wesleyan 77
methel 84, Carrion
Bowling Green 60, E. Michigan 44
Capital 69, Otterbein 52
Charlotte 70, McKenna 13
Wilson 54, Shiffron 88
Hamline 68, Macalester 12
Hedberg 87, Kenyon 69
Irvine 76, Ivy 15
Jasum 80, Kawasaki 76
Kaminsk 74, Tsaid 69
Kansas City 73, Iowa 69
Loyola 80, Evansville 71
Mankato Bay 76, Waverley 62
Marietta 68, Denman 64
Miami (Ohio) 62, Hall 44
Miami (Ohio) 62, Hall 44
Boston 119, Kansas City 110
E. Johnson 11-27 3-4 16, Oberlund 1.3-1.1 3.3,
Mercerheave 1.3-0.2 3.9, Dread 3-14 5-15, Knight 10-18
1.3-0.2 3.9, Nelly 3-14 5-15, Nealy 1.2-0.2 3.9,
Bune 1.2-0.2 3.9, Johnson 7-9 3-17
Totals 47.97-15 17-10
Kansas City
29 18 20
Tampa Bay
23 22 33
Three-point goal - E. Johnson
Total points - 74
Total rebounds - 56
Reboundable - Kansas City (40) Neal (10), Houston (40)
Parish (10) Austin-Ashton (36) Drew (10),
Houston (40)
Maxwell 3.8-2.8-2, Birst 12-3.6-2, Parish 11-5-2,
Henderson 7.0-2.8-2, D. Ison 16-4-8, Janeigh 6-1.8-9,
McHale 10-4.2-2, Ainge 2-0-4, Buckner 1-2-0
Taylor 10-4.2-2, Tanker 6.0-2.0-2, Kansas City
Kansas City
29-22 10-3-10
29-22 10-3-10
THE COMMITTEE SAID Hussey was expecting to raise $30 million from the relay and was planning on giving 88 percent of the income to support of youth activities and the Special Olympics for handicapped children, a movement started by the late President John F. Kennedy.
Greece states it won't let LA use Olympic flame
By United Press International
ATHENS — The Greek government yesterday said that it would not allow the Olympic flame to be used for commercial purposes during the Los Angeles Summer Olympics.
"The government, expressing the sensitivity of the people, will not agree to the commercialization of the Olympic flame," said Secretary General of Sports Kimon Kouloures to William Hussey who is head of the United Nations' Organizations of the Angeles Olympics Organizing Committee.
"The flame belongs to the International Olympic Committee, but Greece is its guardian," said Koulouris. "In this unrelenting commercialization of sports and rumination of any sense of amateurism, only the flame has remained uncorrupted."
Hussey told Kouloures that the flame torch relay in the United States was to cover 11,306 miles and of that distance, 6,214 miles would be covered by runners whose sponsors would pay $3,000 a mile.
FILING DEADLINE FOR THE SPECIAL ELECTION OF 1984 FOR STUDENT BODY PRES & V.P.
If You Want To Run:
1) Pick up declaration of candidacy at Student Senate Office, B105 Kansas Union
2) Have the dean of your school or college certify your enrollment and year in that school or college.
3) Follow the guidelines set forth on the Declaration of Candidacy Form.
4) Return your declaration NO LATER THAN 4:30 p.m.Friday, February 3, 1984.
Paid for by Student Activity Fee
STUDENT SENATE TRANSPORTATION BOARD is now accepting applications for NEW BOARD members.
Individuals interested in becoming involved with the management of the KU bus and handicap transportation system should apply at the Student Senate Office.
O
Funded by Student Senate
O
1
1
}
Lawrence launch Hubbard declares candidacy Inside, p. 8
The University Daily
KANSAN
COOL
Vol. 94, No. 92 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
High 50. Low 30
Details on p.2
Friday morning, February 3, 1984
Prof and coach clash over player's grade
By MATT DeGALAN Staff Reporter
Copyright 1984, University Daily Kansan
KU basketball coach Larry Brown overstepped his authority in trying to keep a basketball player academically eligible this year. He will be one of Liberal Arts and Sciences said yesterday.
Brown also proposed that Hunter make up the course this semester. Katzman said.
David Katzman, the dean, said that Brown had asked him to raise the failing grade that freshman point guard Cedric Hunter eventually received in Katzman's American history course.
But Brown said yesterday that he hadn't pressured Katzman to change the grade, and that he had wanted to see whether Hunter's eligibility could be restored. Brown also said that he attended the meeting at Hunter's request.
Hunter said Brown was there for support.
HUNTER'S APPEAL was justified, Brown said, because Katzman allowed Hunter to enroll in the class a month after classes began. Brown said he was surprised that Hunter's background and "special circumstances."
---
Hunter said Brown was there for support.
"I just wanted somebody to go in with me," Hunter said. "He didn't really say that much."
cause of my responsibility toward all the student athletes under my charge.
I did not go to see Professor Katzman to put pressure on him into changing a grade. I came because Cedric asked me to and I also came be-
Larry Brown. January 26,1984
David Katzman, January 19, 1984
From our meeting and from your letter I would infer that in this case compassion has only one interpretation: award the student a passing grade.
PETER J. BUSH
While in high school in Omaha, Neb., Hunter had difficulty making the minimum 2.0 grade
... Unlike you, I am concerned about the integrity of our academic standards at the University of Kansas.
point average to be eligible for an athletic scholarship under NCAA rules.
Hunter started eight games last semester but was declared academically ineligible this season.
CONTROVERSY OVER HUNTER'S grade first beaten when Katzman, Brown and Hunter score 15-14.
Katzman said Brown asked him to give Hunter a D-minus for the course and to allow him to make
This would have given Hunter the eight hours of passing grades necessary to be eligible to play
Brown sent a letter to Katzman expressing displeasure at Katzman's inflexibility. The letter
accused Katzman of lacking compassion for Hunter and of being prejudiced against athletes. Days later, Katzman put the controversy before the University administration.
In passing Katzman sent copies of his letter to Deanall Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs; David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs; Robert Lineberry, dean of the College; and three other professors.
He sent copies of Brown's letter with a letter of his own. Katzman's letter, dated Jan. 19, described Brown's letter as "insulting, intemperate and ill-conceived."
"FROM YOUR MEETING and from your letter I would infer that in this case compassion has only one interpretation: award the student with a passing grade." Katzman the letter said.
According to University regulations, the only grounds for changing a grade is to correct a clerical error, said James Carothers, chairman of the Academic Committee. Carthers received one of the copies.
In his letter, Katzman said. "Your request to give a student a passing grade merely because he requires it for athletic eligibility is outrageous."
BROWN RESPONDED on Jan. 26 with a second letter and sent it to the same administrators and professors, saying that Katzman's observation accurately reflected what happened at the meeting.
See GRADES, p. 7, col. 1
Appeals board fails to decide parking dispute Catholic center plan to expand is flawed, some neighbors say
By SHARON BODIN Staff Reporter
Five hours of public debate last night failed to convince the Lawrence Board of Zoning Appeals to reach a decision on a parking lot dispute in a lawrence Lawrence Catholic Center and area residents.
The board voted 2-1, with one abstention and two members absent not to allow the center to continue its expansion project without additional parking. However, the action was not final because the six-member board could not reach a majority.
The dispute has pitted residents of the
creative association against official officials of the Catholic center.
Last March, the center announced its plans to build a church and chapel, and to expand the existing student center, at Crescent and Engel Gardens. After the closingings, the center proposed a 125-space parking lot.
Residents in the area disputed the center's estimate for parking needs and argued for a tax.
David Rodwell, chairman of the board, said that City Attorney Gerry Cooley would have to file a complaint.
Tuesday night, Cooley will present his opinion to the Lawrence City Commission, which will discuss the site plan and also make a recommendation to the zoning appeals board.
The center's proposal for constructing three buildings at the site is the main conflict.
in its decision, the board said that it did not agree with preliminary interpretations of city ordinances governing the number of required parking spaces for the church.
Professors stalk justice after hunting outing
B. G. Barr, president of the neighborhood association, appealed the planning staff's interpretation, saying that the church's site plan did not conform to city ordinances.
Barr said that the student center, if expanded, would be a school, not a church. He also said that parking would be inadequate under the center's proposal.
The city's planning staff said that the center's proposal included enough parking. The plan is based on a 4-1 ratio to the number of seats in a main sanctuary of the church.
The St. Lawrence Center was able to persuade the board to decide that the student center, with proposed expansion, would be classified as a church, not as a school.
Because of the decision, the center will not need a special permit from the commission for use.
Schools require the special permit, according to city ordinances, but churches do not.
Neighbors said that the center intended to use the building as a school, but the zoning board refused. The board would use the building for religious instruction. As such, the center would not be classified as a school.
The planning commission deferred action last week on a plat approval for the site because the center had requested more time for negotiations. Controversy about the center's intent for the use of the student center took much of the commission meeting time.
John Nitcher, attorney for the neighborhood association, said that it appeared the board should wait for the city attorney's opinion about the number of seats in the student center.
By TODD NELSON Staff Reporter
Dean Burkhead, attorney for the center, said that he had no comment on the board's action.
The center's proposal is also being considered by the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Committee.
Staff Reporter
On a mid-November morning, nine pairs of boots crunched slowly across the rolling hills of a frozen north-central Kansas field.
Nine hunters, chilled by a brisk north wind, scrutinized the hedgerows, the stubble in the rows, and the overcast sky for any sign of pheasant on the opening day of the 1982
As the afternoon faded to evening, Cloud County officials arrested all nine members of the hunting party, including two professors from the department and three others them with illegally hunting deer out of season.
"ON THE FIRST day of the season, all sorts of things can happen," Peter Casagrande said, recalling the events of that day 15 months ago.
News of the charges against Casagrande, professor of English, and Gaylord Richardson, associate professor of architecture and urban design, sparks a debate about what he accepts a national story.
But news has traveled slowly of the Kansas Fish and Game investigation that led to their dismissal.
Casagrande said that newspapers in lawrence Topek, and Kansas City, and sarasota Palm Beach, metropolitan areas.
story of their arrest. It was also broadcast on a Kansas City television station.
USA TODAY ALSO ran the story, Casagrande said, bringing the story to the professors' relatives, friends and former students across the country.
The damage done by publicity of that day has never cleared. Richardson said.
Even so, the two decided not to take legal action against the Fish and Game Commission, Casagrande said, because they supported the commission's role in protecting wildlife, and because the commission director had been cooperative in reviewing the
Instead of suing, the professors decided to seek exemption from the Fish and Game Department.
"We decided not to sue because both of us are long-time hunters and fishermen."
"We finally decided it would be better to get a statement clearing both of us rather than suing and damaging the Fish and Game Commission."
BOTH PROFESSORS said that clarifying the situation had cost them several hundred dollars apiece in legal fees and transportation costs.
two trucks and arrested the men without an explanation. Casagrande said.
But the arresting officer allowed the hunters to clean their guns before confiscating them. Casgrande said, making the
"We were getting ready to go home," Casagrande said, "and the authorities came back and that's when the whole thing started."
The nine hunters were held from 4 p.m. until after midnight, Casagrande said, in the kitchen of the county law enforcement center in Concordia.
oursuit a officers confiscated their guns and some hunting clothes as evidence, evidence of the attack.
Richardson said, "There isn't very much you can do when a law enforcement official tells you you're going with him. We were just told to accompany him."
ALL THE HUNTERS were arrested, Casagrande said, despite the confession of the man who had shot the deer, who said that none of the others had been involved. Three farmers in Cloud County also said that they had seen the lone hunter shoot the deer.
The authorities arrested them because sometime during the day of Nov. 13, 1982, one hunter, separate from the others, had shot a deer.
i want to get away from the whole mess," said Swenson, who in the last three months has twice been declared student body president and has twice been denied that office.
Swenson won't run in election
Saying that he couldn't face another campaign, Scott Swenson yesterday announced that he would not run again for student body president.
See HUNTING, p. 5, col. 5
On Jan. 5, Chancellor Gene A. Budig called for a new student body presidential election. An appeal is still pending that could make Swenson president again.
By CINDY HOLM Staff Reporter
SWENSON SAID THAT because of time, money and grades, he would not file a declaration of candidacy today. Dennis Strickland, his running mate, will not file either
Staff Reporter
CHARLES LAWHORN, who filed the appeal on behalf of Kevin Walker, Momentum's presidential candidate, said that Momentum had asked the board to declare Walker the winner of the election or to call for a new election that would include Momentum on the ballot.
Budig will have to approve any action of the board. David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday that he thought the chancellor would support the board's
Although they had collected the required 500 student signatures requesting their names on the ballot and had gathered pledges of support, Swenson said, they decided at the last minute not
Acting on an appeal filed by the Momentum Coalition, the judicial board in December recommended that the chancellor order a new election because the November election had been "traught with inconsistencies and ambiguities."
Problems will plague any of the candidates from last fall who run again. Swenson said, even if the candidate won, they would not be re-elected.
The filing deadline is 5 p.m., today
Swenson said that among other things, he could not afford to sacrifice another semester's grade point average. Two semesters as the campus director of the Associated Students of Kansas and one semester campaigning had taken a toll on his studying, he said.
Swenson could still become president if the University of Kansas Judicial Board accepts an appeal that he tiled on Jan. 26 that asked the board to rescind its recommendation for a new institution.
"It might be better to have totally new candidates," he said.
"ITS A MATTER of knowing what we're here for," he said. "We were students before we were seniors."
would be made to the board's ruling Swenson's appeal objects to the board's ruling
See SWENSON, p. 5, col. 1
Deficit could bankrupt U.S., Stockman warns Congress
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Budget director David Stockman warned Congress yesterday that the nation faced bankruptcy unless something was done about the federal deficit.
He and the administration's two other top economic advisers agreed that President Reagan will consider less military spending than he did in his 1960 budget, but disagreed on the fate of tax increases.
Stockman, testifying in the Senate Budget Committee, said, "We're in the same position that many companies are in when they are on the eve of Chapter 11 (the bankruptcy law)."
WITHOUT ACTION TO reduce the deficits, net interest interest payments on the national debt minus interest earnings on federal trust funds in 1980s and 1980s, and I don't think there's any on this
committee who can think of enough taxes or enough spending to cut to even offset that explosion of debt service costs."
Stockman, along with the administration's two other top economic advisors — Treasury Secretary Donald Regan and Council of Economic Advisers Chairman Martin Feldstein — said Congress must go beyond the $100 billion "down payment" President Reagan has recommended for reducing budget deficits over the next three years.
House Democratic leader Jim Wright of Texas said a meeting has been set for next Wednesday.
Leading Democrats, who initially were cautious about Reagan's invitation to work with his advisers on the problem, countered Wednesday by offering to double the president's bid and draft a plan for $200 billion in spending cuts and tax increases.
See BUDGET, p. 5, col. 1
Bryan Bell and Lawrence woman intend to marry, application shows
A marriage license application filed last week for Bryan Keith Bell, convicted of murdering Lawrence restaurant owner Frank Seurer Sr., was rejected and contends to marry a 27-year-old lawrence woman.
By the Kansan Staff
"Everyone will be asking why this is happening," Kathy Lee Lawson, the woman, said yesterday. "But I find Bryan to be more of a man, even in jail, that most of the men I know."
A Douglas County District Court jury last November convicted Bell of the Seurer murder. The Lawrence restaurant owner was the father of KU quartarback Frank Seurer Jr.
Former Associate District Judge Mike Elwell sentenced Bell to 15 years to life.
After sentencing, Bell was taken to the Kansas Reception and Diagnostic Center in Topeka. He is no longer there, Lawson said, but she would not comment on where he is now.
On the morning of Aug. 2, Bell, who had been fired in June from the restaurant, went to the restaurant to ask for his job back, Bell testified during the trial.
A spokesman at the diagnostic center did not know where Bell had been transferred.
Bell was also convicted of aggravated burglary in connection with the theft of $400 from Seurer's restaurant, Pop's Bar-B-Que, 2214 Yale Road, where the murder occurred.
Before he was arrested and charged with the murder on Aug. 17, Bell went back to work at the restaurant, records show.
Bell testified that while talking to Seurer on Aug. 2 he thought he heard Seurer say, "I can't understand why you blacks have trouble managing your money."
Seurer then bumped into Bell, who grabbed a pickle knife and stabbed him twice, according to
Steven Purcell/KANSAN
Bell was sentenced on Dec. 14 for both the second-degree murder charge and the aggravated burglary charge.
Emergency workers slowly carry Wayne Starkey, a facilities operation maintenance man, down the steps of Jolliffe Hall. While doing routine maintenance yesterday afternoon, Starkey began complaining of chest pains. He was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and was later transferred to St. Francis Hospital in Topeka, where he was in intensive care early today.
HALL
1
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, February 3, 1984
NATION AND WORLD News briefs from UPI Official letter calls Walesa a corrupt publicity-seeker
WARSAW, Poland — The Polish government denounced former Solidarity union leader Lech Walesa yesterday as a corrupt and lazy publicity-seeker in a 19-page open letter published in newspapers nationwide.
in the sharpest and most detailed attack against Walesa since he rose to international prominence three years ago, he was accused of violating Polish law and becoming a millionaire at the expense of the workers he represented.
In the northern port of Gdansk, Walesa said the government was engaging in "senseless nolemics."
The letter, which was signed by Zdizsiwil Jurek, an aide to Jaruzelski, said that the former Solidarity official's meetings with underground leaders were "statements contrary to the interests of the state." It hinted that Walesa eventually might be prosecuted.
Guerrillas overrun U.S. oil complex
KHARTOUM, Sudan — Secessionist guerrillas overran the U.S. operation Chevron Oil Company complex at Bentiu in southern Sudan yesterday, killing three foreign workers and wounding at least seven others. Western diplomats said.
The dead were identified as a British oil worker, a Kenyan and a Filipino. One American was also slightly injured in the attack that took place just after a1 a.m. in Bentiu.
About 20 guerrillas crept into the lightly guarded drilling area, 500 miles southwest of the capital of Khoumart, and stowed houses from which they fled.
The predominantly Christian guerrillas are seeking independence for southern Sudan from the Muslim-dominated government.
Sudanese President Jaafar Numeiri contends that the guerrillas are armed by Libya.
New jobless claims lowest since '79
WASHINGTON — The government will not release the January unemployment rate until today, but the administration received good news yesterday when the weekly report of unemployment benefits showed that new claims dropped to 340,000 during the third week in January, the lowest total since June 1979.
Saturday, the lowest total for the week
The Labor Department said the seasonally adjusted total for the week
ended Jan. 21 was 65,000 less than the previous week, and the lowest
since June 2. 1979, when the total was 335,400.
Although the budget that President Reagan proposed to Congress this week predicts further declines in unemployment in 1984, it still predicts unemployment will stay above the 7.4 percent rate which existed when Reagan took office.
The budget projected average unemployment of 7.8 percent in 1984, with a 7.7 percent level in the final quarter.
Researchers develop fast herpes test
CHICAGO — A seldom-used test can positively confirm the presence of herpes simplex in two minutes, University of Michigan Medical Center.
The procedure — a Tzanck smear — can be done in a doctor's office. A positive Tzanck smear had a 94.1 percent correlation with positive cultures confirming the presence of herpes simplex in skin lesions, researcher Alvin R. Solomon and colleagues said.
"Our study suggests that a positive Tzanck preparation is a helpful, accurate, economical device for the early diagnosis of herpes simplex," they said in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
It slices, it dices, it goes bankrupt
CHICAGO — Ronco Teleproducts Inc., producer of such household gadgets as the Veg-O-Matic and the Pocket Fisherman, has filed for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the federal bankruptcy laws, the Chicago Tribune reported yesterday.
Besides the Veg-O-Matic kitchen aid and the Pocket Fisherman, a mini fishing kit, Ronco also manufactures such gadgets as Mr. Microphone and a device that mixes eggs inside the shells. The products are heavily advertised in low-budget television commercials.
Study links bone disease to exercise
SAN FRANCISCO - Young women who exercise heavily and stop menstruating risk developing a crippling bone disorder, results of a study indicated yesterday.
Reporting in the Journal of the American Medical Association, scientists from the University of California in San Francisco said the surprising results showed women athletes who stopped menstruating risk developing osteoporosis — bone mineral loss.
Osteoporosis can cause curvature of the spine and can be fatal if bones become susceptible to fracture. Osteoporosis kills about 20,000 Americans each year. It was previously associated with women past menopause.
Reporters will find no free lunch
MANCHESTER, N.H. — The New Hampshire Democratic Party is charging reporters $25 each to attend a news briefing tomorrow on delegate selection and the campaigns of the Democratic presidential candidates.
State Democratic Chairman George Bruno defended the fee Wednesday. "There's no such thing as a free lunch. If you want a free lunch, so visit the Republican Party," he said.
All eight Democratic presidential candidates have been invited to the Feb. 7 briefing, but were not asked to pay because they are considered panelists, narty officials said.
New Hampshire Secretary of State William Gardner, a Democrat, had been scheduled to speak at the session, but withdrew when he learned reporters would be charged.
WEATHER FACTS
30.24 30.00 29.77 FREEZING (LOW)
SEATTLE CENTER MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON
COLD CHICAGO NEW YORK
SAN FRANCISCO DENVER
LOS ANGELES FAIR ATLANTA
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50 32 32 50 70
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WASHINGTON — House Democrats, hoping to defuse charges they are playing politics with foreign affairs, yesterday moved to tone down a resolution calling for the prompt removal of U.S. Marines from Leba-
Because of a reporter's error, a story in yesterday's Kansan about the Kansas Integrated Personnel Payroll System incorrectly reported that the School of Journalism was missing two payroll checks. One check was missing from the payroll of the University Daily Kansan.
Democrats tone down on pullout
Rep. Steven Solarz, D-N.Y., said Democrats on the Foreign Affairs Committee planned to rewrite the resolution to take out "gratuitous" partisan criticism of the administration and make clear that U.S. air and naval forces should remain in the area to support the Beirut government.
By United Press International
CORRECTION
He said the "bottom line" would still
Solarz said the Democrats did not want the withdrawal resolution to be seen "as a particularly partisan endeavor," and did not intend that the United States abandon the government of Lebanese leader Amin Gemelav.
IT APPEARED THERE would be
surrounded during the few days
on the lampshade, the result
be a call for President Reagan to
marine the Marines "from
the end of Lechner."
Administration officials and Republicans on the panel have charged the Democrats with playing politics and warned that the withdrawal demand included Syria and other factions opposed to the Lebanese government.
Rep. William Broomfield, R-Mich, ranking Republican on the Foreign Affairs Committee, said earlier he would offer an alternative when the resolution came to the floor.
"O'Nell aid Christopher Matthews said, "Aiding and abetting is legal language for being a traitor it wasn't an accident."
MEANWHILE, O'NEILL's chief spokesman accused the White House of branding Democrats as traitors. He noted that presidential spokesman Larry Speakes had declared that efforts to persuade the president to withdraw the Marines from Lebanon "aid and abet" Syria and "others bent on a destructive role in the Middle East."
Challenger, crew prepare for lift-off
By United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Ground crews last night started the final checklist for today's blastoff of the shuttle Challenger that will carry five astronauts on a flight to the Buckley Observatory and will be needed to build a space station.
The countdown rolled along flawlessly and forecasters predicted "super weather" for the scheduled launch time of 7 a.m. CST.
Technicians rolled back the shuttle's launchpad scaffolding and started final preparations for filling Challenger's external tank with a half-million gallons of supercoal liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen.
ASTRONAUTS VANCE BRAND,
Robert "Hog" Gibson, Robert Stewart,
Jeremy
Bruce McCandless and Ronald McNair had a medical checkup, dined on steak and potatoes and turned in early. They were to be awakened at 2:45 a.m. CST to get ready to board the shuttle for their eight-day mission.
Challenger will have six other passengers — white rats named Debra, Alfred, Alice, Ben, Kawasaki and Willard. Three have been injected with an arthritis-causing serum in an anticoagulant device that provides relief from severe arthritis.
The highlight of the 10th stuttle mission will be the unethered spacewalks that McCandless and Stewart will make with the $10 million jetpacks. La Gen James Abrahamson, the backpacker, yesterday the backpacks — called manned maneuvering units — will be used to capture and repair a crippled
sun-watching satellite in April, and are among the tools that will be needed to assemble a permanent space station
"We'RE LOOKING REAL good for tomorrow," said Gene Thomas, shuttle project engineer, who praised the ground crew for being able to stay on schedule despite earlier problems with the shuttle's auxiliary power units, which are crucial for launch and landing.
Two of the turbines caught fire during the landing of Columbia on the last shuttle mission.
In addition to the daring spacewalks, the Challenger astronauts are to launch communications satellites for Indonesia and Western Union and rehearse rendezvous maneuvers to be used on the next shuttle flight to repair the broken satellite called Solar Max.
Shells kill 9 wound 35 in Beirut
A French member of the multinational peacekeeping force was among the wounded in the fighting which sent shells crashing into the windows of the U.S. Ambassador's residence in suburban Burabba.
By United Press International
There were no reports of American casualties and U.S. Marines were not involved in the clashes, although U.S. military advisers were present. Ministry near suburban Baadab which it came under bombardment.
The clash, accompanied by army and Christian militia skirmishes with Shite Muslim militiamen in the slums of south Beirut, sent thousands of civilians in Christian and Muslim sectors into bomb shelters with thunderous booms echoing through the capital.
Druse Muslim rebels in the Shou mountains and the army began trading heavy artillery fire around 1 p.m., killing three Druse villagers and a man in Christian east Beirut, reports from both sides said.
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Government troops and Muslim rebels engulfed southern Beirut in fierce artillery attacks on the city, killing nine people and wounding 35.
A broadcast by state television called the fighting "a wide-scale military escalation" and state radio warned citizens to stay indoors.
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS!
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents
PULOBOLIS DANCE THEATRE
Thursday, February 16, 1984 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Thursday, February 16, 1984 $ 18.00 m. Roche Addisonian
$ 75.00 & $ 12.00 $ 10.00 *D* & $ 5.00 *S* & $ 4.00 Senior Citizens
& Other Students $ $ 7.75
*KU students must show ID at time of purchase and at the door the night of performance
MOLLY'S NOT DEAD, 1978
MOLLY'S NOT DEAD, 1978 intermission
INTERMISSION SCRIBBLE. 1983
This performance is part of the 1984 University Arts Festival, partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee. Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association, this program is made possible by support from the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Arts Council through their participation in the Mid-America Arts Alliance. a regional arts organization.
STABAT MATER, 1983
intermission
DAY TWO, 1980
K
PILOBOLUS DANCE THEATRE
WSU-KU SPECIAL HOT SPOT SUNDAY
WATCHING THE GAME AT GAMMONS ON OUR FOUR BIG VIDEO SCREENS IS BETTER THAN BEING THERE! WE'VE GOT A MID-COURT SEAT WAITING FOR YOU AT THE HOT SPOT.
- FREE BEER AT GAME TIME FOR HALF HOUR OR UNTIL THE KEG RUNS DRY.
- WIN OR LOSE, HALF PRICE FOOD AFTER THE GAME UNTIL 5PM.
- WHEN THE JAYHAWKS WIN (AND WE KNOW THEY WILL) A FREE KEG WILL BE FLOWING UNTIL IT'S GONE—STARTING ½ HOUR AFTER THE GAME IS OVER.
SEE YOU THIS SUNDAY
GAMMONS SNOWIES
VIDEO
23rd & Ousdahl
So. Hills Center 842-3977
.
University Daily Kansan, February 3. 1984
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS From Area Staff and Wire Reports Team of Paola students wins College Quiz Bowl
"The Committee for the Annexation of the Southern Hemisphere," made up of students from Paola, narrowly defeated "Fists of Fury" last night to win the University of Kansas College Quiz Bowl Championship.
CASH, consisting of senior Don Wilbur, sophomore Mike Hart, sophomore Amy Brown and graduate student Brian Wright won when the other team gave a wrong answer.
With one minute remaining in the final round, "Fists of Fury," made up of students from Wichita and Topeka, answered incorrectly a bonus
The correct answer was Alexander II
CASH will go on to the regional tournament, Feb 17-18, in Warrenburg. Mo.
"Fury" captain Jackie Aaron, Wichita graduate student, shouted, "Nicholas II," as the incorrect answer to the question: "Who abolished serfdom in Russia in 1861 and introduced the first elected institutions of local government and was finally killed by a bomb in 1881?"
Truck overturns after brakes fail
A truck overturned yesterday on the West Turnpike Access Road after its brakes failed, a police report said.
The report said that the driver swerved to the left at the intersection of Princeton Boulevard to avoid hitting a car that was stopped at a traffic signal. The truck then overturned, dumping a load of dirt on the West Turmike Access Road, the report said.
The driver of the truck was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and then sent to a Lawrence doctor's office for treatment of minor injuries to her face and wrist.
County won't help finance airport
The Douglas County Commission will not help the city finance a new terminal for the Lawrence Municipal Airport, county commissioners said yesterday at a breakfast meeting for the city and county commissioners.
Although the county commissioners agreed that the terminal was needed, County Commissioner Beverly Bradley said that the county's decreasing tax revenue would prevent it from providing funds for the new terminal.
Bradley said that the tax revenue was decreasing because the Kansas Legislature had passed a bill in 1983 that removed the personal property tax from farm machinery.
Drop-add period will end Tuesday
The last day students may add classes and enroll is Tuesday.
However, some departments have a different schedules for adding and enrolling, and the last day to add a class in some departments has already passed. Gary Thompson, director of student records, said that final dates are listed in the timetable in each department's section.
The last day to drop a full-semester class is Feb. 14.
After Feb. 14 students may drop classes and will receive a "W" or an "E" depending on what class is dropped. Thompson said
He said a student enrolled in a class outside of his major must drop according to the policy of the department that teaches the class.
ON THE RECORD
COMPUTER SOFTWARE worth about $150 was stolen Tuesday morning from Nichols Hall, KU police said. Thieves apparently walked into the open building and stole the software, police said. Police have no suspects.
CANDY AND MONEY worth about $130 was stolen yesterday morning from a vending machine in Marvin Hall, police said. Police have no suspects.
WHERE TO CALL
Do you have a news tip or photo idea? If so, call us at 644-8410. If your idea or press release deals with campus or area news, ask for Jeff Taylor, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, check with Christy Entertainment editor. For sports news, speak with Jeff Craven, sports editor.
For other questions or complaints, ask for Doug Cunningham, editor, or Don Knox, managing editor.
The number of the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising,
is 864-4358
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Two months after receiving an official complaint, the Lawrence Police Department yesterday issued a written policy that outlines four situations that permit the department to use videotape in its investigations.
Features:
The guidelines were established in response to a complaint about police videotaping practices by the Lawrence chapter of the American Civil Liberties Act.
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By JILL CASEY Staff Reporter
Police set videotaping guidelines
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The department based the formally drafted policy on federal guidelines that Lawrence police have used since 1995. Lawrence's assistant chair of police.
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POLICE CAN VIDEOTAPE traffic accidents, Olin said, for use in police academy training and they can film certain evidence at the scene of a crime. Students must watch when "probable cause suggests impending violence," the guidelines state.
- Fixed Decimal * Print Capabilities
The complaint, presented to Olin by Daniel Wildcat, the president of the ACLU chapter, questioned the filming by Lawrence police of a protest sponsored by Latin American Solidarity in November.
In a written statement to the police in November, Wildcat said, "It's our feeling that the practice of video surveillance of a political demonstration intent, has a chilling effect on the exercise of free speech and peaceful assembly."
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WILDCAT MET WITH Olin in November. The police department said then that it would issue a written set of guidelines outlining the situations and types of public gatherings police may videtote.
The police who video-taped the November demonstration did so because a city ordinance was being violated, Olin said. One of the demonstrators was using a bullhorn, which is a violation of a city ordinance, he said.
No mention is made within the guidelines of the free political express-
The guideline states that videotaping is proper when a city ordinance, state law, or regulation directs it.
Olin said that only two demonstrations, the protest last November and a similar march in October of 1979, have been reported as surveillance by Lawrence police.
Expired sherbet gets a raspberry
Residents at McCollim Hall turned a cold shoulder toward their dessert last night when they discovered that the expiration date on the sherbet they were eating had passed months ago.
Residents in the hall cafeteria quickly soured when they saw the evicted dates and took the sheerbout on their trays.
By TODD NELSON
A few diners shrieked as they read the expired dates on their sherbet containers.
David Swartz, Fairbanks, Alaska, junior, said that the data on his Stormwater container was March 1982.
only saw two others and all of those were out of date by at least a year." he said.
AT THE SAME time, cafeteria employees quickly removed the rest of the outdated containers from the
Six diners returned to the dessert counter in the cafeteria to complain about the dated sherbet.
However, Swartz and other residents said that the shebet looked and tasted all right.
Lenoir Ekdahl, director of food services at McCollim, said that she didn't notice the dates on the menu because she hadn't seen them.
she said that the All Star Dairy, 1800 W. Second St., had delivered the sheer to the hall this week.
IN A FREZER, Ekdahl found about 18 containers of raspberry shebert that had expired in October 1983.
rasberry sherbet that had expired in October 1983. "There really isn't anything wrong with it," she said,
"There really isn't anything wrong with it," she said,
"but there shouldn't be a date like that on it."
didn't have to be a lie because it
Ekdahl said that the sherbet had not spoiled because it
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McCollum Hall caterina workers yesterday served shebet that bore expiration dates of nearly two years ago. The shebet came from the All Star Dairy, 1800 W. Second St.
had been stored in the freezer after delivery.
An All Star Dairy spokesman said last night that he could not comment on the problem.
Brandy Kennedy, Topeka junior, said that he had eaten pineapple sheberet that had an expiration date of May 1983. Marta Morales, Guatemala sophomore, said that her raspberry sheberet had the same date.
According to the container lids, the sherbet was made by J.I.C. Manufacturing in Hutchinson.
Clay Smith, Lawrence sophomore, said that he had a raspberry sherbert dated October 1983. However, he said that the sherbet was "more fun."
Committee passes traffic penalty bill
By ROB KARWATH
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — After a sluggish start, a bill that would toughen the penalties for violators of Kansas traffic laws speed downtown on its way to the Senate floor.
But the bill endorsed by the Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee is less severe than a proposal originally submitted from the Kansas Highway Patrol and the state Department of Revenue.
THE RECOMMENDED bill would use a penalty point system to establish mandatory license suspension for persons receiving eight or more points. The bill would assign values from 1 to 12 points to driving offenses, depending on the severity of the offense. Drivers receiving more than eight points would receive a five-day suspension for each point.
If approved by the Senate, the proposal would then go to the House.
Under the plan, serious offenses.
The authors of the bill, officials of the highway patrol and the Revenue Department, had originally proposed a 10-day suspension for each point. But the council voted to debate, the committee voted 5-4 to cut the suspension periods in half.
worth six or more points, would stay on the driver's record for five years. Minor offenses would remain for two years.
STATE SEN, Joe Norvell, D-Hays,
proposed the change because he said
that 10 days for each point would make
sense. But he would be difficult for violators to obey.
The courts and the Revenue Department now share the responsibility for dealing with fraud.
Norvell also said that cutting the suspension time in half would bring Kansas in line with uniform suspension standards. U.S. D. Department of Transportation.
licenses. For more than two weeks the committee has heard testimony that the current system is not uniform and does not fit off with the minimum punishment.
THE BILL WOULD take away the court's power over licenses and give that power to the Revenue Department. The department would keep track of violations and would restrict, suspend or evoke licenses using the point system.
But the courts would still be responsible for convicting violators and handing out fines and prison sentences. Judges would retain the power to punish offenders beyond the mandatory punishments issued by the Revenue Department in cases where they believed it was necessary.
The sole exception to the point system would be the second and third offences for drunk driving. A first-time driver is not punished like any, other violation.
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OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
February 3,1984 Page 4
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daykan Kaman (USPS 805460) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart-Fint Hall, Lawrence, KA 60043, daily during the school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer session, excluding Fridays and Sundays. The student payer must be a student enrolled in the university by mail are $15 for six months or $27 in Deudgean County and $18 for six months or $34 for an outside the county Student subscriptions are $34 paid through the student activity费 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to USPS: 917-696-1111
DOUG CUNNINGHAM
DOUG CUNNINGHAM
Editor
DON KNOX
Managing Editor
SARA KEMPIN
Editorial Editor
JEFF TAYLOR
Campus Editor
ANDREW HARTLEY
News Editor
PAUL JESS
General Manager and News Adviser
DAVE WANAMAKER
Business Manager
CORT GORMAN
JILL MITCHELL
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Eliminate waste
Billion-dollar defense budgets and expensive high-technology weapons are only the tools that allow a nation to protect its citizens and interests.
The people who supply, purchase and manage these tools are the most important element in the defense of a nation.
Almost one-third of President Reagan's proposed $925 billion budget for 1985 is for defense. At the same time, the deficit will rise to an all-time high of $180 billion, and many domestic aid programs will receive substantial cuts.
Although building a strong military that will deter war should remain a high priority for the United States, the deficit has to be eradicated soon.
Also, defense spending must be balanced with the need to provide services for Americans - poor, hungry, unemployed, old and young.
Before pumping more money into defense, the United States should carefully consider and limit the
purchase of new equipment for the military.
Most of the weapons systems now being purchased come with ridiculously high price tags. Defense industries substitute technological gimmicks for honest dependability. They are brought with waste and are content to pass the costs onto the government.
The federal government is not solely responsible for defense. American industry must revive its long-lost pursuit of innovation at low cost and provide economical materials for defense.
Inefficient management is not limited to American industry. The military, from Pentagon officials to newly inducted recruits, must strive to squeeze the most out of themselves and their equipment.
A rerun of 'Leave it to Beaver'
It may have been my imagination, but I could have sworn that parts of President Reagan's State of War were from old "Liam to Reagan" scripts.
Now, I am not saying that the president's speechwriters are media plagiarists, or that they quoted yerbatim from the show.
As a matter of fact, mixed in with Ward and June Cleaver were shades of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson, leading me to believe that the similarities in
THE MONSTER
HELAINE KASKEL
Staff Columnist
scripts were merely coincidental proofs of television's influence upon traditional American values.
With his usual endearing naivete, the president entreated Americans to return to the traditional values that made this country great.
RE PHOTO OF PRES.
making CONTACT
with SECRET
SPEECH WRITER
and WARDROBE
AiDe.
HELLO MISS LANDERS,
CAN I WEAR MY RED
HUNTIN JACKET?
SMELLTON.
Just as long as the Beaver said a few words to somebody up there every day, even if Beaver's teacher, Miss Landers, decided that on Monday that somebody was Bud-
Wouldn't June Cleaver be happy if, for instance, the Beaver was reminded at school each morning to say his prayers? And it wouldn't really matter what kind of prayers they were, would it?
There is no doubt in my mind that June and Ward and Ozzie and Harriet would pay all the residuals from all their reruns to listen to Reagan make the 'm' in America stand for morality once again.
And although he spared his audience the rhetoric of baseball, hot dogs, apple pie and Chevrolet, Reagan's words transported me to a simpler time, a time when affirmative action meant raising your hand at the Yea meeting. PMA meeting was the only hazard waste was the yellowing of a fresh snowfall by the neighbors' German shepherd.
dhah, and on Tuesday, Mohammed,
and on Thursday, Jesus, well, that
would be A-GK with June and Ward
And even though Ward's just an old softy, sometimes when the Beaver gets out of line, he could use a little back-to-basics discipline. And if Miss Landers spanks the Beaver a bit too sound, well, the Beaver was doing something wrong to begin with, wasn't he?
And about tuition tax credits — before the Nelsons and the Cleavers went off the air, both families had noticed that the neighborhood schools were — well — not going downhill, so to speak. Let's just say they are becoming overly diversified.
could just forget that new car, and the automatic washer and dryer, and the vacation in the Pocosons that was going to be a second honeymoon. Now that's no way to keep the little woman happy, is it?
And Ward and Ozzie, being the shrewd businessmen they were, realized that if the money for private school tuition was going to come out of the family savings, they
The Cleavers and the Nelsons also give their staunch support to the rest of the "traditional values" package offered in Reagan's State of the Union address: combat child pornography, sexual abuse, family violence, career criminals, organized crime and drug trafficking.
Of course, a few of these terms had to be explained to the ladies before they would give their endorsement, even though at the last Bridge Night Nancy had told them about the television commercials that caused the hazardous chemical substances. (June and Harriet had thought she
was talking about a new and potentially dangerous weed killer.
But even they don't dare talk about it at the New Suburban Republicans meetings, the Nelsons and the Cleavers disagree with the president on one point — shhhh! + abortion.
You see, Wally didn't really know what he was doing, because when they put the prayer back in the schools, they took out the sex education and somehow he got a girl well, in the family way.
And even though she seems like a nice girl, well, the whole town would know about it, and there's no other girl she could wear white at the wedding.
But the Cleavers do have one consolation. They guess that their boy has a lot in common with the man he wasn't really know what he was doing.
A call for negotiations
In the fall President Reagan sent the Marines into Grenada, where they cleaned up quickly enough to make the Sandinistas flinch.
Last summer, 5,000 U.S. soldiers began seven months of war games in Honduras, close enough to the Nicaraguan border to make that government sweat.
Since that time, the Nicaraguan government has expelled many of its Cuban civilian advisers such as doctors, teachers and construction workers.
The New York Times has reported that the flow of arms to the leftists in El Salvador has slowed to a trickle. The leftists have abandoned their exiled headquarters in Managua.
The government has also signed a peace treaty with the Latin American Contadora group, eased censorship and has indicated a greater concern for having elections.
These actions have shown the
United States the Sandinistas are now willing to reassess their policy of revolutionary expansion and to take care of their enormous continuing domestic crises.
The United States now has the means to negotiate from a position of strength, yet the president seems to have no desire to talk peace.
But the Reagan administration has continued to ignore opportunities to reduce tension between the nations and has ignored the Sandinistas' desire for negotiation.
The Reagan administration has said that the initial reason for increased U.S. involvement in the area was to stop the flow of arms between Nicaragua and El Salvador.
Much more than that has been accomplished, and now is the time to create more tranquility in the region by beginning negotiations for a lasting peace.
Spanish advancement
Another turning point in the post-Franco history of Spain has come with the induction under more direct civilian control of a new group of top defense officials.
... The occasion brought to reality a new law under which the chief of defense staff will report directly to the civilian minister of defense in the prime minister's Cabinet.
So even though the personnel and politics of the armed forces continue to be as conservative as in Franco's time, there is a general feeling that they now are under control.
Americans can become so preoccupied with the failures of democracy, such as in Nigeria . . . that they overlook the places where democracy is flourishing after years of dictatorship. Let the Spanish achievement be given happy recognition.
That carries out the edict of the new law to bring the armed forces more firmly under the prime minister, who now has power to "administer, direct and coordinate" the armed forces.
once has shown his faithfulness to democracy, remains supreme commander of the armed forces.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Liberal arts graduates are in demand
King Juan Carlos, who more than
The University Daily Kansean 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 individuals and groups to grant positions Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansean office, 111 Staunton-Flint Hall. The Kansean reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
PATRICIA
McCORMACK
Jobs besides those of taxi driver, window washer and checker clerk are out there for English, art, music, art history and other liberal arts majors.
That word comes from company chieftains who huddled with college officials at Princeton, N.J., discussing how to get word around that
United Press International
"The 60 participants agreed that the study of such subjects as languages, literature, history, philosophy, comparative religion, ethics and the history, criticism and theory of the arts can provide knowledge and develop skills necessary for success in the business
corporate America is putting out the welcome mat for liberal arts graduates.
LETTERS POLICY
world," a report on the conference said.
"There is a place and a central place — for the humanities and the liberal arts graduate in business," said Charles L. Brown, chairman of the board, American Telephone ad Telegraph, opening the conference.
proceedings of the conference just has been sent to chief executive officers of hundreds of corporations. The covering letter was signed by Brown and James L. Ferguson, chairman and chief executive,
The conference was sponsored by the Association of American Colleges and the National Endowment for the Humanities.
"We write to your attention to the . . . findings and recommendations of an important conference on connections between the study of the humanities . . . and careers in business," they said.
— Chase Manhattan Bank discovered in a recent study of commercial banking trainees that those with only bachelor's degrees developed stronger technical banking skills than those with advanced degrees. About a third of those with bachelor's degrees majored in the humanities and over two-thirds in liberal arts.
American Telephone and Telegraph found in a study of its managers that humanities and social science majors were promoted more rapidly than technical graduates.
"Please读 it. You will learn, as we and some 60 corporate and academic leaders did, how much business and the humanities have to offer each other and what you, as a business person, can do to make more effective relations possible."
ates is in their own best interest. At Stanford, Dartmouth, Harvard and Michigan the numbers of companies seeking interviews with liberal arts students are from three to six times more than they were in the mid-1970s.
How does the study of the humanities — fields like music, English, history, philosophy, psychology and foreign languages — build such a strong foundation for a career in business?
- Many companies have found that attracting humanities gradu
"It develops strengths that scientific or technical training alone seldom provides — judgment, a historical sense, knowledge of other languages and cultures, recognition of ethical issues, interpersonal abilities, communication skills, intellectual flexibility.
The answer, from the report;
"In a complex, changing business environment, an investment in these qualities can offer important long-term returns."
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Really a big deal
To the editor:
In his letter to the editor, "It's no big deal," (Jan. 30), Douglas Sikora voiced some common opinions to which I am moved to respond.
I agree with Sikora that for the last 200 years America has indeed maintained a degree of freedom for its citizens that in comparison to many other nations is quite respectable.
However, I simply do not see this as a justification for blind allegiance toward the government's actions, be they present or past.
And certainly StEdm should not — as Sikora has suggested — be expected to act against his conscience because in the past other circumstances, have chosen to fight under the American flag.
Sikora writes in his letter, "signed a draft card is really no big deal." This superficial statement, however, is wrong.
As individuals we are obligated to do what we honestly believe to be right, and this responsibility does not stop with casting a vote.
We are, each of us, individuals as well as pieces of the whole, and though a majority of the whole may be just right and right, it does not make it so.
Stamm is a man of exceptional moral fiber. He has defined his morals well and will not allow them to be defeated despite the potential consequences.
I would be far more optimistic about the future of this democracy and the world in general if there were no major wars, no genocide, no courage. The courage to say "no."
Steve Schwalm
Steve Schwain
Lincoln, Neb., freshman
Morals plunging
To the editor:
Our moral values are diving to record lows, and the general public not only condones these changes, but pleased with the lowered morals.
We are advised not to kill, as one of the Ten Commandments, for a reason, and I am not sure whether we should not preserve the value of human life.
Many of us don't believe, or don't want to believe that God will provide for the needs of unborn children if we are carried to term and delivered.
If any of us ask Him with a heart that believes in His himipotence, we will see Him do just that. How much longer before we have found a cure for the murder of our elderly in the name of humanity and space needed?
There is no justification for murder, neither physical nor spiritual, and abortion is both of these. We should not regard the absurd or disregard what God calls important.
into American homes, the United States might have adopted the so-called Aiken strategy — that is, unilaterally declare a victory in Southeast Asia and bring the boys home.
Daphne Fowler St. Louis senior
it is hard it is to see that some of the things we enjoy are not good but I know for a fact that if you try God's way for a while with a sincere heart you won't be easily swayed toward activities displeasing to Him again.
The right not to know
WASHINGTON — Sometimes overlooked in the clamor for new Constitutional amendments is the evidence that freedoms, rights and mandates thus safeguard can work two ways.
That point is neatly illustrated by the present flap over barring press coverage of the Grenada invasion, or "rescue mission."
Any guarantee of freedom of information, stated or implied, carries with it a concomitant warrant of freedom from information. This may explain why polls taken after Grenada have tended to support the news media ban.
Citizens who approved the orders that kept reporters from the battle scene simply were exercising their fundamental right not to know.
The Vietnam War frequently is cited as justification for the Grenada press ban. It is difficult to quarrel with that view.
Indeed, had it not been for television nightly bringing war news
Freedom from information, which includes the right to believe only what the government chooses to tell us, is deeply rooted in American life. We are taught in school examples, who can blame children for dropping out of school?
The right not to know also may account for the popularity of talk shows, gossip magazines and the tabloids. You must keep one's name out of the nannys.
Nobody can dispute that it had not been for war correspondents filing daily reports from Vietnam, our military commanders and civilian diplomats would have had more freedom to see the light at the end of the day. But now we don't need the Stone Age and otherwise employ ancient and ancient tactics.
But no. Any such declaration would have run counter to the nightly reports of communist victories in Vietnam.
It may be argued that the right to be uninformed includes freedom to
United Press International
turn off a television set when it is bringing news not to our liking. I remind you, however, that Americans who rely on television as their primary source of news are, in effect, a captive audience.
DICK WEST
Televiewers cannot avert their eyes from a baleful item and refocus on a more sunny dispatch. Unlike newspaper readers, they are obliged to learn bad news along with the good.
Unfortunately for Americans who wish to inviole the right not to know with respect to Lebanon, U.S. news media had correspondents in that country. Their presence undoubtedly inhibits attempts to withdraw our troops.
By constantly filing reports of cease-fire violations, reporters make it tougher for the government to claim that the peace-keeping mission has succeeded, thereby removing the need for further occupation.
I can't blame our leaders for cherishing the sort of vacuum that prevailed during the Grenada operation. If an ostrich is free to stick its head in the sand, can we deny our people a comparable right?
1
.
University Daily Kansan, February 3. 1984
Page 5
Swenson continued from p. 1
on behalf of Walker because Walker had not been enrolled at the time of the appeal.
According to the office of student records, Walker was not enrolled from Nov. 23 to the end of the year.
Swenson said that if the board had made Walker the student body president, it would have violated the Student Senate rules that required the president to be a student.
Doug Whitman, associate professor of business and chairman of the judicial board, said that he and Eric Straus, associate professor of architecture and one of the members of the board, would make a decision on Swenson's appeal early next week.
Scott Swenson.
'Everybody has his mind set on this new election. I don't see the University administration admitting it made a mistake.'
Former student body president
SWENSON SAID THAT if the board decided to reinstate them, they would be accept the office. But he said that he doubted that the board would accept the appeal.
"Everybody has his mind set on this new election." Swenson said. "I don't see the University administration admitting it made a mistake."
Sswenson's appeal may face another roadblock. Lawson submitted a letter on Friday that said the case is "not under his control."
parties were Lawhorn and Julie Menze,
chairman of the Elections Review Board.
In the letter, Lawhorn said that University Senate rules required only the original parties in a case. Lawhorn said the university
Whitman said last week that he did not know whether Swenson had the right to appeal.
LONNY ROSE, professor of law and a former chairman of the judicial board, said that anyone upset by the board's decision could appeal to the two lawyers on the board who did not attend the hearing. Whitman and Straus are those members.
But, Rose said, the appeal can be only on a procedural basis.
In his appeal, Swenson said that the board had failed to follow the correct procedures because only four of the required five members were on the board. He said two of two students on the board had been present.
He said that his appeal also objected to the board meeting during finals week. The board met Dec. 12.
The KU Senate Code forbids scheduling any event requiring participation of students during the final examination period.
Because of finals, Swenson said, Julie Menzle,
chairman of the Elections Review Board, could
be on the floor on Tuesday.
The code allows each party in the dispute to represent himself or be represented.
purpose of the new task force will be to act as a "clearinghouse" for deficit-reduction ideas from all Democratic senators, and then present a Democratic plan to the caucus for approval.
REFERRING TO THE hiparitan group, Byrd said it was important that Reagan "puts his proposals on the table and takes the lead in shaping our future," perhaps like the bitter medicine that must be required."
THE NEW TASK force is separate from a bipartisan deficit-reduction panel formed at the suggestion of President Reagan. That commission, composed of two Democrats, two Republicans and White House chief of staff James Williams, for the first time Wednesday at the White House.
Despite formation of the two deficit-reduction task forces, Byrd said, "It's our intention to
"We will be cooperative, but realistic." Byrd said.
proceed through the legislative process" to try to reduce the deficits.
Byrd told the Senate Democratic Caucus the
"I think we should make every effort to go before the president is proposing," Byrd told his colleagues.
Budget continued from p.1
Regan, in a sign of flexibility toward the Democratic proposal, told the Senate Finance Committee yesterday the $100 billion suggestion "is not a ceiling. It could be a floor."
Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd announced the creation yesterday of another task force this one composed solely of federal law that she seek ways to slush huge federal debt deficits.
The $265 billion budget for fiscal 1985, which begins Oct. 1, included $365 billion for the military
Hunting
The president's 1985 budget calls for a record $305 billion in military spending, $7.9 billion in increased taxes, about $5 billion in social spending cuts and a deficit of $180 billion.
The three disagreed on the fate of tax increases, however.
The three advisers, in separate forums, agreed the president would back away from the 13 percent 'real' increase — after accounting for inflation — for the military.
continued from p. 1
guns useless as evidence. Casagrande said that he didn't understand why they were allowed to clean the guns.
IN DECEMBER 1982, Casagrande and Richardson pleaded not guilty to the charges.
Casagrande said that he had called every day for a week before officials at the Cloud County Law Enforcement Center had agreed to return the confiscated items.
Rachel was also for glory to the call girls. Their cases were dismissed in March 1983 from Cloud County District Court because of a lack of evidence.
"I COULD SEE being detained for a short time," Casagrande said, "to see what was what. But once they had the eyewitness information, the confession they could have released us."
The professors' attorney, Michael Heck, asked State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, to contact the director of the Fish and Game department to investigate the arrests, Casagrande said.
Solbach said. "They were at least victimized by the adverse publicity and probably weren't treated as cordially or professionally as possible."
In early January, Bill Hanzlick, Fish and Game Commission director, sent letters to the professors after he had reviewed the incident.
In the letter, Hanzlck stated that neither of them had been in the vicinity when the deer was shot. He also apologized for their detainment and that professional treatment" they received.
12
is your lucky number!
You have 12 chances to get involved in SUA. Applications and information are now available for 1984 officer and board member positions. Sign up today for a position in one or more of the following areas:
1. President
2. Vice President
5. Films
6. Fine Arts
9. Outdoor Recreation
10. Public Relations
3. Secretary
7. Forums
4. Treasurer
11. Special Events
8. Indoor Recreation
Sign up for interview times now in the SUA Office located on the main floor of the Union. For more information call 864-3477. Sign up deadline for applications is Tue., Feb. 14, 1984.
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1
ENTERTAINMENT
BEATLES
The University Daily KANSAN
February 3. 1984 Page 6
'It was 20 years ago today, Sgt. Pepper taught the band to play they've been going in and out of style but they're guaranteed to raise a smile. So may I introduce to you the act you've known for all these years, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.'
- from "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" Album.
THE BEATLES
Left to right: Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison and John Lennon
The music still sells—eight days a week
By CHRISTY FISHER Entertainment Editor
It was 20 years ago this month that the Beats invaded America. For 15 days, America was in awe over the lads from Liverpool and the pandemonium they caused wherever they went. Police barriers bulged trying to contain the swarm of teen-age fans.
During that week in 1964, the single 'I Want To Hold Your Hand' was at the top of the music charts. Any item with the faces of the fab four — Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr — proved to be a big seller as stores across the nation cashed in on Beatlemania with such items as Beatles wigs, buttons, dolls, clothes and toy guitars. Baskin-Robbins even had Beatle Nut ice cream.
ON FEB. 9, 1964, more than 70 million Americans tuned in to "The Ed Sullivan Show" to see what all the excitement was about. It was one of the audiences ever to watch an entertainment program
Although most KU students were either too young or were not born in time to remember the group's American television debut, many of them still do not know how to become second generation Beatles fans.
Barbara Fenick, editor of The Write Thing, a quarterly newsletter on the Beatles, said that today's fans ranged from 8-year-olds to grandparents
"THE MUSIC SAYS it all," said Mark Lapidos, organizer of the national Beatlefest conventions. "Put on a Beatles record and it's still better than anything else out."
Why are the Beatles 'one of the most enduring rock'n roll groups around?'
Bill King, publisher of Beatleman magazine, agreed. "What's hooking these 10-year-olds is
The music probably does tell it all. The band had 42 gold records and has sold more than 100
million albums and 100 million singles, earning the rank of the most successful group ever, according to the "1983 Guinness Book of World Records."
Although Beatles records do not sell as well as they once did, they still sell consistently, said Frank Palombi, territory manager for Capitol Records.
Capitol is not complaining about the decline in sales over the years, because in the past two years the company's original 19 albums have sold more than 2 million copies.
PALOMBI SAID THAT "The Beatles' Greatest Hits," "The Beatles" (White Album), "The Beatles 1982-1966," "The Beatles 1967-1970," "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," and "Abbey Road" were their most popular Beatles albums today.
The Beatles have also proven to be an enduring topic on the book market. The 1983-1984 Guide To Books In Print' listed 54 books, with a number, and many more are expected this year.
Beatles fan clubs and publications also did not end when the group split up in 1970. At least five Beatles fan clubs and publications exist today. The two largest publications in the United States are Beatlefan, with a circulation of one million Thing, with a circulation of 2,000.
The Fabulous Four also have had a sales impact on the video cassette industry. "The Compleat Beatles," a two-hour rock documentary released about a year ago, has reached $2 million in sales and is one of today's top-selling videos.
IN AN UNUSUAL MOVE; Delilah Communications Ltd. and Teleculture will release the video to theaters in 20 cities across the United States. Feb. 10. Videos normally do not show in theaters.
Although it will not show immediately in the area, the video might be released in the Kansas City area later in the year, said Eamon Bole, spokesman for Teleculture.
Some of the Beatles' original films will also be re-released this year
Walter Shenson, who produced the film "A Hard Day's Night" and who owns the film's copyright, said that he had noticed a recent increase in requests for the film.
Those who have not seen "A Hard Day's Night" lately may be surprised by new versions of the film that now begin with a story told in edited by Shenson, and are in stereoacoustic sound.
SHENSON SAID THE Beatles movie "HELP!" would also be re-released in the future. The film has been off the market since 2013, but the studio did not want to capitalize on John Lennon's death.
Lawrence will be celebrating the anniversary of the Beatles' invasion this week. The Hilricet Theatre, and iowa streets, will show "A Hard Day's Night" tonight through October. If the movie does well, the theater will show "Saturday with Lloyd Lirk," assistant manager of Hilricet.
Before the movie, the theatre will present an audio montage of news events of the 1960s set to the Lemon and McCartney song "I'll Cry Instead."
PENNYLAND RECORDS, KLZR and KLWN radio stations are sponsoring a promotional album, poster and ticket giveaways with the theater.
At 9 p.m. t: Tuesday, KKKK, 96x radio, will play both sides of the original 26 EMI-label Beatles singles. The station also will poll listeners and play the fans' favorite Beatles
KLZR will play its regular Beatles hour at noon today.
On Tuesday, Cinema cab cable entertainment channel will broadcast "The Compleat Beatles" video and "Pop Spot: The Beatles On Their Own."
Throughout February, CinemaM will present a special called "The Rutes" — a comedy featuring the talents of the stars.
MTV, music television, is also expected to have a video for "I Want To Hold Your Hand" produced by Ron Furmanack, sometime this month.
numerous cameo appearances, including one by Harrison. "The Concert for Bangladesh," at Madison Square Gardens, will also be featured on Cinema.
NUMEROUS BEATLEFEST conventions will be held around the United States this year. The conventions will feature Beatles movies, concert films, promotional videos, and television appearances. Beatles memorabilia will be on sale. The convention will also feature Liverpool, a Beatles sound-alike band. Conventions are scheduled in New York, Feb. 17-19, Houston, June 9-10, Dallas, July 14-15; and Chicago, Aug. 10-12.
Lapidos, the Beatleest conventions organizer, said he expected more to attend the conventions this year because it of the anniversary. About 6,000 usually come to the
The English city Liverpool is bracing itself for an invasion of hard-core American fans of the band.
RON JONES, DIRECTOR of tourism in Liverpool, estimates that more than 1 million people from the United States will visit this year, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Although Liverpool has traditionally ignored the Beatles because they moved to London, it decided to honor them this year and cash in on the anniversary profits. Jones said.
The tourism office in Liverpool offers souvenirs and two-hour walking tours. Fans are encouraged to take the Magical History Tour bus tour also.
Tourists also can visit the Cavern Walks Shopping Center where the city's official statue of the Beatties will stand. The shopping center is just a few blocks from the brightly highlighted by the original bricks and decora.
tive touches by Cynthia Lennon, John's first wife.
"MERSEY BEATLES' Extravaganza", *will be Aug. 25-27 and will feature special guests, videos, movies and soave booths. It is the second Beatsy storehouse of Beatles information.*
Beatles City Exhibition Centre is a museum dedicated to the Beatles. It will feature some of the band's original instruments, costumes and other memorabilia.
The "Art of the Beatles Exhibition" will be held from May to September, featuring photography, film, fashion, books and other art work by the Beatles.
Some lucky fans might even get the chance to see an ex-Batle in person. The city passed a resolution honoring them, and McCartney, who is returning, will show up in Liverpool sometime this year.
RAY VELASQUEZ, a disc jockey at 96X radio who recently returned from Liverpool, said, "What the Beatles did 20 years ago was to take a purely American creation — the rock'n'roll of Elvis, Buddy Holly and Little Richard — and synsitate it and return it to America. It seems like it takes America to invent it and England to improve on it.
"If the Beatles had not conquered America, pop music and the pop music business would not exist today as we know it."
Beattefan publisher King said that the group's popularity would last at least as long as the lifetime of the original audience.
"I don't expect it to happen again within the lifetime of the original audience." King said. "Once it happens, it is hard for it to happen again. They are the standard by which we judged this phenomenon. They were fresh and caught everybody by surprise. As long as the original fans are around, I don't see anyone having that kind of impact on this generation."
Holly's fans remember the day music died
By United Press International
MASON CITY, Iowa — "I can't remember if I cried when I read about his widowed bride. But something touched me deep inside . . . the day the music died."
The words in Don McLean's classic 1971 song "American Pie" recall Feb. 4, 1959, when the tragic death of Buddy Holly shook the rock 'n' roll world.
Exactly 25 years after Holly's death, many are still "touched deep inside" by the late Holly and his music, and at least 2,500 people are expected a triumphal trek to the site of his final performance.
The owner of Mason City's KZEV-radio, known only as the "Mad Hat" , organized the annual Buddy Holly Reunion six years ago at the Surf Ballroom in nearby Clear Lake, where Holly and his band, the Crickets, played their last show.
IT IS AN ANNUAL journey to northern Iowa, made every February by devoted fans as their way of paying tribute to rockabilly artist Danny DeVito, who shot short by an airplane accident in Mason City.
Holly fans will spend the weekend in Clear Lake, stirring up memories and grooving to 1950s music provided by Bobby Vee, Tommy Roe and others.
“It’s a special event every year — the best thing I’ve ever done,” said the Hatter. “This year, of course, is awfully special and it’s sold out early. People are spending real money, coming from far away places like England and Scotland. Suddenly Holly Jack and the special music of the ’50s.”
ON FEB. 3, 1959, Holly and the Crickets hold a concert at the Surf for 100 teenagers their perio- dals.
Joining the group on stage were two other popular acts: the "Big Bopper," a Texas disc jockey, program director and singer known for the bjt. "Chantilly Lace," and Richie Valens.
After the concert, a chartered airplane was to take the three singers to Fargo, N.D., for their next engagement. They never got there.
The Beachcraft Bonanza crashed five miles northwest of the Mason City airport, killing the three singers and pilot. Authorities blamed bad weather for the crash.
"It was a real shock. The memories are really vivid," said Niki Sullivan, 46, who quit as the Crickets' rhythm guitarist more than one year before Holly's death.
'The thing that gets me is that you could tell he (Holly) was on the verge of something — he was close to really busting out nationally.'
"ILL REMEMBER BUDDY as a unique individual — a shy kid from Texas with a dream," said Sullivan, who is now a Kansas City, Mo., businessman. "He tried to call me a week before his death, but I wasn't home. He wanted to get the band back together, but we never made the connection. I often think about that."
former manager of the Surf
— Carrol Anderson.
Carroll Anderson, former manager of the Surf, remembers driving Holly and the other musi-
"The years go by, but I can never see to get it out of my mind." Anderson said. "The boys
HOLLY'S WIDOW, MARIA Elena Holly Diaz, is remarried with three college-age children. She lives in Irving, Texas, where she still handles her late husband's business affairs. She said she would be unable to attend this year's tribute because of a trip to London.
"I'm just happy he's still being appreciated and people are still enjoying his music," she said. "This is only a consolation to me. I still remember how far we never go away from my life as long as I live."
were in such a jubilant mood after the show. The thing that gets me is that you could tell he (Holly) was on the verge of something — he was close to really busting out nationally."
Memories of Holly burn bright for a generation stirred by such hits as "Peggy Sue," "That'll Be Music" and "A Dream."
HOLLY, BORN CHARLES Hardin Holley, started off as a country singer in 1956. The Lubbock, Texas, native recorded scores of rock songs from the 1950s and his death in 1959 at the age of 22
Holly was an innovator. He was the first rock musician to double-track his voice on a record, the first white rock artist to use a background orchestra with strings, and one of the first to use the four rock instruments that later became lead — lead, bass and rhythm guitars, and drums.
Interest in Holly's music has heightened because of new versions of his songs by different performers, the 1977 movie "The Buddy Holly Story," and the continuing demand for '50s music, said Bill Griggs, president of the Lubbock-based Ruddy Holly Memorial Society.
"I've listened to 'That'll Be The Day' every day of my life since 1857 and I can honestly say I don't get tired of it," Grigsgs said. "It's happy music and that's why it survives."
BY BERKE BREATHED
BLOOM COUNTY
WILLIAM POOCHES! MANY PRIVATE MONSTERS! I DO ABUSE YOU FOUND YOURSELF IN AG KNOWN! I AM POLAR BEAR!
MY AND JACK IN TIME, TOO! WITH ALL THREE MERM FOULS MY TOODOWNERS ELICALLY SHARE ROOMS WITH THE LITTLE BATTLE JOAN. YOU WANT!
EATEN ONE!
SHARK RUN MIGHT QUET THERE, MOTHER POLAR BEAR, WHATA MATTER YOU SAY?
KOOTCHE! KOOTCHE!
CLICK!
CLICK!
KODTCHE!
KODTCHE!
KODTCHE!
CLICK!
CLICK
SAY, NEER BEIN MIGHTY
QUEET THERE, MISTER
POLAR BEAR, WHIRTSH
MATTER, HUM SAY!
WILLIAM PODGIES! WHY MONTE
MONDRIA I DO BELIEVE YOU
PONGA PONGA PONGA
GENO UWE POLAR DEAR!
ALL THAT IS MED LEAGUE BILL, PERMEBER. SIX, SECURIZE THE TROOPS IN AN OPERATION 'SKI LIFT NONE.' WHAT? THAT!
GOOD MEANING THIS SOUNDS RALPH PEE! I HAVE A NEAR LOW GRANDRIDE FOR PRIN, KALPHE...
HONY KELLANG! I JOB YET WE WOULD KNAPP MARY ALL THE DOWN HERE. I JUST SWAY DEAN MARTIN IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC WITH THE GIRLS OUT.
SPEAKING OF MEN AND WARMERS, LET'S PROMIBROOK AND THE GIRLS OUT.
WOOT! WOOT! HOOT! HOOT! SHOT ME!
UN THIS IS REAL LEADER
SO, PERMITTER IS
SACUED. THE TROOPS
ARE KNOWN TO
IN OPERATION
BUT LIFT NONE.
WHAT? THAT?
GOOD?
WARNING...
THIS SOUND...
OMMUNOUS...
I WORRY, I WAY,
TO DURGE ME...
PRINT, RAPHINE...
ME, THIS IS RED LEADER
SIX. PERMITTER IS
RECOLLECTED. THE TROOPS
AND KNOW BOMBING
IN OPERATION
"SAY LIT NODE."
WHAT'S
MARKT? THAT
HONEY FELLAS! BOY THEY WORK
KIDDING AWAY ALL THE JEE DOWN
BATTING AT MATTINEN
TRYING TO DIRT THE SOUTH
ATLANTIC WITH A
GRANT SWIZZLE
STICK!
HA-HA!
HA-HA HA
HA-!
UMM
SPEAKING OF HAND WARNERS,
LET'S BRONZE BROOKIE
AND THE GIRLS OUT.
WOO! WOO!
NOTHING!
QUICK
RAFINE
SHOT
( LISTEN )
WE!
THERE, THERE'S THE FIRST ONE EMBRAGING NOW. THE STRAIN AND WARNOCK BE THE TRUE ORIGIN. LAKE PARKS HOME ON HIS FACE AS HE STOPS DOWN TO 1025 PANIKAKAN SOIL...
...AND THE ARMY HELPOTTER
WITH THE TWO UNDERSTATED
AMERICAN MEN RESCUE
THE ANGEL TITLE INVA-
SION IS AJUST NOW TOUCHY!
DOWN HERE IN MIAMI...
THERE, THERE'S THE FIRST
ONE EMBRACING NOW, THE
STRAIN AND NORRY BURN,
CLAREN CLEMENCE ON
HIS FACE AS HE SOOKS'D DOWN
TO NISSAN AMERICAN NOIL...
... AND THE ARMY HELP COPTER WITH THE TWO UNATTIFIED AMERICAN CITIZEN RESCUE POWNING THEIR CUSTOM NAMED SION DO JUST NOW TOUCHING DOWN HERE IN MIMA!
THERE, THERE'S THE FIRST ONE EMERGENCY NOW. THE STRAIN AND WORDER OF THEIR OPERATION GLADY WHERE ON HIS FACE AS HE SIGNS POWN TO NIDS AMERICAN SOL.
I SAID I TRAPPED!
4
I SAID I
TRAPPED!
1
University Daily Kansan, February 3, 1984
Page 7
continued from p. 1
Grades
"I got upset when a man talks about the privacy of a student and his rights and has a meeting with a student and then goes public with it." Brown said during an interview yesterday.
Yesterday Katzman said he sent both his and Brown's letter to 'appropriate people and businesses'.
Katzman said that Brown's request was an insult to the academic integrity of the University.
In his second letter, Brown refuted that statement.
"I was there solely to assist the student in presenting his appeal for the grade imposed," the letter said. "Perhaps I should not have attended the meeting. I came because Cedric asked me to and I also came because of my performance and all the student athletes under my charge.
"PROFESSOR KATZMAN apparently feels that a head basketball coach has this great power over the academic outcome of our student athletes. I wish that were so, but I don't even pretend to have control over their performances on the court."
Brown also said that he had never encountered such a situation at the University of California at Los Angeles or at the University of North Carolina, the other schools where he has coached. He said KU had a problem with accepting student-athletes as students.
"You try to look around and tell people that you interested in these kids and then something like this happens," he said yesterday. "This school is so different from the others I've coached at. We have to bridge the gap between student-athletes and academics."
He said that some professors were not cooperative about completing academic pro-
grass reports, which the athletic department sends to professors of athletics to make sure they are in good shape.
"WHAT BOTHERS ME is that now I have a reputation based on one man that I'm not concerned about academics," he said. "That's something from what I have always believed in."
Katzman said there was something fundamentally wrong with a coach attending a meeting between a student-athlete and a professor
He said that he thought Brown's intentions were good, but Duncan didn't understand the system at KU.
Athletic Director Monte Johnson refused comment
Ambler said yesterday that he knew of no policy that would prohibit a student from taking someone to a meeting to discuss grades with an instructor.
However, Ambler said, grades should primarily be a subject addressed by the student and instructor.
IN HIS LETTER to Brown and the administrators, Katzman proposed that athletic department staff members and concerned faculty members "convene a forum to discuss the larger role of athletics and academics at the University of Kansas."
Brown said he would also welcome such a forum.
1 a like to sit down in front of every faculty member and tell them what happened in the
Some information for this story was also supplied by Sports Editor Jeff Cravens and by Kansan reporters Gretchen Day and Jenny Barker.
A record ratio of rushees pledge
The percentage of women who pledged with Panhellenic sororities during rush this year is the largest since pledge records have been kept, and the average vice president for membership said this week.
Seventy-four percent, or 447 of the 610 women who began rush Jan. 5, joined sorcerors, said Jackie McGaugh, the vice president. The women's spring is a 5 percent increase over last year.
This year, the Panhellenic Association's 13
sororites at the University of Kansas raised minimum GPA requirements from 2.0 to 2.3.
McGaugh said the increased grade requirement prevented more than 200 of the 818 girls who registered for rush in November from qualifying to participate in January.
Sheila Immel, adviser for Panhellenic, said that the GPA change was not surprising, because most sororites already had GPA 3.9 or higher and wouldn't pledge women with lower averages.
Mr. Larry Brown'
Head Basketball Coach
Department of Intercollegiate Athletics
Allen Field Mouse
January 19, 1984
Dear Mr. Brown
Instead of a "lesson," I found your letter of January 9th insulting, intemperate that you have taught me to be the university and that I have come to associate with the university and my community in the nearly fifteen years I have been a faculty member. I improve upon the academic standards of the University of Kansas.
I met with you and the student on a Sunday afternoon not because he is an athlete and you are a coach but because he was a concerned student. I met with you to talk to him, to help him to their needs. Perhaps you misinterpreted the Sunday meeting, feeling that it signaled special treatment for a member of your team. If you were a student, I would have been there.
You charge me with lacking "compassion for the individual" which leads you to use my basic character by questioning "whether you have any compassion for others." You charge me with compassion, but it is one of how that compassion is expressed. From this experience, I only understand that compassion has only one interpretation: award the student a passing grade. I am sorry that you did not acknowledge our academic standards at the University of Kansas. Your request to give a student a passing grade merely because he requires it is not fair.
What concern me as well is the possibility that you have been or will be successful in college. You may be unaware about the customs of university of Kansas in accommodation, probably there are faculty and graduate students who are similarly ignorant. We encourage you to ask your advisor if you know when you request that an athlete be given a grade other than the one earned.
A young untenured faculty member or a graduate teaching assistant could be appointed that the renewal might hinge on cooperating with what considered standard practice.
Finally, you accuse me of being "prejudiced against athletes." Do you always attack the integrity and good intentions of those who disagree with you? I will not argue the issue with you because apparently our standards are unfair to all. I will not argue that your performance would be equal in importance to athletics, not only because it is important to remain eligible, but because education itself has its own rewards. Indeed, we should not judge an athlete's performance not and athletic pursuits offer the greatest career opportunities.
I believe that we can all benefit from this unpleasant experience. Perhaps we might convene a discussion of athletic department staff and some interested faculty under the auspices of Academic Affairs, Student Affairs, Seniors or Staff. I am confident that such discussions will be the same time we might convene a public forum to discuss the larger role of athletics and academics at the University of Kansas. Such open forums assist the university community in defining the issues and can lead to the kind of debate that is often needed.
In hopes of stimulating some constructive action, I am sending copies of our correspondence to appropriate offices and people.
Sincerely,
David M. Katharine
David M. Katzman, Associate Dean Director, College Honors Program
DMK :||
David Katzman, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and KU basketball coach Larry Brown exchanged these letters after they met Jan. 8 to discuss a failing grade Katzman gave basketball player Cedric Hunter.
The Kansan obtained a copy of Brown's letter from a University employee who requested anonymity. Brown yesterday gave a copy
January 26,1984
Dear Colleagues:
.ice Chancellor Denell Amacher
Vice Chancellor David Amler
TAMS Professor Jeffrey NEXE
Professor Grant Goodman, AUPU
Professor Dan Schriefer, Department Dean Robert Lennick, College Liberal Arts
I did appreciate Professor Katanne's time in talking with us and still do. I will not, however, appreciate what I felt during our meeting.
I am writing each of you with regard to the copies of a letter which you apparently received concerning a recent meeting with Professor Katzman. I will send you a copy of the meeting and my follow-up note to Professor Katzman to be sent to you. Since Katzman has done so, I find the need to make it public. Since Katzman has done so, I find the need to make it public.
I did not go to see Professor Katzman to put pressure on him into changing a grade. Were I here to permit the student to change a grade? No, I was here to permit the student solely to assist the student in presenting his appeal for the grade impeded. The appeal was based upon educational reasons that the course had not been designed to concern what it would take to pass the course and the enrollment procedures of the university this fall. As you all must know by now,
Perhaps I should not have attended the meeting. I came because Cedric asked me to and I also cared because of my responsibility toward all.
I will be there.
Professor Katzenan apparently feels that a head basketball coach has this great power over the academic outcome of our student athletes. I wish that were so but I don't even pretend to control over their performances on the court.
I want very badly to participate in a forum regarding the role of athletes in an academic institution. I think that it is necessary for everyone to participate.
I coached at two institutions, U.C.L.A. and the University of North Carolina I and never encountered an experience quite like this. I am sure you know that there are some things the teacher should realize that they are not in their education and regardless of what Professor Katzan thinks, that is our primary goal.
University of Kansas
The University of Kansas
Hewlett-Boehner School
of Hockey
Sipçerely,
LB:cg
cc: David M. Katzman
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, February 3. 1984 Page 8
Candidate looks to 'office of the future'
By GRETCHEN DAY Staff Reporter
Supporters of Barbara Marx Hubbard yesterday celebrated her official declaration of candidacy on the Democratic ticket for the office of vice president.
Arm-in arm, Hubbard and her supporters sang "Godd bless America" in the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 W. Turnpike Access Road.
Hubbard, author, lecturer and educator, said that she was running to win an office that was underdeveloped and one that nobody wanted.
AS VICE PRESIDENT, Hubbard said she would create an "office of the future" as a vehicle for citizens to know more about the common goals, needs and resources.
Hubbard, who considers herself a "futurist," launched her "Campaign for a Positive Future" six months ago yesterday amid 25 supporters.
Last night Hubbard and Willis Harmon, a professor of engineering-economic systems and a senior social scientist in the Strategic Environment Center at Stanford Research Institute International, participated in a forum at the Kansas Union Ballroom on the movie "The Day After."
Hubbard, 54, has been studying the future for 20 years and although she had first considered running for president, she has never held an elected office.
"I consider that to be an asset," she said.
HUBBARD SAID SHE wasn't running for president because, "it thinks a big enough leap with me running for vice president."
She said the idea of a woman vice president was widespread in 1984 because people thought that feminine consciousness was necessary in government to balance male qualities.
She said she didn't have any presidential candidate in mind as a running mate. However, she said she would soon be meeting with campaign representatives of Jesse Jackson and Walter Mondale.
"I think they're all excellent and each has special characteristics," she said.
Hubbard said she chose to make her official announcement in Lawrence because it was the site depicted in the movie "Jaws," which is about a nuclear holocaust.
"I THINK IT'S insane, illegal and immoral to threaten anyone with nuclear war," she said.
The nuclear issue in 1983 was what finally convinced her to run for office. Hubbard's platform includes an immediate bilateral-nuclear freeze.
"The United States can take the initiative out of our own desire for
HER CAMPAIGN, she said, represents a new narrative, one that that every man, woman
"We know there is the greatest untapped potential on earth - human
Hubbard said that because the vice president was selected and not elected, the only way she could be selected was to build a constituency.
All powerful political movements have come from the people — the civil rights movement, the women's movement, the peace movement, she said.
"I will continue whether or not I win, she said. "I'm winning every day."
AUGUSTINE LYON
Larry Funk/KANSAN
Barbara Hubbard, Democratic vice presidential candidate, sings "God Bless America" with supporters at the Holiday Inn Holidome. Hubbard officially announced her candidacy yesterday as a "Campaign for a Positive Future." Hubbard is the first person who has ever campaigned to be selected as a vice presidential running mate.
FILING DEADLINE FOR THE SPECIAL ELECTION OF 1984 FOR STUDENT BODY PRES & V.P.
If You Want To Run:
1) Pick up declaration of candidacy at Student Senate Office, B105 Kansas Union
2) Have the dean of your school or college certify your enrollment and year in that school or college.
(3) Follow the guidelines set forth on the Declaration of Candidacy Form.
4) Return your declaration NO LATER THAN
4:30 p.m. Friday, February 3, 1984.
Paid for by Student Activity Fee
STUDENT SENATE TRANSPORTATION BOARD is now accepting applications for NEW BOARD members.
Individuals interested in becoming involved with the management of the KU bus and handicap transportation system should apply at the Student Senate Office.
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1
University Dally Kansan, February 3, 1984
Page 9
CAMPUS AND AREA
Surrogate-parenting bill is unfair, lobbyist savs
By the Kansan Staff
TOPEKA — A bill that would regulate surrogate parenting in Kansas violates the rights of the father in the surrogate agreement, a lobbyist for the Kansas chapter of the National Organization to hold told a Senate committee yesterday.
Linda Woody, the lobbyist, described as unfair a section in the bill that would require the father in a surrogate agreement to be financially responsible for the child if the surrogate mother decided to keep the baby.
The bill, which is under the consideration of the Senate Judiciary Committee, allows the surrogate mother 48 weeks old to be given birth to a baby or give it to the biological father.
and his wife.
If the surrogate does not give up the baby, according to the bill, the father must help support the child until age 18.
"We feel this is very unfair." Woody said. "If the contract is voided, the surrogate has chosen to do that herself. She must assume the rights and responsibilities that go along with that choice."
Woody said that NOW would support the bill if the 48-hour clause were deleted. But she said her organization was not involved in surrogate parenting at all.
Barbara Reinert of the Kansas Women's Political Caucus said that if the Legislature passed the bill, the state would be responsible for licensing surrogate agencies and regulating the industry.
Windsurfers use a visual aid in presentation to committee
By LORI DODGE Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — Yesterday was show- and-tell at a House committee meeting when supporters of a bill that would exempt windsurfers from life jacket requirements carried a red-and-white sailboard into the meeting.
Water vessels are now required to carry a lifesaving device for each person on board. Under the bill, sailboards would no longer be considered vessels and would be exempt from carrying life jackets.
Smiling members of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee heard conflicting testimony about the role of billboards and the necessity of life jackets.
Gesturing to a sailboard propped in
the back of the committee room, Tom Welsh, a windsurfing instructor and education coordinator for the KU Sail board. He was also on the board and sail weighed just 60 pounds.
He said that serious injuries in windsurfing were unlikely because the sailboard was light. He added that sailboarding is safer, and generally fell away from the rider.
Welsh also said that sailboards did not float away from a person the way they would float on water.
But Kathy Vonachen, a windsurfer and a camp water sports instructor, said she wanted windsurfers to be more aware of the hazards involved in the sport.
She contested that windsurfers could be knocked unconscious when falling off their boards and might drown if they were not wearing life jackets.
SAN JOSE
Jim McCrossen/KANSAN
Love Meserve, Lawrence senior, attempts to subdue his wrestling opponent, Billy Martin, Lawrence senior, with a flying chest drop in an "all-star" wrestling move. Meserve and Martin, along with other members of Campus Crusade for Christ, put on a short show yesterday afternoon on the lawn in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall to promote the "College Life" program.
Winter among 15 to attend meeting in West Berlin
By the Kansan Staff
TOPEKA — State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said yesterday he would definitely be one of 15 Americans participating in an international conference in West Berlin Feb. 19-22.
Besides the Americans, the Aspen Institute for the Humanities, a nonprofit cultural exchange group in Denver, has recruited 20 foreign representatives to attend the conference. The delegation from the Soviet Union and other Bloce countries, Winter said.
The topic of the conference will be "Where is the USA Heading?"
Winter said he was selected because the Institute wanted people who would be interested in discussing foreign relations, but it did not want high government officials to attend. He said that the film "The Day After" was another reason he was chosen.
Officials correct errors by KIPPS before payday
By JENNY BARKER Staff Reporter
KU employees received paychecks for the correct amount on time this month, but not because of the Kansas Integrated Personnel Payroll System.
Some KIPPS paychecks for KU employees were originally incorrect, but officials in Topeka and at the University of Kansas corrected the errors before payday, the KU associate comptroller said yesterday.
Keith Ratzloff, associate comproter, said the only mistake that did appear on employee paychecks would be if employees 'pay or their W-2 forms.
SOME KU EMPLOYEES' paychecks included incorrect figures on their 1984 earnings to date, Ratzloff said. Earnings-to-date totals are on the checks only for employees' information.
The comptroller's office has received no complaints about missing or inaccurate information.
"THE CHURCH AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN EL SALVADOR TODAY: A FIRSTHAND REPORT ON THE CRISIS"
—DR JACK BREMER, DIRECTOR/CAMPUS PASTOR
Christian Christian Ministries at K.U.
Jack visited El Salvador and Nicaragua during Jan..1984, with a national group of university faculty and campus pastors on their third factfinding mission. In both countries, he met with the presidents, church and human rights leaders, university rectors and faculty, dissenting party leaders, U.S. embassy staff, refugees, and prisoners.
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Other paycheck problems were corrected before they reached KU employees. Ratzloff said.
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After twenty years on the blue circuit, jennie Brooks has suddenly been declared a staple of the band's tournements, of course, has been there all along. It's just that now, with his fresh, original songs, hard-driving band, and his natural humanity, the world is finally beginning to find out about it.
A PAYROLL REPORT sent by the Department of Administration in Topeka to the University a week before payday enabled the comptroller's office to determine discrepancies between the payroll and a list of KU employees and their proper salaries, Ratzloff said.
"An electrifying master, playing with the unabashed enthusiasm of a ten-year-old pretending his badminton racket is a guitar . . . sincere, exhaustive, houserocked."
This payday was the first time that the University received the report early. It arrived last Wednesday instead of Friday.
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, February 3, 1984
Page 10
Aquino murder photos are sought
By United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — Officials investigating Benigno Aquino's murder said yesterday they were trying to locate a Malaysian who claimed to have photographs proving the opposition leader was killed by a military guard.
Attorney Bienvenido Tan, coordinator of the commission investigating the Aug. 21 assassination at the Manila airport, said two investigators would be sent to the Southeast Asian nation of Brunei to try to find the Malaysian.
Special prosecutor Andres Narvasa said the Malaysian disclosed the alleged evidence in two phone calls from Brunei.
NARVASA SAID THE man only
identified himself to a panel clerk by his surname, either "Kiram" or "Karim," and would not disclose his whereabouts on the island of Borneo.
Aquino was killed at Manila International Airport seconds after four military guards escorted him from a China Airlines jet on his return from three years of self-exile in the United States.
The Malaysian said his cousin photographed the murder near Gate 18 in Kuala Lumpur.
Narvasa said the Malaysian reported his cousin was aboard a Royal Brunei jetter that landed shortly before the flight and parked at airport Gate No. 9.
NARVASA SAID HI first spoke with the Malaysian in December and judge bid his testimony.
Two other people, officials said, have contacted the commission claiming to have witnessed the assassination but they have not been identified publicly.
silence, the man telephoned again and spoke with Tan.
Tan said one of them said he saw the shooting from the airport tarmac and the other from a window inside the airport.
The military says Aquino, President Ferdinand Marcos's chief political rival, was killed by alleged communist assassin Rolando Galman who was gunned down by Aquino's military escorts.
Critics, including Aquino's family, say the military had a hand in the murder.
Britain begins talks with Argentina
By United Press International
LONDON — Britain has opened a secret channel of communications with Argentina, submitting proposals for normalizing relations between the two countries locked in a dispute over the Gulf of Mexico, the Foreign office said yesterday.
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, before leaving for a two-day trip to Hungary, told Parliament she wanted to resume commercial ties and improve relations with Buenos Aires but stopped short of offering to negotiate sovereignty of the south Atlantic Ocean island group.
"WE BELIEVE THAT it is in the
wear of this country, the people of
"We have no intention of negotiating on sovereignty at all," she said.
The Foreign office said the secret discussions were being handled by Switzerland and Brazil, acting as intermediaries. The confidential talks will be held in Paris to cover all aspects of relations except sovereignty, the spokesman said.
The spokesman said "specific ideas" for normalizing relations were submitted to Argentina but would not give the country any relief yet had been received from Argentina.
THE BRITISH APPROACH was the first big step towards normalizing relations since the end of the 74-day war between Britain and Argentina in 1982.
Argentina invaded the windswept south Atlantic Ocean islands of 1,800 people to claim sovereignty in April 1962. Britain dispitished a Royal Navy fleet of warships to drive them out of the islands in a ferocious air, land and sea war.
In an earlier statement, foreign secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe specifically rejected Argentine president Raul Alfonsi for uniting the United Nations peace-keeping force.
"There is no role for the United Nations, the protection of the killers." How can we do this?
Town residents fleebattle in El Salvador
By United Press International
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Civilians fleeing a fierce battle between guerrillas and government troops abandoned a town in eastern El Salvador yesterday, a day before the army was to launch a U.S.-designed pacification program in the area.
Leftist guerrilla battled government troops for three hours late Wednesday in El Transito, 69 miles southeast of San Salvador, then broke off fighting and traveled to nearby town of Jucaranai, military base.
Residents of Jucara began evacuating after guerrillas entered the town because they feared they would be caught in a battle between rebels and government troops, civilians said.
The fighting yesterday came just 24 hours before the government planned to officially inaugurate its "Welfare for Usulutan" pacification program, patterned after programs used in the Vietnam War and intended to attract refugees back to abandoned farms.
Elsewhere in Central America yesterday:
- Secretary of State George Shultz said yesterday that Nicaragua had betrayed its revolution and should attack it with a backlash from its own people.
bluntly rejected charges by Nicaragua Junta leader Daniel Ortega that Washington sought to overthrow the Sandinistas under the cover of an aid program proposed by the Kissinger Commission.
The Kissinger Commission said the United States was engaged in a struggle with the Soviets and Cuba for influence in Central America and called for billions of dollars in a long-term aid program.
Shultz, attending the inauguration of Venezuela's new president.
"The allegations must be a signment of his imagination," Shultz told a news conference. "In order to keep conjuring up that image. Mr Ortega and his colleagues must be worried."
"If I were them, I would be worried too. They are the people who harrassed the church and the pope."
- In Guatemala, fightening between leftist rebels and government troops last year claimed the lives of 510 guerrillas, 60 civilians and 151 members of government forces, nine police officers, the army announced.
- Army spokesman Edgar Djalma Dominguez said 108 troops and militiamen and 18 civilians were wounded, but gave no figures for the number of wounded rebels, whose estimates are estimated to number 2,000.
- Costa Rica, in an apparent move to emphasize its neutrality in neighboring conflicts, denied pernicious ambitions by Argugan rebel leader Eden Pastora.
Firefighter loses lawsuit against city
By United Press International
IOWA CITY, Iowa — A jury yesterday said horseback and rough language are part of fire station life and rejected a claim by the city's first firefighters.
Linda Eaton charged male co-workers harassed her after she won a 1979 civil rights suit that permitted her to breastfeed her son on duty. She was charged city officials did little to change the firefighters' behavior
Attorneys for the city argued Eaton was simply the victim of practical injustice.
"We're talking about a fire department, a place where a certain amount of rough language happens," said Erik Snyek told the jury in closing arguments.
"HOW MUCH responsibility does the HOW MUCH responsibility does the house have to police the workplace, to sanitize the workplace? To require all the firefighters to have certain skills to strike me as awfully similar to George Washington as Nineteen Eagleton Four", Hayek said.
In a prepared statement, Eaton said that because of "finances," she did not plan to appeal the verdict.
"The verdict is a disappointment," Eaton said, "I urge that people not be discouraged by this decision."
Eaton said, "I look forward to the day when women will be accepted as equals in the workplace."
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Escape to the sunshine and join up over spring break for an exciting week in South Padre island. Seven sunfilled days and memorable nights await you at one of Padre's nicest resorts: Bahia Mar. The trip includes transportation, 7 nights lodging, a day trip to Matamoros, Mexico, a beach towel and much more! The total cost of the trip is $310 ($189 with your own transportation). Travel with SUA on their traditional trip to Padre island.
Call the SUA office at 864-3477 for information on its two other Spring Break Trips: Ft. Lauderdale and Winter Park. Hurry and sign up for you Spring Break vacation today.
Escape to the sunshine and join up over spring break for an exciting week in South Padre island. Seven sunfilled days and memorable nights await you at one of Padre's nicest resorts: Bahia Mar. The trip includes transportation, 7 nights lodging, a day trip to Matamoros, Mexico, a beach towel and much more! The total cost of the trip is $310 ($189 with your own transportation). Travel with SUA on their traditional trip to Padre island.
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1984
Page 11
Reagan pledges bipartisanship, exhorts GOP 'to take the offensive' in 1984 campaign
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, offering bipartisanship on the budget with one hand and wielding a political hatchet with the other, exhorted Congress in Congress yesterday to "take the offensive" in the 1984 campaign.
"For the good of the country, we must win. And I'm convinced that, working together, we will." Reagan declared during a luncheon pep rally with scores of cheering House and Senate Republicans at the Capitol.
Reagan unleashed a partisan blast that momentarily drowned out the bipartisan chord strick by the White House. He urged Democrats to mute their criticism of U.S. policy in Lebanon and to begin negotiating on how to reduce the $180 billion deficit in the day-old fiscal 1985 budget.
IF THE DEMOCRATS had won the 1980 election, Reagan said, "the mess the country was in — the soaring inflation, the high interest rates, the defenses and the loss of respect for our nation abroad"— still would exist.
United Press International
"If the Democrats had been running the show," he said, "American families would still be suffering from sky-high inflation and interest rates. The stock
market wouldn't have set new records, gross national product wouldn't have started growing again and the Ameri- ties' wages would have started climbing.
"With them in control, our defenses would still be growing weaker while the Soviet's grower blazed. Troops would have landed on Grenada. That's for sure. We've never been American troops and the Grenadians wouldn't have been applauding."
INSISTING "THERE has been a great deal accomplished here" since he took office, Reagan urged his fellow Republicans to "make certain we take the offensive" by painting Democrats as "very likely to raise taxes than cut spending.
Reagan, whose economic program was largely based on an 25 percent cut in tax rates, said of House Speaker Thomas O'Neill: "Tip O'Neill always complains about the way we cut taxes, but if the Democrats had been in charge, there wouldn't have been any tax cut — none at all."
RONALD REYNOLDS
REV. RICHARD D. RAYMOND
RONALD REYNOLDS
He said voters must be reminded that "the tax cutting that's been done back through the years has been done by the Republican Party."
A solid GOP victory in November, he predicted, would produce "a new birth of freedom and prosperity, and all the world would benefit."
WASHINGTON — President Reagan blows out the candles on his birthday cake during a luncheon yesterday on Capitol Hill. Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., is on the left. Reagan will be 73 on Monday.
Senate passes bill to narrow insanity defense
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Senate overwhelmingly approved a crime bill yesterday that would narrow the insanity defense, making acquittal difficult for defendants like presidential assailant W. H. Wincklev jr.
The first major bill of the year passed on a vote of 91-1. Only Sen. Charles Mathias, R-Md., dissented. He objected to a sentencing reform that would abolish parole for federal crimes and establish a commission to set standardized sentencing guidelines for judges to follow.
Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the Judiciary Committee, reminded colleagues of FBI statistics that said that in America, a murder committed every 25 minutes, rage every 10 minutes and a robbery every 89 seconds.
SWIFT ACTION ON the crime package was expected but the Senate was tangleled in a dispute over an amendment to ban federal workers from performing violations without permission. The Senate finally rejected that amendment 51-41.
The amendment was prompted by the revelation that U.S. Information Agency chief Charles Wick taped telephone calls without informing those
on the other end of the line. Among those recorded were White House Chief of Staff James Baker and former President Jimmy Carter.
Broad support for the crime bill was won after separating out controversial issues such as the death penalty and the审判权 rule for later consideration.
The crime legislation would narrow the insanity defense, in the wake of the furor that arose when Hinckley was acquitted by reason of insanity on charges of trying to assassinate Reagan and abolish parole for federal crimes.
The measure would require defendants who plead insanity as a
defense to prove with "clear and convincing evidence" that they did not know what they were doing at the time of the crime. The burden is now on the prosecution to prove the defendant sane beyond a reasonable doubt.
- Give the government greater power to seize the assets of those involved in organized crime or drug operations.
- Tighten bail laws to provide for pretrial detention in some cases.
- It also would:
- Substantially boost fines and penalties for drug trafficking.
- Increase penalties for labor racketeering
Cries for help go unanswered
By United Press International
LORIS, S.C. — With its pilot unconscious and a woman pleading for help over the radio, a small plane meandered through the darkness along the road to get her home in day night before it finally crashed into a field, killing all four people aboard.
Other pilots who intercepted the terror-striken messages from the doomed single-engine Beechcraft tried to pass on instructions, but they could not find any of those aboard the plane had only limited knowledge of how to operate the radio.
Federal Aviation Administration authorities — whose control towers did not hear the broadcasts — said that the radio's volume control might have been turned down and the woman did not know how to turn it up. Authorities also said that the panic-striken woman might not have realized she had to release the "talk" button on the microphone in order to receive.
FAA SPOKESMAN Vivian Elders said that first word of the tragedy came
from the crew of a Piedmont Airline
ship that carried the woman's
single jacket for her.
She said that the crew reported the woman had said "the pilot was unconscious and another passenger was attempting to fly the aircraft."
Billy H. Franklin, who reported the crash, said, "It just tore all to pieces."
The broadcasts ended at 9:40 p.m.
Elders said, when the plane crashed
into a cleared field near Loris about 20
miles inland from Mvrtle Beach.
Horry County Coroner Dargan Cartrette said the two men and two women occupants of the Beechcraft died on impact.
"It looked like the plane came straight down. It made a hole three or four feet wide in the ground," he said. "Parts of the engine were in the hole."
Cartrete identified the occupants of the plane, lying from Darlington, S.C., to Ocean Isle Beach, N.C., as Andrew Lyman, and David Mason, as plane: Franklin E. Kelly, 27; Wanda Lymn Grant, 27, and Artie Braddock, 0岁 age given. All were of South Carolina.
Actor Perkins pleads guilty to charges of drug possession
Bv United Press International
LONDON — A court yesterday fined Anthony Perkins, star of the movie "Psycho," $142 for possession of marijuana and LSD, which he imported to Britain to use for relaxation from a strenuous work schedule, his lawyer said.
"I've never claimed to be a perfect person." Perkins, wearing a three-piece brown suit, said after pleading guilty in the trial at Uxbridge magistrates court.
The American movie star was the second show business personality in two weeks to be caught at London's Heathrow Airport with drugs. Linda McCarthy, who had Paul McCartney, was also convicted of illegally importing marijuana.
PERKINS, WHO STARRED in the classic Alfred Hitchcock thriller "Psycho," its recent sequel "Psycho II."
and many other Hollywood films, was arrested Sunday when he flew in from Los Angeles for the filming of a British television series, "The Glory Boys."
Prosecutors said the small quantities of drugs with a total street value of $21 were found when Perkins' luggage was searched by customs officers.
They said two small packets of marijuana were found in his trousers and the chemical hallucinogenic LSD made paper of paper found in a bottle of vitamins.
Perkins' lawyer told the court that Perkins had never advocated the use of drugs, had a dignified and conservative public image and planned to use the confiscated items to relax from a strenuous work schedule.
Perkins told reporters, "The imperfections of a man in the public eye will always be under closer scrutiny than the imperfections of a man on the street. I understand that, and I accept responsibility for my actions."
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Make a weekend of it at The University of Kansas February 4 & 5... we've got everything from Bach to Basketball!
Spencer Museum of Art: "Diana Arbus. In Print 1960-1971"; "Paris and Modern Art from the Alex Hillman Family Collection": 9 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 4; 1:4:30 p.m., Sunday, Feb. 5.*
Women's Basketball: The Lady Jayhawks meet Colorado, 2 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 4.
Chamber Music Series: Canada's Orford String Quartet, in concert, 8 p.m., saturday, Feb. 4, Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall; tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office, 913/864-3982.*
Men's Basketball: The Jayhawks meet Wichita State, 1 p.m., Sunday, Feb. 5.
- A University Arts Festival Presentation
Artists Festival
1
1
SPORTS
University Daily Kansan, February 3, 1984
1
Seahawks' Knox to receive award at Chiefs banquet
Page 12
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Three members of the Washington Redskins team and Seattle Seahawks' Coach Chuck Knox will be among those to receive awards at the 14th "101 Banquet," the Kansas City Chiefs announced yesterday.
Knox will be given his third Coach of the Year trophy. He was selected the NFC Coach of the Year for his efforts with the 1973 Los Angeles Rams and returned to pick up the 1980 AFC award while coaching the Buffalo Bills. He is the first coach to win the award three times.
Joe Gibbs, who took the Washington Redskins to the Super Bowl for the second straight year was voted the NFC Coach of the Year and his quarterback, Joe Theismann, was the conference offensive player of the year while Dave Butz was selected the NFC defensive player of the year.
The Feb. 17 black-tie dinner is sponsored by the Chiefs and their booster organization.
SPORTS ALMANAC
BASKETBALL
College Basketball Results
Amherst St. 60, Western St. St. 58
Bridgeport St. 78, Quimpson St. 67
Chicago St. 67, Chester St. 97
Cheyenne St. 9E, Stroudshur St. 86
Vaulner St. 74, Haverley St. 86
Elmira St. 84
Hawthorne St. 75, Lyndon St. 39
Lincoln St. 62, Phila. Pharmacy 69
St. Louis St. 61, Morgan St. 39
Merchant St. 91, NY Marine St. 60
Southern St. 61, Sacrured Heart St. 57
Southampton St. 72
Michaels St. 78, Kenne St. 67
Suqueshane St. 100, Wilkes St. 78
Williamsville St. 44, Union St. 69, Hamilton St. 67
Wakefield St. 55
W. New England St. R, Williams St. 55
Alabama Birmingham 68, Jacksonville 91
AldersonBirmingham 97, Bluefield 91
Belmont Abbey 52, Elm Col. 40
Catwata 77, Pfizer 70
Charleston WV, Wa. 71, Fairmont 63
Gardner Webb 84, Barber Scotland 63
Georgia Centenary 64
Livingstone 68, N.C. Central 67
Middle Tennessee 77, Tennessee St. 71
Norfolk 106, Coppin St. 91
Sw Louisiana 62, New Orleans 53
Salt Lake City 65, So Florida 61
Vanderbilt 55, Mississippi St. 54
Va. Commonwealth 65, So Florida 61
Wake Forest 78, Georgia Tech (4t)
Abandh 79. St. Joseph, Ind. 37
Bethen 103. Coronel 77
Bradley 56. Southern Illinois 55
Briar Cliff 90. Westmar 45
Cent. Methodist 68, Wm. Jewell (64) 47
Cleveland St. 87, Xuyuan 63
Columbus St. 87, Valley State 71
Dakota Westley 69, Black Hills 67 (47)
Dayton Bay, D7俊 74 (47)
Eureka 94, Maryland 73
Indiana Tech 56
Greenville 39, Principia 62
Illinois 54, Iowa 33 (48)
Illinois 54, Missouri 39
Kansas Newman 66, McPherson 58
Mid-America Nazarene 68, Baker 63
Mountaineer 68, Granite 66
Kansas University 68
Purdue Calumet 72, St Francis 65
Quincy 72, Rooteshurst 65
Rockford 63, Worcester 65
Southwest
Ark. St 7, Evangelou (Mo) 59
Arch. College 62, Titliwine 57
Arch. College Mexico 73
Honeston 79, Texas A&M 65
La Tech 75, No. Texas A&M 71
Valdez Arsenal 71
Nevada-Las Vegas 85, New Mexico St. 16
Ouachita (Ar) 49, Cameron Arkansas 16
Ouachita (Ar) 49, Cameron Arkansas 16
Edwards 85, Mary Hardin Baylor 21
Tarleton St. 74, Howard Payne 71
West
Air Force 53, San Diego St. 43
Idaho St. 85, Bouse State 81
Wyoming 73, Hawaii 64
Wichita State 66, Tulsa 64
Williams 0-1 0-0 0, 1-0 0-0 3, 8-0 0-0 6, Vanley 9-1 3-1 3, Harris 10-8 10-8 20, Riess 4-13 7-15, Bedouin 8-15 8-15, Moss 0-0 0,2-2, Meikinny 0-0 0, Total 12-20 32-64, WICHITA STATE (46)
McDaniel 8-19 3-5 21 Santos 3-11 3-5 9, Durisic
8-19 3-5 19 Pake 3-5 0.6 Sherrod 6-14 5-17
8-19 3-5 19 Pake 3-5 0.6 Sherrod 6-14 5-17
3 tied for first-round lead in Crosby
Airline 1-0-0 0-0, Cundifd 0-1-0 0-0, Carr 0-1-0 2-0
Totski 25-59 16-27 66
Hallmark-Weirhe State 33 Tulsa 35 tsm
Watson-Hawkins State 48 Tulsa 60
Johann-Johnsen, Duricus-boundes Tulsa
(Harry 8), Weisha State 46 (McMahlen 12)
(Page 4) Weisha State 46 (McMahlen 12)
(Page 4) Field-temperature A-10.66.
OLYMPICS
Alpine Skiing
PEBLE B BEACH, Calif. — Strugglers Bob Murphy, Jim Nelford and Thomas Gray upstaged the field in the first round of the $400,000 Bing Crosby National Pro-Am yesterday, each with a sundert-ger 67 for a share of the lead.
UPI Olympic Outlook
Gray, who missed the cut in three tournaments and was eliminated in the first round of the Tuscon Play Championship this year, shot 67 at Pebble Beach, making five birdies and no bogues in a mistake-free round.
McCord, Bruce Devlin and Lanny
Wadkins heads a group tied at 71.
Gray hit his irons close all day with his longest birdie put a 15-footer on the third hole. Murphy scrambled a bit more, making a two-footer on the seventh and a 20-footer on the 13th. He made it around the round, with most of his puts inside of 12 feet, except for one of 20 on the par-3 third hole.
Men's downhill - Franz Klammer, Austria;
Erwin Renk, Austria; Mirzim Zurbigten,
Switzerland; American outlook: Bill Johnson.
*Note: either very good or very bad,
medium odds.*
Gray, who was puzzled about why he had suddenly played well after such a poor start this year, said it might have been the fact that he shaved off his beard.
Murphy, coming back from hand surgery that kept him out of competition during most of 1983, and Nelford, the Canadian who always gets turned on when he plays on the Monterey Peninsula, but seemingly nowhere else, shot their 67s at much tougher Slovak Hill.
Jack Nicklaus, in his first tournament of the year, shot a 72, while defending champion Tom Kite had 73, both at Cypress Point.
Tom Watson, who opened the year by taking the title at Tucson, Andy Bean, John Mahaffey and Andy North had trouble on the same course. Watson and Bean shot 77s and Mahaffey, winner of the Hope Classic, and North each shot 79.
birdies and two bogeys. Nelford had six
birdies and one bogey.
"I can't think of any other reason," I likeable fourth-year pre from Present.
Women's downhill, Maria Wallerstein, Switzierland, Michele Fugia, Switzerland, Irene Schmidt, Julia Kubriskova, Christian Cooper, Sumi Valdez, will be close to victory. Andrea Wenzel, Liechtenstein, Phil Mar扎,
andrea_marzato.com
Ray Floyd, Mark Pfeil, Dan Haldorson and Lee Elder were among a big group tied at 70, while Gary
The scores of Gary, Murphy and Nelford, put the trio a stroke ahead of Mark O'Meara and Wille Wood, both of whom had previously played Pebble Beach, and two in front of Jim Roy, David Edwards, Mark Hayes, Hale Irwin and 1983 leading money winner Hal Sutton.
Men's giant skalom. — Pirmin Zurbriggen,
Switzerland; Hans Enn, Austria; Steve Mahe,
Yakim, Wash.
Men's 30-kilometer — Bill Koch, Eugene,
Ore.; Nikolai Zimyatov, Soviet Union; Gunde
Svan Sweden.
Women's slam - Erika Hess, Switzerland;
Tamara McKinney, Squaw Valley, Calif.; frene
Ennis; West Germany.
Men's 50-kilometer — Thomas Wasberg, Sweden; Eric Erik Eriksen, Norway; Harri Kivrenvala, Finland American outback. Jim Hall, Florida, Alaska, finished 10th at Lake Placid in 1986.
It was a warm pleasant day on the Monterey Peninsula and Murphy said that might have been the reason why he played well.
By United Press International
Women's giant slalom — Irene Epple, West Germany; Erika Hess, Switzerland; Christin Sun Valley, Idaho.
Men's 15-kilometer — Aleksandr Zavalyev,
Soviet Union, Gunden Svan, Palmur, Gajam Mikkelspak,
Norway. American outlook. Could be out of top 10
Murphy's round included seven
Men's 4 x 10-kilometer relay — Norway, Soviet
Union, Finland. American outlook; Medal not out of the question.
Women's 'Ski-milometer' Blanka Paula
Czelokovlasiak Brit Petter Tennay. Norway.
Embryo Zimyatza, Soviet Union. American
Ruhwitz. Rahmowitz Edarl. Fairbanks,
Alaska.
Women's a 90-kilometer — Russia Smetanina,
Soviet Union, Lyubov Luyden, Soviet Union.
The first female pilot in the outbook. A building吟 in this event as well.
Women's a x-3 kilometer relay — Neway
Mexico.
Pairs - Velaire Valvala and Og g眶 Veslain, Soviet Union. Sahine Bases and Tasio Thierbach. east, Germany. Caitlin and Peter Carruthers. Burlington, Mass.
Women's - Rosalyna Sumers, Edmonds, Wash. Katarina Watin, East Germany, Tritany Chin, Toluca Lake, Calif., Elaine Zayak,帕曼 N.J.
Women's 18-kilometer - Mara Lissima Hamad
Hamas Rashida, Hamad Rashida,
Rahma Hamad, Seyyid Hamad, American outlook. Juby Rabinowitz Endestad and Lynn Spencer Gallen, Anchorage, Alaska, enjoyed
90-meter jump Jens Weiss, East
Germany; Matti Nykänen, Finland; West
Bulau, Canada; American outcourt;
Mike Hale, Norwich, V., was 15th on World Cup
runner-up.
90 meter jump - Jesse Wisseng, East Germany; Järni Pakkuonen, Finland; Klaus Ostwald, East Germany; American outlook; Jeff Hastings, North Vit, VI; makes top seven
Dance - Jayce Torvill and Christopher Dean, Great Britain, Natalya Bestemannan, and Andrew Rubin, Soviet Union, Judi Blumberg, Summit, N.J., and Michael Sebelt, Washington.
Olympics - hiring year if this event even
women's 8 x 4-metre relay - New York,
USA. Cecilion-Ivakaua, American
outlook. Both quality and depth need
development
Nordic combined — Thomas Sandberg,
Norway, Jokko Karjalainen, Finland, Kerry
Lynch, Granby, Colo
**Figure Skating**
Men's — Scott Hamilton, Bowling Green
Ohio; Aleksandr Fadeyev, Soviet Union; Nori Bert Schramm, West Germany
Women's 500-meter, Karin Eake, Ekke
Brown, Katia雅尔, Soviet Union
Andrey Anisimov, Russia
outlook. Converse Paramekse of Detroit finished
last year in the World Spirit Championships.
8th place.
Men's 5.000-meter — Rolf Falk-Larssen,
Norway; Tomas Gustafson, Sweden; Mike
Woods, Wawatua, Win.
Men's 10,000-meter — Tomas Gautafon,
Sweden; Igor Mokrov, Iglov Union, Andre
Bibrow, Soviet Union. American outlook Woods
do well at this distance also.
Men's 1.00-meter — Abdou Brobure, Soviet Union, Rolf Falk Larsen, Norway; Hilbert van der Dum, The Netherlands, American outlook. Hehrenkan may be stronger in the 1.00.
Women's 1,000-meter - Karin Eanke, East Germany, Christa Robertha, East Germany, Andreas Scheehe, East Germany, Ameri can outlook. No chance.
Men's 1.00-meter — Pavel Popov, Soviet Union, Sergei Khrushchev, Soviet Union; Berthold von Weizmann, German outlook; Eric Henkrien, Champaign, Ill.; will show well and Dani Seen, West Alas,印尼; will
University of Arizona offers more than 40 courses: anthropology, art, bilingual education, folk music and folk dance, history, political science, sociology, Spanish language and literature and intensive Spanish. Six-week session. July 2-August 10. 1984. Fully accredited program. Tuition $410. Room and board in Mexican home, $435.
Women's a 3,000-meter - Gali Schwebenburg,
East Germany. Andrea Schwebenburg, East
Germany. Karin Karek, East Germany. American
team. "West German team looks awesome."
"West German team looks awesome."
Women 1.500 meter – Andrea Schreiber, East Germany, Gail Schoenbaum, East Germany, Karin Enke, East Germany, America outskirts, United States, Wesley, finished 12th this distance in 1980. We win.
Soviet's 80 men — Pavel Pegov, Soviet Union. Akira Kuroda, Japan. Sergei Khrushchev, Soviet Union. American internals. Nikolai Khomutov, Mimamura, Japan. One of new facets of Mimamura.
Soviet Union, Czechooslovakia, United States Canada
Hockey
Write
Guadalajara
Summer School
Robert L. Nugent 205
University of Arizona
Tucson 85721
(602) 821-4729
EEO/AA
$2.00 off haircut
all semester
with KUIG
Silver Clipper
LICENSE NUMBER: 11316008
GUADALAJARA
SUMMER
SCHOOL
For information on training, call WTCS at 841-6887.
if you love donuts .. you'll love CARLEY HANZMAN 1970 W. 23rd 1730 W. 824-3664
EYE EXAMINATIONS
CONTACT LENSES
FASHION FRAMES
Dr. Paul G. Limberg Optometrist has assumed the practice of Dr. Dale Sillix Optometrist
Now Available
2. Sensitive, nurturing people to spend positive time with children of domestic violence on a one-to-one basis or in group activities.
CALL 843-5966
202 Lawrence National Bank Building Lawrence, Kansas
*
1. ) Sensitive, strong women to act as volunteers. All ages, races, and ethnic backgrounds encouraged to apply. Commitment to the self determination of women required. Volunteers for daytime and evening desired.
To Your Good Health
DIABETES MANAGEMENT UPDATE
Feb. 4, 2013
The Student Health Service
Watkins Hospital presents
at
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
9 p.m.-close
841-3268
A workshop designed for the individual with diabetes and those interested in diabetes education:
Feb. 4, 1-4:30 p.m.
home glucose management
- home glucose management
W
Serving the needs of battered women and their children, is seeking volunteers;
Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358.
- insulin administration method<
- stress management
WOMEN'S TRANSITIONAL CARE SERVICES, INC.
- contraception, pregnancy, sexuality
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO REGISTER:
Call 843-4455 ext. 31
PIZZA
Shoppe
PIZZA Shoppe
PIZZA BATTER WITH 15 PODERS
6th & Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
842-0600
Limited Delivery Area
HOT
PIZZA!
PEPSI
32
DELIVERED!
HOT
PIZZA!
DELIVERED!
Don't cook tonight! Enjoy a
steaming hot Triple Topp-
ing King Size Pizza and 32
Oz Pepsi...
$895
plus tax
DELIVERED!
expires 2-29-84
JUAREZ
TEQUILA
The Magic of Mexico.
Alpha Delta Pi
BLACK
DIAMOND
1984
MATRIX
FINALLY . . . A $'99 SPEAKER THAT'S WORTH TALKING ABOUT!
The Boston Acoustics A60 has more clarity, more precision . . . more value than speakers selling for twice as much. Come to the Gramophone Shop and experience the Boston Acoustics A60 speaker. This state-of-the-art design reproduces music with effortless clarity and definition. It's designed to sound good on all types of music, in all type of rooms. It's now on display at the Gramophone Shop, joined by 104 other carefully-selected lines of stereo components. If music and stereo are important to you, visit the Gramophone Shop this week!
KIEF'S
GRAMOPHONE
DISCOUNT STEREO shop
4
1
The University Daily KANSAN
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
SPECIALTIES FOR 3-DESIGNERS
Words 1-Date 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10-Days or Weeks
0-15 2.00 3.15 3.75 6.75
10-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80
21-25 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.85
For every 5 words add: 2.95 3.60 4.25 1.03
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.
Classified Display...$4.20
per column inch
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 displays advertisements except for 18p displays.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in plexi or simply by calling the Kuala Lumpur business office at 864-4358.
VERTISMENTS
- Deadlines same as Display Advertisement - 2 working days prior to publication
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only.
- Words set in ALLCAPS count as 2 words.
* Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words.
* Dedilness same as Dissell Advertisement—
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement
- correct insertion of any advertisement
- No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified
until credit has been established
* Tearsheets are not provided for classified or
To the University Dalyan Kanyon
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance
- Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established.
- Blind box ads = please add a $2 service change *
* Checks must accompany all adscited matted ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
**AHLRUNS HIRING:** STEW WADEWANDES. Reservoirs
6442, 7553, 8192, 8560, 8930, 9300,
GNAUKE letter. 1-1016) 9444-4400 EXT
NAME
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
ATTENTION Sincere persons wishing to travel
to attend the Conference contact Jon at 864 101 6430.
Abbreviation Conference contact Jon at 864 101 6430.
Horseback Riding
$6.00 per hour
KOA Campground
842-3877
Havrack Rides Also
Applications are now being accepted for Student of Faculty in the following Weekend (Wednesday to Friday) Weekend). Applications are available at the Truskoff Office, 143 Allen Field House. Become a part of this great KU tradition. Deadline for application is October 27.
SPRING BREAK in PADRE
for $139
Auction weekly consignment every Friday at 7 p.m.
Showmakers. Across Kaw River Bridge, 2 miles
February 3,1984 Page 13
...
Sun-N-Fun with Summit call for info 749-0048
Bulletin Board Service Poster Design & Distribution Town & Campus 100 locations, Reasonable Rates
CRAVENSHIPS HIUNG $180-$300 Carribean,
HUAVESHIPS HIUNG $180-$300 Carribean,
HUAVESHIPS HIUNG $180-$300 Carribean,
EXT. UNSAUSCHISE
Institution ad Collegium Pro
Citrino per
A FRIDAY
ALTERNATIVE
Pro Christo per
Fructejian ad Collegium
Sherry and Conversation
4 p.m. until 5:30 p.m.
Canterbury House
1116 Louisiana
Germini XD printer demonstration. Alphabet Cloud系
家 has the world's original computer center.
66 Massachusetts.
Margarite Casparian "Liturgical Textiles"
interested in RUGGY* Contact Rick or Doug at 842-0077
MAMA JENERIC'S PIZZA FREE DELIVERY 843-MAMA
This coupon good for $1.00 off on a 12" and $2.00 off on a 16" Mama's Special (Pepperoni, Pork, Green Pepper, Onion and Mushroom). Price includes tax and a liter of Pepsi.
843-MAMA
Larry Wordiar is your offere or home. $45 for an hour.
Ralph Hamilton, Alphabet Alpha Byte Computer Center,
1234 Rosewood Ave.
Kansan classifieds get results
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center needs volunteers will learn to short-term counseling skills. No prior experience needed. Attendance on Tuesday, Sunday, and February, Fee 7, & 7.7 p.m.
FOR RENT
1 and 3 bedroom apartments available immediately. Good campus location on bus route. Contact info@mcm.edu
Are you sick of dorm life? Try a refreshing alternative. I will pay you $10 to subdue your Mysrism Hall contract. Great food, good friends, luxurious at home. Enjoy private bathroom and swimming pool. Call 749-8727.
Apple Croft A/C Heat & Water. Quiz Luxury On
edge of campman a 1 BR, 872/7 W471. 194 W18.
345 E 12th St.
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
Excellent location. Each block to town, three blocks to KU. Two bedroom apartment, low utilities, centrally located with large front yard. First months rent free for 2 rooms unfurnished apartment. Wall to wall a carpet, with drapes. Comfortable furnished apartment on KU bus route and close to shopping. Laundry on KU bus route and close to shopping. Lane 11 see or call 841-868 for information.
Help! Sublimate modern efficient two bedrooms ap.
water cable paired S from T from熏红 Goka
kits 3 from熏红 Goka 2 from熏红 Goka 1 from熏红 Goka
APARTMENTS West Excellent Rates! February Rent Free!
1 & 2 BR APTS FROM $200
- Free Campus Transportation
- 24 hour Maintenance
- Year round Swimming
- Laundry Facilities
Year round Swimming
Leisure Facility
Sublet your 2BR apt, with W/ d/hook, redwood deck,
airconditioning, carpet and fridge and stove and
our $300 deposit for yourself plus we will pay 1/3
at 1st month's rent. **$800/mo.** 740-4600 Keep Frying.
Summer sublease. Studio apt, furnished or summer,
closed to campus, on bus route. Call 740-4917
Need a lease through May?
CALL US TODAY!
842-4444
Open Sat.
524 Frontier Road
MEADOWBROOK—nice furnished studio available immediately. Gatam and water paid, 2 blocks from campus, on bus route, laundry facilities. Call 842-4000, 15th and Crestline.
MEADOWBROOK still available one and two bedroom furnished and unfurnished afters. Heat and water included. 2 Blocks from campus, and excellent parking. 1 Bedroom. Meadowbrook 15th. 94-4200 Meadowbrook 15th. 94 & Crestline. 94-4200
1 new Bedroom apt. at 9th & Michigan, Appliance,
Utilities, Low utilties, sub lease
740-2165/641-1827
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
MUST RENT? Beautiful 1 bedroom apartment close
to the beach. Less than 142,493. Greenside.
0877-650-7480. www.mustrent.com
Save $125 per month. 2-bedroom apartment-like
new and 1 back from KU. Call 643-4798.
17.24
BLOCK 23
BLOCK 23
CONSTRUCTION
MATERIALS
BLOCK 23
23.25
Call or stop by
Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
843-4754
MUST RENT? Will house a $25 per room. lowhouse
bathroom with basement and fireplace. Rich
bathroom with basement and fireplace. Rich
10 or 12 month lease
1,2 and 3 bdm apts. All have D.W., disposal, ov/en/range,
Frost Free Refrig., A/C,
gas heat. Bus Route
sublease purchase 1 bedroom apartment Water paid, close to campan downtown. Off street parking.
KU students we still have a few completely furnished and 14-bedroom apartments available near campus.
Sublease: 1 BR apt. close, carpet/downstairs,
balcony, new carpet, dishwasher, $240, 914-6888
**Discounts:** $150 off 1 BR apt., dishwasher, $30 off 1 BR apt., closet, $50 off 1 BR apt., dresser, $75 off 1 BR apt., closet, $100 off 1 BR apt., dresser, $150 off 1 BR apt., closet, $200 off 1 BR apt., dresser, $300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $1000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $1100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $1200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $1300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $1400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $1500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $1600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $1700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $1800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $1900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $2000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $2100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $2200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $2300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $2400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $2500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $2600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $2700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $2800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $2900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $3000 off 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apt., closet, $13300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $13400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $13500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $13600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $13700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $13800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $13900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $14000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $14100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $14200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $14300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $14400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $14500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $14600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $14700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $14800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $14900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $15000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $15100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $15200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $15300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $15400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $15500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $15600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $15700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $15800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $15900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $16000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $16100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $16200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $16300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $16400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $16500 off 1 BR apt., 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$19900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $20000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $20100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $20200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $20300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $20400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $20500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $20600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $20700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $20800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $20900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $21000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $21100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $21200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $21300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $21400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $21500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $21600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $21700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $21800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $21900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $22000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $22100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $22200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $22300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $22400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $22500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $22600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $22700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $22800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $22900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $23000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $23100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $23200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $23300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $23400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $23500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $23600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $23700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $23800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $23900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $24000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $24100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $24200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $24300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $24400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $24500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $24600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $24700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $24800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $24900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $25000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $25100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $25200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $25300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $25400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $25500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $25600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $25700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $25800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $25900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $26000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $26100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $26200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $26300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $26400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $26500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $26600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $26700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $26800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $26900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $27000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $27100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $27200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $27300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $27400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $27500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $27600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $27700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $27800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $27900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $28000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $28100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $28200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $28300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $28400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $28500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $28600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $28700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $28800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $28900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $29000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $29100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $29200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $29300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $29400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $29500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $29600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $29700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $29800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $29900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $30000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $30100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $30200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $30300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $30400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $30500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $30600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $30700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $30800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $30900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $31000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $31100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $31200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $31300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $31400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $31500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $31600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $31700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $31800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $31900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $32000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $32100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $32200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $32300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $32400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $32500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $32600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $32700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $32800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $32900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $33000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $33100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $33200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $33300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $33400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $33500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $33600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $33700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $33800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $33900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $34000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $34100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $34200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $34300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $34400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $34500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $34600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $34700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $34800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $34900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $35000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $35100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $35200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $35300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $35400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $35500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $35600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $35700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $35800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $35900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $36000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $36100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $36200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $36300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $36400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $36500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $36600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $36700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $36800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $36900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $37000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $37100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $37200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $37300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $37400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $37500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $37600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $37700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $37800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $37900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $38000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $38100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $38200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $38300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $38400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $38500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $38600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $38700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $38800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $38900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $39000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $39100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $39200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $39300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $39400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $39500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $39600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $39700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $39800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $39900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $40000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $40100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $40200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $40300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $40400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $40500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $40600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $40700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $40800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $40900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $41000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $41100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $41200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $41300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $41400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $41500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $41600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $41700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $41800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $41900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $42000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $42100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $42200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $42300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $42400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $42500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $42600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $42700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $42800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $42900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $43000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $43100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $43200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $43300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $43400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $43500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $43600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $43700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $43800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $43900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $44000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $44100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $44200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $44300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $44400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $44500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $44600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $44700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $44800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $44900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $45000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $45100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $45200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $45300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $45400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $45500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $45600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $45700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $45800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $45900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $46000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $46100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $46200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $46300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $46400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $46500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $46600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $46700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $46800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $46900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $47000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $47100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $47200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $47300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $47400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $47500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $47600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $47700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $47800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $47900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $48000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $48100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $48200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $48300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $48400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $48500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $48600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $48700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $48800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $48900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $49000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $49100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $49200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $49300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $49400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $49500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $49600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $49700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $49800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $49900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $50000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $50100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $50200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $50300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $50400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $50500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $50600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $50700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $50800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $50900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $51000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $51100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $51200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $51300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $51400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $51500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $51600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $51700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $51800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $51900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $52000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $52100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $52200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $52300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $52400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $52500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $52600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $52700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $52800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $52900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $53000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $53100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $53200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $53300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $53400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $53500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $53600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $53700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $53800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $53900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $54000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $54100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $54200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $54300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $54400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $54500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $54600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $54700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $54800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $54900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $55000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $55100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $55200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $55300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $55400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $55500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $55600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $55700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $55800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $55900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $56000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $56100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $56200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $56300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $56400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $56500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $56600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $56700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $56800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $56900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $57000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $57100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $57200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $57300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $57400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $57500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $57600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $57700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $57800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $57900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $58000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $58100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $58200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $58300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $58400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $58500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $58600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $58700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $58800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $58900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $59000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $59100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $59200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $59300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $59400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $59500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $59600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $59700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $59800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $59900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $60000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $60100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $60200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $60300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $60400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $60500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $60600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $60700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $60800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $60900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $61000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $61100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $61200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $61300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $61400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $61500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $61600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $61700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $61800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $61900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $62000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $62100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $62200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $62300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $62400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $62500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $62600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $62700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $62800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $62900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $63000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $63100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $63200 off 1 BR apt., closet, $63300 off 1 BR apt., closet, $63400 off 1 BR apt., closet, $63500 off 1 BR apt., closet, $63600 off 1 BR apt., closet, $63700 off 1 BR apt., closet, $63800 off 1 BR apt., closet, $63900 off 1 BR apt., closet, $64000 off 1 BR apt., closet, $64100 off 1 BR apt., closet, $64200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $64300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $64400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $64500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $64600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $64700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $64800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $64900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $65000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $65100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $65200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $65300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $65400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $65500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $65600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $65700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $65800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $65900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $66000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $66100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $66200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $66300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $66400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $66500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $66600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $66700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $66800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $66900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $67000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $67100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $67200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $67300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $67400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $67500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $67600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $67700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $67800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $67900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $68000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $68100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $68200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $68300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $68400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $68500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $68600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $68700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $68800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $68900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $69000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $69100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $69200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $69300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $69400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $69500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $69600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $69700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $69800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $69900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $70000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $70100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $70200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $70300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $70400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $70500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $70600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $70700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $70800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $70900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $71000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $71100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $71200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $71300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $71400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $71500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $71600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $71700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $71800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $71900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $72000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $72100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $72200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $72300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $72400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $72500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $72600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $72700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $72800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $72900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $73000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $73100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $73200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $73300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $73400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $73500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $73600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $73700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $73800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $73900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $74000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $74100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $74200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $74300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $74400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $74500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $74600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $74700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $74800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $74900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $75000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $75100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $75200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $75300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $75400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $75500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $75600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $75700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $75800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $75900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $76000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $76100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $76200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $76300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $76400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $76500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $76600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $76700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $76800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $76900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $77000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $77100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $77200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $77300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $77400 off 1BRapt., closet, $77500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $77600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $77700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $77800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $77900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $78000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $78100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $78200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $78300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $78400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $78500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $78600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $78700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $78800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $78900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79200 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79300 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79400 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79500 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79600 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79700 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79800 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79900 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79000 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79100 off 1 BRapt., closet, $79200 off 1 BRpt., closet, $79300 off 1 BRpt., closet, $79400 off 1 BRpt., closet, $79500 off 1 BRpt., closet, $79600 off 1 BRpt., closet, $79700 off 1 BRpt., closet, $79800 off 1 BRpt., closet, $79900 off 1 BRpt., closet
FOR SALE
GUITAR. Peavey T-40, new fitted, two pedals, etc. Kutam 150w (AMPLIFIERS) W/16" woofer. Great set up, $650 or separately. Mike, MK-5420.
ATARI 600 XL. One month old like new $150. Call 749-2587 after 5 p.m.
78 Renault Le Car, GLT, $1400 3 woodstoves $105
each, 289,116
FOR SALE! 101 Honda CM2070, excellent condition under warranty, asking $500 (nonstabilizer)
Beseler Dual Dichroic Color head with Beseler dual dichroic powered supply for color photography Drawing table. 48 x 38. Wood frame, vinyl top, adjustable height, adjustable tilt, one year old.
or e Sale - Used Floppy disks. Scootch quality or better *2* double, double density, soft sectored *3* double, double density, (minimum 10) • Also limited to medium size (*4* double, double density). Mark or Jonne Finger *289 Overlook Circle, 841-757*. (Mark and Jonne Finger)
For sale Radar Datetool "FOX XR" Brand new. Also "realistic" AM/FM amplifier pin 2 speaker cable.
HONDA CB750-F 1990, excellent condition, quarter
facing with no damage. 2 belts muffler. $400,
first pair.
IBM PC-compatible. From $995. Allegacy Computer Center. Lawrence is original computer center.
Sampal-Sale - Women's and Men's apparel apparel
Sampal-Sale - women, shorts plus 7-shirts, most items 60% off
Sampal-Sale - women, shorts plus 7-shirts, most items 60% off
Peavey 7-0 bass with case, accessories. Perfect condition. $250, price negotiable. 749-7312.
save $$ Computers. Discount prices. Catalog supply for Zenith hardware and software and accession materials. Includes first order! Emerald City Computer Mail Order; Department V; P O X Box 154, Lawrence, KS. 60942 Sires television video. All name brands. Lowest price. Total Sound Distributors. 913-838-6000.
T15-59. PC-10A Printer Master Business decisions
T15-59. master-leisure-useware softwarer 748-9707
THEATRICAL MAKEUP KIT-Large, loaded,
tackle box 651 firm. Call 841-4734
technics Turntable fully automatic, direct drive with $10 Shure cartridge and script, $190. 864-283-235
Titanium Instruments Programmable Calculator TI-59
$125. Printer for TI-59 $125. Both: $25
USED CARPETS--dorm room sizes, mostly shadda,
$80, leave message, 842-413-3
Used Furniture at Shoremack's, across Kaw River Bridge, 2 miles north of Lawrence on 25.99 Highway
U.S. and U.N. stamps, mint and used, bargain priced.
Collectors call 843-5189, eighteen.
Used cameras, large selection, student prices. C & T Photographics. 915 Sila Peer, Overland Park, KS
Western Civilization Notes; including New Supple-
ware and textbooks on Western Civilization;
study guide 2; for preparation for For exam
preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civiliza-
tion" available now at Town Center, the Jaushawk
AUTO SALES
191 Dodge Charger, AC, PS, PB, new Auto. Trans.
Sequoia, good mileage, milespec 932-847-3007
1977 W RABBIT - Well cared for. Must sell. $1300.
842 4173 after 6, anytime weekends.
1979 Ford Mustang V6, automaker. All extra cars. Available PTCO with speakers. 740-3237 or 740-3237.
1018 Datum 200 ZX. GLP, 5 pounds. rear lever, loaded. 2 black & gold, 25 pounds. sharp, must sell.
LOST AND FOUND
WV Wrabh 11K "l", good condition. [Ka7 793-275]
Dalton 310 GX Good super cond Clean Load
Thermo 180 GX Good condo
WV RABbit LS, 4-door, AC, stereo, Cass, 25,000 miles
$1800 | $480 | 84.937 |
Mast sell. Fiat 125, 176, 197, 4 cylinder, 50,00 good
condition, #850. Call 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. #83-8428.
Airlines are hired! flight attendants Reserva
Guide, Newsletter (916) 944-4444
Guide, Newsletter (916) 944-4444
HELP WANTED
Found small amount of cash. Call Stan 843-0977
Lost in December in 3rd floor Strong Hall Computer
Room. Loca Atlas at 6a4 (18:3 p.m.) or 824-3090.
(3) (5) (7) (9) (11)
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STAFF AMPFT for Camp Lincoln/Camp Lake HUBert, a Minnesota resident summer camp. A strong commitment to working with children, required, along with skills and experience in activities. Applicants must be interested in Placement Center 223 Caruth Hall, for interviews on Campus Wednesday. February sixth.
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Wanted: Camp Daley Manager Staff for June/July,
1984. Business Hainman, Health Officer, Unit
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t
B S O N W M H U W S E C E D C I F T
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
February 3, 1984 Page 14
Jayhawks, Dreiling await matchup with WSU
By GREG DAMMAN Sports Writer
Kansas and Wichita State, rivail schools less than 200 miles apart, will meet Sunday in Alten Field House for the first regular-season basketball game scheduled between the two schools since 1955.
Sunday's game is sold out and will be nationally televised by NBC. Tip-off is set for 1 p.m.
The two schools last played in the 1981 NCAA Midwest Regional semifinals in the so-called "Battle of New Orleans." The Shockers defeated the Jayhawks
"As far as the fans go it's a tremendous rivalry," Wichita State assistant coach Kick Shore said. "But as a coach it seems like you're playing for every game as they do for this one."
The Shockers are 12-6 on the season after beating Missouri Valley Conference rival Tulsa 66-44 last night. Xavier Daniel led WSU with 21
points and 12 rebounds. Earlier in the week they defeated Southwestern Loui-
ne and Miami.
THE JAYHAWKS ARE 12-6 after Wednesday's 103-8 loss to Oklahoma and are currently in second place in the Big Eight Conference with a 4-2 record.
KU assistant coach John Calipari said the Jayhawks were expecting a tough game from the Shockers, who have won their last four games.
"We've only won eight conference games the past two years, and they've won their conference both years." Calipari said. "They have some great athletes, and their team will be ready to go."
One KU player who will also be ready to go is center Greg Dreiling.
DREILING, A NATIVE of Wichita,
played at Wichita State his freshman
year before transferring to KU and
becoming eligible this year. Dreiling is
the team in scoring and rebounding,
averaging 10.4 points and 5.7
rebounds a game.
"Greg Dreiling is going to have a lit-
the extra incentive to beat these guys," Calinari said.
Dreling said, "I think this will develop into a good rivalry for both teams. Both teams have great players. The team that it should be an outstanding game."
Dreiling will be joined in the front-court Sunday by forwards Kelly Knight and Carl Henry. Henry and Knight helped the team to dominate with 18 and 17 points respectively.
The Henry, the Big Eight Player of
the week last week is averaging 15.8 points
in games this season.
"YOU DON'T STOP a player like Carl Henry. He's a tremendous player." Shore said. "But we match up them pretty good on the front line."
Knight is averaging 10.3 points and 6.9 rebounds a game.
The Shockers will start with 6-foot-7 Xavier McDaniel at forward, along with 6-7 freshman Gus Santos. Six-foot-10 Zarko Durpisur starts at center.
McDaniel has led the Wichita State
this year in both rebounding and scoring, averaging 19.4 points and 13.3 rebounds a game. McDaniel led the nation last season and currently ranks second.
Satellite availence 7.9m² and 3.3m²
Banks of galactic and terrestrial
units
Wichita State will start a pair of Wichita natives, Aubrey Sherrod and Kirk Sherrod in the guards. Sherrod is second on the team in scoring, averaging 14.5 points a game.
Starting in the backcourt for the Jayhawks will be Mark Turgeon and Calvin Thompson.
Besides the 1811 and 1955 Kansas-Wichita State games, the two teams have played each other only three other times. Kansas has won all three.
CALIPARI AND SHORE both said
their annual game between
the Shorekars and the
between the Shorekars and the
"I think it is good for KU, WSU and basketball in Kansas," Calari said.
Martin wants bragging rights in Wichita
Bv JEFF CRAVENS
Sports Editor
It is going to be a battle for the bragging rights in Wichita. And no one knows how much the cost of it will be.
"If we win, I can go home and brag a little," Martin said. "And if they win, I won't go home."
Martin, who backs up another Wichita native, Greg Dreiling, has gotten a taste of how Shocker fans handle victory. He saw plenty of reaction after victory in what has become known in Wichita as the "Battle of New Orleans."
"I'm tired of them rubbing it in," Martin said. "The Wichita State fans were kind of fastness after they won, and we were on our own town and making buttons and cups."
"IT'S GOTTEN KIND of old and it will get even worse if we don't win."
Martin has seen considerable playing time this season as Dreiling has been hampered by foul problems for most of the season. Martin is averaging 20.4 minutes a game while playing center and power forward.
"I started out pretty well, but here lately, I've gone through a spell where I haven't played up to my ability." Mar-
cella said. Coach Brown has come to relive on me.
Coming off the bench, Martin is averaging 7.3 points and 4.3 rebounds a game. He is also second on the team in blocked shots with 21.
Martin had 18 points against Ohio
State and scored six points down the
halfway block.
"MAYBE IVE JUST been in the right place at the right time," Martin said. "This has definitely been my best season here."
One thing that might have contributed to Martin's on-court success has been the change in his life. Martin was married to his high school sweetheart, the former Jodi Wineinger, this summer.
"It made me realize that I'm not the only one," Martin said. "She helps me because she makes me study harder. It made me grow up."
Another contributing factor is new KU coach Larry Brown, Martin said.
("Coach Brown takes more control
that we have had in the past"
here," Martin said. "When he pulls you out for a mistake, he'll tell you about it and it makes you think about what you are doing so you won't do it again."
MARTIN PLAYS AN all-out style that has won over the fans in Allen Field House. One play that epitomizes Martin'sreck abandon was when he went over the press table and into the crowd against Kansas State.
"I was at full speed before I realized I couldn't get the ball," Martin said. "All I could do is find a way not to get hurt. When I got to the highest point, I looked on the faces of the people in the crushed ball and tiled land safely without hurting them.
Plays like *that* are why many Jayhawk fans have given him the nickname "Mad Man Martin" It is a play that Martin reluctantly agrees with.
"Yeah, whenever I'm going good, people can look at me, especially in the face of being a bad patient."
MARTIN IS HAPPY filling his role
with the team's chances of
chances during the rule of the season.
'I just go out and do what I'm supposed to do," he said. "Whatever it takes to win.
"At times, we have come out and played great. Then we play like we did at Oklahoma. If we play like we can — patient on offense and agressive on defense — then I think we can win the Big Eight."
"I don't think we will be concerned with him, but we will be aware," he said. If we're playing zone and he's on call, then it will get him. If he's on Kelly's side, she'll hit him and if he's in the middle then Glen will hit him. And Carl will pick him up, too.
Although they are facing Xavier McDaniel, the No. 2 rebounder in the game said that the Jayhawks have not planned to keep the "X-man" off the boards.
"After playing the way we did against Oklahoma, if we win, it will be a big boost to our confidence."
Whoever does the job, it will be important for KU to win the game.
Not only that, but Martin will be able to go home for the summer.
5
Larry Funk/KANSAN
KU center Greg Dreiling will face his former teammates Sunday when KU takes on Wichita State. Dreiling and the rest of the Jayhawks will try to contain WSU's Xavier McDaniel, the No.2 rebounder in the NCAA.
KU swimmers back in action at Iowa State
By the Kansan Staff
The women's team is coming off an impressive victory in the Midwest.
The Kansas men's and women's swimming teams will be in action over the weekend, traveling to Iowa State as well, a 6 p.m. dual meet with the Cyclones.
"We've got some work to do," swimming coach Gary Gempf said. "But I think we will swim better than we did last weekend."
The Lady Jayhawks moved up only one place in the national rankings to No. 12 this week, despite beating two other teams by a head of them, Iowa and Southern Illinois.
"That happens a lot that way so it doesn't surprise me at all," Kempf said. "It happens in the basketball rankings or any kind of rankings."
After the Iowa State meet, both the men and women will be off until Friday, when they will travel to Minnesota for a dual meet.
Sports Almanac page 12
- College Basketball results
* Bing Crosby Pro-Am results
* Stars to watch in Winter Olympics
page 12
GATEWAY
Vickie Adkins, center for the KU women's team, has a quiet, easygoing personality, but is a fierce competitor on the court. Adkins was named Big Eight Player of the Week Tuesday and scored 32 points against Oklahoma Tuesday night.
KU center's easygoing appearance helps disguise talent, leads women
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Sports Writer
When Vickie Adkins was named Big Eight Player of the Week on Tuesday, it was about the last thing KU's sophomore center was thinking about.
"I didn't know I gotted the award until they gave it to me," Adkins said.
Adkin's remark is typical of the unassuming approach she takes to the game of basketball.
"Vickie's just so quiet and easygoing on the court that people don't realize how much she does, but she has always been effective, and she's just coming into her own," said woman's head coach Marian Washington.
But Adkins take it-as-it comes at-
tention toward the game shouldn't be
mistaken for a real challenge.
"SHE REALLY ENJOYS competition," Washington said. "She has a real nose for the ball, especially on the end of the line, which is always in the middle of the action."
And the rougher the competition, the better she likes it.
"I think the more aggressive players make me play better," Adkins said. "Going against an aggressive player pushes me to try harder."
Adkins said one such example of a player who brought out the best in her was Kansas State's center Angie Bonner. Adkins scored 29 points and pulled down 10 rebounds, both game-high totals, against Bonner last Saturday, leading the Jayhawks to a 71-58 upset of the nationally ranked Wildcats.
hadn't beaten them in two years," Adkins said. "We were so fired up for that game."
ADKINS KEPT UP the good work in Tuesday's 874-8 loss to Oklahoma, leading all players with 32 points and 14 rebounds. She tied a KU record held by most free throws made in a game. She didn't miss a free throw all night.
"It itdn't seem like I shot that many free throws," Adkins said. "What's really surprising is that I made all of them."
"I was just so excited because we
In the latest statistical rankings released by the Big Eight, through games of Jan. 28, Adkins ranked second in college and third in blocked shots in conference games.
Adkins has emerged as a dominant force in the Big Eight after having to sit six games earlier in the season with a harmsmary injury. That injury was the laceration in a list of injuries that has been ongoing time in her collegiate career.
She had to sit out the first 11 games of last season with a separated shoulder, and missed all of her first season after undergoing knee surgery.
"I TRY NOT TO even think about injuries anymore." Adkins said. "Right now I don't hurt anywhere. I have my knee wrapped up every day for protection, but ever since the surgery it's felt fine."
Adkins not only had to contend with injuries her first two seasons, but also had to get used to playing regular five-on-five basketball.
Adkins went to high school in Oklahoma City, and there girls play a six-on-six game in which three players
stay at one end of court and play offense, and three stay at the other end and play defense.
ADKINS WON OKLAHOMA Player of the year honors her sophomore season and was an honorable mention player in 2013 for problems adjusting to college basketball.
"I didn't know how to play defense
when I came up here," Adkins said. "I'll
be back."
The game wasn't completely new to Adkins. She said she played one on-one against her sister and Jayhawk teammate Barbara, and also played in the game at a local gym "We'd run full court courts, and that was exhausting," she said.
Adkins said her role on the team hadn't changed with the loss of six-foot-six center Philicia Allen. Allen, the team's leading rebounder last season and an All Big Eight Tournament selection, is academically ineligible this season and has been redshirted.
"I'd be playing the same spot in the offense either way, with my back to the corner."
Adkins and her teammates will try to bounce back from Tuesday's loss when they face Colorado on Saturday at 1 p.m. at Allen Fieldhouse. The Jayhawks are tied for second place in the conference with a 3-2 record, while the Buffaloes are in seventh place with a 1-4 record.
"RIGHT NOW COLORADO is a ballclub that's having to adjust from losing it's best player — Lisa Van-Goor" said Washington. "Their greatest threat is their outside game."
The Drinking Myth of the Week
"I'M JUST A SOCIAL DRINKER".
"I'M JUST A SOCIAL DRIINKER".
Just because you never drink alone doesn't mean you can't have a drinking problem. Plenty of "social drinkers" become alcoholic.
TJ. TRUNG LANE
SAC
DR BANK JOHN'S
The Student Assistance Center
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GEOPHYSICIST OR TECTONOPHSICIST University of Kapas
KU seeks applications for a tenure-track faculty position in geophysics. Candidates should have research interests in crustal geophysics. The successful applicant will be expected to teach undergraduate and graduate geophysics courses, develop an active research program, advise students, supervise graduate student theses and dissertations, and provide service through administrative and professional activities. A Ph.D. in geology with specialization in geophysics is required although applicants who will complete the Ph.D. within the first year of employment at KU will be considered. The position is at the assistant professor level with a salary commensurate with qualifications. Although the closing date for the nationwide search has passed, the closing date for local applications is extended to Feb. 13, 1984. The starting date for the position is Aug. 16, 1984. Send vita, transcripts, a brief statement of research interests and courses the applicant feels qualified to teach, and three letters of reference to G.H. Giry, Department of Geology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. The advertised position is contingent on continued state funding. For additional information contact G.H. Giry or phone (913) 864-4974. KU is an affirmative-action, equal-opportunity employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
1
9
The University Daily
Financial woes But demand for WTCS increases Inside, p. 3
KANSAN
SUNNY
Happy Birthday
High 30, Low 20.
Details on p. 2
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 94, No. 93 (USPS 650-640)
monday morning, February 6, 1984
New election weeds out three former candidates
By CINDY HOLM Staff Reporter
only one of the four coalitions that ran in November's student body presidential election will be running in the new election Feb. 29 and March 1. Three new presidential candidates have entered the race.
The new candidates are Loren Busy, Hutchinson senior, of the Starting Over Coalition; Philip Duff, Columbia, Mo., sophomore, who is running as an independent; and Bob Swain, Topea junior, of the Apathy — It Just Doesn't Matter Coalition.
Friday's filing deadline passed with only the Costume Party remaining from the last election.
Walker withdraws, inside p. 5
Even that coalition has gone through some changes.
Changres The presidential and vice president candidates have switched places. Carla Vogel, Overland Park special student, will run for president. Dennis "Boo" Highberger, Garnett senior, will run for vice president.
VOGEL SAID THAT she and Highberg had decided to switch places, because they considered each other more important.
She said that it didn't really matter to them who had the titles. "There is no president and vice president," she said.
Vogel said she didn't think involvement in the last election would hurt their chances in the new election.
In fact, she said, Costume Party members had an easier time collecting signatures for their filing petition, which was encouraging.
student signatures requesting that their names be placed on the ballot.
Student Senate rules require that candidates either be former student senators or collect
On Jan. 5, Chancellor Gene A. Budig called for a new presidential election, acting on the recommendation of the University of Kansas Judicial Board.
THE BOARD SAID the fall elections had been marred by discrepancies in election procedures and recommended revision of the Student Senate rules governing elections.
Problems in the November election prompted Busby and Paul Baskirk, Wichita graduate student and vice presidential candidate, to form the Starting Over Coalition.
Jim McCrossen/Kansar
"After the last election, the credibility of Student Senate has been damaged and is on the line." Busy said. "We want to put the recent history of Student Senate behind us and just start now."
In the new election, students will have a clear choice between candidates who have experience in student government and candidates who want to radically change the Senate's structure, said Busby, who is a fifth-term student senator and chairman of the Finance and Auditing Committee.
BUSKIRK IS A former senator and former chairman of the reorganized Transportation
Busby said, "This election will dictate the future of Student Senate."
Phillip and Patrick Duff, sophomore transfer students from Columbia, Mo., said that they didn't decide until Friday morning to file for the election.
PHILLIP DUFF IS running for president, and his twin brother is running for vice president.
22
STATE
After reading in the University Daily Kansas that Scott Swenson, a candidate in the November election, had decided not to run, Phillip Duff
See FILING, p. 5, col. 4
Wichita State guard Aubrey Sherrod wasn't able to keep the ball away from KU's Calvin Thompson and the rest of the Jayhawks all afternoon. Sherrod scored 22 points last night, but Thompson and the Jayhawks won the game 79-69. See game story on p. 14.
Wazzan quits minister post in Lebanon
Gemayel sends plea to foes for peace talks to avert possible war
Money problems to delay ventilation repair
By United Press International
Facing his greatest crisis, Christian President Amin Gemayel went on national radio and television to appeal to his Muslim opponents to attack him in peace talks aimed at averting all-out civil war.
BEIRUT. Lebanon — Prime Minister Chefik Wazza resigned along with his cabinet yesterday, but fighting intensified as Shiite Muslim militiamen seized control of the main road leading to the airport and the U.S. Marine base.
"Everything is open to discussion with the opposition," said Gemayel, as he sat in a television studio with a green, red and white Lebanese flag in the background.
Bv STEPHANIE HEARN
He dismissed calls for his own resignation but pledged to work to improve ties with Syria, which supports the Muslim militias fighting the
See MIDEAST, p. 5, col. 4
So far the Board of Regents has authorized only $30,000 for modifying the building.
The proposed modifications for correcting hazardous ventilation problems in KU's Art and Design Building will cost more than $125,000 if carried out, according to figures released from a recent investigation into the problem.
During a meeting Thursday with faculty who work in the building, Jerry Moore, the associate dean of fine arts, said the University would have to request additional funds from the Regents to undertake the project.
THE DELAY CAME as no surprise to faculty attending the meeting. Students and faculty have been complaining of skin irritations and headaches caused by excessive fumes since the meeting.
During Thursday's meeting, the faculty members discussed alternatives for correcting the ventilation problems in the spray-painting room.
He also said he doubted that the repairs would be completed this semester.
Several faculty members suggested moving spray-painting classes to another room or building booths with self-contained exhaust systems.
However, the faculty members considering the ventilation problems decided to explore other alternatives before deciding how to modify the sorav-painting room.
Without changes, he said, the spray-painting room should not be used for anything that has a toxic vapor.
the spray planting room Moore asked the faculty to determine how the room could be changed to accommodate teaching needs.
ONLY THREE OF the spraying room's 12 vents work properly, said one faculty member who teaches in the room. He declined to give his
See ART, p. 5, col.4
Neighborhood groups work to improve city
Editor's Note: Lawrence's eight neighborhood associations have long faced problems of accomplishing needed improvements. In an attempt to identify some of those problems, the Kansan surveyed members of the associations.
By SHARON BODIN Staff Reporter
Nestled deep in East Lawrence, a quiet stream winds under a covered bridge in Brookcreek Park. It's a quaint place that contrasts sharply with the tall barbed wire fence of a nearby salvage yard.
Before Brookcreek Park was developed, a
drainage ditch on the property was eroding nearby Brook Street. The city bought the land and began earthwork to fill the ditch and build a new ditch away from the street.
the Brookcreek Neighborhood Association convinced the city to develop the area into a needed park, said Sharon Sturdy, a member of the association who was instrumental in
Community development funds eventually provided nearly half of the financing necessary for development.
LACK OF FINANCING isn't the only problem that neighborhood associations face. Often, residents lack interest in getting involved, and problems mount as finances become scarce.
Recently, community development money for projects such as Brookcreek Park stopped flowing to two of the eight neighborhood associations in the city. In all, four of
Even though some neighborhood associations are in need of federal money, they are still working on several improvement projects and continue to battle neighborhood problems.
Lawrence's eight neighborhood associations are not eligible.
Without federal aid, many projects such as the one undertaken at Brookcreek Park might never have come about. The Pinckney Neighborhood Association is one of those groups that recently
See PROJECTS, p. 7, col. 1
Role of sports may be issue at KU forum
Dispute between prof and basketball coach raises larger concern
By MATT DeGALAN Staff Reporter
Grant Goodman, president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said yesterday that the organization was sending a letter late last month after receiving a letter about the controversy.
The chapter will decide Wednesday whether a forum would be appropriate and will discuss specific issues the forum would address, Goodman said.
A group of KU professors, concerned over the recent dispute involving basketball coach Larry Brown and a history professor, will meet Wednesday to consider organizing a forum on the role of athletics at the University of Kansas.
"This issue goes beyond KU," he said. "It's a question of national importance."
FRIDAY, THE KANSAN reported that professor David Katzman had sent letters to several KU administrators concerning the incident with Brown.
Katzman accused Brown of asking him to raise the failing grade of freshman point guard Cedric Hunter.
Hunter eventually failed the American history course and was declared academically ineligible this semester. According to University regulations, the onsite grade for changing a grade is to 80%. There was no legal error.
Brown sent a letter to Katzman expressing his displeasure at Katzman's inflexibility and said Katzman failed to show compassion for Hunter "special circumstances."
correct a character error
The controversy began when Brown, Katzman and Hunter met Jan. 8 to discuss the failing grade. Katzman said that Brown asked him to give Hunter a D-minus for the course and to allow Hunter to make it up this semester.
KATZMAN CALLED BROWN'S request "outrageous" in a letter sent several days later to Brown and to six administrators and professors. In his letter, Katzmant proposed a forum on
In a Jan. 26 letter sent to the same administrator and professors, Brown also wrote that his name was not printed.
JOHNSON DECLINED TO talk to the Kansan Thursday about the dispute between Katzman and Brown. He said Thursday that the Kansan needed to develop "an appreciation for trying to do its part in helping create a strong athletic program at the University."
Several other administrators and professors said they tentatively supported the idea of a forum on athletics and academics.
expresses interest in Athletic Director Monte Johnson said yesterday that he did not support the forum because "all it will do is make sure that the same kind of garbage that was in the paper last Friday will be in again."
In his letter, Katzman proposed that the forum be organized by either the University Senate Executive Committee, the AAUP, or the offices of academic affairs or student affairs. He suggested that the letters written by both
See BROWN, p. 5, col. 1
NINA PATTERSON
Bobby Bridger strums his guitar outside of Murphy Hall. weekend, is a singer, poet and actor. He performed on campus Bridger, who was Hashinger Hall's artist-in-residence this Friday and Saturday. See story, p. 6.
KU biochemist recruits herb to join war against leukemia
By DAVID SWAFFORD
Staff Reporter
Castor beans worked well enough. But L.L. Houston turned to the purple berries of pokewells in search of something better.
The toxic berries on pokeweeds, which can be found along the sides of country roads and across open fields in the United States, provided a new way for the KU biochemistry professor to fight poison with poison.
person with prior
After years of research. Houston has developed a method for destroying leukemia cells by combining the toxin extracted from the pokeweld's berries and leaves with a type of neutron antibody. When combined, the pair of proteins destroys all leukemia cells it comes in contact with.
MONDAY MORNING
For the last 10 years, Houston has analyzed the effectiveness of plant toxins for battling cancer.
Houston has done all his work in a Haworth
About three years ago he started studying the effects that pokeweed toxin had on leukemia cells. Before that, he experimented with ricin, the toxin found in castor bean plants.
"We used ricin immunotoxin because it killed leukemia cells," Houston said. "But we have since started working with the toxin from pokeweed because it is more stable than ricin and is easier to use."
Hall laboratory using experimental mice. He keeps cancer cells alive in test tubes by adding glucose and vitamins to the cultures.
"We have shown that the pokeween immunotoxin prevents the growth of leukemia cells in mice." he said.
In fighting cancerous cells, Houston said, any agent used must act quickly because cancer cells divide much faster than normal cells.
"You need to kill the tumor cells faster than they can replicate." Houston said, "so anything you can do to speed up that action is good."
Houston and Remki Ramakrishnan, a research colleague, have discovered that when the drug chloroquine is added to cultured leukemia cells, the amount of pokeweed immunotoxin needed is less and the speed at which the immunotoxin reacts is greater.
"This is very toxic," Houston said. "We have devised a procedure for killing one million leukemia cells in three or four hours using a very low concentration of this immunotoxin."
Houston's results have been tested on patients at other universities but have not yet been used in hospitals. He said he did not know whether the pokweed immunotoxin would be used in hospitals.
"The immunotoxin, theoretically, can be used on all cancers. We're just using it on leukemia cells because leukemia is better understood than any other cancer." Houston said.
In theory, leukemia cells would be destroyed faster if bone marrow were extracted from the patient and treated with an immunotoxin. Houston said, rather than the patient undergoing radiation treatment.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, February 6, 1984
NATION AND WORLD News briefs from UPI
Mondale's lead decreases New Hampshire poll says
BOSTON — Former Vice President Walter Mondale has lost some of his lead for the Feb. 28 New Hampshire Democratic primary and Jesse Jackson has gained support in his race for second place with Sen. John Glenn, D-Dioh, a poll said Sunday.
The Boston Globe poll said Monday received support from 37 percent of voters judged likely to vote in this election year's first primary, a
Glenn remained in second place with 18 percent while Jackson surged into third place with 16 percent, a jump of 10 points from the previous poll, the Globe reported.
Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., was fourth at 12 percent, followed by former Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., at 4 percent.
Fire in hotel near Dead Sea kills 2
NEWE ZOHAR, Israel — Fire destroyed the top three stories of a luxury hotel at the southern tip of the Dead Sea yesterday, killing two Israeliis, one of them an army reservist, and injuring 11 other people, police said.
A senior army officer told Israel Radio that the blaze "was not the result of guerrilla sabotage." Another source said a short circuit could have started the fire, which spread swiftly because of poor fire precautions.
Israel Radio said the dead were a chambermaid and an army reservist who assisted in the rescue operation and sufficated when he
Firefighters battled the flames for more than six hours before bringing them under control by evening. Army helicopters and giant cranes aided the rescuers.
Barroom-rape trial to begin today
FALL RIVER, Mass. — Six men charged with gang-raping a woman on a barroom table pool table on trial today and outraged feminists plan to
The six are accused of taking turns assaulting the 21-year-old mother of two on a pool table at now-closed Big Dan's Tavern on March 6, 1983, while the victim screamed for help and patrons yelled, "Go for it, go for it."
The men are being tried in separate trials on charges of aggravated rape, a charge that carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. The trials, expected to last up to eight weeks, were moved to nearby Fall River because of pre-trial publicity.
At a candelight vigil prompted by the woman's story, 2,500 angry demonstrators carried signs saying, "Rape Is Not a Spectator Sport".
Scientists predict Helens explosion
VANCOUVER, Wash. — Scientists monitoring the rise of lava inside Mount St. Helens said yesterday that a small explosion or landslide might occur in the next few days, but acknowledged that predictions about the volcano amounted to a guessing game.
Seismic levels and ground deformation near the lava dome have accelerated since Tuesday, geologists said, and magma rising beneath the huge lava dome in the volcano's crater could burst onto the surface early this week.
The year-old, non/explosive eruption is the longest period of continuous activity since the May 18, 1980, blast that blew out the north face of the mountain. It felled trees 20 miles away, sent a mushroom cloud of ash drifting across several states and left more than 50 people dead or missing.
Reagan likes idea for atom smasher
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration has approved the first stage of planning for the largest scientific instrument in history.
Included in the president's proposed budget for the Department of Energy is $20 million to look into the possibility of building what physicists call the Superconducting Super Collider, a new type of atom smasher.
There are no plans for the SSC, no site — although many areas have issued invitations — and no cost estimates. The first phase of planning, if approved by Congress, would be to find out whether such a project would be possible and worth it.
Man who refused food is identified
SYRACUSE, N.Y. . The 85-year-old man who, with court permission, starved himself to death in a nursing home was identified yesterday by a funeral home as G. Ross Henninger, a former Ohio college president known as a pioneer in technical education.
Henninger died Friday night, one day after state Supreme Court Justice Donald Miller ruled that the retired educator would, be allowed to return to school.
Henninger food and food because Henninger had refused solid food since Dec. 20.
To protect the patient's privacy, Miller had ordered reporters not to publish Henninger's name during court proceedings.
Hemminger, who retired from the Oregon Institute of Technology in 1977, lived alone in a Syracuse apartment until his deteriorating health required medical care.
Olympics may cause LA trial delays
LOS ANGELES — Worried that the wheels of justice will slow to a crawl in freeway traffic snarls during the Summer Olympics, judges and attorneys are exploring ways to reduce their workload — and driving time — this summer.
In Municipal Court, Assistant City Attorney Charles Goldenberg said his office would encourage clients and defense attorneys to postpone trials during the Olympics.
A panel of legal firms is working to reduce the court calendar in anticipation of traffic problems that will make it difficult for attorneys — many of whom are based in the outlying areas of Century City and Beverly Hills — to travel downtown.
Officials estimate that 400,000 to 600,000 people will visit Los Angeles during the Olympics, which run from July 28 to Aug. 12.
WEATHER FACTS
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 2-6-84
SEATTLE 30.24
HIGH
FREEBIZING MINNEAPOLIS 29.77 30.00 29.77
BOSTON
NEW YORK
30.24
FAIR
SAN FRANCISCO DENVER
MILWAUKEE CHICAGO
FAIR ATLANTA
LOS ANGELES 30.00
HIGHEST TEMPERATURES 50.20
DALLAS 30.24
NEW ORLEANS
MIAMI
60
40
60.50
UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST
LEGEND
RAIN SNOW
SHOWERS AIR FLOW
Today will be fair across the middle of the country.
Locally, today will be sunny and not as cold as yesterday. The high will be in the low 30s. Tonight's low will be in the 20s. Tomorrow will be warmer, with the high in the mid-40s.
Today will be fair across the middle of the country.
Balloon blows shuttle's plans
By United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The Challenger astronauts' 6½-foot target balloon exploded yesterday, deflating plans for a 17,500-mph game of space tag. But project managers finally managed to contact the errant Wester St6 satellite for the first time since its launch two days ago.
Western Union's Wester 6 relay station was contacted by technicians at a ground station in California about 2:30 p.m. CST. Bill Ziegler, mission manager of the Wester program, said satellite was probably a "total" loss.
That provided a bit of good news for the hard-luck astronauts who suffered the second setback of their eight-day flight when the shiny white balloon burst and drifted slowly away in tattered plastic fragments.
"It don't think there's any possibility we can get it into geosynchronous orbit," he said. "We'll complete the mission and finish it, much as we can about the failure analysis."
The balloon was to have been used as a target to rehearse an April rendezvous with the malfunctioning Solar Max satellite.
The balloon was launched from the cargo bay in a canister containing a nitrogen gas bottle for inflation. An explosive device failed to break the
A search using Air Force radars later found unidentified objects speeding along in a lopsided orbit ranging from 190 to 755 miles high, prompting officials to wonder whether the debris might be the remains of the satellite
Westar 6 disappeared shortly after Challenger's five-man crew released it. He flies for 8 hours after the shuttle blasted off from Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
canister apart and the swelling balloon burst in the container.
"My opinion is that the PAM failed, probably a massive failure," he said, but added more information was allowed to nail down the cause of the accident.
Ziegler said Sunday the PAM rocket motor probably misfired and shut down, throwing the satellite in the air. Ziegler said the two largest objects spotted in the egg-shaped orbit probably were Westar 6 and its booster rocket.
Jeff Fister, a spokesman for Mc-Donnell Douglas Corp., builder of the solid rocket engine, said it was too soon to speculate about a PAM failure.
The astronauts will launch a nearly identical communications satellite for Indonesia early today, two days behind schedule.
Hartari Asturi, project manager for the Indonesian Palapa satellite said, "We have to support the data."
He said engineers believed Westar's failure was caused by a problem with the satellite's rocket motor The motor was to have fired 45 minutes after deployment Friday to start the satellite on it climb to orbit.
The Palapa is equipped with the same sort of rocket motor, called a payload assist module. The rockets have worked correctly on four nearly identical satellites launched on pre-launch orbit. But Westar was a random failure," said Asturi. "There is no indication that there is a design problem."
The space balloon burst shortly after being released from the shuttle's cargo bay, depriving the astronauts of a life target for rendezvous maneuvers.
Despite the upsets in the 10th shuttle flight, mission controllers still planned to have Challenger land on schedule Saturday at Cape Canaveral.
confident that the launch of his country's relay station would succeed.
Stewart told mission control the balloon popped with a fairly violent explosion.
Anti-Marcos joggers lead large rally
Concern about a collision with the balloon's 200-pound ballast that was drifting on its own in orbit, too small to be tracked by radar, also figured in mission control's decision to scrap the routine.
By United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — Some 300 joggers, whose run honoring slain opposition leader Benigno Aquino triggered the largest anti-government uprising they had secured their destination yesterday, the airport where Aquino was assassinated
Military authorities agreed to allow the joggers to finish their 90-mile journey hours after temporarily blocking the route with 300 riot police armed with trucehems. The military also placed the joggers threatened airport security.
More than 10,000 Filipinos turned out to cheer the joggers, whose journey began nine days ago but was delayed until mid-March and suspended by organizers last week.
AFTER REACHING THE airway
yesterday Agapu
the airport, the skin appears
leader, and 20 other members of the procession went to the tarmac where President Ferdinand Marcos' chief rival was killed Aug. 21.
The protesters were expected to extinguish a burning bamboo torch at the tarmac where a gunman identified by the government as a communist killed Aquino with one bullet to the head.
Officials said about 1,000 riot police and soldiers were stationed inside the Manila International Airport grounds. No incidents were reported.
The marchers were earlier blocked about a half mile from the airby riot police on the orders of Gen. Ruben Escarcha, police chief for the area. Escarcha said the runners "posed a threat to airport security."
**AQUINOS** MURDER remains unsolved, and a commission has been investigating the killing since Noah's arrival. The escorted by military guards from a
Thousands of Filipinos lined the final leg of the marchers' journey, with children on rooftops chanting, "Ninoy, Ninoy, Ninoy," the nickname for the slain opposition leader.
jetstream that returned him to the Philippines after three years of exile in the United States.
Confetti rained down on the procession of cars, jeeps, and joggers who arrived at the court that has symbolized opposition to Marco Rubio's years in power since Aquino was killed.
Chants of "Marcos, Hitler, dictator, dog" and "Marcos resign" rang through the procession, which had assembled early in the morning at two points on Roxas Boulevard along Malana Bay.
THE JOGGERS' JOURNEY began nine days ago in Aquino's hometown of Tarifa in Concepcion province and was to end the following day, but the military and police thrice blocked the marchers, delaying them.
Salvadoran fire support is increased
By United Press International
SAN SALVADOR, EI Salvador — The Salvadoran army is reinforcing combat units facing bolder and blooder attacks by beifl rebel rebattles to overthrow the armed military sources said yesterday.
The sources, who asked not to be identified, said the buildup is already underway in the east, where the heaviest fighting is centered, and is being implemented through the country by the High Command
Under the effort, the army is increasing the size and firepower of its "counter-subversive" battalions, which operate in each of the country's 14 provinces, a military observer said.
The observer said the army has found that the specialized 350-man battalions require more mortar support.
Beginning with a Sept. 3, 1983, attack on the city of San Miguel, government forces have suffered damaging defeats in at least four assaults involving several hundred bodies backed by heavy mortar fire.
Lt. Col. Domingo Monterosra, commander of the Third Military Zone incorporating the three eastern-most provinces, began the new buildup after his units in San Miguel province were routed in at least two rebel attacks since December.
The number of guerrillas has grown from the 6,000 to 8,000 men estimated six months ago and will be increased to 30,000 men by the end of 1984, the military sources said.
The Salvadoran army has about 25,000 men fighting 9,900 to 11,000 leftist rebels nationwide, and the government troop-to-guerrilla ratio in the east is estimated to be less than 2-to-1. military sources said.
The military observer said, "This is not a fundamental change.
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INVITES YOU TO HEAR THE 1984 BLACK HISTORY MONTH
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Dr. John B. Slaughter
CHANCELLOR, UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK
TOPIC:
Black Americans and the Struggle for Excellence in Education
ALDERSON AUDITORIUM, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FEB. 6,1984 7:30 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan, February 6, 1984
Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA News briefs from staff and wire reports
Tomorrow is the last day to enroll for this semester
Tomorrow is the last day students can add classes and enroll for the spring semester.
However, some departments have different schedules for adding and enrolling. The dates are listed in the timetable in each department's
KU professors honored in art show
During the opening ceremonies for a visual arts exhibition yesterday at Washburn University's Mulvane Art Center in Topeka, two KU professors were recognized for their achievements in the Kansas Four, a visual arts competition.
Jon Havner, associate professor of design, captured second place with his brass, abstract sculpture "Stop Action."
Norman Gee, associate professor of art, placed fourth with his enamel painting "P-Series." The painting was of Chinese imagery on a canvas surface.
More than 600 artists entered the competition.
The contest was named the Kansas Four because it is in its fourth year. Paintings, drawings, prints and sculptures were the categories of competition. The winners' works will be on exhibition in Mulvane Art Center through Feb. 26.
Three to speak at photo symposium
A free-lance photographer, a former editor of Esquire magazine and a former art director of Harper's Bazaar magazine will speak at a symposium Feb. 10 and 11 in the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
Duane Michals, the free-lance photographer, will discuss his own presentation of photography. Harold T.P. Hayes, the former editor of Esquire, will discuss how photographers adapted to the magazine's innovations during the 1960s.
Marvin Israel, former art director of Harper's Bazaar, will discuss the role of the art director in working with photographers.
Michals will speak at 8 p.m. Feb. 10. Hayes will speak at 10 a.m. Feb.
11... and Israel will speak at 11 a.m. Hayes.
The symposium coincides with the photography exhibition "Diane Arbus: In Print 1960-1971."
Fort Hays awaits specimens' return
HAYS — Fort Hays State University officials have recovered their full-sized dik-dik and are optimistic the head of a greater kudu and the skull of a Cane buffalo soon will show up.
skull or a Cape Verdean skin will win the wipe. The specimens, which were to be mounted at an exhibit at the university's Sternberg Museum, were stolen last fall. Officials only recently announced the theft in a plea for their return.
"The dik-dik was returned," university police Capt. Donald Brown said Sunday. "We found it at the front door of the museum early Saturday morning."
Brown said officials hoped the greater kudu also would show up.
"I don't think the buffalo skull was that important," he said.
The return of the dik-dik would indicate that whoever had the dik-dik has the other ones or knows who had them, Brown said.
Hays resident Ross Beach donated 24 animals to the museum in September. He and a friend had bagged them during African safaris
At the time of the theft, the specimens were awaiting treatment with a substance that prevents insect damage, said museum director Jerry
"Without that treatment, they will deteriorate very rapidly," he said. According to Brown, the 2½-foot-tall dik-dik resembles a small antelope and a greater kudu looks like a cross between an antelope and a moose.
ON THE RECORD
An armed robber stole $200 from the Food-Barn, 1900 W. 23rd St., Friday evening, Lawrence police said. A store employee gave a description of the robber, but no one has been arrested, police said.
The owner of the Congo Bar, 529 N. Third St., reported to police that $2,000 was stolen from the trunk of his car while it was parked near the bar. Police have no suspects.
Sunflower Cablevision reported five cases of illegal cable hookups over the weekend, police said. Several of the offenders were charged and released, police reports show.
WHERE TO CALL
Do you have a news tip or photo idea? If so, call us at 864-4810. If your idea or press release deals with campus or area news, ask for Jeff Taylor, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, check with Christy Fisher, entertainment editor. For sports news, speak with Jeff Cravens, sports editor.
For other questions or complaints, ask for Doug Cunningham, editor, or Don Knox, managing editor.
The number of the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising, is 864-4358.
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KP&L says plan may raise gas bills
Bv ROBIN PALMER
Natural gas bills for area residents could increase if Mobil Oil Corp. is released from its agreement to sell low-cost natural gas to the city's gas supplier, a Kansas Power and Light official said last week.
Staff Reporter
Mobil filed a petition with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Dec. 7 asking for permission to abandon service to Northwest Central Pipeline Corp., the company that sells gas to Lawrence utilities.
HAL HUDSON, KP&L director of public affairs, said that prices for consumerscould increase because the cost of the gas sold by Mobil is lower than average and replacement gas would be higher.
Mobil's action could force the pipeline company to buy higher-priced gas and the cost could ultimately lead to lower fuel prices. The University of Kansas, Hudson said to
The average price for 1,000 cubic feet of natural gas, or an MCF, is $2-$3 and sometimes reaches as high as $5, said Tom Taymer, manager of public information for the Gas Service Company in Kansas City, Mo.
PAUL HELLMAN, general manager of Mobil's Denver operation, said that the proposal would have, "absolutely on the price for the consumer."
The natural gas that Mobil ships to Lawrence sells for 47 cents for each barrel.
Hellman said the proposal involved the release of natural gas reserves and natural gas liquids.
Hellman said that the natural gas supply was ample enough for Mobil to supply all the business and residential area and still have gas left over.
Last week, KP&L and the Gas Service Co. in Kansas City filed a joint motion to intervene in Mobl's proposal.
They want the FERC to be a hearing so that both sides can be heard. Taylor and
LANGDON POLAND, manager of public affairs for Northwest Central Pipeline, said that the company had not taken a position. Poland said that it was his understanding that both sides were allowed to petition.
Mobil wants to use the gas in a tertiary oil recovery process. In this process, the gas is used to fuel vehicles and is more oil out of underground reservoirs.
Mobil is now doing research on tertiary oil recovery and is not now using the process for oil recovery, said Marilee Smith, public affairs manager.
If the proposal is granted, Mobil would be released from selling almost 33 billion cubic feet of natural gas from the Oklahoma part of the Hugoton oil field. The field runs under parts of Oklahoma, west central Kansas and Texas.
Currently, Mobil supplies western
Kansas and Oklahoma with four million cubic feet of gas a day, Smith said.
Nassau Public Service Co. Inc, 110
E 9th St., supply Lawrence business
businesses and homes with natural gas
it buss from Northwest Central Pipeline
THE GAS SERVICE Co. buys 96 percent of its gas from Northwest
KP&L and the Gas Service Co. want Mobil to prove how using natural gas in tertiary recovery is in the public's greatest interest.
Although the utilities do not have a contract with Mobil, all natural gas that passes across state lines is subject to a permit basis of public necessity, Poland said.
"We have the right to use gas as fuel and FERC has, in the past, released gas for tertiary recovery," Smith said. "It's been done in the past in the nation."
Natural gas is under federal price control and is the lowest priced gas that the Gas Service Co. has access to.
WTCS barely getting by, directors report
By JILL CASEY
Staff Reporter
Sometimes the phone rings only once a week. Often it arouses staff members and volunteers from their slumber several times a night.
No matter how often it rings, or at what time, someone must be there to manage it.
But for the handful of volunteers and two staff members at Women's Transitional Care Services, a Lawrence shelter for battered women, the calls for help are becoming increasingly difficult to answer.
DESPITE INCREASED demand over the past year, financial woes have forced the shelter to lay off three staff members and hire a director for the center, said Friday.
Smith and Joyce Grover, the center's co-director, have relied solely on the
help of volunteers to fill in for the three staff members who were dismissed.
Last week Smith and Grover related the financial plight of WTCS to Kansas legislators during hearings on domestic violence.
"The problem is becoming fairly well received," Smith said. "This is something a lot of people have had on their hands." He added, "going to go away. It's not just a phase."
WTCs is financed by the United Way and other sources, including Douglas County and Lawrence revenue sharing Senate at the University of Kansas.
Smith said she hoped that last week's hearings would persuade state legislators to appropriate state money for the center.
With state funds, she said, the center would not have to rely so heavily on money from community sources that is often hard to come by.
AT THE LEGISLATIVE hearings, Smith testified that the number of women turning to WTCS had increased about 60 percent but that funds for the shelter had been cut by nearly 50 percent last year.
The shelter has not turned women away, Grover said. But the shortage of money is limiting the services the center can offer.
Smith said that had economic conditions had led to an increase in domestic violence, prompting more battered women in the Lawrence area to seek help.
The center's services are also in higher demand, she said, because the center is becoming well-known in the community.
But Grover said that even if state financing wasn't received, WTCS would continue to offer food and shelter to battered women and their children.
"The shelter will always be there," she said. "Somehow we will remain."
The shelter receives women who have been physically abused by their husbands or boyfriends and need an undisclosed place to stay.
NO ADDRESS IS listed in the phone book, but women in trouble may call the center and arrange a place to meet a WTCs volunteer. Smith said.
If a woman needs medical care, Smith said, she will be taken to a hospital emergency room by the shelter advocate.
Sixty-four percent of the women the shelter receives are between the ages of 21 and 30. Thirty-five percent of the women have been beaten by their boyfriends, 55 percent by their husbands, Smith said.
Grover and Smith said that about 85 percent of the women who come to WTCS bring young children with them.
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OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
February 6, 1984 Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daykan Daisan (USP$ 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Prent Irm, Lawrence, KS 60040. daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer session, execlent on Friday and Saturday for final periods, second class postpaid paid at Lawrence, KS 60040. Subscriptions by mail are $13 for six months or $27 a year. Subscriptions by email are $13 for six months or $27 a year. Subscription费 be mailed through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER. send address changes to the University of Kansas.
DOUG CUNNINGHAM
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An ironic ending
Kevin Walker never deserved to be student body president.
He misled the student body by competing in a student election although he had no intention of completing the semester as an enrolled student.
His coalition misled the University Judicial Board by appealing the election.
Now Walker says he won't compete in the new presidential election, which was ordered because of the appeal his coalition filed on his behalf.
To be sure, Walker's decision not to run is the best one. Walker's two-year association with the Student Senate has continually hurt students, despite his confident assertions that he is supported by the majority of the students at the University.
The most important accomplishment his candidacy achieved, Walker said, was to bring about reform to Senate elections, which he said had been manipulated by incumbents and plagued by voter fraud.
This might be true, but Walker's actions cannot be overlooked.
He prolonged the election because he said the system didn't work. But when the system changed, he failed to work with it.
The election reforms were accomplished at the expense of his own credibility. Walker was content to watch as the Senate was scrutinized because of his allegations of fraud, but he was unwilling to undergo the same scrutiny.
His successful appeal has ousted the student who twice was declared student body president.
Scott Swenson decided not to file for the new elections because he had neither the time nor the money.
His integrity was admirable. He chose to work within a system that, although flawed, was not irreparable.
The election reform that Walker's appeal started in motion must continue. But the Senate must never forget the sacrifices a few students, such as Swenson, made to carry through those reforms.
Drug's use warranted
The Hammurabi Code was effective. If a thief were caught, his hands were severed, and the chances were slim that he could or would steal again.
The issue over the use of DepoProvera on convicted rapists, however, is not as clear-cut as the ancient code. No one knows exactly how effective chemical castration is.
Although many groups condone its use, they rightly suggest that a jail term should accompany the drug's use to guarantee that a rapist will not commit more violent crimes.
A recent case in Wichita illustrates the problem. A convicted rapist has asked that he be allowed to undergo Depo-Provera treatments rather than serve a prison sentence. Depo-Provera first came to public attention this summer when a Texas rapist was sentenced to a 10-week Depo-Provera treatment program, instead of to a prison term.
The drug is used to lower sex drive in men by reducing a chemical imbalance, and some doctors who have administered the treatment say they have had an 85 percent success rate.
But many groups are uncertain whether the 85 percent success rate is high enough. Reducing an imbalance, they think, does not mean rapists will stop committing violent crimes.
For the most part, the judiciary, the public and law enforcement officials agree that the drug should be used, although it causes considerable weight gain, loss of hair, itching and other symptoms similar to menopause in women.
Few have brought up Article XIII of the Constitution that prohibits cruel and unusual punishment for criminals. The use of Depro-Provera seems established. And the nation should probably now decide to add a jail sentence with use of Depo-Provera.
Protecting free speech
By disciplining three students involved in disrupting a speech by Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger, Harvard University has made it clear that the right of free speech belongs as much to unpopular speakers as it does to their checklers.
A largely hostile audience booed and heckled Weinberger during a speech this past fall with chants of "Murderer!" and "No draft, no war, U.S. out of El Salvador."
Two sophomores have received warnings that engaging in such conduct in the future would "in all probability lead to disciplinary action."
Dean Archie C. Epps described the discipline as "lenient," but noted that it raised the question of which actions should be considered as legitimate protest and which constituted "unacceptable and disruptive conduct."
A third student, one who hurled water balloons, was placed on disciplinary probation.
The discipline . . means that Harvard will defend those traditions and will observe the distinction between legitimate protest and disruptive actions which violate the free speech rights of unpopular speakers.
Boston Globe
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 town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan also leaves individuals and groups to submit guest coloured 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.
End of Nestle boycott is victory
Victory can be savored over a cup of Nestle's Taster's Choice coffee at breakfast this morning.
The boycott of Nestle, the giant Swiss company that has a large stake in the baby-formula market in Third World countries, is over.
The real winners are many parents in Third World countries. But thousands of people around the world are claiming a share in the victory.
For years, the multinational corporation proved its remarkable marketing strategy by hiring nurses
and health professionals to act as representatives for Nestle.
PETER A. MILLER
in the hospitals and clinics, those marketing people made many good arguments convincing women in underdeveloped countries to use baby formula instead of breast-feeding their babies.
Billboards, free baby T-shirts and baby bottles adorned with the company's logo all further enhanced the image of Nestle.
Many health-care studies have shown that breast-feeding is one of the healthiest means of feeding an infant.
But when women in Third World countries fed their babies the formula, the results were often disastrous.
Bonding between mother and child during these early stages of
Some mothers stretched the formula, which was draining their meager finances, by diluting it. What the women didn't realize was that they were also slowly starving their babies, denying their newborn son or daughter the nutrients necessary for development.
Yet Nestle's marketing of the product was so successful that some parents still swore by the formula, even as they marked their babies' graves with Nestle baby bottles and empty formula tins.
When it came time to buy formula for the baby, parents discovered that the price was often far more than they could afford. The harsh realities and Nestle's profits started going hand-in-hand.
development is another of the positive aspects of nursing. Breast-feeding is also convenient and sanitary.
Because their mothers could not always sterilize the formula, babies were subjected to further health hazards.
But free samples of Nestle's baby formula encouraged women to abandon breast-feeding. Unfortunately, the often ran sample women same time a woman stopped lactation because she was not breast feeding.
But while women in Third World countries continued to believe in Nestle, after being sold on the formula by a slick marketing company, the United States found fewer and fewer things attractive about the company.
In 1977, angered by the marketing techniques employed by Nestle to promote the baby formula in Third World countries, the C.I.A. cernied U.S. citizens formed the
'When it came time to buy formula for the baby, parents discovered that the price was often far more than they could afford. The harsh realities and Nestle's profits started going hand-in-hand.'
Infant Formula Action Coalition International organizations soon joined the campaign.
The groups primarily wanted to change the marketing practices ofuby formula in Third World countries and some American companies.
Widespread, creative efforts at the consumer level, largely centered on boycotts, finally reached manufacturers at the top of Nestle.
INFACT members were smart enough to figure out that emotional and political messages were the type most likely to get through to students, who were deluged daily by reams of scientific and nutritional statistics.
The president of the Nestle Coordination Center for Nutrition Inc., in Washington, D.C., said, "The company was dealing with the situation on a scientific and nutritional level, but the protesters were dealing on an emotional and political level."
The organizers of the boycott refused simply to add to the papers full of figures stacked on corporate furniture in the country and in Nest's case, abroad
After six and a half years, Nestle finally got the message. Several weeks ago, the International Nestle
Far better to show by action just what they meant.
Boycott Committee (INBC) and the Nestle Co. issued a joint statement.
In turn, INBC recommended suspending the boycott.
Nestle had made a firm commitment to comply with the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes, a World Health Organization UNICEF code, which the World Health Assembly adopted in May, 1981 out of concern for health of infants.
This week members of organizations from around the world who have participated in the boycott over the years will meet in Mexico City to discuss how to monitor the changes Nestle has promised
They will also be making plans to try to change practices of some American companies who also use a formula in Third World countries.
According to INFACT members, these companies have basked in the attention focused on Nestle. They have been trying to expand their market shares and at the same time are scrutiny Nestle has undergone.
The success of the boycott ultimately means improved health care for infants in Third World countries.
But the taste of victory is shared by thousands of people around the world who switched to another brand of coffee to get Nestle to realize the power of moral influence and of purchasing decisions.
Reagan tops most polls in election
WASHINGTON — Presidential candidate Ronald Reagan is riding high in the polls, and he is enjoying his victory as he starts down the campaign trail.
But he thinks he has been maligned by opponents on two fronts that he views as political hurdles the so-called 'fairness', issue that the president has tried to undermine and the disadvantaged, and the image that he is "trigger happy."
Right now he is bent on clearing up what he calls "misconceptions" of his views.
He did not help the situation much when he said in an ABC "Good Morning America" interview that even in the best of times people
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He was responding to a question regarding charges that he favors the rich and his policies are causing misery to the less fortunate.
sleeping on outdoor grates in the big cities are homeless "by choice."
He told interviewer Dayid Hartman, "Sure, when someone is down on his luck and is having hard times and they'd like to have someone to blame, they have heard a steady drumbeat (that he is unfair).
“Now, they’ve been told over and over again that because we’re trying to hold down government spending we’re taking it out on their hides.”
In response to a similar question in Newsweek magazine, Reagan cited "some misperceptions that have been carefully crafted by a certain amount of demagogue on the part of opponents of what we've been trying to do here; issues that would have me uncaring for certain groups of our citizenry — and they're not true at all.
And they probably have been the most frustrating thing that I personally have felt."
He summed up his feelings by saying he believes the fairness issue has been "very unfair."
During his first year as president he made social programs his target for cutting big government, aiming at disability payments, school loans, school lunches and other entitlement programs. Such programs, he said.
In the '60s he opposed nearly every "Great Society" proposal, which became law under Lyndon Johnson, including voting rights, civil rights, Medicare and minimum wage. He also suggested in 1964 that Social Security payments might be put on a voluntary basis.
Reagan came into office with a lot of baggage concerning his views on welfare and equity.
should be only for the "truly needy."
In that respect he has halted the growth of these programs. The cuts added a burden to the big cities with their population growth and the recent deep recession, which is not over in some industries.
But again he is not asking for financing for legal services for the poor, an assistance that he appears determined to wipe out. It is the target of activist conservatives in the country.
In his present budget, Reagan also proposes some lesser-than-expected cuts in food assistance and Medicare.
He was told by Republican law-makers, according to House GOP leader Bob Michel, that big cuts in spending would not be politically unjust. He year would be politically unjust.
His response to those who accuse him of favoring the rich is that they are trying to make a political appeal to "greed and envy."
went along, but showed 'hair-raising' deficits for the coming years if the domestic programs continue to increase.
"This is the same anti-business, anti-succes attitude that has brought our country to the brink of economic disaster," he told the concrete, gravel and stone producers in Chicago earlier this week.
His priorities as president have been clear. He believes his mandate in 1980 was to rebuild the nation's defenses and to cut "big government" and spending on social programs.
As president he has tried to do just that. But he resents the view that such cuts lack compassion.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Who even cares?
To the editor:
When I began to read the column by Harry Mallin concerning the “war between the states” of Michigan and Kansas over which state is more boring. I was delighted to see that he is sticking to stick up for Kansas for a chapter.
After enduring years of Kansas jokes, I was pleased to see that a statement in support of Kansas was going to be made. Or so I thought.
What I found was a sarcastic slander of our state that did not defend Kansas but instead added responsibility to Gov. Blanchard's remarks.
Frankly, I was appalled by the shipshed journalism I was reading, not to mention the lack of research on well-known facts. Let me highlight a few points that Lound quite disturbing.
First of all, the "hick" accent Mr.
Mallin used while describing Kansas: I have to find a Kansan who speaks in this manner and I hope I never do.
Secondly, the subject of tourist traps: Granted Kansas has its share of tourist traps, but no more than any other state. And if the Eisenhower building is not supposed to suppose every museum and library in the country must be one as well.
If Mr. Mallin would to actually visit there he would find an abundance of art and history on display for all to see. In our trap, I say let's build a more few.
Finally, the comments toward Michigan: All I can say is, "Haven't we heard enough childish remarks lately?" Personally, I am growing tired of reading about how Kansas is boring and Michigan is unenjoyed.
In conclusion, I would like to
I agree that Gov. Blanchard's remarks were wrong, but so was the onslaught of rebuttal. I say let the issue die.
David Nelson
Concordia junio
To the editor:
address anyone who has made any tactless comments on Kansas. If you don't like it here, please exit quietly. I can't imagine which state more bored with care?
Right to say no
If the U.S. government told you to round up all the Jews, Catholics, blacks or Future Farmers, would you do it?
In response to Doug Sikora's letter that appeared in the Kansan Jan. 30, I'd like to say, Doug, don't be such a sheep.
If we don't have the right to say no to military service, then we're just mindless stormtroopers. I'll fight when I think it's necessary.
How can we be free men if we don't have the right to make such an important decision as what causes we think are worth fighting for?
Daniel Webster, speaking on the floor of the House Dec. 9, 1814, put it well: "Is this (the draft), sir, consistent with the character of a free government? Is this civil real character of our Constitution?"
No, sir, indeed it is not. The Constitution is labled, foully labeled. The people of this country have not been so deprived that themselves such a fabric of despotism.
They have not purchased at a vast expense of their own treasure and their own blood a Magna Charta to be slaves.
Where is it written in the Constitution, in what article or section is it contained, that you may take children from their parents, and parents from their children, and compel them to fight the battles of war which the folly or the wickedness of government may engage it?"
Ed Stamm
Ed Stamm Lawrence resident
University Daily Kansan, February 6. 1984
Page 5
Walker doesn't file for new election
By CINDY HOLM Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Kevin Walker, a presidential candidate last fall, did not file Friday for the new student body presidential election that resulted from an appeal by his Momentum Coalition.
Walker declined comment except to say that he was not planning to run. He is the third presidential candidate from last fall who didn't file.
In a prepared statement released Friday, Walker said his priorities were his wife and two children, his education and his desire to enter law school.
"With these priorities in mind," he said, "will be very difficult, too expensive and, too
time-consuming to involve myself in another campaign at the expense of family and our privacy, which has been violated too many times.
In December, Charles Lawnhorn, Kansas City, ban, senior, filed an appeal on Walker's behalf to the University of Kansas Judicial Board protesting the November election. The appeal asked the board to declare Walker the winner of the election or to call for a new election that would include Momentum on the ballot.
On Jan. 5, Chancellor Gene A. Budig called
"In the last two years, Momentum has done exactly what we originally set out to do and that is to let the student body know that Student Records are to be made to manipulative incumbents and vote fraud."
for a new election.
for a new election.
Walker's name had been left off the ballot because he could not confirm his enrollment by the filing deadline, Oct. 17. The Student Senate rules require confirmation of enrollment on the declaration of candidacy forms.
Two other candidates who ran in the November election have said they would not run in the new election.
Scott Swenson, who ran as Priority Coalition's presidential candidate, announced Thursday that he would not run in the new election.
Steve Bergstrom, who ran as Freedom Coalition's presidential candidate, said Friday that he had decided not to run because the whole election process had been smeared by the problems.
Brown continued from p. 1
himself and Brown be discussed, as well as the issues raised by those letters.
NORMAN SAU, chairman of the history department, said that several issues needed to be addressed in such a forum. He declined to elaborate, but said he didn't think there were any significant problems between the faculty and the athletic department.
Saul was one of the professors who received a copy of Katzman's letter and Brown's response.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said that the University already had addressed many of the issues dealing with student athletes and academics.
Last February, several athletic department administrators, professors and athletes participated in a public forum titled "The Role of the Athlete in the Academic Community."
Fewer than 15 people attended the forum in the Frank R. Burge Union.
However, Ambler said he would support a new forum if the present controversy raised new issues.
One issue that needs clarification, Amber said, is the rights and responsibilities of student athletes. He said that the controversy between Katzman and Brown showed that student athletes often were unsure how to deal with academic disputes.
JAMES CAROTHERS, chairman of SenEx, said that the forum was an interesting idea. He knew of no specific plans by SenEx, however, to conduct such a forum.
Norman Yetman, the chairman of the Academic Support Committee of the University
of Kansas Athletic Corp., said that a forum was needed, but that at the moment the atmosphere was too emotionally charged for it to be productive.
"It should not come at a time when there is such a divisive issue," he said. "It should address the broader issues behind the controversy."
One reason that discussion is needed, he said, is to lessen the level of animosity between the athletic department and faculty members.
Yetman proposed that the issues eventually be raised at the University Forum, a weekly series of lectures sponsored by the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. 1204 Acre Ave. Waiss, a university Forum board member, said his organization was considering the idea.
called the Senate office and found out that only one candidate had filed.
Filing continued from p. 1
"After seeing how things have been running," Philip Duff said, "we thought the Senate needed assistance."
Before the 5 p.m. filing deadline, Philip Duff said, they collected the 500 signatures that they needed.
The Duffs are running as independents without coalition ties.
"It's just us running," Philip Duff said. "We're not claiming to be anybody else."
Bob Swain, Topeka junior, will run for president with vice presidential candidate Robb
Murphy, Washington, Iowa, junior, on the
Apathy — I Just Doesn't Matter ticket.
"I'm fed up with the circus that happened last semester," Murphy said. "It's a big joke and we don't want to live there."
Murphy said that he didn't really expect to win but that his coalition's name was a social movement.
The Student Senate has had so many rinky-link issues, he said. You could be a candidate for the office.
However, he said, if the Apathy — It Just Doesn't Matter candidates are elected, they will hold their own.
Mideast continued from p. 1
government and has demanded abrogation of a May 17 Lebanese-Israeli accord.
THE LEBANESE ARMY fought a fourth straight day of clashes in south Beirut with Shiite Muslim militiamen, who were backed by the army. They were also based in the mountains overlooking the capitals.
EARLIER, GEMAYEL immediately accepted the resignations of Wazran and his Cabinet, which came in response to appeals from Syrian-backed Muslim rebels. But they appeared to have little effect on the escalating battles.
Members of the 1,200-man Marine peace-keeping contingent fought a brief small arms encampment in the afternoon with Muslim militants. Brooks said. There were no reports of American casualties.
An estimated 150 people have died and 561 were wounded in the fighting since The Red Cross and its allies compiled from the Red Cross, hospitals and other sources. No official government figures were available.
The Lebanese army announced that 20 soldiers and 16 officers had been killed and 197 others wounded.
Art continued from p.1
name.
large commercial spraying booth with its own exhaust system.
A recently completed study showed that the
sitting room environment causing most of the
funneling was through a wall.
Others suggested limiting the number of students who could be in the room at one time using art materials that emit toxic fumes. Other teachers had used a spray room with an outside wall into a spraying room.
"You can smell laquer and fixitive all over the building," a secretary said during the meeting. I came in on a Saturday once my office was closed. I walked in, worked out. Sometimes I get three-day headaches.
Some faculty members suggested installing a
The spray painting room is not the only room that has ventilation problems.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan. February 6, 1984 Page 6
Mild weather should arrive in a few days
From Staff and Wire Reports
Mild weather expected later this week could provide warm respite from the cold, gusting winds that howled through Lawrence over the weekend.
Today's temperatures are expected to reach the mid-30s, with winds out of the west at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight's low is expected to be 22 degrees.
Yesterday, winds gusting up to 30 mph whipped through the Lawrence area, a spokesman at the National Weather Service in Topeka said. High temperatures in the area were in the low to mid-teens, but the wind chill factor caused temperatures to plummet to 24 to 35 degrees below zero.
Temperatures tomorrow are expected to reach the mid-30s, with lows in the 20s.
Winds in the Kansas City area gusted up to 50 mph and were accompanied by thunder and lightning.
Balladeer shares unique talents
By AMY BALDING Staff Reporter
The bumper stickers plastered randomly on Bobby Bridger's tattered guitar case convey the unique character of the owner.
The collage of age-worn remnants is reflective of the collage that is the
The man is the art. And he lends his talents to relating stories of mountain men in New Mexico.
Bobby Bridger, who was the main performer in Hashinger Hall's art-in-residence extravaganza last fall, has an avenge of talent with infectious laughs.
He is writer, actor, artist and singer. This combination has caused him to evolve into a unique type of art, a balladier.
His appearance represents the first coordinated program between the University of Kansas and Haskell University in New York, which involved four days of workshops and performances on both campuses, was sponsored by Haskell, AURH, Hashinger Hall and the KU history and theater departments.
BRIDGER DESCRIBES HIMSEL as a "wandering minstrel," who sings and tells stories anyplace from bars to family living rooms.
Bridger performed a lyrical rendition of "Ballad of the West" Saturday night in the Hashinger theater. A one-man show complete with a waltz, medley and Bridger related the story by reciting prose, singing and playing his guitar.
A writer, playwright and poet, he is still working on the epic trilogy the "Ballad of the West." a labor that has commanded half of his 38 years.
LIMITED EDITIONS OF the triology's first two segments have been published. The first two parts cover the American West during the time of the Civil War, the fate of the city of Crazy Horse and his people after the Battle of Wounded Knee.
He has been immersed in many other things as he has worked on his
trilogy.
He recorded two albums for RCA records in 1972 and 1973, after RCA discovered his folk music, which they performed in Denver and in Denver's then-successful formula.
HIS RETURN TO civilization brought the recently-released album titled "Heal in the Wisdom."
Brider adds his own flair to his work by depicting a common strand of love, nature and spiritual healing that links humanity to itself.
But Bridger wanted the freedom to exercise his own style, he said, and retreated from the corporate music world and the lure of commercial bands. He spent the next several years in the Chihuahuan desert in Mexico.
"I really believe that if one is going to admit to the world that they are an artist, then they must accept the responsibility of changing their art form, of pioneering and creating something new from what they've been given," he said. "That to me is imperative."
Group receives grim statistics on El Salvador
By GRETCHEN DAY Staff Reporter
Every month in El Salvador 421 people are killed, and scores more are beaten, mutilated, kidnapped or disappeared. A few years ago Christian Ministries said yesterday.
"It's a place of enormous terror." Jack Bremer, who recently returned from a fact-finding trip to the war-torn Central American country, said before a gathering of about 30 people at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries.
Bremer was part of a group of 18 faculty members and clergy from U.S. universities who traveled on its third trip to the Ivory Coast to aid Salvador and Nicaragua. Jan. 3 to 14
Bremer said statistics compiled by the Archdiocese of San Salvador Legal Aid Office reported that in 1982 an average of 400 people were assassinated each month. That number has
risen to 421 in the first eleven months of 1983.
DURING THAT PERIOD, 514 people disappeared; 39 were kidnapped by guerrillas; 4,638 were killed by right-wing death squads; 67 were killed by guerrillas; and 1,211 soldiers were killed in combat. Bremer said.
Since late 1979, death squares have murdered more than 32,000 persons, he
The most painful thing about El Saudia today is the lack of respect for life, Breaking.
While in El Salvador, the fact-finding group met with government, church and education leaders and visited five refugee camps.
RELIGIOUS LEADERS helped him to understand that the struggle in El Salvador is one of people trying to become free of poverty and oppression, and working to prevent conflicts between government forces and guerillas or between east and west
ideologies.
"The main source of oppression is the army and the oligarchy that supports right wing death squads," he said. Only the United States can break this dominance, but has seemed reluctant to think anything about the death squads, he said.
Evidence suggests that the death squads, which have targeted for death many church leaders, are connected to government security forces, he said.
He said that much of the oligarchy had left El Salvador, was living in Miami and sending money to the death squads in El Salvador.
Bremer said increased U.S. military support was not the answer.
"The UNITED STATES' providing military support only enables the government to carry on the killings," he said. "It's incredible to me that the U.S. can support this kind of corrupt regime."
He said that the Kissinger report, which recommended an $8 billion aid program in El Salvador, including $400 million of it, would greatly militarize the situation.
"It's essential to withdraw U.S. forces from the area and support reconciliations and negotiations within the region and the surrounding area." Bremer said.
Bremer said that the posture of the Roman Catholic church in El Salvador had changed in 15 years. Now the church has a formal form and has a preference for the poor.
"THE CHURCH IS rediscovering the poor and receiving courage from the poor."
The mission of the church, he said, is to minister to the victims of war, to create an atmosphere of reconciliation, and to seek social justice and reform.
But for its attempts the church has been called subversive and communistic, he said.
Since 1976, Black History Month has been celebrated at the University of Kansas.
Black History Month honored officially by Student Senate
similar during February.
But for the first time the Student
By the Kansan Staff
But for the Senate has this year given special recognition to Jack Hickey History Month Kevin Harrison, W i c h i t a sophomore and co-chairman of the Minority Affairs committee, said yesterday.
February
Black History
Month 1984
We thought it would be a worthwhile gesture for the University student body to officially recognize Black History Month," he
said.
"Our main goal is to improve communication between minority groups
The Senate resolution was part of an effort to recognize the accomplishments of black Americans brought up in response to the University Harrison seed.
For example, he said, Wilt Chamberlain, Gale Sayers, and Lynette Woodard are all blacks who have brought fame to KU.
Through such actions, the Minority Affairs committee is trying to revive interest. The committee almost became extinct last year after several committees were consolidated, Harrison said.
In the past, communication between campus minority groups and the Minority Affairs committee has not been what it should be, he said.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, February 6, 1984
Projects continued from p. 1
lost its eligibility for community development grants. The other is the Old West Lawrence Association.
"It is a killing breeze to the extension of local initiative," said Terry Summers, president of Punch Media association. "If you want your neighborhood to be better, you need to support them financially."
DATA FROM THE 1890 census showed that the two groups no longer qualified as low-income areas. Consequently, the associations cannot receive funds unless they can prove that proposed projects benefit low-income people or prevent slum and blight.
The federal money available to all Lawrence neighborhood associations decreased 4 percent for 1984, said Kempton Lindquist, Community Development Block Grant program analyst. But the two associations will no longer be eligible for cuts in funding status, not because of cuts at the federal level.
He said the amount of federal money for Lawrence hit a peak at $839,000 in 1980. The amount budgeted for the city this year is $735,000, down from $766,000 in 1983.
THE REDUCTIONS CAME about because of President Ragan's efforts to trim the federal budget.
Because they are in low-income areas, the East Lawrence Improvement Association, the Oread Neighborhood Association, and the Brookkreek's association are eligible for money.
A neighborhood is eligible for community development funds if 51 percent of its residents have household incomes of $11,324 or less, which
is 80 percent of the $14,156 median income in
Douglas County.
Household income is determined by the total income of the occupants.
The association has also been working with the city on a homestead project that will provide eight empty lots to qualified people who apply to build homes on the lots.
Although the North Lawrence Improvement Association recently lost its low-income status, it can still receive community development money. The city contracted a slum and alphabetic area several years ago.
In the neighborhoods that are not eligible for the money, Lindenquist said, individuals who meet the low-income status can get money from a housing rehabilitation deferred loan program.
The deadline for applications is Feb. 29, and the city will announce the winners April 21. The city will use the time between the deadline and the application deadline, whether applicants are eligible, Herrick said.
IN THE GREAD neighborhood, the problem is sidewalks. The association is working on a sidewall renovation project, said association president Kevin McHugh.
'It is a killing blow to the extension of local initiative . . . If you want your neighborhoods to be involved,you need to support them financially'
- Terry Summers, president of the Pinckney Association
Also, the associations can receive community development money for park improvements, sidewalk repair or water line repair if the improvements will help lower income people, he
and, theoretically, individual areas within the four ineligible neighborhoods can be designated as low-income and therefore receive funds, Lindoust said.
THE EAST LAWRENCE association requested financing last fall to plant trees in the neighborhood, said Sharon Herrick, projects director for the association. The city began the project in late fall.
The biggest problem the neighborhood faces, Mchugh said, is absentee landlords. Some landlords who don't live in the neighborhood rent property that they do not keep up.
Sperry than another problem for the Oread area, because it is close to campus, is parking. McHugh said that the area he lived in, 11th and Kentucky streets, was a high density area that had parking problems.
IT'S NOT A problem in the summer, McHugh said, but in older months KU students cause problems by parking in front of the houses during class.
The Brookcreek association is now working on
a neighborhood maintenance and repair workshop, which will be in an old garage or an old filling station, if the association can acquire one of the sites, president Don Binns said.
The association also has requested funds for paving and widening 15th Street between Haskell Street and Broadway.
The biggest problem the association faces is apathy of residents, he said. To increase interest in the neighborhood, the group plans a membership drive.
"We've got the potential for 10 times the members we have now," he said. "We have the greatest number of homeowners, which is unique to this neighborhood."
THE NORTH LAWRENCE association has requested money to build sidewalks because children have to walk in the street to Woodland Elementary School. president Jack Todd said.
Keeping the Union Pacific Railroad Station open is also a high priority for the association, Todd said, because the neighborhood does not want the building to become run down.
Union Pacific is not using the building, Todd said, but the company will not give it up because
He said the railroad would sell the building if someone would buy it and move it off of the railroad's property.
"That's like giving you the moon, if you can bring it home," Todd said.
Although the group does not have a large membership, he said, people who participate are active. Neighborhood volunteers will build a waterfront on the river levee by Riverfront Park this spring.
THE STRUCTURE IS stone, and cannot be moved, and the building would be unsafe for active use, he said, because it is next to a 40-mile-an-hour railroad track curve.
"We'd rather have 50 active members than ₩⁰ who don't show up," he said.
The Barker Neighborhood Association, formerly called the East Central Neighborhood Association, has requested funds for replacing sidewalks, said president Glenda Hewlett.
Although the neighborhood is not designated as a low-income area, Hewlett said, it plans to work on its eligibility in order to obtain a minimum amount of financing from the city.
The group has asked for money for boundary markers to raise consciousness about the a/a area.
"WE ARE TRYING to increase awareness of our neighbors around us, and increase participation in the neighborhood association," Hewlett said.
A neighborhood watch in cooperation with the Lawrence Police Department, coordinated by the neighborhood association, will begin this month.
"The development of a neighborhood association depends on the energy of people in it."
The Old West Lawrence Association is primarily a social organization, president Oliver Finney said, depending on who is active in the group. Coming activities include a tour of old homes in the neighborhood, an annual picnic and a civic project, which is still undetermined.
Although the association does not get involved in political issues, Finney said, members try to serve as catalysts for issues.
THIS SPRING, THE city will make improvements to Central Park well nearly $70,000.
12
Because the neighborhood lost its lost low-income eligibility, an additional $1,000 in planned improvements to the park will not be made.
is your lucky number!
You have 12 chances to get involved in SUA. Applications and information are now available for 1984 officer, and board member positions. Sign up today for a position in one or more of the following areas:
2. Vice President
1. President
5. Films
9. Outdoor Recreation
6. Fine Arts
3. Secretary
10. Public Relations
7. Forums
11. Special Events
4. Treasurer
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Sign up for interview times now in the SUA Office located on the main floor of the Union. For more information call 864-3777. Sign up deadline for applications is Tue., Feb. 14, 1984.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Nuclear plant is premature director says
Construction of the Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant should be postponed until the power it would produce is needed, the executive director of the Kansas Natural Resource Council told about 30 people yesterday at a meeting at the Lawrence Public Library.
By JENNY BARKER
Staff Reporter
The KNRC is a public interest group that deals with natural resource issues.
The Wolf Creek Plant is unnecessary because Kansas utility companies are producing more electricity than the state needs, said Mari Peterson, KNRC director.
If the plant does become operational, Kansans will be charged higher electricity rates to pay for the construction and operation of the plant while it produces electricity that isn't needed, Peterson said.
Peterson said Kansas Power & Light had 61 percent more electricity than was needed during peak consumption periods. And the threat of an electricity shortage during the December cold spell was unfounded, Peterson said. "We have no plans to go into poofs," so that if one company runs out of fuel, others will provide it, she said.
Peterson said the Kansas Legislature was too concerned with the utility investors and not concerned enough with the rate payers.
The present projected cost of the plant is $2.67 billion.
More than 550,000 households would be affected by Wolf Creek, but only 20,000 people invest in utilities, she said.
Peterson said this estimate was based upon completion of the plant in February 1985. Construction of the plant is already eight months behind schedule, she said, and costs $1.25 million every day.
Joe Wilkins III/Kansan
"The Kansas wheat crop is worth $1 billion. Wolf Creek is three Kansas wheat crops." Peterson said. "It's an awful big mistake to make."
1978
Mark Wilson, left, and Larry Woydiak of the Lawrence Fire Department inspect an overhated chimney at 1704 19th Terrace. The firefighters had to cut into the ceiling yesterday to check for fire around the chimney.
University Dally Kansan, February 6.1984 Page 8
Winter says budget cuts to hurt KU
By ROBIN PALMER Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas will not see any relief from the effects of last year's budget cuts because funds are going to secondary schools, community colleges and state prisons, a Lawrence state senator said Saturday.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., RLawrence, and other Kansas legislators discussed education, state prisons, hazardous waste and taxes during the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Eggs and Issue breakfast.
Winter, along with State Repes, Jesse Branson, Betty Jo Charlton and John Solbach, all Lawrence Democrats, spoke to a crowd of about 100 at the R-ottawa rally in Allen R-Ottawa, and State Rep. Robin Leach, D-Linwood, were also there.
Despite large tax increases, Winter
said, higher education was hard last year because of large spending cuts.
Last year the state cut $14.2 million from higher education, and Winter said that there had been additional cuts in the budget, which further depleted the budget.
The existing tax base is large enough to support higher education, he said, but revenues are not large enough to cover it. The state would also ordinary education at the same time.
The Board of Regents can afford some salary increases and new equipment but now will have to cut $2.7 million from higher education programs as a result of the additional reductions, he said.
With this reduction, he said, 36 positions will be lost statewide and 19 positions will be lost local.
He said that the percentages from the general fund that go to universities
were lower than those for community colleges and secondary schools.
"The real issue is not how but why these tax cuts are made," he said.
these tax cuts are made," he said. Charlton said that the budget was not designed to shortchange KU and that it did not receive any less than any other Regents schools.
Solbach said that higher education and the state's prisons compete for the same funds and that overcrowding with pressing financial problem in prisons.
Plans are being made to relieve the situation by building a prison with bed
Charlton, who is working on the hazardous waste disposal problem, said that burying waste was expensive and industries would find cheaper ways to get rid of the waste. She said that a proposal now before the Legislature would ban all burial of hazardous waste.
Sherbet worries unfounded manufacturer's president says
By TODD NELSON Staff Reporter
McCollum Hall residents had no reason to worry last week when they complained of being served sherbet that was no longer fresh, the president of the company that made the sherbet said yesterday.
Ken Quimby, president of Jackson Ice Cream Co. Hutchinson, said that the dates on the shelver containers were manufacturing dates, not expiration times.
Last week, several residents complained because they thought that the dates stamped on the top of herbet was too dark for the sheerbet was no longer safe to eat.
Quimby recommended that the sherbet be eaten within nine months of when it is served.
However, Quimby said, the shearer could be kept for many months and would be able to eat if it was continually stored at a low temperature.
"We try to do that because if a carton or container of any kind of product was subjected to a fluctuation in temperature, don't hold it up at all." Quimby said.
Jon Haynes, McCollum president,
said, "I was informed by the hall staff
that the ice cream is kept in a cooler at
15 degrees below."
Juanita Bushnell, office manager for the All Star Dairy frozen food department, said that the manufacturing dates were probably overlooked because they were large inventories kept by Jackson Ice Cream, All Star Dairy and McColum.
David Swartz, Fairbanks, Ala., sophomore, said that he had eaten lime and pineapple.
Some residents returned the sherbet, kept in containers dated May 1983 and October 1983, to cafeteria workers without eating it.
The sherbet tasted and looked all right, he said.
But Swartz said he was still unhappy about being served the shelter.
On Feb. 14 a representative of the
Central Intelligence Agency
will interview prospective applicants for positions in the Washington, D.C. area. Positions and qualifications are:
Analysts-MA, international relations, area studies, foreign languages; BA with overseas working experience or post-BA education.
Librarians—MLS or BA liberal arts with library experience. Geographers—MS or MA, BS or BA geography/cartography or equivalent.
All applicants should possess excellent writing ability,
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, February 6, 1984
Bush deflates economic 'feud'
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Vice President George Bush maintained yesterday that internal administration squabbles over budget policy and the muzzling of adviser Martin Feldstein were something "nobody really cares about."
President Reagan declined to answer a question yesterday about whether he wanted Feldstein to stay on as chairman of his Council of Economic Advisers, but a White House aid described Reagan as "upset" by the economist's open disagreement with his approach to easing budget deficits.
The aide acknowledged that up White House officials insisted that Feldstein cancel a planned appearance or "This Week with David Brinkley."
"We did get him off that show," the aide said, also listing White House chief of staff James Baker and deputy chief of staff Chris Deaver as those upset with Feldstein.
ordered off the ABC show.
BUSH WAS ASKED on NBC's "Meet the Press" about Feltingstein being
"Mr. Feldstein, it's my understanding, has been on three or four television programs in the last couple of days," Bush said. "He has testified very open before the United States Congress."
Pressed to explain the cancellation, Bush replied: "Don't ask me. . . . I think it's an 'inside the beltway' thing that nobody really cares about."
Page 9
The "beltway" reference was to the interstate highway that circles the capital city. The expression is used to describe the interest only to Washington insiders.
FELDSTEIN WAS NOT available for
replication, said Foldstein bmg on intention
of copying.
Sources said the Feldstein appearance on yesterday's television program had been arranged two weeks with the university to press secretary Larry Speakes' office.
Feldstein has been a focus of controversy for arguing taxes should be raises, and defense spending curbed, to reduce federal budget deficits. The president, while talking of seeking a "down payment" on the deficit, has
rejected any substantial change in taxes or military spending increase.
Feldstein's outspoken position has drawn sarcastic criticism from White House speakesmen and a recommendation from Treasury Secretary Donald Regan that Congress simply "throw away" Feldstein's annual economic report. The White House aide described Regan as "hopping mad."
AS THE PRESIDENT was leaving his helicopter on his return to the White House yesterday afternoon, a reporter shouted, "Do you want Feldstein to quit?" Reagan responded, "I can't take any questions."
Bush tried to smooth over the controversy, saying, "I've never seen an administration where everybody had to march in lock-step. I think Marty Feldstein . . . strongly supports the objectives of this president."
"If there are nuances of difference between Dr. Feldstein and Mr. Regan . . . let me just give you a little free, gratious advice: Listen to what the president says; take your signals from the president," Bush said.
Food industry says EDB level OK
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Consumer representatives disagreed with food industry spokesman yesterday on whether the government's ban on the cancer-educating EDB should be extended to food products already contaminated.
"We've known for 10 years that this chemical causes cancer in laboratory animals," said Al Myerhoff of the National Resources Defense Council in an interview yesaterday on CBS's "Face the Nation."
"We're satisfied with these levels," Gardner said.
Environmental Protection Agency guidelines for limiting EDB in existing food products 'offer no more risk than eating 1/2 charcoal steaks a year,' said Sherwin Gardner, a spokesman for the America Manufacturers of America.
THE EPA ORDERED an immediate
dibrate Friday to the future use of ethylene dibromide (EDB) on stored grain and in milling machines, but not on grain supplies and products already concerned with leaks. The lamam Rückelkussa said the substance posed no immediate health hazard.
The EPA has issued voluntary national standards for states to follow on controlling EDB contamination: Ruckelshaus is expected to decide in two weeks what will be done about EDB in citrus fruits.
"The EPA guidelines are quite sufficient," said pharmacologist Sorrell Schwartz, a consultant to the critus industry.
The EPA's voluntary guidelines depend on whether the food is ready to eat or requires cooking, since heat largely dissipates the chemical. Certain states, such as Florida, have adopted higher standards such as 1 part of EDB per billion in ready-to-eat food.
EPA guidelines are 30 parts per billion in such foods.
"One part per billion is about the limit of detection," said Robert Metcalf, a University of Illinois biologist, who described EDB as "a strong carcinogen."
"WE CAN'T WORRY about an individual cupcake but have to worry instead about our overall health," said Metcalf, who said the EPA guidelines should be 30 times stronger for contaminated food.
"The only alternative to pesticides is cold storage and irradiation," said Schwartz, who complained about "gerymandered data" in government pesticide studies. "That means the use of these chemicals in case assumptions that are scientifically unacceptable and socially unacceptable," Schwartz said.
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Andropov recovering German paper reports
By United Press International
COLOGNE, West Germany — Soviet leader Yuri Andropov, who has not appeared in public since mid-August, has had a kidney transplant and is recovering from complications that followed the surgery, a West German newspaper said yesterday.
D. G. F.
The newspaper Express said Andropov now is working more than two days a week and soon will be carrying a full work load
The newspaper attributed its report to Eberhard Schneider, a Soviet expert for West Germany's Federal Institute for Eastern Affairs and International Studies. The Express did not state the source of his information and Schneider was not available for comment
Schneider was quoted as saying that Andropov underwent a kidney transplant that was followed by a liver transplant. No date was given for the operation.
He predicted Andropov would make a public speech in Moscow right before the March 4 elections to the Supreme Soviet, the newspaper
Andropov has not been seen in public since August 18, when he met
Andropov
He has been reported in the past to be suffering from kidney disorders and heart problems, but the only official statement made about his sickness by the Soviet government was that he had a prolonged cold.
with a group of nine visiting U.S.
senators. Though he has missed
several important functions, An-
derson said that he would be solidly
in power in the Kremlin.
Severity of crimes is ranked in extensive government poll
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Americans think terrorist bombings, murders and fatal child beatings are the best serious crimes, while smoking marijuana cheating on taxes are among the least severe, a study showed Sunday.
The findings, which may help police and lawmakers in deciding where to draw the line in fighting crime, are the result of the largest survey ever made of how the general public ranks the seriousness of crimes, the Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics said.
Killing 20 people in a bombing got the highest score, 72.1 — seven times more serious than stealing a bike.
Out of 204 crime scenarios, the No.1 severe crime was judged to be the bombing of a public building that killed 20 people
The 60,000 people surveyed were asked to rank the seriousness of a list of crimes, with stealing a bicycle from the street assigned a value of 10.
Other crimes in the top 12:
Rape in which the woman dies, 52.8; parent beats a child to death with his fists, 47.8; bombing a public building, 41.9; shooting down an enemy with the victim struggles and is killed, 43.2
Indian official is found slain in England
By United Press International
BIRMINGHAM, England — Police late yesterday found a body thought to be that of an Indian diplomat who was apparently kidnapped by a group demanding the release of political prisoners in the disputed Kashmir region of India.
"The body of a middle-aged Asian man found in the driveway to a farm in Hinkley, Leicestershire, is believed to be that of missing Indian Deputy High Commissioner Ravindi Harewah commissioner in police statement issued early today said.
S. S. Gill of the Indian Embassy in London, called the act a "heinous crime."
Mhatre, who was reported missing Friday night, was believed to have been kidnapped by a previously unknown group, the Kashmir Liberation Army.
"Police identified the body on their own information, and officials in Birmingham are contacting the family reportedly to identify the body." Gill said today.
The group then sent a letter to Reuters news agency, saying that it kidnapped an Indian diplomat and that it demanded the release of 10 prisoners in the Indian-controlled Kashmir region and an undisclosed ransom.
The letter warned that Mhatre, the No. 2 diplomat at the Indian High Commission in the Midlands city of Birmingham, would be killed if the deadline was reached 7 p.m. on Saturday. The deadline passed without contact from the abductors.
Last night, police said they had found a probable witness to Mhatre's abduction near his home in Birmingham. The witness said he had seen a man being "placed forcibly into a car" around 6 p.m. Friday.
At about 4 p.m. CST yesterday, police found the body.
Indian diplomats were baffled by the abduction. Mhatre was a native of Bombay and had no connections with Kashmir.
"He is not remotely connected with the area," said Baldev Kohl, assistant high commissioner in Birmingham, before the body was found.
"We can't think of any reason for him to be kidnapped," he said.
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, February 6, 1984
Page 10
Official globetrotting can be lavish
By GREGORY GORDON United Press International
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a series of reports investigating overseas travel made by members of Congress.
WASHINGTON — Rep. Robert Badham, R-Calif., didn't go around the world in 80 days. He took longer, and taxpayers probably would have preferred a balloon to his costly military flights.
During an 11-month stretch ending in October, Baden sapten had at least 82 days.
FIGURING CONSERVATIVELY, his share of the government-financed travel exceeded $90,000, including flight costs, meals, lodging and lavish services from host embassies and military members with twin friends in Congress for the Pentagon.
October, blundham spent at least 32 days — nearly three months — joining eight delegations for journeys on Air Force planes to 24 countries. His wife flee free. On 12 days while Badham was abroad as Congress' leading globetrotter, he missed roll call votes on Capitol Hill.
Badham, a member of the House Armed Services Committee, is hardly the only member of Congress whose interests in distant lands are draining the treasury.
In a four-month investigation, United Press International and the non-profit Better Government Association traced $15 million in unreported costs and a $20 million in excesses by congressmen living like royalty, far from public scrutiny.
Much congressional travel is worthwhile, but expenditures are hidden and uncontrolled. The budget — set by Congress' own 1978 legislation — is permanent and limitless. It is supplemented by a Pentagon "black bag" fund of nearly $1 million to wine and beer stores. It also includes millions of dollars in support services from the Defense Department and U.S. embassies.
HOUSE AND SENATE committees listed foreign travel costs of $5.9 million on disclosure staten ents filed for fiscal year 1983.
UPI and the BGA, after a month-long Freedom of information fight that resulted in a suit against the Air Force, documented that taxpayers footed a bill of at least $21.6 million as members of Congress flitted the globe.
UPI and the BGA found at least 357 taxpayer-financed trips to 85 countries and Antarctica — by 73 senators, 236 House members, and more than 1,300 aides, spouses and accompanying agency officials in fiscal 1983.
Besides frittering big dollars for chauffered cars, for dining in some of Europe's most sumptuous restaurants and for slipping away to resorts,
members of Congress squandered vast sums through carefree use of military aircraft.
ITEM: On a Banking Committee trip to the Far East in August, Sens. Jake Garn, R-Utah, Paula Hawkins, R-Fla, and Frank Lutenberg, D-N.J., filled a spiffy converted Air Force 707 with their spouses, Garn's secretary, Secretary of the Senate William Hill, then Senator Bob McLeary, then-Senate, Sergeant-at-Arms, Love Liebengood, three staffers and four military escorts.
The three senators could have flown first class on commercial flights for less than $30,000. Instead, it cost $244,103 to carry the entire group to Japan, Korea, Singapore and Hong Kong aboard the Air Force's Special Air Mission plane. Total cost of the flight was about $65,000 on file with Hildenbrand's office, which collects disclosure reports on such costs.
ITEM: In January 1983, Peter Rodino, D-N-1, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, led a mostly Italian delegation including his son, Peter Rodino III, Reps. Frank Annunzio, D-III, Romano Mazzoli, D-Ky, and Hamilton Fish, R-N-Y, to italy for 13 days, and Austria for 2 days. An aide said they looked into international "refuge matters," in Rome, and damage from Italy's earthquake. But the trip to the fatherland also included stops in Palermo, Florence, Siena, Venice and Trieste. Rodino and colleagues reported military airfare costs as $23,720, but the actual price of transporting the four House members and three aides was $112,348.
ITEM: Rep. Joseph Addabbo, D-N.Y., twice led delegations from his House appropriations subcommittee to China in 1983, at a cost of about $600,000. In recent weeks, Addabbo also went to the Far East. Rep. Melvin Price. D-III, visited China twice in fiscal 1983, once with Mr. Sullivan and twice to O'Neill, D-Mass, on a journey that cost $360,268, then leading his own delegation at a cost of $222,794.
ITEM: In September, Rep. Dante Fascell, D-Fla., headed a special House commission on a trip to Spain. Demands on the 17-plane fleet of the Air Force's 89th Airwing were so great the C-137 jet was summoned back to Washington the day after departure. A C-137 then returned to Spain to fetch the delegation. Cost of what was just a trans-Antlantic trip: $175,000.
Hawkins wound up a five-country, globe-inclining inquiry into drug trafficking with her third stop in 13 months in Hong Kong, which foreign service officers disagrees call a "shop op" - shopping opportunity. Although Hong Kong is a British Crown Colony that makes no foreign policy, 62 members of Congress and 51 staffers got a chance in fiscal year 1983 to buy at bargain prices
MOST CONGRESSMEN interviewed about overseas travel staminah defend it as the best way to monitor U.S. expenditures and policies worldwide.
its fine, tailor-made clothing.
"I feel that the real problem," said Maxwell Rabb, U.S. ambassador to Italy, "is a complete misunderstanding of the nature of congressional visits because they (congressmen) operate under a tremendous and unfair handlime." The word jacket, junker a hate word that colors the business they perform."
Badham, a politically secure conservative, said of his frequent travels, which include a trip to the Paris Air Show. "So what? Somebody is going to hate them? Otherwise. My constituents must approve of the way I conduct my office."
NEARLY EVERY Eury and Senate member polled by UPI and the BGA agreed there were numerous abuses time for new disclosure requirements.
Sifting through thousands of vouchers — some in foreign languages — UPI and the BGA found examples of wasteful spending on nearly every trip:
- Once overseas, House and Senate members commonly are greeted by chauffeur cars. Many rent cars and drivers, even in cities with excellent taxi systems. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Uttah, spent $446 over two days in June renting a Cadillac with driver in Geneva, Switzerland.
- On commercial flights, members of Congress frequently go first class, even if the air fare is quadruple that of economy class. One source said the House Energy and Commerce Committee has an unwritten rule requiring first-class travel so no one gets singled out in the news media.
- Trips often are punctuated with sightseeing. On the excursion to Egypt last February, the Smith delegation, including Badham, took time out for a $4,043 tour of pyramids at Luxor. Contrary to State department guide Pete Paulsen's Palm Beach committee delegation to Germany in November chartered a bus for $174 for a "ladies' program" for members' wives.
- Embassies set up costly hotel control rooms and Pentagon escorts, who fill the belies of military aircraft with up to a truckload of top-of-the-line liquor, man a "control room" bar from dawn until midnight. On a trip to Italy and the Middle East last February, a delegation led by Rep. Neal Smith, D-Iowa, charged $5,002 for "control rooms" at just four stops.
Most symbolic of congressmen living the high-life overseas is the biannual exodus to the Paris Air Show. One source said defense contractors wired members to such extent at the 1838 show and called it "giving." Next: Living It Up in Gay Paxes
Cost of Congressional Foreign Travel for Fiscal 1983
Unlimited congressional travel fund (includes commercial
airfares, rental cars, hospitality套房, overtime, etc.) $4,577,593*
airfares, rental cars, hospitality suites, overtime, etc.)
Military aircraft for 95 congressional trips $7,494,828
Military aircraft parts (estimated)* $876,000
Pay for 89th Airing personnel (estimate) $2,280,000
Foreign service officers (estimated) $4,500,000
Pentagon escorts' expenditures on congressional travelers $903,970
Military escort officers' per diem (estimate) $600,000
Flight crew per diem while overseas (estimate) $260,000
Senate congressional travel office (estimate based on three salaries, office expenses) $100,000
Congressional travel office, State Department (estimate based on two salaries, office expenses) $50,000
Senate contingency fund $25,820
Travel from Senate Committee budgets $8,547
Coast Guard trip to Haiti (estimate) $1,500
TOTAL $21,67
Some costs are estimated, conservatively, because reco-
are unavailable.
Figures do not include some short military flights, embassy receptions, and some other costs
Source: United Press International and the Better Government Association
Congress' leading travelers
House
Rep. Robert Badham
Rep. Kika de la Garza D-Texas
Rep. Melvin Price
7 trips, 82 days, 24 countries.
Rep. Stephen Solarz
4 trips, 41 days, 16 countries.
7 trips, 32 days,12 countries.
Rep. Gerald Solomon B.N.Y.
3 trips. 37 days, 17 countries.
Rep. William Dickinson R-Ala.
4 trips, 32 days, 15 countries.
Senate (no dates are required on Senate disclosure forms)
Sen. Orrin Hatch
R-Utah
5 trips, 21 countries.
Sen. Charles Mathias R-Md.
Sen. Claiborne Pell D-R.I.
Sen. John Tower
5 trips, 5 countries.
4 trips, 6 countries.
3 trips, 6 countries.
The Travels of Rep. Robert Badham November 12,1982 to October 11,1983
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University Daily Kansan, February 6, 1984
Page 11
WHAT'S
NEW
With the divestiture of the 22 Bell Operating companies and the restructuring of the AT&T organization, questions arise concerning how the change will affect AT&T Bell Laboratories.
Will the ingenuity still be there? Will there still be the creativity, the innovation and the unique development capability that has made AT&T Bell Laboratories one of the nation's foremost technological resources? Yes. So what's new?
A New Name
A New Name
What was Bell Labs, Bell Laboratories or, sometimes simply 'The Labs', is now officially AT&T and Bell Laboratories. It joins AT&T Technologies, Inc. and AT&T Communications in an impressive corporate family...the new AT&T.
A New Freedom The new AT&T is tree to compete in a variety of markets. AT&T Bell Laboratories' discoveries and designs can now be extended to whatever applications and consequent markets they suggest.
A New Freedom
A New Mission
AT&T Bell Laboratories will provide the technology AT&T needs to be a world leader in information systems, services and products. We will pursue a broad spectrum of research in micro-electronics, photonics, digital systems and software to fuel new ventures.
A New Beginning It is a year of new beginnings. For AT&T and for you If you are a graduate with a BS, MS or PhD in Electrical or Mechanical Engineering, Computer Science, Mathematics Operations Research, Chemistry, Physics, or Human Factors Psychology talk to an AT&T Bell Laboratories recruiter.
We will be on campus...February 15-17 Check with the Placement Office for details.
If you would prefer to write, send a copy of your resume and academic transcripts to: Director of Technical Employment, Dept. 127/3104/84, AT&T Bell Laboratories, 150 John F. Kennedy Parkway, Short Hills, New Jersey 07078
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University Daily Kansan, February 6, 1984 Page 12
Hale Irwin's putt wins playoff
By United Press International
PEBLE BEACH, Calif. — Hate Irwin made a birdie pinch on the final hole at Pebble Beach yesterday to tie Jim Neilford then won the second hole of nine-death playoff with a nine-foot birdie hit the $400,000 Bing Crosby Pro-Am.
Irwin, recalling how he lost the Memorial Classic in 1976 to Roger Malteib on the third playoff hole when he lost the game to Kyle McDermott not to let the same thing happen again.
But he needn't have worried in the playoff as Nefford, a seven-year pro from Vancouver, British Columbia, could be able to make a putt when it counted.
Irwin seemed to have everything going his way after a lucky bounce on the 18th not only prevented him from getting into trouble but set up the tying birdie putt that sent the match into sudden death.
ON THE 18TH, Irwain's tee shot bounced off the rocks bordering the Pacific Ocean on the left side of the beach. It was bounced on the fairway instead of the beach.
He chose a 3-wood for his second
shot, which left him about 80 yards short of the pin, and with a wedge he hit the flag and the ball came to rest three feet from the hole. The two-time U.S. Open champion then sank the putt that put the tournament into a playoff.
Irwin almost won the tournament on the first extra hole, the 15th, but his try for a birdie from 10 feet rolled over the cup. On the next hole, he skied his tee shot into a fairway bunker. But a 2-iron got him within nine feet of the pin.
Iron trained in the winning putt after Nelford's attempt from about 16 feet away. He broke his second.
Irwin, who shot a final-round 72, won $72,000 and pushed his career earnings to $2,454,659. past Ray Flood to four place on the all-time money list. It was his first victory since last year's Crosby win and the first Crosby title of his career.
"SOMETIMES YOU PLAY well and don't score." Irwin said. "And sometimes you don't play well but good things happen."
Nelford, still looking for his first PGA Tour victory, had a 68 for 10 under 278. It was as close as he has come in seven years to winning a PGA event.
"You have to give credit to Hale," he said. "That's the luck of the game."
That's why it's a game and not stocks and bonds. He won this time but maybe I will the next."
Mark O'Meara and Fred Couples shot final-round 70% to tie for third and win $23,200 each. Englishman Nick Faldo hit in final round to finish fourth at 281 and win $19,200.
Craig Stadler shot a 79 and 1983 leading money winner Hal Sutton had a 72 to tie at 328, another stroke ahead of John, John Fought and David Edwards.
COREY PAVIN, Gil Morgan and Pat McGowan landed at 284, a stroke ahead of Jerry Pate, Victor Regalado and Ben Crenshaw.
Nicklaus, making his 1984 debut, had his best round of the tournament, a 70, that placed him in a tie at 288 with nine others. Phoenix Open champion Tom Kite never found Crossson champion Tomek never was a factor and wound up at 286.
Irwin went into the final round with a two-stroke lead on Edwards and seemed in good shape until Nelford birded Nos. 6, 7 and 9,11. The birdie on the 11th drew Nelford into a tie for the lead with Irwin, who then boyged the 15th when he missed a four-foot putt after flying the green.
South Africans outdistance Foyt Trio wins Daytona marathon easily
By United Press International
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - A trio of South African drivers raced their Porsche March 2,476.8 miles and won the 24 Hours of Daytona road race yesterday, 35 miles ahead of a second-place Porsche Turbo.
Bob Wollek, with Derek Bell, as the third driver.
Sarel Van der Merwe, Tony Martin and Graham Duxbury completed 640 laps in the only around-the-cock road race in the United States, finishing nine laps ahead of the car driven by defending champions A.J. Foyt and
The winning car recorded an average speed of 103.119 mph with the drivers sharing first-prize money of $22,500, plus an undetermined amount of contingency money. The drivers of the second-place car shared $11,500.
Van der Merwe, who is in his second season on the International Motor Sports Association circuit, drove the final hour.
MARTIN AND DUBURY made their debut on the IMSA circuit.
although both are well-known veteran drivers in South Africa.
The South Africans purchased the winning car at the end of last season from IMSA GT driving champion Ali Holbert. It was the car in which Hobert remained co-drove to victory in the IMSA 3-Hour Finale at Dytauma in November.
They didn't do many things wrong and survived one mechanical malfunction that shut off the fuel supply two laps after they took the lead in the seventh hour. It took them more than two hours to regain the lead.
Steamers edge Kansas City on three late goals
By United Press International
MISL victory over the Kansas City Comets.
Kansas City took a 2-1 lead in the third period on Tasso Koutouksou's 19th goal of the season before Jeff Caiatore, Don Ebert and MacEwan scored early in the fourth period for the Steamers, 16-10 and just 10 percentage
21
points behind the Comets in the race for first place in the Western Division.
Koutsoukos pulled the Comets within one 5:28 into the fourth period with his second goal for Kansas City, 15-9 overall but 3-6 against MISL teams with winning records.
SEATTLE — Tom Chambers grabs a rebound while Dallas' Mark Aguire goes sprawling. Chambers came off the bench and scored 21 points yesterday to lead the Supersonics to a 104-96 victory over the Mavericks. Aguire led all scorers with 37.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Duncan MacEwan's fourth goal of the season capped a string of three fourth-quarter St. Louis goals in a span of 2:17 yesterday to give the Steamers a 4:3
Cleveland trades Toby Harrah to Yanks
By United Press International
after spending most of his 13-year career as a regular.
NEW YORK — Toby Harrah, a four-time All-Star, became a member of the New York Yankees yesterday in a trade that sent relief pitcher George Frazier and outfielder Otis Nixon to the Cleveland Indians.
Other minor league players are also part of the deal and will be named later.
"I have been an admirer of his for several years," said Yankee owner George Steinbrenner. "He is quite a competitor, a quality that I respect."
The deal, which was completed Saturday, became official yesterday when the 35-year-old infielder gave his approval. As a 10-year veteran who had spent the last five seasons with the same club, Harrah had the right to veto the deal but okayed it, even though he is expected to be used in a reserve role
The Yankees would like Harrah to platoon with 40-year old Craig Nettles at third base and to fill in part at shortstop. A lifetime 267 hitter, Harrah hit 266 with nine homers and 53 RBI in 138 games last season but has averaged nearly 14 home runs and 70 RBI for season during his career.
Lendl shows no mercy in beating Noah
By United Press International
TORONTO — Ivan Lendl kept his promise by showing no mercy yesterday in disposing of Frenchman Yannick Noah 6-0, 6-2, 6-4 to claim the $100,000 top prize in a $250,000 special event tennis tournament.
Lendl, ranked No. 1 in the world, had vowed "to go right at Noah and show him no mercy," even though his opponent had suffered back spasms all week. Naoh collected the $60,000 second prize in the eight-man round robin.
Lendl, also 23, advanced the easy way, gaining a bye after his scheduled semifinal opponent. American Jimmy Cain made a case of a pinched nerve in his neck.
Noah, 23, had endured a three-hour, five-set victory over Poland's Wojtek Fibak in Saturday's semifinal to advance to the final. He had said after that match that he considered defaulting because of his back pain.
The 1983 French open champion aided Lendl's cause by getting off to an absylush start — double-faulting twice in the first game of the match.
THE FIFTH-RANKED Noah spent the 90-minute match in a dogged quest for an even break. His Czechoslovakian opponent obliged — by breaking Noah's serve three times in the first set and in the first game of the second.
Lendl blasted 11 aces in the contest; Noah, whose usually blistering serve deserted him until the final set, managed three.
The 6-foot-4 Frenchman, who now calls New York home, finally managed to hold service in the third game of the middle set and celebrated winning his first game by raising his hands in the air and yelling "Yeah, Yannick."
Noah, recently shorn of his Rastafarian dreadlocks, enjoyed some success at the net, but Lendl quickly caught on and halted Noah's advancements by forcing lengthy baseline rallies.
“AFTER HE CAME TO the net a few times I tried to take it away from him,” said Lendl, whose super-ball passing shots repeatedly frustrated Noah.
Naah mounted a brief rally in the Noah set, forcing it to 4-4 before Lendl broke him in the ninth game to go up. Naah won the victory by serving out the match.
If you love donuts . . .
you'll love CAROL LEE
842-3694
842-3694
$2.00 off haircut
all semester
with KJID
Silver Clipper
LOVE MORE
AMAZING FINE
842-1822
Prices Reminiscent
Of The Past
$3 Off
A LARGE 2 INGREDIENT
(MIN.) DELICIOUS
MINSKY'S PIZZA.
TONIGHT ONLY
with this coupon only-not valid with other offers
not valid with our 7 days a week delivery
Minsky's
PIZZA
2228 IOWA 842-0154
Prices Reminiscent
Of The Past
$3 Off
A LARGE 2 INGREDIENT
(MIN.) DELICIOUS
MINSKY'S PIZZA.
TONIGHT ONLY
with this coupon only-not valid with other offers
not valid with our 7 days a week delivery
Minsky's
PIZZA
2228 IOWA 842-0154
COUNTRY Inn
Specials
week of 2/6/84—2/13/84
Tues. 2 for 1
Purchase any entree and receive one of equal or lesser value free.
Wed. Roast Beef 4.99
includes roast beef, mashed potatoes & gravy, vegetable,
coleslaw, bean salad, biscuits
Thurs. 2 for 1
Purchase any entree and receive one of equal or lesser value free.
Fri. Boiled Shrimp All You Can Eat 10.99
served with coleslaw, biscuits and beverage
Sat. Buy One Get One ½ Price
Any meal. All dinners include drink and dessert.
Sun. Buy One Get One ½ Price
Any meal. All dinners include drink and dessert.
BIRTHDAY SPECIAL!
On the day of your birthday receive 1 dinner free with
dinner purchased at same price or lower.
1350 N. 3rd
MUST PRESENT THIS AD
FOR SPECIALS 843-1431
COUNTRY Inn Specials
WHITENIGHT'S
Look for our SIX-HOUR SALE TOMORROW
the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755
JOB OPPORTUNITY 1984-85 ACADEMIC YEAR
RESIDENT ASSISTANT
at
GEOPHYSICIST OR TECTONOPHYSICIST
University of Kansas
NAISMITH HALL
Deadline for submitting applications is 5 p.m. Fri., Feb. 10, 1984
KU seeks applications for a tenure-track faculty position in geophysics. Candidates should have research interests in crustal geophysics. The successful applicant will be expected to teach undergraduate and graduate geophysics courses, develop an active research program, advise students, supervise graduate student theses and dissertations, and provide service through administrative and professional activities. A Ph.D. in geology with specialization in geophysics is required although applicants who will complete the Ph.D within the first year of employment at KU will be considered. The position is at the assistant professor level with a salary commensurate with qualifications. Although the closing date for the nationwide search has passed, the closing date for local applications extended to Feb. 13, 1984. The starting date for the position is Aug. 16, 1984. Sand vitha, transcripts, a brief statement of research interests and courses the applicant feels qualified to teach, and three letters of reference to G.H. Girty, Department of Geology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. The advertised position is contingent on continued state funding. For additional information contact G.H. Girty or phone (913) 864-4974. KU is an affirmative-action, equal-opportunity employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Naismith Hall announces that applications for RA positions including job description and requirements are now available at the Naismith desk between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Contact Naismith Hall at 843-8559 with any questions concerning the position.
E. O.E.M/W
Record Sale
1.98 AND UP
On Sale NOW!
At Both Locations
KUBookstores
Kansas Union Burge Union
Record Sale
KU Bookstores
Kansas Union Burge Union
1
...
. . . . .
BASKETBALL
SPORTS ALMANAC
The University Daily KANSAN
Conference
W L AU All Games
Oklahoma 1 5 1833 13 18,357
Oklahoma City 1 5 1833 13 18,357
Iowa St 1 4 687 13 16,684
Nebraska 1 5 350 13 16,684
Detroit 1 5 350 13 16,684
Oklahoma St 1 5 350 11 18,579
Colorado 1 4 132 11 18,579
Big Eight Standings
Jan. 30 North Carolina State 66, Missouri
53
Jeb: 31, Oklahoma 103, Kansas 84
Feb: 1, Missouri 89, Colorado 31, Nebraska 44, Oklahoma State 52, Kansas State 75, Iowa State 69
Feb. 4: Oklahoma 76, Missouri 65;
Nebraska 47, Kansas State 46; Iowa State 67;
Oklahoma State 63.
Feb. 3; Kansas 79, Wichita State 69
Wednesday Oklahoma at Nebraska
Kansas at Oklaahoma State; Kansas State at
Missouri; Iowa state at Colorado
THIS WEEK'S GAMES
College Basketball Results
Saturday: Kansas State at Oklahoma;
Nebraska at Missouri; Iowa State at
Kansas; Oklahoma State at Colorado.
Auburn 67, Florida 65.
Willamette 94, Lewis & Clark 82 (OTT)
KU Recreation Results Man's Greek Trophy
Men's Greek Trophy
The Graduates 53, Kappa Alpha Psi 29
Phi Beta Sigma 16, KPI Phau Pki 38
Ala A 50, I2 F 19
Alpha Kappa Teta 31 Delta A 2.6
Alpha Kappa Lambda 16, KPI A 2.8
Alpha Kappa Teta 2 beat Sigma Alpha
KPI Pki 12, Duckos 2.3
Phi Beta Sigma 16, KPI Phau Pki 14
Alpha Tau Omega 44, KPI Chu Chong
Alpha Tau Omega 44, KPI Upsilon 19
Phi Kappa Teta 31, KPI Phau Pki 29
Phi Kappa Teta 31, KPI Phau Pki 29
Dicha Chi 62, Duckos 2.3
Phi Kappa Teta 31, KPI Phau Pki 29
Phi Kappa Teta 31, KPI Phau Pki 29
Evan's Scholars 52, KPI Phau Pki 31
Kappa Sigma 16, KPI Phau Pki 19
Copyright AGD heat T-Delt by forrest Alpha Chi Omega 36, Kapus 124 Alpha Chi Omega 21, Alpha Mets 34 Little Sisters of Zeta Beta 34, Alpha Omnima Pc1 21
Men's Independent Trophy
Splinterts 55, Mouthcurses 29
Judice for All 40, Bubb's Bombers 44
Lebsters 44, Artensties 19
Trantharalt beat Geets 8, forest
Neptune Sailors 13
Women's Independent Trophy
EFEFFES 23, The Supreme Court 20
Variety 15, Grad Gunners 20
Sombrue 10, Revengeers 21
Milton 8, Revengeers 18
Men's Independent Rec. B
Eastern Conference Atlantic Division
Rainforest 28, Kamikazes 28
The Mavericks 40, NSAE 40
CLB Gummers 46, The Enforcers 39
"Doubleshot beat Houchnobs by toftest
Staffers 26, Northstars 15
The Swosch 37, GDI's 28
Pearson Hoopers 61, The Keg Men 14
Natsmith Hall Rec. B
W L E. Pct. GHz
Boston 30 18 467
Philadelphia 30 18 672
New York 27 18 600 10
New Jersey 27 18 500 11
New York 27 18 647 17
NBA Standings
Atlanta 27 21 563 - 1
Detroit 27 21 563 - 1
Milwaukee 16 20 394 1%$
Chicago 16 20 394 1%
Cleveland 16 20 394 1%
Indiana 13 32 289 12%$
Western Conference
W L. J. PCT. Gr. Utiah 19 580 25 33 42 $1/4 Dallas 25 33 23 31 64 Houston 20 27 42 160 San Antonio 20 28 41 104 City 20 28 41 104
February 6,1984 Page 13
Los Angeles 30 16 652
Portland 25 20 652 0
Sacramento 25 20 652 0
Golden State 22 26 458 0
Phoenix 22 26 458 0
Phoenix 15 32 152 0
Midwest Division
Thoughts & Trannies
Boston at New Jersey, 6:35 p.m.
Golden State at New York, 6:35 p.m.
Washington 125, Indiana 101
Cleveland 108, San Diego 106
Atlanta 102, Philadelphia 97
Boston 100, Washington 97
Kansas City 107, Denver 109
New York 104, Houston 95
Colorado Springs 93
Golden State 107, Phoenix 104
SOCCER
MISL Standings
Houston at Washington, night
At Albany at Albany, night
Cleveland at Detroit, night
Los Angeles at Indiana, night
Chicago at Chicago, night
Milwaukee at Kansas City, night
San Antonio at Phoenix, night
Dallas at Portland, night
Jacksonville at Jacksonville
Kansas City 15 15 9 625
St. Louis 15 10 611 - -
Wichita 15 10 549 - -
Los Angeles 12 9 14 381
Phoenix 14 8 304 $3.6*
Phoenix 7 6 304 - -
Miami 7 6 304 -
Pittsburgh 15 18 6522 3
Baltimore 15 11 5903 2
New York 12 13 480 4
Memphis 12 13 417 7(-)
Maryland 16 16 390 9
Yesterday's Results
Buffalo, N.Y. St. Louis, N.C.
St. Louis, N.C.
Pittsburgh, L. Los Angeles, G. (67)
Baltimore, C. Cleveland 5
Wichita 4, Phoenix 3 (OT)
Yesterday's Results
Buffalo 6, Tacoma 2
GOLF
Tomorrow X Games
Las Angeles at Wichita, night
Bing Crosby Pro-Am
Donnie Hammond. 2,025 | 749 | 571 | 268
Leonard Thompson. 2,025 | 749 | 571 | 268
Hal Sutton, 13,900
Crang Stander, 13,900
Crystal Strasser, 13,900
Loin Hinkle, 11,400
John Foght, 11,600
Bruce Reid, 11,600
Paul McGowan, 9,200
Gerry Pawson, 9,200
Corey Pawson, 9,200
Ben Crenshaw, 7,900
Victor Repensha, 7,900
Leo Elder, 4,720
Joshua Elder, 4,720
William Wood, 4,720
David Ogrin, 4,720
Robert Mariante, 4,720
Jack Nicklaus, 4,720
Payne Stewart, 4,720
John Cook, 3,020
Mark Peat, 3,020
Mark Pfeil, 3,020
Tim Sumpom, 3,000
Jon Bettman, 3,000
Bobby Cimbrott, 3,000
Sven Lederer, 2,820
Tin Norris, 2,820
Tin Norris, 2,820
Hiruae Letke, 2,820
Richard Zokai, 2,820
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 |
| 21-22 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.05 |
| 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 Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
- **Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words**
- **Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words**
- **Definitions are Dierks' Advertisement**
Classified Display advertisements can be only one width wide and no more than nine inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No revenues allowed in classified display advertisements except for big display ads.
- Students have a legal right to leave a working day prior to publication
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions
- No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement
- Blind box ads—please add a $2 service charge
• Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University of Kaysan
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
- Classified display advertisements
- Classified display ads do not count towards mms
this earned rate discount.
- Samples of all mail order items must be submitted.
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.
AIRLINES JHINING
STEwardesses
DIRECTORY Guide. Newsletter
(916) 444-4440 EASTERN
DIRECTORY Guide. Newsletter
(916) 444-4440 EASTERN
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ATTENTION. Sincere persons wishing to travel next April to Lexington for the 141st Annual American College of Nursing will be welcome to Applications are now being accepted for Student Offers for 188 Kansas Lakes (April 18-21), Eater University, and 186 New York State Office. 143 Allen Field House. Be a part of this great KU tradition. Deadline for applications is April 29.
Horseback Riding
$6.00 per hour
KOA Campground
842-3877
Havrack Rides Also
Bulletin Board Service - Poster Design &
Reuse Reasonable Rates, Rückfragen 832424 or A2A
Auction weekly consignment every Friday 7 @ p.m.
Showmates - Kaw River Bridge, 216 West 40th St.
CHRISESHIPS HIREING $16-$80.00 Carrielen,
Shipment to:
1 (916) 944-4444 EXT
1 (916) 944-4444
...
FOR RENT
Sun-N-Fun with Summit
call for info 749-0048
The University Daily KANSAN
Gemini 10X print demonstration. Alphabase
Computer X10X, Lawrence's original compter
(the same model)
Interested in RUGGY? Contact Rick or Doug at 842-0377.
2 bedroom in basement of beautiful house 5 minutes from campus - Garage-Private parking and laundry facilities.
COURSEEERS NEEDED! Headquarters Crisis
Counseling Center needs volunteers willing to learn
short term counseling skills. No prior experience
required. Attend meetings, Sunday &
Tuesday. Fefer, 5 & 7, 7 p.m
842-1876 or 841-1287
BRAND NEW
TOWNHOUSES
AT
SUNRISE PLACE
9th & MICHIGAN
1. 3 and 3 bedroom apartments available in Good campus location on the route between Newark and Philadelphia.
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.
Apple Croft. A/C, Heat & Water. Quilt Luxury on
edge of campus iPad 1, BGR 27/25, 741 W.1896
1354 N. 25th St. New York, NY 10024
Affordable luxury. 3 year old duplex in excellent condition. Large living space with vaulted ceiling, carpeted floor. Appliances with washer and dryer hookup. Private residence with washer and dryer hookup. Hardy's $96 call. Mount 842-764-0741.
Are you sick of derm life? Try a refreshing alternative! I will pay you $100 to subbase my Naismith Hall contract. Great food, good friends, luxurious atmosphere, maid service, private room. (CALL 212-894-2530)
Excellent location. One block to town, three blocks to KU. Two bedroom apartment, low utilities, $250/month. Great commute.
1 & 2 BR APTS FROM $200
- Free Campus Transportation
* 24 hour Maintenance
* Year round Swimming
* Laundry Facilities
Need a lease through May?
CALL US TODAY!
842-4444
Open Sat.
524 Front Road
Need a lease through May?
First months rent free for 2 bedroom unfurnished room. Two bathrooms and two wainscapes. Complete kitchen with dishwashers and disposal. On KU bus route and close to shopping center. On KU bus route and close to 2 bedroom Lane 11 on call 841-6945 or help! Sublease modern efficient two bedroom apt.; water, cable paid. Black 5. front; red Oak 7. back. Call 841-6945.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
232.4
CARLON PA
FIT EAST
BLASTERWINDOW
SK
325.1
MILKSHOP
WALL OFF
ZONA ST.
233.1
MEADOWBROOK — nice furnished studio available
for rent in St. Louis. Call 516-742-3800 for
campus listings or landlord facility. Call
516-742-3800 for more information.
MEDAOBOOKR still available one apt. and
bedroom furnished and unfurnished apts. Heat and
water included, 15th from campus, and excellent
bedroom equipped with bathrooms.
Meadowbrook baks. 15th & Crestline. 842-4300
MUST RENT! A bus route 1 bedroom apartment close to campus on bus route 853$ more utility. No phone. No security. $200.00 per month.
10 or 12 month lease
MUST RENT? Will lease a 6250 sq. ft. townhouse
with basement and fireplace with
basement with basement and fireplace
2 new Bedroom, atlift & Michigan Appliances,
Baltimore, atlift, low utilities, sub lease
*84-216-6030*
1,2 and 3 bdm apts. All have D.W., disposal, ovar/range, Frost Free Refrig., A/C, gas heat. Bus Route
RENT NOW FOR FALL. Take your pick of
one of our four locations at Startup 290. See our door
numbers below.
Save $12 per month. 2-bedroom apartment-like
room with 3 backs.斗K from BUK. Call 843-4798
FOR SALE
Sublet our 2BH apt, with W/D hookup, redwood deck,
airconditioning and carpet and stove and keep our $00 deposit for yourself plus we pay l/1 50% of your rent's amount. 800-749-3600 Keep Trying.
Our 2BH apartment is furnished平整 and 1 and 2 bedroom apartments near campus. Call 842-4455, 842-5255 or 841-1212.
Sublease. 1 BR apt. i, carpet down/downst,
balcony, new carpet, dishwasher. $240 81-6888.
Sublease two bedrooms apt, carpet, air conditioning,
clean, close to campus / downst. $275 79-6427
4. ch. SUN Studio P-A with Reverb: 5 p. CB 3600 precision drum set: 480 bass amp. Call Cheap
Canon
78 Renault Le Car, GLT, $1400 3 woodstoves $95 each. 749-1163
ATARI 600 XL. One month old like new $150. Call
749-2407 after 5 p.m.
BASS GUITAR FULLY T-40, tawny (fitted cases, 60mm), great set up $650 or separately. Mike's Great set up $650 or separately. Mike's
843-4754
Beneer Dual Dichro Color head with Beneer dual dichro stabilized power supply for color photography
Boe- interaudiom Alpha 3 speakers. Brand new and for my use. Call last and make an offer. Ask
me.
Drafting table. 48 x 36. Wood frame, vinyl top,
adjustable height, adjustable tilt, one year old
For Sale- Use floppy disk. Scotch quality or
sacrificed. Mini 10, soft-surface, airtight secto-
rs. $1 each minimum 10). (Also limited to
8 single or double sided; 5" hard sectored). Mark or
carry. Price: $349. 841-7157 (first call for availability and direction.)
For sale Radar Detection "FOX XR" Brand new also "realistic AM FM amplifier plus 2 speaker
Ladens ecklin leather boots. Size 9 with 3" dress heel.
Call 842-3001
Stereo television video. All name brands. Lowest
area. Video area. Total Sound Distributors.
913-344-6000
**"IBM-PC compatible." From $96. Alphabyte**
**"IBM-PC compatible." Original computer**
**"Center Lawrenc." original computer**
Peavey 7-0 bass with case, accessories. Perfect condition. $250, price negotiable. 749 7312
Used Furniture at Sheakmiller's, across Kaw River Bridge, 2 miles north of Lawrence on 29 54 Highway.
USED CARPETS—dorm room sizes, mostly shags,
$0; leave message, 842-4133.
AUTO SALES
THEATRICAL MAKEUP KIT-Large, loaded
tackle box, 656 firm. Call 841-4734
T15.98 PC, 100A Printer, Master.Business decision-
masters-learning aversion, softwares, 749-9776
100A Printer, Master.Business decision-
masters-learning aversion, softwares, 749-9776
Used cameras, large selection. C & T Photographs. 8135 Santa Pae. Overland Park. KS
U. S. and U.N. stamps, mint and used, bargain priced. Collectors call 843-5189, e-mails:
Western Civilization Violation; including New Supplement. On New Sale Makes use to use them in the presentation of the paper or exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Crater, The Village.
WV RABBIT - Well cared for. Must sell. $1300.
842-6713 6, anytime weekends
181 Datam 200 ZX, GLP. 5 speed, rear lower,
rear upper. 360 W, best price. 420-900,
must ship to bore or best offer. 420-900.
1918 WV Rabbit LS, 4-door, A stereo, Cass, 25,000 miles
$840.814 841.037
CAMP STAFF WANTED for Camp Lincoln/Camp
Bernard, assistant camp counselor in camp. A strong commitment to camp and experience is required along with skills and experience in Campus Center, 22 Cornell Hall for interviews on Campus
Ford Mutant V6, autonomic. All extras. Star
stereo San Francisco PT01 with speakers. 748-3527 or
353-3228.
Cruiseships are hiring! $150,000 - Carribean.
Sailings only. Offer valid January 28.
New Jersey - 1/9167 944-4440 ETX.
Miami - 1/9167 944-4440 ETX.
Airlines are hiring! Flight attendants
Directors, Newsletter. 10310 9444-4400.
www.airline.com
Earn $16 weekly working in your home. Part of爪 work. For application mail a self-addressed stamped envelope addressed to the school's electronic technician. Part time during school and full time in summer. Send resume Box M67.
HELP WANTED
Found Contact-learned account of 108 Storm on Jan. 12, 2014. Account number 6135059. Found refund amount of cash. Call Storm: 843-909-9090
Gold ring set with 3 large amethystia (purple stone). Phone: 602-971-8533. Cell Call List: 864-361-838 (8:35 p.m.) or 843-369-838.
Student wanted 4.4 p.m. Mon, Thurs. or Fri to灯 light household chairs, pick up two kids and prepare easy dinner; gourmet not required! Might work swimming pool membership. Must have own transportation and be dependable. Call 814-9417 Fri. evening or Sat. Morning for interview. Pay
Female to assist with care. No experience required. Morning or evening and weekends Needed through summer. Call 15 p.m. 749-6288 Resumes now being accepted for 6 management positions in Eastern Kansas. No prior experience needed. Please email: Enterprises 8120 Brietchow, Wichita KS 67207
Wanted: Camp Daisy Hindman Staff for June/July,
1984. Business Manager, Health Officer, Unit
Leaders and Assistants, Waterfront Director and
Medical Director. Must have a Master's or
certificate required). Horse Program Director and
Instructors, Horse Barn Manager, Nature and Craft
Directors, and Kitchen Assistant positions open.
Apply to Camp Services Director, Kaw Valley
Campsite, Inc., 1675 Elm Street, Topeka, Kansas
Kansas 66034 913-723-3108 or 1-800-422-8328.
MISCELLANEOUS
Considered about your income and your education?
Let American Youth Enterprise help you to help you to help you with both.
A few hours can earn you $40-60 weekly as well as help you with schoolwork. American Youth Enterprise P.O. Box 600 Kanaka Young American Youth Enterprise P.O. Box 600 Kanaka
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SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN February 6, 1984 Page 14
'Hawks renew rivalry with victory
By JEFF CRAVENS Sports Editor
The Big Game. Every team in sports has at least one game on its schedule that is known as the Big Game — the team's most important reputation and keep its alumni happy.
For the Kansas Jayhawks, it was the third Big Game of the season yesterday when they beat the Wichita State Shockers 79-69 in front of a sellout crowd and a national television audience.
Kansas State and Missouri, two big Eight rivals, had already fallen, but the Jayhawk fans who had suffered through almost three years of hearing about the 'Battle of New Orleans,' a 66-65 Shocker victory in the 1981 Midwest Regional finals, demanded a victory over Wichita State.
"THIS IS REALLY a different feeling than Kansas State or Missouri," Kelly Knight said. "We play them every year so we know what to expect. I haven't seen Wichita State play since New Orleans."
It was Knight and Carl Henry who led the way for KU. Henry scored 21 points and pulled down 11 rebounds, and Knight scored 14 and grabbed 10 boards, as the Jayhawks out-rebounded Wichita State 37-25.
"We beat them on the boards, and that was something I was concerned about."
Although Wichita State made a couple of runs at the Jayhawks in the second half, the turning point came in the final 53 seconds of the first half.
After leading by as many as nine points, KU saw the visitors close to within two, at 36-34 with 1:09 left to play. But Wichita native Brian Martin hit a hook shot, the tenacious KU defense forced a turnover and the
Jayhawks were apparently going to go for one shot.
BUT HENRY DROVE the lane for a layup with 17 seconds left, giving Wichita State a chance to score before the end of the half.
"We were supposed to be going for one shot, but we didn't communicate, and I wasn't sure what we were doing." Henry said.
It turned out to work to KU's advantage, as Calvin Thompson stole the ball and hit Tad Boyle for a layup to Jawahra. Jayhaws ahead 42-34 at baltimore.
"I thought it was a really big play right before half," Brown said. "They had cut it to two and we go in leading by eight."
While the lack of communication worked out for KU, Gene Simpson said he hadn't been able to do it.
"I THINK THE last 32 seconds of the first half really did us in because we wanted one shot . . . and we took a bad shot." Shocker coach Gene Smithson said. "Of going in tied up, they have great surge and went in ahead by eight."
The Jayhawks had a balanced attack in the first half, with four players scoring at least six points, led by Henry with nine. Xavier McDaniel, who score 24 points in the game, had 14 in the first half, while Aubrey Heredad added 12 fit.
McDaniel, the nation's second leading rebounder, also grabbed 11 rebounds for the game, despite being the target of the KU defense.
"We were really concerned with McDaniel." Knight said. "We really didn't contain him, but we contained everybody else."
In the second half, KU used three different defenses to keep the Shockers off balance. The Shockers closed the gap to five at 53-48, but KU outscored
RON KELLOGG AND Greg Dreling each scored four points in the run. Dreiling, who played at Wichita State for one season before transferring to KU, scored the last four points, including a one-hand tomahawk dunk.
Wichita State 12-1 over the next four minutes to take a 65-49 lead.
Just when the crowd was ready for a rout, the Shockers outscored KU 10-2. But Dreiling scored the second four inning to keep the huskies from boosting the Jayhawk lead to 14.
KU surprised many people by using the transition game, a Wichita State state-owner sport.
"We like to run to beat the press," Brown said. "I thought the fact we got a couple of cheap baskets off the transition game helped us Bob Hill (KU assistant coach) scouted them and we could we跑冠 because of their size."
KU USED ITS man-to-man defense, a zone and a special triangle-two defense — with Martin and Kellog playing man-to-man on Sherrod and McDaniel with the three players playing in the second half to keep Wichita State off balance.
"When we were in zone, everybody was aware of where McDaniel was," Martin said. "When we went to man, I had to stay in front of him and box him out."
"The triangle-two, when we played Sherrod and McDaniel, really confused them. They didn't know what to run against it."
Knight, who was redshirted the year that Shockers beat the Jayhawks in New Orleans, could now joke about the last meeting between the two schools.
"I THINK I got off Bourbon Street in time for the gag." Knight said.
Both teams agreed that they were
happy that the series between the two schools had been renewed.
"It's a game that needs to be played. Brown said, 'I think it is a competition.'"
Smithson agreed, "I want to say that I'm really happy this series was better."
Probably the person who was thrilled the most by the matchup was Drewling, who had 14 points, including three dunks.
"I think the rivacy is just as big as the KU-K-State rivalry," he said. "I don't have any dislike for them, but it's great for the state."
But in the end, it was just another Big Game for the Jawhaws.
Kansas (79)
Mun Cfg FG T1 Rb Pb TP
Curt Heatry 39 6-10 6-12 10 21
Kelly Kung 39 6-10 6-12 10 21
Greg Drewling 27 5-7 4-5 4 14
Marilyn Marshall 27 5-7 4-5 4 14
Calvin Thompson 27 5-7 4-5 4 14
Tud Broyle 10 2-2 0-0 1 1
Boyle
Percentages: FG, 560 FF, 700 FB; Locked shots:
Martin Turnovers: 23 Henry 18 Thompson 4
Kellogg 4 Dreiling 3 Turpan 3 Martin 2 Knight
Knott 2 Knott 2 Turpan 3 Knott 2 Turpan 2
Thompson 2 Broye, Royle, Technique, None.
Wichita State (69)
Mn FG Mn FG Bf PP Aa Tp
Xavier McDaniel 40 19.7 6 18 10 4 24
Gu Santos 10 9.1 6 17 8 14 34
Zarke Dourise 29 1.3 1.2 1 2 5 3
Amaru Dourise 10 9.1 1.2 1 2 5 3
Karl Fajke 20 1.2 0 1 2 5 3
Gary Camflitt 23 1.7 1.2 1 0 4 3
Haim Ebel 8 1.2 2.2 0 1 3 4
Mike Airon 8 1.3 0 1 2 0 4
Percentages: FG, 47, FT, 274. Blucksteds shot:
6 McDaniel, 6 Santos, Cundiff. Turnovers: 19
(Sherrord, 6 Cundiff, 4 McDaniel, 2 Santos, 2 Papke, 2
Carr, 2 Arise, 1 Steak) 10 (Sherrord, 5 Cundiff, 3
Carr, 2 Arise) 10
Half. Kansas 42-34 Officials: Bain, Zetcher,
Aaron
2010
LAKERS
KU forward Carl Henry and coach Larry Brown embrace in front of the Jayhawk bench. Henry scored 21 points and pulled down 11 rebounds to lead KU post Wichita State 79-69 yesterday.
Colorado falls as KU women hit from line
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Sports Writer
"We've got to get to the free throw line," said women's head coach Marian Washington. "That's our bread and butter. But we've had better free-throw shooting games than the one today."
The Kansas women's basketball team had trouble making free throws in the second half of its home game with Colorado Saturday afternoon but made enough to beat the Buffaloes 68-61.
The second half of the game was a steady procession to the free-throw line for the Jayhawks. They made 14 of 23 before making two of four in the first half
The Jayhawks didn't make a field goal in a six-minute stretch late in the second half, during which Colorado cut an 11-point lead to one at 57:56 with 5:21
Then two Vickie Adkins field goals sandwiched between two free throws by Barbaria Adkins increased the lead to Suffailles never challenged after that.
VICKIE ADKINS BROKE loose for 13 points in the second half to finish with a game-high 19 points. She hit all five of her field goal attempts and made three of five free throws in the second half.
"Colorado was aware of what we were trying to do inside." Washington said. "It was tough to get Vickie involved in the offense in the first half, in the second half we went to a high-low post setup with her and Angie (Snider), and we were able to get her the ball."
Snider was right behind Adkins in scoring with 18 points. She went to the free throw line 11 times in the second half and made six.
Rounding out the double figure scoring for Kansas was Barbara Adkins with 14 points.
Adkins spent much of the second half shadowing Colorado guard Diane Hiemstra, called by Washington "one of the finest shooters in the women's game."
"I THOUGH BARBARA Adkins had a good game both on defense and offense." Washington said.
Heimstra scored 10 points in the first half, hitting five of eleven shots but was held to six points in the second half. Her team-leading total of 16 points was two points below her average.
Hiemstra's shooting in the first half helped bring Colorado back into the game after they fell behind early. The Buffaloes never led in the game. With 13:06 left in the first half they were down 14-4.
Colorado then ran off eight unanswered points to pull within two. The Jayhawk kept it up with 13. Tiffany Hill with 23 seconds left the game at 30.
Kansas outscored the Buffaloes 20-11 in the first nine minutes of the second half to build up their biggest lead of the game at 52-41.
SNIDER ANSWERED with a 17-foot right before the buzzer to put the Jawhays up at the half 32-30.
MICHAEL JACKSON
PEBLEB BEACH. Calif. — Hale Irwin signals victory on the final hole of the Bing Crosby Pro-Am, Irwin, a two-time U.S. Open winner, edged Jim Nelford in a sudden-death playoff yesterday. For this story and more sports news, see page 12.
Big Eight roundup NU, Sooners, O-State all win
But when Kansas State's 3-2 zone defense collapsed around Ponce, he flipped the ball to Cloudy on the left wing.
THE CORNIUSKERS scrambled upcourt for a final shot, with point guard Ponce driving the lane with 12 seconds to play.
Dreiling overcomes pre-game nerves to key KU victory over former coach
"Ponce made it work," Nebraska
Kansas State took a 46-15 lead on a three-point play by Ben Mitchell with 77 seconds remaining and had the chance to put the game away when Cloudy was called for traveling with 28 seconds to go. But Kansas State guard Jim Roder missed the front end of a 1-and-1 free throw situation with 17 seconds left to set up the dramatic finish.
Smith, in the game only because star center Dave Hoppen had fouled out with six minutes to go, scored on an offensive rebound of a missed Cloudy shot with six seconds remaining Saturday and sebrane at a 47-46 victory over Kansas State and the Cornhuskers back into the Big Eight race.
Kansas State was looking for David Ponce. Nebraska was looking for Stan Cloudy, and no one was looking for Ronnie Smith.
By United Press International
Cloudy took the pass and stepped up for the shot from 20 feet with 8 seconds left, but it bounced off the front of the rim to the far side of the basket where Smith was standing unguarded. The 6-9 center came down with the ball and then went right back up for the game-winning shot.
By GREG DAMMAN Sports Writer
IT WAS SMITH'S ONLY rebound of the game, and his six points were his first career Big Eight points in six games. Cloudy chipped in 14 points and Hoppen 10, as Nebraska improved its overall record to 13-6 in handing Kansas State only its second home loss in 11 games.
Coach Moe Iba said, "He set the whole thing up. I told him if they missed the free throw to penetrate and then kick the ball out to Cloudy. I thought Stanley would hit the shot."
Throughout the entire basketball season, KU center Greg Dreiling had been waiting for the Wichita State game.
Despite the jeers from the WSU fans Dreling played a important roll in KU's 79-69 victory.
Yesterday, in Allen Field House in front of a packed house and national television audience, it finally began for the Wichita native, who transferred to KU from Wichita State in the fall of 1982
The victory also shoved Nebraska back into the running for a first division finish, pulling the Cornhuskers to .500 in the Big Eight along with Iowa State, Missouri and Oklahoma State at 3-3. Missouri dropped to a 76-64 tie against Iowa State, and in the only other game, Iowa State edged Oklahoma State 67-63.
DREILING SCORED 14 points, hitting five of seven from the field and four of five from the line. Three of Dreiling's goal fields were dunks.
Was he nervous before the game? "I was about to ready to throw up."
If Dreiling was nervous, he didn't show it. The Shockers came out gunning early in the game and forged a 10-3 lead in the first three minutes. The next three minutes belonged to Dreiling.
First, he hit a baseline jumper and then followed with two dunks to score six of the Jayhawk's next eight points and help KU to a 13-12 lead.
"AFTER I MADE that first shot I just kind of took a deep breath and everything was back to normal." Dreiling said: "I didn't feel like I had to prove anything, I'm just glad we won and I'm relieved."
Missouri's aggressive man-to-man defense held Wayman Tisdale to a career-low 10 points, but point guard Jameis Winston, the slack with a career-high 21 points.
Dreiling also played a big part in
holding off a Shocker comeback in the second half.
Before the game there were rumors that KU coach Larry Brown would hold Dreiling out of the starting lineup to keep him out of startingcapal his old teammates.
With 6.25 left, Wichita State had narrowed the gap to 67.39, but Dreiling hit a turnaround jump shot and two free throws in the Jayhawks back in game 41, 7-14.
But the rumors were dispelled when Dreiling started the game.
"I've been looking at Greg all week," he said. "I think it means a lot to him."
Dreiling said that he was up for the game but that he was careful not to put too much pressure on himself.
"IVE BEEN THINKING about it all week, but I haven't been losing any
Both Dreiling and Smithson said that depth was a factor in the game. Three Wheeler State players quit the team last week, leaving the Shockers low in numbers.
Wichita State coach Gene Smithson liked what he saw of his former player.
"I was very impressed with Greg's play," Smithson said. "I thought he played extremely well. He played with poise out there."
Dreiling said, "We knew they didn't have mac' depth and were foul pronouns."
"I thought our lack of depth hurt us." Smithson said.
The Jayhawks played well inside, with forward Carl Henry scoring 21
points and forward Kelly Knight adding 14 points, giving the KC starting front row 38.
"In that particular case Greg had one hand on the ball. I thought it might have been a situation where a violation occurred." Smithson said.
Having played for both KU and Wichita State, Dreising is uniquely qualified to compare the playing styles of the two teams.
"They should be tough next year."
Dreiling said, "It got more interspace as the game went on, especially when the face judge was in the middle."
They should be tough next year.
The game was the first between the two schools since a 1981 NCAA tournament game and the first regular season game between the two since 1955.
"I think Wichita might have had a little more athletic ability," he said.
"But we've got a lot of heart and a great coach."
KU AND WICHITA State are scheduled to meet next year in Kemper State.
Now that the Wichita State game is behind him, Dreiling said that he would just relax and concentrate on the Big Eight conference race.
"I think the rivalry is just as big as the KU-KState rivalry. I don't have any dislike for them, but it's great for the state," Drreling said.
"It feels great," he said. "I feel more relieved than anything."
Wolf gains big singles victory
Tennis team gains confidence
By PHIL ELLENBECKER
Sports Writer
On Friday the Jayhawks won four three-set matches in defeating Tusa 7-2. Tula downed the Jayhawks 8-1 last year.
The Kansas men's tennis team came away from weekend matches in Fayetteville, Ark. with a confidence level well as an important singles victory.
The Jayhawks were defeated by sixth-ranked Arkansas on Saturday, but their only victory was a big one. No 1 singles player Mike Wolf beat 13th-ranked Kelly Everden 6-2, 4-6, 7-5.
Kansas head coach Scott Perelman said that Wolf's victory should greatly enhance the freshman's chances of entering the national rankings.
Perelman said the next rankings should be coming out in three weeks.
"HE'S NOT FAR from being ranked right now," Perelman said. "This victory should be a big help in getting him into the poll. It's his top win since
Wolf, who had a 13-2 record in singles play during the fall season, sent the Jayhawks on their way to the Tulsa victory by winning in straight sets. No.
Scott Perelman, KU tennis coach
'The Tulsa match was closer than the 7-2 score indicated. It was a good overall effort — definitely a team victory. We started off the season with four tough teams and came away with one victory.'
"The Tula match was closer than
3 singles player Jim Syrtre also won in straight sets, and the No. 4 and 5 players, Charles Stearns and Scott Alexander, came from behind and won their matches after both had lost their first sets.
KANSAS SWEPT the three doubles matches against Tulsa. Wolf and No. 2 singles player Michael Center won the No. 1 doubles match in three sets. Stearns and Syrrett teamed up for a victory in straight sets in No. 2 doubles. Alexander and Franco Caciopiolini, the No. 6 singles player, were the No. 3 doubles team and completed the sweep with a three-set victory.
the 7-2 score indicated," Perelman said. "It was a good overall effort -- definitely a team victory. We started off the season with four tough teams and came away with one victory. I think this win should give us a lot of confidence going into the spring season."
Syrett, the Jayhawks' team captain, missed the Arkansas match because he was attending his sister's wedding. His place was taken by freshman Richard
"It didn't cost us as the match, but we might have scored one or two more goals."
The Jayhawks dual record is now 1.3,
with all three losses coming to命
in a row.
KANSAS 7. TULSA 2
1
Sundges; Mike Wolf, K. def, Neal Smith 6.3, 7.4, David Sanders, T. def, Michael Center 6.4, 7.6 Jim Syrett, K. def, Richard Alexander 6.3, 6.8, Charles Stearns, K. def, Bob Swain 6.2, 6.2, Scott Stearns, K. def, Robert Sawyer 6.2, 6.2, Barrie Berryalls, T. def, Franco Cacoppiol 6.3, 6.7 Doubles; Wool Center, K. def, Smith Mills 6.3, 7.4, Snyder Stearns, K. def, Thompson Swainness, K. def, Franco Cacoppiol, K. def, Sanders Alexander 6.4, 7.6
**MKANSAS 8, KKANSAS**
*Suspects. Wolf, W. de, November 6; 4. 7.Seret,
R. de, November 6; 5. 9.Seret, R. de,
Nieves, M. de, November 6; 7. Neararms, G.
Bamac, A. def, Alexander 6.2. 6.2. Schmidt, A. def,
Caccappolino 6.4. 6.2. Rubinon, A. def, Rubit
**Doubleb:** Evermond Secret A, det. Wolf Center
**Doublec:** Evermond Secret A, det. Wolf Center
**D:** 6. Schmidt Blair A, det. Carapopoulos
**D**: 8. Schmidt Blair A, det. Carapopoulos
Redevelopment Letter sets role of committee Inside. p. 3
KANSAN
SUNNY
c
Vol. 94, No. 94 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
High, 50. Low, 20.
Details on p. 2
Tuesday morning, February 7, 1984
Second satellite is in errant orbit
By United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The $75 million Indonesian satellite launched by Challenger yesterday apparently sputtered into a useless orbit because of the same rocket flameout that doomed a nearly identical satellite deployed by the shuttle last week, project officials said.
Mission Control said last night the astronauts had not been told yet that the Palapa B2 satellite had joined the Westar 6 relay station and Challenger's busted target balloon on the list of mission failures that totaled more than $150 million.
The Challenger crew — Wance Brand, Robert "Hoot" Gibson, Bruce McCandless, Robert Stewart and Ronald McNair — had turned in for the night before the Palana was written off.
THE SATELLITE FAILURES did not threaten today's spacewalk spectacular to test the $10 million jet backpacks aboard Challenger, NASA said.
While many Americans are sitting down to breakfast, McCandless and Stewart will step into Challenger's cargo bay, don the backpacks, unhook their lifelines and become free-flying human satellites circling the Earth at 17,500 mph.
Like Westar, the Palapa was insured for up to $100 million and NASA will receive $20 million in launch fees from the owners of the satellites because Challenger's performance was not at
Tracking stations found the Palapa six hours after it had been lost in an orbit almost identical to the one taken last week by the Westar VI satellite, said Richard Brandes, a vice president for Hughes Aircraft Co., the manufacturer of both satellites.
"**The attempt to inject the Palapa spacecraft into a geosynchronous orbit was an apparent mistake.** Brandt said."
OFFICIALS SAID THE Palapa and Westar satellites posed no threat to Challenger in their egg-shaped orbits ranging up to 747 miles high,
but there was no way to move them to a proper park spot 23,300 miles above Earth.
Brandes said the Palapa's onboard rocket motor, called a payload assist module, did not fire for the full 85 seconds to push the satellite toward a geosynchronous orbit. He said the flameout apparently occurred because of a spark with the rocket's nozzle.
A similar problem is believed to have occurred on the Westar VI satellite Friday.
"Some qualification of the problem would have to develop before we could recommend further use of the payload assist module motor," said Brandes.
THE ROCKET MOTOR is built by McDonnell Douglas Corp. Charles Ondahl, a vice president for McDonnell Douglas, said speculation about the cause of the problem centered on the rocket nozzles because both motors "essentially snuffed" early.
Besides the two satellite failures, the astro-
See SHUTTLE, p. 5, col. 1
Streaks of light form as cars and buses travel down Jayhawk Boulevard in this time exposure photograph.
KIPPS test results arrived too late for KU
By JENNY BARKER Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas was already committed to the Kansas Integrated Personnel Payroll System when it received test results indicating that the system would not properly handle KU paychecks, the KU comprroller said yesterday.
John Patterson, the comptroller, said that last fall the University had chosen to enter KIPPS in October rather than November or December because KU had its lowest employee transactions in October. Because KU was committed
in October, Patterson said. University officials have time to properly review the test results.
THE UNIVERSITY DID not receive the test results until Oct. 12, only 15 days before KU went on hiatus.
KU sent two mock payrolls to the Department of Administration to Topeka to test KIPPS. The results from the first test, which included only 80 employees, were inconclusive, Patterson said. However the results of the second test, which included the full KU employee, indicated problems, he said.
Patterson said the University couldn't have delayed entering KIPPS because in its prepara-
"WE DIDN'T HAVE the staffing or the resources to keep four systems on-line." Patterson said.
to enter KIPPS it was effectively operating in four separate payroll systems — the old state system and its supplemental program, and KIPPS and its supplemental program.
Patterson said University officials would have delayed entering KIPPS if the system's capacity had been known. KIPPS is now operating at 94 percent to 98 percent of its capacity.
"The only prudent thing to have done would have been to say 'We're not going to come up on this system until it gets more resources.' " Patterson said.
Voting-machine plan wins elections panel's approval
By CINDY HOLM Staff Reporter
Students will use voting machines supervised by representatives of the Lawrence chapter of the League of Women Voters during the student body presidential election on February 24 and March 1, the Student Senate nowows a proposal to the newly formed Elections Committee.
The Elections Committee decided last night to recommend that the Senate borrow four to six voting machines from the Shawnee County Elections Commission.
Goldberg will meet today with members of the Shawnee commission to learn how to operate the machines and to finalize any details.
ROY GOLDBERG, chairman of the committee, said that Kathy Berkowitz, a member of the league, had agreed to provide poll workers in exchange for a donation from the Student Senate to the state chapter of the league.
The Senate will vote on the proposal at its 7 p.m. meeting tomorrow in the Big Eight
He said the Student Senate would have to obtain the machines from Shawnee County schools.
THE COMMITTEE WILL place voting machines at the Kansas Union, the Frank R. Burge Union and Strong Hall, he said. The committee hopes to acquire a back-up machine for each machine in case of power outages during overloading. The machines have a capacity of 1,000 votes.
The committee also voted to have the
makes programmed to accept write in votes, but valid votes would have to include both the first and last name of the candidate. spelled correctly.
Goldberg said the committee would post signs at the polls to explain the write-in policy.
The machines, which will be locked when not in use, will tabulate the votes when the poll close on March 1, he said. Poll workers will determine the outcome of the election.
Goldberg said that Mary Hope, chairman of the commission, had quoted a $150 shipping cost and $100 programming cost for the machines.
THE TENTATIVE AGREEMENT for a donation to the league is $59, which is based on a minimum wage payment for the hours that volunteers will work, he said.
The total cost of the election will be about $600. Goldberg said.
Last week, the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee voted to allot $2,000 out of the Senate unallocated fund for the election.
Elections Committee members will supervise the polling stations and answer questions but will not be involved in the voting process, Goldberg said.
League volunteers will check students' identification cards, ensure proper voter registration and help run the machines, he said.
The committee is also considering an extension of the polling time to 7 p.m. to allow more students to vote. In previous elections, polls have been open from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Smith, dean of student life, said the extension would allow students in night classes to vote.
Muslim rebels storm Beirut, take areas near Marine base
By United Press International
Three Marines were reported wounded in the wiest and most intense fighting in the capital since the 1975-76 civil war. The renewed fighting came less than a day after the resignation of Prime Minister Chefik Wazzan, a Muslim, and his Cabinet.
BEIRUT. Lebanon - Thousands of Muslim rebels stormed into the heart of the capital yesterday, seizing large portions of west Beirut and overrunning army positions adjacent to the U.S. Marine base. U.S. forces retaliated with naval and air fire.
"Who is in control of the country tonight?" "one key Marine officer asked a reporter." "Is Amal (the Shite militia) in control? Is Gemayel still president? Is he in control?"
ELSEWHERE IN THE MIDEast, Israel staged a wartime mobilization test yesterday for the second time in three months but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did not get involved in Lebanon's factional fighting.
"There is no relation between what is currently happening in Beirut and Israel's position in Lebanon," Shamir told the Ma'ariv newspaper.
Shamir's comments coincided with Israeli news reports indicating that his government had nearly written off Lebanese President Amin al-Sarwani, a major rival, and may require Israeli positions near Sidon.
President Reagan, declaring during a visit to
Dixon, III., that U.S. support for Gemayel was "firm and unwavering," blamed Syria for the new outbreak of violence and called on the government "to cease this activity."
A MARINE SPOKESMAN said the American base at Beirut Airport was surrounded by hostile forces and an adjacent Lebanese army position near Beirut. The attack had left much of west Beirut in rebel control.
The Marine spokesman said that gunmen shooting from cars fired on Marine positions and that small arms fire was being directed at their base from a position that had been held by the enemy.
One Marine was wounded in an attack on the airport base earlier in the day, prompting U.S. air and naval strikes against Druse Muslim University. The Marine base on the city's southern outskirts
Two other Marines were reported wounded at the U.S. Embassy.
A ship from the U.S. 6th Fleet fired a 5-inch gun and an A-6E bomber from the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy staged a bombing mission over the antitank and military sources in Washington said.
It was the first use of U.S. air power since a Dec. 4 raid against Syrian targets in which a helicopter struck a city.
IN WASHINGTON, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said the Pentagon had contingency plans to protect U.S. Marines in Beirut if the military situation in Lebanon deteriorated.
Student contracts rare, contagious meningitis strain
By DAVID SWAFFORD Staff Reporter
A member of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity, who felt ill Sunday when he left for his home in Overland Park, was diagnosed this weekend as having a rare strain of spinal meningitis, which is sometimes fatal.
THE AFFECTED STUDENT, Chris Dillman, Overland Park freshman, is being treated at Shawne Mission Medical Center in Merriam. A shawnee mission said that Dillman was listed in a condition.
Haymond Schwegler, chief of staff at Watkins Hospital, said yesterday that members of the fraternity had been offered antibiotics to prevent them from contracting the infection.
$ ^{*} $No other cases have been reported at the University.
A team from Watkins Hospital visited the fraternity last night and explained to members how the infection was contracted and what the symptoms were.
The infection is highly contagious, Schwegler said.
Almost all of the fraternity's 72 members have taken the antibiotic as a precautionary measure, said Alan Kindswater, Dodge City junior and president of Delta Tau Dale fraternity.
"This is the only case I can remember at KU in the last two or three years," he said.
Dillman went home Sunday complaining of
See ILLNESS, p. 5, col. 1
Brown's letter calls Katzman biased
In a previously undisclosed letter that stirred a grade dispute between basketball coach Larry Brown and a KU professor, Brown accused the professor of being "so prejudiced against athletes that it was almost embarrassing."
By MATT DeGALAN Staff Reporter
The letter concerned a Jan. 8 meeting with Brown, point guard Cedric Hunter and David Katzman, professor of history. Brown said that Katzman had been too harsh in giving Hunter an American history class.
Staff Reporter
"It is also obvious to me, based on our conversation, that you have little regard for athletics and what they can do for a young man." the letter said.
BROWN WAS OUT of town recruiting and could not be reached for comment. Katzman, who is also an associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, confirmed that the letter was a copy of the one Brown sent to him, but he declined further comment.
In the letter, Brown also said Hunter was not to blame for being unprepared to take an exam in the class. Brown said Katzman should have discussed the problems with Hunter before the semester ended.
Last night the Kansan obtained a source of the letter from an anonymous source.
THE DAY AFTER the Jan. 8 meeting, Brown sent the letter to Katzman, charging that the professor is compassion in dealing with Hunter.
ineligible this semester after failing to pass the eight hours required of freshmen athletes in their first semester.
Hunter was declared academically
"From our meeting and from your letter, I would infer that in this case compassion has only one interpretation: award the student a passing grade." Katzman wrote. "Unlike you, I am concerned about the integrity of our academic standards at the University of Kansas."
Angered by the remarks, Katzman responded with a letter that said Brown had asked him to raise Hunter's grade. Katzman sent copies of both letters to six administrators and professors.
Katzman later said that along with the request to raise the grade, Brown had asked that Hunter be allowed to take the class over. Hunter had taken the first month of classes, which Brown said justified Hunter's appeal.
Tomorrow the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors will meet to discuss the possibility of a forum on athletics and university sports in Kansas. Both Brown and Katzman have voiced support for the forum.
Athletic Director Monte Johnson has said he did not endure the forum as much as he did for the sport.
"same kind of garbage" that had been reported about the incident.
LONNY ROSE, KU's assistant athletic director for NCAA interpretations, is the first member of the athletic department to comment on a decision incident by said Brown did nothing wrong by attending the meeting.
Rose said all students could appeal grades and could take anyone to meetings with professors.
Caryl Smith, the dean of student life, said the University didn't need to establish guidelines defining the boundaries that coaches should maintain in dealing with instructors and students.
The present system is adequate and allows an outsider to be present in settling disputes between professors and students, she said.
See LETTER, p. 5, col. 2
A grade can be changed only because of a clerical error, according to University regulations.
"I don't think it's a policy question," she said. "It's up to the individual instructor. The policy is that it's the instructor's choice."
VICKIE THOMAS, general counsel for the University, said regulations would not have prohibited Brown from attending the meeting or from asking for the grade to be changed. She also said she knew of no deficiencies for determining when professor was being unfairly pressured.
Dear David:
January 9. 1984
David Katman
Professor
History Department
3043 Wescow
Cannus
I appreciate your taking the time to visit with me and myself concerning your history course.
After visiting with you, it is obvious to me that many of the things that you said to me would have been better said during his time in your class and I remember that he was not prepared to take a college examination of his I think that learning that fact from you on January 8 was a little late.
it is also obvious to me, based on our conversation, that you have little regard for athletics and what they can do for a young man. You talked about treating students all the same yet you are so prejudiced against athletes that it was almost embarrassing. I would never have been able to tell you not been for his scholarship and it is a gift for him to achieve so many of the advantages that so many of your other students have already had.
I don't completely side with, but hearing you only review his exam and not show any compassion for the individual makes me wonder whether you have compassion for anybody. You told that maybe it was a lesson for him. That is a harsh lesson! Maybe this letter
There are a lot of fine student-atheletes around and if you take the time to visit with them, you would see that. Their commitment toward athletics is certainly great but they are also committed to getting an education.
Sincerely,
Brian Brown
Larry Brown
Head篮球 Coach
Above is a copy of the first letter that head basketball coach Larry Brown wrote to David Katzman, an associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, after their Jan. 8 meeting. The image shows a student in a black Hunter before he sent the letter to University administrators.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, February 7, 1984
NATION AND WORLD News briefs from UPI
Filipinos say measure is an attempt to fix elections
MANILA, Philippines — Businessmen, nuns and schoolchildren packed the Philippine National Assembly yesterday to denounce an election bill they charged would ensure a parliamentary majority for President Ferdinand Marcos.
The scheduled parliamentary elections May 14 are considered the first serious challenge to Marcos' rule since the Aug. 21 assassination of his chief rival, Benigno Aquino.
The National Movement for Free Elections (NAMFREL) urged the public to pack the gallery of the National Assembly for the debate, and was invited to attend the forum.
"Many took the word of our leaders that they would try their best to ensure that we have clean and honest elections. What can they believe now?" NAMFREL chairman Jose Concepcion said.
Uranium inventory comes up short
WASHINGTON — A nuclear weapons plant cannot account for nearly a ton of bomb-grade uranium, but has no evidence that it was stolen, officials said.
A House Armed Services subcommittee held hearings on discrepancies in the inventory of bomb-bgrade uranium at the department's Oak
Joe LaGrone, manager of the department's Oak Ridge operations, refused to discuss numbers in open session but confirmed reports that 1,710 pounds of bomb-grade uranium had not been accounted for during the past 35 years.
Experts say the amount is theoretically enough to build 85 atomic weapons.
Soviet plane enters Taiwan's airspace
TAIPEI, Taiwan — Nationalist Chinese jefitives intercepted a Soviet TU 1945 reconnaissance plane fleeing into Taiwan's airspace
Gen. Wang Miao, a military spokesman, said the Soviet aircraft entered Nationalist Chinese airspace at 10:09 a.m. over Liachiu Hsu islet, 14 nautical miles southwest of Taiwan's west coast.
Four F-Se jetfighters notified the Soviet plane that it was intruding and followed it for 37 minutes until it left Taiwan's airspace at 10:46
Another military source, who asked not to be named, said weather conditions at the time were very bad and the intrusion may not have occurred.
'Nuclear era' is ending, report savs
WASHINGTON — Declaring that the "nuclear era is drawing to a close," Congress' Office of Technology Assessment said in a report yesterday that commercial atomic power was unlikely to grow in this century without major reforms.
Nuclear power plants involve "too many financial risks as a result of uncertainties in electric demand growth, very high capital costs, operating problems, increasing regulatory requirements and growing public opposition," the non-partisan agency concluded.
The study said the 1979 accident at Pennsylvania's Three Mile Island nuclear plant marked "a watershed in U.S. nuclear power history because it proved that serious accidents could indeed occur."
Jordan will help Iraq build pipeline
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Iraq and Jordan have agreed to build a crude-oil export pipeline for Iraq, the authoritative oil publication Middle East Economic Survey reported yesterday.
The pipeline project had the support of Iraq's leadership and "apparently enjoys the backing of the United States, which has been very supportive."
It said some preliminary study work on the project had been done by the giant U.S. engineering firm Bechtel.
The project, which would create a new outlet for Iraq's shut-in oil exports through the Jordanian port of Aqaba, is gathering momentum and must now be viewed as a serious contender for prompt implementation, the report said.
GOP moderate won't seek re-election
WASHINGTON — Rep. Barber Conable, R-N.Y., the senior Republican on the House Ways and Means Committee and a leading GOP moderate, announced yesterday that he would not seek re-election this year.
The 61-year-old Conable, first elected to the House in 1964 from a New York district including Rochester, N.Y., surprised his colleagues with the announcement. Conable has been influential with both Democrats and Republicans.
"Representative institutions remain vigorous only if there is a frequent infusion of new ideas so that each generation can have its own expression of the dialogue of representation," he said. "Everyone is entitled to his own time frame. For me, 20 years is long enough."
Yes, Beatles fans,it's been 20 years
NEW YORK - To millions of Beatles fans, the image is as clear as if it were yesterday. But it was 20 years ago today that four singers stepped off a Pan Am jet at Kennedy Airport wearing trim suits, ties and wide glides.
George Harrison, 20, carried a small flight bag. Paul McCartney, 21,
stood beside John Lennon, 23. Ringo Starr, 23, wearing a bulky scarf
around his neck, was last off the ramp.
Ten thousand screaming fans and 200 members of the media turned out to greet them at the airport.
By the time the band broke up in 1969, the Beatles had a record 20 American No. 1 hits. Their "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" was voted the best rock album in history by international critics.
WEATHER FACTS
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 2-7-84
SEATTLE 30.24 30.24
FREEZING MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON
SAN FRANCISCO HESA CHICAGO NEW YORK
DENVER COLD HESA ATLANTA 30.24
LOS ANGELES FAIR SOW WARM HESA DALLAS NEW ORLEANS MIAMI
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NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 2-7-84
Today will be fair across most of the nation.
Locally, today will be mostly sunny with a high near 50, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy with a chance for light snow and a high in the upper 30s.
Ethiopia expels 4 U.S. diplomats
Bv United Press International
In Washington, a State Department spokesman said that the United States ordered the expulsion of two Ethiopian diplomats in retaliation. One of the diplomats has asked to remain in the United States.
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia — Ethiopia expelled the expulsion of four U.S. diplomats amid charges that 18 arrested Ethiopians were spies plotting with a foreign power to topple the last regime, Western diplomats said.
The State Department said that the government of Ethiopia, under the rules of the Vienna convention on diplomatic exchanges, was not required to give a reason for expulsion. In this case, it did not state any.
THE EXPELLED AMERICANS were identified by the State Department as Ernest Brant, first secretary of the embassy; Paul Bradley, military; Timothy Wells, commercial minister; and Robert Kraigie, vice-consul.
Western diplomats said that the expulsion of the four diplomats and the
arrest of the 18 Ethiopians, including two colonels and a major, could have been planned.
One of the expelled Ethiopian diplomats, Belay G Tsakik, first secretary of the Ethiopian Embassy, already has been sent to States, the State Department said.
THE GOVERNMENT-RUN Ethiopian Herald newspaper said Sunday that the 18 Ethiopians arrested were "spying for an imperialist power" and were involved in a coup plot "massacred by agents of an imperialist power."
The second expelled Ethiopian diplomat, Gelagay Zawde, a commercial counselor, has asked permission to remain in the United States, and the request is being considered, according to a U.S. spokesman in Washington.
tion and the Marxist regime of President Mengistu Haile Mariam
"The their aim is to deceive the Ethiopian people by raising false hopes in the names of equality and democracy," the newspaper said.
Diplomats said the newspaper's editorial seemed to point directly at the United States as the unnamed "imperialist power."
This was the second expulsion of U.S. Embassy staff from Ethiopia in the past seven years. In April 1977, the entire U.S. military mission was ousted and accused of spying and plotting against the Marxist government.
The U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa, a
heavily secured compound on the outskirts of the capital, has been kept under 24-hour surveillance by the government since the 1977 expulsions.
RELATIONS BETWEEN THE United States and Ethiopia have remained cool since the 1974 revolution government of Emperor Haile Selassie.
Following the revolution, Ethiopia turned to the Soviet Union as its major ally and has come increasingly under Moscow's influence.
The United States, eager to retain influence in the Horn of Africa, increased its military and economic influence Ethiopia's traditional enemy. Somalia
The Ethiopian government has formally protested U.S. military aid to Somalia, saying its support was a mistake against the war's irrational integrity and independence.
United Press International
EUREKA COLLEGE
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
SEAL OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
EUREKA, III. — President Reagan delivers the first Time magazine Distinguished Speaker's Program address at his alma mater, Eureka College. Reagan visited Eureka and Dixon, III., where he grew up, to celebrate his 73rd birthday yesterday.
Indian diplomat is abducted and slain
By United Press International
BIRMINGHAM, England — Police hunted yesterday for suspected Kashmiri separatists who kidnapped an Indian diplomat, shot him "execution-style" and dumped his body on a farm road.
Ravinda Hareshwar Mhatre, the No. 2 man at India's mission in Birmingham, was the first Indian diplomat to be abducted and slain.
Police revealed yesterday that the diplomat died in an "execution-style killing," shot at close range once in the head and once in the chest.
The Indian government in New Delhi called an emergency Cabinet meeting and ordered its embassies around the world on alert for further attacks.
MHATRE'S BODY was found on a farm road in Hinckley, Leicestershire, Sunday night, some 30 miles outside of the village where he was last seen alive on Friday.
Mhatre, a native of Bombay whose main job was stamping passports and who had no connections with Kashmir, was believed kidnapped by the previously unknown Kashmir Liberation Army.
Six hours after his disappearance, the group sent a hand-delivered note to the Reuters news agency, claiming to
About two-thirds of the scenic mountain region of Kashmir is held by India, and nationalists demand a referendum to give the Kashmir inhabitants a chance to vote for independence or incorporation into Pakistan.
have kidnapped an Indian diplomat and demanding the release of 10 prisoners in the Indian-controlled Kashmir region and $1.5 million in ransom.
India claims Kashmir is an Indian state but Pakistan controls the northern and western sections of the territory. The two countries have twice been over Kashmir, which has been a disqualification since Indian independence in 1947.
Police did not describe Mhatre's wounds. Twenty people were questioned in the first hours of the murder probe.
Police said they had "no contact at all" with the Kashmir Liberation Army and Reuters said there was no up to Friday's midnight ransom note.
Police believe Mhatre was attacked after alighting from the bus near his home in suburban Birmingham. They appealed to a woman witness who saw a struggling man being bundled into a car Friday evening to come forward and help.
Despite discord, Reagan adviser sees job security
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Top economic adviser Martin Feldstein said yesterday that he doubled President Reagan would fire him, despite White House orders that kept him off a TV program in order to limit discussion of "disarray" in the administration.
"There's no disagreement about what really matters, what should be done — and that's to bring the deficits down," Feldstein told reporters after testifying before the House Budget Committee.
Feldstein, chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, has advocated higher taxes in open disagreement with Reagan's approach
of curbing spending to ease budget deficits.
VICE PRESIDENT George Bush denied Sunday that the administration's economic policy-makers were in "disarray." He also said internal struggle that led to the cancellation of a federal investigation appearance on an ABC interview program Sunday was something nobody really cares about outside the capital.
Feldstein said yesterday he had a good working relationship with Reagan and had no intention of resigning. Mr. Trump said he would punish the president that he would be forced to resign.
He said the decision to yank him off the television program was "an administration decision to avoid unusefulness of the disarray" in economic policy.
He said that he and Treasury Secretary Donald Regan had technical differences, but that the news media greatly exaggerated the importance of Regan's comment that Congress could "throw away" Feldstein's annual economic report.
IN HIS TESTIMONY, Feldstein repeated that the president's $262 billion fiscal 1985 budget, with its $180 billion deficit, was not sufficient. He called on Congress to join Reagan in a bipartisan effort to cut the deficit with a $100 billion "down payment" over three years.
"I think these negotiations can work, will work," Feldstein said, but he said those in the financial markets were not convinced if interest rates are to fall.
Asked later why the president did not propose major deficit-cutting devices, Feldstein said "he has — the bi-partisan panel."
The bipartisan group, proposed by Reagan in his State of the Union speech two weeks ago, has scheduled its first meeting for tomorrow. Democrats at a state convention and some came up with a suggestion for cutting $200 billion from the debt.
HOUSE BUDGET COMMITTEE
Chairman James Jones, D-Oka,
appealed to all sides to make the
pegotiations succeed.
"I think the danger to the country and its economy, and to the world economy, is so great we've got to make those bipartisan talks work," he told a luncheon of the Center for National Policy.
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University Daily Kansan. February 7,1984
Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA News briefs from staff and wire reports
Low-power television firm wants station in Lawrence
Low Power Technology of Golden, Colo., has filed an application to establish a low-power television station in Lawrence, the Federal Communications Commission said yesterday.
The FCC did not say when the license for the station, which would broadcast on channel 30 might be granted
The FCC grants licenses to low-power stations to provide local broadcasting, unlike most commercial stations, which broadcast broadcasts in the air.
Heidi Terrill of Low Power Technology filed the application for the new station
The FCC is also considering three applications for a license to operate a full-power station in Lawrence. Last summer, the FCC conducted hearings in Lawrence to consider the applications, but the licence will probably not be granted until later this month.
Commission to vote on cable theft law
The Lawrence City Commission will vote tonight on whether to make the theft of cable television service a violation of municipal law.
The city has already given first approval to the proposed ordinance, which would make the city's law as tough as the state law on cable thieves.
State statutes sets a penalty of up to $500 fine and up to 30 days in jail for cable theft
The city's current laws do not cover cable television theft. Suspected thieves are now prosecuted in municipal court on a charge of petty larceny.
In the past five days, Sunflower Cablevision reported seven cases of illegal book-prints to Lawrence police.
Dave Clark, Sunflower general manager, said his company planned to take the seven cases to court.
In the last three months, 30 cases of cable theft have been discovered and turned over to police for investigation. Clark said.
"It'a a big problem," Clark said. "I'd like to emphasize that we're taking a hard stand. There will be no deals made."
Bipartisan review of plant wanted
TOPEKA, Kan. — House Democrats yesterday demanded that the Republican leadership dissolve a special committee on the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant and appoint a bipartisan group to review options for the $2.67 billion plant.
However, Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, said such a committee was unnecessary. Doyen discounted Democrats' fears that the ad hoc committee of Republican leaders would present the final say-so on Wolf Creek.
House Minority Leader Marvin Barkis, D-Louisburg, said, "Maybe we're all waking up to the fact that just because you've assumed for 10 years that something was going to happen doesn't mean that it should happen or that it's the only option."
Assistant Minority Leader Don Mainey, D-Topeka, said that if the Republicans denied their request, Democrats probably would be forced to hold their own public hearings on the state's first nuclear plant that is under construction near Burlington.
Two KU theatre students honored
Two University of Kansas students received awards at the American College Theatre Festival in St. Louis Jan. 26-29 for designing the set and costumes and composing the music for "DADADADADA," a play written by a KU student.
David McGreevy, Wichita graduate student, won a first place award and a citation of merit in the regional competition for designing the set and costumes for the play, written by James Larson, Lawrence graduate student.
McGreevy also won a citation of merit for his lighting designs and a cash award for his costume designs
Jordan Stump, Lawrence junior, received a citation of merit for his original score for the play.
McGreevy's designs will be entered in the ACTF national contest and be exhibited this spring at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
"DADADADADADA" was presented for the first time last September at the University.
Debate team wins at Baylor tourney
A KU debate team placed first and two other KU teams placed in the top five in a tournament last weekend at Baylor University in Waco, Texas.
In the junior division, Robert Bradley, Wichita freshman, and David Thomasanek, Wheeling, III, freshman, placed first. George Lopez, Wichita freshman, and Eddie Watson, Arkansas City freshman, placed fourth.
in the senior division, John Culver, Overland Park freshman, and Marty Aaron, Wichita sophomore, placed fifth among 32 teams.
Bill would limit transfer of sales tax
TOPEKA — Two legislators plan to introduce a bill today that would limit the amount of sales tax money transferred from the state general fund to the highway fund and increase the state tax on gasoline.
The bill would put a limit on the amount of sales tax money that may be transferred from sales of new and used vehicles. The limit would be set at the current level of $5 million instead of increasing annually as scheduled.
Rep. James Lower, R-Emporia, said the change could save the general fund $75 million over the next five years.
"The general fund can't afford those transfers," Lowther said Monday.
The transfer was approved in the final weeks of the 1983 Legislature in a compromise highway financing package.
The bill they plan to introduce Tuesday would replace the transfer with a 1 cent increase in the motor fuels tax on Jan. 1, 1985, followed by an increase in the fuel taxes.
ON THE RECORD
A CAR STEREO WORTH about $350 was stolen Sunday from a KU student's car parked in the 1000 block of Mississippi Street. Police have
A STEREO WORTH ABOUT $550 was stolen Sunday night from a KU student's residence in the 1000 block of Mississippi Street, police said. Police have no suspects.
A STEREO WORTH $545 was stolen Saturday night from a house in the 1100 block of Indiana Street, police said. Police have no suspects
AN OFFICIAL OF the KU office of business affairs reported that a tent worth $300 was stolen Sunday morning from outside of his home in the 400 block of Rockfence Place, Lawrence police said. Police have no suspects.
A TAPE RECORDER WORTH $600 was stolen Wednesday night from a repair room in the audio-visual department in Lippincott Hall, police reports show. Police have no suspects.
WHERE TO CALL
Do you have a news tip or photo idea? If so, call us at 864-4810. If your idea or press release deals with campus or area news, ask for Jeff Taylor, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, check with Christy Fisher, entertainment editor. For sports news, speak with Jeff Cravens,
For other questions or complaints, ask for Doug Cunningham, editor, or Don Knox, managing editor.
The number of the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising, is 864-4358.
Report says prison is not for nonviolent
From Staff and Wire Reports
The Advisory Committee on Prison Overcrowding, established by Secretary of Corrections Michael Barbara, submitted the report, which included 16 recommendations, at a press conference in the State Office Building.
TOPEKA — State legislators should relax laws requiring prison sentences for persons convicted of non-violent crimes, said a report released earlier in the county. The committee.
David Barclay, special assistant to the secretary of corrections, said that because of the public's concern, lawmakers and others in the criminal justice system had become stricter with lawbreakers in recent years, adding to the state's prison overcrowding problems.
THE ADVISORY COMMITTEE'S report said that the overcrowding problems must be solved by changing buildings. It was rather than by building new prisons.
Barclay said that the public must be
"It makes little sense to send someone convicted of stealing bicycles worth about $300 to prison, when the defendant incarcerating a felon is $11,000 a year."
"In situations where the value of the crime is less than the cost of incarceration, you have to examine the wisdom of it," he said.
convinced that it was impractical to imprison people convicted of nonviolent crimes.
WHAT THE PUBLIC has to realize, Barclay said, is that even if the state built more prisons, the operating costs of those prisons would be tremendous because the prison population would keep growing.
He aid that although the public thought that the state's prisons were filled with violent offenders, 45 percent were offered there for non-violent offenses.
He aid that the construction and operating cost of a 500-bed facility over a 30-year period would be $300-$340 million.
"The committee wanted to make a clear distinction between violent and
At a news conference, Barbara called the report thoughtful and insightful but expressed reservations about one recommendation calling for an emergency release mechanism that would be triggered when the state's prison population reached 90 percent of the maximum capacity established by law.
non-violent offenders," Barclay said. "There are fairly large numbers of inmates who go to prison who might not need to."
"I FEEL THAT if we go with an early release mechanism, we are liable to forget these other options," Barbara said.
The report said that 14 other states had emergency release mechanisms, and at least five have used them to ease prison overcrowding.
Barley said a trend toward less incarceration had emerged in recent years as states experimented with new ways to fight prison overcrowding.
He said some alternatives included community service work, financial restitution and more creative use of local jail time — on weekends or in
evenings — so that the offender could keep a job, pay taxes and support a family.
The advisory committee's report also recommended:
*Repolaring a law that the Legislature passed two years ago which increased minimum sentences for class D and E felonies.
- Creating a sentence of probation for most first-time class E felons.
- Expanding community service sentences for non-violent offenders.
- Making theft of less than $300 a misdeemer and theft of more than $300 a class E felony. Now, theft of more than $100 is a class E felony.
Barclay said that Barbara had set up meetings with legislative leaders next week to discuss what recommendations might be acted upon this session.
The Legislature has already passed bills establishing two pre-release centers in Topeka and Winfield to ease overcrowding problems.
SOCIAL RECOGNITION OF INTERNATIONAL SPORTS GAMES
The state's prison population now is about 1,300, officials said. The designed community center in the city is $2 million.
Children from the Hilltop Child Development Center play soccer on the lawn in front of Watson Library. The children enjoyed the warmer weather recently. The center is at 1314 Joyhawk Drive.
Members oppose limit on DIC's role
By SHARON BODIN
Staff Reporter
A letter from the Lawrence City Commission that limits the Downtown Improvement Committee's role in downtown redevelopment caused dismay and disappointment for three DIC members yesterday.
The letter, which the city sent last week, said the DIC should act as an advisory body and an advocacy group. That is, it should advise the City about financing in the downtown plan and should promote it to the city.
DIC member Richard Kersenbaum said he was disappointed with the letter because it showed that the DIC's role diminished by the City Commission.
"It's obvious that throughout the development of the Town Center plan, the DIC's input has not been solicited," he said. "I think that since the public has not been involved in that plan, it seems we should be harder to sell the plan to the public."
THE LETTER WAS written because DIC members told the commission that they were confused about their role in downtown redevelopment. That confusion came after the city abandoned a bridge and that the DIC had negotiated extensively.
In November, the city broke off negotiations with the Sizerley Realtor Co. Inc., Kenner, La., and decided to begin a merger with the Town Center Venture Corp.
The letter from the commission to the
DIC said the DIC should serve the City Commission "in a purely advisory
It also said the DIC would present and promote the Town Center plan
DIC chairman Pete Whitenight said the commission wanted the DIC to endorse only the commission's viewpoints.
"I MIGHT HAVE been apparent the DIC had become an advocate of the Sizerel plan," he said. "The city wants us to be an advocate group, but only for the things they want. Have a hard time with that."
"The DIC was set up to be a screening body, a bunch ofunch of people. Whatever it was." Whitney said.
DIC member John Naughtin said, "I'm a little dismayed that the City Commission doesn't quite trust the DIC. It's like if we were given too much responsibility, we would sabotage the city. We can't replace it with the Sizerel scheme."
The letter said the City Commission would not allow other city groups to participate.
Naughtin said the DIC would do as the City Commission told it to do because its members wanted downtown redevelopment to succeed.
DIC MEMBER Jack Arensberg, who owns Arensberg Shoes, 819 Massachusetts St., said he approved the contents of the letter.
"We are just there at the pleasure of the commission," he said. "We do what they want."
wide latitude on the City Commission's part."
DIC member Nancy Hambleton said,
"It's a very general letter. It allows a
Hambleton said the commission had not specifically outlined the DIC duties because commissioners didn't know the redevelopment would get underway.
"I're getting impatient to get on with it. I think we all hope things are getting done that we don't hear about," she said. "I look forward to the next progress report and hope that things are getting done."
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HISTORICAL MUSEUM
KU student is arraigned in auto death Judge considers request for a trial without a jury
By the Kansan Staff
A 20-year KU student pleaded not guilty at her arraignment yesterday to charges of vehicular homicide, leaving an apparent accident and failing to stop at a stop sign.
Associate District Judge Mike Malone, who presided over the arraignment, said he was pleased with the ruling.
Susan Shaw, 1004 Alabama St. 3, was charged after the car she was driving hit a car driven by KU law student Paul Jauret, who died at the scene Jan. 22.
Jean Shepherd, Shaw's attorney, requested that Shaw's trial be decided by a judge, not a jury. Malone said that he would consider the request.
Malone freed Shaw on a $2,500 recognition bond, which means she will only have to pay if she fails to appear.
The fatal accident occurred at the intersection of 10th and Kentucky streets. Shaw was traveling west on I-95 from Windsor to Lexington at the stop sign at Kentucky Street.
Nourot and his wife, Alice, 1226 Haskell, were traveling north on Kentucky Street when their car was struck by Shaw's car Upon impact, police reports show, Nourot's car spun, causing his door to open. He was thrown from the car and police said he died instantly.
Witnesses said that Shaw left the intersection and turned on Vermont Street, reports show. Police officers reported that she returned within an hour and identified herself as the driver of the other car.
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Silver Clipper
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents
DUKES UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
PILOBULUS DANCE THEATRE
Thursday, February 16, 1984 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Public $10 & $8 KU Students with ID* $5 & $4 Senior Citizens
and Other Students: $9 & $7
*KU students must show ID at time of purchase and at the door
the night of performance
842-1822
Program MOLLY'S NOT DEAD, 1978
SCRIBBLE. 1983
INTERMISSION
DAY TWO. 1980
This performance is part of the 1984 University Arts Festival, partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee. Swainstout Society and the KU Endowment association, this program is made possible by support from the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts through their participation in the Mid America Arts Alliance.
PILOBOLUS DANCE THEATRE
K Normal
OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
February 7,1984 Page 4
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 Shaffer Fell Hall, Excelsior Street, daily during the regular school year and Monday and Thursday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and final periods, and final periods. Subscriptions payable to a Lawyer at Kansas 6004. Subscriptions are for $15 for six months or $24 for nine months, and a semester paid through the student activity fee. POSTMASTER: address changes to the University.
DOUG CUNNINGHAM
DON KNOX
Managing Editor
SARA KEMPIN
Editorial Editor
JEFF TAYLOR ANDREW HARTLEY
Campus Editor News Editor
DAVE WANAMAKER
Business Manager
PROCESS General Manager and News Adviser
CORR GORMAN JILL MTICHELL
CORTIAL Sales Manager National Sales Manager
JANICE PHILIPS DUNCANCALIHOU
Campus Sales Manager Classified Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Silent treatment
The most vehement "no comment" is commentary just the same.
Indeed, this is the case in Athletic Director Monte Johnson's unwillingness to publicly shed light on the dispute that recently surfaced between head basketball coach Larry Brown and a history professor.
David Katzman, the professor and an associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, accused Brown of acting unethically in attending a meeting to discuss the failing grade Katzman gave point guard Cedric Hunter.
The grade, in an American history course, made Hunter academically ineligible for the spring semester.
When asked about the situation Thursday by a Kansan reporter and again by an editor, Johnson said he would not talk to the Kansan until it developed "an appreciation for trying to do its part in helping create a strong athletic program at the University."
Johnson similarly resisted supporting a public forum on athletics and academics that Katzman and Brown suggested in their correspondence.
The forum, he said, simply would bring up "the same kind of garbage" that was reported Friday about Hunter. Brown and Katzman.
Johnson's silence is a strong indication that he truly thinks that the operations of the athletic department are beyond public scrutiny and that academics are second to winning in building a "strong" athletic program.
But there is little indication that Brown supports such a notion.
Brown's honesty and up-front approach to the matter show that he stands behind his decision to support
his ball players both on and off the court.
Brown attended the meeting between Katzman and Hunter out of what appears to be a genuine concern for Hunter. Brown did not violate University regulations in meeting with Katzman.
But while Brown's intentions in meeting with Katzman may have been strictly honorable, the meeting constitutes an error in Brown's judgment.
No "special circumstances" exist for athletes — regardless of previous schooling, status on a athletic team or enrolling in a course one month late. Athletes are students the same as everyone else enrolled in this University.
As Hunter said, although he wanted Brown's support in the meeting with Katzman, he ultimately was responsible for completing his school work and passing the exams.
Recent KU basketball standouts David Magley, Darnell Valentine and Lynette Woodard showed that a balance could be struck between work on and off the court. All three earned Academic All-America honors.
But one example of an error in judgment does not warrant the label that Brown is not "concerned about the integrity of our academic standards at the University of Kansas." Katzman's charge is overstated.
However, Katzman's letter raises healthy questions about the role of athletes in an academic setting.
If nothing else, it served the purpose of demonstrating that at least one official in the athletic department — the athletic director — appears unwilling publicly to support academics in his "strong" athletic program.
Being good neighbors
The St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center is in the midst of controversy.
The Center has aroused the ire of many residents in the neighborhood with its plans to build a church, chapel and student center for Catholic students.
The controversy has grown to such proportions that a neighborhood association recently was compelled to take out a full-page advertisement in a local newspaper.
The Crescent-Engel Neighborhood Association originally planned to meet with leaders of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center to work out problems that they, as residents, had with the Center's building proposal.
Adequate parking, building size, and the potential impact of the proposed buildings on the neighborhood are all legitimate concerns.
The advertisement, written in a way alarming enough to make any homeowner feel threatened, is clearly only half the story.
certainly something worth talking about.
And although the groups had done a good deal of talking, both knew there was still a long way to go.
Unfortunately, the Crescent- Engel Neighborhood Association chose to adamond discussion and instead took its message directly to the public.
The Crescent-Engel Neighborhood Association would do well to take to heart the headline on its own ad — "Neighbors should act like neighbors," it says.
Discussion — often hours of face-to-face conversation, and then compromise, is much more typical of good neighbors than putting forth information about only one side of the issue.
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 Kansan also invites individuals and groups submitted guest columns and groups can be mailed or brought to the Kansson office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
Mass political movements and religions are built around people such as Barbara Marx Hubbard.
Specific answers are needed
She said she offered a new political choice and a vision of the American dream fulfilled.
When she announced her candidacy for the vice presidency of the United States Thursday in Lawrence, Hubbard, 54, spoke of peace, individual potential, "the creative majority", and a magnificent future.
Language such as that can sway populations.
But that does not mean that she should be the next vice president of the United States.
Bless America" after her press conference in a small, crowded room of the Holiday Inn Holdome, was hard not to see a bright American future resting in the hands of the author and mother of
And, I admit that, deep down, I like the woman because she resembles Jimmy Stewart's honest character in "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington." The idealist with a firm faith in God and country, it seems, has come to lead the nation toward a new age.
aside. Also, they're the ideas that the people of the United States want to hear.
Stripped down to the nity-gritty, what Hubbard is saying is simple — every person is beautiful, each citizen can make a difference, and we can work together to save the earth and the human race.
LETTERS POLICY
Although the ideas are not new, they are truly noble — all cynicism
Hubbard probably has a better shot at the office than most people think. With her positive message and the Democrats' desire for a female vice president, people are and will continue to listen to her.
Hubbard has never been elected to public office. And although she
But she is just not qualified for the job.
JEWELRY
consideris this to be an asset, a vice president should have had some previous experience in public administration to acquire a deeper understanding of how the American political system really works.
If the President were killed or disabled, Hubbard would take over possibly the most important office in the world without the necessary political training.
Besides, what does a futurist researcher really do? If she is supposed to tell what the future will be like, she is not the only person qualified to do that. Any fortune teller will do.
In her speech Thursday, in a citizens' forum that night and in the literature that her supporters eagerly handed out. Hubbard spoke of making the vice-presidency "the voice of the nation" which will set down long range goals.
big-league politics, she'd probably get eaten alive.
She speaks of saving the environment and eliminating poverty and hunger. She promotes conservation and the use of renewable energy to provide the sun, wind and water. She wants to rebuild American communities.
She said she would plan to initiate a massive space program to foster human development and peace. She supports a bilateral, verifiable nuclear freeze and she wants to "build trust, not bombs."
She said she believes in genuine equality for every citizen and she speaks of fully developing the potential of each person on earth.
But is anybody against these things?
Her ideas are wonderful, but they lack the specifics. A plan is useless if
Money is an obvious question here. In her literature and in her speeches Thursday, she did not say who would pay for her "office of the future" or other programs to eliminate general human misery.
President Reagan recently presented a budget for fiscal year 1985 of $295 billion, with a projected deficit of about $180 billion. Last week, David Stockman, his budget director, warned that the United States could go bankrupt if huge deficits continued.
Hubbard will be taken more seriously, if she shows how the programs will support themselves. But these objections should be put to all candidates for public office, not just Hubbard.
Congress probably would be unable and unwilling, given the present political climate, to just hand out the money.
Finally, Hubbard says that she is running for vice president because of a general feeling among people of the United States of time to "lect a woman to the office."
Although Americans must seriously consider selecting a female vice president, they should not run out and support the first woman that comes along without seriously looking at her credentials.
it cannot be put into place because no one knows how it will work
THE FIRST STAGE OF OUR CAMPAIGN IS TO LOCK UP THE YOUTH VOTE!
THE FIRST STAGE OF OUR CAMPAIGN IS TO LOCK UP THE YOUTH VOTE!
WE'RE GOING TO SET FIRE TO YOUR HAIR!
WE'RE GOING TO SET FIRE TO YOUR HAIR! REAGAN BUSH 04
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
More on 'boring'
To the editor:
I, too, am from Michigan and wish to comment on the "debate" over which state — Kansas or Michigan — is "more boring."
Agreeing with Mark S. Reed, I also find the debate to be rather ridiculous and "unbringing of government officials." I also agree with Harry Malin and his conjecture on how well run the state of Kansas is.
But neither points, either Reed's or Malin's, have anything to do with what Gov. Jim Blanchard was saying. He wasn't commenting on how well run Michigan is versus Kansas; he was referring to excitement — something usually associated with entertainment — upbite.
But I guess you Kansans wouldn't know about that if turtle races at the local bar on a Friday night is your game. It's not what you'd know about y'all, but I like to dance.
For the last 15 years I have lived in Birmingham, a suburb of Detroit. I frequently went into the city, especially during the summer, for weekend ethnic festivals, concerts, or performances at Grand Prix and quiet walks along the River; one of the cleanest rivers America the beautiful has to offer.
Canada is just a few minutes away and it can, too, have a nightly to offer, including bars that stay open past the witching hour — sometimes until midnight or the morning. But I guess that's way past Kansas kiddies' bedtime.
I can understand a few Top 40 stations, but there seems to be a monopoly — oh, with lots of equally boring advertisements such as,
"Would you buy a car from this man?
(Ray Town Car Dealer).
And the Kansas radio stations — do they ever play anything besides mediocre makeout music such as Air Supply or wimpy Christopher Cross? Let's hear some Prince, Andre Cymone, the Time, U2, David Bowie or even the Who and early Stones.
The man is wearing a double-knit polyester suit with laperls out to his shoulders. Somebody had better buy
I didn't even get mugged!
a car from this guy or at least buy him a new suit.
Talk about monoteon voices — c'mon Ray, let's put a little excitement into it! No wonder Detroit is in town, we've got salesmen like Ray!
People constantly ask me, "Why KU?"
And I respond, sincerely, "Because of the journalism school." But I also chose the University of Kansas because Lawrence is so boring. If I had gone to school in Kansas, I would never have studied.
Mary E. Coffey Detroit, Mich.
Since then, we have composed a hard-working group of 70 students on our student committee to help organize and run the Relays this year.
Support needed
To the editor:
We are seeking student support in various ways to help the Relays run smoothly. One area that we need is in the area of student officiating
Last fall we started work on the 1984 Kansas Relays, and although you probably don't realize it, they aren't that far off.
The Relays can't be run with their help alone, though. It takes the cooperation of the entire campus.
Applications are now available at the Track Office, 143 Allen Field House. The deadline for applications is Feb. 29. We also need various living groups to provide housing for the athletes while they are here.
Most of all, we need the great support from the student body, the administration and alumni, and from the city of Lawrence as a
The Kansas Relays have been a great KU tradition for more than half a century and this tradition deserves to be continued. In the past couple of years attendance has grown, and our interest directed toward the Relays.
In this Olympic year let's make an attempt to rejuvenate interest in the Relays by attending them with family and friends.
Chip Cooper, Fairway junior
This year's Kansas Relays promise to showcase some of the nation's greatest athletes and should be extremely exciting.
Chip Cooper, Fairway junior
Tom Jacobs, Overland Park junior
Amy Foster, Overland Park junior
Kansas Relays Tri-chairman
Lack of initiative
To the editor:
To all other.
This letter is in response to the news article of Feb. 1 in the University Daily Kansan concerning Templin Hall's mail withholding policy.
The facts relayed by the article leave me shaking my head in disbelief. The whole incident reminds one of the mindlessness and lack of initiative demonstrated in Huxley's "Brave New World."
It's difficult to believe that the Tempin resident director failed to realize the gravity of obstructing the mail or that Fred McEhene, officer of residential programs, was oblivious to the situation for two years.
Perplexed thoughts race through my mind upon closer examination of the situation. I am not sure what makes me more furious, this unconscionable policy of Tempin Hall or the lack of its continence by those affected.
AURH commands no respect for allowing such situations to fall by the wavside.
The other side of the situation brings to light residents that have allowed this policy to continue for two years. Granted that those not inclined to incur fines will not be aware of this policy, but those affected should have seen its illegality.
The "off the record" feelings of AURH elected officials would have us overlook this incident, 1 challenge AURH not to take this easy walk.
The consequences of this policy must be considered — the non-payment of levied fines is a matter to be dealt with by the respective hall, but this does not hand them the reigns of unbridled power.
Douglas Neumann Topeka senior
The nuances in campaign for president
- Woodchopping, for example, is In.
WASHINGTON — As we begin the long pull toward November, some of the particulars of the 1848 presidential campaign are becoming clear. As in other cultural forms, a definite list of Ins and Outs can be discerned
There are indications that senior weightlifting, or pumping iron after 70, also will be an In pursuit.
Thus far these amount to a
- Heroes are In.
It helps to be the commander in chief and be able to brave a young army medic next to your wife at a State of the Union speech, but free-lance her hobnobbing also is possible. In the way to Darmapus to bring it off.
The political rhyme has reached prime time and will have its day in the campaign fray. To catch the moment, you'll need to no need to guess, just listen to lees.
ARNOLD SAWISLAK United Press International
- Jogging is Out
one-man trend, unless Harold Stassen gets into axes and dumbbells.
Vice President Bush and Sen. Alan Cranston both are still bravely pounding the pavement, but the former is running in place and the latter nowhere. There is every sign that Obama was the last gasp of military job development said to have brought profound relief to the Secret Service.
- Rhyming speeches and rynntmical phrases are In.
The trend is just emerging, but don't be surprised if the president declares he has brought the nation on to recession from progression.
As the trend catches on, watch for the other candidates to show up at campaign rallies with small boys who rescue old ladies from burning houses and gold medal bobsled jockeys.
After March 5, only one or two candidates will have anything nice to say about the Midwest and New England. It will be the Sun Belt where glittering promise lies for most of the presidential hopefuls.
- Congress is Out
- Tip O'Neill and Howard Baker will to hold joint news conferences in order to draw enough reporters to kill the echoes in their offices. Most of the newsies will be following the candidates and the heroes, tramping down the grass roots and listening to the rhyming speeches.
- Bipartisan commissions are In.
- Bipartisan commissions are in. A device both the Republicans and the Democrats have discovered to avoid problems before the elections when the obvious solutions are political hazardous.
- The weather is Out.
Replaced in 1894 by the federal deficit as the subject everyone talks about but no one does anything about.
University Daily Kansan, February 7, 1984
Page 5
Shuttle continued from p. 1
nauts also had to cancel a rendezvous maneuver to practice for an April satellite repair mission because the $500,000 target balloon burst.
Glynn Lunney, the shuffle program manager, said NASA would participate in the post-mortem to try to determine what happened to the rocket motors.
"OUR POSITION ON the subsequent use of payload assist modules is that they are a very, very important part of the satellite communication industry. We are going to offer all the help we can in the resolution of this problem," said Lunney.
He said it was too early to ten wneues uneat failures would affect future satellite launches
The rockets have been used successfully in the past four launches of satellites on shuttle missions.
The astronauts reported that the launch of the 925-billion Palapa out of the shuttle's cargo bay at the launch site.
Forty-five minutes later the satellite's payload assist module fired.
THE ASTRONAUTS FILMED the rocket firing for ground crews. Brand reported it looked good "as near as we could tell," although the crew didn't not see the entire scheduled 92-seconds burn.
The Palapa deployment had been delayed for two days while tracking stations searched for West Africa.
Brandes said the Indonesians were advised to proceed with the launch of Palapa, despite the Wester problem, by Hughes, McDonnell Douglas and others. The research team provides the Indonesians with technical advice.
After the satellite was launched the astronauts were free to concentrate on preparations for today's five-hour test of the jetpacks that will be used to repair a broken satellite called Solar Max.
Illness continued from p.1
symptoms similar to those experienced during the flu.
"I'm not sure how he contracted it." Kindswater said. "He waited around a couple of days to see if it would go away before going home."
He said the Watkins team said last night that spinal meningitis occurred more often in the late winter and early spring than any other time of the year. He said that the people who suffered from the infection were usually run-down and had weak immune systems.
"THEY TOLD US that the antibiotic was preventive. The symptoms won't even surface if the drug was taken. Only people who came into close contact with Chris need to worry about it."
Schweigel said the infection is transmitted through close contact with other people.
It has a definite bacterial form," he said. "It has no connection with any other illness such as mononucleosis. It is distinct; it stands on its own two feet."
The bacterium that causes spinal meningitis invades the membrane linings of the brain and spinal column as well as the bloodstream, Schwegler said. It causes stiff backs and violent headaches. Eventually, the infected person could lose consciousness.
Letter
continued from p. 1
Neither Katzman nor Brown would say whether Hunter had appealed the grade because he thought there had been a clerical error.
THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE Athletic Association has no specific rules dealing with incidents involving disputes between coaches and instructors, said Janice Bump, an NCAA legislative assistant.
She would not comment specifically on the dispute between Brown and Katzman.
Information for this story was also supplied by Kansan reporter Todd Nelson and Sports Editor Jeff Cravens.
BRASILIA, Brazil — Secretary of State George Shultz said yesterday the United States was continuously reevaluating the role of the Marines in Lebanon in light of the volatile situation in the country.
By United Press International
"The situation right now is certainly a very unpleasant and unwelcome one." Shultz said at a news conference during a visit to Brazil's capital.
U.S. still assessing Marines' role, Shultz says
"As to its implication for the
case of war, open forces, the future
will have to tell us."
President Reagan said last year that the Marines could be withdrawn from Beirut if the government of Amin Gemayel government collapses. The Lebanese prime minister and Cabinet resigned Sunday amid an intensive flareup of fighting between Moslem rebels and government troops.
Three Marines were reported wounded yesterday in Beirut.
Shultz was cautious in his statement, without giving an unqualified vote of confidence to Gemayel He did not indicate any imminent and radical change in U.S. policy but an adjustment as the conditions warrant.
Shultz and Brazilian Foreign Minister Ramiro Saraiva Guarereo signed reports of five bilateral working groups providing the first agreement by the United States to allow a Latin Ameri- cation technology for weapon construction.
United Press International
SPIRIT LAKE, Wash — Accelerated seismic activity has been observed and measured in inside Mount St. Helens. Scientists monitoring the volcano said yesterday that a small ex- 1980, in a blast that blew out the north face of the mountain.
How to make peace with Tolstoy.
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Escape to the sunshine and join up over spring break for an exciting week in South Padre island. Seven sunfilled days and memorable nights await you at one of Padre's nice resorts: Bahia Marina, located southwest of Padre; a day trip to Matamoros, Mexico, a beach tunnel and much more! The total cost of the trip is $310 ($189 with your own transportation). Travel with SUA on their traditional trip to Padre岛。
PADRE ISLAND
Call the SUA office at 864-3477 for information on its two other Spring Break Trips: Ft. Lauderdale and Winter Park. Hurry and sign up for you Spring Break vacation today. Deadline Thursday, Feb. 9.
SUR TRAVEL
MARCH 8, 1984
12
is your lucky number!
You have 12 chances to get involved in SUA. Applications and information are now available for 1984 officer and board member positions. Sign up today for a position in one or more of the following areas:
1. President
5. Films
2. Vice President
9. Outdoor Recreation
6. Fine Arts
3. Secretary
10. Public Relations
7. Forums
4. Treasurer
11. Special Events
8. Indoor Recreation
12. Travel
Sign up for interview times now in the SUA Office located on the main floor of the Union. For more information call 864-347-1971. Sign up deadline for applications is Tue: Feb. 14, 1984.
SUA
4
ENTERTAINMENT
The University Daily KANSAN
February 7, 1984 Page F
LA FEMME EN LA MASKA
Princess Alice of Monaco (Norma Jean Giffen) and middle-aged Frank Harris (Ray tannicelli) discuss their future co-ownership of a fashionable hotel — a project that eventually cost Harris 25,000 pounds and his bankruptcy. The scene is from the off-Broadway production, "Flesh, Flash and Frank Harris" by Paul Stephen Lim, KU lecturer in English.
Play brings KU to New York theatre
By MELISSA BAUMAN Staff Reporter
Just as "The Day After" brought the University of Kansas to television movies, "Flesh, Flash and Frank Harris" brought KU to off-Broadway theater.
The production, which played off-off Broadway in November 1983, opened off-Broadway January 23.
Paul Stephen Lim, lecturer in English, wrote the biographical play about the life of turn-of-the-century writer Frank Harris, who was a student at KU. While in school, Harris met Byron Smith, a classics professor who greatly influenced him.
AN OFF-BROADWAY SHOW differs from a Broadway show in that the actors are paid less, and they play in smaller theatres. An off- of Broadway show, which is limited to 16 performances, plays to fewer than 100 patrons, and the actors are not paid.
The biographical play begins with Harris' sister telling him how to use flattery to succeed with women. Her advice allows him to be successful in attracting women, but doesn't necessarily allow him to be successful in his relationships.
Harris falls in love with Laura, who he tries to please by becoming editor of a prestigious newspaper. However, she scorns the sensational newspaper that he works for and leaves him
Although Laura seems to be the only woman Harris loves, he marries middle-aged Emily He separates from her after she destroys his book. He includes including his only picture of his idol, Byron Smith.
HARRIS AND EMILY never divorce, but he lives with the young Nellie who he marries after 30 years.
Several scenes describe Harris's friendship with the two writers as he helps them begin their career.
His relationship with Nelle is marred by her love for money. Because of her materialism, Harris writes two biographies of George Washington and Rachel Tucker, for the sake of art, but for the sake of money.
In describing Smith, Lim said that he was
more sophisticated and cosmopolitan than other professors, and this attracted Harris. Because Smith was so outspoken, KU fires him.
Smith's outspokenness is demonstrated in one scene when he spoke to the congregation of the Free Congregational Church in Lawrence. Smith did more than people that religion did more harm than good.
The pretense for Smith's dismissal, moral turpitude, was supported by the rumor that while he was in Greece, Smith got a young woman pregnant. The rumor was not substantiated, at the University fired Smith, and he died at the age of 27 of tuberculosis.
Lim's play differs from other biographical plays because three actors play the infamous Harris during three stages of his life — young Frank, middle-aged Frank and old Frank. The play is also different because all the actors remain on the stage throughout the play.
"There's no way one actor, however versatile,
can encompass age 16 through age 23." I musced.
can borrow age to through age 71. Lam said,
AS THE THREE HARRIERS reminisce about their friends and lives in the foreground of the stage, the other characters step out of the "memory pool" in background to perform the scenes that the Harrises are speaking about.
Lim said that two themes existed in the play that friendship between the sexes was impossible because of sexual attraction, and that genius but also intelligence there and could be nurtured from anywhere.
"One doesn't have to be at Harvard or Princeton to have a good teacher," Lim said, referring to Smith. "You can find good teachers anywhere."
The playwright chose Harris as the play's subject because he saw many similarities between the writer and himself after reading Harris' books and autobiography.
Both were immigrants who had brothers in Lawrence, and both met KU professors who
"I MET NOT one professor but maybe three, four or five who influenced me greatly." Lam said. "So when I read about Harris and his wife, Martha, with it, it was something I completely understood."
The similarity of opinions is also apparent Lim, like Harris, thought good professors were
everywhere, and he also was cynical of the relationship between men and women.
Lim said that although Harris never expressed his views in writing, it was something Harris would have said because of his relationships with women.
"Much of the dialogue in this play comes straight out of what these people said or wrote. There was very little invention on that point." Lim said.
"When I invented a line, I felt it was in the spirit of Frank Harris, that it was something he could do," he said.
BECAUSE OF THE FAVORABLE public response, the play moved from off-off Broadway to off-Broadway. Lam said the box office had made it one of the most nights because the play had been sold out.
Although the major newspapers and magazines have not published reviews of the play yet several small newspapers have printed respectable or "glowing" reviews, I am said.
"Flesh, Flash and Frank Harris" also did well when it was performed by the Lawrence Community Theater in 1980. Lim said that it was the first original play the theater had performed.
The Village Voice said the play was beautifully directed and designed but said that Frank Harris complained too much about his poverty.
Lim came to Harris' defense.
"FRANK HARRIUS was a millionaire twice in his life and lost it twice." Lim said. "In his old age when he was married to a woman who always didn't blame him for regretting or complaining.
"If you're accustomed to having fine jewelry and then not having any at all, then you miss it." The New York Native said the play did not have enough flesh or flash
Lim dismissed the comment. "They wanted more skin and they didn't get it." he said.
'Reckless' is a pitiful flick with no plot
The New York Times has not printed a review of the play, but has run one article about Frank Harris. Lim said the review called Harris a mediocre talent compared to Wilde or Shaw.
"I've been doing this now for seven years," he said, "and out of all the reviews I've gotten so far, I'd say maybe two have been genuinely helpful and constructive."
I knew what to expect from "Reckless" when I saw the ad for it — a sleazy piece of trash.
But the film makers could have made it an entertaining sleazy piece of trash like "Risky Business." With a strong drum line and a few good guitar notes, the plot could have made an interesting three-minute rock 'n' roll song. But, the movie is a pathetic pile of cliches.
a boy named Johnny Rourke (Aidan Quinn)
lives on the economically depressed side of a
P.
JOHN
HANNA
Kansan Film Critic
steel town. Rourke rides a motorcycle, wears leather jacks and wants to leave town. He also manages to get himself kicked off the high school football team.
WHEN ROURKE was young, his mother left his father (Kenneth McMillan), who is a fat alcoholic, and this accounts for his anti-social behavior. "Writer Chris Columbus goes through a lot of trouble to make it painfully obvious that Rourke's problems come from home.
In one scene, Rourke breaks into the high school he attends and manages to get a hand on his academic file. He reads it, and, sure enough, he is able to behave that behavior can be traced to his mother's departure.
Quinn plays Johnny Rourke a cross between Coimbal Balboa and James Dean. He speaks in a language he doesn't know.
A girl named Tracy Prescott (Daryl Hannah) lives on the good side of town, and she wants to stay there. She is a "perfect" cheerleader who is also to be wild. She also has a dingbat for a mother.
Tracy's character is so dull that it's nonexistent, and Hannah whines her way through an unspired performance, leaving the viewer with a vision that her character is shallow and brainless.
BUT TRACY'S BOYFRIEND, Randy (Adam Baldwin), is even more boring than she is. He wants to take over his father's management job at the steel company, and he is the quarterback in his school football team. He also walks and talks if he has a permanent case of hemorrhoids.
And Rourke's father kicks him out of the house after an argument over a woman that the father has brought home. Later, Rourke's father dies and boy does the logical thing and torches his house.
Of course, Tracy and Rourke fall in love, or a sort of love, anyway. They have sex a couple of times, fight and make jp. Rourke also fights with her boyfriend, like the motorcycle boy moving on in his girl
In the end, Tracy has to choose between her life at home and Rourke. It's obvious what she'll choose about 10 minutes into the movie.
The best moment of the film was when they played Bob Seger's "Roll Me Away." The song is good, but I could have turned on the radio and dear it instead of wasting my money on this turkey.
Director James Foley and his cast should get out of filmmaking and take up hotel-motel management immediately.
JUST A FROG
Cynthia Pistilli/KANSAN
"Road to the Coast" is one of many colorful doodles by Stuart Levine, KU professor of English. Levine's work will be on display through the month of February at the Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont streets
Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont streets.
English professor's doodles shown in local art exhibit
By PHIL ENGLISH Staff Reporter
When Stuart Levine attends a classical music concert, he makes sure to bring a pen. When the concert begins, he becomes lost in the crowd and has to doodle on the back of the show's program.
"Ever since I can remember, I would doodle on the back of whatever was available," the KU professor of English said.
But Levine no longer limits himself to the back of a concert program.
"ONE DAY AS A present, my wife gave me paints and canvases because she was tired of seeing my drawings on the back of a concert program," he said.
And, after receiving encouragement from friends and family, he decided to go public with his drawings. Levin's colorful artwork will be on display at the Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont streets, throughout the month of February.
Levine said he never knew how he felt about his doodles, until his friends and family found them.
"I felt a little embarrassed at first to have my doodles put up alongside my realistic drawings," he said. "Some of the works are sharp, realistic watercolors, while the others are strange doodles. The realistic paintings show some kind of talent, while the doodles are there just because I know people like them."
Levine was surprised when he found out how much the public enjoyed his work. He attributes this to the wide variety of his appeal.
His first show was in September, in the gallery of the KU Regents Center in Overland Park. The display was the most popular showing in the history of the gallery, judging from the number of visitors and the number of guests, said Mary Gerish, director of the gallery.
He even received requests for three more exhibitions around the state.
LEVINE SAID HI TIRE tried to convey to people all ages a children's association with bright colors.
The February show at the Lawrence Arts Center contains a number of new works, many which were not exhibited at the Regents Center show.
"People seem to really enjoy my work because it might remind them of a time when they were younger," he said. "The works are complex, imaginative, and everyone can enjoy them."
When he opened his exhibit Sunday, Levine played the French horn with the Lawrence Woodwind Quintet.
But doodling is not Levine's only experience in the arts.
As a matter of fact, Levine was so successful in the arts during his college years that his friends tried to persuade him to go into the arts and not English.
He now thinks he has the best of all three worlds — music, painting and teaching.
Levine said that, although his artistic career is taking off, his teaching was still the hardest part of it.
"I'm afraid that if I tried to make a future out of painting or conducting, it would spoil me and I wouldn't get the kick out of it that I do now," he said.
Play improvises on ancient theme
By JAN UNDERWOOD Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The set is no set.
The room is black and bare except for
numerous of dust footprints on the floor and a
few of the carpet.
The lights go up and the actors burst into the room, skipping, hollering, hooting, stretching
Gradually the chaos becomes a kind of dance as the actors coordinate their frenzied movements into what seems to be a choreographed dance instead of an improvisational warm-up.
The audience will not see this 30-minute warm-up because they will not be allowed to interact.
The play is "The Oedipus Project: A Post-Modern Performance," an improvisational version of Sophocles' classic myth, "Oedipus Rex." It was written by Paul Gouldough Sunday at the Ipage Theatre in Murphy Hall.
The play deals with the ancient Greek story about an oracle that foretold that Oedipus would grow up to kill his father and marry his mother. In Sophocles' story, to escape the prophecy, the king sends the baby out with a shepherd to be left in the hills to die. The shepherd, unable to follow the command, takes the baby to a neighboring kingdom where he grows up. In the play, however, the cast tells that the baby was left out to die and found by a woman, who saved him.
"Everybody knows the story," said Robert Findlay, director. "I certainly felt it didn't need
to be told in the way Sophocles told it."
"Part of the whole idea behind the paraterate is that you don't evaluate it," Findlay said. "It grows out of the idea that there are just simply those that are hindered by intellectualizing them."
The eight-member troupe performs the ancient play to modern music and improvised lighting, combining dance moves from their warm-ups with a more traditional acting style. The group no stage directions and the play dialogue comes from Sophocles, Finday and the student actors.
Findlay refers to his version of the play, as a paratheatrical experiment. His experiment is based on the idea that the actors improvise on a given theme without ever criticizing what they see in the sounds and actions that the group used were lifted from the improvisational warm-ups.
The group spent its first two to three weeks working entirely improvisationally, without reading any Sonohocles. Findlay said.
Mark Nash, Denver senior, who plays the character Tetrisias, described the project as "organic and mutable" because the play was constantly changing.
But, he said, the play had become more stable because the actors have been working on the play for 18 weeks and they have brought it to the stage, which they try perform it the same way every time.
He said the warm-ups change from night to night depending on "what's happened that day, what's going on with these people, whether they're up or down."
BLOOM COUNTY
AND SO HERE, AND WITH AN UNKNOWLEDGE COMPLOSION TO THE AUTHOR'S JOURNALIST, THE MOOD JUST CANNOT BE GOOD.
PHIPPY!
THANK YOU!
BY BERKE BREATHED
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1
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, February 7, 1984
Page 7
PETER WALLACE
Jim McCrossen/KANSAN
Beth Ridenour, 3311 Trail Road, left, gets an Oreo cookie in the mouth from Sandy Carson, RFD 3. Ridenour and other members of the staff in Bailey Hall stuck Oreo cookies on Carson's car as a practical joke in honor of Carson's birthday. Carson said that she didn't even like Oreo cookies.
Speaker recalls blacks' achievements
By MARY SEXTON Staff Reporter
Name after name tumbled from the memory of John B. Slaughter — some familiar, others never pledged to memory.
Crispus Attucks and Booker T. Washington Benjamin Banneker, George Washington Carver, Carter G. Woodson and Shirley Jackson. And always, Martin Luther King Jr.
February
Then came the
Black History Month, 1984
recollection that stirred the emotions of his listeners. A black man first planted the American flag at the north pole, Slaughter said.
"We need to bring to the attention of all Americans, black and white, the contribution blacks have made, and also consider the ongoing problems face-
ed by blacks in education," the Topeka native said.
Despite a history of educational inequality, black Americans have made large-scale contributions to American society, Slaughter, keynote speaker for Black History Month, said Anderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Slaughter, who is chancellor for the University of Maryland at College Park, challenged students and educators to strive for excellence in education. Math and sciences hold the key to a better future for blacks in America, he said.
Slaughter called science the "spark of history" but asked who would light the torch.
He also warned his listeners not to neglect preparing for the future by looking for ways to improve education for blacks.
Most citizens are not informed enough to choose which technologies are worth developing, he said. This can only come about through taking a tough stand on educating blacks in math and sciences, he said.
WEDNESDAY at THE SANCTUARY ALL You Can Drink!
"We need to reach out and recruit
some of the most talented black
students."
"The nation has not offered opportunities to predominately black college-educated men."
"Education continues to be the great socializing equalizer," he said. "I believe firmly in quality and equality in school, but they are not mutually exclusive."
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ACLU wants videotaping study
The Lawrence American Civil Liberties Union yesterday requested that the Lawrence City Commission sponsor a public study session to discuss the videotaping policies of the Lawrence Police Department.
By the Kansan Staff
Wildcat said yesterday that a study session attended by concerned citizens, civil libertarians, commission members and educators would best address the voiding tapeotap.
In a hand delivered letter to the City Commission, Daniel Wildcat, the Lawrence ACLU president, responded to the Lawrence Police Department's written guidelines for the taping of public events.
ing an incident in which a Latin American Solidarity protest was videotaped by the Lawrence police last November.
The guidelines were presented to the ACLU last week as a result of a request made by Wildcat in November, follow-
In his letter, Wildcat commended one of the guidelines, which allows the videotaping of events only if specific ordinances are being violated. Wildcat would prohibit the videotaping of events solely on the basis of the event itself.
crowds which police thought might become violent
However, Wildcat said one of the guidelines permitted the videotaping of
The guidelines state that one should make this judgement based on criteria such as the kind of event, the size of the crowd, prior history of the group and actions occurring prior to filming.
"It is difficult, if not impossible to imagine a demonstration which could be filmed under these guidelines," Wildcat said in is letter.
Howard Hill, a Lawrence City Commissioner, said yesterday that he had not yet seen Wildcat's letter, but that he believed the police have used videotaping sparingly, and have never used it to intimidate anyone.
Activism thrives in KU newsletters
PREPARE FOR: APRIL
By PHIL ENGLISH Staff Reporter
Political activism is alive at the University of Kansas.
Praxis and The Plumber's Friend are two locally published newsletters that exist to keep political activism thriving, their editors said.
"Our main purpose is to get the various activist groups in Lawrence and on campus together to discuss the topics of interest we all have in the field, said Rhonda Neugebauer, Lawrence graduate student and editor of Praxis.
"We deal with professionals from women's groups, anti-nuclear groups and others, and try to get them to write articles for us to let the people of Lawrence know why they should be concerned."
SINCE THE FIRST publication of Praxis, in the spring of 1882, the editors have maintained a strict policy of political activism in their newsletter.
Eight editors, who all are KU students, publish Praxis sporadically. It costs 35 cents and has a circulation of about 300. The newsletter now averages one issue every five weeks. Neugebauer said. Praxis has no formal publication schedule but is printed only when funds permit.
"We publish some things that you could be killed for in another part of the world," she said. "People should read Praxis — because they need it."
Only persons devoted to world political issues may write for Praxis.
The newsletter's title means different things to different people. Neugebauer said that to her, it meant a journal of thought and action.
Webster's New International Dictionary defines "praxis" as a noun meaning action or practice.
"A PERSON MAY have a very good idea on an issue, but it doesn't mean anything unless the person is willing to take action," she said. "We want people to talk and listen to each other, not just mom and dad or the chancellor
and their professors."
"People might be scared because we hold strong opinions," Neuebauer said. "But it is only because our ideas need to be made public."
Taking action is important to the staff of Praxis. However, Neugebauer added that action through violence would run their credibility
ANOTHER LOCAL newsletter. The Plumber's Friend, edited by Tim Miller, lecturer in religious studies, examines the problems he sees with Lawrence politics.
"I write to avoid getting an ulcer, by
spitting out what is bothering me," he
The problems that Miller sees deal with the Lawrence political scene, and problems on the KU campus.
SANCTUARY
"I want to give the students another interpretation of current events," he said. "The things people read and hear about through the normal communication channels, deserve some additional commentary."
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KU seeks applications for a tenure-track faculty position in geophysics. Candidates should have research interests in crustal geophysics. The successful applicant will be expected to teach undergraduate and graduate geophysics courses, develop an active research program, advise students, supervise graduate student theses and dissertations, and provide service through administrative and professional activities. A Ph D in geology with specialization in geophysics is required although applicants who will complete the Ph D in the first year of employment at KU will be considered. The position is at the assistant professor level with a salary commensurate with qualifications. Although the closing date for the nationwide search has passed, the closing date for local applications is extended to Feb. 13, 1984. The starting date for the position is Aug. 16, 1984. Send vita, transcripts, a brief statement of research interests and courses the applicant feels qualified to teach, and three letters of reference to G.H. Giry, Department of Geology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. The advertised position is contingent on continued state funding. For additional information contact G.H. Giry or phone (913) 864-4974. KU is an affirmative-action, equal-opportunity employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
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Naismith Hall announces that applications for RA positions including job description and requirements are now available at the Naismith desk between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.
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KANSAS UNION
BURROWS
RESIDENT ASSISTANT at NAISMITH HALL
TO THE CLASS OF 1984
It's time to order your graduation announcements and name cards at:
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, February 7. 1984
House Democrats call for amendment on tax
By United Press International
TOPEKA — House Democratic leaders are calling for a constitutional amendment for the classification of property in Kansas.
"The Republican leadersmup was failed to provide needed protection for Kansas homeowners and farmers against the potentially huge tax increases that would follow statewide reappraisal of property." House Mimie Reappraisal, Marcus Barkis, D. Louisburg, H. Larry Bayley, "Reappraisal is coming and it's time we acted in the public interest in the area of property tax reform."
THE RESOLUTION calling for classification is part of a package of public interest bills revealed by the five leading leaders in the House yesterday.
One of the bills would establish felony prosecutors in each of the state's judicial districts to help inexperienced county attorneys.
Page 8
Barkis said county attorneys' decisions on what to do with a felony case too often depend on the amount of time they have, with too many plea bargainings being the result.
The state's county attorney system often has been criticized because in many areas the county attorney is the least experienced attorney in town.
The bill would establish the felony prosecutors as a part of the attorney general's office. To be appointed, an attorney would have to be a member of the Kansas bar for at least five years. If the attorney worked as a county attorney or assistant county attorney, the department would be reduced to three years.
ANOTHER BILL unveiled by the Democrats calls for conservation rates.
They also are calling for the establishment of a Citizen Utility Board under the supervision of the Kansas Corporation Commission. The board would "provide residential customers the representation necessary to offset the excessive lobbying of the corporate and industrial sectors in determining who carries the load of utility rate increases," Barkis said.
Barkis said he hoped the bill would result in career prosecutors. Under the bill, the felony prosecutor could not have a private law practice, which many county attorneys now have to supplement their county salary.
Dinnerware thieves set table for a shortage at GSP, Corbin
By TODD NELSON Staff Reporter
Residents of Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin halls are facing trying times.
So much silverware and dishwash has been stolen from the halls' cafeteria that residents have frequently been forced to use plastic utensils, the director of food services for the halls said yesterday.
"We were in pretty good shape at the end of Christmas break," said Denise Wiseman, the director. "But we noticed a big loss in spouses at the beginning of this semester, and we're probably not going to get any more."
AN INVENTORY conducted by the hall during semester break revealed that 1,189 spoons, 268 forks, 141 knives, 73 shakers and 563 glasses were missing.
The silverware usually lasts through only half of the dinner period, according to Wiseman, and after that, students must use plastic utensils.
Wiseman said most of the loss occurred when residents took dinner trays from the cafeteria to their rooms so they could eat while watching afternoon soap operas or while studying at night.
To help combat the problem, Wiseman has had signs posted in the ball court.
silverware and dishware had been stolen so far this school year.
"I have been surprised at how well things have progressed. Wiseman said.
Cafeteria personnel have also began enforcing some cafeteria rules that had been ignored.
"The first couple of days were kind of hard for them."
THE POLICY CHANGES include the enforcement of a rule that prohibits residents from returning to their rooms with trays, silverware or dishes from the cafeteria, she said. Students are positioned at caterer cafeteria exites to enforce the rule.
Since Thursday, when the policy changes went into effect, Wiseman said. "I know we're not losing as much stuff out of the dining room."
Residents may no longer bring their own glasses or containers into the cafeteria, Wiseman said. She said the policy was changed because residents were "packing out quarts of milk and bowls of peanut butter."
Wiseman said that the halls usually bought all the silverware and dishware for the year at the beginning of the fall semester. However, this year's supply is already in use, and finding replacements for losses now might be difficult.
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
5 p.m. close
841-3268
"My biggest problem is not always being able to get replacements for the things I lost," Wiseman said. "If we run our equipment, we must have to use plastic."
843-7398
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DEATES
A HARD DAY'S NIGHT
Clouds gather in a somber fashion on a recent Kansas evening
UNDERGRADUATE ART SHOW will be in the main gallery of the Art and Design Building through Feb. 10.
A HARd DAYs Night
DTERDOACTYL'S EGG, a science fiction and fantasy magazine, is accepting short stories and art work for the Fall 2016 Dillerat in 94-5738 for more details.
HOTDOG
R & I
© 2014 by HOTDOG, LLC. All rights reserved.
HILLCREST 3
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CINEMA 1 STAT AND IDALE
TELEPHONE: 824-8600
Eve. 7:30, 9:20 Daily Mat. 5:00
Educating
Rita
KU ASIAN FILM Festival will present "The Sun and the Moon" at 7:30 p.m. Dyche Hall KU MOUNTAINEER-BACKPACKING
*p* by Susan Lee
MOUNTAINEER-BACKPACKING
Association will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union.
"IImproving the quality of education and improving our system in Kansas is the governor's No. 1 priority for the teachers in office." Myers told the committee.
Myers said Carlin's proposal would raise the average teacher salary in Kansas by about 9.75 percent. Property taxes would go up by about $394 million and education taxes would go up by about $394 million in new dollars into the system.
CINEMA 2 31ST AND IOWA
TELEPHONE 842-8400
The Senate Education Committee opened hearings on two bills calling for widely different approaches to financing public education in Kansas school districts. Hearings are to continue until a vote scheduled for early next week.
John Myers, state budget analyst,
testified on behalf of the Carlin
administration for a bill that would
allow school districts to increase their
budgets next year by 4 percent to 8
percent, depending on district wealth.
The state education department
budget authority of 2 percent to be
earmarked for raising teacher salaries.
CINEMA 2 TELEPHONES 843-590-8000
SILKWOOD
HERO UNION KING ROAD CHURCH
20TH CENTENARY FOX
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION will present "Getting the job" to students at W. W. H. School.
TOPEKA — Improving the quality of education in Kansas should be one of the state's chief goals, with upgrading teacher salaries one way to achieve the goal, a spokesman for Gov. John Carlin testified yesterday.
SING WITH KU Collegium Musicum at 4:30 p.m. in 328 Murphy.
Eve. 7:15, 9:35 Mat. 4:45 Sat.-Su
THE LAWRENCE JAZZ SOCIETY
in the basement of
Staffer Fint, Ball.
THE WESTERN BRASS Quintet, a faculty ensemble from Western Michigan at Kalamazoo, will attend @ 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
"A SUFFOCATING LONELINESS" will be the first session of a Theological Seminar: "Spiritual Formation; Three Movements of Spiritual Life" at 4:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Orcad Ave
NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS will meet today and tomorrow for lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Cork Room I of the Union Cafeteria.
TAU SIGMA Student Dance Club will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robinson Center "CHAMPIONS" will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Licee.
Sen. Fred Kerr, R-Praff, a member of the panel, questioned how much teacher salaries would increase. He said that Carlin had recommended that the state finance only 87 percent of the excess cost of special education, which meant that school districts would have to draw on their general fund dollars to meet the constitutional mandate for special education.
THE BROWN BAG Concert Series will present the KU Student Brass
Myers said fewer and fewer college students were entering education schools to become teachers, and studies showed those who did were finishing in the lower 50 percent of their graduating class. By raising base teaching salaries, these students would be more competitive with others and more attractive to the best students, he said.
TOMORROW
Quintet at noon in the Strong Hall Rotunda
CAMPUS CRUSADE For Christ will
rise 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of
the University
CHAMPIONS! will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR Christ will present Philip Sandifer, guitarist, at 9 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium of the Union.
Education is a top priority analyst says
By United Press International
106 DAY
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February Chinese Film Series "The Number One"
胡金銓
Directed by King Hu
975. Camnes Film Festival best special effect
976. International Film Guide best director of the year
A classical Kung-Fu movie with Chinese subtitles.
DATE: Sun., Feb. 12, 2:30 p.m.
PLACE: Wescoe, Albrecht Auditorium Rm. 3140
ADMISSION: member-free; non-member $1
Tickets available at the door!
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, February 7, 1984
Page 9
Fed sets a wary financial course for 1984
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve Board, warning more strongly than ever about the dangers of big defics, told Congress yesterday that it has a cautious set of policy guidelines for 1984 in doing out money and credit.
The board made it clear in an annual report to Congress that it intends to accommodate the rate of economic growth that is already anticipated by President Congress. But the board also stands to cut short any inflationary surges.
The new report contains the Fed's most extensive warnings yet that high federal deficits are "dominating the outlook for credit flows in the year ahead," according to a market pessimism blamed for sharp declines in stock prices in recent days.
"THE PERSISTENCE OF large deficits in the face of strengthening private credit demands would tend to exert pressures on domestic credit markets, keeping interest rates higher than they would be," the policy statement said.
The report dismissed the economic progress made last year as a largely routine rebound from recession and said the year was not proof of a permanent victory for anti-inflation policy.
Board Chairman Paul Volcker will testify on the report before Congress
The board's analysis of the effect of deficits on interest rates and trade performance paralleled that delivered last week by the president's top adviser, Martin Peldstein, in the Council of Economic Advisers report to Congress.
THE NEW FED policy statement
spelled out virtually the same targets for growth of the money supply as tentatively set earlier. It also contained revisions in 1983 figures showing that cash available at the end of the year grew more than was evident at the time.
The report also said the board would be only slightly less wary of returning to a strict interpretation of "M-1," the most widely-followed category of the money supply. The Fed has been paying less attention to this category, because it has been distorted by the deregulation of bank interest rates.
The annual money targets announced each year mean little to analysts trying to decide if interest rates will climb in the next three months. Other factors, such as the pace of business borrowing and how fast money moves through the economy also influence the competition for credit.
THE HOUSING INDUSTRY would
be the first to benefit if federal deficits were reduced by substantial amounts — $50 billion to $10 billion a year, the board said. Although whatever tax increases or spending cuts were involved would not take effect until later, interest rates could respond immediately, the Fed said.
"The counterpart rise in private credit may be the most noticeable initially in mortgage markets at the lower long-term interest rates that are likely to evolve," the board said. "In addition, businesses would be in a position to increase bond and stock offerings."
Fed critics have disagreed on the shortcomings of last year's board performance, some saying it would lead to a "flawed" soon and others seeing higher inflation.
The Fed said that it was right on the tip of the nail to successfully keep inflation low while raising
Taxpayers pay for junkets to the Paris Air Show
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a series of reports investigating overseas travel made by industry researchers.
By GREGORY GORDON United Press International
WASHINGTON — Like swallows returning to Capistrano, 36 members of Congress flocked to Paris last spring for the world's grandest extravaganza, probably some of the finest free meals they ever will eat
House and Senate members attending the weeklong Paris Air Show were so lavishly wined and dined by aerospace industry firms that one member among nine congressional delegations called it "disgusting."
White House and Senate members drew $131 in daily expense money from the U.S. Embassy, defense and aerospace contractors picked up fat tabs at Tour de France meetings, the city's dinner spots, several congressmen said in a survey.
SHUTTLE BUSSES SERVED the hotel entrance, but 10 members rented mid-sized, chauffeur-driven Mercedes and Peugeots at a taxpayer cost of $18,848, United Press International and the non-profit Better Government Association found in a review of embassy and Pentagon vouchers.
Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee who was President Reagan's personal representative, hired two limeauxs for himself, his wife and two staffers for $5,303.
Melvin Price, D-III, rented two cars for his House Armed Services Committee delegation at a cost of $5.759. Ron DeLugo, a non-voting delegate from the Virgin Islands, sent $1.372 on a car.
ALTHOUGH EMBASSY CHARGES for the suite and refreshments reserved by a House Science and Technology Committee delegation headed by Rep. Donald Fuqua, D-Fla., totaled $2,555, sources said Price insisted on a separate control room for his contingent. It cost an additional $2.908.
In a four-month investigation, UPI and the BGA found the Paris Air Rife with the kinds of excesses that helped drive congressional overseas travel costs to more than $21.6 million in fiscal 1983.
Taxpayer cost for representation in Paris by delegations of at least 142 House and Senate members, spouses and aides easily exceeded $252,000. Two-thirds of the money was for airfare because within 24 hours, Price's 15-member delegation, a 13-member House Appropriations Committee team headed by Rep. Bill Chappell, D-Fla., and Fauqua's 29 members, took three military planes to Paris at a cost of $217,000.
CAPITOL HILL SOURCES said prices of meals that contractors bought congressmen and their wives often exceeded the limits of ethics rules barring acceptance of the laws, from those with an interest in pending legislation.
Rep. Jack Edwards, R-Ala, who dined at The Ritz as guest of a contractor, he cannot remember, said, "I know that there are rules to play by and . . . I played by those rules. I don't know what it costs to
Said Rep. Robert Badham, R-Calfi: "As our political leader from California once said, if 'you can eat their food and drink their liquor and take their wine,' I will believe you belong in this business." And I've done all of the above.
Defense contractors deny padding government contracts with entertainment expenses. But law enforcement sources disclosed that a federal grand jury in Florida is probing allegations that Pratt and Whitney, a division of United Technologies Inc., improperly charged the Pentagon for entertainment expenses, including some from the 34th Paris Air Show in 1981.
have a dinner in a nice French restaurant "
One U.S. official said he only saw a handful of House and Senate members and a smattering of aides in response.
ROBERT STANGARONE, Pratt and Whitney
spokesman in West Palm Beach. Fla., declined
EVAN GALBRAITH, U.S. ambassador to France who cabled the State Department to complain about the crush of 658 official U.S. visitors, said embassy burdens were extreme.
"I had senior political officers having to deal with menus for dinners, and supplies and taxis and all sorts of menial things," he recalls. "It's sort of a glorified nanny."
Members of Congress did not limit their regal living abroad to the Paris Air Show.
Next: Tower retires in style
By United Press International
Nicaraguan elections are back on schedule
Nicaragua's Council of State yesterday said it would make a rough draft of its electoral law public only one day later than originally planned, putting 1985 elections back on schedule.
Another communique from the ruling junta said the date and other details for presidential, vice-presidential and constituent selections in 1965 would still be announced Feb. 21 as planned earlier
The junta condemned air attacks last week in Chinandega Province in northwest Nicaragua by rebels, but the president has refused to postpone the elections.
THE COMMISSION WILL also make public tomorrow a rough draft of the proposed legal law origi- nated to be released the day before.
When the commission postponed today's announcement last week, many observers feared elections could be delayed or canceled.
The junta, however, did warn that continued attacks by U.S.-backed rebels could result in the disruption of the elections.
The attacks, which the Sandinistas claim were directed by the United States and carried out by anti-government rebels based in Honduras, were also protested by the United Nations Security Council.
In El Salvador, the U.S.-backed army prepared to launch new counterinurgency drives in rebel-controlled regions in the first test of a modified command structure put place. Nov 7, military sources said.
U. S.TRAINED battalions and "hunter" units began deployment Sunday in northern Chalatenango province, far northwestern Morazan province and southeastern Usulutan province, military sources said.
El Salvador's ultra-right political party has not considered switching presidential candidates, despite allegations that the current choice
— Roberto d'Aubuisson — ordered the 1980 slaying of Catholic Archbishop Oscar Carmello Romero.
British pilots plan an attempt to set balloon-altitude record
By United Press International
PAGE, Ariz. — Two British pilots will attempt to set a world hot-air balloon altitude record today and become England's first astronauts.
Peter Mason, a spokesman for Operation Sky Quest, said yesterday that "all systems are go" for the balloon launch.
"The balloon is ready, the capsule is ready, the pilots are ready," he said. "The only thing that can stop us now is an increase in the winds."
Mike Kendrick, 37, of Bridgnorth,
England, and Per Lindstrand, 35,
of Oswestry, England, hope to飞 at about
80,000 feet — more than 25,000 feet
higher than the current balloon record set in 1980 over Denver.
After a three-day delay caused $ _{12} $ strong surface winds, Mason said that calm conditions were needed for the launch.
"There's a lot riding on this, including two guys' lives," Mason said.
He said the men would wear presurized spacesuits because no oxygen was available.
A 30-man ground crew spent most of the summer making adjustments on the sandy
Saturday night the crew did a test inflation, Mason said. They needed between 60 and 90 minutes to fill the tank. The gas holds 1.5 million cubic feet of hot air.
DELTA DELTA DELTA SCHOLARSHIP AWARD
If you are an undergraduate woman enrolled at KU with a high degree of academic achievement and community service work, you could win a scholarship worth $534 (or one semester's tuition at KU). The winner of this scholarship would then be eligible to compete for the Zoe Gore Perrin National Scholarship worth $1,000!
Applications available at the Tri-Delta house or for more information, call 843-4610. Deadline is March 1, 1984.
Questionnaires for
MORTAR BOARD National Senior Honor Society
may be picked up in the Office of Student Affairs, 214 Strong. All juniors and first semester seniors with at least a 3.0 grade point average are eligible. Deadline to return questionnaires is Friday, Feb. 24.
MINI-TOURNAMENTS at The Jay Bowl
By Recreation Services
Mondays at 4 p.m.
starts Feb.13
INTRAMURAL BOWLING
Entry Deadline: Thursday Feb. 9
208 Robinson
Fees charged at The Jay Bowl
French Bread
Night
Minsky's
PIZZA
STYLE . . .
ALL THE DELICIOUS FRENCH
BREAD PIZZA YOU CAN EAT
FOR $2.95
I Can't Paint
How Good
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SERVING:
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Minsky's
PIZZA
2228 IOWA • 842-0154
Minsky's
PIZZA
1 Day Ektachrome Slide Processing
PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES 864.4767
- Slide Duplication
Contact: University Placement Center 223 Carruth-O'Leary Hall to make an appointment. EOE/AA
Serving K.U. Students, Faculty, and Staff
Complete Black & White Services
*B/W prints to $ 2 0 \times 2 4^{\circ} $
- Passport & Resume Photos Taken *
Slides of Original Art and Photographs
Slides of Original Art and Photographs
Price List Available
More Other Surfaces Rush Service Available
All applicants should possess excellent writing ability, strong representational skills and knowledge of foreign language. Q.S. citizenship required. Starting date open. Starting salary range: $17,138-$20,956 depending on education and experience.
On Feb. 14 a representative of the
Central Intelligence Agency
Analysts—MA, international relations, area studies, foreign languages; BA with overseas working experience or post-BA education.
206 Art and Design Building
Librarians—MLS or BA liberal arts with library experience. Geographers—MS or MA, BS or BA geography/cartography or equivalent.
will interview prospective applicants for positions in the Washington, D.C. area. Positions and qualifications are:
BOT PRESTIGIOUS
PARK LAND HOTEL
BAR & RESTAURANT
Buy a $12 membership and you will receive a $10 gift certificate from Sgt. Preston's
TUESDAY----40c DRAWS
WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS LADIES NIGHT
SGT. PRESTON'S WANTS YOU
25c Draws 50c 7 p.m.-2 a.m.
RECIPROCAL TO 80 CLUBS IN KS.
OPEN 11 am-3 am
OPEN TO PUBLIC
11 am-2 pm
815 New Hampshire
★★★★
presents Gene Hoffer speaking on "What Makes A Good Campaign"
JOIN THE COLLEGE REPUBLICANS
Date: Feb. 7, 1984
Time: 7 p.m.
Place: Council Room at the Union
"I don't know what the hardest shot in golf is, but the easiest shot is the first shot at the 19th hole.
$1.25 drinks & 50c Draws tonight."
-W.C. Fields
GAMMONS SNOWIES
VIDEO
23rd & Ousdahl
1
SPORTS
The University Daily
KANSAN
February 7, 1984 Page 10
Peete's decision expected today Gottfried to miss signing day
By JEFF CRAVENS Sports Editor
Sports Editor
The final two days of football recruiting are always crucial, which means they are about the last two days of training. A head football coach wants to be gone.
But KU head coach Mike Gottfried will be gone today and tomorrow, the signing date for high school players. Gottfried will be attending a funeral.
"It is someone who was like a second father to me," Gottfried said. "He got up to turn the channel on the TV and watch the game." It's hard to figure those things out."
Gottried said he didn't think being away would hinder the Jayhawk recruiting effort. KU, he said, could be as many as 33 signings tomorrow.
"IT'S REALLY HARD to put a number on it," Gottfried said. "We won't know for sure until Wednesday. Most of our commitments are secure, but we've had a few who have committed to us verbally that have backed out, but they are all from out of state."
Last weekend was the final push in KU's recruiting. Gottfried said 27 players, including Rodney Peete, visited the final weekend before the signing date.
Peeet, a high school All-America quarterback from Shawnee Mission South, visited the KU campus Sunday and yesterday. Gottfried said he
expected Peete to make his decision today.
Peete threw for more than 4,000 yards his junior year when he attended high school in Arizona. He transferred to South when his father, Willie, was hired by John Mackovic as an assistant coach for the Kansas City Chiefs.
"I think it's very questionable." Gottfried said about Rodney Pete attending KU. "He is still considering what to do, now until it makes the announcement."
Whether Peee signs or not, KU has already signed a junior college quarterback transfer. Mike Norseth, who played at the same junior college that produced Iowa State quarterback David Archer, is already attending KU. Archer was second in the Big Eight Conference to Frank Searer in passing.
Skip Peete, Rodney's brother, attends KU and will be eligible to play for the Jayhawks next season. Skip Peete. KU is in position in the depleted KU offense.
PEETE IS CONSIDERING Arizona, Arizona State, Southern California and Stanford besides the Jayhawks. Many say Peeet will go to one of the warm weather schools because he is also an All-American in baseball.
"I would rather not comment on the guys until the signing day." Goffretli.
ONE AREA the Jayhawk staff has concentrated on has been in-state recruiting. Last season, Gottfried was hired well into the recruiting season and did not have a banner year within the state.
"We have had a lot more time," Gottfried said. "And I think we have got some very good players."
A problem Gottfried often mentioned last season was that he didn't have the numbers to compete with the stronger programs in the conference. But that has not influenced recruiting to a great extent, he said.
"We don't really put a big emphasis on numbers," Gottried said. "The biggest thing is to keep what we have here."
Lawrence has a brother, John, who is a 6-foot-3, 220 pound tight end from Parsons who has committed to the Javhawks.
MANY FORMER KU football alumni*, including former Jayhawks Bucky Scribner, Kyle McNorton and David Lawrence, were in town to help Gottfried recruit. Scribner is a punter for the Green Bay Packers and McNorton on the Chiefs' roster.
Several other players have said they would attend KU to play football. Three of them are from Salina South High School.
Running backs Chuck Eanes and Tony Harvey have said they would accept scholarships with teammate Eric Keeler, a linebacker.
Warren Shields, a 6-1, 195-pound running back from Sumner High School and Milton Garner, both from Kansas have also said they would attend KU.
Swimmers continue winning ways with 95-45 victory over Iowa State
The KU women's swimming team continued its winning streak by defeating the Iowa State Cyclones 95-45 in a dual meet at Ames, Iowa Saturday.
By the Kansan Staff
The women were victorious in 12 of the 16 events.
The 12th-ranked Jayhawks were led by double-winner Darcey Gregor of Texas.
freestyle in 1.531 and first in the
200-vard backstroke in 2.12.04.
Jenny Wagstaff set a new Beyer Hall pool record by placing first in the 1000-yard freestyle with a time of 10:18.43 Tana Bower placed first in the 1000-yard backstroke in 1:01.53, and Keka Wagstaff placed in the 1000-yard breaststroke in 1:10.75.
Tammy Pease, the top-ranked 50-yard freestyle swimmer in the nation, won that event in 24.26.
Other individual champions in swimming were Celine Cerny in the 200-yard butterfly in 2:07.15, Michele Compton in the 200-yard individual medley in 2:17.97, Chris Hays in the 200-yard breaststroke in 2:33.14 and Chris Wright in the 500-yard freestyle in 5:16.30.
In diving, the Jayhawks received a first place award from Dana Pace in 1-meter dive with a score of 244.125
By United Press International
Officials try to resolve player issue
SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia — Sports officials from five nations worked yesterday to resolve a dispute over player eligibility that threatened to disrupt the ice hockey competition at the 14th Winter Olympic Games.
Finland lodged an official protest Sunday, charging that nine players from five countries were professionals and should be disqualified.
But yesterday, the managing director of the Finnish Ice Hockey Federation, Kalervi Kummola, said the Finnish Olympic Committee might be the protest. The competition was scheduled to get underway today.
The West German president of the International Ice Hockey Federation, Guenther Sabtzek, called together the Norwegian, Canadian, Austrian, Italian and Finnish hockey leaders to try to resolve the dispute.
"We only want the IOC (International Olympic Committee) to make a decision," Kummula said. "If the IOC rules that players from the National Hockey League or international leagues can play in the tournament, we will have an Olympics open to professionals."
The group then met with Willi Daume, president of the eligibility commission of the International Olympic Committee.
The two traditional downhill nations each have five skiers in the first-ranked group training on Bjelensica mountain, but are only allowed four competitors in the race itself.
That prompted the Flims to challenge players from Canada, Norway, Austria and Italy. They dropped a West German and a Canadian who were on their list Sunday and added another Italian.
On the ski slopes, Switzerland's Pirimin Zuribgren set the fastest training time in the battle for places like Stuttgart and teams for Thursday's men downhill.
The problem started when Finland's goalie, Hannu Kamppuri, was barred from play because of a short stint with the Edmonton Oilers.
the fastest time in three days of training as harder snow and the fight
Zurbriggen, the men's overall
World Cup leader, minutes
46 World Cup down the 9-mile
track.
054
URI file ub
LAKE PLACID, N.Y. — American Olympic hockey players celebrate their 4-3 upset victory over the Soviet Union in the seminal game of the 1980 Winter Olympics. Unlike the 1980 Olympians, who surprised the world by capturing the gold medal, the American team will enter the 1984 Olympic Games in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia as a target. The United States is scheduled to open competition today against Canada.
for team places livened up the session.
American Bill Johnson, out to prove his right to a place among the elite downhillers, battled to the second place and backed up his first place in Sunday's run.
To promote the Olympic spirit, Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley and his counterpart in Sarajevo, Uglijesa
Uzelac, appealed to world leaders to declare a global trace during the 1984 summer and winter Games
"On behalf of the citizens of the two Olympic cities in 1984 — Sarajevo and Los Angeles — we wish to open the 1984 Olympics with a proposal that this year we return to the ancient Greek Olympic tradition of an international truce," they said in a joint statement.
SPORTS
News briefs from staff and wire reports
Gill signs four-year pact with Montreal Concordes
MONTRÉAL — Quarterback Turner Gill, who led the University of Nebraska to two NCAA scoring records, has signed a four-year deal with the Montreal Concordes of the Canadian Football League, the team announced yesterday.
The 21-year-old native of Fort Worth, Texas, told reporters he was looking forward to playing in the Canadian Football League because he had never played in any other sport.
"I think I'll fit in well here," he said, "There's a wide field up here and because of the wide field and my mobility and throwing arm, I think I should do pretty well in this game."
Gill, who was also drafted last month by the Houston Gambels of the USFL, said he chose Montreal's offer rather than wait for the National Football League draft in May because he thought he'd have a better opportunity to play in Canada.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Forward Malcolm Thomas of Missouri was selected Big Eight Player of the Week yesterday on the strength of his 79-point. 30-rebound showing in three games last week.
"If I waited for the NFL, I'd probably have gone in the third to fifth round, and that probably means I wouldn't play too much for a couple of years.
Thomas, the national junior college player of the year last season at Moberly Mo., was selected for the honor despite Missouri's 1-2 record during the week.
MU's Thomas is top Big 8 player
Thomas started off slow with 17 points and 11 rebounds in a 66-53 road loss last Monday night to defending national champion North Carolina State, but came back on Wednesday to collect a career-high 28 points and eight rebounds in an 89-51 rout of Colorado.
LONG BEACH, Calif. — Former Dallas Cowboys' linebacker Thomas "Hollywood" Henderson pleaded not guilty yesterday to charges that he sexually attacked a 17-year-old quadriplegic and his 15-year-old girlfriend at gunpoint.
At a preliminary hearing in January, the 15-year-old testified that when she and her friend entered the apartment, Henderson pulled out a gun and forced them to disrobe. She said Henderson also forced them to "freebase" cocaine, causing them to vomit.
Superior Court Judge David Eagleson allowed the flamboyant Henderson to remain free on $16,000 bail and ordered him to return to court March 5 for a pre-trial hearing. Trial was set for March 26.
Cornhuskers too strong for Kansas track teams
Police found a 38-caliber handgun in the apartment, which they entered after the girls went to the police station.
The 6-7 Milledgeville, Ga., native ranks fourth in the Big Eight in scoring with an average of 18.5 points and third in rebounding with an average of 9.6 a game.
Others recording season-best marks were Greg Leibert, second in the mile; Craig Branstrom, second in the high jump and third in the 60-yard high hurdles; Rob Rhett, second in the 300 and the 60; John Creighton, second in the 440; and Bruce Connelly, third in the 1000.
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Sports Writer
The Kansas men's and women's track teams took it on the chin from the imposing Nebraska track squads in dual meets Saturday at the Devaney gym in Lincoln, Neb. The team's队 lost 95-26, and the women lost 84-27.
Henderson, 30, was arrested at his apartment Nov. 3 after the younger girl told police that she lured her and the wheelchair-bound friend to his
Former Cowboy pleads not guilty
Henderson said he took the girls home after they solicited him on the street, and said he pulled an unloaded gun on them when he found one of them pocketing some of his money.
"We've probably met three of the better teams in the Big Eight now in Missouri, K-State, and Nebraska," said KU men's head coach Bob Timmons. "It's hard to say anything about it, but we showed a lot of improvement with a lot of personal bests, and we just hope to keep improving."
KU women's head coach Carla Coffey said Nebraska had "one of the top teams in the nation." The Cornhuskers
The only top finisher for the men was Bill Bunten, who won the 880 in a time of 1 minute, 54.4 seconds, his season best.
won the National Collegiate Athletic Association indoor title last year.
Coffey said she was happy with the improvement shown by her young squad, which included 16 freshmen out of 26 squad members.
"The main objective is to continue to improve week by week." Coffey said. "I'm pleased with the performances of our middle distance and distance runners. I'm also pleased with the performance of Stine Lerdahl in the shot."
Other placing for the women were Kris Pilgrim, second in the high jump; Rosie Wadman, third in the high jump; Vickie Fulcher, second in the 440; Cherise Taylor, third in the 440; and Kelly Wood, third in the 1000.
Lerdahl was the lone first-place finisher for the women, throwing the shot-put for a season-best 48-72 to win the event. Denise Buchanan was runner-up in the same event, throwing it 43-10.
The KU men's team will travel to Champaign, Ill., this weekend for the Illinois Classic. Timmons said a large number of schools were invited to the meet, including a number of national powers.
Posting season-best marks and placing in the top three were Tracey Keith, third in the two-mile run; third in the 100-meter race; Berquist, third in the 890-yard run;
Rene Goree, second in the 500-meter run; Kim Jones, second in the 300-yard run; and Connie McKernan, third in the 60-yard hurdles.
The women's team will travel to Norman, Okla., for the Oklahoma Classic. Cofeyed it should be "a very good meet," and would include some conference teams, as well as Okahama, Oklahoma State, and Wichita State.
Also placing for the men were Tom Hays, who tied for second in the pole
Two Cornhuskers set school records on Saturday. Darren Burton broke the high jump record by going 7.41, and he also recorded in the mile with a time of 4.039.78
vault; Mike Rich, third in the long jump; Greg Dalzell, third in the 600; and Craig Glicken, third in the shot-put.
SPORTS ALMANAC
Daily Schedule At Sarajevo, Yugoslavia
OLYMPICS
Today
Ice hockey - At Skidenberg. Austria vs. Finland, g.
m. Czechoslovakia vs. Norway. 9:38 a.m. w. West
Germany vs. Nugeliava. 1:1 p. At Zetra U.S. v.
Czech Republic vs. Germany. 10:45 a.m. 10:45 a.m.
Poland vs. Soviet Union, 1:10 a.m.
Opening Ceremony at Zetra, 7:30 a.m.
Thursday, February 9
Women's 10km cross country skiing at Igman, 2 a.m.
Women's 1,500 meters speedskating at Zetra, 2 a.m.
Men's 30k cross country skiing at Iqman, 2 a.m.
Men's and women's logic, second run, at Trebecvik.
Men's alpine downhill at Blythesana, 5 a.m.
Men's and women's high first run, at Trevebrook, 7 a.m.
ice hockey at Skenderjira; Poland vs. West
Germany, 6: am. at Sweden; norway, 9:30 am.
Russia, 6: am. at Zerbai; Soviet
Union vs. Italy, 6:30 am. at Austria,
1:30 am. U.S. vs. Czechoslovakia, 1:30 am.
Women's 500 m speedskating at Zetra, 2:30 a.m.
Men's 500 m speedskating at Zetra, 1:45 a.m.
Ice dancing, compulsory dance, at Zetra, 6 a.m.
The lob, first and second run, at Trebusville
6:30 a.m.
8 m, Ahmad field, at igman 2 'm
Men's and women's badge, at trebicvv 2,
Ahmad field, at igman 2 'm
Two-man bob, third and fourrsts, at Trebevic,
6:30 a.m.
Ice hockey – At Skidenberg. USSR is, Vugaloslav,
6 a.m. Italy; at Warsaw, 0:30 p.m. Canada; at
Venezuela, 1:30 p.m. Czecho-
slovakia, 6:30 a.m. Norway, 10 a.m.
Sweden and W. Germany, 1:30 p.m.
Pairs skating, short program, at Zetra, 2 p.m.
Saturday, February 11
Women's alpine downhill at Jaberna. 3-30 m.
Nordic combined, 2m jumping, at Malo Pole. 350m.
Women's 500m speedskating at Zetra, 2:30 a.m.
Men's 500m speedskating at Zetra, 4 a.m.
Monday, February 11
Biathlon, 20km event, at Igman, 2 a.m.
Madrid
Women's 5km cross country skiing at Igman, 2 a.m.
Men's 5.000m speedskating at Zetra, 2:30 a.m.
Nordic Combined, 15 km event, at Igman, 4 a.m.
Norse Nordic Combined, 15 km
Norwegian Combined, 10 km
Mumping, 10m at Malpole Pond, 8 m
Mumping, 10m at Malpole Pond, 8 m
Mala Palo Fojé, 8 a.m.
Men's and women's fight, four run, Trenebic, 8 a.m.
Monday, February 13
I dance Ice Dance, original set pattern, at Zetra, 8 a.m.
Pairs skating, free skating, at Zetra, 10:30 p.m.
Men's figure skating, compulsory figures, at Skenderija, 12 a.m.
Men's 1.5km cross country skiing at Alpine 2.4 m.
Men's 0.6m speedlifting at Zalmer 2.3 a.m.
Men's Nordic skiing at Zalmer 2.3 a.m.
Women's basketball gladiator at Jabarena, 5 a.m.
ice hockey at A Skowenberg. Sweden vs. Poland, 6
a.m. France vs. Spain. Paris vs. Austria,
Austria, 5 a.m. Al Zetra. Canada vs. Norway, 6:30
a.m. West Germany vs. Sweden. 10 a.m.,
Central Florida vs. New York.
Tuesday, February 14
Tuesday, February 14
Bristol, taken event of Japman, 2 a.m.
Men 1.1 m, 1.00 m speedcaching at Zetra, 2.0 a.m.
Women's a skipper glide at Jabariat, 5 a.m.
A skier goes down the slopes at Krakatoa.
Ice dance, free dance, at Zetra, 10:30 p.m.
Women's figure skating, compulsory figures, at
Skenderja. 12 fig. a.m.
Women's 3 x 4 km cross country ski relay at
leman. 2 a.m.
Women a 3.000 m speedadapting at Zetra; 2:30 a.m.
Doubles hue at Treflevac, a 3:10 a.m.
Doubles huge 14 lb olive; 26 lbs.
Mert's alpine giant slalom at Jelenaica, 5 a.m.
ice hockey – At Skidenberger vs. Austria a 6 m: m. Uglyaselia vs. Poland, 9:30 a.m. : West Germany, Italy, Switzerland, Italy, Poland, 8:30 a.m. : Belfast, United Kingdom, 8:30 a.m. : Belfast, United Kingdom, 1:30 p.m. : Czechmolenburg vs. Canada, 1:30 p.m.
Men's 3 x 9 km cross country ski relay at Ignan, 2 m,
4.
Men's 1.500 m speedkicking at Zetra, 2:40 a.m.
Men's 3.000 m speedkicking at Balaenophae, 8:00 a.m.
Men's figure skating, free skating, at Zetra, 10:30 p.m.
Friday, February 17
Biathlon, 3 x 7.5 kms relay, at Igman, 2 ~
Women's alpine slalom at Jabrina, 4.0 a.m.
Women's bobsleigh first, and second races, at Ruckus,
6:30 p.m.
ice hockey (playoffs for placings) 1A
Shreerunjita 3 a 0.8 m, 1 p.m. AT Zetra 1a 10 m,
1Shreerunjita 3 a 0.8 m, 1 p.m. AT Zetra 1a 10 m,
p.m.
Sunday, February 19
Women's figure skating, free skating, at Zetra, 12 p.m.
Men's 50km cross country skating at Igman, i a. Men's alpine slalom at Belleslane, 3:30 a.m.
j skipping, 10m, at Male Polie, 5:30 a.m.
Four-man bob, 30b, and fourth runs, at Trebecin
Marshfield, February 18
Women's 2bkm country cycling at Igman, 2 a.m.
1. In pole stand at eyeball height, 3 - 4 ft.
2. Ice hockey (playoff for placements) At Zetra
Brown will return to football if he beats Harris in footrace
By United Press International
CHICAGO — Hall of Famer Jim Brown, admitting that he was not as smart as Franco Harris, yesterday restated his decision to come out of retirement at the age of 47 to protect his career rushing record.
Brown, who used to play for the Cleveland Browns, appeared yesterday on the Phil Donahue show with the two running backs closest to his all-time record in the Cardinals' careers of the Pittsburgh Steelers and Walter Pavon at the Chicago Bears.
Brown, who will turn 48 on Feb. 17, said he would seek a tryout with the Los Angeles Raiders if he was able to defeat Harris in a 40-yard dash. The former Penn State state indicated he would be willing to accept the challenge.
After the show, Brown said he was encouraged by Harris' response.
"I believe right now I could beat you in the 40." Brown said to Harris.
"This is the first time I realized Franco would race me," he said. "If he beats me, I will forget about coming back."
And Harris replied, "There are probably one ear-old who could be in charge, but Jim isn't cann't."
During the program, Brown said that professional football had become corrupted by drugs, television and athletes who were not interested and entertainers more than gladiators.
"They do so many things that remind me of my movie days," said Brown. "I know I am wrong."
movie career “Sport, to me, is sport,
it’s not about money. It’s about
knowing who you are.”
Brown said he was not always impressed by Harris' performance, particularly when the fullback ran in contact, thereby prolonging his career.
"The only reason to run out of bounds is to stop the clock," said Brown, who praised Payton for sharing his philosophy of running.
But Harris, who is in second place on the career rushing list, defended his face by saying that a player was most likely to score when he tried to turn near the sideline.
"Most of the time when you're running to the sidelines, you're running sideways which is the worst possible way to run," he said. "When you play, you don't use just your athletic ability, you use your head."
"He's telling the truth," Brown said.
"He's smarter than Walter and I."
Brown also questioned the value of statistics used to establish the greatness of today's superstars and said that any star runner who failed to reach 1,000 yards during the current 16-game schedule was "a cripple."
1
"Is 1,000 yards in 16 games representative of a good season?" asked Brown, who compiled much of his yardage during 12-game campaigns. "It's a standard that shouldn't even be talked about."
1
Payton and Harris, however, showed that they could play a little defense of their own when they spoke up for their brand of football.
The University Daily KANSAN
SPORTS ALMANAC
KU RecreationResults
BASKETBALL
Men's Independent Rec. A
Scorched Stone 12, Haven II
Jerry Kids's Jelly 5, Haena Hoop 33
Express 6, So What 57
The Smiles 58, The Cops 33
The Painters 59, The Tennis 48, Whitkey Rockers 25
JT'a 50, Hormones 28
Ms. Residence Rec. A
58 Temple Street, Nights 1 30
Penthouse 51, Night Beds 1 38
Fearson Hall 53, X-rooms 23
Skipper Hall 54, Skippers 38 (OT)
Running Room 62
Men's Independent Ree B.
Mr. Larry K. Kids 37, Buch-Aballies 33
No Defense 57, Legion of Doom 48
Shirts 22, The Nobodies 20
Jayhicks 38, The "B" Team 20
Kynbiles 49, PCB's 37
Oge Offers 46, Ne从Nraku 17
Daykynks 38, the B' Team 20
Knybblies 46, PCB'S 37
Geo-Ofers 48, Frog-N-Krauts 17
February 7,1984
Core Dame 13 12 6 684
Texas-San Antonio 13 6 687
Marquee 12 12 7 625
Pan American 12 7 625
Dayton 10 10 7 589
SE Louisiana 9 9 500
Hapit (Australia) 9 9 500
New Orleans 9 9 475
Tennessee State 7 10 412
W. C.Wilmington 7 10 475
N.J. 12 12 294
Grizzly's Bears 33, King T' s 23
The Skeas 37, Coors Light Beer Wolfs 27
Page 11
Mudhens 21, Fabulous Freebirds 20
Uncle Dudley's B-ball Review 41, Blackballs 23
The Skins 37, Coors Light Bear Wolfs 27
Women's New Bc. 28
Triangle Little Sisters beat Chick's Chicks
be foretold
The Tom girl beat NSAE by forfeit
Men's Greek Rev. A
DX Stud Buckets 37, Let's get Naked 2
EIS Shorts Game 1
College Basketball Standings
| | Conference | All Games |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | W J. Pct. | W I. Pct. |
| Temple | 8 2 900 | 14 4 778 |
| St. Joseph's | 8 2 500 | 14 4 778 |
| St. Joseph's | 8 2 500 | 14 4 778 |
| Gw. Oak | 9 2 506 | 13 9 526 |
| Duquesne | 5 500 | 7 12 300 |
| St. Bona | 5 500 | 7 12 300 |
| Mississippi | 7 300 | 7 11 389 |
Rhode Island | 7 300 | 8 10 411 |
Penn St. | 7 300 | 8 10 411 |
| Miami | 8 2 733 | 8 12 400 |
W L Pct.
DePaul 17 7 0 1.000
Settos 14 5 737
SW Louisiana 15 5 722
Conference All Games
W 1. Pct. W 1. Pct.
Brown 30 66 58
Cornell 4 2 66 10 7 589
Kent 4 2 66 10 7 589
Harvard 3 3 50 7 8 467
Yale 3 3 50 6 11 353
Penn 6 3 50 6 11 353
Cochabene 4 3 33 11 570
ATLANTIC 10
**Conference** W. 1 Pct. All Games
Northeastern 1 W. 1 Pct. W. 1 Pct.
Canton 6 2 750 13 6 844
Cumberland 6 2 750 13 6 854
New Hampshire 6 4 371 10 6 856
Oregon 6 4 371 10 6 856
Nigarua 5 2 286 6 12 333
Vermont 5 2 286 6 12 331
Wisconsin 5 2 286 6 12 331
Conference All Games
W L Pct. W L Pct.
Richmond 3 1 600 5 145
Wm & Mary 3 2 600 8 104
Geo Mason 3 3 500 14 789
Nah 2 3 400 16 672
Madison 2 3 400 16 672
Madison 2 3 1407 6 144
Croatia 2 3 1407 6 144
ECAC METRO
ECAC SOUTH
| | Conference | All Games |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Long Island | W 1 Pct. | W 1 Pct. |
| Long Island | W 3 Pct. | W 3 Pct. |
| Marist | 6 3 667 | 11 8 579 |
| St. Fran (Pa) | 6 3 667 | 10 9 580 |
| F. Dixonion | 6 4 600 | 11 9 504 |
| Loyola (Md) | 5 500 | 10 9 504 |
| Siena | 3 6 333 | 9 10 474 |
| Wagner (Pa) | 3 222 | 9 10 474 |
| Wagner (Fr) | 1 8 111 | 9 10 474 |
METRO ATLANTIC ATHLETIC
| | W L.Pet. | W L.Pet. | W L.Pet. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Iona | 7 | 187 | 85 | 176 |
| St. Peter's | 6 | 275 | 10 | 132 |
| Bailie | 6 | 250 | 12 | 142 |
| Fairfield | 4 | 450 | 8 | 142 |
| Army | 4 | 460 | 11 | 111 |
| Hot Cross | 4 | 400 | 11 | 100 |
| Forlum | 4 | 400 | 11 | 102 |
EAST Conference All Games
W L Pct. W L Pct.
Duckett 8 0 117 W 14
Bucknell 7 0 175 12 67
Rider 7 7 756 12 667
Rider 5 4 106 12 667
Hofstra 5 4 156 91 407
Hofstra 5 4 500 11 634
Lafayette 4 4 690 11 640
Lafayette 4 6 900 11 640
Lehigh 6 3 333 14 412
American St. 6 3 333 14 412
Towson 8 2 800 16 340
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
Conference
W 1 Pct. MG Games
N Carolina
Maryland
Oklahoma
Duke
Wake Forest
Alabama
Clemson
W 1 Pct. MG Games
4 2 667 14 4 778
4 2 667 14 4 778
4 2 667 14 4 778
4 2 667 15 7 739
4 2 667 15 7 739
4 2 667 15 7 739
4 2 667 15 7 739
4 2 667 15 7 739
4 2 667 15 7 739
The University Dailv
ATLANTIC COAST
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
SCHOOL 2-5 SKILLS
| Words | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10-Days or Weeks |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0-15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 |
| 10-20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 |
| 21-25 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.85 |
| For every 5 words add: | 5.10 | 5.60 | 7.25 | 1.05 |
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Wednesday
POLICIES
Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No reserves allowed in classified displays. No overflows allowed in classified display ads.
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
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- Incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
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form cases can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ad can be placed on person or simply by calling the Kauai business office at 804-4358
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* Checks must accompany all classified adls attached to The University Daily Kansas
ANNOUNCEMENTS
AIRLINES HIRING STEADWARDES; Reserva
CNR CALIFORNIA TRAVEL ASSOCIATE
Newsletter 1/101-9440 EXT
MTA Mailer
ATTENTION PERSONS wishing to travel
from the United States to Albertville,
Albertville Convention Contact Jon at 841-8030. Leaflet
NO. 95.
...
The University Daily KANSAN
SPRING BREAK in PADRE
for $139
Horseback Riding $6.00 per hour
KOA Campground 842-3877
Hayrack Rides Also
Bulletin Board Service Poster Design & Distribution
Town & Campus 100 locations, Reasonable
Auction-weekly consignment every 7 Friday at 5 p.m.
Showmakers. Ace Carw Air Uriver Bridge, 2 miles
Sun-N-Fun with Summit call for info 749-0048
ATT reproduction and laser photos, photo ART SALE
ATT reproduction and laser photos, photo ART SALE
to choose from 4 each or 3 for $1. Sponsored by
Sony.
Applications are now being accepted for Subent of Fee. Applications must be submitted by the Weekend. Applications are available at the Track Office, 141 Allen Field House. Be a part of this great KU tradition. Deadline for application is June 30.
Hawaii, References. Rick 843239 or Ali 841-5000
CRUISESHIPS HIRING! $16 -430.00 Carribean,
Hawaii. World. Call for Guide, Directory, Newsletter.
| 1-916 | 944-4400 | EXT UNAKUSANCRUSE
Kansan classifieds get results
Interested in RUGGY? Contact Rick or Doug at 842-0577.
1 and 3 bedroom apartments available immediately.
Good campus location on bus route. Contact
us for details.
Gemini HDI printer demonstration. Alphabeticputer Center™. Lawrence's original computer center.
FOR RENT
2 Bedroom in basement of beautiful house 5 minutes from campus. Garage, Private parking and enclosure. Electric heating.
ART/CRAFT SPACES: one with water; one
skylight; one window. 843-6252, 843-6191
BRAND NEW
TOWNHOUSES
AT
SUNRISE PLACE
9th & MICHIAGAN
Apple Croft, A/C Heat & Water, Quilt Luxury On
campus of campus 1, BR 872, 741 W 18h, W 18h
9a.
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
Are you sick of dorm life? Try a refreshing alternative! I will pay you $10 to sublease my Naismith Hall contract. Great food, good friends, luxurious住屋 and wonderful private bathroom and swimming pool. Call 749-8472.
Affordable luxury. 3 year old duplex in excellent condition. large range of appliances. Dryer in beadroom. Energy efficient. Appliances with washer and dryer hookup. Private Parking. Close to Dibsons, Hardy's, Hardy's House, & more.
Excellent location. One block to town, three blocks to KL. Two bedroom apartment, low wi-fi, centrally located kitchen. First month rent for 2 bedroom unfurnished and a private kitchen. Plate kitchen with dishwasher and garbage disposal. On KU bus route and close to shopping. Laundry facilities and pools. Come by 278B Reid Lane 11 to pick up.
Help! Sublube modern efficient two bedroom apt.
cable pad, cable S. from Zinc. Red Oak Rocks.
Cabinette in the center of room.
Large deep apartment one block from union. Quiet, study atmosphere. One book for no pets.
Jaynavi APARTMENTS West
1 & 2 BR APTS FROM $200
Need a lease through May
CALL US TODAY!
842-4444
Open Sat.
524 Frontier Road
MEADOWBROOK still available one and two bedroom furnished and unfurnished apts. Heat and water included, 2 blocks from campus, and excellent maintenance service. Prices from $265
MEDAOWBROOK—furnished studio available immediately. Gas and water paid. 2 blocks from campus, on bus route, laundry facilities. Call 842-4900, 15th and Creline
RENT NEW FOR FALL. Take your pack of joyery
from $390 to $485 at Kmart or a new
new condition. Starting at $26. See our unit
toys page for details.
2 new Bedroom apt at 9th & Michigan, Appliances,
Private Balcony, Low utilities, sub lease
MUST RENT! Will charge a $25 per room lowbrow
bedroom with basement and fireplace. Rich
bedroom with basement and fireplace. Rich
MUST RENT! votre 3 bedroom apartment close to canoe. service: $250 plus utility费. no deposit required.
FOR SALE
Submit our 28K bank with, w/ W D jackets, desk set and table set. We will give you $200 for your deposit for yourself plus we will pay 1/2 of that amount to your bank.
Drafting table. 48 x 36. Wood frame, vinyl top, adjustable height, adjustable tilt, one year old
Save $125 per month. 2-bedroom apartment-like
new and 3 backs from KU. Call 843-4798
Roll Sun. Cream happy sunshine, slushy chin-
ter, 3" double sided, double denuded quantity of B' single or double sided; B' hard seated). Mark or Jon Finger Jr. 4290 Backcover 841-757 (Canon)
Sublakee Meadowbrook studio, VV 219; $245/mo.
842-4200
KU Students we still have a few fully furnished classrooms and our own office. We campus-校办 924-4455, 8125 or 812132.
924-4455, 8125 or 812132.
Sublease. 1 BR apt. close to dapartment, balcony, new carpet, dishwasher, $240, 84-6668
ATR reproduction and laser photo ART SALE
to choose from. #4 or #5 or #7. Sponsored by
to choose from. #4 or #5 or #7. Sponsored by
25" Magnavox color console $215. Fewer JPC for stereo table $90. Call 847-7169. Nadom.
BASS GUITAR Fittar T-30, new fitted case, 35.9", 14" pickup. Great set up for $650 or separately. Make.
ATARAN 400 XL. one month old-like $150. Call 749-2407 after 5 p.m.
Foil sale Radar detector "Fox XR" Brand new
AM/FM amber panel 2 speaker Call MA835
Sublease two bedroom bdpm, carpet, air conditioning,
cloose, then campus downstairs. $275, 749-6427
4 ch. SUN Studio Pad A; with Reverb; 5 pc CBF00
Precision Drum Set A; 60 bmp. amp. B奏 C900
Call to Order
Sublease nice studio apartment available immediately 790-0983.
For Sale: Women in 10-speed bike. $69 checked.
For Sale: Women in full good condition. Call 843-7627 and ask about insurance.
HONDA CRZ750-F90 excellent condition, quarter
manual. 2-year warranty. A reasonable offer will be accepted. 843-136-106
Bose–interfero Alpha 3 speakers. Brand new and too big for my use. Call fast and make an offer. Ask
IBM PC compatible. *F* from $965. Alphabetic Computer
Lawrence. *L* from another computer center
Ladies eeklin leather boots Size 9 with "3" dress heel. Call 842-3001.
Beeel 642-624-222
Pavel 7a-bay with cash, accessories. Perfect
for travel.
Accessible, portable, 624-742-742
Stereo-television footage. All name brands Lowest price. KC area. Total Sound Distributors, LLC
THEATRICAL MMAKEUP KIT-Large, loaded,
tackle box 651 firm. Call 841-4734
T1.59, PC 100A Printer, Master-Business decisions
Must-hull-utility-security software, 749-8076
Used Furniture at Shearman's, across Kaw River Bridge. 2 miles north of Lawrence on 29-59 Highway.
U.S. and U.N. stamps, mint and used, bargain priced.
Collectors call 843-5189, eighnings.
USED CARPETS--dorm room sizes, mostly shags,
$30, leave message 842-4133
Used cameras, large selection, B.C. T
16kpgs; 2013 SanaPa, Overland Park, KS
16kpgs; 2013 SanaPa, Overland Park, KS
Western Civilization Notes ... including New Supplement to Western Civilization: Use it to use the new study guide. 2. For class presentation. 4. For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Book is at Town Crier, the Jayhawk Books and Academic Publishing.
AUTOSALES
1957 Chevy Belt Air Elite four door Good condition,
original Must sell $1200 Serious
buy now
1971 Dodge Charger, AC, PS, PB, new Auto. Trans.
Snow trap wire and connector 828.4307.5407
1977 WW RABBIT—Well cared for. Must sell. $1300.
8421-4173 at 6, anytimeweekends.
Ford Mustang V6, automatic. All extra. stero 5200 PS/DC with speakers. Call 743-527 or 537
1081 Datamont Z8 XZ GLP 5 speed, rear loader, load
bridge, 24-inch monitor, hard mount, must sharp, must sell
b00 or best deal, gps receiver
198 VW Rabbit LS, 4-door, AC stereo, Cass, 25,000 miles
$4800. 841-937-6
Must sell. Fiat 128, 1975, 4 cylinder, 50,000, good condition.
$890. Kitcar #61, model no. 843-8423.
or a non-clinical diarrest. Must sell since 1976.
Holden's are more likely to have more
arelets than 15 reasonable offer. Call Altaft at
415-322-2222.
LOST AND FOUND
Found-Ccontact lenses leave of 108强 on Jan. 19. To pick up or lost & found in New York Authority.
Found: two watches and a retainer. Claim at Watson Circulation desk. ID will be required.
HELP WANTED
Lost in December in 12d floor Strong Hall Computer
Rooms. Call Lia at 864-375-6135 8:5 p.m. or 843-360-6940
CAMP STAFF WANTED for Camp Lincoln/Camp
Lawrence, with a commitment to working with
community, along with skills and experience in activita-
tion. Send resumes to Camp Lincoln,
232 Carwall Hall, for interviews on Campus Wednes-
day.
Airlines are hiring. Flight attendants Reserva
Guide, Newsletter (916) 944-4400
Email: airline@reserva.com
Wanted: Camp Daisy Hindman Staff for June July, 1984. Business Manager, Health Officer, Unit Assistant, WSI and Small Craft Instructors Ceramicist, WSI and Small Craft Instructors, Horse Born Manager, Nature and Craft Director, and Kitchen Assistant positions open. Applicants to Camp Daisy Hindman Scout Council, Inc. F.O. Box 4314, Topkaka,山西
Earn $18 weekly working in your home. Part of our
workforce. Send resume to:
envelope to: FK, Box 1651, Lawrence, 60044
Resumes now being accepted for 6 management positions in Eastern Kansas. No prior experience necessary. College graduates preferred. Fugate Institute 8203 Pearlachtey. HS Kia 97207.
Week-long positions for Assistant Instructors in natural history Summer Workshops for Young People. Museum of Natural History, KU. June 16th - August 25th/hy/gr/phil. Contact Ruth Genchin, Director of Public Health 602 J Dyche Hall (913) 864-4177. An equal opportunity employer.
Cruiseways are hiring! $16-30,000. Carribean.
Cruiseways are hiring! $16-30,000. Carribean.
1:916 - 9:164 Etx. UK/NAUTICALS
1:916 - 9:164 Etx. UK/NAUTICALS
Pre-Engering, & Phy Set Majors: 4 & 3 Y/4 Y
M/K RT07 Scholarships are Available. Contact CAPT
M/M: Marta Schultz, Set Mjb, Set Cal or Call 864-5111
María Pizza drive just for applications! Apply in
80910 @WPJI JWJ for 10 d/month.
MISCELLANEOUS
Concerned about your income and your education? Let American Youth Enterprises show you our program's benefits. You can enroll in up to 40 hours can earn you $60-80 per week as well as help you become a Youth Enterprise. P.O. Box 641 Kansas City, MO
Experienced electronic technician. Part time during school and full time in summer. Send resume to JobStaff@northco.com.
BUSINESS PERS.
PERSONAL
Diplomacy: Anyone interested in playing this class: avalon hill game, bill 841-4890. Keep calling.
Tonight the BAPTST STUDENT UNION" will present the topic "Getting The Most from Scripture." We meet every Tuesday evening at the center 629 7500 - 8000. "Not just for Baptists!"
A strong kool outfit (Bennett Retail Laundry, Chu-
lled Gym), 19.5 x 16 x 8 inches, north of
Meredith Stadium, 348 Hipons, Illinois 61201.
Bicycle through Europe. June 11 July 11. 6 Countryside. Call 843-729-8100. GAILLEG WAISHTHIRNE available for immediate delivery. 144 each postpaid. Mary Colleen. 605-105-8858 or write box 317.
We Meet or Beat
Any Available Air Fare
Roundtrip Discount or
Reduced Air Tickets
St. Louis $178
Colorado Springs $100
Chicago $120
Houston $130
New Orleans $138
Denver $150
Washington, D.C. $160
Las Vegas $180
Tampa $198
Orlando $198
Fort Lauderdale $198
Phoenix $200
New York $198
Los Angeles $230
Hawaii $359
Indianapolis $409
ALL SPRING CHARTER FLIGHTS
FILLING FAST
K.C.-Frankfurt $50w.
K.C.-London $599
Chicago-Munich $569
Chicago-Paris $569
Chicago-Madrid $579
Chicago-Dusseldorf $629
Receive $100,000 Flight insurance with every airline ticket purchased at no additional cost.
Restrictions May Apply SPECIAL BONUS
841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center
1601 West 23rd
M-F 9-5:30; Sat. 9:30-2:00
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early-
care conditionals satisfied greater Kansas City
area confidence.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization,
immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits.
CAMBEDGE Diet January Cleanance. Making room for new shipment up to 16 off on select flavors in our catalog. Free delivery.
In the Isambards of women who regularly use MARV KAY CAMESIET™ Call Dame: 841-4734 for use at Marv's offices. Magazine size comes 50% off; Savage Sword of Conan, Marvari, Marlog, Jan 23-11th
114th at Kwaiyaki 107 West 17th St. 843-7299
MODELS WANTED At Ultimate Hair & Skin Care
MODES WANTED. At Ultimate Hair & Skin Care Center. 14 Eighth St. Eth. Call 719-8711.
National Lampoon and MAD 90e sale. Jan 21 through Feb 11 at Hulu.com, Games 167,厅 1/2, black box 1/4. $25.
25% Off Feb. 7 Only
on any in stock books
Cross Reference Book
& Gift Shop
Mall Stores Center
Organic Land, lahred near Garderie KS, Community mercantile grocery shop, 700 Maine, 843-844-844
Believe femininity -girls guys -The Touch" in your privacy of your own place. Message only if inexperienced.
*BEST PRICE ONLY*
Last Chance To Hit The Slopes!
SKIING
SKI VAIL/BEAVER CREEK call TOLL FREE
1-800-222-4400 or CONSULT YOUR TRAVEL AGENT
FOR DISCOUNT RATES on lodging, lifts, and rentals
Say it on a shirt, custom silicone screen printing. T-shirts, toenses and neck. Shirtsthrift 750-761-1611
jerysees and caps. Swirl at Sbursa 749-1611
Sending a SEING TELGRAM - a unique appeal for Valentine's Day! Special price through Feb. 14th. Call Enaard 804-1616
Make Your Spring Break Travel Plans Now!
Sensitive, nurturing people respond positive line with a group's language. Women's Transitional in group activities. Contact. Women's Transitional in group activities. Contact.
We offer:
Sensitive, strong women to act as volunteers. All women must apply. Commitment to the self determination of women required. Volunteers for daytime and evening desired. Women's Transitional Care Services
- Eurail passes
Guaranteed lowest air force
THIRD STREET Appliances. Appliances, furniture, clothing.
Vermont. Always good bargain.
Vernon. 16 F. Worth
8, 9th St.
Student nips to Europe/iceland Airlines reservations and tickets
749-0700
The Etc. Shop 732 Mass has formal wear, vintage,
and classical clothing. Open 11 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday
through Friday. Call (844) 629-2111. The Kegger-
=1610.1 9 w 22rd, KEG Gear BULE $33,
COP or pump set up. 841-9450
WHOLESALE SYSTEM RENTAL. P.A. systems.
Disco Systems, Guitar and Bass Amps. 814-6495.
Johnny's Tavern Live music. Thurs. & Sat. Feb. 9 &
11. Blue plate special.
SERVICES OFFERED
Learn to Fly Flight Instructor. Very
Suitable Rates. 814-7494-7504. 929 Ask for
Garden Bike.
- Amtrack tickets
Maupintour travel service
ENGLISH FLD. will help make your writing clear.
ENGLISH FLD. will help make your writing clear.
Tauteng, Nogir 151, 162, 102, 203, Call Me
Hugo, Johannesburg 151, 162, 102, 203, Call Me
Hugo, Johannesburg
Experienced child care In my home Quiet
neighborhood 749-5080
Need help in math? Experimented math tutor can
call: Call 843-179-159 for Fred.
Call 843-179-159 for Fred.
- Flight insurance
Photography, bridal paetahosa, wedding albums, candids, portfolios, compositions, sports events, teams, and individuals. Bill Zook. 542-3438晚ings. Box 244, Eduard, Kansas 66025.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Massachusetts.
downtown all hair, $5.00. No appointment
with us.
3 Services at 1 location. Typing, editing, graphics.
WORD ARTISTS Ellen K141-9172
SPANISH TUTOR transmitter. Native speaker. Ex-
cellent speaking, intermediary and advanced
calling. Call 855-262-9131.
TYPING
iSt Rate Typing) The original (and only) AAA Typing,
accept no subscripts 842.1942
24-hour typing. All day, all night. Experienced-themes. resume, papers. Fast, ac-
A A A A AFFABLE TYPING SERVICE Fast first quality typing. WORD PROCESSING 841 0606.
AFFORDABLE QUALITY for all your typing needs.
Call Judy, 842-9495 at 6 p.m.
Absolutely Letter Perfect Typing, Editing, Book
Maintenance quality 84-86%, overnight service available
overnight; overtime service available
Accurate, affordable typing. Ask about speed,
overnight service under 25 pages. Call Mary-
Call TIP TOP TYPING - 1203 iowa. Experienced
Cabling Manager. Memorywritery
Royal Catering Director.
D.N.R. 843-7500 D.N.R. 843-7500
Excellent typing at reasonable rates. IBM Selectric
(pica). Call 842 948-498 before 10 a.m.
Call Ferry for your typing needs: letters, terms paper, dissertation data. Select concluding selective cursive or print letters. Noon - 10am. Noon - 2pm.
Computerized word processor or IBM Correcting Selectric used by experience typists for a professional format for your dissertation, terms, thesis applications, resumes, mailing lists. Call 843-724-714
Elsvie could smile, Shakepease could write my
talent-trying. Call 8642044 after 30 and weeks end.
Experimented Upper Term, paper forms, thorns all over the surface. Hand-cut paper forms. Will and will not correct spelling. Fax 643-8534, Mrs.
'last, accurate uptake at reasonable prices' IBM
'selective Selecting' Call Judy at 843-0891
Correcting Selective Call Judy at 634-715-2800
It's a Fact. Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing. Word
Selective Call Judy at 634-715-2800
**Stop!** Call 841-9424 for all of your typing needs.
**TYPOPLUS PLUS**. These desserts names list.
JEANETTE SHAFFER - TYPING SERVICE IBM
INSTELECT III, Pike or Elmo, 840 897 871
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED. FAST & EFFICIENT
841-3310
Top quality typing and graphics, low rates,
specialize in all social fields. Kathy 842-3378
Typing, Thesis, Dissertation, Term Papers, etc.
Fast, accurate and reliable. Call 841-6357.
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P.3.02 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.03 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.04 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.05 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.06 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.07 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.08 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.09 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.10 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.11 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.12 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.13 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.14 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.15 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.16 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.17 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.18 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.19 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.20 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.21 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.22 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.23 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.24 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.25 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.26 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.27 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.28 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.29 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.30 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.31 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.32 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.33 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.34 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.35 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.36 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.37 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.38 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.39 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.40 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.41 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.42 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.43 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.44 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.45 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.46 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.47 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.48 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.49 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.50 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.51 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.52 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.53 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.54 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.55 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.56 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.57 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.58 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.59 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.60 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.61 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.62 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.63 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.64 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.65 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.66 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.67 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.68 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.69 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.70 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.71 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.72 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.73 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.74 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.75 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.76 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.77 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.78 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.79 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.80 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.81 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.82 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.83 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.84 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.85 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.86 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.87 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.88 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.89 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.90 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.91 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.92 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.93 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.94 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.95 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.96 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.97 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.98 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.99 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.10 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.11 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.12 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.13 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.14 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.15 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.16 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.17 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.18 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.19 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.20 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.21 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.22 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.23 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.24 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.25 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.26 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.27 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.28 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.29 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.30 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.31 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.32 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.33 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.34 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.35 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.36 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.37 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.38 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.39 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.40 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.41 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.42 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.43 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.44 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.45 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.46 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.47 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.48 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.49 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.50 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.51 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.52 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.53 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.54 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.55 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.56 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.57 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.58 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.59 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.60 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.61 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.62 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.63 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.64 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.65 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.66 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.67 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.68 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.69 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.70 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.71 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.72 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.73 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.74 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.75 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.76 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.77 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.78 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.79 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.80 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.81 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.82 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.83 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.84 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.85 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.86 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.87 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.88 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.89 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.90 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.91 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.92 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.93 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.94 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.95 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.96 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.97 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.98 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.99 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.10 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.11 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.12 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.13 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.14 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.15 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.16 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.17 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.18 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.19 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.20 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.21 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.22 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.23 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.24 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.25 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.26 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.27 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.28 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.29 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.30 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.31 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.32 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.33 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.34 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.35 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.36 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.37 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.38 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.39 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.40 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.41 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.42 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.43 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.44 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.45 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.46 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.47 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.48 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.49 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.50 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.51 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.52 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.53 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.54 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.55 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.56 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.57 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.58 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.59 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.60 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.61 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.62 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.63 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.64 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.65 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.66 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.67 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.68 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.69 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.70 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.71 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.72 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.73 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.74 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.75 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.76 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.77 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.78 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.79 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.80 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.81 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.82 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.83 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.84 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.85 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.86 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.87 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.88 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.89 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.90 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.91 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.92 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.93 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.94 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.95 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.96 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.97 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.98 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.99 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.10 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.11 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.12 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.13 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.14 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.15 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.16 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.17 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.18 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.19 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.20 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.21 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.22 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.23 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.24 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.25 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.26 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.27 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.28 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.29 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.30 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.31 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.32 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.33 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.34 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.35 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.36 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.37 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.38 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.39 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.40 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.41 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.42 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.43 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.44 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.45 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.46 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.47 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.48 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.49 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.50 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.51 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.52 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.53 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.54 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.55 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.56 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.57 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.58 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.59 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.60 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.61 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.62 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.63 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.64 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenarios, questions.
P.3.65 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenios, questions.
P.3.66 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenios, questions.
P.3.67 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenios, questions.
P.3.68 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenios, questions.
P.3.69 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenios, questions.
P.3.70 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenios, questions.
P.3.71 processing. Thesis, resume, illustrations,
scenios, questions.
P.3.72 processing. Thesis, resume,简历
参考资料。