A 4x4 truck is parked on a street in the city. There are people walking on the sidewalk and cars driving behind it.
Birthday battalion
Forget the traditional cake and candles. In celebration of KU professor Jim Sherman's 46th birthday, an army of his friends got together last week to give him a ride on a
makeshift Sherman tank — actually a high-speed tractor. Sherman's Sherman mobilized near Haworth Hall and met little resistance on the Hill. See story, page 3.
Clear
High, 80. Low, mid-50s Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 95, No. 7 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, September 4, 1984
BY BRENDA STOCKMAN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas will install by late 1986 a campus-wide telecommunications network capable of transmitting voice, data and video messages, the chairman of the KU telecommunications committee said Friday.
"It's an integrated system designed to meet future needs of the University," said Edward L. Meyen, chairman of the committee and associate vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service.
The system, he said, would revolutionize campus communication, research and data processing by making additional resources available to faculty and students.
The new system, which was outlined in the
committee's prospectus last spring, will replace the current campus telephone system by late 1986 and eventually supply fire and security services, electronic mail. video text, teletext and satellite communications.
CARBONS
THE SYSTEM, ESTIMATED to cost $7.5 million, will connect all University offices and residence halls, although the services available at each site will vary with the needs of the users. Meyen said
"This represents a real opportunity for the University that can dramatically affect its instruction and research mission." Meyen said in a build capabilities and not be nearsighted.
The University began to explore the possibilities of a new telecommunications system about a year ago when news of American Telephone and Telegraph Co.'s
THE PROSPECTUS SAID, "Using the worst case, our telephone bill will be approximately $2.5 million in three years and $3.25 million in five years. If we amortize the purchase cost of a private system over several years, there is good reason to believe that we will be able to fund the equipment cost and the personnel to operate the system within the amount already budgeted for telephones."
This means that by developing its own system, KU will have a complete telecommunications system for about the same money currently spent on telephones. Meyen
Martin L. Jones, associate director of
business affairs, said, "We're now paying about $1.4 million for the telephone system alone."
MEYEN SAID THAT the Kansas Legislature approved a bill this spring that would allow debt financing of the telecommunications system. The law allows the university to borrow from sources and repay it from the University's budget, without a large cost increase.
Jerry Jennings, an official with the state telecommunications office, said that the price of hardware had decreased since the prospectus was released. The project could cost 20 percent less.
Using the $7.5 million price estimate listed in the prospectus, a 20 percent savings would lower the price of the new system to $6 million.
said the state would be responsible for developing telecommunications systems for all state offices and Board of Regents schools. The state is exploring the possibility of developing a network to link all of these systems.
DREWY ALLAIRE, ASSOCIATE director of facilities operations, said that the first six systems to be included in the network would be KU's Lawrence campus, the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Fort Hays State University and the state offices in Topeka
Meyen said that systems for all state agencies were in the planning stages, but KU's system would be installed first.
KU is working out the final details of the plan. Meyen said.
Contest is mud bath for teams
By JOHN EGAN Staff Reporter
Surrounded by sun-scorched grass, they slipped and slid around in the mud. But the setting wasn't a farm, and they weren't hogs
Eight teams participated yesterday in a mud volleyball tournament sponsored by KU Recreational Services. The second annual tournament was played just west of the KU practice fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
Beginning at 1 p.m., the tournament participants competed in two categories: men's and coed. The only requirement was a childlike desire to slosh around in the mud.
The competition wasn't without its pitfalls, however. One muddy player, DaNelle Davis, Anthony senior, said that rocks in the mud poked at her feet and that the brown gue hindered her mobility. But the ultimate challenge was surviving the wrath of her teammates, collectively known as the Mud Diggers.
"IF YOU SCREWED up, you got mud thrown on you," Davis said. "You got booed and mud thrown on you."
1970s
After Davis got cleaned up, she decided that playing in the tournament was fun, despite her team's loss.
"Should have done it last year," she said.
A team called Us — comprised of members of the KU Volleyball Club — and a squad named the Mudders — made up of eight members of the Theta Chi fraternity and a lone female — were starting their欲 to determine the cool championship.
While Davis and others were aiming water hoses at each other to wash away the grime, another round of mud madness was beginning.
Earlier, a team named the Nads had clinched the men's title.
Amid screams, laughter, cheers and chants, the two teams fought for each point — striving to make that set, serve or spike.
A muddy Pat Welch, Omaha, Neb., graduate student, prepares to serve the volleyball during yesterday's mud volleyball tournament sponsored by the University of Kansas Recreational Services. The event was on the northwest side of the KU practice fields. 23rd and Iowa streets.
AT FIRST, THE game was punctuated by jovial remarks. But soon, each team's momentum was building. Both sides were determined to plastered with them, became, to win.
"Trojans can't be beat, Trojans can't be beat," was one of many rousing cries from the Mudders.
"They're dead meat now." one of the
Mudders velled.
At that point in the match, any efforts at remaining clean were futile. Every player showed the splattered signs of fierce competition. Shorts, shirts and bodies
Slowly, the Mudders were closing the gap on Us. Each time the mud-caked volleyball was tossed into the air, the Mudders were inching closer to victory.
See MUD, p. 5, col. 1
31-year-old Timothy Cox marketing professor, dies
By HOLLIE MARKLAND
Staff Reporter
Timothy Cox, 31, an acting assistant professor of marketing in the KU School of Business, died of cancer Sunday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Cox came to the University of Kansas in the spring of 1983 when ill since February
Cox
He was at KU as a faculty member, teaching and conducting research while finishing the requirements for his doctorate degree at Indiana University.
MR. COX HAD completed two-thirds of his research at KU when he died, said Ron Michaela, assistant professor of business.
While at KU. Mr. Cox studied the decision-making process of the consumer when making an important purchase.
"He had the study set up, and he was ready to collect data, which would have been a simple task," Michaela said, "then writing the results and the conclusions."
John Lastovicka, associate professor of business, said "The students were very enthusiastic about him. Replacing a person like Tim will be extra difficult. He had different perspectives on business than the ordinary person with a social psychology or marketing background. He had a purely economic point of view."
MICHAELS. A PERSONAL friend of Mr. Cox, said Mr. Cox loved his family and had a sharp mind that he liked to engage in friendly arguments.
"He would take either side of a topic and discuss it with you," Michaelas said. "He would always sit down and talk to you about anything. I liked and trusted him very well."
Morse, O. Cox was a religious man, said Lorraine Morse of Bella Vista, Ark., his mother-in-
See COX, p. 5, col. 1
Campaign trail leads Reagan and Mondale to California
By United Press International
California's rich lode of 47 electoral votes lured both President Reagan and Democratic nominee Walter Mondale Monday on the traditional Labor Day opening of the presidential campaign.
Neither they nor their running rep, Vice President George Bush and rep. Geraldine Ferraro, wasted time in initiating political attacks at the start of the nine-week campaign season.
But there was a sharp contrast in campaign styles.
Reagan's entourage rolled through the communities of conservative Orange County to well-organized rallies complete with big crowds — an estimated 50,000 in Fountain City and behind the balloons, placards, bunting, sighs and chants of "Four More Years."
UNDERDOGS MONDALE AND Ferraro, after marching in a poorly attended Labor Day parade in Manhattan, flew to an enthusiastic crowd in tiny Merrill, Wis. They rode in a 1958 Ford Fairlane during a light rain to a campaign rally there before completing their journey in Long Beach, Calif.
Only Bush was off on his own in Lermont, III . where he attacked Mondale's "low-road campaign" that would, he said, return the States to "the nightmare of Jimmy Carter."
Reagan told thousands of loyalists in Cupertino, Calif. that "today, we set out to achieve a victory for the future over the past, for opportunity over retreat, for hope over despair, and to move up to all that is possible and not down to that which we fear."
"You ain't seen nothing yet," he declared
See POLITICS, p. 5, col. 1
Studv savs freshman weight gain most dramatic
By CHRISTY FISHER
Staff Reporter
A Pennsylvania State University study, which was released in August, supported what many college students knew all along — that students put on the pounds as freshmen
When students go off to college, they gain more than just knowledge. Unfortunately, many also gain weight.
"There is no question in my mind that the majority of people who see me for weight direction live in the dorsitories," said Ann Kohl, the dietician. Last year, Kohl saw more than 1,000 students with eating-related concerns.
pain in the joints as resident
A dietician at Watkins Hospital thinks that residence-hall living and food are two reasons for students gaining weight.
concerns
**KOPH THINKS THAT** "what is out of sight in mind of mind" Many students would not eat chocolate iced brownies and chocolate chip cookies if such foods were not put in front of them on a regular basis at residence halls, she said recently.
The Penn State study did not find that residence-hall living was a significant factor in weight gain, said Jean Harvey, a 1984 graduate from the University for her greater thesis in nutrition education.
About two-thirds of the students — 67 percent of the men and 62 percent of the women — said they gained weight as freshmen.
But the added inches were not just a first-year initiation rate. About half the students also reported that they gained weight during their remaining college years. The average of 7.3 pounds as sophomores, 7.8 pounds as juniors and 8.8 pounds as seniors.
The study found that weight gain was most dramatic during students' freshmen years. Freshman women gained an average of 9 pounds and men gained 9.1 pounds.
HOWEVER, THIS DOES not mean that students gain an education and about 30 pounds by the time they graduate. Harvey said he took about half of the extra weight during summer months.
Kohl said that students living in residence
halls generally received more information about nutritional services than student's living off-campus. But she said it was likely that students ate more when food was placed in the cafeteria.
Also, students living in residence halls often do not eat food that is best for them. KEYS
Lenoir Ekdahl, director of the food service program for KU residence halls, said that plenty of food was available to students living in residence halls. But she said that was not necessarily a reason for students gaining weight.
"If you have food out before you, you don't have to eat everything," she said. "We have other options. Students can have skim milk and other low-calorie items such as fresh fruit, open-faced sandwiches. If they choose wisely, and exercise to burn up calories, there is no reason for a student to gain weight."
EKDAILH, SAID THAT in addition to the main course, students had a choice of bread,
See WEIGHT, p. 5, col. 3
KU
'88
LON
September 4,1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily
KANSAN
$40 million prize winner bought $1 lottery ticket
CHICAGO — A 28-year-old Chicago printer who bought a single $1 ticket showed up with a bearing misy yesterday to claim the $40 million Illinois Lotto jackpot, the biggest lottery prize in North American history.
"My lifestyle will probably not change," he said. "I've got a beautiful life with a family and a future fiancee."
Michael E. Wittkowski, wearing blue jeans and flanked by his smiling family, grinned broadly as he told a news story about he told only one ticket last week — the winner.
Joining Wittkowski at the podium was his girlfriend, Francine Pappas, 22, also of Chicago. The two plan to marry as soon as Pappas sets the date, Wittkowski said, and one of his first purchases will be an engagement ring.
Chernenko active, Soviet says
MOSCOW — A Soviet official said yesterday that President Konstantin Chernenko is fulfilling his duties, although he has not been seen in public for more than seven weeks.
Viktor Lomeiko, spokesman for the foreign ministry, told a news conference that a weekend statement by the 72-year-old leader of the Communist Party party he is active.
Chernenko, who suffers from chronic shortness of breath believed caused by emphysema, was last seen in public July 13. Two days later the official media announced he had left Moscow for his summer vacation.
Plant releases radioactive gas
ALKEN, S.C. — A mile-wide cloud of radioactive titan oxide gas released by an accident at the Energy Department's top-secret Savannah River Plant dissipated harmlessly into the atmosphere yesterday, plant officials said.
The tritium oxide gas—a key ingredient of hydrogen bombs—escaped Sunday night and drifted northward.
neither the 300-square mile plant nor the nearby city of Aiken was evacuated, and SRP spokesman Cliff Webb said only trace amounts of radiation reached the ground.
Student dies in dormitory fall
WASHINGTON — Alcohol was apparently at least partially responsible for the death of an American University freshman who fell off the roof of a dormitory Saturday, a university spokeswoman said yesterday.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports.
Labor Day no picnic for Carter
By United Press International
NEW YORK — Former President Jimmy Carter spent Labor Day hammering and sawing with 40 other Georgians rehabilitating a dilapidated tenement in the drug-infested Lower East Side of New York City.
Carter's former vice president, Walter Mondale, was marching up fashionable Fifth Avenue about a mile away while Carter toiled in one of New York's poorest neighborhoods. When completed the six-story building will house 19 families.
Screaming buzz saws, hammering and occasional clouds of dust billowed out of doors and windows as the man who served in the war fought to hold a news conference outside the building.
"I'm not running for anything, I'm a Christian and this is part of my Christian duty. I believe in this project," Carter said.
CLAD IN A BLE workshirt, khaki pants and sneakers, Carter declined to discuss politics, saying only that he hoped Mondale won the Novembeer election.
BROOKLYN
United Press International
"I've always been a working person; it's not anything new for me. I've worked around the farm. I've worked around the factory, and I helped build a house in Georgia," said the peanut farmer who became president.
Carter and about 40 volunteers from the Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, Ga., arrived in New York by bus Sunday to lead a winding on the crumbling, so-year-old tenement.
New York — Former President Jimmy Carter appears behind an ornamental window frame as he helps to rehabilitate an East Village slum building. Carter, his wife Rosalynn and 40 friends from Plains, Ga., will spend the next five days working in the area.
Diplomat talks to Ugandan leaders about killings
Ry United Press International
Attairs Chester Crocker, the highest ranking U.S. diplomat to visit Uganda in four years, met with top Ugandan officials on his arrival but talks with President Milton Obote were postponed.
permitted. Crocker was expected to discuss with the president charges by U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Elliot Abrams that the Ugandan army was committing mass murder and genocide.
KAMPALA, Uganda — The Reagan administration's top African expert met yesterday with Ugandan leaders to deal with a diplomatic crisis set off by U.S. charges that Ugandan troops have killed up to 200,000 civilians in three years.
Assistant Secretary of State for Africa
Obote, who came to power in 1980 following the fall of dictator Idi Amin, has launched a military campaign against rebels in the Luwero triangle — a Maryland-sized chunk of bush and scrub about 50 miles north of Kampala.
Obote's government has admitted the army has been guilty of some excesses in pursuit of the guerrillas, but says they have killed about 15,000 people.
Philippines buffeted by Typhoon Ike
By United Press International
SURIGAO Philippines — The second storm to rampage through the Philippines in less than a week left at least 325 people dead, 200,000 others homeless and the southern city of Surigao in ruins before heading out to the South China Sea yesterday.
Typhoon Ike, the most powerful storm to hit the Philippines in 14 years with peak winds of 137 mph, slammed into the sugar-producing central Cebu province Sunday and roared across seven major islands in two days.
"THE CITY LOOKS like it was bombed," said a witness in the southern port city strewn with uprooted coconut trees and houses ripped into heaps of splintered wood and crumpled sheets of corrugated metal.
I keeled out to the South China Sea toward Vietnam yesterday after destroying 90 percent of the houses in Surigao, where 350 others were reported missing.
Sougo city Mayor Constancio Navarro said 82 people were killed and 94,000 of the city's 135,000 residents were left homeless. The city, 135 miles southeast of Manila, was also left powerless with short supplies of fresh water.
"Typhoons are not taken very seriously here. We are used to it. But then the winds started to become very strong. The people were really caught by it." Navarro said.
Offshore, on the tiny island of Nonoc another 25 were killed. Armed Forces Chief Gen. Fabian Ver said in Manila.
IN THE LAKESHORE, town of Mainint, 28 miles southwest of Surigao, at least 200 others were killed when the lake overflowed its banks and swept their homes away, said the town's army commander, Col. Eduardo Picar.
Picar was among several officials who briefed reporters on their arrival in Surigao aboard a C-130 transport loaded with 35,000 tons of relief supplies.
Six more people died on the sugar-producing central Philippine Island of Negros, seven on the resort island of Cebu and six in the southern province of Misamis Oriental on Mindanao, the Office of Civil Defense reported.
Damage from the two-day storm was estimated to be in the millions, with total damage in Cebu alone placed at $6.8 million.
OCID SAID EXCLUDING Surigao, 105,828 people had been left homeless.
PARKS
What becomes a student most?
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A firm grip on current events. A handle on the push and pull of national politics. Insights into business, the economy, the arts, fitness, fashion, food and fun
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Please note that you will not receive a discount on your StarTimes subscription now to The Kansas City StarTimes and you'll have news you can use at your fingertips if you live on campus you can use the StarTimes delivered right to your door, all semester, for less than $19 — a special student discount.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Speech will explore use of science in literature
Theories of chemical science and human relationships are paralleled in the writings of Goethe, Henry Adams and Thomas Pynchon, said Richard L. Schowen, Solon E. Summerfield Distinguished Professor of Chemistry
Schowan will speak on "Elective Affinities: Science, Certainty and Freedom in Henry Adams and Thomas Pynchon p. 105; woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union
"The point of this lecture is to explore the way the three writers have used scientific ideas in their work," Schowen said.
All three authors write about the ideas of bonding that occur in chemical substances and in human relationships, he said. Each writer also addresses substance change, which produces uncertainty and freedom.
Overseas study aid available
Information will be available on Fulbright-Hays Grants, KU Direct Exchange Scholarships, ITT Fellowships and students during a year of study abroad.
Graduating seniors and graduate students eligible for the grants and 80% scholarships.
Students interested in overseas graduate studies can learn how to finance them at a meeting at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Jawhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Sept. 28 is the last day that the office of study abroad will accept applications for Fulbright Hays Grants and Direct Exchange scholarships.
For more information, contact Anita Herzfeld at the office of study abroad, 203 Lippincott Hall.
Haskell picks centennial head
A South Junior High School teacher was appointed last week to coordinate the 1984-85 centennial celebration at Haskell Indian Junior College.
Clencene Hills, who teaches speech and drama at South Junior High, 273 Louisiana St., is the former chairman of the Douglas County Bicentennial Commission. Gerald E. Gipp, Haskell president, announced Hills' appointment Thursday.
The opening convocation for the cen-
tenual celebration will start at 1 a.m.
the following afternoon.
Prof to lecture on death theme
A professor from the University of California-Los Angeles who has studied death and dying will lecture on suicide and death in April, "kick" at 4 p.m. Sept. 12 in 4076 Wescoe Hall
Edward Schneidman, UCLA professor of thanatology, has long been interested in Hermann Melville, author of "Moby Dick." Dick Hardin, KU professor of English.
"Schneidman has written quite a bit on suicide," Hardin said. "He wrote an article on the death of Herman Melville. I guess his psychology interest led him to Melville."
Anita Herzfeld, director of the office of study abroad, will speak at noon Wednesday on the influence of the Spanish language on English-speaking Costa Ricans.
Her speech, the first in a brown-bag lunch series sponsored by the Center of Latin American Studies, will be in 109 Linnockt Hall.
Herzfeld said her speech would be in Spanish
Several years ago, Herzfeld taught in Costa Rica as part of a cultural exchange with the University of Kansas. While there, she met a group of black students who spoke English better than she did.
She said that the students spoke a Creole language based on English vocabulary. The language, called "nekeyapuy," was spoken to Costa Rica's native Spanish, she said.
Today will be mostly sunny with a high around 80 and easterly winds of 5 to 10 mph. Tonight and tomorrow will be clear to partly cloudy. The low tonight will be in the mid-50s, with the high tomorrow in the 80s again.
Weather
By SUZANNE BROWN
Staff Reporter
No banners or parades marked Lawrence's ouie Lalder Day holiday yesterday.
But the peaceful streets on a day traditionally given to community celebration did not surprise Charles Warriner, KU professor of sociology.
Warriner said the lack of activity in most towns and cities on Labor Day was a symptom of a U.S. decline in community feeling.
"We don't even stop and pay attention to that anymore," said Warringer.
The decline in community feeling, he said, has weakened the significance of holidays such as Labor Day and Memorial Day for U.S. communities and made these days predominantly family holidays.
In the past, Warriner said, residents of
"The community stopped and paid attention to what was important to the community," he said.
towns and cities celebrated together on holidays.
LABOR UNIONS CREATED Labor Day in the late 19th century as a salute to the workers. In 1882, a New York City carpenter and union president suggested to the newly-formed Central Labor Union that it hold an annual parade demonstrating worker unity, followed by a picnic or festival for workers and their families.
The idea was received enthusiastically, and its popularity spread quickly.
In 1894, the U.S. government made the first Monday in September a holiday for District of Columbia residents and federal workers. By the 20th century, as workers began to receive better pay and working conditions, most states had made Labor Day an official holiday.
A FEW LARGE Labor Day parades still take place in major industrial cities such as New York City, where about 250,000 AFL-CIO members marched along Fifth Avenue yesterday. But such celebration has died in many areas.
Regina Morantz, associate professor of history, said it was no surprise that Labor Party leader Bill Clinton was a strong supporter.
"We don't honor labor in this society," she said.
Morantz said that the spirit Americans admired was not that of the laborer, but that of the entrepreneur, the person who worked to elevate the economic status of his or her parents.
Warriner said that Americans seemed to need a special day to remember workers.
“If we don't stop to laud the working man, we forget about him,” Warriner said.
ONE LABOR DAY tradition remains intact. For many years, the day has marked
the start of U.S. presidential campaigns.
Yesterday morning, Derfocrafic candidate Walter Mondale and his running mate, Geraldine Ferraro, began their race at New York City's Labor Day parade. President Reagan opened his campaign in Orange County, Calif.
Though many American banks and schools close on Labor Day, many retail stores close as well.
Beth Quinlan, a floor supervisor at Gibson's Discount Center, 2125斯沃斯St. said that the store was fairly busy yesterday and many of their customers were shopping for ordinary household items.
"Some people probably don't think it's a real special holiday," she said.
TRAILRIDGE
TRACEY HELMERT SALES clerk at K-Mart Delivery Store, 3106 St.辽, st. her store had as many customers yesterday as it did on an average Saturday or Sunday.
Steven Purcell/KANSAN
Jim Sherman, chairman of the department of human development and family life, drove a tank packed with friends and co-workers down Jayhawk Boulevard Friday
afternoon. The ride was a gift to Sherman, who celebrated a birthday on Saturday.
Professor says 'tanks' for birthday ride
Staff Reporter
By JOHN REIMRINGER Staff Reporter
It all started as a play on Jim Sherman's name.
Sherman, chairman of the department of human development and family life, celebrated his 46th birthday Saturday. On Friday, Sherman received a birthday card from staff and faculty in his department picturing a World War II Sherman Tank.
After that, it was only natural for Annette Elder, a secretary in the department, to have her husband, Brad, drive his tank into town to give Sherman a ride.
At 4:30 p.m. Friday the tank, actually an M-5A4 high speed tractor used to carry personnel and mortars in the Korean War, waited to ambush Sherman near the loading
dock on the south side of Haworth Hall. Brad Elder said he used the army-surplus tank for farming
"I hope it'll start," Annette Elder said as staff members awaited Marsh's arrival
About 50 people cheered and clapped as Sherman emerged from the building and was confronted by the tank, which was armed with machine guns, bearing the words "Happy Birthday, Jim."
"Where did you get that?" Sherman asked, clapping his hands and smiling. "I love it. Thank you very much, this is great."
One of the lookers told Sherman that the surprise was not over yet. He still had a tank
crawled onto Sumymside Avenue, 17 people were crowded on the deck
"You sure we're not going to both get arrested?" Sherman said Brad Elder.
By the time the tank invaded rush hour traffic on Jayhawk Boulevard, Sherman was at the controls. The traffic controller near the Chi Omega Fountain had already surrendered her booth and the tank met no resistance stronger than the stares of pedestrians and motorists as it rumbled through the heart of campus.
At that point, nearly everyone present wanted to hop on the tank. When the tank
At the corner of Jayhawk Boulevard and Sunflower Road, a bearded man in a gray pickup truck looked slightly nervous as Sherman steps back around the corner from 1000 Folsom's puddle.
Back at Haworth Hall, Sherman parked the tank on a curb and dismounted, smiling like a child who had finished playing with a new toy.
"That was really fun," he said.
Three groups aim for increased voter registration
By the Kansan Staff
The KU chapter of the Associated Students of Kansas, Delta Sigma Theta sorority and the KU College Young Democrats will kick off separate voter registration drives Sept. 10.
Sandra Binyon, Wichita senior and KU ASK's Task Force 84 coordinator, said the organization hoped to register as many as 4,000 students. ASK is a state-wide student lobbying organization, and Task Force 84 is its voter registration and education project
The drives are an effort to get KU students to register and to vote, members of the three groups say. The organizations hope to put together a coalition of voters. Douglas County's list of registered voters
"What we really want to accomplish is to get people involved. People complain about politics, the political system and certain candidates," Binyon said. "It's my personal opinion that if they don't vote, they shouldn't complain."
Don Burke, Fayette, M- senior and co-chairman of the College Young Democrats voter registration committee, said yesterday that the organization hoped to register 3,000 students and Lawrence residents.
Kelli Frey, Topeka senior and Delta Sigma Theta's co-chairwoman for its registration drive, said yesterday that the sorority wanted to register at least 100 voters.
ASK will set up a table in front of Wescoe Hall from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. from Sept. 10 to Sept. 14 and from Sept. 24 to Sept. 28.
Binyon said she did not know yet how many students would help with the drive. KU ASK will hold an organizational meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The College Young Democrats will set up a table from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Sept. 10 to Sept. 27.
Burke, the College Young Democrat co-chairman of voter registration, said that students could register for any party and that the group's registration table would be
Delta Sigma Theta, which will share its table with the College Young Democrats, will be at the Union from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. from Sept. 10 to Sept. 14. They also will have a table in the Union at the same times Sept. 17, 19 and 21.
Vogel fills vacancy on StudEx
By JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter
A journalism student senator was named Friday to replace the chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee, who resigned last week.
Robert Walker, the former chairman,
resigned Aug. 28 in a letter to Carla Vogel,
student body president Chris Coffelt, Hays
was dismissed on April 15. Was chosen
Friday as Walker's successor.
Walker said yesterday that he left his position because he was frustrated with student government and because he wanted to start a new Young Republicans association at the university.
Vogel said that she and Dennis "Boog" Highberger student body vice president, chose Coffelt because of her experience in Student Senate. This is Coffelt's second year as a journalism senator.
COFFELT'S APPOINTMENT STILL must be approved by majority vote of the Student Senate at its first meeting Sept. 12 Highberger said he expected no problems with the appointment.
StudEx is the Student Senate's executive committee, and its voting members include the student body president and vice president, the chairmen of the Senate committees and the three student representatives on the University Senate Executive Committee.
The Student Senate Treasurer and Executive Secretary are non-voting members of StudEx. The StudEx chairman can vote only to resolve a tie.
Coffelt said she accepted the position because she wanted to ease instability caused by two resignations that have occurred since Vogel and Highberger took office in September. Mr. Highberger was chairman in April, following the resignation of David Friend, the previous chairman.
WALKER. A KANSAS City, Mo., senior, now is enrolled as a student at Northwest Missouri State University in Maryville, Mo., where he also is president of the Young Republicans.
Walker said he had considered resigning since spring, when he decided he wanted to become involved in politics at the state level.
"It provides more of a future for someone. The opportunities are far more valuable." Walker said. "There's no future in student politics. It's a dead end."
Walker said he discovered this summer that Northwest Missouri State had no chapter of the Young Republicans, and he decided to start one. He said other universities in Kansas and Missouri already had well-run chapters.
"I saw it as an avenue to get involved," he said.
HE ALSO SAID Northwest Missouri also was attractive because its tuition for in-state students was about $500, compared with the more than $1,400 he would have paid as an out-of-state student at the University of Kansas.
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OPINION
September 4,1984 Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
the University Daly Kannan, UNESK 650 640 is published at the University of Kansas, 181 staffer Flint Hall Law, Kanwer. Kannan 650 640 daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence. Kanwer Kannan 60443 submissions by mail are accepted. $7 a week in Douglas County and $10 for six months or $19 for twelve months. The county Student POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daly Kannan, 181 staffer Flint Hall Law, Kanwer. Kannan 60443
DON KNOX Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE HESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
DOUG CUNNINGHAM Campus Editor
DAVE WANAMAKER Business Manager
SUSANNE SHAW General Manager and News Adviser
LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
JILL GOLDBLATT Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Image of ASK
The campus director of the Associated Students of Kansas bowed out of office last week to prevent a public dispute with the Student Senate, but regrettably his resignation most likely will prolong the poor image on campus of the lobbying group for state students.
group for state students. The events of last week are even more regrettable because Chris Edmonds' resignation did not stem from his actions as ASK director, but from his actions as a director of a national student group not associated with ASK.
Edmonds was accused by Senate leaders of submitting a $776 travel voucher, though Senate rules forbid payment for travel to meetings, forums or conventions. The accusations were serious, the leaders said, because Edmonds also served as the Senate's authority on rules and regulations.
So Edmonds, citing personal reasons, quit.
So Edmonds, using personal experience. It is easy to blame Edmonds of being unethical, just as it is easy to blame the student leaders who approved his request of being ignorant of their own rules.
of being ignorant of their own rules.
But in this dispute, ASK is guilty only of unfortunate name association.
association. That's not to say ASK always acts in a proper and professional manner. For much of its 10-year history, the has been true.
But ASK has been striving for a more active role. Its Topeka directors are better informed and more adept at successful lobbying of state legislators.
In past years, student opponents of ASK have cited its not-so-glorified past in proposing that the group receive less student money. This year, when ASK goes before the Senate's Finance and Auditing Committee, the group should be judged on its own performance — and not on that of Chris Edmonds or the KU Student Senate.
Respect for labor
In this region of right-to-work laws and sparse union membership, Labor Day again has passed as just another holiday for most workers.
Labor unions began the holiday in the late 19th century to honor the worker, and unions still lead celebrations in some large Eastern cities.
Such festivities would be lost on most Kansans; many of them wouldn't even be able to think about parades or speeches, because their employers would need them for the brisk business expected from holiday shoppers.
Regina Morantz, an associate professor of history at KU says she isn't surprised by the decline of Labor Day as a day to celebrate American labor. Americans look up to entrepreneurs more than to common workers,she says.
Perhaps the public is not reacting against the idea of labor.
The current status of Labor Day may reflect the nationwide decline in the strength and popularity of large labor unions. People hear management blame unions for low productivity and high prices; they read of violence at union picket sites and of ties to organized crime. The unions fight to hang on to what power and memberships they have.
Having a day to honor the U.S. worker is a noble idea. If Kansans and most of the country choose to skip the union parades and go shopping or go to work instead, their respect for workers is not necessarily diminished.
Beatles maniacs
The fans love Beatles' memorabilia, yeah,yeah,yeah
At an auction last week in London, fans of the Fab Four paid more than $250,000 for items — ranging from a John Lennon guitar to a membership card for a Liverpool club where the group played — from the good old days.
where the group played - from the good ones only.
The top price, more than $20,000, was for an unpublished manuscript by Lennon.
manuscript by Lennon.
What some people see as trivia, at best, or junk, at worst, is gold to others. One must wonder, however, whether anyone say, 100 years from now, will care about what Lennon wrote in the manuscript, which contains poetry and prose from the early days in Liverpool.
The Beatles' music is certainly worth preserving. The items that were auctioned, however, seem mere conversation pieces — and expensive ones at that.
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten and 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 hometown, 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-Flind Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
LETTERS POLICY
The other day I was given one of the greatest opportunities an American can ever be offered. I turned it down.
Sorry, Clara, hold the commercial
It started with a phone call. The man who was calling was representing the Wendy's Old Fashioned Hamburgers chain.
"We're shooting two more 'Where's the beef commercials,'" the man said.
Figure 18. "And we'd like to know whether you would consider being in one of them," he said.
"You what?"
"I figured." I said.
You whate.
"You'd have to fly to California," he said, "but if you want the part, it's yours."
The man explained that the "Where's the beef" commercials had been such an astonishing success for Wendy's — sales for the first six months of 1984 were up by 32 percent, according to the company — that more such commercials will be filmed Starring once again will be Clara Peller, the foghorn-voiced, 80-plus-year-old grandmother who somehow became a genuine U.S. superstar on the basis of her one line.
"The commercial we want you to be in will receive saturation television exposure during the fall presidential campaign," the man
The commercial will feature two
MUSICIAN
political candidates debating the merits of big, fluffy hamburger buns, he said.
BOB GREENE
he said.
Out in the audience, Clara Peller will be seated, watching. As the candidates argue about the buns, she will stand and yell . . . oh, you know what she'll yell.
Syndicated Columnist
"Where do I fit in?" "I asked.
"We want you to play the role of a reporter," the man said.
(No cracks, please.)
"You'll be sitting in the audience, 'covering' the debate," the man said. After Clara first yells, Where's the beer? You'll stand up and start yelling
"On national television?"
"I'll yell 'Where's the beef'?" asked.
Vae !
"Yes."
"Yes," the man said.
"Yes, the man said."
"I wish you hadn't called," I said.
"So every time the country sees Clara Peller yelling 'Where's the beef' this fall, they'll see me yelling 'Where's the beef,' 'ooo'"
It's true; I wish he hadn't. Who wouldn't welcome an opportunity like this — to co-star with one of the great thespians of our time, and to be guaranteed national exposure on a scale undreamed of by generations of Shakespearean actors?
I couldn't do it, of course; people in the news business are strictly forbidden from endorsements of commercial products, even implicit ones. The theory is that once you endorse a product, whatever credibility you have as an objective, unbiased reporter is gone. You have proven that someone can purchase your approval with money.
I thought about it for a moment. Could I find a way to do that so that it could perhaps not be construed as an endorsement?
Nah if shooting 'Where's the beef' in a Wendy's commercial, what is a commercial endorsement, what is?
Then I thought. What if I don't take any money for it? That way, no one can accuse me of being bought off.
That didn't work, either. It isn't just a matter of money. Somehow, once people see a person on television screaming your approval of a burglar, they never look at him quite the same way again.
So I thought some more. What if I said I was doing it for my readers? In other words, what if I said I was doing it as research for a story
designed to reveal the making of a big time commercial?
No deal. Sure, you're all saying right now that you'd like me to be in the commercial. Do it, you're saying; do it! But you wouldn't respect me in the morning.
I thought of the final alternative.
Make the commercial and get out of journalism. Do the honest thing Savor the fame and fortune of being in the Wendy's commercial, and then turn in my typewriter forever.
Tempting, tempting — but what happens when the commercial stops airing? I still have the rest of my life to live. I can't go around remind people. I was the guy who stood up for Feller and yelled Where's the year that Beagan and Mondale were running for president."
I called the man from Wendy's back.
"I'm waffling." I said.
You have to make the decision, be said. "We're running out of time." I named.
Do actors in TV commercials ever get to date their leading ladies"
"Come on," he said. "We've got to cast this commercial."
I told him no. I won't be watching television in the fall. All I see would be the world stardom. I had given away
Summer abroad aids perspective on words
The words drifting into my bed room were unfamiliar.
Lingering thoughts of the previous night's dreams in English vanished as I lay in my bed in Colombia, South America.
Several Spanish floated into my room and the mutterings under my breath did not help translate the phrases
It was another day of life in a foreign country, and to think that I had been my choice to spend the summer studying in South America.
Words came at me through more mediums than I cared to anticipate, all trying to get across a point that I would struggle to comprehend.
would struggle Billboards shouted their messages with phrases that I did not understand.
Deciphering the directions on a pay telephone proved only a momentary victory. I could not ask the recording on the other end of the phone to repeat her message or to speak to me in English.
Newspaper headlines had me wondering just what in the world was going on; stores could have been offering great bargains, but their
catchy slogans were only foreign words written in flashy colors.
It's a story written in the books or many foreign students, whether they are French students studying in Germany, Poles studying in France
MARGARET
SAFRANEK
PENNESHEA
Staff Columnist
or North Americans studying in Colombia.
The problem is words, those unfamiliar, garbled sounds that somehow allow the world to communicate.
They come from many foreign countries, some having studied English in schools back home, others struggling with their first introduction to the language.
About 300 students are at KU this semester taking on the challenge of learning the English language
In a world of familiar language a person need not spend the day mentally rehearsing simple phrases before asking aloud where to find a certain building, what the codes on a class schedule mean or how to use the washing machine that simply reads "quarters only."
However, for those who hear a word and are forced first to translate it into their own language and then to assimilate it into the new English vocabulary they are building, a day is one word challenge after another.
easy to make it through the day with this language, which has been acquired over a lifetime.
Nor must phrases such as "beats me," "get lost or go for it" be dissected and emphasized in a person speech, even if it vague notion of what the speaker means.
Moreover, a properly pronounced word such as "going to" when slurred into a garbled "gonna" conveys the same message to those who have heard the words many times.
But foreign students learning English struggle to understand the
lyrics to songs on the radio, compre-
pend computer printouts of bureau-
ratic language and decipher-
starred, hurried explanations.
stare at her face.
Anyone who has been forced to shout above the din of a speaker blaring away in a bar or strain to hear a neighbor's conversation in the midst of a crowd knows the frustration of hearing the sounds without understanding the message.
Such is the helplessness and frustration that often confronts students who are acquiring language skills in a foreign country.
of course, many groups on camps will help ease the problems facing these new students. The Applied English Center will also offer them intensive courses, speeding up the sometimes painful process of learning another language.
ing alike, what many of the students strung with the English language will appreciate are the average persons around KU who take the time to patiently explain and re-explain things, and pronouncing those words of English clearly and distinctly offer the most welcome kind of hello.
HERE.
CHECKERS!
Presidential debates may be limited to two
WASHINGTON - The White House is not interested in Walter Mondale's suggestion for six debates with the president.
Because pre-election days are dwindling, the stalling has White House aides betting that only two debates, at the most, will take place.
Meanwhile, Vice President George Bush says he wants to debate with Geraldine Ferraro, but Reagan and his strategists will have to work it out.
Nevertheless, the debates will be viewed as the high point of the campaign.
When the ground rules are finally worked out and sponsors have been chosen, the campaign will be well into September.
WHITE HOUSE AIDES never mis
a chance to take a swipe at former President Jimmy Carter. In fact, half of Reagan's campaign seems geared to an attack on his predecessor.
Recently, while announcing that Reagan would personally award
HELEN THOMAS
He takes his computer on the road so that he can stay in touch |
United Press International
medals to two teen-agers for herism, deputy press secretary Larry Speakes noted that Carter did not award any similar medals during his presidency.
The candidates are awarded under a Justice Department program and Congress requires that the presentation be made by the president
The medals awarded during the Carter years were presented by Reagan, he said.
SPEAKES WAS ASKED how the president had decided to select a teacher to be the first civilian to take a ride in a space shuttle.
He said Reagan had received several recommendations. When a reporter told Speakes that he understood that journalists had also been considered for selection from non-astronaut candidates to the shuttle, Speake said ABCTV's Sam Donnion would have been selected "if we could keep him up there."
TYPEWRITERS ARE becoming a thing of the past in the White House as computers are moved onto the desks of top aides and secretaries
desks or top mobs
Speakers has access to a storehouse
of instant information by punching a few keys on his computer.
THE PRESIDENT'S NEWS conferences are expected to be few and far between during the fall campaign.
News conferences can hold pitfalls for any president, particularly when all appears to be going well. Why rock the boat?
Furthermore, a Beagan news conference might require the television networks to provide equal time, 30 minutes to Monday. ]
White House spokesman Speaker said that Carter had conducted only five news conferences in 1980 when was running for re-election and that Reagan had held six so far.
K. K
University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1984
Page 5
Cox continued from p. 1
Taw. He had been named the 1984 chairman of the board of Elders at the Redeemer Hospital in New York.
Morse said that Mr. Cox and his wife, Karen, had taught Bible study groups at the church.
He was born March 30, 1953 in St. Louis. He received his bachelor's and master's degrees in economics at Central Missouri State University in Warrensburg, Mo. He taught at Clarksville, N.J., then Clarksville, Tenn. for two years while working on his doctoral studies for Indiana University.
MR. COX'S DOCTORAL proposition on marketing was accepted at Indiana University in February. He was a member of the American Marketing Association.
Survivors include his wife, Karen; two
daughters, Jennifer, 7, and Rachel, 1; two brothers, Paul Cox and John Cox, both of Lee's Summit, Mo.; two sisters, Laurie Viles, Kansas City, Mo., and Sue Schultz, Lawrence; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cox, Topeka, and his paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Schauh, Horseshoe Bend, Ark.
The Rev. Karl Schoenrade will conduct services at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Warren McElwain Mortuary, 120 W. 13th St. Burial will be at Oak Hill Cemetery in Lawrence.
The family suggests that memorials be sent to the Redeemed Lutheran Church in care of Warren McElwain Mortuary.
continued from p. 1
Visitation at Warren-McElwain Mortuary will be 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. today. The family will be at the funeral home from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
were dirty beyond recognition. Even the referees weren't spared from being splashed with mud.
At 21-24, the Mudders were behind. But the Mudders were confident they could cut the deficit. And minutes later, at 24-24, the Mudders were from capturing the mud volleyball crown.
THE MUDDERS WENT on, after two exciting points, to become the mud volleyball champs. Spectators and players joined in a romp through the mud in
joined in a romp through the mud in celebration. With smiles cracking muddy faces, jubilant team members gave each other high fives.
One Murder. Jeff Faiman. Lawrence
Politics continued from p. 1
junior, saw the competition as an escape from the drudgery of homework.
After cleaning up, the mudders at the mud pit to hold a victory party at their
it's completely different than playing regular volleyball." Faiman said as he picked at dried mud on his knees. "Every time the ball you get sprayed with that stuff."
IN A SWIPE at Mondale, he said "the future we are building is not about promises, but about promise."
Members of the Mudders attributed their win to at least two things:
"The key was in our rotation," said one Mulder.
Maurice Reagan, the president's daughter, punctuated her role as chief family cheerleader with an admonition against complacency.
"We may be a few points ahead," she said,
"but we're running like we're 10 points
"It was our good humor that I think won it for us," said another.
In Merrill, a town of 10,000, an estimated
10,000 people turned out in a light rain to chéter Mondale and Ferraro.
Observers said people had come in from surrounding towns to see the Democrats and attend an Antique Car show
Mondale accused Reagan of an "uncaring, icily indifference to American society," and said "I don't believe a president should just serve all the people in his country club. I believe a president should serve all the people in the country."
Lions clubs give funds for eye research
By DAN HOWELL Staff Reporter
Officials of Kansas Lions clubs will present a $50,000 gift to the University of Kansas Medical Center Saturday to begin underwriting an endowed position in eye research, the Med Center announced Friday.
Staff Reporter
Theodore Lawwill, chairman of the ophthalmology department at the Med Center, said the Lions Eye Research Professorship would need an endowment of about $1 million to be completed in about four years.
"The idea is to bring an outstanding person to KU." Lawwill said.
WHEN ENDOWMENT IS adequate, Lawwill said, about 70 percent of the investment income will support the salary of the research professor. About 30 percent will help pay for research expenses including equipment, supplies and salaries of assisting personnel, who often have research grants of their own.
A committee of members of the ophthalmology department, representatives of Lions club throughout the state and Med Center officials will select the research professor, Lawwill said. The professor does not but necessarily, will not be from KU.
The funds, to be presented in ceremonies at the Med Center, will go into accounts of the Kansas University Endowment Association and the Investment Association will invest the money.
tributed about $700,000 during the last four years. Some of the money donated last year bought a $94,000 laser used in cataract surgery.
FRANK PIEPENBRING, PAST president of the Kansas Lions Sight Foundation Inc., said the endowment drive marked a new phase in the group's support of eye research at KU, which began in the late 1960s.
"That's the only way to cure eye problems — research." he said.
Previous Lions' gifts totaling more than $1 million have supported other research and service efforts and equipment purchases, Piepenbring said.
lawward said that the clubs had con
Lawill said that the Lions' contributions had helped the KU ophthalmology department to gain national prominence. An effort by the department will ensure the department's good reputation.
LAWWILL SAID THAT the ophthalmology department also had received an unrestricted grant of $2,000 from Research Funds, a New York philanthropic foundation
The foundation supports work at 49 university departments and helps represent the needs of eye researchers to Congress, he said.
Lawill said that the KU ophthalmology department was known best for its work in repairing light damage to the retina, visual processing of light stimulus into nerve impulses and then images, and cellular biology. The last area includes research into use of genetic material to repair the retina.
Weight continued from p-1.
salad, a starch item, a vegetable dish and dessert. She said that the more fattening items were offered because some residents needed more calories.
Kohl said that some students had complained about having to choose between a fruit and a dessert. She said that choosing between the two teaches bad nutrition habits because adults need two servings of fruits and vegetables each day.
But Ekdahl defended the food service policy by saying that a student could meet the fruit requirement at the other two daily meals.
Kohl also listed other factors that were significant to student weight gain. Metabolism
At the beginning of the college years, metabolism begins to slow down. Kohl said Because women stop growing at age 18 or 19, they should start decreasing their consumption at that age, she said.
However, men are not as likely to gain weight at this time.
“It’s one of the unfair facts of life that men oftentimes don’t start gaining weight until their late 20s and early 30s. Women, on the other hand, are still in their late teens and early 20s,” she said.
Kohl also discounted the myth that weight gain was inevitable and a normal part of aging.
"This is not necessarily true, healthy or acceptable," she said. "A person's metabolism is slower, and burns calories less efficiently. But our appetites do not decrease with age." Stress
Stress was another possible factor in weight gain during college, Kohl said.
"Stress is common in young adulthood because this is the period in life when one leaves home. The person feels an inner struggle to be an adult and at the same time,
a pull back homeward to Mom and Dad to guide decision making," Kohl said. Fast Food
Kohl thinks fast food is another culprit in the 'inch an inch' war.
Because Lawrence is fast food heaven, she said, many students take advantage of it with her.
"Students have more freedom being away from home, so they can order a pizza at it."
In the Penn State study, Harvey also found that college students' snacking habits increased slightly while the number of meals students' consumed decreased.
Kohl also found an abrupt change in students' physical activity in college.
"People come in and tell me that in high school they were in band, a cheerleader, or on the swim team," she said. "Then, they come up here and they do not get involved."
K.U. WOMEN'S CREW
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A TRIBUTE TO THE LAWRENCE WOMEN'S TRANSITIONAL CARE SERVICES
WTCS, which began operating a shelter for battered women and their dependent children in the fall of 1978, is a local response to a national problem. (While some one million to six million women are beaten in their homes each year, governing units all over the country are handing public funds to their respective chambers of commerce and other moneyed groups with which these comfortable contingents then understandably continue promoting private interests.)
Because City Commissioners Ernest Angiro, David Longhurst and Howard Hill know nothing about the Lawrence Women's Transitional Care Services (WTCs), they voted; at the August 21st meeting of the City Commission, to cut $5,000 in state alcohol tax revenues from WTCs and give this money instead to the Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism.
promotes this mission.
WTCS, a collective organization which accords equal power to each of its members, maintains a 24 hour crisis line and a shelter in which food, transportation and personal attention are given to all who enter by the 26 WTCS volunteers. Because WTCS only attempts to give those seeking its assistance the strength with which to deal with the problems confronting them, more than 50% of these abused women return to the homes from which they earlier had fled.
By conducting public workshops and training sessions for police and hospital personal as well as providing speakers for various groups, WTCS hopes to, in WTCS advocate Parm Houston's words, 'break (this) cycle of violence' and eliminate the need for its services. As that day doesn't lie in the foreseeable future, many Lawrenicians hope that these three city commissioners will reconsider their position and henceforth support this distinctive and vital organization.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terr
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Your parents will be glad to hear that you're still in good hands.
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ALERT
University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Fair booth will display KU snake
By the Kansan Staff
One of the most unusual attractions at the Kansas State Fair in Hutchison this week is likely to be a 7-foot bull snake on display from the University of Kansas.
The snake is only one of the exhibits that will be featured in a display booth shared by KU and Kansas State University. The schools will be showing off their advancements in the areas of science and technology.
This will be the second year that the two universities have joined
together to cut costs of participating in the fair which runs Sept. 7-16.
"We're working together to give the message of the importance of research and science," said John Naughtin, KU University Relations' publications designer and coordinator of the project. "We're not down here with the purpose to recruit in mind."
Naughty predicts that about 40,000 people will see the booth during the fair.
Each university sets up its own exhibit schedule. Naughtin said the KU Museum of Natural History had participated in the fair for many
years and that for the past few years its live snake exhibit had been very popular.
Other exhibits from KU will include a display of educational video games designed by Jerry Chaffin, professor of special education. Video games such as "Meteor Multiplication," "Alien Addition," and "Verb Viper," are used to help teach children reading, writing and arithmetic.
The Kansas Geological Survey will offer a slide show of little-known Kansas landscapes such as sand dunes and waterfalls. The slide show will run for the duration of the fair.
At least five people lost their lives in Kansas traffic accidents during the Labor Day holiday weekend, authorities reported yesterday.
By United Press International
Don Ehlers, 57, Dresden, was killed Sunday in a one-vehicle accident in Decatur County in northwest Kansas, a Decatur County sheriff's dispatcher said yesterday.
Five die in traffic accidents
Ehler's pickup truck was found off a county road north of Dresden about 7.45 p.m. He died a few hours later at the Decatur County Hospital
in Oberlin.
A 24-year-old Leon woman died early Sunday when the car she was riding in 2 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles east of Leon collided with another car. The Butler County Sheriff's office said Jody Bohannon was dead on arrival at Wesley Medical Center in Wichita.
Russell Hamlin, 33. Perry, was killed Saturday night in Shawnee County when his pickup left the road and flipped over, said Traffic Sgt. Billy Lewis, of the Shawnee County Sheriff's Department.
Also Saturday, the Kansas High
way Patrol identified a traffic victim as James J. Finders, 18, of Goodland. Finders was driving east on an Interstate 70 detour when he crossed a center divider, hitting the driver's side of the westbound truck.
In another accident, near Ellsworth, a car went off Kansas Highway 156 and struck a metal culvert head-on on December 38-year-old Saturday, repaired the Ellsworth County Sheriff's Department.
The victim was identified as Jerry L. Beagle of Atchison.
STUDENTS
COULD THE NAVY INTEREST YOU IN PAID TUITION?
If you are a student at the University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Scholarship. The Navy Scholarship provides full tuition, all text books plus $100 a month spending money.
When you graduate, you will have a job in the fleet as a naval or marine officer. You will train in Nuclear Submarines, Surface Ships, Naval Aircraft or one of many other exciting fields.
CHECK OUT THE ADVANTAGES OF NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS
Call Lieutenant Joe Johannes at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps (NROTC).
Paid Tuition, Spending Money, and a Job. That is Navy ROTC
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INTERESTED IN:
—POLITICS
—EDUCATION
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THEN COME TO THE FIRST MEETING OF THE
ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF KANSAS
SEPTEMBER 5 7:00 p.m.
JAYHAWK ROOM
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--expires Sept. 11 no deliveries
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700 New Hampshire 843-3434
P.R. HERMAN'S PIZZERIA SPECIAL
14” Pizza for $5.50 eat in carry out only
From 5-9 EVERYNIGHT
TUESDAY SPECIAL
(watch for our weekly Tues. special)
LE BIRDMAN
OUR FAMOUS SUBS:
Whole(12") $3.00
Half(6") $1.50
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
Hawk's Crossing & Yello Sub
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal do
Negotiation of legal documents
- Many other services available
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
8:30 to 4:30 Mon. thru Friday
17:30 Burling (Satellite) Union 864-5665
12th & Oread 23rd & Louisiana
843-6660 call-ins are fast! 841-3268
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Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Tuesday
Specials
Tuesday
Chef Salad
16 oz. Drink
(green cup)
$2.05
Wednesday
This Week's Specials
$2.15
$2.40
Double Hamburger Potato Chips 16 oz. Drink (green cup)
Thursday
Chicken Sandwich
French Fries
16 oz. Drink
(green cup)
Friday
Friday
Burrito $2.00
w/Chili
Small Salad
16 oz. Drink
(green cup)
9-3:30 THE KANSAS UNION Level 2 HAWK'S NEST
henrys
HENRY'S RESTAURANT
SIXTH & MISSOURI 843-2139
When Henry has a special, it's really a special.
Between the hours of 3 and 5 p.m. weekdays, come in and enjoy a 99c milk shake. Choose from six flavors. We'll have a different 99c everyday.
BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL
99 $ ^{¢} $
The JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK is now taking applications for the following staff positions:
Copywriters
Photographers
Events Editor
Living Groups Editor
Organizations Editor
Art Director
Applications are available in the Jayhawker office, 121B Kansas Union between 1 and 5 p.m. Deadline for applications is Wed., Sept. 12.
Deadline for applications is Wed., Sept. 12.
GRADUATE WOMEN'S POTLUCK
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center INVITES YOU TO JOIN US FOR A POTLUCK DINNER. COME MEET OTHER WOMEN ON CAMPUS AND SHARE GOOD FOOD AND CONVERSATION.
Date: Tuesday September 4,1984
Time: 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.
Place: Ecumenical Christian Ministries Building 1204 Oread
Bring: Any dish you like. Drinks and place settings provided.
X
Please feel free to bring a friend.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT KIM STRYKER AT THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER. 864-3552, 218 STRONG HALL
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1984
Page
Campus safety a much-debated problem for KU
Blue phones can summon assistance Financing is barrier to safe KU lighting
By JOHN REIMRINGER Staff Reporter
They go unnoticed by KU students most of the time, a part of the landscape on and around Mount Oread.
The 12 phones, found in gray boxes mounted on poles topped with blue lights, provide a direct line to the University of Kansas Police Department's dispatcher's office in Hoch Auditorium.
When a phone's receiver is lifted, a light in the dispatcher's office shows which phone has been tripped. A KU police officer is sent to the location immediately, Sgt. Mary Ann Robison said.
The officer usually reaches the phone in two to three minutes, Robison said.
NO DIALING IS necessary, she said, and the person using the phone doesn't need to speak — just pick up the receiver.
The phones are used about 30 times a month, Lt. Jeanne Longaker said.
"It's the type of prank that could jeopardize someone's well-being," she said.
The thefts were discovered immediately by the officers who responded, Longaker said. Each $25 receiver was replaced within 24 hours.
OF THE 12 phones on campus, eight were installed in late 1976, and
the remaining four were installed in 1980. Each phone costs about $1,200 and the University pays a monthly fee of $25 and $25 to maintain each phone
The phones are located on Irving Hill Road, on 15th Street near Green Hall, at the intersection of Sunnyside Avenue and Sunflower Road, at the intersection of Jayhawk Boulevard and Sunflower Road, at the intersection of 13th Street and Oread
Avenue and at the intersection of 14th Street and Alumni Place.
ADDITIONAL PHONES ARE at the north end of Potter Lake, at the north end of Spencer Art Museum, at the north end of the parking garage near Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall, at the Pearson Place fountain behind Fraser Hall, between Malott and Wesco halls, at the intersection of Na smith Drive and the service drive leading to Watkins Hospital.
By JOHN REIMRINGER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Campus lighting at the University of Kansas could be improved, most KU administrators and student senators agree.
But how to make the improvements and where to get the money are the problems.
"It's been studied to death," said
Russ Ptacek, Nunemaker student senator. "That ought to be the one subject that the Senate can unify and work together on."
Carla Vogel, student body president, said that one solution might be to increase the student activity fee by as much as $1 per student to help finance additional lighting on campus.
Vogel also suggested that the University of Kaisers Alumni Assoc-
EMERGENCY ONLY
USE FOR EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE ONLY
Illustration by Joe Wilkins IIIKANSAN
ation help raise money for lighting improvements.
THE DEPARTMENT OF facilities operations recently received $25,000 from the Kansas Legislature to improve campus lighting, said Allen Moyer, a director of facilities planning. But that money won't go far, Wiechert said.
Plans for the use of the money haven't been completed yet, he said. Much of it probably will be used to replace outdated incandescent street lights with metal halide fixtures, and prove the quality of the light, he said.
University officials know that campus lighting needs to be improved, Wiechert said, but that the money hasn't been available.
"We usually ask for some every year," he said, which is the first wave of cuite suites.
Helms conducted a similar study at the University of Colorado 10 years ago.
RON HELMES, PROFESSOR and director of architecture, recently completed a study of KU campus lighting, which he said he hoped would spur an improvement in campus lighting. I.e. plans to present the results of the study to KU officials within a few weeks.
"It resulted in a major re-lighting of the campus there," he said.
In the meantime, Helms advised students to be careful when walking on campus at night.
LI. Jeanne Longaker of the University of Kansas Police Department said that some areas were safer than others for students walking on campus at night. These areas include Jayhawk Boulevard, 15th Street, Irving Hill Road and Sunnyside Avenue, she said.
"At Colorado we found the beginning and end of both semesters to be the most dangerous," he said.
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FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES join the K.U.HWT. CREW
U NVERSITY WOMEN You are invited to attend Kappa Phi Wednesday, September 5 at 6 p.m. in the Back room at Minsky's, 23rd and Iowa A leadership club for college women.
Attend the
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS
Covering:
Coach Cliff Elliott 843-3294
ACADEMIC SKILL
Tuesday Sept. 4
3:30
Burcham Park
2nd and Indiana
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
Time Management
Textbook Reading
Listening and Notetaking
Wednesday, September 5 6:30 to 9 p.m.
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Wednesday. September 5th
Wednesday, September 30
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PURPOSE AND OBJECTIVES
The influence of Pi Kappa Phi has been significant. In fact, for many it has been a way of life. The reason is that our purpose and objectives are sound and have meaning. They are exciting and constitute a challenge. Members of Pi Kappa Phi have found within their Fraternity assistance in reaching these objectives.
SCHOLARSHIP>You are in school to gain an education, therefore studies are most important. Fraternity grades, on a nationwide average, are above those of non-affiliated men. Pi Kappa Phi is a main source of scholastic guidance and encouragement to its student members.
PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT—A P! Kapp learns how to get along with people. Living and working with men from different backgrounds and areas of the country is a rewarding and educational experience.
LEADERSHIP—More than likely you are also in college to better develop your leadership abilities Pi Kappa Phi is an excellent place to assert your potential and to assume responsibility by actual experience. Guidance in this is available from alumni members and fraternity programs.
SOCIAL LIFE—Pi Kappa Phi is serious but not all the time. A well-balanced social program is part of every chapter. It has been said, "Pi Kappas have more fun than people."
For More Information Call Our Representatives at . . 841-9544
University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 8
Lakes attract crowds for holiday weekend
By JOHN EGAN Staff Reporter
During the three-day Labor Day weekend, area residents flocked to Clinton and Perry lakes to enjoy the last holiday of the summer. officials at the two lakes said yesterday.
The number of boaters, campers and swimmers at both lakes was a little less than expected, the officials said, but crowds appeared nonetheless. No major accidents were reported at either lake.
At Perry Lake, Joe Loepez, park ranger, said visitor traffic was fairly heavy, but no more than usual for the Labor Day holiday. Rain early Sunday may have deterred a few visitors, he said.
Llope estimated that between 75,000 and 100,000 people visited the lake during the weekend. The lake is available to be available until today, he said.
In addition to the campers and
boaters who enjoyed the Perry Lake area, about 3,500 motorcycle enthusiasts attended a rally for ABATE, a motorcycle club, Lopez said.
"We expect 30,000 to 32,000 by the end of the weekend," Watkins said.
Watkins estimated that the final Labor Day turnout would be close to last year's total of 30,300.
Bunnie Watkins, Clinton park ranger, said that about 23,600 people had visited Clinton Lake by 4 p.m. yesterday, compared with about 23,000 at the same time last Labor Day weekend.
Friday's high temperatures may have kept some day campers away, she said. And Sunday morning's rains accompanied by wind gusts of up to 30 mph kept some boaters off the lake, although it "didn't really wash anyone away" Watkins said.
However, yesterday's weather conditions were ideal, she said.
"It's a perfect day to be out on the lake," Watkins said.
Heart patient leaves hospital
By the Kansan Staff
James O. Hale was released Saturday from the University of Kansas Medical Center, five weeks after undergoing the first heart-transplant operation in the Kansas City area.
Hale, a 43-year-old Wichita upholsterer, will live with relatives in Kansas City for the next couple of months so he can receive weekly checkups for signs of infection or rejection by the heart.
Hale walked with members of his family from the hospital's front door to a waiting room. He removed a paper particle mask from his face for a few minutes and told reporters that he felt "marvelous."
Hale, the victim of a severe coronary artery disease, was not
expected to live more than a few months when he was brought to the Med Center July 20 from St. Francis Hospital in Wichita.
After a heart was found by the Midwest Organ Bank in Kansas City, Mo., and flown to the Med Center, the organ was the one-hour transplant operation July 26.
Clara Sallaz, a 46-year-old Kansas City, Kan., woman who received the second heart transplant at the Med Center Aug. 10, was in serious condition last night, hospital officials said.
Med Center officials announced in Juity that they were beginning the heart-transplant program, which would be possible by 250,000 in donations.
The Med Center is one of 15 hospitals in the United States to have performed heart transplant surgery.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
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Book, slides illustrate native Kansas
"In my book, you will find no wheatfields, no fences, no people, no pheasants — because they come from China — no carp — because they were introduced from Asia; barnyards for Collin and the museum for the Museum of Natural History publications at the University of Kansas.
By ERIKA BLACKSHER Staff Reporter
"This is about those things that are native and natural and here before we are."
Images of golden wheatfields and roaming cattle typically are considered native Kansas characteristics.
But Joe Collins, a zoologist, would like to change that misconception with his book and slideshow, "Natural Kansas."
THE 11-CHAPTER BOOK, which
will be published early next year $ _{v_{2}} $ the University Press of Kansas, is the first book to examine Kansas before man and his culture moved in, said Collins, who has lived in Kansas since 1968.
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
Most multi-media slide shows are set-timed, with slides changing every four or eight seconds, Collins said.
After seeing an eight-projector, computer-programmed slide show in Oklahoma, Collins, John Simmons, collection manager for the Museum of Natural History and Suzanne Cupp, administrative assistant to the museum, decided to put together a multi-media slide show to promote the book.
Collins will present the 22-minute slide show in October during the Wednesday evening lecture series at KU's Museum of Natural History.
HOWEVER, COLLINS' SLIDE
show will be synchronized by a device that will allow the 110 slides to change at varying speeds in rhythm with with "Beethoven's Sixth Symphony," Collins said.
Joe Eagleman, KU professor of geography, and Simmons, who helped the slide show together, led the chapter on weather, Collins said.
The Flint Hills near Emporia and the Ozark region in the southeast corner of Kansas are areas that have been exposed to their natural state, Collins said.
"There probably isn't much land left that has not been plowed or has not had cattle put on it, except those areas set aside," Collins said.
"Natural Kansas" surveys the state's land, weather, plant life, waterways and wildlife.
"When the music rises to a crescendo," he said, "you want to have a really unusual slide come up at that time."
COLLINS INVITED 10 other Kansans to write chapters in their area of expertise.
For example, the Arkansas River is dry from the Colorado border to 300 miles into Kansas, he said.
Collins, who has written six other books and is the co-author of the third edition of the Peterson Field Guide to Amphibians and Reptiles of Eastern and Central North America, will be presenting a show Kansas that the state's natural beauty was worth preserving.
"I tend to have my cheerful moments when I talk about the amphibians, the frogs, the salamanders," he said, "and my moments of despair when I see what's happened to the water in this state."
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
Custodians turn down monthly payroll plan
About 110 University of Kansas custodians in a non-binding vote Friday rejected a proposed change in their payroll payment system.
The proposal would change the system of figuring custodians' paychecks from an hourly rate to a monthly rate. Only 22% of the custodians in the three meetings of different areas of the housekeeping department.
Phil Endacott, assistant house-keeping director, said that most
At a starting pay of $4.64 an hour,
custodians earn $9,883 a year,
he said. Under the system system, this
would be cut to $9,660 a year.
"We have a higher turnover, more absenteeism," he said. "It was just too much work to do by hand."
Endacott said that Friday's meetings were called in response to a 1982 request from the department of facilities operations to change all of its workers to a monthly pay system. At that time, all departments within the department except maintenance kept having switched to a monthly pay system.
you're paid for all the hours in long months," Tolbert said.
Housekeeping was not put on the system, Endacott said, because the department had more pay transactions than others. This created a problem, since at that time the University had not yet switched to a
"They put a pencil to it, and figured out that for this year at least, they'd be $28 better off under the hourly system." Endacott said.
custodians opposed the move because they were among others in their own paychecks.
"UNDER THE MONTHLY system, it was seen as much more difficult to figure the amount if someone missed three hours of work, for example," he said. "Hourly was much easier."
GIL TOLBERT, NIGHT shift supervisor, said that the monthly payroll system would hurt custodians who worked extra hours during a month.
computerized payroll system.
"The hourly system makes sure
Endacott said that the other facilities operations departments had probably experienced a slight decrease in their paychecks since they were changed to the monthly system two years ago.
---
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Bowling Leagues
Leagues Start September 9th
SIGN UP TODAY!
Sunday
(begins Sept. 9th)
Town & Gown 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday
Monday
(begins Sept. 12)
University Woman 1:00 p.m.
Mixed Hall 5:30 p.m.
(begins Sept. 10)
University Mixed 5:30 p.m.
Open Men 8:00 p.m.
Thursday
Tuesday
(begins Sept. 13)
Guys and Dolls I 5:30 p.m.
Guys and Dolls II 8:00 p.m.
(beginns Sept. 11)
Mixed Greek 5:30 p.m.
Greek Men 8:00 p.m.
Friday
(begins Sept. 14)
T.G.I.F. 4:00 p.m.
Level 1
Call 864-3545
THE KANSAS UNION JAYBOWL
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1984
Page 9
Bomb blast kills three in train station
By United Press International
MONTEAL — A bomb explosion ripped through the city's main train station packed with Labor Day holiday travelers yesterday, killing at least three people and injuring 29 others. Police said the blast may have been a warning against a visit next week by Pone John Paul II.
Police said the 8:23 a.m. blast originated in a bank of baggage lockers that blew 120 feet across Montreal's Central Station crowded with 250 Labor Day travelers, scattering 'burning luggage and debris and shattering windows of a hotel built over the terminal.
Montreal police said a suspect was in custody but would not identify him or disclose grounds for his arrest.
THE BLAST CAME on the eve of national elections and followed the discovery last Friday of a note that apparently was intended as a threat against Pope John Paul II, who is expected to arrive in Montreal next Sunday.
The rambling, barely coherent hand-printed letter was found by a ticket agent in the station and turned over to police. It said in part:
"9:30 a.m. September 3, 1984. End of the unholy Vatican. Kill popes! Fry bloody papacy! First 18 popes died violently."
Police said they considered the letter evidence in the case. Police spokesman Pierre Vezina said "the letter revealed a lot of targets and we investigated right away." He would not disclose the other alleged targets.
John Paul is scheduled to arrive Sunday in Quebec City to begin an 11-day visit to Canada. He is scheduled to arrive by train next Monday at Montreal's Windsor Station, about a block from Central Station.
THE POPE IS to stay at the Roman Catholic archdiocese located in the block between the two stations.
Montreal Police L1. Paul-Emile Henry said no one claimed responsibility for the blast.
"People were screaming and yelling and running, and police ordered everyone to get out—and we got out," said Harry Smith, a teacher from New Zealand, who was standing about 90 feet from the explosion.
"I heard the explosion and it was terrific. I saw balls of fire and suddenly I saw a cloud around the surroundings where the bomb exploded," said another witness, Marcel Brais.
spokesmen for Montreal Police and the Urgence Sante ambulance service said three people were dead, identified the scene and taken to the morgue.
AMBULANCE SERVICE SUPERVISOR Anthony Dion Monte said 29 injured victims were taken to six hospitals. Most of the victims suffered burns, cuts and shock and one was unconscious, he said. Two of the injured were reported in serious condition.
The station, crowded with Labor Day travelers, was evacuated about an hour after the explosion, but police said an anonymous caller told police at 11:40 a.m. that a second bomb had been planted.
"There is no second bomb yet," Montreal police spokesman Real Cantin said two hours later. "We'll have to wait, so far we haven't found anything."
FIDELITY
Cantin said the bomb was planted in a locker close to a men's room, near an escalator.
United Press International
Montreal — Rescue workers carry out the body of one of the victims of a locker bomb that ripped through the Central Station train depot here yesterday. Three people are confirmed dead with up to 25 more injured in the blast that police think was a warning against an upcoming visit by the Pope.
South Africa rioters kill 14, injure more
By United Press International
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Rioters rampaged through six black townships yesterday, burning houses, cars and churches as a new constitution that bars bars from leaving least 14 people were killed, including a deputy mayor who was hacked to death and set ablaze.
Rioting continued into the evening, with police guarding ambulances as they ventured into the city south and east of Johannesburg.
Hospital sources at Sebokeng township near Sharpeville, where the heaviest ripped erupted, said 200 people had come for treatment and of those, 135 were admitted, six of them in critical condition.
Police spokesman Lt. Henry Beck said his office knew of 37 injured, but said the toll could be "much higher."
THE RIOTERS BURNED houses, cars and churches, stoned vehicles and buildings and looted shops in the townships of Sharpeville, Boibateng, Sebokeng, E伏aton, Bobhelong and Temisia.
Esau Mahlatis, the chairman of the Lekoa Town Council near Sharpeville, also was killed, Beck said.
Bek said one victim included Sam Dlamini, deputy mayor of Sharpeville, who was hacked to death and his body set afire on the steps of his house. Witnesses said he had shot at two black youths.
Police confirmed that two people
ued when their autos were set on fire. Previously, authorities said three people died in car bombing.
South African television quoted police as saying they "were on some occasions forced to use live cameras" and crowds of as many as 4,000 people.
'TEN OF THEM (the rioters) were killed in police countermeasures and four were killed by the rioters themselves.' Beck said.
The violence was South Africa's worst this year.
teidents of the townships said the riots were triggered by plans to raise rents and yearlong protests against government education policies in South Africa's system of aparthood, or strict racial segregation.
A new governmental system took effect in Cape Town as former Prime Minister Pieter W. Botha was named acting state president. It was the first step to implement a plan to raise the power from power while giving Asians and people of mixed race a limited parliamentary role.
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Under the constitution which took effect at midnight Sunday, South Africa now will be ruled primarily by a 178-member white Parliament. A 40-member Indian parliament and an 80-member chamber for South Africans of mixed race will have a voice in some matters concerning their groups.
THE NATION'S 22 million blacks will remain shut out of the political process.
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University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Page 10
Nicaraguan crash kills two U.S. men
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Two American men who may have been mercenaries were killed in the crash of a rebel helicopter that was shot down over Nicaragua during a raid on a Nicaraguan military base. D.N.Y. disclosed yesterday. Nicaragua lodged a protest with the State Department.
The U.S.-made OH58 helicopter was shot down Saturday when it accompanied a three-plane air assault by CIA-backed Nicaraguan rebels on a military training school in northwestern Nicaragua.
The three crew members aboard the craft were killed, two burned beyond recognition, the Nicaraguan government said. It said four Nicaraguans were killed and also two were killed in the air strike and two Nicaraguans were wounded.
A DEFENSE MINISTRY spokesman said that authorities were attempting to identify the nationality of the third crew member, "a tall, heavy-set, blond," who had "all the appearances of an American."
In Washington, Moynihan, said he had been informed by the CIA that two Americans were aboard the helicopter but the agency denied that they were on the CIA's payroll. Moynihan said "the best guess" was that they were free-lance mercenaries.
"We assume they are Americans," Moynihan said in an interview on the CBS Morning News. "We do not know Last week, again. Men from men from Honduras) from Orleans. And apparently made their way to the FDN, the钥
"TWO OF THEM clearly were in a helicopter that flew over Santa Clara (in Nicaragua Saturday) where there had been a firefight on the ground between the Sandistas and the Contras. The helicopter was shot down, and this one man came out alive (but was killed.)"
'Contra' group.
Moynihan, vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, did not identify the Americans nor did he say how the CIA knew they were aboard the helicopter.
The American deaths would be the first reported in the almost 3-year-old rebel war against Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista government. The Nicaraguan government has charged that the rebels use foreign mercenaries, but the charges have never been confirmed.
"THE USE OF massive air methods provided by the CIA to the bands of mercenaries is evidence of an escalation in the open war the U.S. government is waging against Nicaragua," the protest said.
Nicaragua's Foreign Ministry lodged an official protest with the U.S. State Department, charging that the Reagan administration with escalating its undeclared war that has depleted $5 million in U.S. funds (BRU).
Nicaraguan officials said they would release photographs of the body of the blond man so that his next of kin could claim the body.
It was the second time in a week Nicaragua claimed it shot down a U.S.-made aircraft. Tuesday, eight U.S.-backed rebels were killed when a United States shot down in Nicaragua as it dropped supplies to rebels, officials said.
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WHAT EVERY STUDENT SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN LEASING A TELEPHONE AND LEASING A CHICKEN.
Yes, there are differences. And we think you should know what they are. Ask yourself these questions.
there are differences.
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WHEN YOU LEASE A
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any lease charges
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DO LEASED CHICKENS COME IN A SELECTION OF COLORS AND STYLES? No. Chickens don't come in many colors. But the AT&T telephone you lease this fall comes in a variety of colors and three popular styles.
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ARE LEASED CHICKENS SHIPPED DIRECTLY TO YOU?
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telephone will be shipped directly to you after one call to 1-800-555-8111, or you can pick up your phone at any of our AT&T Phone Centers. ONE FINAL QUESTION: DOES IT COST THE SAME TO LEASE A CHICKEN AS TO LEASE A TELEPHONE THIS FALL? Hardly. While we have no hard data on the exact cost of leasing a chicken, we can tell you with some certainty that the cost of leasing a telephone this fall is far less than you might think. The decision to lease a chicken or a telephone, of course, rests with you. But should you opt for the teleme, remember: you get three months see next summer, and you can take the one home with you. There's a choice of colors and styles, free repair, and we'll ship you the phone
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AT&T Consumer Sales and Service. To order your telephone, call 1-800-555-8111 for delivery right to your door or for information concerning AT&T Phone Center locations. Lawrence
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Valid with the following restrictions: 1. You must be registered for 12 accredited hours for the 1949 fall term. 2. Valid only to students billed by AT&T Consumer Sales and Service. 3. Deployment accounts are valid from offer #1. Limit two telephones per account. 5. Offer exp: 7 months from due date termination. 6. This offer is not valid for permanent year-round resident students. 7. The three weeks months will not long end until you have part of the first month of your lease. 8. All telephone accounts are FCC regulated. We provide repair service for 72 months from due date termination. 9. Only telephones equipped with Touchstone dialing can access certain long distance services and networks. © Copyright; AT&T Consumer Sales and Service 1984
1
}
University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1984
Page 11
NATION AND WORLD
Polls project Liberal loss in Canada
By United Press International
VANCOUVER, British Columbia
VANCOUVER, British Columbia—John Turner, faced with the prospect of becoming the first Canadian prime minister in 39 years to lose his own district, focused on home turf yesterday in the final day of his Liberal Party's uphill campaign to stay in power.
Opinion poll indicated that the Conservative Party — led by Montreal lawyer and businessman Brian Mulroney — was set to hand the governing Liberal Party its worst defeat in 26 years in today's general elections.
Mulroney 45, has run a campaign that emphasized the need for a change in government, a popular theme in a country that has been governed by the Liberals for all but nine months since 1963.
the surveys also showed that Turner's efforts to win over western Canadians by running for a seat in the House of Commons from the Vancouver Quadra district are having little effect. He is running well behind incumbent Conservative Bill Bennick in a 12-year House of Commons veteran.
A loss in the district would make Turner the first Canadian leader to suffer a personal defeat in his own election, MacKenzie King in the 1945 election
In a last ditch effort to stave off that fate, Turner spent the weekend being interviewed and campaigning in and around the district in the western province of British Columbia.
Turner, 55, has been prime minister since June 30, when he succeeded Pierre Trudeau, who retired. Turner resigned from the House of Commons in 1976 after resigning as Trudeau's finance minister.
Canada is divided into 282 electoral districts known as seats. The party that wins the most seats forms the government and its leader becomes prime minister
Ice on Discovery is risk for return
By United Press International
CARE CANVERAL Fla
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Flight controllers, worried about possible damage during the return to Earth, told the crew of the shuttle Discovery yesterday a spacewalk might be required to chisel off a 10-pound ice chunk blocking an outside water nozzle.
The astronauts at first were told such a venture outside the cabin could occur today, but three hours later it would there would be no space alk today.
The possibility of a spacewalk taking place tomorrow was left open, and would extend the mission a bit longer. The shuttle would then land Thursday.
on Thursday.
However, Henry Hartfield, Michael Coats, Richard Mullane, KU alumnus Steven Hawley, Judy Resnik and Charles Walker remained scheduled to land at 7.39 a.m. tomorrow at Edwards Air Force Base in California's Mojave Desert.
THE ASTRONAUTS WERE in no immediate danger because of the ice, but the concern was that the 18-inch ice chunk, estimated to be 65 inches high, break off during the return and damage the shuttle's tail section.
"I guess I've been concerned all along about the size of that thing and
its implications for entry," commander Hartsfield sailed after being informed of the options under consideration. "Apparently you've been worried about it too."
Flight director John Cox said the concern increased late yesterday after an analysis by Rockwell International, builder of Discovery, suggested that such a big piece of ice breaking off at high speed could cause considerable damage to the ship.
ship
Cox said the astronauts first probably will be asked to use the ship's robot arm to try to break off the ice. Astronaut Sally Rise, Hawley's wife and an arm expert, tried the procedure in a simulator in Houston and said visibility is bad for an arm knock and she hoped something else would be tried.
these basic techniques.
Hartfield suggested that he first fire the ship's big control jets to give Discovery "a few bangs" back and forth and up and down to try to dislodge the ice.
Linhua District
COX SAID THE crew might also be asked to discharge water at a higher pressure or blow air through a hose. The spacewalk would be the last resort.
"We'd probably only do that if we can't get enough off with the arm or these other techniques," Cox said.
"Give it a few whacks," he said.
"It can't hurt anything. Then
Houston — A block of ice that formed on the outside of the shuttle Discovery at the waste water port is shown by a TV camera on the shuttle's remote arm. The 18-inch formation is of concern because of possible damage to the Discovery if the ice hit the shuttle upon re-entry. NASA officials are considering a spacewalk to remove the ice.
Before being told there would not be a spacewalk today, astronauts Richard Mullane and Steven Hawley donned helmets to begin breathing pure oxygen to eliminate nitrogen bubbles in their blood — the bends during a spacewalk. The ship's
cabin pressure also was being lowered to prepare for a possible spacewalk.
ALTHOUGH A SPACEWALK was not planned for this mission, two members of each shuttle crew are trained for emergency spacewalks. The proper equipment is stored
aboard Discovery for such an outside venture.
Flight director Randy Stone said earlier in the day that the ice buildup was not considered a serious problem and an emergency spacewalk had not even been considered. But Cox said the later Rockwell study changed the situation.
Threat of new elections has Israeli coalitions scrambling
By United Press International
TEL AVIV, Israel — Israel's two major political blocs worked feverishly to shore up support for their respective coalitions yesterday amid the threat of new elections brought on by their failure to agree to a national unity government.
Israel television said "only a miracle" could bring about a unity
government after Labor Party leader Shimon Peres and caretaker Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir of the Likud bloc failed to reach agreement in key unity talks Sunday.
NEITHER LABOR NOR the Likud, however, ruled out more meetings on a possible unity government
Ahmir said the two party leaders had failed to agree on who would serve as prime minister first and how Cabinet posts would be distributed. He said the Likud could not formally accept Labor's desire to freeze settlements.
A Shamir aide, Yossi Ahimeir, said yesterday the issue of Jewish settlements on the West Bank and the politics of rotating the prime minister's job had caused the break in national unity talks with the Labor Party.
"I hope that there's a chance
because the situation requires it." Shamir said. No talks were scheduled.
"I'm planning to meet with all parties." Peres said. "We have to consider the situation of the state. The economy is indeed in danger of breaking down."
The political crisis has aggravated economic turmoil in Israel caused by a burgeoning foreign trade deficit, government overspending and an
annual inflation rate of 400 percent. A Bank of Israel study published yesterday called for austere measures, including curbs on cost of living wage increases.
TRADE UNION ECONOMISTS meanwhile warned that Islam faces mounting unemployment and possibly stagflation — recession coupled with rising triple-digit annual inflation.
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1984 Page 12
Reagan permits banana imports
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration, allegedly involved in a covert war against Nicaragua, has done nothing to halt a sixfold rise in banana imports from the Marxist nation in the first half of 1984.
The skyrocketing banana imports, arriving entirely via one California company, have meant a cash inflow of $14.7 million in U.S. currency to a country Reagan says is exporting to destabilize the Caribbean basin.
The White House has taken no action despite prodding a year ago from Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.
Chief beneficiary of the banana imports has been Pandol Brothers Inc., a firm based in Delano, Calif. Company president Jack Pandol failed to respond to several telephone calls.
BANANA IMPORTS FROM Nicaragua through May of this year totaled 42.8 million metric tons, compared with 7.4 million tons during the same period last year, according to U.S. Agriculture Department figures.
At the same time, banana imports from Honduras an American ally, have fallen by 18 percent, the decline has been down eighty xx as well.
Officials at the State Department. the Agriculture Department and the
Honduran government said that although the numbers may look surprising, they indicate nothing unusual. They note that the United States has no trade restrictions with Nicaragua.
Nicaragua
An Agriculture Department official said a Honduran official said banana imports can fluctuate wildly, depending on the weather.
ON APRIL 26, 1983, Helms urged the ON APRIL 26, 1983, Helms urged the House to wallop the Sandistas economically, calling it "essential to the peace and security of Latin America and the United States that we do not continue on a 'business as usual' basis with Marxist Nicaragua."
"Since the United States is the only practical market for Nicaraguan bananas, it is clear that prompt action to restrict access to our market could have given the economic benefits to the Sandinista and his four-page letter, a copy of which was obtained by United Press International.
"At the same time, such an action could send a very positive signal to our friends in the region — that the United States will not continue to be a source of economic vitality to the Sandinistas while they endeavor to disrupt the economic and political systems of their neighbors."
THE SENATOR PROPOSED that Reagan impose restrictions, and promised to sponsor legislation authorizing presidential action if that
was not possible. A spokesman for Helms said receipt of his letter was acknowledged, but nothing further happened.
A spokesman for one banana importing company said he believed the Nicaraguans, using expropriated, government-owned banana plantations started by an American company, were deliberately "dumping" the bananas to endanger the American market and endanger U.S. dollars.
Asked why the White House has taken no action, the import company spokesman said, "Perhaps it has not drawn any attention out there."
During an interview at the Nicaraguan Embassy, Rolando Sevilla, minister counselor for economic affairs, flatly rejected suggestions his nation is dumping on the American market.
SEVILLA SAID THE United States received 40 percent of all Nicaraguan imports prior to the 1979 revolution resulting in the ouster of strongman Anastasiio Somoza. Last year, the figure was 18 percent.
When he was asked why the United States allows an increase in banana imports from Nicaragua, Sevilla said, "because the United States probably needs to fill out its import quota. Nicaragua is close and (had) always traded bananas with the United States. It's just a continuation of it, to fill the U.S. quota of imports."
Acid leak thwarted in Omaha
By United Press International
OMAHA, Neb. — A nitric acid leak from an outdoor storage tank that sent a poisonous cloud drifting over southwest Omaha, forcing thousands of persons to flee, was halted early yesterday.
The leak, which began Sunday night, was contained about five hours after workers first saw the leak. They also found in steel tank at Control Data Corp.
The teak combined with air to form a cloud of poisonous nitric oxide gas, which drifted over the hopes of about 10,000 Omaha residents staying in hotels nearby, Fire Department Capt. Joe Wiegel said.
As it hit the air, the acid formed a yellow-orange cloud that drifted southeast.
Police went door-to-door and cruised neighborhoods with loudspeakers Sunday night warning people to leave their homes, or at least to shut doors and windows, turn off air conditioners and take pets inside.
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FALL CLASSES
FALL
KNITTING Beginning Knitting
Beginning of School
Class I starts Sept. 17 (Mon.)
8 sessions, 7 - 9 p.m.
$16.00
Class II starts Sep. 18 (Tues.)
8 sessions, 7 - 9 p.m.
tea, $16.00
Intermediate Knitting
Two-Color Legwarmers
starts Sept. 20 (Thurs.)
6 sessions, 7-9 p.m.
fee: $12.00
Two-Color Legwarmer
start September 18 (Tues.)
4 sessions 7-9 p.m.
$80.00 by Joey Miller
Argyle Sweater
starts Sept. 17 (Mon.)
6 sessions, 7.9 p.m.
fee $12.00
*aesthion Knitting*
starts Sept. 19 (Wed.)
8 sessions. 7-9 p.m.
fee $16.00
Fashion Knitting
Fairisle Vest
starts Sept. 20 (Thurs.)
6 sessions, 7-9 p.m.
fee: $12.00
WEAVING & SPINNING
Beginning Weaving
Oct. 27 & 28 (Sat. Sun)
2 sessions, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
tee: $25.00 includes materials
Tapestry Weaving
Oct. 6 (Sat)
Oct. 9-30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
fee: $12.00 includes materials
Hand-Manipulated Laces
Sept. 22 (Sat.)
1 session, 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
fee: $12 00 includes materials
Woven Clothing
Wave Closing
Oct. 17 (7 p.m.) . Oct. 20 (9 p.m.)
Oct. 27 (10 11 a.m.)
fee: $30.00 includes warp
Sept. 15 (Sat)
1 session, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
fee: $12.00 includes materials
Beginning Spinning
Fancy Spinning
Beginning Basketry
Oct. 13 (sat)
1 session, 10 a.m -4 p.m
tee $12.00 includes materials
BASKETRY & WHEAT WEAVING
starts Sept. 19 (Wed.)
2 sessions, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
tee $15.00 includes materials
Butterfly Basket
Wheat Weaving
Oct. 20 (Sat.)
1 session, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
fee: $10.00 includes materials
Rug Braiding
starts Nov. 3 (Sat)
2 sessions, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
fee: $15.00 includes materials
OTHERS
starts Sept. 12 (Wed.)
4 sessions, 7-9 p.m.
ten. $8.00
Lace Net Darning
Stencilling
Sept 29 (Sat)
1 session. a. m.-12 p.m.
fee: $5.00 includes materials
Saturday
Oct 13 (Sat)
1 session, 9 a.m - 12 p.m
fee: $5.00 includes materials
ee. $3 off includes material CROCHETING & LACE MAKING
Bobbin Lace
Tatting
starts Sept. 13 (Thurs.)
6 sessions; 7-9 p.m.
fee: $12.00
Sept. 15 (Sat.)
1 session, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
free $12.00
Beginning Crochet
stars Sept. 25 (tues)
4 sessions 7-9 p.m.
tee: $8.00
Intermediate Crochet
start Oct 23 (Tues.)
4 sessions. 7-9 p.m.
fee $8.00
Beaded Crochet
start oct. 25 (Thurs)
2 sessions, 7-9 p.m.
fee: $4.00
STOP BY FOR A FULL CLASS DESCRIPTION
Pre-Registration Required. - Sign Up Now
FOURTH ANNUAL ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA/CHI OMEGA
Saturday, September 8th 7 p.m. Burge Union
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WHEAT MEET'84
- 100 Kegs of FREE BEER
Stroh's Beer
- Top Bands:
UNIDOS
Steve, Bob, and Rich
All Proceeds to Cancer Research at KU Med Center
TRACK MEET:
TRACK MEET:
Sat., Sept. 22
10 a.m. at Memorial Stadium
$3.50 in advance
$4.50 at the gate
1
University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1984
SPORTS ALMANAC
Page 13
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE American Conference East
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
| | W | L | T | Pct | PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Miami | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1.000 | 35 | 17 |
| NY Jets | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1.000 | 21 | 17 |
| New England | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1.000 | 17 | 17 |
| Indianapolis | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1.000 | 14 | 12 |
Pittsburgh 0 1 0 000 27 37 37
Cincinnati 0 1 0 000 17 20 20
Houston 0 1 0 000 14 24
Cleveland 0 1 0 000 13 21
San Diego 1 0 0 000 42 13
Kansas City 1 0 0 000 17 37
Seattle 1 0 0 000 24 04
LA Lakers 1 0 0 000 14 0
Denver 1 0 0 000 20 17
| | W | L | T | Pct | PF | Opp |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| NY Giants | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0.00 | 26 | 27 |
| Dallas | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0.00 | 26 | 27 |
Philadelphia | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0.00 | 27 | 28 |
Slouhars | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0.00 | 27 | 28 |
Nationals | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0.00 | 17 | 15 |
Chicago 1 0 0 1.000 34 14
Green Bay 1 0 1 1000 24 23
Detroit 1 0 1 1000 25 22
Baltimore 1 0 1 1000 14 34
Minnesota 1 0 1 1000 13 42
West 1 0 1 1000 14 28
Atlanta 1 0 1 1000 36 17
San Francisco 1 0 1 1000 36 17
LA Rams 1 0 1 1000 32 27
Los Angeles 1 0 1 1000 28 36
Tampa Bay at New Orleans, noon.
Atlanta, 8. New Orleans 28
Kansas City, 7. Pittsburgh 27
Baltimore, 6. Washington 25
New England 21. Buffalo 17
N. Y. Giants 28. Philadelphia 17
Oakland, 13. San Diego 4. Minnesota 13
San Francisco 30. Detroit 27
Chicago 4. Tampa 17
Indianaapolis 17
New York Jets 23. Indianapolis 14
L. A. Hammond 21.
Monday's Results
Seattle, 32. Cleveland 0
Dallas at L. A. Harris, night
9. Pittsburgh at N.Y. J. Nets, 8.pm
Sunday, 9. Sept
Buffalo State 5. Florida 13
Dallas at N.Y. Janes, noon
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pc. GR
Detroit 88 50 638
Toronto 79 58 357
Baltimore 62 54 13
New York 73 63 357
Boston 73 64 355
Cleveland 67 77 490
Milwaukee 56 81 490
East
Minnesota 67 611 511 —
Kansas City 68 69 496 2 —
California 69 69 493 2 (%)
Oakland 67 74 463 6 —
Chicago 67 74 463 6 —
Texas 61 75 449 8 —
Seattle 61 75 442 9 —
Monday's Results
Oakland 8 Chicago 2
St. Louis 7 Charlotte 4
New York 3 Toronto 0
Baltimore 5 California 1
Baltimore 5 California 1
Minnesota 4 Kansas City 1
California (Witt) (2-10) at Cleveland
(Schulz 2.5, 7, 6 n. p.)
Seattle at Texas, night
Minnesota at Kansas City, night
Oakland at Chicago, night
Miami at Miami, night
Baltimore at Detroit, night
California at Cleveland, night
Baltimore (Boddicker 16-9) at Detroit
(Bozema 2.5, 1.5) n.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W 8 L Pct GB
Chicago 73 41 606
New York 77 60 562 6
Philadelphia 77 60 562 9
St. Louis 69 66 511 13
Montreal 67 69 491 15
Pittsburgh 68 78 413 24
(Mothbello) 2-27. 7 p.m.
Oakland (McCatty) 7-12) at Chicago
(102Roma 7-5), 6'30 p.m.
Toronto (Clancy) 10:13) at New York
Gobbs 6/19, 11; "3 p.H.
Seattle (Beattie 10.15) at Texas (Hough
14.14)
(Sutton 12:40) 7:30 p.m.
Minnesota (Schrom 4.7) at Kansas City
(Seaver 12-9): 7:30 p.m.
Boston (Nipper 7-5) at Milwaukee
Winnfield (Schofm 4/7) at Kansas City
(Gabera 8/1), 7:35 p.m.
Taylor (Griffith 6/2) at House "Hou"
Houston Scott 5-11 at Atlanta
Bruziosaara 1:11, 4:40 p.m.
Montreal
Fitzharris 3, Abundant 4
Fort Thomas 5, Philadelphia 3, 12 minutes
San Francisco 4, Cinnamath 3
St. Louis 7, New York 3
Atlanta 6, Houston 4
Pittsburgh Delaware 6-12 | southeast Galliganck 0-7-1 35 p.m
Rochester New York 6-4 | at Philadelphia
(Hirschfeldt24)
Pittsburgh (Delton, 6-12) at Montreal
(Delton, 07-2) 6-35 0.10
San Diego
Houston
Alaska
Los Angeles
Los Angeles
San Francisco
San Francisco
Cambridge
Monday's Results
Chicago ( Sanderson 6.4) at Philadelphia
(Catton 11.6) 6.35 p.m.
Cincinnati (Soto (13-7) at San Francisco
(Krukow 10-10), 9-35 p.m.
San Diego (Whitson 13-7) at Los Angeles (Hershiser 8-27), 9:35 p.m.
New York (Fernandez 4-3) at St Louis (Cox
6-10, 7.35 p.m
Golf Results
New York at Pittsburgh, night Philadelphia at N. Louis, night Cincinnati at San Diego, night Greenville
$175,000 Rail Charity Classic
M Springfield, IL, Sept. 3
Cory Hill 819250 26 68-78-61 207
Colby Jane 122500 120 67-78-61 207
Lara Grabac 122500 120 67-78-61 207
Larry Grabac 122500 120 70-78-69 221
Mary Benzimmers 726754 13 74-64-73 221
Nancy Hagen 726754 13 74-64-73 221
Nancy Hagen 726754 13 68-78-61 212
Pat Bradley 4156 10 77-61-68 212
Pat Bradley 4156 10 77-61-68 212
Heather Broem 2887 10 77-73-24 212
Heather Broem 2887 10 77-73-24 212
The University Daily
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
Call 864-4358
| Words | CLASSIFIED RATES | 10 Days |
|---|
| 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | or 2 Weeks |
|---|
| 0-15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 |
| 16-20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 |
| 21-25 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.85 |
| For every 5 words add | 25c | 50c | 75c | 1.05 |
POLICIES
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Classified Display ... $4.20
over column inch
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
- Words set in HOLD FACE count as 3 words
Android Display advertisement can be only wide and wide, or no more than nine inches deep. Minimum depth is no inch. Newriers allowed to display Android advertisement except for large screens.
working days prior to publication.
• Allow rates based on correct day insertions.
- Included in application to advertise classified advertising.
- ONLY
no responsibility is assumed for more than one in
case.
- Hint: has ads - please add a $2 service charge.
• Hint: must ad as company all classified adsまた marked.
classified display advertisements
• labeled displays and do not count towards num
This carried out sale discount
* Samples of all mail order items must be submitted*
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
until credit has been established
* To试卷 are not provided for classified or
Print items can advertise 1,000 of charge but are not printed exceeding three days. These ads can be placed
on the back cover of the business office at 944-4138.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 119 Stauffer Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ATTENTION FEMALE ATHLETES" Trends for KU Women's Fastpitch Team will begin September 14. The team has achieved athlete rankings in Board Room 221. Information: Facilities: 864-737 for additional information.
Ninjahead Special this Thurs 5/30 10:00
Ninjahead Special this Thurs 5/30 10:00
Matches Matsui vs Hara
Matches Matsui vs Hara
Become a KU Student Ambassador! Interested students should have a general working knowledge of the University's curriculum and be willing and open manner to high school students. This position requires that applicants be full-time students with a minimum of 2.5 cumulative grade point average. Applications are available in the office of Administration, 30 West 14th Street, for application June is Monday, September 17
3132-7477 JOHNSON
KWALITY COMICS, SALE Aug. 2nd through Sept.
6th, 800 W. 729th St., HOLLYWOOD, CA 90210
800-729-7239
Budget Stretcher coupons Thurs. nights Buy $40 & receive $1 coupon toward next purchase Cross Reference, Malls Shopping Center
**Detroit**
Premium Thrift Shop for homeware, clothing,
medications. Saturdays: 9:12, 10:30. Tuesdays:
4:30, 9:12. Thursdays: 7:40, 9:10.
94 Vermont
If it true you can buy裤 for $44 through the CAI government. You get the fact that today. Call CAI.
Minute Masters Music for dancers and parties. All
lights. Limited. Encouraged Rates.
CALL TODAY: 800-553-9264
FREE DISCOUNT POSTER CATALOG Write a
FACTORY 9.0 West Rosemont Ave. Alexandria,
VA 23814
**FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAMS** Topics include overcoming mental disorders, preparing for exams and interview preparation, learning computer comprehension, Tuesday, September 4, 7 to 9:30 m. Jayaawah Room, Kansas Union FREE; the Student Assistance Center, 321 S. 15th St.
DEBALING WITH THAT UNAKKS FEELING
Learn to imitate conversations make new
sounds in English.
September 10, 6:30 - 9:00 p.m. FRIE
Please attend to attend the Student Assistance
Program.
The JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK is now taking applications for the following staff positions:
Copywriter - Liaison Editor Living Groups Edit, Art Director Applications are available in the Jayhawkerr office 121 b. 12th Floor, p. p. p. Seenend for applications is Wed. Sep 10.
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS. Attend the Academic Enrollment Workflow Workshop listening and notating. Wednesday, September 5, 8 to 10 a.m., 207 W. 49th Street and notation. The Student Assistance Center 121 Strong.
**IMPROVE YOUR READING COMPREHENSION AND SPEED** Three class sessions, six x 9:30 a.m., Monday through Friday, 24 and 7:30 to 9 p.m. Materials fee $15. Register at the Student Assistance Center, 121 University Drive, St. Louis, MO 63102.
**SPRINTERS BOOKS. Lawrence's Womyn's and**
**children's bookstore for ALL women, collectively**
operated by leasures, invites you to meet 8 - 12
open house! 1101/ 1.7 Mass; 6 - 30 Postkirk Park,
and Womyn's Dance (9 a.m.) at Clinton Park, 5th
Ala St. for outdoor events, direction
Western
brings out of large long distance telephone bills?
call TMI, your only quick and efficient local
distance company in Lawrence, New
york. Guardians in the U.S. have been
protected in the U. Haitian. Puerto Rico and
Alaska. There are no monthly minimums
and Alaska bring out calls to call TMI represente-
nants at 843-9566.
- * * MUM SALE * * *
Lambda Sigma
Parent's Day Mum Sale
Spetember 4-15
On Sale Near You! $3.50 ea
The University Daily KANSAN
Shireen Bennett, formerly of Charme Beauty
Shireen Bennett, now at Angles Beauty Salon 940
Massachusetts. M-F Call 643-8700 for Shuren
November Special Shampoo & Haircut - 88
RESEARCH PAPERS* 306 page catalog, 15,278
topic(s) Rush $2.00 RESEARCH (1322 MHZ, hoope, 200
MB, Los Angeles) 9205) (213) 477 8226
Bent 10" Color T.V. $29.96 a month. Curtis
Mathes. 14 W. 23rd. 842-3751 Open 9:30 9:00.
M F. 9:30 10:00, Saf
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. 147 W. 2trd. 842-5751. Open 9:30 - 9:00.
M-F: 9:30 - 5:00
FOR RENT
2-BR Apt, like New, on Busroute, C/A/W in驶, in closed:
841.131.714.843.0038
3 BR Apt. Utilities paid 7 blocks K.U. 2 blocks downtown. Covered parking, large backyard, sun west. West #178. Phone 764-2523 for info
1. bedroom 2.bath townhouse w/garage Swimming pool available Excellent southwest location 673) mg Call 841 9670
3 bedroom House, new furnace, new carpet, carpentry, fireplace, house to K.U. 181 KU 84198
AVAILABLE JAN. 141 one bedroom apartment in our home on secured社屋 $235,841-324
AVALOS APARTMENTS Gas & water paid in these large one and two bedroom apartments Ready for immediate occupancy Close to KC Airport for more info, call Kaw Valley Mgt at 844 6800
Designed for a group of students, Classy, huge and energy efficient 4000 watt 79-168 835-942 Female Christian roommates 79-168 835-942 Female Christian roommates 79-168 835-942 Female Roommate= to share Apt 79-168 79-168 835-942 Female Roommate= to share Apt 79-168 79-168 835-942 utilities, deposit semi furnished, garage downstairs & bathroom Call Paula, evenings, 79-696 79-696
For Rent: next to campus, nice efficiency and one bedroom apartment. Utilities paid. 842-4185
MEADOWBROWK still available one and two bedroom furnished and unfurnished aids. Cable and water included. 2 shocks from campus, and excellent maintenance. $149.00 & Crestine / 842-409
Large, furnished apartment (6 rooms). 3 bedrooms. 1/2 bath. fireplace, central air, garage close to KU. Very nice. A couple or 3 students. Reference: 842.7487
Now leasing one, two & three bedroom apartments,
duplexes. Ready for you to move into. Good locations
some on busine. Contact Kaw Valley Mgt.
at 841-6088
MEADOWBROOK—nice furnished studio available immediately. Water and cable paid 2 blocks from campas, on bus route, laundry facilities. Call 842-4280 & Stainline
OLD MJL APARTMENTS. Now leasing newly remodeled one and two bedrooms apts - walking distance to KU and on basement. Ready for move-in. move in time. Call JMJ for more information and for more info.
1981 Honda Mopar Express SR, in good condition
$775. Call evensy. @ 843-2500
1076 Yamaha 360, good condition, 10-speed men's bicycle
483 8156 or 864 9044
Male roommate wanted. Nonsmoker Separate BR,洗衣, dryer, 125 mo+ plus 1/2 utilities Call 340-932 or 646-7752
Opportunity for roommates! Book three from campuses, 4 big beds in a closet, a kitchen with pantry and with 2 vanities. backpack overcrowding stadium, laundry, put remodeling materials in your garage and allow for $10 per roommate for 1. See to up air the bedding at $35.
New 2 br townhome w/fireplace, garage air conditioner, fenced yard Day 749.6977 Evenings
843 1026 or 843 4337
Sublet Spacius one Jr. Apt. in Heatherwood
Valley Apt. Post, covered wiath balcony,
sheltered by 3 bedrooms and a refrigerator;
C/A low utilities, water paid on,
heater; R$ 250, now only $261 (84) or 119/on
rental.
847 Citation Mobile home, 14. 40, 2. 8r., unif-
ward, CA, storage desk, deluxe kitchen,
garden tub, extra space, 811 6036, weekends &
days, 294-134 days.
3.2 cubic ft. Reirigerator—$125, 72 Datsum 500
runs, body in bad shape—Best offer over $200.
749-3288
Quaint rooms in family home in Old West
Lakehouse. Since kitchen privileges $100 and
sitting room privileges $50.
12 x 12 ' burnt-orange shag carpet, $25, 841-566,
841-5024
One & Two Bedroom Apts. Close to campus, no utilities furnished, reasonable rates. call 842 0727, keep trying
Try cooperative living' Sunflower House, 1406 Tennessee, 749 6871 Ask for Dawn Inexpensive and Private rooms are available
FOR SALE
79 HONDA CX-500, Plexi-fairing, new Dunlops.
79 HONDA C350, FEATURING a new hood,
E.C. $800 negotiable 643-390 steps.
AUDI-Fox, 1977, 4-dr, auto, $1950. Electrovoice
New hardware for the iPad.
Apple II, II plus Silentype Thermal Printer w in
terrace card $190 negotiable. Scott; 864 6800
`urface card $190 negotiate Scout, 84-6000`
Apple IIe KD, disk drive with controller $79
Verizon
Commodore 64 computer with dataset, board-writing process, color graphics. Great for students. Like new pair $390. price negotiable
-728-198-6
FOR SALE. Bookske, starting at 49.95. The Furniture Barn: 1811 W.60 H
Apple II: i8k6, amber monitor. Apple printer:
$1295 IBM PC (2) drive $1895 drives.IBM PCr- $1895 drive $1795 IBM Format 256 or
KBrane format 482/327 or 482/327 or
Computer trend I-341-0041
For your furnishing and your living quarters, we have what you need. Thrift stores at 628 Vermont and E. 9th.
Need to sell a full size bed, complete. Make an of her.
Call 841-3299
Men 's 2³, lightweight 12' speed, Men's tail
10' speed, women 's 15' speed, men's speed, Call
18' speed
Gak table, 4 chairs, desk, dressers, bed, chest
bookshelves, and tables, ea. 841-2831 after 5.30
PEUGEOT PX 10, Reynolds 53) Tubing and great
Gemini 10x dot matrix printer; barely been used
Call 824-240
Queen Size Waterbeds $179.99 complete. The Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 6th
SONY PSLX 1 TURNtable DD full-upl, LOW
hearts ARL 107 D427 casey Doblehy
Queen size Water bed $80 Drawing board $10 Call
841-1444
Solid Wood. 5 DRAWER CHESTS $89.95 The Fur-
ure Barn. 11W 6th Bath
stereo television. All name brands. Lowest prices. Kx area. Total Sound Distortion.
TWIN BED in very good cond. $20. Call 841-2901.
Twin Mattresses and Foundations $119 per set.
The Furniture Barn W 16th
Typewriter, IBM wstatic II, self correcting,
w four typing bangles and approve $80 worth of ribbons
and tapes, cover $60 perfect cond.
481-796
Used Metal Office Chairs. Side chairs with &
without arms $5 & $10. Stainless steel chair with
castors $15. Exec. Screw chair with castors $20
$32. 1270 after 1.0 m
Udish School Sewing Machines, Excellent selection.
Singer brands. Ibiza's Bermuda sewing &
vacuum center, 2480 R Iowa. (Holiday Plaza)
842 195.
Used vacuum, all brands, excellent selection. Bob's Bermuda sauna & vacuum chamber 340B-789
WINDSURFING SALBARDS prefixed from $499
Large selection of imported models. NATURAL
CONTRASTS. WORKS AT SUN. £65.00.
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplement. Now on Sale. Make sure to use them in your exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization 'available now at Town Cries. The exam preparation.'
Women's 10-speed Schwinn Traveler III $125.
843-2586, 5.7 p.m. or ask for Launan, 2210
Summerfield.
COMPILER TERMINAL Zenith ZT1 (Terminal with built in Auto Dial modem, auto log on feature, parallel (centronics) and E23 cores. Zenith ZTU II hss Monitor 480-6238
AUTO SALES
Furniture Hide-a-bed $10. Dresser $40.
Table-chairs $40. Day bed $40. Small cabinet $15.
Bean bag $10. Joe Call at 644-8034 or 843 8156
1977 Triangle TRT. recently rebuilt engine, new starter, alternator, clutch plate, amd . AM/FM Stero cassette, power antenna, air, Call Jash, 841 2232 anytime.
1975 Plymouth Granfurt AC, AT, PS, PB Exc
cellent car $200, negotiable 841 0127 Call even
ings, weekend
1973 T-Bird, white leather interior. AT, PS, PB.
PW. Tilt & power seats, some rust $795. Call
844-6092
1971 Buck Skylark, PS, PB, AT, AC, excellen
body rough. bdych 8417-8414 or 864-8564
Sanman Classique Stereo System, includes direct drive, turntable integrated, amplifier, tuner, casetube deck, equalizer, bass monitor, CD changer, 641-1223. Anytime 9781 Mauiang 4 l, great air, new tree. A
Clean used VW's for sale. Metric Motors, 841 6600
Cleanup Powder Diamond Sidex. Six Diameter.
AM, FM stores, new clutch. Asking $59
Call 749 1232 for more info.
60. VW Bug, strong engine, Phil, 842 2822, eve & weekends.
1997 Fast Eat Super Brava, Pioneer AM-FM stereo machine, 4 players, black velour interior, new spare tire; tires - very good condition. Snow tires. 845-309 after 5, 845-426 during 5 years.
piano teacher qualified in Suzuki method needed.
pulliam's Music House. 843-3907
Quarter time graduate research assistant to assist the Associate Dean of Architecture with public publications other public relations agencies. Prior to applying, you must be open in a Possible Appointment ends 3-14-8. Submit resume with phone number to Annelise Belfire. **Marvin, Lawrence, KS 6055**. Applications
Missing Orange & white outered male cat,
friends, answers to Carmichael. Lived in 1500
block of Louisiana and roams the bread
house. Please call me. 842-5211
anytime. We must him.
HELP WANTED
LOST AND FOUND
1978 Mustang H 4-yl, great on gas, new tires. A good car for a student $2500. 842 248
Last Caleb Cat one yr old Last seen—T17B & Iowa, please call sit 4666 or return—1715 Indiana, Reward
- only time Bartender and Cocktail waitresses
Must be 21 yrs. of age. The New Place 2486 Iowa
842-9530
Bartenders & Doormen. Must be 21. Apply after 2 p.m. at romine.ks3.wsio Wisconsin.
Immediate openings for part time girl petroleum
AI2 shift available. Especially月 runches &
merrings. Apply in person at Vesta restaurants
1327 W. 6th
SOLID WOOD Student desks: $89. The Furniture
Barn; 1811 W. 6th
Openings for part and full time fountain personnel. All shifts available. Apply in person at Vista restaurants, 1327 W. 6th
Someone to drive a piano tarner around on Tuesday, and Thursday. Pullup's music: 843-3907
Child care workers wanted for group care home. Married couple. At least one spouse must have bachelor degree from an accredited college or college level course in undergraduate psychology Must have strong desire to work with and to improve the child care environment. Child care homes have a excellent 9 year record with well developed Teaching Family Model and an active relationship with the current Certified Teaching Parents will provide 60 to 90 days on sight training. Program funded by Kendall Dept of Social and Health Sciences, University of Iowa, will begin training between October 1 and November 1, 1984 Applicant must be working toward Bachelor's degree in College, University local, and 2 colleges within 25 miles Easy access to Kcity City colleges.Equal opportunity employer Salary range $35,000-$45,000. Send resume to Youth Services, Inc. (P.O Box 221)
coordinator Newletter editor for the East Lawrence Improvement Association, a neighborhood based organization, 1. 3 time per week; 2. 5 times per month; 3. must have administrative experience, organizing skills ability to publish periodic newsletter, some research background in education, diverse groups and individuals, and a demonstrated commitment to helping people help themselves by applying. Apply by letter and resume, with two letters of recommendation by September to the ELIA office, MFH 842-769-4700. ELIA is MFH 842-769-4700.
Delivery Drivers. Must be dependable, hardworking and able to work weekends. Car and expenses are provided. Apply Mon Wed 2. 4 pm, in person only at Pizza Hut. 934 Manhua Anch. DO
Dependent female to assist disabled with care during hospitalization. Evening hours available. Call between 1-5:30.
FRESHMEN- It won't too late to join NAVAL
HOTT: Call 804-3161
Full time, mature individual to aid in supervising six adolescent youth must be willing to work with students in their first grade or higher; experience preferred. Send letter w resume to Achievement Platform for boys. 1104 Dutton Street, Boston, MA 02116.
GRADUATE ASSISTANT Primary duty to assist with production of paraffins and occasional publications in humanities; secondary publication in Humanistic Studies may be required. Excellent typing and proediting skills essential. Experience with ATMS and or WordStar工资可报。For ten months (flexibility in scheduling work is possible and salary range is $420 - 500). Submit letter of application and resume to Fairfield American University, Kansas 604-4708 or September 7, 1984.
Micro Computer Sales person. Full and part time
inside sales, some outside sales. Knowledge of
hardware and software required. Send or en-
resume to Compustark, 71 W. 23rd, Lawrence
Need responsible person to care for two great kids in my home, 9 a.m. to l.p. m. 841-0481
University of Kansas Budget Office has an open position for a continuous half time graduate assistant position with possible full time employment during the academic year. The position requires budget and accounting transfers for the University budget and will help with the technical preparation of the four University Budgets. The Budget Officer must have experience to poise for fund accounting and have an opportunity to work within the University financial environment. Acceptance in a K.U. grant program is required. Send resume and oral communications skill required: $400-480 per month for a half time appointment Closing date: Sep 21st 1984 For information call Lana Whisker. Budget Officer
applications available in the Strong Hall. EOE, WAITERS AND WATHEES NEEDED. Gamn's nightitude is interviewing goodlooking students with spirit and sensibility for water and waitress position. Experience help, not mandatories. Phone 842-9677 for appointment.
Work Study position open in two the organizations and activities continue. Care will be provided for those who will continue that end of Spring Semester, 1985. Prefer applies to students enrolled in a job offered as available and need to be returned to room 601 in September.
WTCs, the battered women shelter, is looking for strong, sensitive women to act as volunteer advocates. Women of all ages, race and ethnic backgrounds are encouraged to apply. A commitment to the self-determination of women is required. Volunteer women should be 18-40 years old (614-6607 before Sep 9).
Wanted: Part-time shift supervisor. Must be 18, able to work nights and weekends. Apply in person only at Bendida Bandido W 132d W 230f
POSTDOCTORAL RESHARK ANS 400722-
Membrane Biochemistry: Position available for membrane biochemical equipment in neuromuscular and neonatal membrane ion transporting systems to be examined. Holds a PhD or equivalent in Biochemistry required with lab experience in membrane isolation and analysis. Send resume and two letters of reference. Possible Complete job description available upon request. Send mail and two letters of reference. Biomedical Research, Lawrence, Ks 65014 Deadline for applications: September 30, 1984 We are
Stay at Stephanie's. Ambulance people wanted
at delivery. Good pay. good environment. Must be 18 years old and have own car. Apples at 221 Yale Ave. or for 3 call 811-8010.
Wide choice Desk Lamps and Accessories to brighten your room at The Furniture Barn. 1811 W. 6th.
MISCELLANEOUS
PERSONAL
Dehus, want to daunce? (it's more than 75 cents too.) Strots.
REWARD for into learning to the return of my neck after surgery. Contact Nastya Berkhesh at 915-326-7800 or nasterkhesh@nastyberkhesh.com
S W M-36 man, seeks a taste of freedom three
sessions. Serious injuries only; 8
hours required.
MATH TUTOR for most courses. 843-9022
Sensitive, nurturing women and men are needed to spend time with children of domestic abuse victims. Children may break the哭泣. If interested in volunteering it help break the cycle of violence and help children recover. 11:00 a.m.-11:49 a.m. September 8.
BUSINESS PERS.
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care; confidentially assured Greater Kansas City area. Call for appointment
COMPRESHENEVE, HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care, confidentiality assured Greater Kansas City area Call for appointment
WAITLY COMICS, SALE. Aug. 23rd thru Sept.
4th, WC 74, #84, 73599.
Instant passport, portfolio resume, naturalization, immigration, visa ID, and of course fine portrait. Saxell Studio 749-1611
LARGE CLUCK-STUD LOM LA VAI reg $29.95 $8.65
Crowdlight reg 27.95 $7.00
Registrar req 36.95
Burdinger, 841.36443
Modeling and theater portraits shooting new
Beginiers to professionals: Call for information
STAETDITLER/MARS TCH gen special 7 per net
per set $22 to 50 write supplies. Last Strong
$149.
Student affordable at sale prices. Typewriters, keyboard correcting portables with office features. Hewlett Packard calculators, self-service desks and business systems. Phone: 842-4243
Say it on a shirt; custom silk-screen printing. T-shirts, jerseys and caps. Shortt by Swellen 143.
THE BEST WORKOUT IN TOWN. Lawrence
School School 692, 120th Ventranean to a
central location.
The New Place: for a rich atmosphere at an affair darle price. The New Place, a private club. 2804
842.9450
DIMST BEAMS $2 each, or 6 for $10. Call 841. 6006.
[ ] [ ] [D]. [D].
SERVICES OFFERED
WANT TO HIRE A TUCHT. Our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121
8th St., New York, NY 10017.
TUTORS List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center, 121 Hall St
NEED A HIDE RIDER? Use the Self Serve Car
P001 Exam Main Lobby, Kansas Union
COMMUTERS Self serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
COMMUTEES Serve Self Car Pool Exchange
Lobby, Kahlo Union
Main Loyalty
Lifesavers LIFES. Inquire at the Student Assistance Center, 12) Strong Hall
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in
lawyer. 841-5276
STADIUM BARBER SHOP 101, Massachusetts,
downtown All haircuts. $5 No appointment
necessary.
BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing
412.1871
Chame Beauty Salon Home of the $7 Haircut
TYPING
3 Services at 1 location. Typing, editing, graphics.
WORD ARTISTS. Ellen 841-2172.
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September 4,1984 Page 14
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
Former 'Hawk adds life to Giants' passing game
By Staff and Wire Reports
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — This could be the year the New York Giants' offense finally enters the 1980s. And if it does, much of the credit for the initiation of the move goes to former KU wide receiver Bobby Johnson.
Johnson, a free-agent rookie,
burned Eagles cornerback Brennard
Wilson during the Giants' season
opener Sunday against the Philadelphia Eagles. The result was a 28-27 victory for the Giants, and a 19-16 loss 400 yards passing four touchdowns in quarterback Phil Simmons for quarterback Phil Stimms.
Johnson finished with eight catches for 137 yards and two touchdowns in his first National Football League start.
"I learned I can play with the best in the league in this game," said Johnson, who came to the Giants after they were used up completely in NEFL draft.
AS A SENIOR at KU, Johnson had 58 receptions for 1,154 yards and
eight touchdowns. He is the KU single game and season receiving vardage record-holder.
Johnson was a third-round pick of the United States Football League's Philadelphia Stars but left their camp after 10 days because he wanted to play in the NFL. At least NFL teams contacted him for the draft but he chose the Giants because he thought they needed wide receiv-
He was right. Earnest Gray was the Giants' only consistent threat last season with 78 catches. He drew double coverage Sunday, leaving an opening for Johnson, who played wide receiver on Wilson's side. Wilson, normally a backup safety, was shifted to cornerback in training camp because of an injury to Roynell Young.
Young.
"We knew he was out of position," Johnson said of Wilson. "We planned to go on deep them."
to go deep on them.
Johnson made a key touchdown catch late in the second quarter. On 1st-and-10 from the Eagles' 35 yard line, he outsmarted Wilson in the end zone. As Simms hung the ball up,
Johnson broke for the post while Wilson went to the flag — resulting in an easy touchdown catch.
"I RAN STRAIGHT downfield, then kind of relaxed and he relaxed." Johnson said. "He thought the play was over."
The catch gave the Giants a 21-6 halftime lead. Johnson beat corner-herman Edwards for a 14-yard second quarter for a 28-20 Giants lead.
Johnson was not the only Giants receiver to burn the Eagles secondary. Byron Williams also capitalized on Gray's decay for 167 receiving yards in a spectacular touchdown catch, bobbling the ball three times before hauling it in and racing for the end zone.
Giants All-Pro linebacker Lawrence Taylor, who isn't always impressed by his teammates, had glowing words for the Giants' of
"We're putting points on the board," Taylor said. "It's a different feeling to sit on the sidelines for eight or nine minutes at a time."
Bowlers want to strike up victories, top-10 ranking
By CHRIS LAZZARINO Sports Writer
A national power could be in the making in the Kansas Union Jaybowl.
A combination of returning starters and outstanding newcomers could give the KU men's bowling team enough talent to finish the season in the top ten in the nation, according to first-year Head Coach Michael Fine.
"We are laying the groundwork to be successful over the next three or four years. We have an enthusiastic, team-oriented group," said
The captain of the team is senior Jim Mack, a four-year starter who is expected to be a strong bowler and provide needed experience to a team that could be dominated by youth.
"I will probably average five to ten pins higher than last year, and that
would put me at about 200 to 265. I put in a good summer of practice. I am definitely ready for my last year." Mack said.
ADDING IMMEDIATE HELP will be freshman George Keene. Keene is one of the top junior bowlers from Wichita, with an average over 200.
Fine was named coach on July 23, and has had little time to recruit in the past year, so he has basically relied on interested bowlers, such as Keene, to contact him at the Jaybow if they are interested in the team.
"A number of good bowlers attend KU for academic reasons. In the future, I hope to do some recruiting from junior leagues." Fine said.
Both the men's and women's bowling teams are Student Union activities, sponsored by the Union. The teams compete in the Kansas-Nebraska league, which consists of teams from KU, Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Emporia State University, and the
University of Nebraska
THE LAST TIME KU won the Kansas-Nebraska league was the 1980-81 season, Mack said. Wichita State has been league champion every year since the 1980-81 season
The men's team is gunning for WSU and is confident that it will dethrone the champs.
"In order to win the conference, we will need five bowlers to average over 200. I think that we can do it. Our goal is to beat WSU. If we beat WSU, it would be the equivalent of the basketball team team beating Oklahoma or the football team beating K-State and Missouri." Fined. said
Tryouts for the men's and women's teams are open to any KU student, and will begin Sept. 17. During the week-long tryouts, students will have to set up times to bowl three sets of five games for a total of 15 games.
United Press International
Each team will consist of eight bowlers, with five competing in each match.
0
Kansas City Royals two third baseman Greg Pryor tags Minnesota Twins base-hunter Tom Brunansky out at third base after Brunansky was caught in a run down in the fourth inning of the Royals Twins game last night. The Twins won the game 4-1 and increased their lead in the American League West Division over the second place Royals to two games.
Royals lose to Twins, 4-1
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY. Mo — The last time the Kansas City Royals played the Minnesota Twins in a big game was the season finale of the 1976 season. And it didn't even figure in the pennant race.
Kansas City had long since clinched the Western Division but that game was to decide the American League batting crown in a three-pronged race featuring George Brett and Hal McRae of the Royals and Rod Carew of the Twins. All three players entered the game, each other with Brett finishing at .333 McFaec .332 and Carved .331.
Ron Washington drove home two runs with a bases-loaded single in the second inning and pinch-hitters Randy Bush and Darrell Brown each knocked in an insurance run in the ninth to give the Twins a 41 victory over the Royals and increase their lead in the Western Division to two games over Kansas City.
But the tension of a batting race wasn't in the air at Royals Stadium last night . only a pentan race. And before a crowd of 37,043, the Twins fared better on
"I don't think this game or this series is any more important than the rest of the games we have to play." Kansas City Manager Dick Hosser said, "except that this is the club we have to beat — this is the club we have to catch."
Minnesota starter John Butcher scattered four singles over 7.2-3 innings, improving his record to 11-8 and helping the Twins snap a five-game losing streak.
Hogeboom leads team against LA
By United Press International
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Gary Hogeboom turned in a team-record performance in his first NFL start Monday night, completing 33 passes for 434 yards, and Tony Dorsey overcame his own four-fumble performance by scoring on a 7-yard run with 3:56 left to go in a 20-13 victory over the Los Angeles Rams in their season-opener.
Hoegebom, who completed only 11 passes during the 1983 season, broke the Dallas team record of 31 pass completions set last Nov. 13 by Danny White against the San Diego Chargers. White was benched by Coach Tom Landry last week for the talent but untested Hoegebom.
Hgoeboom, drafted five years ago out of Central Michigan, made Landry's decision seem a stroke of genius by ridding the Los Angeles secondary with short and medium-range passes throughout the game.
His passing gave the Cowboys their 19th victory in their last 20 season openers and their 11th without a loss on the road. The win also was Landry's 235th in the NFL and Green Bay Coach Curly Lambaue. He trails only George Halas on the all-time coaching list.
Dorsett finished with 81 yards on 25 carries after gaining only nine yards in the first half. His performance moved him into the seventh spot on the all-time NFL rushing list with 8,417 yards.
In contrast to Hogeboom's brilliant performance, the Rams' Vince Ferragamo completed only 11-of-33 passes for 48 Cowards. The cowboy defense intercepted four of Ferragamo's passes and sacked him three times for losses of 17 yards. His last interception, with 1:39 remaining, ended the Rams' last chance to tie the game.
Dallas finished with 436 total yards to 204 for the Rams, who were led by Eric Dickerson's 138 rushing yards on 21 carries.
In other NFL action, the Seattle Seahawks defeated the Cleveland Browns, 33-0, but lost the services of last year's AFC leading rusher Curt Warner, who injured his knee during the game, and will be out indefinitely.
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Representatives from the University of Kansas School of Medicine will be coming to K.U. to visit with students on an individual basis on the following dates:
INTERESTED PRE-MED STUDENTS
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SNA FILMS
SNA FILMS TONIGHT
NICHOLAS RAY'S BIGGER THAN LIFE
With James Mason and Walter Matthau
Next Nicholas Ray Film:
Bitter Victory, Sept. 18
Woodruff Auditorium, Level 5, Kansas Union 7:30 $1.50
---
SPIRIT SQUAD
JUNIOR VARSITY TRY OUTS FOR MEN AND WOMEN
AT ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
Monday, September 10-6 p.m
followed by clime
CLINICS
September 10, 11, 12, 13
IN FRONT OF ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
RYOUTS
Friday, September 14
5:00 p.m. until finished
ALLEEN FIELD HOUSE
ALL STUDENTS WELCOME
TUMBLING ENCOURAGED
ALL AT
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---
Johan Kern
Tory Glory
Brian Mulroney was all smiles last night as returns from Canada's national election indicated his Conservative Party was winning in a landslide. As the smoke was clearing,
4U
the Tories were leading or had already won in enough districts to let Mulroney form the next majority government, which would be the first in 26 years. See story, page 2.
Pleasant
High, 80s. Low, 50s Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Wednesday, September 5, 1984
Vol. 95, No. 8 (USPS 650-640)
Slattery says students like Republicans
By SUZANNE BROWN Staff Reporter
THE SKATE JOURNAL
"It's cool for young people to be conservative now," Slattery said. "But when they come out, they're not."
Slattery, who is seeking his second term as U.S. representative for the 2nd District, was the featured guest at last night's opening of the Douglas County Democratic Party Headquarters, 1903 Massachusetts State. The opening event included a lecture on democratic candidates for state and local offices and members of the KU College Young Democrats.
SLATTERY ADMITTED THAT college students seemed taken with the Republican Party this election year. But he said the conservative shift among young voters was due more to Reagan's magnetic television personality than to campaign issues.
"Ronald Reagan is an actor on TV," he said. "Walter Mondale is a wimp."
Slattery said the university students he had talked to were disturbed by the current U.S. policies on issues such as military aid for Central American countries, the mounting federal deficit and the country's worsening relations with foreign powers.
PRESIDENT REAGAN'S POPULARITY dipped only temporarily among many Americans after the tragedy.
"Lebanon was just stupid," he said, referring to Reagan's decision to send American troops into war-torn Lebanon. More than 200 U.S. soldiers were subsequently killed in a suicide bomb attack by a member of a fanatical Arab sect.
Young people are genuinely attracted to the president, Slatterty said, but they fail to look beyond the man to the Republican platform on which he is running.
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Shattery the Reagan had shown no sympathy for students in his policies, such as
See SLATTERY, p. 5, col. 5
Jim Rix, Sac City, Iowa, senior, skate-boarded home along Jayhawk Boulevard after classes yesterday. Rix said he skated to class daily to avoid long walks from Hashinger Hall, where he lives.
Candidates go east on campaign trail
By United Press International
President Reagan defended his prayer in school and missiles in space proposals yesterday, asking veterans to join in an "agenda for America's future." Democratic nominee Wendle Mondaole preferred to focus on Reagan's past, saying he is ignoring education for "our children"
Reagan spoke to the national convention of the American Legion in Salt Lake City — an audience that Mondale, also campaigning in the West, is to address today.
Reagan also had his political bases covered in Washington, where Treasury Secretary Donald Reagan said Mondale "will end the recovery and drive us right back into recession" if he is elected.
IN A NEWS CONFERENCE organized by the Reagan-Bush 84 campaign committee, Regan said Monday's pledge to cut the deficit by two-thirds in four years would force taxes to be raised so high that economic growth would stop.
Mondale, through his press spokeswoman Maxine Isaacs, responded: "First they cooked their own figures. Now they're trying to cook mine.
"I's all designed to avoid responsibility for deficits of $200 billion and the fact that the Republican platform adds an additional $160 billion. It's time for them to come forward with a responsible and fair plan."
with a reappointment.
Earlier, Reagan met with leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, key players in Utah politics.
Mondale and his running mate,裴. Geraldine Ferraro, remained on the West Coast, where they ended their Labor Day reelection campaign with appearances in California and Oregon.
appearances in cannonade of REAGAN, WORKING HIS WAY eastward after also opening his formal campaign on the West Coast, offered the legionnaires a pointed defense of his position on church-state relations.
He said his support for voluntary prayer in schools "is in the spirit of the Constitution as our forefathers wrote it and as we have lived it for most of our history.
"I can't think of anyone who favors the government establishment a religion in this
country, I know I don’t." Reagan said. "But what some would do is to twist the concept of freedom of religion to mean freedom against religion."
Arriving later in Chicago, Reagan told reporters he spoke on or religion before the legionnaires because his comments on the issue had been "greatly distorted."
"MY CONCERN WAS NOT with government invading religion," he said. "It's with all those people that are trying to make government turn around and interfere with people's right to practice religion."
"I guess it just lost something in the translation," he said.
The president, who wore an American Legion cap for his speech, told the audience of about 7,000 that his "agenda for America's future ... will create growth, opportunity and progress at home and pursue peace and freedom abroad."
Reagan said his opponents in Congress "want to hinder our attempts to help El Salvador" and "desert the freedom fighters in Nicaragua." He said his policies had "resisted Soviet expansionism" while opening "a wide series of diplomatic avenues eventually bear true trait not just in arms contretains, but in arms reduction treaties."
OF THIS PROPOSAL FOR development of missiles to combat enemy weapons in space, he said. "Some call this 'Star Wars.' I call it prudent policy and common sense."
Buckley borough council. While he was searching for support in the West, Reagan gained some in Washington. The Rev. Joseph Jackson, former head of the 5.5 million-member National Baptist Convention U.S.A. Inc., one of the largest black denominations in the nation, gave Reagan his personal endorsement.
Jackson said he was speaking only for himself and not the church body.
In Eugene, Ore., Ferraro criticized Reagan for tax policies that favor corporations and the rich, then defended her own wealth, saying, "Nobody handed me anything. I worked for my money."
WORKED BY THE DEMOCRATIC VICE PRESIDENTIAL nominee spoke at a news conference after appearing before an exuberant crowd of about 4,000 people crammed into a shopping plaza in the university town.
Former Jayhawk West tenants suing for security deposits
By JULIE COMINE Staff Reporter
Tenants at dayjayhw West Apartments, 524 Frontier Road; were cleaning out cupboards, packing suitcases and canceling utility services as they moved out last spring.
But three months later, seven tenants have gone to small claims court seeking return of
Default judgments have been awarded in three cases, two cases are pending and two cases were dropped by the plaintiffs.
delayed security deposits and penalty payments from Jayhawk West and its management company, Management USA, of Euless, Texas.
KANSAS LAW REQUIRES landlords to refund security deposits 30 days after the tenant's lease expires, or 14 days after
damages are assessed Otherwise, the tenant may sue for one and one-half times the amount of the deposit withheld.
Donna Higdon, regional vice president for Management USA, said that delays in returning deposits were caused by a recent shift of Jayhawk West's paperwork from the company's regional Florida office to the Texas office.
exas office
Management USA, which also has an office
But Clyde Chapman, director of the Lawrence Consumer Affairs Association, said that last month he filed a complaint with Robert T Stephan, Kansas attorney general. The case is not yet decided by the attorney general to find out why Jayhawk West and Management USA had "consistent
in the Los Angeles area, oversees more than 200 apartment complexes throughout the country. Higdon said.
tly failed to return security deposits to tenants."
BESIDES THE SEVEN TENANTS who filed papers, Chapman said that between 10 and 15 other tenants recently had called Consumer Affairs to complain about getting security deposits back from Jayhawk West.
"Obviously, we haven't heard from every
See TENANTS, p. 5, col. 1
Bicylists may receive fines for violating state statutes
By JOHN REIMRINGER
Staff Reporter
BUDWATER
THE
LA LA
Bicyclists on Mount Oread may soon be paying traffic tickets if they don't pay attention to Kansas traffic laws.
"We are at that time of year again when we're going to start a stringent enforcement," said Lt. Jeanne Longaker of the University of Kansas Police Department
At this time of the year, police begin receiving complaints about bicyclists from motorists and pedestrians, she said. Pedestrians have complained about bicyclists trying to hit them. Motorists have complained about bicyclists ignoring stop signs.
BICYCLISTS ALSO COMPLAIN about motoris not yielding the right of way, Longaker said.
Bicyclists must obey the same traffic laws as motorists, Longaker said.
"It's a 50-50 debit."
It is pedestrianed, though, that are in the institutional position, and KU police had several tips for those who choose to walk on campus.
"Part of the problem we have with pedestrians is people will take shortcuts," she said.
campus.
On campus, pedestrians have the right of way when they are walking in marked crosswalks. Longaker said That right is not guaranteed when pedestrians cross the street outside of crosswalks. We are here, with
"It's a 50-50 deal," she said.
e said.
Lt. John Muliens of the KU department
According to figures released by the National Safety Council, the number of annual fatalities involving bicyclists under the age of 15 has remained fairly constant during the past 30 years. But the number of fatal accidents involving riders older than 15 has jumped nearly 1,000 percent.
said that pedestrians were on their own as soon as they stepped outside of crosswalks
Doug Buchanan, Fairway junior, tends bar at the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St. Some Lawrence taverns, private clubs and grocery stores have reported low sales of LA, a low-alcohol beer brewed by Anheuser Busch.
"Technically they're jaywalking," he said.
While pedestrians have the right of way in crosswalks, Mullens advised that they use good judgment
MULLENS SAID THAT adult bicyclists tended to forget the safety rules they were taught in grade school.
Mullens said that the increase might be due to more adult bike riders on the road in recent years. He said another possible cause was less concern for safety by many riders.
SOME INTERSECTIONS ON or near campas are particularly dangerous for bicyclists, Longaker said. Riders should be especially careful at the intersection of Crescent and Naismith drives, the intersection of Memorial Drive and West Campus Road and the traffic circle at the Chi Omega Fountain.
Bicyclists can be ticketed for the same traffic violations as motorists. Mullens said, including running stop signs, failing to yield the right of way and speeding.
LA beer receives frosty welcome
City law requires bikes to be licensed. Longaker said. Licenses may be purchased in 332 Carruth-O'Leary Hall for 25 cents.
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ Staff Reporter
Dave Hornback/KANSAN
Anheuser-Busch claims that LA beer is "for the way you live today."
But around Lawrence, many people aren't buying that line, and they're not buying the new low-alcohol beer either.
In May, Anheuser-Busch, the nation's largest brewery, introduced LA, which contains half the alcohol of its regular beers. Several other low-alcohol beers have since been introduced, but LA is the most conspicuous brand in Lawrence.
several tocat clubs, taverns and grocery stores have found the new beer hard to sell. Dillons, 1740 Massachusetts St., has decided to stop carrying LA because of low sales.
"WE TOOK IT ON as a promotion thing for a trial run. It didn't work," said Keith Romero, an employee at the store. "We've decided to discontinue it, and the trucks have come already to pick up the remaining stock."
stock.
Hugh Ekengren, an employee at Rusty's,
901 Iowa St., said that the store may quit
selling LA also.
"I would describe sales as 'not fantastic.' " Ekengen said. "It just doesn't sell very well, and we might end up scrambling it."
scrapping
Dave Kiner, bar manager at Gammon's,
1601 W. 23rd St., hasn't seen much demand for the low alcohol beer either
low-alcohol beer in 800s.
Britain, Lawrence junior, agrees
"Requests for LA are very, very low."
Kiner said "We have a few signs up
"People don't really go out to drink a low-alcohol beer around here."
advertising L.A. but we haven't served much of it.
Bill Britan, Lawrence junior, says "COLLEGE STUDENTS DON'T drink beer for taste," he said. "They drink to get beer. Why dish out more bucks for more beer and more calories to get the same effect?"
LA has 110 calories and contains 2.4 percent alcohol by volume, or 1.7 percent alcohol by weight. Locally, LA is usually uiced about the same as regular beers.
If the price is low enough, LA will sell Food Barn, 1900 W. 23rd St., recently put the beer on sale for $6.99 a case as a promotion
See BEER, p. 5, col. 1
September 5, 1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily
KANSAN
Airport bomb intended for students, officials say
NEW DELHI, India — A rebel bomb that killed 28 people and injured up to 350 others at Kabul airport in Afghanistan last week was apparently directed at Afghan students about to fly to the Soviet Union for schooling, diplomats said yesterday.
were upopmats also reported that a rebel rocket attack on the Soviet Embassy in Kabul on Aug. 24 wounded three Soviets and sparked "indiscriminate" firing by guards that killed or wounded 22 Afghan bystanders.
Afghan rebels who hope to topple to Soviet-backed government claimed responsibility for the bombing, diplomats said.
U.S. denies any part in raid
WASHINGTON - The State Department said yesterday there was no connection between the U.S. government and two U.S. citizens killed in a rebel raid in Nicaragua.
The Nicaraguan government, in a protest, described the unidentified dead Americans as "soldiers of fortune for the CIA."
"We're not denying them (the two men killed) may turn out to be Americans," State Department spokesman John Hughes said.
Chernenko to appear publicly
MOSCOW — Soviet leader Konstantin Chernenko, whose $7^{1/2}$-week absence from public view has sparked rumors that he is ill, will appear today at a ceremony to honor three cosmonauts, a prominent Soviet journalist told a West German newspaper yesterday.
The Bild newspaper, quoting Soviet journalist and Kremlin insider Victor Louis, said the ceremony will mark "Chenkerno's first public appearance after his vacation," which began in mid-July.
Skvscraper's lights turned off
NEW YORK — New York City for the next two months will be without its most famous nocturnal beacon — the light that swathes the Empire State Building.
The skyscraper's lighting system was shut down for rewiring and automation Monday night. Labor Day's red, white and blue display was the building's last full-scale light show until mid-November.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, the location of the funeral for Timothy Cox was reported incorrectly in yesterday's Kansan. Services will be to i.m. today at Redeemer Lutheran Church, 2700 Lawrence Ave.
TELLY
United Press International
BAIE COMEAU, Quebec — Conservative Brian Mulroney, foreground, and aides watch national election returns in a private home in Mulroney's hometown. Conservative Party victories last night gave prime minister-elect Mulroney enough support to form the party's first majority in 26 years.
Canadian voters give Conservatives victory
By United Press International
TORONTO — Conservative Brian Mulroy ended a generation of Liberal Party domination in Canada last night, engineering a landslide national election victory to give the Conservative Party its first majority in 26 years.
The 45-year-old prime minister-elect, determined to better Canada-U.S. relations strained during the rule of former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, drew support for his Tories from all sections of the country
Early returns from Canada's four Atlantic provinces, Quebec and Ontario had liberal candidates winning or leading in only 36 constituencies and the socialist New Democratic Party gaining 12 seats in the next House of Commons.
Hours after the polls closed at 8 p.m. in Quebec and Ontario, Conservatives were elected or leading in 192 of Canada's 282 seats in the upper next majority government under Multony
The defeat of Prime Minister John Turner's Liberals ended the party's quarter-of-a-century monopoly of Canadian governments.
All 282 House seats were being contested in Canada's 33rd general election.
Some 16 million people were englebe to vote.
Mulronev, 45. a former Montreal lawyer
Some 16 million people were eligible to
"It's coming," was all Mulroney would say when asked for a prediction of the outcome, shortly after he voted in a school gymnasium in his hometown of Baie Comeau, in the northern Quebec constituency of Manicouagan.
and businessman, had never won an election before he captured the Tory leadership 15 months ago. He led his party to a massive sweep through his native Quebec, demolishing the stronghold of the French-speaking province that gave the Liberals control of the federal government for 62 of the past 84 years.
Conservatives have governed for only 22 years this century. The last Conservative to win a majority government was John Diefenbaker in 1958, when he won 208 seats, the largest majority in Canadian election history.
Muhroney's predecessor as Conservative leader, Joe Clark, led the nation for nine years.
A defeat of Turner, a wealthy Toronto lawyer, who succeeded retired Pierre Perey in 2014, will bring Party into a rare show of bloodletting and leave the prime minister's future uncertain.
Discovery to return from first mission
The election culminated an eight-week campaign in which a desire for change of leadership emerged as a prime issue, while Canada's 11.2 percent unemployment rate, punishing interest rates and slow growth received little attention.
By United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. — Demonstrating the shuttle's ability to deal with the unexpected, Discovery's crew used the ship's robot arm yesterday to wack off a 15-inch icicle that had threatened a safe return home scheduled for 8:38 a.m. today.
Discovery is to land at Edwards Air Force Base in the California desert. The shuttle will have covered 2.17 million miles since leaving Florida Thursday. The weather is expected to be perfect for the landing.
On their last day aboard the spaceship, crew members Henry Hartsfield, Judy Resnik, Michael Coats, Richard Mullane, Steven Hawley and Charles Walker completed their final experiments and packed up in preparation for the landing, satisfied that the new shuttle is ready for routine orbital operations.
"IF YOU CAN DISCOUNT the ice, I think everything else has been absolutely perfect," said flight director John Cox last night. "We're extremely pleased with the vehicle's performance."
Commander Hartside took care of the ice problem. He drove the 50-foot, triple-jointed arm down over the left side of Discovery and sent the ice chunk flying away from the ship so it couldn't break off and hit the shuttle's tail during the descent.
THE GROUND CREW PASSES on
Cox said that it appeared Hartside's icebreaking technique had cracked the second icicle, which was then probably dislodged by vibrations from a rocket firing
A 5-inch icicle was left sticking out from the waste water discharge nozzle, but six hours later the astronauts took another look with a television camera on the arm and found the ice was gone.
special thanks to the ice busters of 41-D." said Dick Richards in mission control, referring to NASA's designation for the maiden flight of the Discovery.
Vice President George Bush talked to the crew from the Houston control center as they prepared to turn in for the night and asked how things were going.
"It's going extremely well, Mr. Vice President," Hartfield said. "We've had a pretty exciting mission. I think we've got most of our objectives accomplished. We're getting ready to button up and bring her home."
"We've got a fine addition to the fleet of orbiters." he said.
In addition to the icicles, the astronauts were leaving communications satellites launched Thursday, Friday and Saturday for flights to West Sea Systems, Hughes Aircraft, Co. and AT&T in space
ALL THREE SATELLITES were reported
in their proper orbits and working well, restoring the shuttle's reputation as a dependable way to transport satellites to orbit. That reputation had been tarnished by two satellite rocket failures in February and June's aborted shuttle launch attempt.
Coming back with the crew is a concentration of a hormone produced by a commercial medicine-making machine aboard Discovery.
The astronauts are also bringing back, stowed in a box 7 inches high, the golden solar sail power generator that was hoisted 105 feet above Discovery on Sunday.
The concern about the 15-inch icicle, said flight director Randy Stone, was that if it broke off during re-entry it might have had enough energy to puncture Discovery's left maneuvering rocket pod.
Controllers considered calling for a space walk in case all other techniques were unsuccessful in dislodging the ice.
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The influence of Pi Kappa Phi has been significant. In fact, for many it has been a way of life. The reason is that our purpose and objectives are sound and have meaning. They are exciting and constitute a challenge. Members of Pi Kappa Phi have found within their Fraternity assistance in reaching these objectives.
LEADERSHIP—More than likely you are also in college to better develop your leadership abilities. Pi Kappa Phi is an excellent place to assert your potential and to assume responsibility by actual experience. Guidance in this is available from alumni members and fraternity programs.
PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT—A P I Kapp learns how to get along with people Living and working with men from different backgrounds and areas of the country is a rewarding and educational experience.
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Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Student Senate officers to set up table outdoors
Carla Vogel, student body president, and Dennis "Boop" Highberger, student body vice president, will temporarily move from Friday to a table in front of Wesmond Hailo
At the table, Vogel and Highberger will hand out information about Student Senate and take applications for Senate committees. They said they would set up the table at 12:30 p.m. and spend at least an hour in front of Wescoe.
"Many people don't know that Student Senate exists," Highberger said. "Many that do know don't know where we are."
Highberger and Vogel moved their offices outside for an hour in July. Highberger said that he and Vogel may up an outside office later in the semester.
Student Senate positions open
Applications for positions on the Student Senate's five permanent committees and one permanent subcommittee are available on the third floor of the Kansas Union.
All KU students are eligible for the positions.
The deadline for returning the applications to the Senate office is 5 p.m. Tuesday.
The permanent committees are: University Affairs, Student Rights, Finance, Minority Affairs and Cultural Affairs. The permanent subcommittee is the Elections Committee, a subcommittee of the Student Rights Committee.
KU. Haskell officials to speak
Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Gerald Gipp, president of Haskell Indian Junior College, will speak tonight at the 18th annual Lawrence Chamber of Commerce
The event, dedicated to Haskell in honor of its 100th anniversary, will start at 5:30 p.m. at 15th Street and Crestline Drive under a tent on the grounds of Meadowbrook Anpments.
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m. and a program featuring Budg, Gipp and other activities for children.
Librarian hurts arm in fall
Emerson Hazlett, chairman of KU affairs for the chamber, will be master of ceremonies for the program.
Ethel Stewart, librarian at the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications, was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital yesterday with a broken arm she suffered in a fall near Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Stewart, 1300 Haskell Ave., was listed in good condition yesterday afternoon at the hospital.
State nurses' meeting planned
The Kansas State Nurses' Association, District 17, will hold its September meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in conference room 2 B at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with a high in the lower 80s and easterly winds of 5 to 10 mph. Tonight and tomorrow will be mostly clear. The low tonight will be in the mid-50s, with tomorrow's high in the mid-to upper 80s.
Where to call
Do you have an idea for a story or a photograph?
If so, call the Kansan at 648-4810. If your idea or press release deals with campus or area news, ask for Doug Cunningham, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, ask for Susan Wortman, entertainment editor. For sports news, ask for Greg Daman, sports editor.
Photo suggestions should go to Dave Hornback, photo editor.
For other questions or complaints, ask for Don Knox, editor, or Paul Sevart, managing editor.
The number of the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising, is 3644358.
Kingfisher
Bruce Willett, Kansas City, Kan., junior and U.S. Air Force Neilson, Moundridge freshman. The cadets were par ROTC cadet first lieutenant, adjusts the salute of cadet Rick ticipating in a leadership laboratory yesterday.
Business deals may be discussed
Chinese officials to visit KU
By CHRISSY CLEARY
Staff Reporter
The governor of Henan province in China and other Henan officials will visit Lawrence and the University of Kansas tomorrow afternoon, James Scally, assistant to the chancellor, said yesterday.
The Henan science and technology delegation's visit will begin at 12:30 p.m. with a luncheon at the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center, Scally said. The group is one of three delegations from the Chinese province visiting Kansas this week.
AFTER THE LUNCHONE Hjehukang,
of team of team meet privately with
Chaosian Cheng.
The three delegations are visiting Kansas as part of an invitation from Gov. John Carlin, who visited Henan in June to promote trade between the two states in a program with a university in Henan, and Henan and Kansas officials may discuss business deals during
he visit, said Joseph Kuo, associate professor of East Asian Studies.
After visiting Lawrence, the delegation will travel to Topeka for a state dinner with Carlin. Kuo said.
Carlin's visit to Henan was arranged with the help of a 5,000-character Chinese-language typewriter owned by KU's East Asian studies department. Kuo said that the department used the typewriter to translate letters to and from Henan's governor.
KLOI SAD HE DID not know whether Carlin's office would need translators for the delegation's visit. One of the delegation members speaks English, he said.
During the week, the three Henan delegations will visit surrounding areas in Kansas, including Pittsburgh State University and the Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson Henan businessmen are traveling with the delegations to further trade affairs, Kai said.
chapters, 2003-2015
Robert McColl, professor of geography
said that Henan had many geographic similarities to Kansas.
The province has sandy areas that are prone to flooding, much like southern and western Kansas, McColl said Temperatures are parallel to Kansas - hot summers and cold winters.
"IF PEOPLE HERE knew they share similar geographical threats as people in Henan, then they'd be less likely to look at Chinese people as strange or completely different from us," McColl said.
Both McColl and Kuo think that healthy relations with China are important to the United States.
From a business angle, Kuo thought the potential market for U.S. products in China was tremendous. China has an abundance of undeveloped natural resources, he said.
"The United States is the best place to turn for technological help." Kuo said. "Having a friend in China can help stabilize world and bring us closer to world peace."
Prof traces science theories in literature
By DAN HOWELL
Staff Reporter
Science and literature borrow ideas from one another to the benefit of both, a KU professor said last night in opening the 1984-85 Humanities Lecture Series.
Richard L. Schowen, Solon E. Summerfield disinguished professor of chemistry, told an audience of about 100 people in Woodruff Auditorium that scientific theories and literary metaphors were both ways of "manning" the world.
mapping the world
His address, titled "Elective Affinities:
Science. Certainty and Freedom in Goethe,
Henry Adams and Thomas Pynchon," traced the use of scientific ideas in one writing by each author
GOETHEIS' 1809 NOVEL. "Elective Affinities," took its name from a treatise by a Swedish chemist, Torbern Bergman, Schowen said. Goethe applied the outdated
His speech was the first in a four part series sponsored by the KU Center for Humanistic Studies.
noun or chemical affinity to human relationships by creating four characters who changed partners.
For Goethe, the medium of human affinity is the imagination, Schoened. But as in science, a hidden variable must emerge to forestall any lasting bonding.
"The certainty of uncertainty will leave us as impotent as Bergman's chemistry," Schowen said.
He said that in 1909 Henry Adams considered similar questions in an effort to apply thermodynamic laws to stages of history.
history,
"He wanted to find a physical law that would restore some predictability," Schowen said.
ADAMS DREW AN ANALOGY from the three states of matter to theological, metaphysical and scientific phases of human thought, Schowen said. As a result, Adams predicted pure mathematical thought by 1921.
changes exist, he said. One is the tendency for both kinds of changes, once begun, to hasten further change.
Schowen said that Pynchon's 1973 novel, "Gravity's Rainbow," read like an obscene tail tale.
321 But parallels between chemical and social
Through the image and the laws of rocket flight, Pycnon sought to test the reality of "a point where all rules are off, and freedom is perfect." Schoen said.
He said that Pynchon insisted on the need to doubt one's premises
"One must not only be paranoid but, as Pynchon says, paranoid enough," Schowen said.
Schowen concluded by saying that mathematics should be seen as only one of the many routes to knowledge.
The next lecture in the series will be at 8 p.m. on 25. at Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art, Edward Maser, University of Chicago professor of art, will speak on "The Humanist in Old Age: The Late Works of Franz Antoin Maubertscht"
Week to call attention to book bans
Action taken to increase awareness
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission accepted a proclamation last night declaring the week of Sept. 8-15 as "Banned Books Week in Lawrence."
around the country. Caldwell said that the purpose of the week was to bring public attention to what she called a threat to basic freedoms.
Liz Caldwell, manager of Act One Ltd., 1025 Massachusetts St. said that she and other Lawrence-area book merchants would provide displays in their stores during the week. The displays will feature books that have been banned from schools or libraries around the country.
Caldwell said that "The Diary of Anne Frank" was often found on lists of banned books.
"NO PERSON HAS THE RIGHT to tell me what I can't read," she said, "and I am responsible for what my children read."
She also said that Doris Day's autobiography, "My Own Story," had been banned in some parts of the country.
"She was very frank about some of her relationships in the book," Caldwell said of Day.
Caldwell said that this was the third year that Lawrence had set aside a "Banned Books Week." To her knowledge, she said, almost all public response to the week had been favorable.
in other action, the City Commission unanimously approved the final plat of the first subdivision of the new University Corporate and Research Park.
THE SUBMISSION, DIVIDED into four lots, is a 21-acre plot on the northeast corner of the intersection of W. 15th Street and Lawrence Avenue.
Commissioner Nancy Shontt asked that the developer conserve existing greenery, which other commissioners included in their approval.
The commission also approved a site plan for a small shopping center to be built near the junction of North Second and North Third streets. The development will probably include a restaurant, liquor store and office space, according to information provided to city officials by the developer, Riverfront Square Investors.
During its discussion, the commission also directed that George Osborne, superintendent of parks, and Rob Phillips, who is with the developer, reach an agreement on the type of landscaping for the area.
OSBORNE HAD SUGGESTED that more landscaping be required than the developer proposed.
Camps complained that the extra trees, which were plum trees that Phillips said would eventually be 20 to 30 feet tall, would put the stores in the new development at a competitive disadvantage by blocking the view from the street.
The commission said that the trees were part of a continuing plan for developing north Lawrence.
In other action, the commission:
- **denied a sign variance for Pinecrest**
Apartments, 2365 Reedub Lane.
- deferred action on the final plat of Naismith West Subdivision, south of 24th street between Ousdahl Road and Naismith Drive, until the commission's Sept. 18 meeting.
- deferred a petition to pave a portion of Ridge Court until next week's meeting.
$\cdot$ accepted several changes in the Community Development Block Grant program, which were a part of an overall move to simplify the program, said Lynn Goodell, director of community development.
INTERESTED PRE-MED STUDENTS
Representatives from the University of Kansas School of Medicine will be coming to K.U. to visit with students on an individual basis on the following dates:
Friday, September 7th Friday, September 14th Friday, September 28th Friday, October 5th
Appointments, which are for 20 minutes, are to be made through the Pre-Med Secretary. 106C Strong, during office hours posted.
Students and Faculty make the difference at
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September 5,1984
Page 4
OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University, Daily Kalmuan (UNPS 604-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawen. Kanun 6004 daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawen. Kanun 6004 Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 a year in Laramie County. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University, Daily Kalmuan, 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawen. Kanun 6004
DON KNOX
Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE HESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
DOUG CUNNINGHAM Campus Editor
DAVE WANAMAKER
Business Manager
SUSANNE SHAW General Manager and News Advisor
LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager
JILL GOLDBLATT
Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Saving lives
Louis Washkansky's heartbeat in December 1967 was board, around the world.
heard around the world. Christianian Barnard, aided by a surgical team, performed the world's first heart transplant on him in Cape Town, South Africa.
In the years since that historical, life-giving operation, the technique has been improved, refined and performed repeatedly.
The research that has gone on around the world was put to use at the University of Kansas Medical Center five weeks ago.
Medical advances have meant transplants of both heart and lungs into patients. Bypass surgery has given many others a new lease on life without a transplant.
Over the weekend, 43-year-old James Hale of Wichita walked out of the hospital with a new heart.
others a few days or weeks, such brief success did little to dampen enthusiasm for the operation.
Doctors attempted to use the heart of a baboon as a substitute for the human heart in 1977, and five years later. Barney Clark lived for several months with an artificial heart.
In the years since Barnard had the pulses of the world quickening with news of the first successful transplant, hundreds of other people have been the beneficiaries of a new heart and additional years of life.
The Med Center estimates that the total cost of a heart transplant operation is $80,000.
Whatever the cost, medicine continues to make great strides, and much of that progress has resulted from operations initially considered experimental and costing millions of dollars with few guarantees for success.
Hale's operation was an example of the advancements made in heart surgery. A surgical team of 30 assisted Barnard during the first heart transplant; a team of only 15 was needed for Hale's.
was needed for Trade's Innovative medical operations soon become routine procedures. Somehow, the cost of the very first operation becomes worth the money.
Going bananas
U. S. policy on Nicaragua seems to be in a bunch of confusion these days.
Not only has Congress questioned aid to counter-revolutionaries (contras) in that country, but a recent report indicates that U.S. banana imports from Nicaragua rose sixfold in the first half of 1984. Figures from the U.S. Department of Agriculture show that banana imports from Nicaragua were 42.8 million metric tons through May of this year; in the same period last year, the figure was 7.4 million tons.
Meanwhile, banana imports from the Honduras have dropped by 15 percent this year.
o dropped by 15 percent. The problem is that the Honduran government is supposed to be an ally of the United States. The Nicaraguan government, on the other hand, is battling the contras, who have allegedly received support from Uncle Sam.
Despite its backing for the contras, the Reagan administration has failed to restrict trade with Nicaragua. A spokesman for a banana importing company speculates that the Nicaraguans have been dumping their produce on the U.S. market; the Sandinista government says it merely is taking advantage of the free market.
What monkey business! A Marxist country follows a capitalist dictum, while the U.S. government trips as it tries to coordinate its relations with a hostile country.
Reagan: fiend or friend?
Fable tells story about leadership
For those who may have forgotten, 1984 is an election year, and that makes it a good time to recall lessons of the past.
1 ms lesson is in the form of a fable about a nation of not too long ago, in a place not far from here.
The nation in the fable had recently lost a long, costly, demoralizing war. The economy was turning sour as unemployment rose and inflation soared. Popular discontent was crippling the government.
Nuria Mwangi
MIKE ROBINSON
Staff Columnist
When the Olympic Games came to his country, The Leader turned the event into a forum for nationalism and patriotism.
From the midst of this discontent, one man sought and attained the nation's highest office. We'll call this man The Leader.
The Leader was popular because he had made the nation strong again and he had made his government respected in the world and at home. He gave the people the kind of confidence and pride that they had once lost and thought they would never regain.
The Leader's biggest political asset was his ability to mobilize the support of the people. He could break everything down into terms the masses could understand, and his gift quickly began to pay off.
When he took charge, the mood of the nation was grim, and people were pessimistic about their country's future in world affairs. But such was his enthusiasm, and his ability to communicate it, that in a few years, The Leader turned that around.
He complained that the military was in poor shape and warned of the communist threat. And through his efforts, army morale, equipment and efficiency improved as more money went into better weapons.
So his stock continued to rise.
Even when he engaged his country in military adventurism abroad and lives were lost, he managed to control public opinion by defending his actions in broad terms of the national good.
leader, and they ignored his contradictions and flaws. They chose to discount the excesses that his policies produced, mainly because they didn't care and didn't think they were affected by those excesses.
When minority groups complained that The Leader was bad for their interests, they were either ignored or scorned. When his opponents in government criticized his policies, they were denounced as unpatriotic.
It was only when he led them into another war, a world war, a war they lost, that they began to realize that something was wrong.
Too late, they realized that patriotism was a fine thing, but that a nation drank with patriotism could be an ugly, even evil place. They didn't care how strong, was ordained to control the destines of its neighbors.
The people accepted what The Leader said because he was the
This fable probably sounds familiar to you, and that's because it isn't really a fable. The Leader's nation was Germany, and his name was Hitler.
And they realized the dangers of following leadership that misleads.
The fable may also remind you of some present-day leader or other in some nation closer to home, but any similarity on those counts is purely coincidental.
President shows worth in actions
John Anderson's endorsement last week of Walt Mondale stirred my memories of how I had come to like Ronald Reagan.
My earliest memories stem from 1976, when Reagan opposed President Gerald Ford for the Republican presidential nomination. Good of Jerry had gone through some rough
P. H.
VINCE HESS
Editorial Editor
times; he had replaced Spiro Agnew, and had replaced — and pardoned — Richard Nixon.
Reagan criticized Ford — harshly. I thought — for things such as the proposed Panama Canal treaties. Reagan took the fight — o the convention, in Kansas City, Mo., and For President the general election to Jimmy Carter.
Carter, aided and abetted by
AW
Walter Mondale on-the-Fritz, made bumbling Ford and even "arch-conservative" Reagan look good. If Carter wasn't complaining about national mayonnaise or malaise or whatever, he = a nuclear engineer, cited inspiration from his daughter on the matter of nuclear arms.
Another presidential campaign arrived, a la the cavalry, and brought with it Reagan and the seemingly fresh, new face of John Anderson, then a congressman from Illinois.
Anderson impressed me greatly at first. After all, he looked like a president and sounded like one, too, at least initially. Then I started to listen to him.
Reagan at that time was proposing both cuts in tax rates and limits on government. Plus, he talked tough on defense and national security, told that was refreshing at a time of Afghanistan and hostages in Iran.
As for what Anderson was saying, well, he's endorsed Mondale for 1984.
Around this time my reading about Reagan had persuaded me that he was the man. In an era of professional politicians, he had actually worked for a living as a broadcaster and an actor in his years. Only after that career had faded did he start to run office.
Indeed, during his years as an actor, he had made public tours for General Electric; those tours had put him face to face with the nation and told him of their complaints about government.
Reagan took on the Peanut in a debate shortly before the election and cracked his shell. He had barely begun to implement his policies as president when John Hinckley Jr. shot him.
Roagan displayed his unique sense of perspective during this crisis; as the nation agonized over every word from authorities at the hospital and the White House, the president said to his wife, "Honey. I forgot to duck." And some people worry that he'd lose his head in a nuclear confrontation!
Reagan's policies have generated controversy, yet they certainly contain some good. In domestic matters, for example, critics attack the president for lack of compassion; however as Mondale likely knows as he's elected it is easy to be generous with someone else's money
In the area of defense and foreign affairs, the Reagan administration distinguished itself with a successful freeing of Grenada from a murderous gang of thugs.
Now it's Jellybean against Geraldine.
Do it again. Ron.
Thug sticks to his gun in suit against police
There are different words for it. Gall, Nerve. Cheek. Chutzpah. Take your pick, but Alfred Cosentino has it in abundance.
Cosentino has filed a lawsuit that says his civil rights have been violated.
That's not unusual in itself. At any given moment, about half of America is suing the other half — often for the strangest of reasons.
Criminals now sue their victims for damages and sometimes collect, as in the case of a Minnesota petty theft
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
to the author.
I am writing in response to Chuck Vanasse's letter of Aug. 30. It seems to me that he misunderstands the whole concept of tolerance for homosexuals.
I will never expect religious zealots, Christian fundamentalists like Mr. Vanasse, to understand or tolerate homosexuality. At the same time, I will probably never understand their viewpoints, either. No one expects him or anyone else to do anything but oppose homosexuality. I can never see that not happening, nor can most homosexuals
Homosexuals seek human respect
But the point of tolerance and understanding is not necessarily acceptance of homosexuality as homosexuality Homosexuals want nothing more than to receive the
To the editor:
same respect and opportunities that other human beings receive — and which they deserve. What homosexuals want is really only what everyone else wants (and has); the ability to walk down the street without fear for their physical well-being; to be able to show affection to everyone else; to care for — like everyone else; to have equal opportunities for jobs; to have equal opportunities for housing; to be shown some respect.
Is this sort of tolerance "inconspicuously hurtful" to the hormonal exal? Perhaps Vansase thinks so, I do not. We deal with other types of "simmers" every day, yet we do not treat them with disrespect
Well, I must admit that I agree with him on one point:"We all have a
A guy sued a dogcatcher for locking up his mutil. Municipal workers sue their superiors for not attaching lights to their classrooms for giving them poor grades.
But when it comes to indignation, none can even approach AI Cosentino.
I suppose that we must sometimes tolerate things we think are wrong. I must tolerate Ronald Reagan as president. At least homosexuals did not send troops into Beirut or El Salvador. If no one is hurt, why not tolerate the no accept homosexual i
standard of morality." But what Vanasse does not mention is that everyone's morality differs.
The injury (and the danger) comes when we let our "morality" get in the way of our common humanity. So many people are quick to judge, and so few are quick to forgive.
who persuaded a jury that it was really unnecessary for a farmer to shoot him after he had looted the farmer's car.
Douglas Stallings Lawrence graduate student
Cosentino, 30, is by trade a two-bit criminal. At least that is the way the cops in Omaha, where he is now locked up, describe him. Law enforcement officials tell this story:
A while back Cosentino and an associate were hired by some drug dealers in Florida to track down a man and a woman who were suspected of stealing some of the dealers' cocaine.
Their search led them to a house in an Omaha suburb, where they burst in and found the suspected couple, who were staying with relatives.
This time they kidnapped the woman and told the man that they 'release her when they got the cocaine.
Waving guns and talking tough, they demanded the drugs. Then they ransacked the house, but found nothing. They left, but decided to come back and give it another try.
The man called the cops and from on then it was just like television or the movies. A trap was set up. When the kidnappers phoned with arrangements for the switch, the cops listened in on the phone.
unmarked van near the exchange location, the sidewalk in front of a post office.
A car pulled up in the night. Cosentino sat in the back seat, painting a gun at the woman's head.
Then a SWAT team hid in an
MIKE
ROYKO
Syndicated
Columnist
H. S. SMITH
His partner got out to meet the man who was supposed to produce the drugs.
Cosentino's partner, being a sensible sort, dropped his gun and flung himself to the pavement.
He jumped out of the car and fired of a couple of rounds. So the police started blazing away at him with pistols and shotguns.
After he healed, Cosentino was put in a cell to await trial, and this time evidently gave him time to brood to his failings as a hired mug.
The police then burst out of the van, shouting that everybody should freeze, halt, surrender and other such things that police like to shout at such moments.
But Cosentino, who may have seen too many old James Cagney movies, gave it the old come-and get-it copper routine.
before it was over. Cusentino had in pellet and ballet holes in his hide. The doctors managed to save him, and he was charged with all sorts of misbehavior - kidnapping, as saulting a police officer, and assault with a deadly weapon.
In addition, human nature being what it is, he had time to succumb to those most common of character failings - self pity and blaming others for one's inadequacies.
The result is that Cosentino has filed a federal lawsuit saying that his constitutional rights have been violated. He wants at least $50,000 in damages.
And how did they violate his rights?
He says that the police tried to kill him, and there's probably some truth in that. When the police wound you 19 times, chances are they weren't trying to knock an apple off your head.
He also says that when they came popping out of the van, they didn't adequately identify themselves
An interesting point. But even if they were true, who did he think they were? Bad tempered phone repair men? Camper's irate at having their sleep disturbed?
Finally, he says, the fact that they shot him so many times means that their training was inadequate
I have to concede that he might have a valid point there. When I mentioned this case to a Chicago cop, he asked, "How many times did they hit him?"
Nineteen
"And he's still breathing?"
And he's so That's right
"Well, then, they ought to fire the guy who runs their shooting range."
University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1984
Page 5
continued from p. 1
Tenants
one, so many tenants are getting their deposits back." Chapman said. "But obviously, some aren't getting their money back, which is clearly against the law."
The complaint filed with the attorney general says that Jayhawk West's management has been unresponsive to tenants' questions about deposit returns.
"When tenants have questioned the local management about the failure to return security deposits in a timely manner, responses range from the check is in the bank to the check got lost to 'there have been several lockkeeping problems.'" the complaint says.
CAROLE HARVEY, a spokeswoman for the attorney general's consumer protection department, said she had received the
complaint and the office was investigating.
If the attorney general's office decides that Management USA has violated the Kansas Consumer Protection Act, the office can take several actions against the company.
Chapman said that the attorney general could seek an injunction to prevent the company from doing business in Kansas, levy a $2,000 fine for each violation or issue a consent order telling the company to "clean up its act."
Jim Shears, Jayhawk West manager, said he didn't know what to tell tenants when they complained about delays in receiving deposit payments. The bank had not given him a reason for the delays.
'IT'S THE RESPONSIBILITY of the management company to receive paperwork, process payments and write the checks," he said.
As far as I know, they're trying to get checks to residents as soon as possible
Jennifer McClaffan, Topea junior, received her $20 deposit check from Management USA about two weeks ago — nearly three months after she moved out.
Although McClaflin said that the company had been uncooperative, she dropped her suit against Management USA last week.
"All I ever got was the run around," she said. "We talked to the manager, we talked to the main office, we talked until we were blue in the face."
LaRue moved out of her apartment June 1. When she hadn't received her deposit after 30 days, she filed a petition in small claims court.
REBECCA LARUE. SALINA senior, received her $195 deposit check last month, but had to go to court twice to get it.
When 10 days passed and she still hadn't received her check, she returned to court to plead guilty.
Representatives of Jayhawk West and Management USA failed to appear at the hearing on Aug. 2, so LaRue was awarded a default judgment.
LaRue received her check four days later. HIGDON YESTERDAY APOLOGIZED for delays experienced by Jayhawk West tenants. She said that a check of company records showed that all outstanding deposit checks had been mailed to former Jayhawk West tenants.
Beer continued from p. 1
Promotions for LA claim that the beer is "reflective of today's lifestyle." An advertisement says that "lighter activities, lighter social attitudes and lighter choices in the foods we eat and the beverages we drink are more important." DIREK WEEHLING, SPORKSMAN, FOR
anneuse-Busch, said yesterday that LA was selling well nationally after overcoming initial problems associated with being a new product.
The store sold more than 40 cases in two weeks.
"Anheuser-Busch knew there would be many difficulties trying to generate awareness of the brand." Wehling said. "This is an entirely new concept, and it is going to take some time."
Wehling said that the main problem with selling LA in college towns was convincing students to try the beer.
"We got a good deal on LA, and we passed the cheap price along to the customer," said Shirley Nichols, head clerk at the store. "It is our good deal comes along, we'll do it again."
"Young adults are a very difficult market to figure out," he said. "The key in a town
such as Lawrence is getting students to buy it and try it out. a lot of students have an initial objection to LA just because of the nature of the product."
Slattery
Patrons at Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., occasionally request LA out of curiosity about the beer's taste, said John Kline. He sat at the bar and a Leaventown sophomore
"PEOPLE ASK FOR it because they want to see what it's like," he said. "But most of them have some complaint about LA after tasting it."
Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe.
1340 Ohio St., said a couple of his customers drank LA regularly. But Wallace said he doubted that the beer would catch on in Lawrence.
"I don't believe students are interested in LA," he said. "This is a beer for the more mature drinker. It's for the person who enjoys drinking beer but doesn't want to get intoxicated for one reason or another."
continued from p.1
In August, Miller Brewery began test-marketing Sharp's LA — its entry in the low-alcohol beer category. Sharp's LA is being sold in five areas in the United States.
advocating large cutbacks in financing for student loans.
"Reagan wanted to devastate the pro-
gram," he said. "I don't know what he do after."
David Berkowitz, Douglas County Democratic Party chairman, warned those present that a second Reagan term would mean four more years of hardship for middle-class Americans. Berkowitz's remarks were mattered in shatterings of applause from party members.
AT THE STOREFRONT headquarters last night, posters lined the walls of the crowded room. Children weaved among the party faithful, oblivious to the political exchanges around them. The headquaters 'opened followed the traditional Labor Day campaign'
Regardless of who wins the presidential election this year, Slattery said, moderate members of Congress must compromise if the U.S. government is to accomplish anything during the next four years.
"The Kassebaums and the Slatteries are not that far apart from each other on the issues," he said, referring to Sen. Nancy Kassebaum R-Kansas.
OTHER CANDIDATES APPEARING at the opening included State Reps John Solbach, Jo Bo Charlton and Jessie Branson, all of whom are Lawrence Democrats running for re-election, and Lawrence Seaman, who will face incumbent State Sen Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence.
KATAHONO
Bob Dunlap 842-4074
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If you need this coupon along with any other coupons, please add the savings from buying it. If you need more savings or food products that you can store together, the coupon may be redeemable for a discount on the price of your item.
RUSTY S RUSTY S RUSTY S RUSTY'S
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DOWNY
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Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon
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EXPIRES SEPT. 12, 1984
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France's coupon company with one our
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greater than one offer or extra
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Limit one coupon per manufacturer's
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EXPIRES SEPT. 12, 1984
University Daily Kansan, September 5. 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
State crime rate drops but rape reports rise
By United Press International
TOPEKA - Crime in Kansas dropped 5.7 percent during the first six months of 1984 from the same period in 1983, but 10.1 percent more rapes were reported, Kansas Bureau of Investigation statistics indicate.
Violent crimes, including murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault, decreased overall 3.6 percent from the first half of 1983. Property crimes of burglary, larceny, motor vehicle theft and arson dipped 57 percent.
KBI statistics released yesterday indicated violent and property crimes in Kansas dropped for the 10th consecutive quarter. Rape is the only violent crime on the upswing in the last five quarters, KBI Director
Thomas Kelly said.
Among violent crimes, reported rapes increased from 276 in the first half of 1883 to 304 in 1894.
half of the 62 murders showed the biggest drop at 32.3 percent. There were 62 murders in the first half of 1983, but only 42 murders were committed through June of 1984.
Robbery dropped 16.1 percent,
while aggravated assault was up less
than 1 percent.
Among nonviolent crimes, burglary dipped 14.4 percent and larceny was down 3 percent, but motorvehicle theft increased 4.4 percent.
The most frequent crime committed was larceny, with 31,756 cases reported in the first half of 1984.
Arson was down 11.1 percent, with 392 reported in the first half of 1984, compared with 441 in 1983.
Democrats plan fund-raiser
By United Press International
TOPEKA — Gov. John Carlin will join four Missouri Democratic Party officials in a fund-raising luncheon tomorrow that will be attended by Democratic vice-presidential nominee Geraldine Ferraro.
Kansas City, Kan., Mayor Jack Reardon, a congressional candidate for the 3rd District, also will serve as a host, along with Sen. Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo., and Missouri Congressmen Alan Wheat, Ike Skelton and Charles E. Curry.
The $250-a-plate luncheon will be at the Hilton Inn Plaza in Kansas City, Mo.
EDITOR'S NOTE: The University Daily Kansan welcomes listings for its On Campus column. These events must be free and open to the public, and listings must be submitted to the Kansan newsroom, 11 Stauffer-Flint Hall, three days before publication.
ON CAMPUS
Kansan publishes On Campus as a public service and does not guarantee publication of all items.
Tuesday Women in Communications will meet at 5 p.m. in 204 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Today
DANCE
Interested in
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Dungeons and Dragons
Wed., Sept. 5, from 7-11 p.m. in the Trail Room Kansas Union
Champions
SUA
Thurs., Sept. 6, 11 p.m. in the Trail Room, Kansas Union*
* Game Masters Needed Everyone Is Welcome
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Secrest Leather
fine selection of distinctive leather goods.
Andiamo Luggage Anne Klein Collections Dooney-Bourke Handbags Hugo Bosca Billfolds Michael Green Handbags Michael Scott Folios Schlesinger Briefcases Tumi Luggage
914 Massachusetts 842-6046
ATTENTION! PRE-MED STUDENTS
A MEETING FOR JUNIORS AND SENIORS INTERESTED IN APPLYING TO MEDICAL SCHOOL
Wednesday, September 5
at 7:00 p.m. in the Alderson Room of the Kansas Union
Important information for pre-med students * Representatives from KU Medical Center will be in attendance
BE SURE TO ATTEND!
TASTE THE DIFFERENCE FROM THE GROUND (BEEF) UP
New!
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Cheese: Choice of three types of cheeses including American, Swiss, and Monterey Jack.
OhSe SMOKEHOUSE RESTAURANT
Now open 11:00 am to 10:00 pm Sunday - Thursday 11:00 am to 11:00 pm Friday & Saturday
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Offer expires September 30, 1984. Not valid with any other special promotional offer.
BUY ONE FLAMEBROILED HAMBURGER.
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1107 Massachusetts
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Mon. Sat. 9:30-5:30
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MONDAY NIGHT SPECIAL . . .
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Free Pitcher of Pepsi with purchase of Medium or Large Pizza
PARTY or MEETING ROOMS Available at TWO of our locations . . .
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Pizza Hut Locations
1606 West 23rd 843-3516 Sue Gentry, Mgr.
11 a.m.-11 p.m. Sun-Thurs; 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Fri-Sat
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1
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page
U.S. colleges attract foreign students
From Staff and Wire Reports
A record 338,894 international students studied in U.S. colleges during the 1983-1984 school year, a report financed by the U.S. Information Agency said yesterday.
University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1984
However, the enrollment of international students, while a record and up 0.6 percent over the previous year, is down less this year, the report said.
At the University of Kansas, 1,442 international students were enrolled in classes as of Aug. 24, said James Stinson, assistant director of the office of foreign student admissions. "We've had lower foreign student enrollments," Stinson said, "but
We've had lower foreign student
theses in the past two years.
These figures are from the first stage
of enrollment and they could increase. It looks pretty strong compared to enrollments in the past."
Exact figures on the number of international students at KU will not be available until after the 20th day of classes, when final enrollment numbers are made, said Clark Coan, director of the office of foreign student services.
Nationwide, the largest contingents of international students come from Taiwan, Iran, Nigeria and Malaysia.
Among Far Eastern nations, 139 students from Taiwan made up the largest group of international students at KU, Stinson He. He said that the Iranian student enrollment, 75%, was lower than the students, was now at only 95 students because of animosity between the United States and Iran.
THE MALAYSIAN STUDENT ENrolment at KU, now 136 students, has increased over the past three years, Stinson said. He attributed the increase to a jump in tuition charged by universities in the United Kingdom, where many Malaysian students have studied in earlier years.
STINSON SAID INTERNATIONAL student enrollments had accounted for an average of 6 percent of the total student enrollments at KU for the past three years.
and Malaysia.
The report, compiled by the Institute of International Education, showed an increase in students from Asia, but a decline in the number of students from other areas.
In U.S. colleges, Asia accounted for greatest number of international students, 132,270, and with the highest increase over previous years, 10.5 percent.
comprehensibility
health
assistance
● free programs
● comparison assistance services
● alternation counselling
● groupwork
● contact assistance
Nationally, foreign students constituted almost 3 percent of a college enrollment of 12.3 million students in the past school year. Nationwide figures for this school year are not yet available.
The report showed that Taiwan, with 21,960 students, surpassed Iran as the top country of origin among international students. Iranian enrollment, second with 20,260, was down from a 1980 high of 51,310 students.
Nigeria, with 36 students at KU,
and the largest enrollment of African
students, Stinson said.
Overland Park, KS) 913-345-1400
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STUDENTS
COULD THE NAVY INTEREST YOU IN PAID TUITION?
If you are a student at the University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Scholarship. The Navy Scholarship provides full tuition, all text books plus $100 a month spending money.
When you graduate, you will have a job in the fleet as a naval or marine officer. You will train in Nuclear Submarines, Surface Ships, Naval Aircraft or one of many other exciting fields.
CHECK OUT THE ADVANTAGES OF NAVAL
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FURNITURE RENTAL
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The Topeka Capital-Journal
STUDENTS
Special student subscriber offer! Your $15.00 semester subscription price will give you the very best, State, Local, National and SPORTS news that is available in Kansas.
FOR DELIVERY CONTACT:
W. of Iowa, S. of 15th Richard Todd, 842-4264
E. of east Iowa, N. of 19th E.N. Christie, 842-0692
West of Iowa Randy Flyer, 842-8727
ENJOY A FAMILY WEEKEND IN THE COUNTRY
HILTON ACADEMIC CENTER
$46 THE DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS Ask for the "Family Weekend Special" when you reserve a room any Friday Saturday or Sunday night. Bring the lift door. You'll get a deluxe double
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KANSAS CITY
SPECIALS
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Mon. Cogburns
Big Screen Monday Night
Football Madness
$1.50 Pitchers During Game
Hatter
$1.25 Highballs
8-11 50¢ Draws
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No Cover 7-9
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University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1984 Page 8
CAMPUS AND AREA
SenEx, KUAC seek formal link Athletic panel considered
By BRENDA STOCKMAN Staff Reporter
The University Senate Executive Committee is considering adding another standing committee to create a formal link with the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board.
The SenEx ad hoc committee on athletic-governance relations will propose the creation of the new committee at tomorrow's SenEx Adhoc Sandra Jo McKenzie, ad hoc committee chairman and professor of law.
SenEx is the executive board of the University Council, which is the executive committee of the University Senate. SenEx now will study the proposal from the ad hoc committee.
THE PROPOSAL CALLS for six faculty members and three KUAC student members to form the new standing committee, McKenzie said.
"Creating more formal ties has been discussed for two years," said Lanny Rose, assistant athletic director and professor of law.
"It has long been the concept that
the University is here and the athletic department there. We're trying to counteract that."
He said that the new committee, if approved, would create a formal tie between University governance and KUAC that had not existed before, and so would allow a greater exchange of information.
exchange of information The committee would be called
'It has long been the concept that the University is here and the athletic department there. We're trying to counteract that.'
Lonny Rose, asst. athletic director
authority to determine KUAC policy.
the athletic committee. Like other standing committees, it would be given goals for the year by the SenEx chairman.
McKenzie said that the new committee would open communication lines between SenEx and KUAC. But SenEx would have no
"IF A CONFLICT does come up,
'There no way the governance can influence the board,' she said. "It doesn't change the structure any."
Monte Johnson, athletic director,
said of the ad hoc committee, "I
think their intentions are good." He
has no problem with the proposal.
Arno Knapper, chairman of SenEx and professor of business, said that the ad hoc committee was formed last spring to look at the relationship between SenEx and KUAC. Faculty members of the department said that they didn't feel responsible for a continuity, he said.
Knapper said that if SenEx accepted the proposal tomorrow, it would be sent to the SenEx organization and administration committee for review. The committee will make sure that the proposal conforms to the University governance code.
Once the proposal has been approved by the organization and administration committee, it must receive final approval from the University Council.
REGISTER TO WIN! Douglas County Fair Grand Champion
BEEF
Drawing Held Sept. 8th
WIN!
1/4 BEEF
WIN! $ \frac{1}{4} $ GRAND CHAMPION BEEF Register at any Rusty's Locations To Win!
Name
Phone
No Purchase Necessary * Must Be 18 Years & Older
RUSTY'S
IGA
DISCOUNT
What's the second best thing you can do for your computer?
Datalife Verbatim
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So what's the first best thing?
Use only the finest quality flexible disks in your system: Datalife by Verbatim. Buy them both here.
Verbatim
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KU
Available At The
KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
Discover Horizons
GO ON A SPREE
HONDA
Only
$435
HONDA
Only $435
If you need to get around town on a limited budget, the Honda Spree" was built for you. It's ideal for commuting to and from work or school. And because it's the lowest priceed Honda scooter you can buy, it's ideal for your bank account, too. Plus, its peppy 49cc engine, low maintenance requirements and easy to use controls make it as easy to ride and maintain as it is to pay for.
Spera
Mon.12-6
Tues.-Fri. 10-6
Sat.10-4
-Horseman
1548 E. 23
843-3333
Harley-Davidson
Dance Your Way To The Go-Go's!
THE TWINS
The Go-Go's will appear at Sandstone Friday, Sept. 7, 1984
Twenty Go-Go's Tickets To Be Given Away.
Thursday night we've got the beat. Get ready to step out like never before. Right after 10 o'clock we're having a Go-Go's music dance contest and you're invited to enter. Our judges will pick the 10 best couples and each winning couple will receive two free tickets to The Go-Go's show at Sandstone. Dress up and get down to the Go-Go's dance contest this Thursday night. What a great way to win tickets to a great show at a great place. We weren't kidding when we told you this will be a year you'll never forget.
TONIGHT
(8:00-11:00)
All the beer and bar drinks you can drink
$3.00 cover
$1.50 bar drink
11:00 to close- 75* draws and $1.50 bar drinks
GAMMONS SNOW
23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center
University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1984
Page 9
CAMPUS AND AREA
Youth charged in Wichita
By United Press International
WICHITA — A teen-ager accused of using two handguns to hold police at bay for five hours because he had a fight with his girlfriend was charged in juvenile court yesterday, a prosecutor said.
A 17-year-old Park City youth was charged with making a terrorist threat and disorderly conduct, said Sedgwick County District Attorney Clark Owens. Charges against the youth were filed in the juvenile division of Sedgwick County District Court, Owens said.
The teen-ager was being held in the Sedgwick County Youth Residence Hall and was set to make his first appearance at juvenile court today, Owens said.
He was arrested at a Park City house about 12 a.m. Monday, said
Sedgwick County Sheriff Johnnie Darr.
Park City police officers were called to the house about 8:30 p.m. Sunday after neighbors reported hearing two gunshots, Darr said.
The first Park City officer to arrive at the scene heard three shots come from the house, Darr said.
The teen-ager, who allegedly was armed with two handguns, said he had had a quarrel with his girlfriend, and refused to surrender unless police brought his girlfriend to him. Darr said. The youth was alone in the house.
Shortly after midnight, he surrendered one of the guns, a 38-caliber snub-nose pistol, police said. The teen-ager surrendered the other gun, a 357 caliber pistol, about 1:15 a.m. after his girlfriend was brought to the scene.
ICHABOD'S
EST. MCMLXXV
$2 PITCHERS ALL SEMESTER 2 FOR 1'S FROM 7-8 P.M. EVERY DAY 2 miles North of bridge on Mass. St.
STUDENTS, COME GET INVOLVED!!
THE FOLLOWING STUDENT SENATE COMMITTEE ARE NOW OPEN:
--no other coupons or disc. apply with special sale prices
ELECTIONS
- INANCE
* UNIVERSITY AFFAIRS
* STUDENT RIGHTS
* CULTURAL AFFAIRS
- FINANCE
To the perfect time
You're a triumphant right! And you want
to make college a real learning experience!
Well ROTC can add a valuable
difference to your college education. A
determined leader and managed
man training. And that makes your
degree worth more.
With Oral ethics scholarship and
mental opportunities, two
Plus the opportunity to graduate
with a commendation and
begin your future as an
officer.
For more information
contact your
Professor of Military
Science.
ARMY ROTC.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
CONTACT:
Captain Moon
Room 213
Mil Sci Bldg
864-3311
Bowling Leagues
APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE
STUDENT SENATE OFFICE. 105.B KANSAS
UNION, DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION IS
TUESDAY, SEPT 11 AT 5:00 P.M.
Leagues Start September 9th
Paid for by the Student Senate
(begins Sept. 12)
University Woman 1 o'clock p.m.
Mixed Hall
5:30 p.m.
Wednesday
IS THIS ANY TIME TO THINK ABOUT ARMY ROTC?
15 E. 8th, Downtown 843-0498 Tue.-Sat. 10-5:30
Sale Dates Sept. 8-Sept.15,1984
It's the perfect time
You're a freshman right? And you want
to make college a real learning experience!
Well ROTC can add valuable
dimension to your college education. A
dimension of leadership and manage-
ment training. And it will make your
deepen with more.
ROTC offers scholarship and
tunnel opportunities two.
Place the opportunity to graduate
with commissory and
begain your future as an officer.
For more information,
contact your
Department of Military
Sciences.
ARMY ROTC,
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
Sunday
(begins Sept. 9th)
Town & Gown 7:00 p.m.
SIGN UP TODAY!
--custom framing & gallery
(begins Sept. 13)
Guys and Dolls I 5:30 p.m
Guys and Dolls II 8:00 p.m
SELECTED FRAMED ARTWORK by Monet, Sanchez, O'Keefe, Schurr
FrameUp custom framing & gallery
Thursday
Monday
(begin Sept. 10)
University Mixed 5:30 p.m.
Open Men 8:00 p.m.
Class size limited.
UP TO 40% OFF
Monday
(begins Sept. 11)
Mixed Greek 5:30 p.m.
Greek Men 8:00 p.m.
Tuesday
Friday
THE STRONG HILL
STD
ON 844-2056
...
Sundav
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED
September 10, 17, and 24 (Mondays)
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Register and pay $15 materialslee at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall
SOFTWARE AT DISCOUNTS UP TO 22% OFF MFG. LIST PRICE
YOUR EXCLUSIVE STUDENT DIVIDEND APPLIES TO ALL SOFTWARE PURCHASES!
(Six hours of instruction.)
Level 1
Call 864-3545
THE KANSAS UNION
JAYBOWL
INNOVATIVE CONCEPTS ASHTON-TATE
EPSON VERBATIM MICR-PRO MICRO SOFT SORCIM DATA SHARE BROWN DISC DISCKEEPER NOVATION
(Begins Sept. 14)
T.G.I.F 4:00 p.m
Save 32% On ZENITH Computers
100
KU
State Bid Prices Are Now Available!
Other Lines Featured:
Our Price $2059
Our Price $2379
Z-150 Dual Drive 320 KRAM—List $2799
Our Price $1903
Rent it. Call the Kansan.
L-100 Single Drive 192 KRAM—List $3029
Z-150 Single Drive 128 KRAM—List $2199
Our Price $1495
Z-100 Dual Drive 192 KRAM—List $3729
Our Price $2535
Z-100 Dual Drive 128 KRAM—List $3499
Our Price $2379
KU Bookstores
Computer Store Burge Union
COMPUTER OUTLET.
A REVOLUTIONARY
(AND MUCH CHEAPER)
WAY TO BUY
COMPUTERS.
COMPUTER OUTLET.
A REVOLUTIONARY
(AND MUCH CHEAPER)
WAY TO BUY
COMPUTERS.
图
---
---
Computer technology is growing by quantum leaps and bounds. And it's high time computer retailing did likewise.
At Computer Outlet, it has.
You see, we've developed a whole new system of selling computers—networking—that dispenses with the antiquated and outdated methods of traditional retailing. Methods that for too long have kept prices high and selection low.
THE LOWEST OVERALL PRICES IN KANSAS.
Our system of networking is a jealously guarded secret. We can tell you however, that it afords you the luxury of the lowest overall prices in Kansas City, Topeka or Lawrence.
THE WIDEST SELECTION ANYWHERE.
Computer Outlet has most makes of computer hardware and software, including the acknowledged industry leaders.
And if we're out of an item, our nationwide search network will locate it and get it to you fast.
COMFORTABLE SURROUNDINGS AND INTELLIGENT SALESPEOPLE, TOO.
Even at our prices, we realize that your foray into the computer world can prove a sizeable investment. So we feel that your decisions should be made in a comfortable environment.
And the salespeople who work in this environment aren't really salespeople at all. They're employees of our parent company—Foresight Solutions, Inc.—and they plan computer systems for entire cities. These people aren't out to sell you just anything. They just want to see that you get the products and services that fit your needs.
DIAL 843-PLUG AND DISCOVER THE FUTURE TODAY.
Stop by today and you'll thank yourself tomorrow.
Because we've seen the future of computers.
The future is here, at Computer Outlet.
COMPUTER OUTLET "High Tech's Lowest Prices."
804 New Hampshire Lawrence, Ks. 843-PLUG.
804 New Hampshire Lawrence, Ks. 80431 LOU
Children and adults of IBM/PC to city governments IBM/PC is a trademark of International Business Machines
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1984
Page 10
KCC approves Wolf Creek tests
By United Press International
TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday tentatively approved a 250-hour test requirement at 100 percent capacity for the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant before the plant will be certified as complete and ready for operation.
The KCC also tentatively approved three other requirements that must be met by plant operators before the estimated $2.9 billion plant near Burlington is certified for operation. The KCC will take a final vote on the requirements early next week. KCC spokesman Gary Haden said.
The KCC requirements are that
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
307 Mass. phone: 843-115
- all necessary pre-operational and start-up component testing be complete before certification.
- the plant be operated for 250 hours or about 10 days at full power as required by the contract.
- the unit be fired by its predominant fuel source, nuclear power.
- the plant show sufficient demonstration of transmission capacity to utilities the plant will supply.
Michael Lennen, KCC chairman,
said the full power test would be
required despite objection by Kan-
tomine Diaz and others in charge of building Wolf Creek.
"IT IS THE OBLIGATION of the
commission to insure the plant is likely to operate." Lennen said. "We must make sure it is reasonably free from design or construction defects because the technology is new. It would be inconsistent to look at the 50 percent or partial level of operation."
Boyd's Coins-Antiques
Class Rings
Buy-Sell-Trade-Pawn
Gold-Silver-Coins
Antiques-Antiques
73 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Ks. 6044 913-842-8773
KG&E had asked the KCC to consider the plant complete during its 50 percent operation level, which would have allowed an expected rate-increase request by Oct. 15, officials said. However, that rate-hike request may now be postponed because the plant is not expected to run at 100 percent capacity until sometime between March 22, 1985, and May 21, 1985.
KG&E OFFICIALS told the KCC last week they expected the plant to be operational by May 21, 1985. Nuclear fuel will be loaded into the Wolf Creek reactor between Nov. 1 and April 30, commercially operable at 50 percent capacity between Feb. 12 and April 13 of 1985.
The plant is 97.5 percent complete despite a brief interruption of a major test of the its ability to withstand extremely high temperatures and pressures.
The test was halted less than two weeks ago when faulty seals were discovered on two of the four coolant pumps in the facility.
---
Kaw Valley Girl Scout Council LEADER BLAST OFF Thursday, Sept. 6
For new leaders and experienced leaders or for those who would like to be leaders
Lawrence Public Library
9:50-11:50 a.m.
1-3 p.m.
7-9 p.m.
FUN!
INFORMATIVE!
MIDWEST BUSINESS SYSTEMS
• Blue Print Service
• Copy Center Code Copying
• Air Conditioners & Supplies
812 Mach Press
842 - 41^
DOOR PRIZES!
REFRESHMENTS!
---
Call the Kansan.
SENIORS DON'T BE LEFT OUT!
HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO APPEAR IN THE 1985 JAYHAWKER
SENIOR PORTRAITS
Shooting begins Monday, September 10 $3 sitting fee (waived when you buy a yearbook) Call yearbook office for appointment 12-5864-3728
THE BULLDOG'S BOOKS
T
Sports WEST
SALF
Sports
10-8
The Nice Price Place.
Morris Sports West carries a full line of quality sportswear. But we don't think you should sell the farm to pay for it. That's why all of our specially priced sportswear from both stores is available at Morris Sports West. And it's still the same high quality sportswear you've always known us to carry. So when you're looking for sportswear at a great low price, look to Morris Sports West. Now, isn't that nice?
MORE SERVICE. MORE SELECTION. MORE SPORTS.
MORRIS Sports WEST IN THE HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
AK $\Lambda$ /X $ \Omega $ 4th ANNUAL
WHEAT MEET
TRACK MEET FOR KU CANCER RESEARCH
PARTY: SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 8th 7 p.m. BURGE UNION
- TOP BANDS FEATURING:
- Steve, Bob, and Rich
- UNIDOS
Stroh's
- 100 Kegs
- Free Pepsi
Pizza Shuttle—
pizza by the slice
Track Meet
Track Meet Sept. 22 Memorial Stadium
北
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK!
Donations:
$3.50 in advance
$4.50 at the gate
Buy Tickets from AK\.A: 842-7556
or X\.O: 843-5800
Your
Year for
Gold
Now
Save $25
on 14K Gold
College Rings
10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
CENTRAL STATE
UNIVERSITY
1913
Now that it's time to purchase your college ring, think about choosing the finest—a 14K gold college ring from ArtCarved.
Designed and handcrafted for lasting value, an ArtCarved 14K gold college ring is now more affordable than ever. For a limited time only, you can save $25 on the style of your choice. Stop by to see the entire ArtCarved collection and custom options. Remember, it's your year for gold!
ARTCARVED
Sept. 10-12 10-4 p.m.
Date Time
Deposit Required. MasterCard or Visa Accepted!
1984 Airtel Cancun Flags
KU Bookstore-Kansas Union Place
7241
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1984 Page 11
29 die in second day of South African riots
By United Press International
SHARPEVILLE, South Africa — Thousands of people burned and looted businesses and government buildings in black townships yesterday on the second day of rioting that claimed at least 29 lives.
Police in armored personnel carriers fired rubber bullets and tear gas at groups of youths while columns of thick, black smoke rose from huge fires at several ghettoes turned into battlefields.
TOWNSHIP RESIDENTS SAID many targeted businesses belonged to black municipal councilors accused of collaborating with South Africa's white minority government and to Asian businessmen thought to be exploiting blacks. The riots began Monday in the area of Sharpeville, 40 miles south of Johannesburg, with residents complaining of rent and electricity rate hikes. One man said his rent rose by $3.57 on Sept. 1 to $35.70 per month.
$5.70 per month.
The violence, which had been confined to seven townships outside
the neigbouring city of Johannesburg. In Evaton, about 40 miles south of Johannesburg, arsenists set fire to the Venter Training College during the night, causing extensive damage, police Li Col. Jaap Venter said. The training college was believed to have been abelaze because of its role in South Africa's system of segregated education.
IN OTHER SPORADIC incidents, groups of teenagers burned and looted shops and government buildings — including a pest office and a state-owned clinic — in Sharpeville Sebokeng and Eve, injured five traegas, rubber bullets and backset in some of the incidents.
Johannesburg in the Transvaal province, spread yesterday with police reporting rioting in the Thabong and Vaal Dam townships in the neighboring Orange Free State.
deems. Cape Town, scores of newly elected mixed-race and Asian legislators were sworn in as members of parliament yesterday.
The 80-member mixed-race chamber and the 40-member Asian chamber will join the 178-member white assembly today.
New B-1 bomber unveiled
PALMDALE. Calif. — The first operational B-1 bomber, the $220 million aircraft intended to replace the nation's aging B-52 force, was unveiled yesterday, less than a week after the crash of a prototype of the strategic jet.
By United Press International
prompted Tommie Douglas Benedef, 55, Rockwell International's chief test plot who died in last Wednesday's crash of a B-1 prototype, was praised as the man who kept faith through the project's stormy progress from drawing board to flight pad.
light pad.
Gen. Lawrence Skantze, head of
Before the rollout, Gen. William Thurman announced the Air Force would ground indefinitely a B-1A prototype like the craft that crashed last week pending investigation results.
the Air Force Systems Command, said "Doug, wherever you are, we are going to follow through, and we are going to do it damn well." Skantze spoke at a 50-minute ceremony attended by 1,500 invited civilian and military guests at Rockwell's Palmdale plant.
The dark green and gray bombers will be stationed at Air Force bases in Texas, Kansas and the Dakotas.
GOOD TIMES CORNER
GOGO DANCERS 4 p.m.-11 p.m.
14 miles West on Hwy. 40
New Management 18 and up welcome
379-9900 Closed Mondays
--presents
The Palace
CARDS·GIFTS
K. Q. PARAPHANALIA!!
CARDS GIFTS
CARDS GIFTS
K.U. PARAPHANIALIA!
* PARTY WARES
* NO SPILL MUGS
* PENCILS & PENCIL HOLDERS
* NOTE PADS
* CHECKBOOK COVERS
* CREDIT CASES
* NOTEBOOKS
* ADDRESS BOOKS
* GREEK & COLLEGIATE ALPHABET
* KEYRINGS & PINS
M.S 9:30-5:30
THUR. 9:30-8:30
1943
8TH. & MASS
843-1099
--presents
SIGMA DELTA TAU HAS COME TO K.U.
ALL INTERESTED SOPHOMORE JUNIOR AND SENIOR WOMEN ARE INVITED TO AN INFORMATIONAL MEETING
SEPTEMBER 6TH
5-7 P.M.
ENGLISH ROOM
KANSAS UNION
Use Kansan Classified.
KU
Student Union Activities
KU
KANSAS UNION OPEN HOUSE WEEK September 11-15
come and see the various activities and services the Kansas Union provides.
*******
**********
Extends its heartiest congratulations to all the members of the Muslim Community in the Lawrence area for today's occasion of the
CORAM BIRAM (EID AL ADBA)
one of the two major Muslim annual feasts. This is in memory of Abraham's complete and total obedience to god as exemplified in his willingness to sacrifice his son.
LAWRENCE ISLAMIC CENTER
M. S.A.
DOMINO'S PIZZA
$5.99
Two pizzas for one low price.
DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERS DOUBLES
Fast, Free Delivery
You're not seeing double! It's just our latest way of saying that Domino's Pizza Delivers. $ ^{\mathrm{TM}}$ Now you can have two delicious 10 $ ^{ \circ} $ or 14 $ ^{ \circ} $ pizzas for one low price. They're custom-made with your choice of items on each pizza they don't have to be the same! And Domino's Pizza $ ^{ \circ} $ uses only the freshest ingredients and 100% real dairy cheese.
REAL
Just give us a call and we'll deliver your pizzas within 30 minutes — or they're free!*
Call us.
Lawrence
1445 W.23rd St.
841-7900
832 Iowa St.
841-8002
Hours
4:30pm-1am Sun-Thurs.
4:30pm-2am Fri. & Sat.
Domino's Doubles
Two 10" cheese pizzas only $5.99.
Two 14" cheese pizzas only $8.99.
Pepperoni, Mushrooms, Sausage Ground Beef, Ham, Onions, Green Peppers, Black Olives, Jalapenos, Pineapple, Extra Cheese and Extra Thick Crust. Two 10" pizzas $1.25 per item Two 14" pizzas $1.49 per item
Additional Items
Cola available.
Good at participating stores in Kansas only.
Limited delivery area.
Our drivers carry less than $20.00.
*Weather conditions permitting.
Prices do not include sales tax. 1984 Domino's Pizza, Inc.
30 minute challenge
If your Domino's Pizzas do not arrive within 30 minutes, present this coupon and get your pizzas **free!***
Lawrence
1445 W. 23rd St.
841-7900
832 Iowa St.
841-8002
*Weather conditions permitting.
One coupon per order.
DOWNTOWN
PIZZA
NATION AND WORLD
Louisiana's governor stops execution
University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1984 Page 12
By United Press International
ANGOLA, La. - Gov. Edwin Edwards stopped the execution of condemned murderer Earnest Knighton Jr. with seven hours to spare yesterday, giving Knighton two weeks to take his case to the state Pardon Board.
Edwards issued the repribe minutes after the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington rejected Knighton's appeal on a 5-4 vote. Edwards had earlier in the day that he would give Knighton a repribe if the court rejected his appeal.
next week. If the board refuses to commute his sentence, there will be nothing to do except pray, Murray said.
Rejected in appeal Attorney Julian Murray of New Orleans said Knighton would have a hearing before the Pardon Board
The reprieve issued by Edwards will expire at midnight Sept. 18, but Knighton would not automatically be executed. Under state law, the trial judge would have to set another
Knighton, 38, was convicted in the March 1981 murder of a Bossier City, LA, gas station worker during a $300 holdup. He shot Harold Snell, 52.
In Florida, a federal appeals panel yesterday stayed the execution of child killer Ernest John Dobbert Jr., who was scheduled to be electrocuted tomorrow.
MINNEETONKA
MOCCASINS
Women's sizes available
in white, palomino, pink,
lavender, navy, light blue,
black brown, red black and
grey. Children's and infants
sizes available in pink, light blue
and palomino.
Gordon's SHOE CENTER
815 Massachusetts
West Coast Saloon
LADIES DRINK FREE
every Wednesday 7 p.m.-midnight $1 cover
2222 Iowa
841-BREW
KU TAE-KWON-DO CLUB
Tae-Kwon-Do is a fitness exercise, sport, art, self-defense, martial way, Ki-discipline for inner power, and finally mental and spiritual discipline. Interested students and faculty are all welcome.
Time:
Mon 5:00-6:00
Beginners 6:00-7:30
Advanced Wed 5:30-7:30
What does FULL SERVICE mean to you?
American Gem Society Members
Anniversary Rings
Ani Figurines
Annual Poster Watchs
Art Carved Wedding Bands
Aynaleh China
Bald Wren Braces
Bridle Sets
Bulova Watches
Casting
Chain Repair
Chains
Charge Accounts
Clock Repair
Clock Manufacturing
Colored Gemstones
Cross Pen & Pencil Cases
Cotton Wrap
Foam Material Manufacturing
Custom Jewelry Manufacturing
Denby China
Desk Dust Settings
Earrings
Electro-Plating
Engraving
Estate Appraisals
Fabrication
CLEANING
Marks JEWELERS
Gen Printing
Gear Knives
GTA Training
Gold Needle Sets
Gold Repair
Gorham Figurines
Gorham China
Gorham Stainless
Gorham Silver
Gorham Flocked Clocks
Lacquer
Iracey Silvery Care Kits
Insurance Appraisals
Iris Crystal Figurines
Jewelry Repairs
Jump Rope
Key Chain
Layaways
Lever Handles
Loose Diamonds
Lunt Stainless
Lunt Silver
Mantle Chains
Mother Chains
Mounted Diamonds
National Bridal Service
Northeast Korea
Northeast China
Omega Watches
Oneida Stainless
Over 300 Watches
Peak Nailwear
Peak Nailwear
Pear Rings
Pear Stringing
Peart Nailwear
Peear Earrings
Pendants
Polar Watches
Peardial Watches
Reed & Barton Stainless
Reed & Barton Stainless
Ring Sizing
Ring Remounts
Seiko Reaguaines
Seikie Watches
Silver Repair
S.sendel Bands
S.sendel Bands
Stoneware
Towel Crayell
Towel Stainless
Towel Stainless
Travel Alarm Clocks
Wall Clocks
Walter Silver
Walter Silver
Watch Repair
Watch Manufacturing
Watch Restoration
Wedding Invites
Wedding Patterns
Wedding Linens
Wedged Wedge
Wedged China
And More!
FULL SERVICE since 1889 Marks JEWELERS 817 Massachusetts 843-4266
TONIGHT
SUA FILMS
D. W. Griffith's Spectacular INTOLERANCE
RUDAHANI
with Lillian Gish (silent with music)
Woodruff Auditorium, Level 5, Kansas Union
7:30 p.m $1.50
Use Kansan Classified.
EPSON
EPSON PRINTERS:
Number One...and Built Like It!
There is an Epson printer designed to fit your needs and your budget. We offer the only truly complete line of dot matrix printers. More models! More features! More capabilities!
And All Epson Printers Have A One-Year Warranty On All Parts and Labor.
That's why Epson is the world's largest selling printer!
COMREX CR-II
... Hardcopy To Rival The
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5
- Daisy wheel printer with 5K RAM buffer
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wide, 12 CPS Over 100 typeslites
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Print up to 122 columns
- Optional typewriter key
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- EPSON RX-80/FT
...Affordable Paper
Handling.
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EPSON
- Six dot graphic modes
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- 128 typestyles
See Our Showcase Display of Epson and Comrex Printers
all microcomputers
Oi
- Six dot graphic modes
EZCOMP
COMPUTER CENTER
(913)841-5715 HOLIDAY PLAZA
KU
KU STUDENTS
ATHLETIC TICKET INFORMATION
SAVE ON YOUR SEASON
SAVE ON YOUR SEASON
FOOTBALL, BASKETBALL AND KANSAS RELAYS TICKETS
BY PURCHASING THE SPECIAL "ALL SPORTS" TICKET FOR
KU
ONLY $45.00
STUDENT BASKETBALL SEATING IS LIMITED!
— AN ALL-SPORTS TICKET GUARANTEES YOU A BASKETBALL SEAT —
KU FOOTBALL
- A large open offense that broke eight school and three Big Eight records last season
- Led by second-year Coach Mike Gottfried.
- A home schedule featuring Wichita State, Oklahoma and Nebraska.
Oklahoma and
• Choice of seating in open seating section or reserved seating section
KU BASKETBALL
- 1984 Big Eight Tournament Champs
- Led by Coach Larry Brown
- One of the nation's top recruiting classes
- A home schedule featuring Houston,
Missouri, Oklahoma and K-State.
"All Sports" Tickets— $45.00
Football Reserved Seating— $26.00
Football Open Seating— $23.00
Tickets can be purchased at the athletic ticket office in Allen Field House on weekdays from 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Student sales will also be held in front of Wescoe Hall from September 4th to the 7th from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. If you bought a ticket this summer, you can pick it up at the Field House.
you can pick it up at the front door
An "All Sports" ticket could be your only chance to see K.U. Basketball!!
TEN FEET AND ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF EXPERIENCE.
---
When you buy a pair of shoes from one of our five full-time salesmen at Arensberg's, you're not just buying footwear. You're also buying all the knowledge that years in the shoe business have given him.
And that experience is a valuable commodity indeed.
Because your salesman isn't just a hired hand, he's made a career of the shoe business, which means that he really cares — and truly knows — what's best for your feet.
Our five full-time floor people — Ace, Larry, Tom, Tom and Jeff - have a combined hundred years in this business. That's a century of commitment to quality family footwear, to stocking that footwear in depth, to an incredible variety of it and everything else about it that Arensberg's stands for.
So the next time you're in the footwear market, remember these five guys down here. And remember that you can buy a pair of shoes anywhere.
But if you want what's best for your feet, you've got five more reasons to step into Arensberg's Shoes.
ARENSBERG'S SHOES
Step in the right direction.
Quality Footwear for the whole family since 1958.
819 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 843 3420
University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1984
Page 13
KROGER MEANS
Kroger
BETTER MEAT
DOUBLE COUPONS! Everyday. Up to and Including 50'. No Limit on Quantity. Details Posted In Store.
OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY - 1015 WEST 23rd
Right to Limit, PLease
ADVERTISED ITM POLICY: Each of these advertised items are to be readily available for sale in each Kroger store except as specifically noted in this ad. If you do run out of an advertised item, we offer your choice of a comparable brand refecting the same savings or a raunchy, which will entitle you to purchase the advertised items at the advertised price within 30 days.
Fresh Tyson
WHOLE FRYERS
lb. 48¢
Limit, Please
TURKEY CHICKEN
All Meat
OHSE WIENERS
12 oz. 68¢
All Grinds
FOLGERS COFFEE
3 Lb.
Can
$499
Limit one with $10 or more in other pur-
chases excluding cig. & beer.
folgers
Fresh Fryer
LEGS or THIGHS
lb. 99¢
Prices effective thru Tuesday, Sept. 11, 1984
Regular or Light Beer
OLD MILWAUKEE
$297
12-12 oz.
cans
KROGER — THE
Guarantee The Best S
KROGER — THE MEAT PEOPLE
Guarantee The Best Steak in Lawrence
USDA CHOICE
GRAIN FED
BEEF
Morton
POT PIES... 4 8 oz. $100
for
USDA CHOICE
GRAIN FED
BEEF
U.S.D.A. Choice
Grain Fed
T-BONE STEAK
$298
lb.
U.S.D.A. Choice
Grain Fed Boneless Top
SIRLOIN STEAK
$268
lb.
U.S.D.A. Choice
Grain Fed Boneless
ROUND STEAK
$158
Ib.
PEPSI-COLA
$295
12-12 oz.
cans
PEPSI
Gold Rush 6ct. ICE CREAM BARS ... pkg. 68¢
The Kroger Garden
New Crop
PAULA RED APPLES
3 LB.
BAG 88¢
U.S. No. 1
RUSSET POTATOES
10
lb.
bag
99¢
Fresh
SNO-WHITE
CAULIFLOWER
$119
Hanging 4 in.
POTHOS PLANT
BUY 1—GET 1
FREE
Plant Shoppe
Hanging 4 in.
POTHOS PLANT
BUY 1—GET 1
FREE
Beautiful
ROSE BUD
VASE
ea $499
Jumbo
TROPICAL
PLANTS
$5 OFF
Fresh Crisp
JUMBO
CELERY
39¢
GOLDEN
CARROTS
2
lb. bag
49¢
All Flavors
DANNON YOGURT
8 oz. 39¢
DANNON
LOWEST COUPR
Old Fashioned
WHITE BREAD
5 $1
16 oz.
loaves
PASSPORTS
Each Only $995
Worlds of Fun
SAVE $4
KANSAS CITY'S
MARKET PLACE
ADVENTURE
Fresh Baked Bread
TWIN FRENCH
2 ct.
pkg. 99¢
Apple or Cherry
FRIED
FIES
5 for $1
Deli-Bakery
Fresh Baked Bread
TWIN FRENCH
2 ct.
pkg. 99¢
Apple or Cherry
FRIED
FIES
5 for $1
Fresh Made
THIN CRUST
PIZZA
2 for $650
Apple or Cherry
FRIED
FIES
5 $1
for
Fresh Made
THIN CRUST
PIZZA
2 $650
for
Fresh Made
THIN CRUST
PIZZA
2 for $650
CHECK OUR 100's OF WAREHOUSE PRICES
Kraft
MIRACLE WHIP ... Qt. 99¢
Shortening
CRISCO ... 3 Lb. $183
Can
Conv. Pak
DIAPERS
LUVS
$849
box
Regular or Iron $ 1 14
SIMILAC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 oz.
Strained
GERBER
BABY FOOD
4 9/4 oz.
20¢
Cost Cutter Filled
EVAPORATED MILK .13 oz. 39°
Spotlight
BEAN
COFFEE
$1 88
lb.
ALL Grinds FOLGERS COFFEE $229 lb.
Cost Cutter
NON DAIRY CREAMER 12 oz. $1 49
Sunshine
KRISPY CRACKERS 1b. 88¢
Cost Cutter
GOLDEN
CORN
29¢
16 oz.
Cost Cutter
SWEET
PEAS
29¢
17 oz.
Cost Cutter
TOMATO SOUP ... 10 % oz. 19¢
Cost Cutter
PEANUT BUTTER ... 18 oz. 99¢
KRAFT
VELVEETA
2 $259
lb.
Box
Cost Cutter
MARGARINE
39¢
lb.
Always Save Dry
DOG FOOD ... 25 lb. $3⁰⁷
Always Save
CANE SUGAR ... 5 lb. $1²⁸
Bathroom Tissue
NORTHERN
99¢
4 roll
Cost Cutter
Flavors &
COLA
3
12 oz.
Cons
49¢
Cost Cutter
GELATIN ... 5 oz. $1 00
Boxes
Cost Cutter
POT PIES ... 8 oz. $29¢
Dog Food
STRONGHEART
16 oz.
Can
23¢
Dog Food PURINA 5 $239 lb.
Cost Cutter
CORN CHIPS ... 16 oz. 98¢
Detergent
FAB
49 oz.
$1.49
Detergent FAB 49 oz. $149 10 lb. Bag KINGSFORD CHARCOAL $238
10 lb. Beg
KINGSFORD
CHARCOAL
$238
University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1984
Page 14
NATION AND WORLD
Prosecution opens meat packers'trial
By United Press International
DENVER - A meatpacker who sold tons of beef to the military and the federal government for school lunch wanted to make a profit at any cost, even if it meant recycling tainted meat, a prosecutor said yesterday.
Rudolph "Butch" Stanko, 37, of Gering, Neb. former owner of the new-detail Cattle King Packing Co., is accused of violating federal meatpacking regulations at the company's Denver area plant.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Charles Torres told a jury of 10 women and two men that Cattle King employees punctured gas-infilated packages of rejected meat to hide its condition so they could reclaim it or re-process it.
closed Cattle King after widespread publicity. Earlier, NBC TV ran a show about the plant on its "First Camera" program.
Stanko, who denied all charges.
Also on trial is Gary Waderick, 29. a sales executive at the Denver area plant, which was once one of the federal government's top beef suppliers.
453 5986
Consultant Hours
200 Lawrence National Bank
Laverance Kennesaw
DR. PAUL G. LIMBERT
Consultant
Eye Examinations & Eye Glasses
Contact Lenses & Visual Training
KWALITY COMICS Comics & Science Fiction 107 W. 7th. 843-7239
Defense attorneys claimed federal prosecutors were goaded into court action because of the NBC show.
treated for minor cuts and eardrum damage. No one was killed, police said, and all but two people were treated and released from the hospital. The showroom and 30 cars on display were destroyed. Buildings along the blast ripped tiles off roofs, topped walls and tapped windows Broken glass scattered over a 10-area block, showering lunchtime shopper, witnesses said.
Stanko, Waderick and Cattle King are on trial on one count of conspiracy and six counts of violating federal meat regulations.
Two other employees pleaded guilty to charges earlier.
"We had two warnings but there was no description of the car and there was some confusion about the location," a police source said. "We had to check maybe 100 or more cars in the street and the car park."
WE
FIX
CHAINS
FAST
749-4333
They said the government case centered on testimony from three ex-employees who violated federal meat regulations.
BELFAST, Northern Ireland — A car bomb exploded outside an auto showroom in Newry yesterday, injuring 71 people as police evacuated the area after receiving two warning calls from the outlawed Irish Republic American.
The 300 pound bomb was planted in a Ford ESC parked on the street outside a car showroom in the center of the town of about 13,000 people. 35 miles southwest of Belfast and several miles north of the border with the Irish republic.
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
71 injured in car bombing
Police said 71 people, including more than a dozen senior citizens and a 2-year-old child, were
800 Mass
By United Press International
Need a TV...
Rentacolor TV..
Student Discounts, Free Delivery, Free Installation, & Free Service
Call Mike 1-764-8660
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
117 Burge (Satellite) Union 84-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee
J & M Favørs
"Count on us when you need a Favor"
J & M Favors
* imprinted specialties*
Now at a New Location
2201C W. 25th (Behind Gibsons)
Best Quality 841-4349 Best Prices
ASSOCIATION of university residence halls
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS
bring i.d.
saturday September 8th 5:00-midnight templin hall
--calculations, amortizations and balloon payments.
ACADEMIC SKILL
BORDER BANDIDO TEXAS BURRITOS!
The Biggest & the Best
-A 10" burrito stuffed with meat, beans or both. Also filled with lettuce. Smothered with our tany sauce and topped with cheese.
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
C
Just $2.29
1528 W. 23RD. Across from Post Office 842-8861
Time Management
hugahawk
84
Stroh's
KLZR 106
STORNO TELI
AL 2134
FAX 512-890-2764
Listening and Notetaking
Wednesday, September 5 6:30 to 9 p.m.
3140 Wescoe Hall
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
- Student Senate, B105 Kansas Union
- Your Organized Living Group President
-The Office of Admissions, 126 Strong Hall
Deadline Monday, September 17.1984
For more information contact:
MUSCLE
REPRESENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS AS A STUDENT AMBASSADOR
T
THERE'S A GREAT STEAK WAITING FOR YOU . . .
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
TANZANIA
- For Lunch or Dinner.
- All you can eat Salad and Hot Food Bar
- Banquet Facilities.
- Carry-Outs
1015 Iowa Street
business
Against
Gri
PUSH DEF SUB CMP PI
N M POWER NL POWER % Q R S T U V W X Y Z
STO 7 8 9 0
ROC 4 5 6
BLM 1 2 3 4 5 6
ENC 0
Get down to business faster. With the BA-35.
If there's one thing business students have always needed, this is it: an affordable, business-oriented calculator. The Texas Instruments BA-35, the Student Business Analyst.
Its built-in business formulas let you perform complicated finance, accounting and statistical functions—the ones that usually require a lot of time and a stack of reference books like present and future value
The BA-35 means you spend less time calculating, and more time learning. One keystroke takes the place of many.
The calculator is just part of the package. You also get a book that follows most business courses: the Business Andbst Guidebook. Business professors helped us write it, to help you get the most out of calculator and classroom-
A powerful combination.
Think business. With the BA-35 Student Business Analyst.
ti
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Creating useful products and services for you.
© 1983 Texas Instruments
University Daily Kansan, September 5. 1984
I will output the text as it appears in the image. It is a simple text block with no images or decorative elements.
Page 15
SPORTS ALMANAC
1. U. Open Championships
At New York, Sept. 4
(at parentheses)
Tennis Results
John McLeurie (1), New York, del. Robert
Green, Brooklyn, Matts (4), 6-3, 6-2, John
Halverson (1), New York, del. Robert
Gray, Brooklyn, Matts (4), 6-4, 6-4, 6-2, Matts Wulander (1),
Gray, del. Robert Mayer, Springfield,
Maryland, Matts Springfield, Matts
Tomina (13), Crescentbakova (3), 6-3, 6-2,
Jim Contours (3), Sandhurst, Harbor, Phi
Delta, Crescentbakova (1),
Fourth Round
Hasa Mandilkova (3), Czechoslovakia vs. Garliss Bergen (1), Canada, postponed, rain
Women
Sylvia Hanika. West, Germany. def. Petra
Huber. Austria. 6.4 n7-5
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST W 1 W Pct GB
Detroit 80 1.4 633
Toronto 80 3.8 396 ^
Boston 74 3.2 43 ^
Baltimore 74 6.4 12 ^
New York 73 6.4 333
Cleveland 62 29 443 ^
Miami 56 82 481
West
Minnesota 70 68 597
Kamala City 68 69 5001
California 68 69 4964
Chicago 68 73 4705
Ohio 64 73 4657
Tuesday's results
California 3. Cleveland 1. 12 innings
Hawaii 4. Detroit 1. 12 innings
New York 4.
Kansas City 4. Minnesota 1.
Boston 3. Milwaukee 1.
Chicago 12. Oakland 1.
Tampa Bay 3. 12 innings
California Kison 3-3) at Cleveland
(ROMAN 0-6), 6-05 p.m.
Baltimore Fla. (82) B
Bergen County (70) H
(Nurb. 143) at New York
Boston | Brown | 1-6 | at Milwaukee
(Haas 7.10), 7:30 p.m.
Berkeley
Toronto (Stieh 14.5) at New York
Rassmann 8:2, 7:4 p.m.
(Rasnussen 8.4;) p.m.
Oakland (Burris) 11:7) at Chicago
(Dotson (3.11); 7:30 p.m.
ab h b r b
Puckett cf c 4 0 2 4 0 2
Eauler ch 3 0 0 0 Wathan ph 1 0 00
Bush ph 1 0 00 Slaughter x 3 0 00
Washington s2 0 0 0 Pryor 3b 4 1 10
Brown ph 1 0 00 Bracaness al 1 1 00
Jimenez s2 0 00 00
Totals 23 1 1 7 Totals 29 1 7 7
| Totals | 23 1 1 7 | Totals | 29 1 7 7 |
|---|
Haus 7.25 | 7:00 p.m.
Haus 8.16 | 7:30 p.m.
Kansas City (Louisville) 8.45 | 11:11 a.m.
Bentonville 8.46 | 7:30 a.m.
Seattle | Harvans 8.93 | at Texas | Darwin 8.93 |
7:35 p.m.
Kansas City 4, Minnesota 1
Game-winnning KO=2014-11-25
E. Slaughter 18, Minnesota's Kansas City
7, 2B. Jones 3S, Sheridan (18), S. Bi
Ancelana, SP, Potamina
Minnesota 001 000 000-1
Kansas City 001 001 20x-1
Minnesota
Schrum (L 14-8)
6 1 3 5 3 3 3 3
Kansas City
Gubicza W (0)11 8 2.3 7 1 1 1 3
Quisberberry S(37) 1.3 0 0 0 0 0
T. B. J. K. 16 249
Filson 1 2 1 1 1 1
Lysander 2.3 0 0 0 0
Tuesday's Sports Transactions Baseball
Tuesday's Sports Transactions
New York, NY. -- Detailed third baseman
Kevin Mitchell and pitcher Wes Garden from the
International League
Basketball
Basketball
Detroit — Matched after sheets to forward Kelly Tripura and guard Vinnie Johnson
Columbia
College
St. Joseph's Named Jim Van Blank
assistant cross country and track coach
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
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 7.00
21.25 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.05
For every 5 words add: 25c 50c 75c 1.05
AD DEADLINES
POLICIES
Monday Thursday 5.10 p.m.
Tuesday Tuesday 5.10 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 5.10 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5.10 p.m.
Friday Saturday 5.10 p.m.
installed displayed advertisements can be only with maximum width and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depths are one inch. No advertisement allowed in displayed advertisements on installed display slides.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- Words set on ALL CAPS count as 2 words
- Words set in BOLD CARE count as 3 words
- Double line or Display Advertisement
- Always takes based on consecutive day increments only.
2D ADVERTISMENTS
A sign for a radio or recording three days. These ads can be placed
advertising
• blind bids only - please add a $2 service charge
• blind bidding only - please add a $2 service charge
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in connection of any admission impaired.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
1. correct insertion of date and additional fields.
- Not required are a one-time identification of pregnant classifier
*ATTENTION FEMALE ATHLETES* Tryouts for KU Women's Fastpitch Team will begin September 3. All interested athletes contact Bordt-Stuart, Inc. 212. Allow Feedback: 644-722-5011
Classified display advertisement
Classified display ads do not count towards mean
this, earned rate this count
courses must accompany all classes admitted to The University Daily Kurdistan.
Courses will be required to pay in advance.
Become a KU Student Ambassador! Interested students should have a general working knowledge of the University and be able to demonstrate their ability to supervise a student to high school students. This position requires that applicants be full-time students enrolled in 12 credit bursaries or not, and must have a point average applications are available in the Office of Admins 12.8 Hard Time. The deadline for application is
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
On Sale Near You! $3.50 ea
- * * MUM SALE * * *
Lambda Sigma
Parent's Day Mum Sale
September 4-15
*budget Stretcher coupons Thurs. evenings.* Buy
10 & receive $1 coupon toward next purchase
cross reference Malls Shopping Center
IMPAIR YOUR STUDY SKILLS. Attend the Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop. Cover time management, textbook reading, listening and notetaking. Wednesday, 5/6 to 9:00 p.m. 11: Whewell Free FIRE Preserve the student Assistance Center, LL Strang
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
Landlight Special this Thurs. Evs 5 (30) (80)
9% off albums & cassettes in stock
Cross Inspire Mall Shopping Center
REALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING
earn to initiate conversations, make new
connections, tell comfort stories and
request more time at 9:00 p.m. FREE. Please
registers to attend at the Student Assistance
center.
GAY AND LESBIAN SERVICES OF KANSAS
RESEARCH PAPERS 306 page catalog 15,278 pages
Rush $2.00 RESEARCH 1922 idaho. 296 MB. Los Angeles 90025 (211) 477 6226
Thursday, September 6
7:30 p.m.
INFORMATIONAL & ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
KWALITY COMICS; SALE Aug. 23rd thru Sept.
th. 107 W. 7th, 840-7239
Jayhawk Room Kansas Union
EVERYONE WELCOME
**WINTER'S BOOKS** Lawrence's Womyn's and
pictorial book for all AFL, collectively
operated by IHL, invites you to the
Bath (2:12), Melbourne (3:00), Sept & 8:25,
Ireland (1:12) / Mass (3:20), Gothenburg
Penrith and Wimborne (1:45 m) at Clifton Park,
Philadelphia. At Saturdays of events or directions
Bent 19" Color T-V $28.6M a month, Curtis
Matters 147 W. 2325 W. 42571 Open 9 to 9:00
M/F 8 to 10:00 Sat
Best VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Carlson
Matters (147) 217-822-5751 Open 9:30 - 9:40,
9:45 - 9:50 Sat
Barry Bennett, formerly of Charme Beauty Salon. Inaugurated at Angeles Beauty Salon, 940 N. Las Vegas Blvd., M. P. Call 813-457-900 for Sharayne's Special Shampoo & Haircut . 800-626-4900.
music Master's Music for dancers and parties All guests Lighting included Reasonable Rates Referees 249-1125
Beginner Specialist
Tired of long distance telephone bills?
Want to be quick and efficient local long distance company in Louisiana or have a garage service? 20% off 20% off 20% off U.S. Huawei Puerto Rico and Alaska. There are no monthly minimums and IY represent 41% of U.S.
41%
DEVELOP YOUR READING COMPLEXION
AND SPEED. Three class sessions, from
0 to 1 hr, to 8 to 9 p.m. Materials fee $45;
at the library or through Class size limited.
Pleasant Trift Shop for homewares. great values. Saturday's, 9:12, Thursdays, 9:4.
Thursday's, 9:12, Thursday evenings, 7:30, 8:30, 9:40. Vertrepn
GAY AND LESBIAN SERVICES OF KANSAS PRESENTS GAY OLD PARTY
Saturday, September 8
Kansas Room-Kansas Union
8 p.m.-1 a.m. $2.50 admission
Is it true you can buy jerseys for $44 through the U.S. government? Get the facts today! Call 1-822-7422 1422 Ext. 2204
FOR RENT
- ext-Ap1 like, like New, on Bustroute, C/A, W/D in shifter,
$390, $400, 841, 814, 843, 808
3 HH Apt. Utilities, 2 blocks, K-1 U, 2Ku-
downsown. Covered parking, large backyard, su-
deck. 468 West 6th. Phone 784-2233 for info
3 bedroom. 2 bath townhouse w garage. Swimming pool available. Excellent southwest location. $750/month Call 841-7613
3 bedroom House, new furniture, new carpet,
fireplace, fireplace to KU 1. 130 KY 842 1998
AVAILABLE JAN. 14. (one bedroom apartment
842. 843. 868)
ON PARTMENTS. Gain $40.
Designed for a group of students. Classy, huge and energy efficient. $660 per unit. 748 1692. 843 9427
Economical Student studies. 140 month, utilities paid. Common bath. 843 2116.
VALON APARTMENTS. Gis & Water glair will here these large one and two bedrooms apt. Ready for immediate occupancy. Collection room or more info. call Kawai Valley Mgt at 414 6000.
Female Church roommate needed to share $75/mo plus utilities and $10/mo for church space to share Apt $75/mo, 1/2 utilities, deposit, semi furnished, downward & "bursary" Paula, evening 749-6068
For Rent: next to campus, nice efficiency and one bedroom apartment. Utilities paid 642-4185
New leasing one, two & three bedroom apartments,
duplexes. Ready for you to move into Good idea
stations, some on busine. Contact Kaw Valley Mgt.
at 841-600-9600.
OLD MILL APARTMENTS Now leasing newly remodeled one and two bedroom apts, walking distance to KU and on basecamp. Ready for home. 24-hour room service. Call Kau Valley Hall at 814 6090 for more.
MEADOWBROOK—nice furnished studio available immediately. Water and cable费 2 blocks from campus, on bus route, laundry facilities. Call 842-4290 I & B Crestline
MEADOWBOOK still available one and two bedroom furnished and unfurnished awnings. Cable and water included. 2 blocs from camp, and expired maintenance fee. 11th & 12th. Bristol - 842-708.
Male rommate wanted. Nounmaker. Separate BR, washer, dryer, 125-mo plus 1/2 utilities. Call 749 3012 or 1-665 7572
Large, farmed apartment. (6 rooms.)
1 bedrooms, 1/2 bath, fireplace, central air,
garage, close to KU. Very nice. A couple or
3 serious students. Reference: 8127488
- proximity for commuters. One block from cam,
pill, a bag hot tub, or the beach. Two blocks
from campus, two blocks with vans, backpack
overloading stadium, landlord, just remodeled
studio, just remodeled studio, just remodeled
alongside for $30 per room for 1. See up to
allowance for $15
Spacium, bedroom apartments available for fall for 1 bed or 2 people. Includes fully equipped kitchen, carpeting, central air, humidity facility, mk IU heat, gas and water pump. For more info call (800) 354-7966.
One & Two Bedroom Apts. Close to campus no
mature entrusted, reasonable rates, call
(212) 555-4900
Quiet rooms in family home in old West Lawnware. Some kitchen privileges $100 and $160 utilities included. $243 after 40 hours.
Brydge cabinetry colonneal b block N. of Kaukaun Utopia Fireplace. Bute cable service excellent view of campus. Good multiple student dwelling $625 month. 043-2116
Try cooperative living! Sunflower House 1000
Tennessee 794080. Ask for Downs Inexpensive
& Private rooms are available
**thread Twnishms:** 2 locations, all close to campus. *Some perfect for 3-4 people*. Completely furnished w/custom furnishings. Rentals under $50/mo per person. **$145**, **$125**, **$112**, **$108**.
Sundance Apartments 7th & Florida. Completely furnished studios. 1. Br. w/ belf. Bentrals from $220 on mo. water, road waper 841-3253
LOST AND FOUND
Tungweng Apartments - 10th & Arkansas-
Hand new, completely furnished, energy effi-
cient facility 1.2 & 1.8 apts. Heavy for
Adjacent to K. Rentals. Retail from 6pm
04/12/13 8:45am
Lost. Calico Cat one, yr old. Last seen (718) to
phone; call曾4664 or return. 1915 in
California.
sassing. Orange & white neutered male cat, friends, answers to Carmichael, lives in 1280 block of Louisiana and roams the Gread neighborhood. If found, please call 406-3231
1976 Kawasaki K240, bookrack, highways pegs,
windshield, 270 miles, excellent condition, $700
841.3112
12 x 12. Burnt orange shag carpet, $25, 841-5897
841-5934
1906 Yamaha 360, good condition, 10-speed men's bicycle
851356 864394 894394
1977 Kawasaki KZ70 krug; $700 Fender pa 6 channel, 200 watts, 841-532 830
1960 Yamaha XS 400, $750, 841, 333, 452 California 7
1979 Citation Mosaic home 14 x 60 2-turner
1980 Citation Mosaic home 14 x 75 2-turner
lobby, extra life; 341 - 949, weekend & evenly
floor; extra life.
(981) Honda Moped Express SR, in good condition
$75 Call/Enrollment: 814-2540
5.2 Cubic Ft. Retrigerator - $125, 72 Datsum 360
runs, body in bad shape. Best offer over $200.
499-828
79 HONDA CX-500, Plexi-fairing, new Dumpies,
F. I. F., 800 available, 834-800, events.
AUDI Fox, 1977. Idr. 440, W390. Electronics
Programmer, amplifier, w/o K90
AUDI Fox, 1977, *i-4*, auto, $1900, Electronics
speakers $120 ca, Pioneer amplifier, $80, $200,
Kenwood audio 71W, $130, $44, 192W
Apple II, II plus Silenttype Thermal Printer w interface card $190 negotiate. Scott. 064 6800
Apple iPhone (i28K) amber monitor, Apple printer)
$196.00 IBM PC, i28K) drive, keyboard, $176.00
IBM PC/r (i28K, i drive) 196.00 IBM Portable 196.00
$154.00 Caller ID, caller@487.937 or
$154.00 Caller ID, caller@487.937
Bed for sale. Twin only one year old. price
negotiable. Call 841 7295
Bookcases, beds, desks. Everything But Ice. 616
Vernont
contributor in its computer with diamante Do you have a computer with diamante? Do you have a computer with diamante? Like new paid $20 price negotiable钻子. La
FOR SALE Bookcases, starting at 49.65
The Farmhouse Barn, 1011 W. 6th
Flexarm steel 108; watt capacity. Regalpads 44.95, on sale $99.99. Bob's Tinern Sewing and Vacuum Center .24401 Iowa (Holdley Plaza) 842 1790
For your furnishing and your living quarters, we have what you need. Thrift stores at 628 Vermont and 16 E. 905.
Hire for sale Agropola Geelong getting 12 years
Expired 04/16/19. Orkney: call 861-3829
Men, 23 * lightweight* 12* speed*. Men's tail to speed, men's to speed, men's back to speed. Call
Need to sell a full size bed, complete. Make an offer.
Call: 841-3299
fer. Call 641-5260
Oak Drafting table/ desk. Good condition. Best of
fer. 841-5261
Gak table, 4 chairs, desk, dressers, bed, chest
beds, and tables, and etc. #814 2841 after 5-30.
Queen Water Note $129.50 complete. The Furniture
Room 1011 W. 107hr
SONY - PSLX 5 Turntable HD, full auto, LOW hours ARAI 782 D cassette, Dolby. Chrome low noise 749-3177
queen size Water bed $89 Drawing board $10 Call
841 1414
Used Metal Offer Chair. Side chairs with &
without arms $1 & $10. Stove Swivel chair
with casters $1. Exec. Swivel chair with castors $8,
842-224 3 p.m
Solid Wood 5 Drawer Chests $89.96 The Fur-
mer Barn Part I W1 6th
TWIN BED in very good condition. $89. Call 841-2861.
Twins Mattresses and Foam mattresses. $119 per set.
Bedding is not included.
WINDSURFING SAILBOARDS packed from 5540
Large selection of imported models. NATURAL WAY
220 Massachusetts 840-1000
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplement. New on sale. Make sense to use in exam preparation or as a supplement. For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization*. available from *The University Press* and *tread Bookstore*.
Stereo television video. All name brands, Lowed prices. KC area Total Sound Distributors. 912-843-6000
COMPLIER TERMINAL Zenith ZT 11 Terminal with built-in Auto Dial monitor, auto log on parallel, centrificе) and RS232 ports. Zenith ZT M21 (J26) meter gun $409, 842, 325.
Yamaha receiver. Pioneer tape deck with 2
speakers. $99. Drafting table & chair. $18 with 2
speakers.
AUTO SALES
Furniture Hide a bed $10; Dresser $40;
chairs/tables $16; Day bed $20; Small cabinet $15.
Bronze box $10. Call Joe at 963-884 or 932-8136.
w20 Plymouth Granbury AC, AT, PS, PB Excellent car 800, negative 841 0127 Call evenings weekend
Women's 10-speed Schwinn Traveler III $125
843-2866, 5.7 p.m. or ask for Laurian, 2110
Summer Camp
Sanman Classique Stereo System; includes direct drive turntable, integrated amplifier, toner, cassette deck, equalizer, speakers & beautiful rack m 10. call Owl Call, 8421 12347 Anytime
over rramp TEC. Heavenly reboot new engine, starter, alternator, clutch plate, more. AM/FM Stero cassette, power antenna, air, Call Jash, 841-1223 anytime
1971 Buck Skylark, PS, PB, AT, AC, excellent
Roadside kills. 5625, PS at 841 7146 or 864 9835
wood running Plymouth Duster Xi Six-cylinder 3-speed AM/FM stereo clutch, Akg 850
1928 Mustang 11.4 cyl, great on gas, new tires. A good car for a student 802-922-8488
MISCELLANEOUS
HELP WANTED
Wide choice Desk Lamps and Accessories to brighten your room at The Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 9th
Bartenders & Doormen Must be 21. Apply after 2 p.m. at ronnie s., 230 Wisconsin
Computer Science Student, well versed in computer operations, qualified to handle installations and operations of large software applications and paid hourly for installations and operating training. Midwest University Systems.
Child care workers wanted for group, care home Married couple At least one spouse must have work experience in child care or college level coursework in adolescent psychology. Must have strong leadership skills and background
Coordinator/Newsletter editor for the East Lawrence Improvement Association, a neighborhood based organization, 1.2 time position. Double bonus. Bachelor's degree in education, administrative experience, organizing skills, ability to publish periodic newsletter, some familiarity with local history, and individuals, and a demonstrated commitment to helping people both themselves. MS or同等学历 by letter and resume, with two letters of recommendation by September to the ELAJ, MS or同等学历 by letter and resume, BS or同等学历 by letter and resume, MHEL 842 769 4730
Delivery Drivers. Must be dependable, hardworking
and able to work weekends. Car and expenses
are provided. Appt Mon.-Wed. 2 - 4 p.m. in
only at Pizza Hut. 801. MASS. AN OR
dependable female to assist disabled with care and mobility. Call between 10am and 5pm, having available. Call between 10am and 5pm, having available.
atKSHIMEN - It's not too late to join NAVAL
BATC - Call 864-351
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16.500 $9.500/year
Now hiring. Your area. Call 805-677-6000 Ext.
R930
GRADECAUTE ASSISTANT Primary duty to assist with publication of journals and occasional publications in humanities, secondarily, assistance with special projects, particularly in the area of Excellent typing and proreading skills essential. Experience with ATM and or WordBird word processing system preferred. Applicant must have a well-established publishing work is possible and salary ranges are $420. 808 Applicant to application and resume to the Center for Humanities and use faculty diversity of faculty from September 7, 1984.
Micromputer Sales person. Full part and time inside sales, some outside sales. Knowledge of hardware and software required. Send or bring resume to Computerark, 11 W. 21d. Lawrence
Need responsible person to care for two great kids.
Need baby, i.a. p. t. l. p. t. i. p. m. 341/4481.
Openings for part and full time fountain personnel. All shifts available. Apply in person at Vista restaurants, 1227 W. 60th
Immediate openings for part time grill personnel
available with availability. Especially mores and
mornings. Apply in person at Vista restaurants
1027 W. 11th
Part time: Bartender and Cocktail waitresses.
Must be 21 yrs. of age. The New Place: 2406 Iowa, 842 953.
Piano teacher qualified in Suzuki method needed
Pulliam's Music House: 843-3067
Quarter time graduate research assistant to assist the Associate Dean of Architecture with school publications, other academic journals, and month, to begin as soon as possible. Appointment fee $1.58-15. Submit resume with phone number Joadie Little. 206 Marvin, Lawrence NS 6043. Applications
SOLID WOOD Student desks. $89. The Furniture
Barn. 1811 W. 60h
Wanted: Part time shift supervisor. Must be 18, able to work night and weekends. Apply in person only at Border Rampid. 1320 W. 23rd St.
University of Kansas Budget Office has an opening for a continuous half-time graduate assistant in the Summer. The position will assist with the process of budget and accounting for the financial preparation of the four University Budgets. The person assists with the preparation of budgeting and counting, and has an opportunity
to work in your University team and program. Work in accounting, and good written and oral communication skills. Expand your knowledge. Changing date. Sep. 24th. For information, call Janice Whitehatcher.
Applications available in 189 Hall FOE, WAITHETS and WAITHETTES NEEDED! GAMMON's nightclub is intreviewing goodlooking students with spirit and sensibility for water and waitness positions. Experience helpful interaction and communication #687-3672 for an appointment, 8 p.m. 11 p.m.
Work Study position now open in the organization and activities center. The appointment for this clerk type position will continue until the end of Spring Semester. 100. Primer apply only if available. All positions are available and need to return to room 401 Namoo Union by September 7, Friday.
POSTDENTIFICAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE-
membrane Biochemistry - Position available for membrane biochemistry graduate program in neuromuscular membrane ion transporting systems to be exam- avared. FB bachelor's degree required with lab exp in membrane isolation and analysis. Full-time position. Complete job description available upon request. Send vitae and two letters of recommendation to Center for Biomedical Research, Lawrence, KS 60044. Deadline for applications: 30 September, 98. Will be
Aria Snyder Stephanie's Ambitions, people wanted
Good food. Good environment. Must be 18
and over and have own car. Apply at 2241 Yale
or 3 on call 841-8016.
Someone to drive a piano tuner around on Tues
day and Thursday. Pulliam's Music: 843-3097
PERSONAL
My Dearest Gene, one beautiful year and we're still going strong Happy Anniversary
Sweetheart, Love you - Nancy
HENWARD for into-leading to the return of my painting, lasks last from spring 2014 to art HL Art. 24 x 34 on canvas. Contact Susan Beltke at 842 323. keep trying.
Sensitive, nurturing women and men are needed to spend positive time with children of domestic violence on a one-to-one basis in order to help prevent the break of the violence; please call Women's Transitional Care services. 814-6987 for WTC, the battered home counselor, looking for younger adults who need to as volunteer advocates. Women of all ages, race and ethnic backgrounds are encouraged to apply. A commitment is required for daytime as well as evening are needed; contact 814-6987 before September 8.
S W M 36 inmate, seeks a taste of freedom thru correspondence Serious inquiries only B *envoy* B2 L learning. NS 60401
SERVICES OFFERED
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Stroom Hall
121 Strong Man
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Loft, Kansas Union
Strong Hall
TU70HS. List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center.
121 Strong Hall
NEED A RIDE! HIDER! Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lubby, Kansas Union COMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
TUTORS/TUEEs. Inspire at the Student Assistance Center, 12) Strong Hall
Downtown Charmine Beauty Salon - Home of the $7 Haircut
Complete beauty care for dormitories and imports at
Gateway Center on W. 6th St., across from
814-5700 814-5700
Charity Beauty Salon in new offering Haircuts for women of all ages and skin tones. Professional cosmetics or perfum of a great price.
Environmental campus photo studies. Modeling, Dance and Environmental portraits or companies, IM.
PRESIDENTIAL CANCER SERVICES
Prompt contrapassive and abortion services in
Lawrence 841.576
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841.576
STADIUM HARBOR SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downstream AT haircuts. $%. No appointment
necessary
BIRTHRIGHT Free pregnancy testing
coping with SK221
confident counseling. 813-3821
MATH TUTOR for most courses. 843-9032
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor_
Beginner/Advanced Group Individual
www.tennis.com
BUSINESS PERS
COMPLIERENCE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care confidentially assured; greater
health care area call for appointment:
913-642-3100
New Arrival
Vintage Clothes from 1920-1950
Volvets, Sloks, Wools
1918 • Main St. 4830
1938 • First St. 4830
Then
Barbs Vintage Rose
COMPENSATED HEALTH ASSOCIATES
early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality
medical care, confidentiality assured greater
Kansas City area call for appointment
Computerark
Computerpark
PROCADOWLING EQUATION
Aircraft
Manual
Machine
Oceanic
Boehner
Competitor
IBM & IBM Solutions
Microsoft
Windows
Office
instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, ID, and of course fine portraits. Welska Studio 794-801.
KWALYT COMICS, SALE, Aug. 23rd thru Sept.
16, W. 7th, W. 843-7259
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
Mornings with kids
3-5 years at Head Start
Call 842-2515 for information
LAMP CLOSE O.T. T Lens LA1 reg $29.96 $167.5
Crownlight 27.96 $19.38 white supplies last
Stiff's Office systems 104 Vermont, 843-6441
THE ETC. SHOP
732 Mass. 843-0611
THE FUN PLACE TO BE
VINTAGE-NEW 1950's
WOOL BANDED JACKETS
INDIANA JONES
AUTHENTIC HATS
AUTHENTIC HATS
BY STETSON
PLUS MANY OTHER HATS
STAEDTLER/MARS Tech pen special 7 pen set
$30.10 1pen set $22.50 while supplies last. Strong's office Systems
Keyboard affordable at sale price. Typepapers, keyboard correcting portables with office features. Hewlett Packard calculators, self-assembly computers and business systems 888 Mass. Phone: 842-4134
The New Place: for a rich atmosphere at an after-
labor price. The New Place, a private club, 2806,
827-9203
THE BEST WORKOUT IN TOWN Lawrence
Awarded by father Timpson M.F.A. 6:15 p.m.
School: Grum, School 129 Vermont Come to a
FREE class: 4, 5, 6, 7
Say it on a shirt, custom silicone printing. T-shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirtart by Sweilka 194-611
modelling and theater portfolio shading now.
Beginners to professionals. Call for information
Savelli Studio, 749-661
Community Mercantile
Lawrence's Natural Food Grocery
700 Main St. Lawrence, KS 81534
TWIST BEADS $2 each, or 6 for $10. Call 841-6006.
5 p.m. - 10 p.m.
LOOK AND FEEL,GREAT,
SUNTANNING, ROTTUF
& HEALTH CLUB
2419 IOWA *HOUSE 1037*
Light Room.
Environmental Hub Tub Room.
FREE DAY MEMBERSHIP*
EUROPEAN
FALL SALE
2 For 1
(OR 25% OFF SINGLE MEMBERSHIP)
Credit Limit: $9,84
GET NOTICED
*Services at location Typing, editing, graphing*
*WINDOWS Artists, Ellen 841.2172*
24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fastest service. 841-5066
TYPING
Absolutely LETTER PERFECT Word process,
typing, and typing库存 IBM-80S v. 3 & W
Same Day Service Available All Hours 941-6900
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing,
typing
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers Word Processing, Professional Results, resumes, papers a specially. Call 749-1108
Always try the best for professional service
Term papers, thesis, resumes, etc. Reasonable
482-3246
Call Terry for your taking needs, letters, term
papers, dissertations etc. IBM correcting selecte
II 842-7434 or 841-9871. Noon to 3pm.
Call Terry for your typing needs. letters term-
paper, dissertations, and IBM retrieval selec-
tive papers 842.4754 or 842.3621. Noon-10:30 p.m.
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHIPPER — Tying Service
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard cassette tape
443-8677
IS A FAST, Fast, Affordable Clean Tying
Word processing You can afford @ 841.4300
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI
BUILT 841.4306
843-867.
Experienced typed. Term paper, dresses, moccasins,
HIMC correcting Seleite, Eltter will correct spelling. Phone 843-9534.
Mr. Wright
Professional TYPEING EIGHTING GRAPHICS
IBM Corrective Selectric, Kali 4242.8528 before
10:36am
RELIABLE, experienced typing/word processing
of term papers, dissertations, etc. $81 25
a page. Call Mike after 6 p.m. (843) 5472
TIP TOP TYPING, 120 ufa Professional typing,
processing, editing Resumes (from start to
finish, repetitive letters, editing our open-
sures, emailing and writing emails)
correcting. Mon. Fri. 9:34-8:47
665
TYPING-PLUS: Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resume assistance with composition, grammar spelling, ete. English tutoring for foreign students, or American students.
WANTED
Day and evening dishwashers needed; meals included.
Call 841.536 for an interview
Experienced typist. Term papers, thesis, all museasuals. IBM Correcting Selective Ecitee or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6534. Mrs. Wright
- roommate wanted; grad student prefer
red; 1/2 rent, deposit & utilities. 841-002
Female roommate - nonmiser large furnished, une bedroom. 24th & Iowa. $115 plus 1-2 utilities. Nancy. 862-649-0278
*****WANTED******
CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVES
EARN $BIG COMMISSIONS$
& FREE trips promoting
Winter and Spring Break
ski and sun trips. CALL
TOLL FREED 800-321-5911
SUNCHASE TOURS INC
Male student accepted specially junior or upper status serious student, to share a two bedroom, semi-furnished Apt. on Jus route $321 more 1/2 units. Call 845-1116
Roommate* to share large house 1/4 rent, 1/4
utilities on bus route 749 3286.
Roommate for a duplex, one half block of six
campus. Rent. $100 plus 1/2 utilities. Café #424300 or
www.roommate.com
SOCcer coaches needed for 1415 year olds in
Lawrence youth league Call Dave Amey
and after 5
We buy VW's, running or not. Call Metric Motors.
841 660
September 5,1984 Page 16
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
Bell is only Edison survivor
It had to happen. After four fun-filled years, Kansas fans are left with one last holdout - defensive back Dino Bell - from a group of football players from Edison High School in Huntington Beach, Calif.
Dino's predecessors, — his brother Kerwin, Frank Seurer and Bill Malavasi — came to Mount Oread with press clippings worthy of recruits usually found at Nebraska and Oklahoma. And after a freshman season in 1980 that displayed their skills, the former KU coach Don Fambridge with a trip to the 1981 Hall of Fame Bowl in Birmingham, Ala.
but 1982 was a bust, and instead of going with Fam to Birmingham, the Jayhawks went 2-7-2 and stayed home. Consequently, Fam is now recruiting full time — for Sen. Bob Dole.
FAMBROUGH'S RECRUTING before the 1982 season, however, brought seven players from Edison High to KU. Jayhawk fans envisioned a talent pipeline from California that would someday lead them to football's promised land — a.k.a. the Top 20.
today, Bell, a 5-foot-9. 100-pound junior, is the only Edison High graduate on the team. The rest have used up their eligibility or left for a
chance at more playing time with another school. For the most part, the love affair was shortlived.
Nevertheless, it continues for Bell, although it certainly has been an up and down love affair. He has survived the bad times, including a broken wrist before the Southern California game last year that kept him from playing in front of his hometown friends. And the good
GREG
DAMMAN
Sports Editor
times, such as a key 37-yard touchdown run in a victory against Kansas State his freshman year.
Now he will be playing without a supporting cast of former Edison High players, and for a team that has been picked to finish last in the Big Eight Conference. Bell said that he noticed the absence of his hometown friends at the start of practice this fall.
"AT FIRST it was strange," he
said, "But me and the guys on the team, from Kansas and from other states, really get along well. I have a lot of friends from Kansas, and that helps, because gradually the guys from Edison left."
The Jayhawks will play Wichita State Saturday in the season opener, and Bell will be starting at left cornerback. KU smashed the Shockers, 57-6, last year, but the Shockers upset the Jayhawks, 13-10, in 1982.
"TWO YEARS AGO we might have been overconfident and looked down at Wichita State," he said. "But not this year. Their quarterback has a real good arm. He's a good passer and a good scramble. You can't expect to run over anyone these days."
By "these days" Bell is referring to the hard times the Kansas football program has suddenly fallen upon. With a team lacking in depth and playing under NCAA probation, the Jayhawks have proven that it really doesn't take long to get from the penthouse to the dog house.
But despite the bleak outlook, Bell stands behind his decision to come to terms.
"I always dreamed of going to USC and playing for the Trojans," he said. "But I like the atmosphere and the people here. I'm glad it here."
KANSAS 2
Anno Bell was playing tailback in this game against Wichita State in 1982, but he'll be at cornerback when the KU football team opens its season Saturday against the Shockers. Bell is the only Jayhawk left of the seven players recruited by former KU head coach Don Fambrough from Edison High in Huntington Beach, Calif.
File photo/KANSAN
Injuries leave KC's offensive line without two of its top performers
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs didn't miss many tackles in their 37-27 season-opening victory Sunday over the Pittsburgh Steelers, but they figure to miss two this week
expected to miss Sunday's game against the Cincinnati Bengals.
David Lutz and Matt Perkinson.
Right tackle Lutz, Kansas City's best offensive lineman a year ago, and left tackle Herkenhoff, Kansas City's most consistent offensive lineman over the past five seasons, both suffered knee injuries in the second quarter of the Pittsburgh game and were held out the rest of the day.
Latz underwent surgery yesterday to repair ligament damage in his right knee and is expected to miss at least eight games. Herkenhoff did not have to undergo surgery but is
Lutz and Herkenhoff were replaced against the Steelers by rookie John Alt and five-year veteran Jim Rourke. There was no noticeable drop on in play as the Chiefs did not allow a sack in the game.
"When you lose two of your four players at a position, you're going to feel it." Kansas City Coach John Mackovic said, "but we had up graded ourselves there from a year ago John Alt has been improving rapidly and Jim Rourke has improved from week to week."
Lutz was a No. 2 pick out of Georgia Tech a year ago and started the entire 1983 season for the Chiefs, earning the club's rookie of the year award. He was replaced by the 6-foot-5, 263-pound Roukue. Herkenoff was replaced by the 6-7.
278 pound Alt, a No. 1 draft pick out of Iowa in 1984.
To add depth this week, Mackovic plans to work a pair of guards at the tack position. Starting left guard Brad Budde will work at left tackle and reserve right guard Rich Baldiger will work at right tackle.
Kansas City middle linebacker Gary Spani also suffered an injury to his right knee against Pittsburgh and, like Herkenhoff, his status will be determined on a player-by-player basis; the agitations are expected to keep Spani out of the Cincinnati game. He will be replaced by rookie Scott Radecic.
The addition of Radecic and Alt gives Kansas City four rookies in the starting lineup. They will join nose tackle Bill Maas, a No 1 draft pick from Pitt, and cornerback Kevin Ross, a No 7 selection from Temple.
The triumph pulled the Royals to within one game of the first place Twins in the American League West.
KC beats Twins, 4-1
Darryl Motley slapped a one-out single to center in the sixth off Minnesota starter Ken Schrom, 4-8, and took third on a bloop single by Jorge Orta. White then singled in Motley for a 2-1 lead.
sacrifice Pete Filson came on in relief and, after an intentional walk to Willie Wilson, pinch hitter Lynn Jones doubled home both runners.
By United Press International
Rookie Mike Gliczaite, 10-11,
allowed seven hits over $8^2$ innings and
struck out three. Quinceberry came in with two runners on base and retired pinch hitter Randy Bush on a pop to three. The Royals posted their first home victory Minnesota in five tries this season.
Kansas City opened its advantage to 4-1 in the seventh Greg Pryor beat out a bunt and took second on Buddy Biancalina's
Put Patnunm's bases loaded-sacrifice fire gave Minnesota a 1-0 lead in the third. Gubiza then retired the next 15 Twins in order before yielding a two-out single to Mickey Hatcher in the eighth.
The Royals tied the score 1-1 in the third on a walk to Biancaalana, a single by Wilson and back-toback feilder's choices by Pat Sheridan and Motley.
Warner expected to be out for year
By United Press International
SEATTLE — Seattle Seahawks running back Curt Warner, the leading rusher in the American Football Conference last year as a rookie, underwent knee surgery yesterday and is expected to be out of action for the rest of the season.
Warner's absence leaves a huge void in the Seattle offense. Backup Zachary Dixon was also helped off the field Monday with a knee injury which was not believed to be other active player at the running back position is Eric Lane, known most for his special teams play.
LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA MAZDA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA MAZDA LAIRD NOLLER TOYOTA MAZDA
Welcome Back Jayhawks To Savings on Import Service
I'll just put it in the image.
Minor Engine Tune-Up
- $36.95 **
*Replace Spark Plugs*
*Replace Fuel Filter ***
*Replace Points and Condenser (if equipped)
*Set Engine to Manufacturer's Spec.
--wE STRIDGE * 6th & Kasold * 841-0144
HILLCREST * 9th & Iowa * 843-2313
NORTHSEAT * 2nd & Lincoln * 843-5733
SOUTHSEAT * 23d & Louisiana * 843-8588
*Inspect Brake Pads and/or Shoes,
Rotors/Drums, Parking Brake and Adjust
*Inspect all hoses & fittings, check Master Cylinder, Calipers/Wheel cylinders,
add Brake fluid
- $15.00
Brake Inspection
* $15.00
COUPON
--wE STRIDGE * 6th & Kasold * 841-0144
HILLCREST * 9th & Iowa * 843-2313
NORTHSEAT * 2nd & Lincoln * 843-5733
SOUTHSEAT * 23d & Louisiana * 843-8588
- Includes up to 6 qts. of Prem. Oil
* Toyota or Mazda Brand oil filter
* Extra Parts & Labor extra
$13.95 **
Please present coupon at time of write-up
SCIENCE
*Check battery *Clean terminals
*Check Belts and Hoses *Inspect Wipers
*Drain cooling system & install Anti-
Freeze for -20 --30 below zero
Winterization Special
* $26.95
Oil & Filter Change
TOMITA PARTS AND SERVICE
THE REAL STUFF
THE RIGHT PRICE.
VISA MasterCard
Hours: 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Monday - Friday
842-2191
--wE STRIDGE * 6th & Kasold * 841-0144
HILLCREST * 9th & Iowa * 843-2313
NORTHSEAT * 2nd & Lincoln * 843-5733
SOUTHSEAT * 23d & Louisiana * 843-8588
Laird Noller
TOYOTA·MAZDA
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ODDS CHART
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2
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---
Comic relief
Enough already! At your overwhelming request, Berke Breathed's Bloom County gang — including Steve Dallas, Frank Binkley and Opus — returns today to end
the Kansan's comic drought. Also, today marks the Kansan debut of Gary Larson's "The Far Side," a popular panel that is only slightly more than offbeat. See page 15.
Warmer
C
High, mid-90s. Low, mid-60s.
Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 95, No. 9 (USPS 650-640)
Thursday, September 6, 1984
By United Press International $ ^{a} $
WASHINGTON The CIA knew a U.S. paramilitary group was sending men to join Nicaragua rebels but did nothing to stop the volunteers, two of whom were killed in action in Nicaragua, congressional sources said yesterday.
yesterday.
The sources said CIA officials yesterday informed some members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence that the agency knew six Americans were traveling to Honduras to join the CIA backed Nicaraguan Democratic Force, which is fighting the leftist Sandinista government of Nicaragua.
"THE AGENCY HEARD these guys were coming and their guys dove into roxholes," a source familiar with intelligence matters said.
sad
CIA officials said agents in Honduras "got out of the way" of the six Americans because they "didn't want anybody to think (they) were involved" in the paramilitary operation, the source said.
At the same time, Rep Ted Wesley, D-N-Y,
sent a letter to CIA Director William Casey
calling on him to explain if his agency had
any connection with the two dead Americans.
"The loss of American lives in the covert war against Nicaragua could draw the United States into direct military involvement in that conflict," Weiss said.
The Americans, described by U.S. officials as "volunteers," were sent to Honduras by Civilian Military Assistance, a paramilitary organization based in Decatur, Ala.
TWO MEMBERS OF the group, Huntsville police detective Dana H. Parker and James P. Powell III, were killed in a rebel helicopter that was shot down by Nicaraguan forces. The helicopter crashed after participating in a Nicaraguan Democrat Force attack on a Sandinista military school at Santa Clara.
Nicaragua charged that Parker, Powell and the four other Americans who went to Honduras a week before the attack were mercenaries working for the CIA.
mercenaries working for the CIA,
Tom Poehy, a founder of the paramilitary
group who organized the trip, said the group had sent anti-Sandinista "contra" rebels $70,000 worth of equipment and at least 15 Americans as trainingJanuary is mine.
THE PENTAGON SAID that U.S. military personnel did not control the two Honduran airfields that Nicaragua said had been used in the rebel attack, and that U.S. personnel were not on hand when the attack was launched.
Americans as trusted. The sources said they were uncertain how far in advance intelligence agents in Honduras had known of the Posey group's operation and the planned Santa Clara attack.
Nicaragua's Sandinista government said maps recovered from the downed helicopter showed it came from Hurduras' El Aguacate air base and Jamastran airfield, bases the United States recently has used and improved.
Congressional sources said that even without control over the airfields, U.S. personnel in Honduras probably would have monitored flights from the airfields.
INTELLIGENCE AND MILITARY officials said that once the airfields had been built or improved, authority over them passed on to the Honduran government.
motorized engines in a helicopter and three planes used in the attack fit the description of equipment supplied by the CIA, the sources said.
In his letter, Weiss said, "U.S. citizens employed by the American government, on contract with the government, or associated in any way with the U.S. government should not take part in any covert activities against Nicaragua."
SUNDAY, JANUARY 17, 1982
A full report on the incident also has been requested by Sen. Patrick Leaby, D-VT., a member of the Senate intelligence committee.
Leahy expressed concern that rebel attacks against Nicaragua might be launched from U.S. controlled bases in Honduras.
Larry Weaver/KANSAN
He noted claims by the Sandinistas that the rebel helicopter began its flight from an airstrip in Honduras. The Reagan administration has sought funds to improve airfields in that country to handle military operations
Bryan Tulp, Prairie Village freshman, balances on one foot as he attempts to keep a soccer ball airborne. Tulp took advantage of the nice weather yesterday to practice his soccer moves west of Memorial Stadium.
Funding to GLSOK in doubt
By JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter
The Student Senate Elections Committee this month will decide whether KU students will determine the future of Senate funds for the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas
The committee must decide whether a student's petition to end GLSOK financing is valid and can force the Student Senate to hold a campuswive vote this fall, Thomas Davidson, the committee's chairman, said yesterday.
During the April deliberations for the fiscal 1965 budget, Steve Ember, Lawrence senior, started a petition calling for an end to GLSOK financing.
"I JUST FEEL THAT students should be able to vote on it." Imber said. "If the students vote to fund them, I respect that."
In the spring, the Senate allocated about $60,600 to student organizations for fiscal year 1963. Of the $24 student activity fee that each student pays at the beginning of each semester, $1.81 goes toward funding that allotment.
The Finance Committee, which makes recommendations to the Senate on allocation of student funds, excluded GLSOK from its fiscal 1985 budget proposal. But the Senate decided to give GLSOK $565 for rent and telephone service. Carla Vogel, student body president, had threatened to veto a budget that did not include GLSOK.
that he did not include him. Imbere said that he had circulated the petition in the spring at residence halls, fraternities and sororities because he wanted students to decide how their money would be spent.
HE SAID GLSOK could support itself through its dances, and for that reason, the group should not receive any funds.
"This is not a moral attack on homosexuality." Imber said. "This has been presented as a financial issue."
a financial issue.
But Ruth Lichtwardt, GLOSK president
See GLSOK, p. 5, col. 1
Kansas legislation makes survival for third parties hard
Staff Reporter
By JOHN EGAN
Traditionally, minor-party candidates have not made much headway in the political arena
election
Marian Ruck Jackson, an American Party candidate from Eureka running against incumbent Sen Nancy Landon Kassebaum, says she is confident about beating her Republican opponent.
but despite the odds, two Kansans running for the U.S. Senate on minor party tickets think that they have the potential to make a dent — and perhaps win — in November's election.
"I think people are becoming more aware of the third parties," Jackson said this week.
"They don't want Democrats or Republics. They're sick of it."
LUCILLE BIEGER, RUSSELL, running on the Conservative Party ticket against Kassabeh, echoed Jackson's sentiments.
"I have been amazed at how many people are truly dissatisfied with the two-party system," she said, adding that a third-party vote was not a wasted one.
But a recent revision of a Kansas election law has minor-party candidates, such as Jackson and Bieger, scrambling to keep their parties alive.
The Kansas Legislature in March passed legislation that redefined the way minor parties can become officially recognized in the state. Although most provisions in the legislation are agreeable to third parties, one part of the new law has made Jackson and
may be in danger or exasperated.
ONE PROVISION OF the legislation says that for a party to remain recognized in the state, one party candidate for statewide office must receive at least 1 percent of the votes cast. Previously, when a party gained its status, that status could not be taken away.
Bieger anger because they say their parties may be in danger of extinction.
away.
Bieger said. "I do not think that the legislation is fair in any way. I would like to see this legislation taken off the books. I think it's poor legislation, very bad. I think it's deceptive."
deepen. In this year's election, eighteen minor-party candidates are running for the Senate, the house of Representatives, the Kansas House of Representatives and the state Board of Education Third parties now
recognized in Kansas are American, Conser-
vative, Libertarian and Prohibition.
"THEY'RE TRYING TO stay recognized," said Eric Rucker, spokesman for the Kansas secretary of state. "They're trying to get 1 percent."
vative, liberal, libertarian Because of the legislation some candidates see their races as missions to keep their parties afloat
get percent. The legislation, however, does ease regulations for parties attempting to regain their status in Kansas. In the past, a party was required to submit petitions signed by registered voters representing at least 3 percent of the votes cast for secretary of state in the preceding general election.
state in the present. Now, the required percentage has been cut to 2, and the office has been switched to governor because that office is considered
HE SAID THE legislation provided an outlet for different political philosophies, while riding the political system of parties that did not have support.
State Rep. Richard L. Harper, R-Fort Scott, chairman of the Kansas House Elections Committee, views the minor-party legislation as a double-edged sword.
The new law makes it easier for parties to get on the ballot, Harper said, and easier for them to lose out.
more indicative of party strength, Rucker said.
thank her. Jackson, the American party candidate, said she thought the legislation was a move toward the elimination of third parties.
toowe the vote.
"Many third parties may not get 1 percent of the vote, and if they don't, they're out," Jackson said.
KU grad talks of search for clues in KAL tragedy
By CHRISSY CLEARY Staff Reporter
The black box that could contain the answers of the tragedy of Korean Airliner 007 remains submerged in the Sea of Japan.
NUNLEY PARTICIPATED IN the U.S. mission to search for the black box of the plane, which was shot down by Soviets last September. The black box is believed to contain a taped conversation of the flight crew and the Soviet ground control.
KU graduate
"The mission, at first, was to search for anything — survivors and wreckage," said Lt. John Nunley, U.S. Navy helicopter pilot. "It took 30 hours to get to the site, so there wasn't much hope of finding survivors."
But the experience of searching for clues to the mystery has left a lasting impression on a KU graduate.
Nunley spoke to about 100 Navy ROFTC students at Swarthot Auditorium in Murphy Hall yesterday about the importance of leadership and flexibility in the Navy.
"Soviet hampered investigations considerably." Nunley said "They performed questionable acts to antagonize our search efforts."
"Because of a mechanical failure, I crashed an H-2 helicopter while looking for the Korean airline the Russians shot down." Nunley said. "The Navy makes you aware of your own mortality and your friends' mortality. I get into a helicopter, and the crew depends on me.
"YOU ALL MUST develop the potential to save lives. To be a good leader, you have to think fast and be flexible. Things don't always go the way they do in drills."
Nunley said after his lecture that he remembered returning from a 51-day mission at sea to Yokosuka, Japan, to be sent out again to look for survivors and wreckage of the ill-fated Korean airliner.
The South Korean 747 was shot down Sept. 2, 1983, by a Soviet fighter jet after it flew into Soviet air space. The tragedy took 269 lives.
THE TAPE COULD have helped explain what really happened, but the black box and the tape never were found. Nunley said he didn't believe the Soviets found the box.
With 90 Soviet, Japanese and American ships, Nunley and the rest of the crew of the U.S.S. Badger searched 60 nautical square miles for the black box.
See KAL, p. 5, col. 1
Reagan's daughter speaks at gathering
Women's power issue addressed
By United Press International
TOPEKA, Kan. — Women have political power because they outnumber male voters in the United States by more than six million. President Reagan's daughter Maureen told 700 people at a Republican breakfast yesterday.
breakfast yesterday."
"Don't let anybody tell you there is no such thing as a gender gap." Heagan said to the predominantly female crowd "We have unique concerns and unique contributions to make."
The president's daughter is touring the country as a liar, or the Republican Party on women's issues, but she touched on numerous topics in her Topeka speech and news conference.
REPUBLICANS HAVE BEEN telling Democrats for 20 years that by the 1980s the country would be out of money. Reagan said.
said, "And we are," she said. "Spending program on top of spending program put us there. In 1981 when my father took office we began to look at a mix of solutions including communities, the private sector and each individual."
President Reagan will not consider the economic recovery complete until everyone has benefited from it, she said.
On women in politics, Reagan said Republican have the chance to elect 1,000 women to state and national offices in 1984, 1414 incumbents up for re-election. The GOP is committed to the new ideas of women and has worked with women officeholders and candidates, bringing them to Washington for briefings, she said.
M. THOUGH PRESIDENT REAGAN opposes it, Reagan said she supported an amendment to the Constitution for women's equal rights.
gentle, so I told Lucas, "I am
Reagan also said that she thought vice
"We still disagree on that," Reagan said. "I think there needs to be an ERA amendment and statutory reform to guarantee the rights of women. I'm disappointed the Republican Party did not enumerate those in their platform."
She refused to discuss abortion, saying it was a personal and moral matter
"You can't discuss it without getting into an argument, so I don't discuss it." "she said"
"she didn't do anything illegal, she just was trying to portray an image she did not fit. She was trying to be a middle class housewife from Queens when in fact she is a very wealthy lady," the President's daughter said.
presidential nominee Geraldine Ferraro damaged her credibility with the controversy over her husband's income tax returns
"THIS RACE IS NOT men and women,
but Republican and Democrat and Reagan
and Mondale. Geraldine Ferraro will not
make that much difference."
And Reagan warned that Republicans should not be complacent despite a large lead in the polls.
"I won't settle for less than 80 percent of theote." Brentan joked.
Her next two stops are Omaha, Neb. and Des Moines, Iowa, in a campaign tour that will take her to all 50 states. She said she did not know if her father would make a campaign stop in Kansas, a state most would concede to President Reagan.
"I hope he'll have the opportunity to come to Kansas." she said.
September 6, 1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily
KANSAN
Marshals seek cult leader for information on guns
YELLLILLE, Ark. — Federal marshals began a manhunt yesterday for the leader of an armed racist religious cult to question him about the purchase of guns found in the possession of another man accused of killing an Arkansas state trooper.
trooper
Jim Ellison, spiritual leader of The Covenant, the Sword and the Arm of the Lord, is wanted for ignoring last week's subpoena from an Oklahoma grand jury investigating trooper's death.
The Johnson County sheriff's office had been ordered to evict the group by Tuesday from its 224-acre wilderness encampment north of Yellville near the Missouri border because it had defaulted on a $75,000 mortgage.
Car bomb kills four in Beirut
BEIRUT. Lebanon — Assassins detonated 155 pounds of explosives packed in a Mercedes Benz as former prime minister Selim Hoss passed by in a Buick yesterday. At least four people were killed and 25 wounded, but Hoss survived the blast.
blast.
No one claimed responsibility for the attack, which killed Hoss's driver, two police escorts on motorcycles and a 64-year-old woman tenant of an apartment building, a police report said.
Hoss, 54, is a Sunni Muslim and the current Education Minister.
It was the first fatal car bombing in the Lebanese capital since July 4.
Gave's father to stand trial
LOS ANGELES — The father of slain soul singer Marvin Gaye was ordered yesterday to stand trial on charges he killed his son in a violent dispute at their South Los Angeles home.
Marvin Gay Sr., 70, was ordered to be arraigned in Superior Court Sept. 20. The Grammany-winning entertainer was shot through the heart during an argument with his father April 1. The elder Gay remains free on bail.
Gay has pleaded not guilty, claiming in an interview that he fired the gun in self-defense during an argument with his son, but that he thought the weapon was loaded with blanks.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, the Kansas incorrectly reported yesterday that the first subdivision of the University Corporate and Research Park was at the intersection of West 15th Street and Lawrence Avenue. The subdivision is at the intersection of West 15th Street and Wakarusa Drive.
United Press International
PORTLAND, Ore. — Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale and his running mate Geraldine Ferraro don raincoats as Oregon greets them with typical weather — rain. Mondale and Ferraro addressed an enthusiastic crowd of 1,500 supporters who endured a steady rain to greet them yesterday.
United Press International
Mondale will initiate arms talks, if elected
By United Press International
Walter Mondale took his foreign policy and defense plans to a political lions' den yesterday, and said if elected president, he would call on the Soviet Union to join him in arms control negotiations within six months.
As Monday spoke bluntly about the danger of nuclear war at the American Legion national convention in Salt Lake City, President Reagan told a conference in Chicago that the United States had regained hope and moved toward restoration of old values under his leadership.
The vice presidential candidates also were on the road in the middle of the first week of all-out campaigning. Rep. Geraldine Ferraro remained on the West Coast to appear with Mondale later in the day in Portland, Ore.
CAMPAIGNING IN PADUCAH, Ky. Vice President George Bush responded to Monta'le's vow to call Soviet leaders as soon as he was inaugurated, by saying, "Let him try."
At a news conference, Bush said, "Maybe they (the Soviets) would negotiate if Mondale plans to eliminate the MX missile, the B1 pumper, and pushes for a nuclear freeze."
Monday said Reagan was the first president since Herbert Hoover not to meet with Soviet leaders, and added: "The issue is whether he has set on a course toward peace and a safer world. In my judgment, he has not."
He even makes jokes about nuclear war,"
Mondale said, "But nuclear war is not funny."
Mondale said negotiations were vital for world survival.
"Every day we fail to open negotiations with the Soviets is another day we slip toward Armageddon." he said.
If he were elected, he said, he would "declare a temporary moratorium and challenge the Soviets to join us."
"I AM ANNOUNCING NOW that on the very first day as president, I will call on the Soviet leadership to meet me within six months in Geneva for fully prepared, substantive negotiations to freeze the arms race and to begin cutting back the stockpiles of nuclear weapons." Mondale said.
In his Legion speech, Mondale outlined his defense program, including asking allies to carry a heavier burden, shifting from nuclear to conventional forces, reforming the Joint Chief of Staffs and improving Pentagon management.
Monday was interrupted several times by polite applause. He spoke to about half of the 7,000 delegates and guests who applauded Reagan Tuesday.
Reagan used his Chicago appearance to argue that economic recovery rather than increased taxes would reduce federal deficits, but primarily concentrated on the improvement in the national state of mind since 1980.
FOUR YEARS AGO, he said, "it seemed to many that America's well finally had run dry from a philosophy of bigger and bigger government."
Shuttle return puts program on track, NASA savs
By United Press International
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. — With the national anthem booming over loud speakers. America's third space shuttle made a flawless landing yesterday and put the space program back on track
"I think only in America can we make things like this happen," said mission commander Henry Hartsfield.
continuation.
Discovery flashed out of an orange sunrise and took its six-member crew to a smooth touchdown after a six-day orbital voyage that covered 2.49 million miles, clearing the way for a shuttle launch a month for the rest of this year.
HARTSFIELD, CO-PILOT Michael Coats and crew members Judy Resnik, KU alumnus Steven Hawley, Richard Mullane
and Charles Walker bounded triumphantly out of the shuttle, got a quick medical checkup and flew to Houston.
checkup and new to the field.
They brought back a secret hormone purified and concentrated in weightlessness by a commercial biological processor. The material was flown to St. Louis in a stainless steel vat for initial processing
steel汽 for initial procurement. Walker, who operated the medicine maker for McDonnell Douglas, thanked the National Aeronautics and Space Administration "for a tremendous opportunity to see what we as humanity can do out there."
humidity can do little.
Left in space were three communications satellites, the most ever launched on a single shuttle mission. Each was reported working normally in its proper orbit. The satellites were the first launched by a shuttle since the double failure of two similar satellites last February because of rocket trouble.
BEFORE LEAVING THE base where 10 of 12 shuttle missions have ended, the six space fliers thanked NASA and Air Force workers for their support.
"I'd just like to thank everybody for the opportunity I just had to have the experience of a lifetime," said Coats. "Flying a space shuttle is just an incredible experience."
Mullane said, "It's just a super vehicle and it performed superly."
Discovery returned from space showing the discoloration of its fiery dive into the atmosphere, but was reported in "beautiful" condition by Jesse Moore, associate NASA administrator for space flight.
administrator to space. "I just can't say enough about this magnificent flying machine," Moore said after the 8:38 a.m. landing.
This flight brings us on back to schedule again so that starting in October, we will
essentially be launching once a month through the rest of the year."
THE TWO SATELLITE failures in February disrupted the program, and then June's unprecedented launch pad fizzle for Discovery added to the problem. The aborted flight forced NASA to combine the June mission with what was to have been Discovery's second mission this month.
Two of the three satellites launched by Discovery used rockets identical to the two that failed in February Moore said this "gives us all confidence" in the rocket motors.
Discovery's veteran sistership. Challenger, is scheduled to take off from Cape Canavaler, Fla., Oct. 1 on the next shuttle mission. Discovery is to fly again Nov. 2.
FROLIC'S
A KU DRINKERY
FALL SPECIALS
FROLIC'S
A KU DRINKERY
FALL SPECIALS
Wednesday:
2 for 1's on Draft Beer
7-10
Thursday:
25c Draws, $1 cover
7-11
Friday:
T.G.I.F., $1 pitchers
$1 cover, 1-6
Saturday:
Free Keg for every home football game that the Hawks win
715 Massachusetts
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September 6,1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 3
The University Daily KANSAN
Watson Library to have sale tomorrow and Friday
Watson Library will have a surplus book sale from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. tomorrow and Friday in the courtyard in front of the library.
"There is a something for everyone," said Susan Hamilton, library assistant for exchange and gifts.
The books on sale, most of which will sell for 50 cents, range from literature to travel to art. Encyclopaedia Britannicas dating back to the 1940s also will be on sale, she said.
The East Asian Library will have its own book sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday on fifth floor Watson.
Art director for Time to speak
Rudi Hoglund, art director for Time magazine, will give the first lecture in the Hallmark Symposium Series at 6 p.m. Monday in 3140 Wescoe.
Hogland will speak about the relationships among illustrators, art directors and editors, said Tom Allen, Hallmark visiting professor in the School of Fine Arts.
"He'll also talk about the process of selecting covers for Time — the team decision of choosing a photo or painting." said Allen, who is in his third year as a Hallmark professor.
Hallmark professional.
Allen helped last year to develop the lecture series, which is financed by a $38.00 grant from Hallmark. Six other Hallmark lectures are scheduled throughout the semester.
Republicans plan ceremony
Vern Chesbro, executive director of the Kansas Republican Party will attend the Sunday opening of the Douglas County Republican Party Headquarters, 1601 W. 23rd St., suite 104. The opening ceremony is scheduled from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.
representatives from the campaigns of Sens. Nancy Kassebaum and Robert Dole and local Republican candidates will attend the informal opening.
Volunteers to help with the campaigns of Republican candidates will be accepted. Refreshments will be served.
Prof to lead Geology Congress
John C. Davis, senior scientist at the Kansas Geological Survey at the University of Kansas, was elected president of the International Association for Mathematical Geology in August at the 27th annual International Geological Congress in Moscow.
Davis, also a professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, described the association as a "research forum" for more than 1,000 scientists from all parts of the world, including 200 from the Soviet Union. The association specializes in the application of mathematics to problems in geology.
geoblogy Davis will lead the organization until the 1989 International Congress in Washington, D.C.
Photo exhibit opens Sept. 15
An exhibit of about 125 photographs of mud-style architecture in western African and southwestern Asian deserts will open Sept. 15 at the KU Museum of Anthropology in Spooner Hall.
Jean-Louis Bourgeois, architectural historian, and Carolele Pelos, photographer, spent two years documenting religious buildings and homes in such places as Morocco, Niger, India and Afghanistan.
The photos — most in color — are on a two-year tour organized by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition. The exhibition will be at the museum until Dec. 12.
Weather
Today will be sunny, windy and warmer. The high will be in the mid 90s with southerly winds of 15 to 30 mph and gusty. Tonight and tomorrow will be mostly clear. The low tonight will be in the mid to upper 60s. Tomorrow will be hot, with a high in the mid to upper 90s.
NCAA's academic standards studied
By BRENDA STOCKMAN
Staff Reporter
Officials at the University of Kansas this week agreed with a recent study that calls for the National Collegiate Athletic Association to modify its academic eligibility standards for first-year athletes
The study, released last week by Advanced Technology Inc. of Reston, Va., said that the NCAA should greatly modify its new freshmen eligibility standards, which have been adopted by the group but won't take effect until 1986.
The use of the new standards may discriminate against disadvantaged students, many of whom would eventually graduate if given the chance, the study said.
THE STUDY LISTED THE SIMI-graduation rates of athletes and non-athletes at NCAA Division I schools as a reason to doubt the effectiveness of the new standards.
of students with grades 10 or higher.
More specific records of the graduation.
Lonny Rose, assistant athletic director and professor of law, said that there were fewer than five percentage point differences in college athletics at the athletics and nonathletes who graduated from KU.
and attrition rates of student athletes is not yet available, said Paul Busirk, special assistant for athletic advising in the office of academic affairs. The office hasn't yet had time to complete a study of those rates, he said.
saID. Bel Brinkman, faculty representative to the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board and dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications, said that NCAA Proposition No. 48, which outlines the new standards, was passed with the understanding that studies and revisions would be made.
The proposition, although not perfect, has focused attention on the problem of academic eligibility, he said.
"I THINK IT WILL be adjusted," Brinkman said. "I don't think Proposition No. 48 go as it now stands."
The new NCAA standards, which will go into effect in 1986, say that incoming athletes must meet two requirements: to be immediately eligible, an athlete must score 700 on the SAT or 15 on the ACT, and he must have a 2.0 average in 11 core course requirements.
The study suggests three alternatives to the proposition:
- require freshmen to meet either the
grade point average or the test criteria.
- require all student athletes to pass the core curriculum and allow those with grade point averages below 2.0 to earn freshmen eligibility by scoring the test minimum.
- weigh the test score and core curriculum separately, but have a minimum qualifying standard of the two together.
standard of the NCAA. Brinkman said that because the NCAA was seeking ways to predict college success it turned to the ACT and SAT scores. These scores have long been used as standards for student placement, honors programs and scholarship awards, but many coaches and athletes objected when the NCAA suggested using them for standards of athlete eligibility.
only. Brinkman said that ACT and SAT were not meant to be predictors of college success and that high school preparation varied.
that might. MONTE JOHNSON, ATHLETIC director, said that establishing a core curriculum was more difficult than it might appear
"You can imagine what some schools in any part of the country might have that would meet the math core curriculum," he said. "If one school has Fun With Math and another has Algebra — Trig, what's the comparison in difficulty?"
But, Brinkman said, problems with a core-curriculum requirement were part of the reason the NCAA sought a standard that combined test scores. The best standard available was previous academic records, he said.
Johnson said, "We're all groping to find something that's fair.
"I'd like to see every one of our athletes that we make a commitment to, graduate. If all you do is keep him eligible you might not be helping him graduate."
HE SAID THAT ALTHOUGH academic standards were needed, a provision for exceptions also was needed.
exception in man. Brinkman said the new standards would not prevent any student from attending the University. Athletes could still participate as sophomores if they met the eligibility standards.
Rose and Larry Brown, KU head basketball coach, said that they would prefer that freshmen not be eligible for varsity sports
no matter what it is there will probably be someone, somewhere who will abuse it," Brinkman said.
in effect, the final standards would require either a minimum test score or a core curriculum.
William Blue, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, stands at one of the micro computers (in 3064 Wescoe, a small room next to Spanish office) he uses to tutor Spanish students. Blue is the first at KU to use micro computers as a teaching aid.
Joel Jackson/KANSAN
New programs to aid learning by computer
By ERIKA BLACKSHER Staff Reporter
KU students may have an easier time learning the Spanish language, writing an essay or understanding logic because of developments being made by professors in computer programming.
The Spanish department next week will begin using a computer program designed to drill and challenge beginning Spanish students.
"It could be a helping program for those who are having some difficulties or a challenging program for those who are doing well and wanted to improve," said William Blue, professor of Spanish and Portuguese.
THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT is designing a similar program which will be ready by fall 1985, and the philosophy department is in the early stages of a program for the introductory logic course.
Blue said the Spanish program, the first of its type to be used at the University of Kansas, was more advanced than most programs because it could deal with everything from the simplest vocabulary words to the most complex sentence structure.
stress.
"As it works now, the program knows how to conjugate all verbs in the Spanish language," he said. "Therefore, when a student is answering a question about verb conjugation, the computer then can give him or her hints about what's wrong with the answer."
anSWER
HASKELL SPRINGER, PROFESSOR of English and director of the freshman and sophomore English program, said the English department was looking for a system that not only would assist students with basic grammar and punctuation but also would teach them good writing habits.
For example, if a student abuses the passive verb construction, Springer said, the program will alert him.
prog in which he says, "Our intention is to start out with a small pilot program," he said, "and then adapt it to students' needs."
students need Blue's program, which he began designing in December 1983 with the assistance of KU graduates Robin Rasure and Grant Steinle, initially will be used by students in the intensive 10-credit hour Spanish course.
The program will give the instructor and students more time in class for activities other than repetitive drilling. Blue said, "IT GIVES THE STUDENTS the opportunity to do an entire series of drills that can be geared directly to their class, to the level they're working on and to work at their own speed," he said.
speed, the said.
Because repetition is essential to learning a language, the computer works well as a tutor. Blue said.
too. "Blue sax"
"It's a skill course." he said. "The more practice that you get, just like the piano, the better you get at it."
Arthur Skidmore, associate professor of philosophy, began working on a computer program for an introductory logic course three weeks ago.
The program, which should be completed by fall 1968, will be aimed at students who need or want extra help. Skidmore said. Almost 40 percent of the students in the Introduction to Logic course fit that category, he said.
"ITS PHYSICALLY IMPOSSIBLE to give that kind of extra instruction," he said.
Blue said he planned to have the computer available for students Mondays through Wednesdays in the Spanish and Portuguese office. He will check the computer on Thursdays to see where the students' main problems are and then review the problems before weekly quizzes
KU students keep clean records after mock abduction
Staff Reporter
By JOHN REIMRINGER Staff Reporter
A college prank that backfired on its perpetrators ended yesterday with a diversion agreement between the students involved and the Douglas County District Attorney.
UNDER THE TERMS of the diversion agreement, if the four students charged in the incident successfully complete the terms of their probabilities, no charges will be pressed, and no record will be kept of the case.
The four students charged agreed to pay $30 restitution each to Goodpasture, as well as court costs and a diversion fee. The four also agreed to work 10 hours of community service. They will be on probation for 11 months.
AUTHORITY
The prank took place in May when Victor Goodpasture, Topka sophomore, was held by six other KU students in a mock abduction. The diversion agreement was reached after the district attorney's office decided to press charges, although Goodpasture had declined to do so.
"I didn't press charges, the state did," Goodpasture said yesterday. "I didn't want the court hassle, and anyway, it was just a prank."
BUT ASSISTANT DISTRICT Attorney Jerry Wells said, "We felt strongly that because of the possible harm that could have come, even out of a prank, that it merited more than not doing anything."
Goodpasture and Kruger were roommates at the time.
The prank was the culmination of a series of incidents that took place last year in Ellsworth Hall between Goodpasture and other residents of his floor, including the four who were charged in the incident. John, junior; Dirk Kruger, Leavenworth junior; Robert McAlexander, McLouth sophomore; and Quentin McClung, Metamora, III, junior.
"We were definitely total opposites," Kruger said. "I probably did it just because of all the little things throughout the year."
ON MAY 9, AS Goodpasture was walking back to Ellsworth after a Western Civilization final, six men wearing masks threw a sheet over his head, put him in the back of a yellow pickup and held him down while they drove to Woody Park.
"It was perfectly executed." Goodpasture said. "I thought it was a joke. I didn't take it seriously at first."
Goodpasture said, however, that he became concerned because no one spoke to him.
SIGMA DELTA TAU HAS COME TO K.U.
ALL INTERESTED SOPHOMORE JUNIOR AND SENIOR WOMEN ARE INVITED TO AN INFORMATIONAL MEETING
SEPTEMBER 6TH
5-7 P.M.
ENGLISH ROOM
KANSAS UNION
SVA FILMS
TONIGHT
Japanese Classic:
IKURU (TO LIVE)
with Takashi Shamura
Woodruff Auditorium, Level 5, Kansas Union
7:30 $1.50
BICYCLE
M G O O P B O V E O U
BIKING AROUND LAWRENCE
TOURS: All tours leave from South Park Sept. 8: Ride to Baldwin, 8 am breakfast at Blackjack Inn
22. Clinton Lake, 080410
Bring your swimming suit
Sept. 15: Eudora Evening Ride, 3:15 pm
Sept. 22: Clinton Lake, 8:30 am Bring your swimming suit
Sept. 29: Perry Lake, 8:30 am 50 mi.
Routes for tourists and racers
FIRST CLUB RACE OF THE SEASON:
Sat, Sept. 8th, 10am:
12 mi.Time Trial, $1 entry fee (no charge for bike club members)
Entries at SUA Office or call 864-3477 Start: 2 mi. N of Kasold & Peterson.
For info on all bike club activities, call 864-3477 or stop by the SUA Office.
September 6,1984 Page 4
OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kansas, UNPS 604-640, is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall Lawrence, Kan. 6045 daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60044 Subscription by mail is free. A year in Douglas County must be paid through the county. Student letters are paid through the student activity fee *POSTMaster* Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall Lawrence, Kan. 60045
DON KNOX
Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE HESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
DOUG CUNNINGHAM Campus Editor
SHAW
DAVE WANAMAKER Business Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
General Manager and News Adviser
LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager
JILL GOLDBLATT Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Register to vote
It is no secret that the college students of today are more conservative than their counterparts of 10 years ago. Studies show that today's students are preoccupied with more personal concerns, such as getting jobs and making a decent living.
To some people, that also means that today's college students are apathetic about the political leadership of their nation as well, but as someone once said, "It ain't necessarily so."
necessarily so. The young people of this generation, at least the ones at the University of Kansas, have a good opportunity to prove their critics wrong when several voter registration drives begin later this month on campus.
Three organizations - the Associated Students of Kansas, KU College Young Democrats and Delta Sigma Theta sorority - are sponsoring campaigns to get students registered to vote. Delta Sigma Theta hopes to register at least 100 people. College Democrats are aiming for 3,000 new registered voters and ASK's goal is 4,000. The groups will be working from Sept. 10 through Sept. 28.
the efforts of these organizations are commendable, but no amount of hard work or conviction will alter the fact that only one thing will determine whether the drives succeed or fail
That intangible aspect is the students.
That malignable aspect is the students.
"It's really a guess as to the percentages or even the numbers of students who vote," says Sandra Binyon, coordinator of the ASK efforts at KU. "I can assure you that it can't be enough."
Unless college students - liberal and conservative, here and at campuses around the nation - reverse that trend and register to vote, they will shut themselves out on what could be a watershed election.
be a warrior.
Students should register and vote, not only because it could make a difference on issues that directly affect them, such as financial aid, but because as citizens, they are at least generally affected by all important issues. And as responsible citizens, they are required to act on those issues.
Truly green acres
Encouraging news for the heartland came this week when the Census Bureau reported that the number of small farms had increased between 1978 and 1982.
The number of small farms increased from 543,000 in 1978 to 637,000 in 1982.
The growth kept the decline of the total number of farms to less than 1 percent.
less than 1 percent. Although the study indicates that the increase might have been caused by part-time farmers on the edges of towns who earned most of their income in other occupations, it's good to know that farmers are not a dying breed.
know that farmers are not afraid. Moreover, it's nice to learn that some people were not afraid to take a risk amid reports of farmers who were suffocating in debt and inflation.
The number of small farms, those of 50 acres or less, increased in every state but South Carolina.
increased in every state but Boston Now maybe the entire country will hear what Kansans already know that farming is not so bad, and that a state in which farming is an important industry is nothing to be embarrassed about.
Abuse of children
Newsweek magazine reported in its May 14 issue that an epidemic of reported sex-abuse cases is occurring.
Parents must remember that they, not the state, are primarily responsible for the protection of their children. Parents should thoroughly check day-care centers, talk to other parents, be involved in the centers, and, perhaps most importantly, listen to and understand what your children tell you about how they spent their day.
One other important consideration: Are our criminal laws reasonable in dealing with molestors of children? What should be done with a sleaze who rapes a 3-year-old? Should it not be a capital offense?
The Montgomery Journal (Chevy Chase, Md)
LETTERS POLICY
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten and 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 hometown, or faculty or staff position. The Kansan also invites individuals and groups submitted abstracts or written letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flixt Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
The jukebox in the Jayhawk Cafe belted out a blissful rock number that no one in the crowd of young beer drinkers appeared to recognize
Awareness comes slowly to students
I leaned against the bar with my good friend, Scott, and took in the scene before us.
Young men and women stood about or sat in crowded booths and talked above the din about summer jobs, cars, dating and parties.
Scott shook his head, endorsing my doubt that not many did know who it was.
"I wander how many people in here know who this is?" I said, rather smugly, nodding at the jukebox.
Scott and I shared a common interest in that particular song because it represented another era to us. It had been popular in 1971, the year we graduated from high school together.
The America of our high school years was an America of turmoil. In those four years, Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy died violent deaths, riots tore cities apart, Richard Nixon was elected president, thousands of American soldiers not much older than we were died in Vietnam, four college students were shot to death by National Guardmen at Kent State, and many more students staged campus demonstrations against the established mainstream American society.
Those events and others touched us and helped shape the cynical views of the world Scott and I shared when we went off to college he to a venerable Eastern university I led to Kansas college — in the fall of 1971.
Materialism was "out." Social awareness was "in."
Thirteen years later, we were both married, living in Lawrence and pursuing advanced degrees.
And on this night, in a tavern our parents had patronized as KU students of the late 1940s, we were recalling the early 1970s through the haze of several beers.
We remembered that we had had much more awareness of and concern for the future of our country's society than the 20-year-old reveling around us could ever hope to have.
Before us, the college students of 1984 appeared to be the personification of the current Republican message to America: Materialism is "in." social awareness is "out."
JOHN
SIMONSON
Staff Columnist
After all, we were concerned now,
so we certainly must have been
concerned then, when it was fashion-
able.
And we had documentation. Throughout our undergraduate years, Scott and I maintained a long distance correspondence.
We got them out last weekend and began to read. What we read in those letters was something a bit different from what we remembered.
Oh, we had made note of important current events of the time, including the hostage crisis at the 1922 Munich Olympics, Nixon-MeGovern and
But mostly what we wrote about, what we apparently were most concerned with, was girls, old movies, girls, football games, girls.
music, girls and drinking.
Maybe one of the most revealing passages was from one of my letters, dated May 4, 1972.
"I refuse to involve myself in political discussions andor activities. I have developed interests in things which will, I hope, lead me away from the state of the union, as much as possible."
It bathers me now that I thought that way then. But the fact that I eventually woke up and developed a strong interest in U.S. government and science, that the same awareness can, and probably will, take place in others.
At least, that's what I'm hoping.
INCREDIBLE! YOU SAY
THAT'S THE PLANET JOV
WITH JELLYBEANS AND CANDY
CANES AND FLUFFY PINK CLOUDS
AND FLOWERS AND BIRDIES!
IS IT INHABITED? DOES
ANYBODY LIVE THERE?
JUST RONALD
REAGAN!
Athletes' academics require cooperation
The problem is getting through the student athlete stigma that exists at the University. Instead of "Us vs Them," the theme should be "We"
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation presented a startling revelation last week by saying that college athletes who were also good students.
What a novel idea
Although an average football player is putting in 60 hours a week to achieve peak performance on Saturday afternoon, many teachers and advisers are not willing to help him find a way to handle the load.
Really I'm sure no other institution around the nation has cultivated such a thought. A 4.0 student who runs a 4.3-40 yard dash and can bench press 400 pounds is as common as a KU Orange Bowl team. Those players want to go to an established football program, not KU.
Actually, the KUAC means well, because there is a problem with athletes and academics at KU. But that cannot be solved by a report that says intelligence is the key ingredient for a recruit.
One weak area in the recent past has been that the academic counseling provided by the athletic department has not been successful. That is why some players have run into problems.
But both football coach Mike Gottfried and men's basketball coach Larry Brown have said that quees-
ALEXANDRIA VERSHINKOVA
JEFF CRAVENS Staff Columns
Granted, these jocks are all 18 years old or older, but the fact is that some aren't familiar enough with University academics to understand what it takes. Someone needs to tell them.
tionaires sent to instructors about athletes' academic progress have gone unanswered most of the time, leaving them helpless unless the student tells them about any possible problems.
Communications between the two factions are not the rule, and that is a tragedy. It's actually amazing, considering the reputation that KU buys.
In the athletic department's "master plan," the goal is to have a football contender that is full of great thinkers. To be realistic, it just doesn't happen like that.
Sure, guidelines can be set about recruiting better students, but so many variables exist. Many players are recruited before their transcripts or ACT scores are made available to the coach. And even when they are, a 2.0 in an inner-city school doesn't always mean the kid can make it at KU.
There are all kinds of reasons that athletes do not make their grades. Some athletes just are not responsible enough to juggle athletics and academics. Heck, some students can't handle just academics.
but there is a definite friction between the academic and athletic worlds.
Just ask Brown and David Katz
man, professor of history, who had a misunderstanding last year that would never have gone public at another school.
The coach does expect — and should expect — at least some cooperation, but there are teachers who think giving an inch to an athlete is a sign of weakness.
"People want to say that athletes aren't different, but they are and always will be," Gottfried said. "Just like I think the guy who holds down a job at Zarda is different, too."
triedred is not saying to push the athletes through, but that they need to be shown some understanding. The athletic department can take some of the blame, and the academic people need to get their act together because the goal is to have people, including athletes, earn degrees.
no master plan will accomplish that. Just a lot of hard work and understanding from both sides will. Until that happens and the relationship between the athletic department and the University can be improved, KU athletes, and the University in general, will suffer.
Elvis videos can still excite TV audiences
Intriguing news is coming out of the music business.
Executors for the estate of the late Elvis Presley have announced plans to put together a Presley video. The specifics of the video have not been revealed, but a spokesman for the Presley estate said that it would be updated for 1964.
Oh, dear. One can only imagine what this modernized Presley video will consist of. Elvis' voice will be singing "Blue Suede Shoes" — "Well, it's one for the money, two for the show, three to get ready, now go, cat, go" — and the visuals will consist of walls, rails racing through graveyards, masked men driving spikes through caskets.
If that happens, the "Blue Suede Shoes" video will look pretty much like most other rock videos; it will be calculatedly shocking and designed to titillate teenagers and persuade them to buy the records.
I hope, however, that the executors of the Presley estate realize that the original rock videos consisted only of Elevator videos in front of an Elvis and singing
You talk about danger and drama and sexual overtones; the mere sight of Elvis singing a song stirred young America and frightened older America in ways that all of today's purposefully nasty videos can never be imagined.
The executors of the Presley estate have the right idea. A whole generation of young music fans has not seen Presley perform. Millions of others recall him only as the friendly, bland, homogenized singer who appeared in Las Vegas in the '80s and poked gentle fun at his own image.
That was all that was needed.
But the early Presley was so
---
arrangely new and threatening, so alien to what older Americans had come to accept in a singing star, that the very sight of him on television
BOB
GREENE
Syndicated
Columnist
was enough to cause a national case of apoplexy.
No other musical phenomenon can rival that amazing, thrilling, almost
chemical combustion that happened when those two new forces — Elvis Presley and the network TV camera — met each other.
the executors of Elvis' estate really want to produce a successful Presley video — if they want to come up with something that young people will talk about in school the next morning — they should forget about special effects.
They should merely use unedited footage from the television shows on which Elvis made his first appearances.
Elvis will appear skinny and sneering, dressed in a big sport coat over baggy pants.
"Um . . . first of all we want to thank you for all our success . . . uh
and we want to sing our new single for you . . . uh . . . and it goes something like this."
But Elvis '56' Elvis '57? Those are performances that have not been viewed in years. Millions of us will be saying that we sure appreciate seeing them. Ma'am. Ua, thank you very much. Awopbopaloobopalop-bamboo.
And then he will hit his guitar and break into the first words of "Don't Be Cruel."
Films and videotapes of Elvis in the 70s are plentiful.
Observance stresses infant safety
WASHINGTON — Sept. 9 is Expe ctant Mother's Day in America.
Something symbolic may be intended in the scheduling of such an observance on the ninth day of the ninth month, but the significance is utterly lost on me.
What I do find meaningful is that the Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association is sponsoring Expectant Mother's Day to point up "the need for safety alertness with new babies inside the home, outside the home and while traveling."
It also might be noted that some of the 25 tips the association has prepared to help new parents avoid accidents are valid regardless of whether you have a baby in your arms.
**Rule 21, for example, admonishes:** "Don't carry a baby up or down stairs without first checking for loose objects that could throw you off."
United Press International
balance."
DICK WEST
What I consider the most ominous threat to life and limb is not
ballerina is a good rule to follow all the time, especially if baby is old enough to leave roller skates or other wheeled toys on the stairs.
Some of the baby carriages you see weaving along the sidewalk are 1 regret to report, pushed by drunks
mentioned at all, however. I refer to the menace of erratically steered baby carriages.
baby carriages Baby carriages veering down on unwary pedestrians have become, next to jaywalking, perhaps the No.1 peril associated with urban peregrinations
Having seen no recent statistics, however, I am not going to explore in detail the need for a crackdown. I'll leave that crusade to members of ENRAGE (Expectant Nannies Ranting Against Guzzling Employers)
My main concern is the enactment of laws that require new parents to obtain operators licenses before they venture out on the sidewalk at the helm of a baby carriage.
All too often, new parents receive only cursory instructions before they take baby for a spin.
I comment the Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association for its efforts to provide infants with a safer environment, including transportation approaches; however, let us not forget those of us whose expectations already have been more than adequately fulfilled.
University Daily Kansan, September 6. 1984
Page 5
KAL continued from p. 1
"The Russians would have talked about the box if they found it," Nunley said, "just like we would have talked about it if we had found it."
Nunley said he wasn't nervous working near the Soviets, although the political implications of the situation constantly were drilled into their heads.
"Sometimes the Soviets came real close, but not really," Nunley said. "Personally, I didn't think the Soviets would be particularly aggressive, like shoot at us or something, since they already were thrust into an attack. That doesn't mean they were angels either."
Nunley said he always wanted to be a pilot.
"I WANTED TO fly attack planes since they get to fly low and fairly fast. That's the most exciting," he said.
After two years at the University of Kansas, Numley decided to join the Navy ROTC to fly jets. However, after he took a cruise on a Navy helicopter carrier, he decided to fly helicopters.
"I love flying more than normal descriptions allow me to say," Nunley said.
After his two-week leave in Lawrence to visit his family, Nunley will return next week to San Diego, where he is stationed as a helicopter pilot and helicopters and as a helicopter pilot instructor.
Larry Weaver/KAMP
SAN JOAO MUNDO
"I like teaching and being involved in tactical experiments and development." Nunley said. "M₂ job satisfaction is about as high as I could get."
mgr as coadjunctor.
Nunley's father is a professor of Latin American studies and computer science at KU. His two brothers attend KU.
船員
軍事
警察
消防
保安
航空
海防
地震救援
海洋灾害防治
环境修复
生态保护
城市管理
国防安全
应急管理
综合保障
公共安全
医疗急救
食品药品安全
知识产权保护
环境保护
能源安全
航空安全
海洋安全
公共卫生安全
食品安全追溯
食品安全信息发布
食品安全监管
食品安全风险预警
食品安全追溯系统
食品安全追溯平台
食品安全追溯报告
食品安全追溯记录
食品安全追溯记录卡
食品安全追溯记录本
食品安全追溯记录册
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Lt. John Nunley, U.S. Navy helicopter pilot and KU alumnus. Airline 007, which was shot down by Soviet planes last describes his part in the search for the black box of Korean September. Nunley spoke yesterday to Navy ROOT students.
GLSOK
continued from p.1
said yesterday that her group was just one of many that could be considered self-supporting.
"What it boils down to is that our membership is largely gay," she said. "That is what people object to."
Under Senate rules, a petition for initiating a referendum must contain the names of at least 10 percent of the student body —2,300 in Imber's case. Imber said his petition had 2,578 when he submitted it in late April to the Senate's executive secretary for approval
BUT SENATE RULES do not specify whether a petition circulated in the spring can be used to call an election in the fall, Davidson said. He said some of the people
who had signed the petition probably had left KU.
Senate rules also say, "The Elections Committee shall have the responsibility of determining the validity of the petition."
Davidson said the Elections Committee would discuss the petition at its first meeting, probably Sept. 14 or 15.
The committee did not act on the petition in the spring, Davidson said, because it had no members.
He said that Vogel had appointed him committee chairman near the end of the school year and that classes had ended before a committee could be formed.
THE SENATE WILL take applications for the committee until 5 p.m. Tuesday, Davidson said that he, along with the Senate Committee Board, expected to choose a committee that night.
conferring.
If the petition is deemed valid, then, under Senate rules, the Senate will hold a referendum. If a referendum passes, the Senate cannot change the decision for 12 months.
biodiversity. Vogel said the decision from such a referendum probably would take effect for fiscal year 1986.
honored his senior year. Imber said that if he did not agree with the decision of the committee, he would appeal it to the University Judicial Board.
Death toll rises in second day of Chilean protests
SANTIAGO. Chile — Violent elashes erupted yesterday between riot police and demonstrators in Chile, raising the death toll to at least six in a two-day protest against military rule.
By United Press International
In the city of Copiapo, 499 miles north of Santiago, an army lieutenant working for the secret police and a student were killed in shooting during a university action, officials said.
national military three. Three people were killed in the second consecutive day of rioting, including a 20-year-old youth manning a barricade of burning tires in a working class neighborhood of Santiago. He was shot to death when police moved in with armored cars to disperse demonstrators, news reports said.
AT THE SHANTYTOWN of La Victoria, south of Santiago, the site of some of the fiercest violence Tuesday - police were on patrol and an army helicopter hovered
overhead as residents prepared a funeral procession for the Rev. Andre Jarlan, a 44-year-old French priest who was one of at least three people killed in Tuesday's protests.
residents said police were firing submachine guns to quell rioting youths when Jarlan, La Victoria's parish priest, was hit by a burst of gunfire that pierced the walls of his rectory.
French Ambassador Leo Bouvier in a one-hour meeting in the Foreign Ministry in the morning and called for a thorough investigation into Jarlan's death.
Pollice said 340 people were arrested in Santiago during Tuesday's demonstrations, and 50 people were injured -10 of them seriously.
THE TWO-DAY national protest — including a transportation strike and school boycott — was called by the Democratic Alliance, an opposition coalition of moderate parties. Its purpose was to pressure Gen
Augusto Pinoetch, Chile's military president,
to return the nation to democracy.
In anticipation of further violence last night, the government enforced a midnight-to-dawn curfew and banned newcasts on two opposition radio stations to stop the escalation of protests.
Interior Minister Sergio Onofre Jara declared the protest a "political failure" but recognized that the opposition had seriously disrupted the normal activities of the country.
The president of the bus owners' association said public transport in the capital was running at half its normal pace, and teachers said school attendance was down by 50 percent.
It was not clear whether the school absenteeism in Santiago signaled parent support for the protest or fear over violence in the streets Tuesday. Thousands of leaflets scattered around Santiago said: "Without protest there will be no change. ... Stay at home. Don't go shopping. Don't go out."
District attorney cautions consumers on prize offers
By United Press International
TOPEKA — Kansas consumers should be alert to more than 150 companies offering free prizes through questionable solicitations, Attorney General Bob Stephan said yesterday.
yesterday.
Stephan warned consumers to be wary of telephone solicitations and mailings that offer free prizes.
other free prizes.
In every complaint the attorney general has investigated, consumers were required to pay shipping and handling costs for a free prize or were required to buy a product to receive a prize. Stephan said.
rocks," Stephan said. "Satellite dishes are small aluminum discs, boats are rubber rafts; grandfather clocks are made of particle board and plastic; and mini computers are cheap pocket calculators."
The prize is offered usually by itself or an inducement to buy other merchandise, Stephan said. There is a long list of prizes, but many are often not what the consumer thinks they are.
The prizes are not free, said Stephan,
because consumers often are asked for a
credit card number to charge shipping and
handling fees which usually run at least $50
' Jewels usually are little more than
The attorney general said the consumer's best protection was to be skeptical, hang up the phone when such a call was received and receive a card number to a telephone solicitor.
Prizes also are offered as inducements to buy other products such as vitamins.
Such schemes violate most state laws, but promoters are difficult to find and prosecute. Stephan said. Most operate from another state and never stay in one place long enough for a state's consumer division to catch up with them.
ON THE RECORD
NAIMSHI HALL received a bomb threat at 10:55 p.m. yesterday. The hall's public areas were evacuated and searched, but residents were not evacuated from their rooms, an official at the hall said. Police have no suspects.
PIONEER SPEAKERS worth $140 were stolen from a KU student's car in the 1600 block of Edg毕端 Road sometime between 4:30 p.m. Tuesday and 4:30 p.m. yesterday. The driver's side window of the car was broken
AKU STUDENT's bicycle, worth $210, was stolen from the front porch of her home in the
3000 block of Campfire Drive sometime between Aug. 28 and Saturday.
AKU STUDENTS bicycle, worth $300, was stolen in the 1200 block of Louisiana Street sometime between 6 p.m. Tuesday and 8 a.m. yesterday.
BURGLARS STOLE $100 from Fisca Oil Co. Inc., 740 North Second St., between 9 p.m. Tuesday and 6 a.m. yesterday.
Tuesday and 9 a.m.
A 29-YEAR-OLD Lawrence woman's
billfold and its contents worth $228 were
stolen in the 1700 block of West 24th Street
yesterday. A suspect has been arrested in the case.
29.
THE BIG ONE
H
an important game, or a hard test.
Or something else—maybe God?
JUST DO IT.
45 years ago this week "The Big One" began at least, according to Archie Bunker. Others claim "The Big One" was Vietnam or Korea. Saying "The Big One" for some persons might mean an important game, or a hard test. God?
Knowing just the words is not enough to understand a speaker.
Often friends are needed to explain meanings.
That's a good reason to get together to study, and to worship —to know THE BIG ONE!
JLC
University Lutheran
15th E Iowa—843 6662
Sunday Worship 10:30 am
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September 6,1984 Page 6
ENTERTAINMENT
The University Daily KANSAN
Looking for Lawrence's best The ultimate hot fudge sundae
By SUSAN WORTMAN and KAREN MASSMAN Entertainment Editors
The ultimate hot judge sundae That was all we wanted
We had a notion of what we were looking for. Remember the old-fashioned ice cream parlor, where sundaes were served in parfait glasses? Creamy vanilla ice cream drenched in hot fudge sauce, with a cherry nestled in the whipped cream and nuts on top. That was what we were looking for.
I grew up in a small town, and fun on Friday nights was dragging Main Street and stopping by the Dairy Queen brazier. So naturally, my first thought was to go to Dairy Queen
Things have changed a little. We had a choice of hard or soft ice cream, peanut or pecan topping and we could have whipped cream or go without. Since Dairy Queen, 2545 Iowa St. and 1835 Massachusetts St., specializes in soft-serve ice cream, we chose that.
Our next stop was Zarda Dairy Store, 1802 W. 25rd St. We expected a good sundae at Zarda because of its reputation for fine dairy products
Nuts and whipped cream are an extra 15 cents each. Actually it wasn't bad for 99 cents, but our search was far from over.
We got 5 ounces of ice cream, 1 ounce of fudge sauce, an adequate serving of whipped cream and a light sprinkle of nuts, but no cherry. Cherries are vital.
The woman in the candy-striper smock handed, us $3^{4}$ ounces of hard ice cream, with one scoop of fudge sauce. We got more sauce at Dairy Queen. Almonds cost 15 cents, but whipped cream came with the deal
You can't knock Zarda's ice cream.
My mom would say, it was more vanilla-y, and it really was good. And the sauce was more chocolate-y. It was thicker and hotter than Dairy Queen's. That was a plus. Now, the minus. It cost $1.39, and with nuts, it came to $1.44.
We also had the Baskin Robbins version. It was supposed to be the prima donna of ice cream sundaes or in this case, the prima ice cream
For $1.05 we got just 2 ounces of ice cream sporting the coldest hot judge we'd turned a spoon to. And to top that off, at Baskin Robbins, 1524 W. 2nd St. and 925 Iowa St., we only got half a maraschino and no whipped cream.
Perkins Cake and Steak 1711 W 23rd St., was next. It had an advantage before we ever started. It has
We were crushed.
such convenient hours — they're always open. Seriously, what if you have a craving for fudge at 2 a.m. Where will the Zarda people be then?
Perkins doesn't have a hotudge sundae. Sigh. But it does have a comparable chocolate sundae. Not only that, but they serve it in an honest-to-goodness parfait glass.
The sundae had one and a half scoops of ice cream and a huge dollop of whipped cream. They weren't all that generous with the nuts or the sauce, but we did get a whole cherry with stem intact.
In addition, you get to eat in Perkins' relaxed atmosphere with piped-in music. All this for $1.45 not including the tip.
having just for kicks, we decided to try Bucky's Drive In. 2120 W Ninth St. IN turned out to be the best surprise of the afternoon. The nuts and whipped topping each cost 10 cents extra. (Hint: don't order whipped cream.) The 75-cent sundae had 5 ounces of ice milk and 4 ounces of fudge, though. Not bad proportions.
Our sundae didn't look like a hamburger, but they served their sundae in a Styrofoam burger container, and that didn't enhance the taste. When we opened that white burger box and saw that $^{1}$ ½ ounce blob of soft ice milk 'swimming in' $^{1}$ ½ ounces of chocolate, well, it wasn't a pretty sight. We rolled out, still hoping.
Still, our quest continued, for we had not found the perfect hot fudge sundae. When we rolled into Vista Drive In Restaurant, 1527 W. Sixth St., we had high hopes. But their effort did not even meet our definition of a sundae — no nuts, no whipped cream and, the real let-down, no cherry.
...
Finally, we waddled into Chocolate Unlimited Inc., 1601 W. 23 St., our last hope for the ultimate hot fudge sundae. We watched as the girl scooped 3 ounces of Eddy's French vanilla ice cream into a chilled parfait glass. Pretty impressive. She then proceeded to pour $1\frac{1}{2}$ ounces of hot homemade fudge sauce over the ice cream, douse it with real whipped cream and delicately apply mixed nuts at no extra charge.
Our hearts and taste buds were tickled as we dove into what came as close as we could find to the ultimate hot fudge sundae. It cost $1.10 with tax.
Our mission accomplished, we went home satisfied. Glutons, yes, but for a good cause. It was all just part of a day's work. And tomorrow would be another day.
Buddy Mangine and
Dave Hornback/KANSAN
Sundae provided by
Perkins Cake & Steak
Buddy Mangine and
Dave Hornback/KANSAN
Sundae provided by
Perkins Cake & Steak
Go-Go's still going up the pop music charts
By DAVID LASSITER
Staff Reporter
Mimiskins and smiles and a be-bop style — that's what the Go-Go's are made of.
The Go-Go's have been together for six years. They've seen their share of small-town gigs, and now they are seeing the big city tours.
Friday night, the group will play at the Sandstone Amphitheatre in Kansas City to start the second leg of their "Talk Show" tour. The band just finished a two-week vacation after eight weeks of touring the country
Kathy Valentine, bass guitar player, said she remembered playing one particular small town gig at the Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts ST., about three years ago.
Valentine said the group liked playing in the Midwest because audiences were more enthusiastic than in larger cities. In New York or Los Angeles, people attend concerts just to be seen at a concert, but in the Midwest, audiences go to have a good time, she said.
"I remember that I was amazed at the turnover and the reception we got there," she said. "I think the concert was sold out."
For this portion of the tour, the Red Rockers will open for the Go-Go's.
Rockets will open for us on the last part of our tour." Valentine said. "They had been on tour a long time before they started playing with us. That's why we've changed openers for this second tour."
"After a gig, which gets over at about 11 p.m., we usually go back to the hotel that we're staying at," she said. "Sometimes we might go down to the bar for a drink or two, or sometimes we just sit and talk, or sometimes we might just watch TV."
Although the Go-Go's have a lot of energy on stage, life during a tour can be rather ordinary. Valentine said.
Occasionally after a show, the women meet a few people backstage. They are usually members of local radio stations, but sometimes a fan will send a note to the band, and the band will invite them backstage.
Despite their popularity, the record isn't doing as well in comparison to group's earlier albums. Because several members had been sick, the Go-Go's did not start their tour when the first single, "Head Over Heels," was released. But Valentine thinks the latest single to be released, "Yes or No," will help push the album up the charts.
and the boo is how the Go-Go's be bop style still seems to be popular because their new "Talk Show" album is about to go gold, Valentine said.
"We've written songs through all kinds of combinations. Everyone has a unique perspective in the group." Valentine said. "If I have a particular style in mind then I get the person with a comparable perspective to help me. Like Jane is kind of quirk, and Charlotte has her humor, so I pick someone to help me by their personality."
"If you don't kick in for the first single, you sind of lose momentum on the album," she said.
valentine considers the band to be a rock'n'roll band, but they combine the basic rock'n'roll style with pop harmony and melody.
The women write their own songs. Usually it is a collaboration between two of the group's members.
Jane Wiedin, founder of the band, never played the guitar before she started the group. Gina Schock played the drums for 19 years before she joined the band. Valentine said she had played the guitar before but never the bass guitar.
Charlotte Caffey, keyboard player, has studied classical piano since the age of four or five, Valentine said.
The women's backgrounds in music vary widely.
Belinda Carlisle is lead vocalist for the band.
The group has made several music videos including three from their new album.
"My favorite video to make is 'Vacation.' Valentine said, "VIDEos can be fun to make, but they take a lot of time and can become tedious."
As for the miniskirts, the women in the band pick out their own clothes, Valentine said. But the band does hire someone to sew and help create their outfits
"Sometimes I find stuff and rip it up to wear or have the wardrobe girl alter it a little." Valentine said.
And the smiles. The Go Gos' have been smiling ever since they hit the music scene. Now, their smiles are their trademark.
"We just keep smiling," said Kathy Valentine, base player for the group. "We have our problems like everyone else, but the media never portrays us as sad."
THE HITTLE FRIENDS
The Go-Go's — (from left to right) Charlotte Caffey, Kathy Valentine, Belinda Carlisle, Gina Schuck and Jane Wiedlin.
KU students are pursuing trivia mania
Trivial Pursuit is breaking up game monopoly
By MICHAEL HALLERAN
Staff Reporter
Who seized power from Milton Obeat in 1971? What was the distinguishing feature of Richard Kimble's quarry? What invention does the principle of conservation of energy make possible? What is one of the hottest games on the University of Kansas campus? The answer to the last one is easy — Trivial Problem.
For those who haven't been exposed to trivia mania, *Trivial Pursuit* is a game that combines a little bit of luck with a lot of patience and a truckload of encyclopedias. The end result is a contest of mental and mnemonic prowess. Anywhere from two to 24 players can pit their wits against one another for the title of "most trivial."
for the time of.
The game was invented by three Canadian trivia buffs. Scott Abbott and two brothers, Chris and John Haney, devised Trivial Pursuit over a game of Scrabble, said Pat Hafer, marketing services manager of Selchow & Righter Co., the game's U.S. manufacturer.
After pouring over newspapers, reference books and dictionaries, they came up with a Canadian version of Trivial Pursuit. Selchow & Righter modified the questions for the U.S. market and introduced it in 1982. Now, Trivial Pursuit seems to be turning up everywhere.
"Trivial Pursuit, last year, exceeded the entire sales of all board games." Hafer said, and the projected sales for Trivial Pursuit next year would be near $700 million.
The game can be an expensive habit to support. The GENUS edition ranges in price from $25 to $40, depending on where you buy it. It is the most common version, but the SILVER SCREEN, ALL-STAR SPORTS and the BABY BOOMER editions all use the same board with the same color-coded question system and are on the market now.
All of these variations on the master game cost about $30 and include only the question cards, 1,000 of them, guaranteed to appeal all but the hardest of the hard-core pedants.
game carry out. Because of the constant revisions and variations, Hafer said the game would probably be popular for a long time.
For those people put off by the complexity of SILVER SCREEN, SPORTS and BABY BOOMER, Selchow & Righter plans to introduce a second edition of the GENUS game early in 1985.
"I don't see it petering out unless they stop bringing out new editions. It's a fun thing, a social thing," she said. "It brings people together."
together.
Much of the challenge in the game seems to lie in the obscure, forehead-pounding nature of the questions. Some of them are freebies, but many are a source of frustration closely akin to the fisherman's "one that got away."
akin to the fisherman's one that goes away "it's educational and fun," said Larry Cornelius, owner of Fun And Games, 1002 Massachusetts St. "It's a good party game especially with groups of people. It helps to break the ice."
Cornelius said Trivial Pursuit was the largest selling game of 1984, outselling even the perennially popular Monopoly.
The topics in the GENUS edition are geography, entertainment, history, arts and literature, science and nature, and sports and leisure. And the probability of a question being asked twice during a game is almost nil because there are 6,000 different questions in the six categories.
The game incorporates a question-and-answer system composed of six categories of questions on an question card. Players ask one another a question based on colored category spaces on the playing board. Players win by collecting wedge shaped pieces from each category.
One need not invest in the game to enjoy it because some area taverns and private clubs already have
"My guests really enjoy having the game here," said Bob Forbes, general manager of Mel Amigos Mexican restaurant and private club. 2600 Iowa St. Mel Amigos provides the GENUS edition and the SILVER SCREEN editions for its patrons.
enthusiastic for his patron.
"People have a good time playing it here. I bought the game for my guests." Forbes said. "Sure, they will probably stay here another hour and have a few more drinks, but I bought it for their convenience. Sometimes they don't play the game, they just look through the questions."
Steve Akins, Lawrence senior, says he likes to play the game because it's a new form of competition. It exercises the gray matter instead of the muscles
He prefers to play Trivial Pursuit where it is quiet and where he can think. Akins said. He likes to concentrate on the game and learn from it, which is impossible when people are laughing and walking around. But, he said in the same breath, Trivial Pursuit is also fun to play in groups.
"I love to give hints because that way I learn more," he said. "It opens up a new dimension on the game for me. The game makes learning fun. If they had taught us like this in grade school, I would have gotten straight A's."
The answers, by the way, are that Milton Obate was deposed by Idi Amin. Richard Kimble's quarry had only one arm and a perpetual motion machine makes the principle of energy conservation possible.
University Daily Kansan, September 6, 1984
ENTERTAINMENT
Page
Calendar
Friday
Master's: Reecital; Keith Branson,
organist in G, swatheborr Reecital Hall
B.
Go—Go's; 7:30 p.m., Sandstone Theatre, Bonner Springs.
David Halley Outdoor Party, 5 p.m.
to midnight, 11th and Maine streets.
Mighty Joe Young. 9:30 p.m., The Jazzhaus, 92% Massachusetts St. Also performing Saturday night.
1. 5-6 Speed Up. 7:30 p.m., Fine Arts Building, 4949 Cherry St., University of Missouri-Kansas City, Kansas City, Mo
Saturday
Kansas State Fair runs through Sept.
10. Hutchinson. For more information call
University Dance Company 8 p.m. and Sept. 9 at 2 p.m., Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall. Tickets are $2 for students citizen and $3.50 for general admission.
Lucinda Williams. 9 p.m. Bogarts of Lawrence. 611 Verm St.
Renaissance Festival. Every weekend through Oct. 8. Agricultural Hall of Fame, Bonner Springs.
6 to 9 p.m. Potter Lake
Arts & Crafts Fair Noon to 5 p.m., South Park, Massachusetts Street between 11th
& 13th streets
Old Eldridge Hotel added class to Lawrence
Kaw Valle Songwriters' Contest. Noon to 6 o.m. Potter Lake.
By KAREN MASSMAN
Associate Entertainment Editor
BY KAREN MASSMAN
There was no McDonald's, no F.W. Woolworth, not even a movie theater — just clouds of dust and wooden buildings along Massachusetts Street.
But when Shalor Winchell Eldridge and his brothers arrived in 1856, they decided to add some class to the town, so they set about building Lawrence's first hotel.
The Eldridge House stands in the original location, but the hotel rooms have changed to apartments, and the eloquent banquet halls have been divided into small shops. Down in the basement is the barber shop where Harry Courtney works. He remembers the hotel during its peak years, from 1920 to 1950. He owned the barber shop in the hotel then, and
Originally called the Free State Hotel, the one-story building was described by the Herald of Freedom, one of two newspapers in Lawrence, as having "outhouses of the neatest kind." The entire building cost $20,000 to complete, and that included furniture.
"It was a lot different in the old days. It was one of the best hotels in the state." Courtney said. "The hotel always had something going on. Half the business was students or people coming because of the Hill."
The hotel stood on the corner, glamorous and glorious, for three weeks. Then, proslavery forces burned it to the ground during the Sack of Lawrence.
the Carson by 1859. Eldridge had rebuilt the hotel and renamed it the Eldridge House. The new Eldridge had the first hotel bar in Lawrence, and it was still one of the most elegant hotels west of the Mississippi River.
Old Lawrence
1234567890
On the morning of August 21, 1963, pro-slavery ruffians again entered Lawrence, this time led by William Clarke Quantrill. For four hours, the men killed and plundered — 150 people died and the luxurious Eldridge House burned to the ground again.
The people of Lawrence wanted a nice hotel, so they issued bonds and raised $50,000 to build a new hotel in the 1920s. William
However, Shalor Eldridge was undaunted and built his hotel for the third time, changing the name to Hotel Eldridge. This time, though, he lacked the funds to build it with the grandeur that the other Eldridge hotels had. Eventually, he was forced to sell it.
Old photos in the Eldridge House coffee shop show the Eldridge Hotel as it was in the late 1800s.
BARNES & CO.
MASSACHUSETTS
HARBIN, MICHIGAN
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Hutson and J. Monte Green, a builder from Manhattan, raised the other $165,000 necessary to tear down the old hotel and build a new one. A pharmacy and postal telegraph were opened in the building, and Courtney's first barber shop opened.
When Kansas 7 was built, Massachusetts Street was no longer the hub of Lawrence.
After several more owners, the hotel was renovated to apartments by Rockledge Investors Partnership in 1970, and the name was changed back to the Eldridge House.
The hotel declined during the 1950s when motels became the fad. The era of the elegant hotels had ended by the time the first Holiday Inn arrived in Lawrence in 1951.
TI
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SOCIAL LIFE—Pi Kappa Phi is serious but not all the time. A well-balanced social program is part of every chapter. It has been said, "Pi Kappa have more fun than people."
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TAKE THE PI-KAPP CHALLENGE!
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LEADERSHIP—More than likely you are also in college to better develop your leadership abilities. Pi Kappa Phi is an excellent place to assert your potential and to assume responsibility by actual experience. Guidance in this is available from alumni members and fraternity programs.
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PURPOSE AND OBJECTIVES
SCHOLARSHIP- You are in school to gain an education, therefore studies are most important. Fraternity grades, on a nationwide average, are above those of non-affiliated men. Pi Kappa Phi is a main source of scholastic guidance and encouragement to its student members.
The influence of Pi Kappa Phi has been significant. In fact, for many it has been a way of life. The reason is that our purpose and objectives are sound and have meaning. They are exciting and constitute a challenge. Members of Pi Kappa Phi have found within their Fraternity assistance in reaching these objectives.
PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT - A P I Kapp learns how to get along with people. Living and working with men from different backgrounds and areas of the country is a rewarding and educational experience.
AKA/XΩ 4th ANNUAL WHEAT MEET
TRACK MEET FOR KU CANCER RESEARCH
PARTY: SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 8th 7 p.m. BURGE UNION
- TOP BANDS FEATURING:
STEVE BOB& RICH
JERSEY
- UNIDOS
Stroh's
- Free Pepsi
Pizza Shuttle
pizza by the slice
- 100 Kegs
Track Meet Sept.22 Memorial Stadium
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK!
Donations:
$3.50 in advance
$4.50 at the gate
Buy Tickets from AKA: 842-7556
or XO: 843-5800
---
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 6, 1984
Page 8
Prof warns about book bans
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
The lists of books that have been banned in some parts of the country include many that a college professor or bookstore manager would call classics.
"The threat of censorship is always a real one," said James Carothers, associate professor of English. "There can also be a problem in prior censorship. Teachers can fail to include books in required reading lists."
THE AMERICAN LIBRARY Association has provided local book merchants with a list of books that are, or have been, subjects of controversy. The list is part of a move around the country to publicize instances of book banning. The Lawrence City Commission on Tuesday declared Sept. 8-15 as "Banned Books Week in Lawrence."
The association's list includes such favorite targets of censors as J.D. Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye" and Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," which often have been objected to because of strong language.
The list also contains many of the works of such authors as John Steinbeck, Kurt Vonnegut and William Faulkner.
"The Treasury of American Poetry" made the list when it was challenged at Gretna, Va., High School in 1981 because it contained eight objectionable words. The view committee injuried on the pages containing the cutting out the pages containing the words, orinking over the words, according to the list.
IZ CALDWELL, MANAGER of Act One LTD., 1025 Massachusetts St. said, "book banning is still occurring and people need to be aware of it."
But while parents and administrators in other parts of the country have been haggling over objectionable passages in the books their children read, the Lawrence school district has managed to stay free of these troubles, local administrators say.
trators say. "As far as I know, in the recent past there have been no problems locally with book bannings," said Dan James, principal of Central Junior High School.
Bob Taylor, assistant superintendent for curriculum and instruction, agreed that instances of objections to books were rare in Lawrence and attributed that to the general attitude of the community.
"The COMMUNITY TRUSTS that the school district will operate a fundamentally sound program." Taylor said.
a book that has been the subject of controversy may have a note specifying this on a teacher's reading list." Taylor said.
The main reason Taylor cited for the lack of controversy about books in the area was that at least at the secondary level, books aren't "banned."
"But if a student raises an objection, we try to talk about it with the student and his parents and offer some alternatives," he said.
James said that at Central Junior High, teachers put out recommended reading lists for the course, but any book not on that list was available for students to read.
"IT ISN'T AN attempt to control what they read, but more to see that the content of the book is at an appropriate reading level for the student." James said.
However, he said that certain books were considered inappropriate for young readers, such as sexually explicit books.
"We try to channel the kids away from books like that," he said.
James also said that he couldn't remember a conflict with a student being denied a book he wanted to read.
Taylor said that he was against book banning in general and that if people weren't aware of it, they needed to be.
PATRICKA SCHNEIDER
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incomes, wanted larger deductions. She said legislation to extend the expiration date probably would fail.
State may suffer money shortage
Branson also discussed women's issues. She said that next year the Legislature might appoint a commission to investigate pay inequities between men's and women's jobs in state government.
Branson was the guest speaker at a University Forum luncheon at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, St. Paul Ave. About 30 people attended.
Branson, who is running unopposed for a third term in the Kansas House, said voters had been bulled into complacency by a healthy budget this year. However, state finances might suffer next year if a 1983 income-tax bill is allowed to expire, she said.
But she said that the successful passage of such a bill could not be predicted until after the fall elections.
THE BILL, WHICH LIMITS the amount of income-tax deductions a person can declare to $5,000, brought about $50 million to the state this year. Branson said. Unless the Kansas Legislature introduces a new bill, she said, the original one will expire after December.
By SUZANNE BROWN Staff Reporter
Kansas may face a serious money shortage after this year when higher deductions on income taxes probably will be allowed, State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said yesterday.
However, Branson said many Johnson County legislators would fight any effort to delay the bill's expiration because their constituents, many of whom earn high
REPRESENTATION FOR WOMEN in the Kansas Legislature has improved in the last several years, Branson said. This year, 23 women — or 14 percent — served in both state houses, a percentage slightly higher than the national average of 13 percent.
tions
STUDIES CONDUCTED IN other
Branson said the investigation of pay inequity in Kansas might receive impetus from the recent decision of a federal court in Washington state ordering the state to pay $850 million in back pay to women state and county workers. Leaders in Washington government have appealed the ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court.
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In 1983, Gov. John Carlin commissioned a study to research pay inequality in Kansas. The study was to have been completed at the end of this year, but Branson said it take longer because of the detail involved in describing and classifying state jobs.
states have found many examples of women who were paid less than men for jobs of comparable worth, Branston said. Seven states have passed legislation to correct this wage gap.
"I strongly feel the need for this in Kansas," she said.
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Student Union Activities presents
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OPEN HOUSE WEEK
September 11-15
**************************
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Tuesday, September 11
Guest Speaker:
Governor John Carlin
[Picture]
7 p.m. Alderson Auditorium
4th Level Kansas Union
**************
When you graduate, you will have a job in the fleet as a naval or marine officer. You will train in Nuclear Submarines, Surface Ships, Naval Aircraft or one of many other exciting fields.
If you are a student at the University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Scholarship. The Navy Scholarship provides full tuition, all text books plus $100 a month spending money.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 6, 1984
Page 9
Bailev still hot after equipment delay
By DAN HOWELL
Staff Reporter
Delays in equipment shipments for a $347,633 air conditioning project at Bailey Hall have caused discomfort and inconvenience but little disruption of daily routine, building occupants said yesterday.
Dale P. Scannell, dean of the School of Education, said that heat, dust, noise and access had been problems.
"We thought when we moved back in Aug. 15 that we would have air conditioning by Sept. 1," he said.
Facilities planning, said the University's contract with Piping Contractors of Kansas Inc., a Topaka company, called for the project to be "substantially complete" by Aug. 15.
HE SAID THAT MEANT the building would be usable but that not every part of the project would be finished
"We knew going into the project
that it would be tough to finish it completely in that time," he said.
Modig said he was less optimistic than others about the completion date. He expected testing of the system to begin about Oct. 1 and regular operation about Oct. 15.
Modi said that work had begun on the site a few days after commencement in May but that common problems had delayed the project.
An electrical storm knocked out a transformer during the first week of work, he said, and then a delay in manufacturing the new air handling unit postponed the completion date.
The air handling unit arrived yesterday and was lowered into a hole at the front of Bailey. Modig said the unit was the last piece of equipment needed.
ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES of the School of Education, which were in Fraser and Murphy halls during the summer, returned to Bailey in mid-August. But Scannell said about eight faculty members were not able to use their offices yet.
"I wouldn't know where to find them." he said.
He said the hallway on the bottom floor amounted to "a disaster area." The hall is lined with piping and other equipment.
Robert Hohn, professor of educational psychology and research, said he could not use his office or its library.
"The reason I'm not in my office is that it's become a repository," he said.
The office has furniture stored in it, he said.
SCANNELL SAID THAT last week's heat wave had raised temperatures on the building's main floor to more than 100 degrees.
Hohn said he disliked the dusty air, the lack of his own phone and the necessity of walking under exposed wires.
Dick Tracy, associate professor of educational psychology and research, said that students in crowded upstairs classrooms had put up with heat, noisy fans and stored
Dean Adams, an employee of Stevenson Roofing & Sheet Metal Co. Inc., a Topaka subcontractor, said noise problems should diminish soon because a loud part of the work was almost done.
n furniture. He moved back into his office last week but has found the noise troublesome.
"We've been fastening sheet rock on the ceiling," he said.
"It's been distracting more in the office," he said.
ADAMS SAID THE ONE new air handling unit probably would create less noise than the 18 smaller ones it was replacing.
Modig said that several steps of the project remained. Workers must pour a concrete lintel, a horizontal support for the stones above the air intake. Louvers to regulate intake then will be added below the lintel, and grillwork will be placed across the top of the hole.
People at the Spencer Research Library yesterday morning had to walk to Watson Library or Lindley Hall to use the restroom or get a drink of water.
By the Kansan Staff
Spencer Research Library and seven other campus buildings were without water for three to four hours yesterday after a water line four inches in diameter broke Tuesday night, an assistant director of facilities operations said.
Crack in water pipe leaves buildings dry
Tom Anderson, director of facilities and operations, said, "It was not a real big gusher."
The water line between Hoch Auditorium and Marvin Hall broke between 11 p.m. and 11:30 p.m., the assistant director said, and lost to 1,000 gallons of water were lost
each hour until the water was shut off at 7:45 a.m. yesterday.
After the break was fixed, water remained off while facilities operations crews checked equipment and restrooms in the eight buildings. The buildings whose water was shut off included Bailey Hall, Snow Hall, Strong Hall, Stauffer-Flint Hall, Wesco Hall, Hoch Auditorium and Marvin Hall, the assistant director said.
He estimated the cost of the water loss at $1.90 for every 1,000 gallons. The total cost was estimated between $8 and $15.
Anderson said the break in the water line was not unusual, especially after a summer drought.
"When the ground dries, it cracks and that will pull the water line apart," Anderson said.
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University Daily Kansan, September 6, 1984
Page 10
CAMPUS AND AREA
Regents Center offers CS degree
By MARY CARTER Staff Reporter
Students can now earn degrees in computer science from the University of Kansas without ever coming to Lawrence through a joint program initiated this semester by Johnson County Community College and KU.
"The idea is that students will take the first two years at the community college and the last two years at the KU Regents Center, resulting in a bachelor's degree in computer science," said William Bulgren, chairman of the computer science department at KU.
BEGINNING THIS FALL semester, students at the community college can take computer science classes with the same course numbers and content as KU's CS 200 and CS 210.
Bulgren said. The courses will have the same syllabus and textbooks as KU courses and will be taught by community college faculty members.
bers.
next spring, the Regents Center will offer an upper level computer science course. Courses will be added each semester as students advance, Bulgrem said. By fall semester 1987, five courses should be available at the Regents Center, and students will be able to graduate with KU degrees.
be able to program. Bulgen said that besides serving an educational need, the program "gives junior college students an opportunity to progress toward full bachelor's degrees that was not available before in the Kansas City area."
area.
COMPLETING THE FIRST two years at the community college will not mean automatic admittance to
courses at the Regents Center.
courses at the university.
"We will treat them like any other junior college transfer student," Bulgrean said. "They will have to be admitted to KU and meet the same criteria as other students."
A computer science class was scheduled for the Regents Center this fall, but because of low enrollment, the class was transferred to the Lawrence campus, said Mary Hersh, director of the Regents Center.
At the community college, about 60 people are enrolled in the two computer courses, said James Vomhof, director of the business and economics division at the college.
come.
"It takes 64 hours to get an associate of arts degree," he said. "What we are doing is matching KU's program totally. Whatever KU calls for is what we'll have."
CALLS FOR IS WHAT YOU NEED
THE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
has a new, 1,800-square-foot computer laboratory with 50 terminals and 55 microcomputers. The CRTs are connected to the main computer at Kansas State University now, but an IBM mainframe computer will be phased in next year, Vomhof said.
"There will be no problems with physical facilities," he said. "A good rule of thumb is to have one computer for every 15 students. Right now, we're some place around 12, but we will probably soon fall into the 15 to 18 range." Gersh said that about 10 personal computers would be installed at the Regents Center "whenever we see that we need them."
The program was organized in about two weeks last spring by administrators from three campuses.
Survey lists advising as problem area
By MARY CARTER Staff Reporter
Obtaining good academic advising is the biggest problem for both community college transfer students to the University of Kansas and those who have attended only KU, a recent survey shows.
One in five transfer students said making new friends and getting used to large classes were difficult or very difficult.
"Advising at both schools could be more efficient — at both places, the counselors didn't seem quite sure of what transferred and what didn't
" said one student in the sack. The survey which was completed last week found that 40% of between the KU office of institutional research and planning and the office of
institutional research at Johnson County Community College.
Cobby County About half the 600 respondents were KU students who had previously attended the community college. The other half had attended only KU.
"We've known for some time that a large mobility exists between Johnson County Community College and KU. We're always interested in knowing more about it," said Don Doucette, director of institutional research at the community college. "We have about 1,800 former students who are enrolled at KU this fall."
Transfer students last year composed almost one-tenth of the Lawrence campus enrollment. Last fail, 2,374 students transferred to KU from other schools, according to KU statistics.
About 50 percent of the transfer students and original KU students said that getting good academic advising was difficult or very difficult.
Budgeting time and keeping up with academic standards also were listed as problems with transfer and non-transfer students.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said he was not surprised that students said they did not have great problems adjusting socially to KU.
"I was pleased that a lot of students did not have great difficulties academically or socially. Even if they did, they were still very positive about KU," he said. "I just confirmed to them that I would be ready to help their needs even if we're not specifically identifying them."
John Tollefson, dean of the School of Business, said transfer students didn't experience anything different from other first-year students, they just experienced it later.
The report said that transfer students found that the noticeable differences between the community college and KU were "increased opportunities for social activities and contacts with faculty, giving greater difficulty of succeeding in academic courses and in getting individual help or advising at KU."
Jannell Salts, Mission junior, said this week that attending a community college made coming to a bigger school easier.
"JuCo got me involved. When I came here, I was not intimidated because I felt like a part of what's going on," she said.
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مصادر العلماء العربية.
عرفي بن عمر عبدالعزيز • وعرفي بن محمد العباسي العباسي العبدي
1534/9/V في مسجد العصر العربي الحسين بن أبي داود، ودراسة
حصة الدراسة العظيمة والمثلية والكاملة ومراجعة صورةها.
الملفات:
The 20th Bldg (11th & Vermont)
KU MEN'S SOCCER
Organizational Meeting and Practice
Monday, Sept. 10th 7:30 p.m. 23rd and Iowa
In case of rain, meeting and practice will be postponed until Tuesday.
Monday September 10 7 pm at the Kansas Union Big 8 Room Slide Show on Toure deFrance
MOUNT OREAD BICYCLE CLUB MEETING
KU-Haskell relations win official's praise
Monday September 10
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ
Staff Reporter
Relations between Haskell Indian Junior College and the University of Kansas have improved in the last year, Gerald Gipp, Haskell president, said last night.
Saturday, September 8, 7-10 p.m.
Council Room, Level 4 Kansas Union
Gipp spoke at the Chamber of Commerce 18th annual fall mixer, which was dedicated to Haskell in connection with the school's 100th anniversary.
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
"We feel a lot of support and interest from the University," he said. "But, there are a number of things we can build on in the
Gipp said support from the entire community had become
At the mixer, Chancellor Gene A. Budig praised the accomplishments and contributions of Haskell to the community and called the college a significant education network in Lawrence.
AFRICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION GENERAL MEETING
"We wish to acknowledge Haskell's countless contributions to the well-being of this community and state." Budig said. "Lawrence is the finest university community in America. The people here understand and respect the value of education at all levels."
Cycling
Emerson Hazlett, chairman of the KU affairs committee for the chamber and director of KU's Center for Economic Education, said his committee, which sponsored the mixer, was concerned with relations between KU and the Lawrence community.
More than 600 people attended the mixer including about 70 new faculty members from city and county schools. Speakers from five area schools welcomed the faculty members.
"I'm looking forward to a great year," he said. "I hope the community will continue to come forward and be supportive like they have been." Tonight is an encouraging show of support.
stronger this year because of the school's centennial.
"The University is Lawrence's largest employer. We are obviously interested in what goes on there." he said.
"We concentrate on the relationship between the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and the University." Hazlett said. "It's a very good relationship, and we want that to continue.
BE THERE!
The mixer is a function put on by the chamber to show its appreciation for the University's contributions to Lawrence, Hazlett said.
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---
STUDENTS, COME GET INVOLVED!!
THE FOLLOWING STUDENT SENATE COMMITTEES ARE NOW OPEN:
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FINANCE
UNIVERSITY AFFAIRS
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ELECTIONS
APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE, 105-B KANSSA UNION DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION IS DEADLINE, SEPT. 11 AT 5:00 p.m.
Paid for by the Student Senate
---
Scoop of the Week Sept. 6-Sept.13
OLGA Panties 20% Off Lawrence Book Coupon Taken
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KU STUDENTS ATHLETIC TICKET INFORMATION
SAVE ON YOUR SEASON
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KU FOOTBALL
- A wids open offense that broke eight school and three Big Eight records last season.
- A home schedule featuring Wichita State, Oklahoma and Nebraska.
- Led by second-year Coach Mike Gottfriend
- Choice of sitting in open seating section or reserved seating section
KU BASKETBALL
- 1984 Big Eight Tournament Champs
- One of the nation's top recruiting classes
- Led by Coach Larry Brown
- A home schedule featuring Houston, Missouri, Oklahoma and K-State.
"All Sports" Tickets— $25.00
Football Reserved Seating— $26.00
Football Open Seating— $23.00
Tickets can be purchased at the athletic ticket office in Allen Field House on weekdays from 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Student sales will also be held in front of Wescoe Hall from September 4th to the 7th from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. If you bought a ticket this summer, you can pick it up at the Field House.
An "All Sports" ticket could be your only chance to see K.U. Basketball!!
University Daily Kansan, September 6, 1984
Page 11
V
PIKEFEST '84
---
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, September 6, 1984
Chernenko appears briefly
Page 12
By United Press International
MOSCOW — President Konstantin Cherenko, who had been rumored seriously ill, made his first public appearance in 54 days yesterday at a brief Kremiln ceremony honoring three cosmonauts.
The ceremony, shown on the nightly TV news program Vremya, began with a tanned and smiling Chernenko walking unaided into the ornate Kremlin hall.
Holding a five-page speech firmly in his left hand, Chernenko read his remarks without the wheezing and halting delivery that had marked his earlier public speeches. Later, however, he stood stiffly and seemed short of breath.
The appearance of the 72-year leader ended an absence from public view that began July 13, when he was seen with Javier Perez de Cuellar, secretary general of the United Nations.
Two days later, Cherenko officially began a vacation at his Black Sea retreat. Soviet leaders ordinarily take annual six-week vacations. Cherenko's lasted almost eight weeks.
The Soviet leader, who became the oldest man to assume command of the Soviet Union following the death of President Yuri Andropov last Feb. 9, suffers from chronic breathing difficulties, believed to stem from emphysema.
LOS ANGELES Entertainer Michael Jackson, in a statement yesterday, denied that he took hormones to keep his voice high or had cosmetic surgery on his eyes or cheeks, and said he planned to marry and have children someday.
Jackson says rumors are false
By United Press International
his attorneys to sue any publication that spread false rumors about him.
In a prepared statement delivered by his personal manager, Frank Dileo, Jackson said he had advised
Responding to gossip publications that have repeatedly referred to the singer's androgynous qualities, Jackson said in the statement: 'No! I've never taken hormones to maintain my high voice.'
The statement continued, "No! I've never had my cheekbones altered in any way. No! I've never had cosmetic surgery on my eyes. Yes! One day in the future, I plan to
Dileo said that his client believed performers should be role models for young people, and said that Jackson was saddened that many of his fans might believe the rumors
get married and have a family."
"I love children," Jackson said. "We all know kids are very impressionable and susceptible to such stories. I'm certain that some have already been hurt by this terrible slander."
Applications for
STUDENT ORGANIZATION OFFICE SPACE IN THE KANSAS UNION ARE NOW BEING TAKEN, ANY STUDENT ORGANIZATION MAY APPLY
Pick up Information & Applications at the SUA Office, 4th level Kansas Union
Deadline is Sept. 14, 5 p.m.
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Annex
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Open Daily 10:30:5:30 Thursday till 8:30
Sunday Evening...
Followed by supper ($1)
WORSHIP
5:30 pm
+ + + +
ECM STUDENT CHRISTIAN CENTER
1204 Oread
(One block North of the Kansas Union)
ECUMENTAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES:
The United "theodist Church"
The Presbterian Church (USA)
The United Church of Christ
The Church of the Brethren
For the best selection of Hallmark Cards & Gifts
shop at
ARBUTHNOT'S
Southwest Plaza 27th Ave Iowa
mailmark
Southwest Plaza 23rd & Iowa 841 2160
Hours:
M-F 10-8 Sat 10-5
STC TRUST HOLD
NEW YORK, N.Y. 10024
--b
DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING
University Dance Company Student/Faculty Concert Saturday, September 8 8 p.m. Sunday, September 9 2 p.m.
Learn to: initiate conversation make new friends adjust to new social situations
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
$3.50 general admission
$2 students with KJUD
Monday, September 10 FREE!
6:30 to 9 p.m.
$2 students with KUID
Sponsored in part by Student Activity Fee
To attend please register at the Student Assistance Center,
121 Strong Hall, 864-4064
---
FrameUP custom/family/gallery
15 E.8th Downtown
15% OFF All Posters Over $10
No valid with any other coupon
Expires 11/15/84
Tues.-Sat. 10-5:30
843-0498
---
3UA
Special
Events
R.E.M.
DANCE FLOOR!
KZR
106
DANCE FLOOR!
WITH SPECIAL GUESTS: the dB's
NON POP
I'll just use the image content as it is. The text in the image is not clearly visible or legible. It looks like a black and white photo of two people, but the faces are partially obscured. I cannot transcribe any text from this image.
FRIDAY,SEPTEMBER 14th HOCH AUDITORIUM·9 pm
TICKETS $10/$9 ALL SEATS RESERVED $1 DISCOUNT AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTS W/KUID
TICKETS at SUA BOX OFFICE; All Capital Automated Ticket Outlets including Full-Line Jones Stores, Caper's Corner Records, both 7th Heaven Stores, Crown Center Ticket Office and Love Records; Omni Electronics in Lawrence; Budget Tapes and Records in Topeka; and through Dial-A-Tic at 816/753-6617.
PRODUCED BY NEW WEST/CONTEMPORARY
---
/
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, September 6.1984
Pope speaks against rhythm method
By United Press International
VATICAN CITY — Pope John Paul II warned Roman Catholic couples yesterday that even the rhythm method of birth control could be morally wrong if it was used for "unworthy reasons."
The pope issued the warning to about 20,000 pilgrims and tourists in St. Peter's Square, during his eight speech in a series aimed at getting current Catholics to obey the church's total ban on artificial birth control.
John Paul, who began his personal crusade on the church's unpopular
birth control stance July 11, repeated traditional Roman Catholic teaching that natural birth control was the standard; a much smaller size that conformed to divine plan.
but these need to be. But the pointff said even natural birth control was morally wrong if it was not used properly.
"THE USE OF INFERTILE PERIODS for corjugal union can, however, be an abuse if the couple is seeking in this way to avoid children for unworthy reasons." John Paul said.
John Paul did not explain what he considered "unworthy reasons" for practicing natural birth control, but traditional church teaching requires that sex between married couples be open to conception unless there are responsible, unselfish and moral justifications.
"This method can never be perceived in a merely functional or utilitarian way, separating it from the ethical dimension," the pontiff said.
Newlywed couples, for example, who decide to delay conception while trying to establish themselves financially can practice natural birth control, according to church teaching.
relationship with his wife, would have invalid reasons, the church teaches.
BUT A WOMAN WHO WANTED to delay having children for fear of ruining her figure, or a man who feared a child would ruin his
The pope based his address on Pope Paul VI's 1968 landmark encyclical, "Humana Vitae" (Of Human Life) which disappointed many Roman Catholics because it failed to relax the church's unequivocal ban on artificial birth control.
John Paul said the encyclical urged Roman Catholic couples to act according to the "objective moral order established by God," and in many is it exclusively directed to limiting, much less excluding, children.
Sharon files libel suit against Time magazine
By United Press International
NEW YORK — Former Israeli defense minister Ariel Sharon testified yesterday that he filed a $50 million libel suit against Time magazine to vindicate himself and the Jewish people.
Sharon has accused Time of implying in an article that he encouraged the massacre of hundreds of Palestinian refugees and
Lebanese civilians in two West Beirut refugee camps in September 1982
Sharon denounced the allegation as a "blood libel" against all Jews.
"IREGARD IT AS ONE of the most terrible things that has been done to the Jewish people, the state of Israel and to myself," Sharon said.
Sharon, who flew to Manhattan from Israel to give the public deposition, was accompanied into U.S. District Court by his bodyguards
and Israeli reporters.
Under questioning from attorneys for Time, Sharon said he filed the suit because the article contained state that were "false, lies, and ibebels."
In Time's Feb. 21, 1983 issue, an article entitled "The Verdict is Gulty" described the findings of an Israeli judicial commission.
ACCOUNDING TO THE TIME article, the classified appendix said that Sharon visited with the Gemayel family on the day after the assassination of Lebanese President Bashir Gemayel.
"Sharon also reportedly discussed with the Germayels the need for the Phalangists to take revenge for the assassination of Hashir", the Time
Time referred to the contents of a secret appendix of the commission's published report
Sharon contends that this statement is libelous.
Murderer of 8 nurses up for parole review
By United Press International
CHICAGO — A parole hearing will be held today for Richard Speek, and the father of one of eight student nurses he murdered 18 years ago will be there to make sure their killer doesn't go free.
"It's a hard time, all the time," said John Matsuek, 77, who has gone to each of Speck's four previous parole hearings at the Stateville Correctional Center in Joilet.
rou you have to say your piece. I don't want him ever to be released," said the wheelchair-bound retired tavern owner, whose home was one of the eight student nurses murdered by Seck July 14, 1966.
Armed with a knife, Speck, 42, an itinerant merchant seaman, broke into the South Side townhouse where the student nurses left in 1907 with strips of cloth torn from a bedsheet, then killed them.
Days later Speck slashed his wrists in a room row rooming house. He was arrested when a doctor at Cook County Hospital
recognized a "born to raise hell" tattoo on his arm. The only surviving nurse described the tattoo to authorities.
Speck was sentenced to death, but the U.S. Supreme Court overturned that sentence in 1971. He was resentenced to serve eight consecutive 50- to 150-year prison terms.
Matusek and his wife, Bessie,
plan to attend the hearing with
John and Lena Wilkening of
Grifith, Ind., whose daughter,
Pamela, was another Speck victim.
The parole board will have "thousands of letters that will protest the release of Speck," Matusek said. "I don't think there'll ever be a chance of them letting him out because the public is too much behind this thing."
Prisoner Review Board Chairman Paul Kilnicar said Speck's upcoming parole hearing before a three-member board was routine. Five to seven protest witnesses are scheduled to testify.
A decision by the full 10-member board probably will be announced Friday.
SENIORS:
DON'T BE
LEFT OUT!
HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO APPEAR IN THE 1985 JAYHAWKER
SENIOR PORTRAITS
Shooting begins Monday, September 10 $3 sitting fee (waived when you buy a yearbook) Call yearbook office for appointment 12-5864-3728
AIRDRIVERS
图
SPECIALS
TABLE
BACK TO SCHOOL
SPECIALS
Genuine Marble Top Table
14" Diameter 20½" High
Reg. $150
$18
CASH & CARRY
Vibrating Pillows
KU
Bean Bag Chairs
In KU Colors and Jayhawk!
Reg. $150
$2995
In Red & Blue with Jayhawk Emblem
Reg. $30
$18
Brass Plated Hall Tree
Reg. $190
$38
CASH & CARRY
Free Parking Behind The Store
We Sponsor
PAUL HARVEY
The Rest of the Story on
96x radio
3:00 P.M.
Monday through Friday
VISA
MasterCard
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CHET
Ask About Our Own Convenient Customer Open Account Plan!
Open Thursday Evenings Until 8:30
Johnson FURNITURE CO.
722 Massachusetts
Genuine Marble Top Table
14" Diameter
20% "High
Reg. $50
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CASH & CARRY
Vibrating Pillows
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Bean Bag Chairs
In KU Colors and Jayhawk!
Reg. $50
$2995
In Red & Blue with Jayhawk Emblem
Reg. $30
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Reg. $90
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J
13th Walnut Valley Festival September 13,14,15,16,1984
Featuring in Person:
Berline, Crary & Hickman
• New Grass Revival
• Bryan Bowers
• Hot Rize
• Red Knuckles & The Trailblaze
* Torchka & Skyline
* Jheon
• Gentlemen
Ma. O Connor
• Touchstone
• Foster Family String Band
* Walt Michael & Company
* Juggernaut String Band
- Art Thieme
* Cathy Barton & Dave Para
* Southwind
- Sumit Kick Crogers
*Patrick Couton & George Fisch*
- Patrick Couton & George Fischer
Holley
Arts & Craft Fair
Winfield Fairgrounds
Joel Mabus
- Mark Nelson
* Stevie Beck
- Rolly Brown
- Russell Cook
- Dan Huckabee
* Chameleon Puppet Theatre
- Roz Brown
- Dan Huckabe
wv
Arts & Craft Fair
Workshops
8 contests
Well policed grounds
Weekend ticket includes
rough
camping
No Animals. No Beer or
Alcohol. No Drugs and
Please note for contest rules. Contests are limited to
50 contests per contest
Winfield, Kansas
At Globe Agreement 12X for $111 $111 $111 $111
At Globe Agreement 12X for $111 $111 $111 $111
No minimum deposit September 5th. Allowance to book guaranteed admission.
Any discount will be given on September 5th or wherever will be
19.12
Adena for Thursday in order to obtain a weekend leave.
Children under 12 with a visit
No Motorcycles (due to noise)
For more information and advance tickets write
association, inc
walnut valley
This will be the BEST FESTIVAL IN THE U.S. this year!! (316) 221-3250
HURRY & SAVE AT — KING Jeans
PIRATE
JUST—FOR—GALS
"JEAN SALE"
(Today thru Sunday only)
Lee Baggies
London Rider Denim
$2399
Reg. $33
Lee Junior Jeans
$1299
Button-up, pre-washed
shrunk-to-fit
Levi's 501's
$2399
Reg. $31
Straight Leg, Pre-washed
Levi's 505's
$2399
(Slightly Irreg.) (Reg. to $34)
Reg. $31
Lee
Junior Jean
Basic 5 pocket
$21.99
Reg. $30
Panama Jack
Corduroy
Jeans
$5 OFF
Reg. $33
John Henry Blouses on SALE
BEGIN
END
GO TO
BACK TO
START
VOL. 2
Stop In and Register for a FREE! Poster
(drawing held on Mon., Sept. 10)
Collage Sweaters on SALE
KING Jeans
843-3933
740 Massachusetts
Open Thurs.
Evenings
& Sundays
University Daily Kansan, September 6, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Page 14
Seahawks pick up Harris; Whitehurst signs with KC
By United Press International
SEATTLE — The Seattle Seahawks signed former Pittsburgh Steelers running back Franco Harris, who is approaching the National Football League career rushing record, to a one-year contract yesterday as a replacement for injured Curt Warner.
Warner, who last year led the Seahawks to their first playoff, suffered a season-ending knee injury Monday in Seattle's 33-0 victory over
Harris, who is just 363 yards short of Jim Brown's NFL rushing record of 12.312 yards, is expected to be in the top 50 at a time against the San Diego Chargers.
Harris, 34, was in a contract dispute with the Steelers this summer. The club released Harris Aug. 15, after he was no sign of breaking the impasse.
"Our goal here is the Super Bowl," Harris said. "It will be a hard job to replace Curt. I have all of respect for him. I'm happy to be here."
The signing of Harris was just part
of a flurry of intense activity around the Seaahawks' headquarters Wednesday. Three other veteran NFL running backs — Rickey Young, Perry Harrington and George Peoples — were given tryouts earlier in the day.
Street 647 Massachusetts Street
202 Lawrence National Bank
Lawrence Kansas
the sea. The Seahawks were anxious, even to the point of desperation, to find another running back.
Along with losing Warner for the rest of the 1984, backup Zachary Dixon also suffered a knee injury, although less serious, in the game Monday. That left Seattle with only veteran, Eric Lane — primarily a special teams player — and three fullbacks to carry the ball this Sunday.
Warner underwent surgery Tuesday to repair the damage suffered to a ligament and cartilage in his right knee. He is expected to make a complete recovery, but will not play again this season.
harris will be wearing No. 34 on his uniform when he takes the field for the Seahawks because No. 32 — which he wore at Pittsburgh for 12 years — has already been assigned to Seattle's Cullen Bryant.
DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG
He downplayed the significance of Brown's NFL rushing record in his initial meeting with the Seattle media.
more than 1,000 yards last season for the eighth time in his career.
In other National Football League transactions yesterday, the Kansas City Chiefs announced the signing of former Green Bay Packers quarterback David Whitehurst as the team's third quarterback on the roster.
Laine Cullen Brynn. Despite his age, Harris rushed for
To make room for Whitehurst on the roster, the Chiefs placed offensive tackle David Lutz on injured reserve. Lutz was injured in last Sunday's victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers and was expected to be sidelined eight to 10 weeks with a sprained right knee.
The seven-year National Football League veteran, a free agent, was scheduled to begin practicing with the team immediately to prepare for Sunday's game against the Cincinnati Bengals.
No surgery was required to repair the injured knee, but Latz will be in a cast for four weeks before he can begin rehabilitation, the Chiefs said.
Smart Lenses • visual Training
SPORTS ALMANAC
East W L Pct GB
Detroit 89 51 636
Baltimore 80 59 578
Rutland 80 59 541 13
New York 74 64 581 14
Booster 74 65 581 14
Cleveland 74 65 581 14
Milwaukee 57 82 449 31
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Minnesota 70 69 564 —
Kansas City 70 69 564 —
Calgary 70 69 564 —
Oakland 65 67 464 464 —
Boston 65 67 464 464 —
Seattle 63 77 452 452 —
Toronto 63 77 452 452 —
HUMMERDAY 5 ATLANTA
California 1, Cleveland 0
Detroit 1, Baltimore 0
Kansas City 10 innings
Oakland 5, Chicago 4
Milwaukee 7, Boston 5
Minnesota 10 innings
Seattle 6, Chicago 10 innings
Oakland 7, Young 3-7 at (Hoy)
Oakland Young 7-3 at (Hoy)
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Seattle at Seattle City, night
California at Oakland, night
California at Chicago, night
Oakland at Cleveland, night
Milwaukee at Baltimore, night
Milwaukee at Baltimore, night
W I Pct. GB
Chicago 88 51 66
New York 78 61 66
Philadelphia 78 61 66
Slu L岸 71 66 38
Montreal 68 69 12
St Louis 68 79 42
WEST
San Diego
Houston
Alabama
Los Angeles
San Francisco
San Diego
Chicago
Montreal 3; Chicago 1
New York 4; Pittsburgh 2
St. Louis 6; Philadelphia 5
London 7; San Francisco 8
Atlanta at Los Angeles
Houston (Knepper 13.9) at San
Computer science • • • • • • • •
biotechnology • • • • • • • •
marketing • • • • • • • •
administration consulting
geography
contraction
Cincinnati Pastore 381 at San Diego
Village 2, 2.5%
Chicago (Eckersley 8-7) at Montreal
(Lea 15-9); 6:05 p.m.
(Lea 15-9), 6:05 p.m.
New York (Schiraldi 0-0) at Pittsburgh
(406) 75-7900
Chicago (Eckersley 8-7) at Montreal
100-105-3200
(Rhodes 11.9), 6:35 p.m.
Philadelphia (Hudson 8:0) at St. Louis
New York (Schradler 0-0) at Pittsburgh (Bleden 1.9, 6.3, 13.8).
Philadelphia (Hudson 8-10) at St. Louis (Kearsey 4-3), 7:35 p.m.
Atlanta (Mahler 9-9) at Los Angeles
(Valenzuela 11-15), 9:35 p.m.
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, New York, night St. Louis at Pittsburgh, night Cincinnati at Los Angeles, night Milwaukee at San Francisco, night Atlanta at San Francisco, night
Pennant Race at a Glance AMERICAN LEAGUE
Overland Park, KS 913-345-1400
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Minnesota 70 69 504
Kansas City 69 69 504
California 69 69 504
Chicago 69 69 504
Chicago 64 74 404
Games remaining 21) Home (12) Texas
Sept. 7, 8. Kansas (Carson) Sept. 10, 11.
Chicago (4) Sept. 17, 18, 19. Cleveland (3)
Sep. 21, 22. Away (10) at Texas
PENTACOLOR TV
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FREE Delivery, Installation,
Games remaining 21 (Haze) 11 (Seattle)
Sept. 7 | Sept. 8 | Wankel (Seattle) 21 | Sept. 21
Sept. 9 | Sept. 10 | Wankel (Seattle) 21 | at Minnesota (Sept. 10 | Sept. 11, 12 | at Seattle)
Sept. 14 | Sept. 15 | al of California (Sept. 17 | Sept. 18, 19
Sept. 14, 15, 16, at Chicago (3) Sept. 24, 25, 26, at Cleveland (4) Sept. 27, 28, 29, 30
& service.
Kansas City 4, Minnesota 1
Games remaining (24) Home (13) —
Cleveland (3) Sept. 11, 21 Chicago (3) Sept.
11, 21 Texas (3) Sept. 31, 22 Away (1)
at Cleveland (3) Sept. 31, 22 Away (1)
at Chicago (3) Sept. 31, 22 Away (1)
at Atlanta (4) Sept. 19, 21
a b c h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
Puckettck a b c h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
Engle dh 4 0 0 0 0 Wilton cf 4 1 2 0
Engle dh 4 0 0 0 Wilson cf 4 1 2 0
Hirebk 4 0 0 0 Ostra db 4 1 1 0
Brunksmyk 4 0 0 0 White db 4 1 1 2
Gaustf 4 0 0 0 Iong tb 4 1 2 0
Gaustf 4 0 0 0 Iong tb 4 1 2 0
Laudnerc 4 0 0 0 Slaught c 3 0 1 0
RWhungfn 3 1 2 0 Pryor sb 3 1 0 0
RWhungfn 3 1 2 0 Pryor sb 3 1 0 0
McRae pb 1 0 0 0
Minnesota 001 000 000-1
Kansas City 000 001 03x-1
Game-winning RBI - White (9).
DP- Minnesota 1, Kansas City 4 LOB
-Minnesota 3, Kansas City 5 2B-
R Washington Sheridan 2
Game-winning RBI — White (9).
NEW Place
Minnesota
Smithson (L1-13) 12) 7 1 3 7 2 2 1 1 3
Davis 2 3 2 2 2 1 0
"Denver City"
Liebrandt (W-96) 8 8 1 1 0 2
Quisenberry (S-38) 1 2 0 0 0 0
T. -23 J. -18 22
--on West Campus
Info: SUA Office, 864-3477
Orienteer Kansas
RENT A PIANO
Low Cost - Month to Month
LAWRENCE PIANO RENTAL
SOLUTIONS 423-8900
--on West Campus
Info: SUA Office, 864-3477
Orienteer Kansas
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEEED
(Six hours of instruction.)
September 10, 17, and 24 (Mondays)
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
590 N. WEST 37TH ST.
CALIFORNIA, CA 95021
Register and pay $15 materials fee at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
Class size limited.
GQ
611 West 9th
843-2138
...
---
Goodies Gourmet
FRIDAY-SATURDAY Futtucini Alfredo
Call ahead, eat in or carry away.
843-6462 711 W. 23rd.
A cream and white wine and butter sauce over paper thin homemade fettucin with fresh sauteed mushrooms and homemade buttered bread.
$3.95
THE O'CLUB
NEEDS YOU
Sun, Sept. 9
8 am
A WORKSHOP AND ORIENTEERING MEET
KENNEDY GLASS INC.
Serving This Area Since 1950
Auto Glass Specialists
Insurance Claims Handled Promptly
- Commercial Glazing
- Glass Tops for Furniture
- Plate Glass & Store Quality
- Window Glass Installed
Orienteer Kansas
- Storm Windows & Doors
- Plexiglas Cut to Order
- Insulated Glass
843-4416
master charge
the assurance you need
VISA
730 New Jersey
ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY?
XII
the hymn
Join in worship with the church that brought you THE KING JAMES VERSION OF THE BIBLE,
AMAZING GRACE,
the conversion of
C. S. LEWIS,
---
PRINCE CHARLES AND LADY DIANA
CANTERBURY HOUSE 1116 LOUISIANA
Holy Eucharist Sunday evenings at 5 pm
THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH WELCOMES YOU
Dance Your Way To The Go-Go's!
THE QUEENS
The Go-Go's will appear at Sandstone Friday, Sept. 7, 1984
Twenty Go-Go's Tickets To Be Given Away.
Thursday night we've got the beat. Get ready to step out like never before. Right after 10 o'clock we're having a Go-Go's music dance contest and you're invited to enter. Our judges will pick the 10 best couples and each winning couple will receive two free tickets to The Go-Go's show at Sandstone. Dress up and get down to the Go-Go's dance contest this Thursday night. What a great way to win tickets to a great show at a great place. We weren't kidding when we told you this will be a year you'll never forget.
TONIGHT
(8:00-11:00)
25' draws and $1.00 bar drinks
GAMMONS SNOWBLE
23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center
September 6.1984
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1-1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75
16-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80
21-25 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.85
For every 5 words add. 25c 50c 75c 1.05
AD DEADLINES
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.
calcium column
Closest to the surface, allowances can be only one mm wide (within which most can be maintained). Minimum depths are just inches. No allowances allowed in display. Display heights, except for log columns, are always 150 mm.
Classified Display ... $4.20
per column inch
POLICIES
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD CAUSE count as 1 word
* Dollars use in Display Advertisement
- Defines same as Display Advertisement,
working days prior to publication
* Maintains rates based on consecutive day insertion
- only
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in
- Classified display ads do not count towards more than earned rate discount
- fill box ads - please add a $2 service charge
• checks must be company all of affiliated adsまた
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- Testtests are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
- this earned rate document
* Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
must to publication of advertising
- Not refunds on cancellation of prepaid classified advertising
- Aborted lease and a $2 service charge
- Checks are in compliance with all relevant laws and terms to the University.
- Provides an account of any accommodations received to make it easier to advance.
mind terms can be advertised FIRS of charge for a period or over one week three days. These ads can be placed online or by calling the business office at 844-4130.
- No responsibility as to the misuse of the correct insertion of any advertisement.
- No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertisement.
ATTENTION FEMALE ATHLETES! 7 Tryouts for KU Women's Fastpitch Team will begin September 3. All interested athletes contact Nate Schmitt, ksu.edu/fieldhouse. B44.757 for KU.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until it has been established
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4350
(Become a KU Student Ambassador!) Interested students should have a general working knowledge of the University and be able to commandeer computers. Students are encouraged to manner in high school students. This position requires that applicants be full-time students with a master's degree or a minimum 2.5 cumulative grade point average. Applications are available in the Office of Admissions at KU on Monday, September 17.
GAY AND LESBIAN SERVICES OF KANSAS
INFORMATIONAL & ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
Thursday, September 6
7:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Room Kansas Union
EVERYONE WELCOME
**GREATEST PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS**
**WORKSHOP** Learn to define a topic, organize your notes, use the library, manage your time. Wednesday 12.9 to 10.9 p.m., Downtown Addison Dell Hall FIEE. FRIES by The Dell Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall Bldg. 8944-0644
Heart VCE with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curry
$30. Wine & Spirits $44.87/week $38.90, 9-10
$9.30, 9-10 FST.
Image 19 'Color T' 628 858 a month Curtis
Mathews, 144 W.71 F 828 987 (09-30-96)
(open 9-30-96)
THE FAR SIDE
Budget Stretcher coupons Thurs. evening,买的
$10 & receive $1 coupon toward next purchase
Cross Reference, Malls Shopping Center
Candlelight Special this Thurs. Eve. 5:30/8:00
20% off albums & cassettes in stock Cross
Reference. Malls Shopping Center.
DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING
Learn to initiate conversations, make new
connections and ask questions
September 10, 6:30 - 9:00 p.m. FREE. Please
registrate to attend at the Student Assistance
Center.
IMPROVE YOUR READING: COMPRESSED
SIGN ASHAN SMITH, executive seminars,
exams, workshops and classes, June to
September, Monday-Saturday, Sep 24 to
7. 9 to 9. 30 pm; materials fee $15.
Register at the Student Assistance Center, 122
7th Street, New York, NY 10006.
Is it true you can buy jeeps for $44 through the U.S. government? Get the facts today! Call 1312-742-1181 Ext. 3094
KWALITY COMICS. SALE Aug. 21rd thru Sept
8th, 107 W. 71H, 843-7239
Latin American Student Association invites all Latin students to come to our meeting to be held September 6th in the Regional Room in the Kansas Union at 5:30 p.m.
RESEARCH PAPERS' 306 page catalog - 15,728
tables) Rush $2.90 RESEARCH 11,122 Idabeo, NJ
ML West $9.005 (213) 477 8256
On Sale Near You! $3.50 ea
- * * MUM SALE * * *
Lambda Sigma
Parent's Day Mum Sale
September 4-15
On Sale Near You! $4.50 ea
*STEEN BOOKS* Lawrence's Wommy's and children's bookstore for ALL women, collectively operated by her husband, you are invited to meet her at 10 a.m., Sept. 8-12, Open house: 110/12 Mass. + 30 Parkick Picnic and Women's Dance (8 p.m.) at Clinton Park, 3b & Ai. Shn. for events or directions.
Shirley纽威尔, formerly of Charte Beauty Salon, is now at Angles Beauty Salon, 94 Massachusetts. M.F.Cell 843-404 for Shirley September Special Shampoo & Haircare - 88.
Tired of large long distance telephone bails? TO trim, your only quick and efficient local long distance company in Lawndale, CA is **Puerto Rico** anywhere in the U.S. Hawaii. Puerto Rico and Alaska. There are no monthly minimums, no service charge, or call to inform your TM representative at 843 956.
By GARY LARSON
Extinct Extinct
Sorry Extinct
© 1984 Universal Press Syndicate
9.6
Suddenly, Bobby felt very alone in the world.
Flymouth Thrill Shop For housewives, clothing,
girlfriends, Saturdays, 9:12-10:30, Thursday, 9:4-
10:30, 9:12-10:30, Thursday evenings, 7:8-10,
9:40. Verdict
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All requests. Lighting included. Reasonable Rates. Referrences 749-121.
BLOOM COUNTY
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
Comedy Writers - I need original stand-up material. Mike: 843-7559.
3-bedroom, 2 bath townhouse w/garage. Swimming pool available. Excellent southwest location. $859/mo. Call 841-6537
2-BR App. like New, on Busroute, C/A/W D-inclie-
sion, $300/month, 841, 1314, 843-0038.
3-bedroom house, new furniture; new carpet, sun
porch, fireplace; walk to KU 130 KY 84198
AMALON APARTMENTS. Water & gas paid in
Large, furnished apartment, 6 rooms. (3)
bedrooms, 1/2 bath, fireplace, central air,
garage, close to K.U. Very nice A couple or
3 serious students. 842.7487
Designed for a group of students, classy, huge and energy efficient 600 watt 799-1682 843-9427 Female Christian roommate needed to share the space with a 50 watt 799-1682 Female Roommate—to share Apt 75/1 watt 7.2 utiliztes, deposit, semi formified, near downtown & barcode. Patricia Palenetta, 794-0368
large one & two bedroom apts. Ready for immediate occupancy. Close to KU. And on balcony. For more info, call Kaw Valley Mgmt at 811-6900.
ATTENTION ASSORTED HOUSEMATE!
I AM HOME NOW AND PLAN TO
WATCH THE CUBS GAME THAT I
RECORDED LAST NIGHT IN MAY
NEW VCR. WHICH IS THE WAY?
I HOPE NOBODY
HAS MESESED
WITH DURING
THE DAY!
watee or female roommate. Three college girls
looking for 4th chairmate. 4 bedroom
Traitlure towhouse. $140 plus 1/4 utilities. Very
comfortable. #81-907
Now leaving one, two & three bedrooms apts,
and displays. Prey you for to move into good loca-
tions, some on basline. Contact Kavail Valley Mngt
at 841 6900
uppertors for roommates; one block from can-
nery; big 4 bedrooms, living room, kitchen with
fining area, bathroom with 2 winters; back porch
wetlooking room; laundry, just remodeled
118 per roommate of 4, also winters. For 1. See
table 64. Call 822-7692, 791-7118, 824-4545.
RLD MILL AFPARTMENTS. Now leasing newly emodeled one and two bedrooms apts —walking distance to K IU, and on busiwer. Ready for in-motion invoices, 9-month fees. Call (212) 342-2066.
Try cooperative living! Sunflower House, 1400
Temessee, 749-0871. Ask for Dawn. Inexpensive &
private rooms are available.
Qual rooms in family home in Old West Lawrence. Some kitchen privileges, $100 and $200 per room, including a bedroom, spacious bedroom apartments available for fall, for i or ii people. Include fully equipped kitchen, carpeting, central air, laundry facilities, on KU bus route, gas & water pay. For more inquiries, call 518-796-3413.
CLICK!
Two-bedroom townhouse in Meadowbrook available for sublease from mid-Sept. Rent reduce ed. 821.1514
FOR SALE
1978 Kawasaki K2 400, bookrack, highways pegs,
windshield, 370 miles, excellent condition, 5700
KYI, YEPI
1976 Yamaha 500, good condition, 10-speed men's
track car. 280-480cc, 96-98 EPA.
Sansei Chauquet Stereo System; includes direct drive, turntable, integrated amplifier, tuner, cassette deck, equalizer, speakers & beautiful rack 8 mone, old Call, J141-2123. Anytime
1077 Kawadaki KZ.796 large 3rd Feld Pender paulch.
280-saft a.mts. $54,843-624.
1979 Citation Mobile home 14 x 60 2 br-, unfir-
nished, CA, deck, storage shed, deluxe kitchen,
garden kit, extra size, 81-936, weekends & even-
ings, 105/20/92 data.
[90] Honda Moped Express SR, in good condition.
[91] Call (855) 724-3490.
1980 Yamaha XS 600, $750, 841,332, 452 California?
78 HONDA CX-500. FLEXIFlaring, new Dumpings,
E.C. $900 negligible. #43 390 events.
5.2 Cubic ft. Refrigerator - $125, 72 Datsun 500,
runs, body in bad shape Best offer over $360
499, 738
REWIND
REWIND
REWIND
REWIND
REWIND
REWIND
© 2014
FOR SALE: Bookscases, starting at 49.90 The Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 60th
AUDI Fax, 199. 4-7rd, auto $150, Electronica speakers K20 exa. Power ampler W20, W200. Karen audio 72W $130, 841, 1982
Commodore- 64 computer with dataset. Do word processing, color graphics' Great for students. Like new model $300, price negotiable Call Tim. Days: 8143-8294. Fax: 749-4246
For your furnishing and your living quarters, we have what you need. Thrift stores at 628 Vermont and is E. 9th.
Hei Hei 6k4, disk drive with controller $569
Apple IIc Hei 8k2, anti-mount device. Apple product
$199.
Flexible arm lamps, 100 watt capability. Regular $44.95, use $19.95. Rob's Brewing Sewing and Vacuum Center, 24804 Iowa (Holiday Plaza) 820-1295.
Bookcases, beds, desks. Everything But Ice. 616
Vermont
Guitar: Ibanez Accounts, electric cutaway 3
mos old. 275, 864-2900 Titan
Men's 25" lightweight 12 speed. Men's tall
10-speed. women's 10-speed, men's 5-speed. Call 849-7257. mts 7.9
Queen size Water bed $80; Drawing board $10; Call:
841-1434
Queen Water Webbars $179.95 complete The Furniture Barn. 101 W. gth.
table, 4 chairs, desk, dressers, bed, chest,
bookhelves, and tables, etes. 8423 1283 after 530
Personal Computer APPLE Macintosh
Computer 8500 Series MAC 8500
Microsoft BASIC $2200 Call 8423 7381
Oak Drafting table/desk Good condition Best of
fer. 841-546
The Ultimate System ALPINE 7136
d/Gio/Autolev/Dobly AUDIOMOBILE amps
SA200; /2 SA400; uncl SA300 FQ Fader.
Solid Wood . D. Drawer Chests: $89.95 The Furniture Barn, 11W 6th H
MODEL: MIDEX RTL-3800 (MK124) Cable Length: 15.990 EQ. Frequency: 5 GHz EXEC Elect Xover 8000 Xover 8000 2 ways 16 subwoofers in racket, Timer/premier AT alarm all DIN, power & speak cables
Samikic studio piano, 40 in. old, black $280
Yamaha MT-44 3-rack recorder $700 Male
$129
Twin Mattresses and Foundations. $119 per set.
The Furniture Barn. 11W. 6th floor
by Berke Breathed
AND NOW.
MUTUAL OF
OMAHA
PRESENTS
PENGUINS
NANTARCTICA'S
LITTLE GUENNS!
I KILL WHEN
PEOPLE RECORD
OVER MY
PROGRAMS
Western Civilization Notes - including New Supplement to the Western Civilization Notes, and a Study Guide to use for class preparation. For exam preparation, "New Analysis of Western Civilization, available at Town Ocean. The." [A New Book by Peter Porter.]
Used Metal Office Chairs. Side chairs with & without arms $1 & $10. Stainless screw chair with casiors $1. Excel. Sewel chair with casiors $20. 84 after 2 a.m.
WINDSURFING SAILBOARDS priced from $540
Large selection of imported models. NATURAL
WAY, 29 Massachusetts. 841-400-736
Yamaha receiver, Pioneer tape deck with 2 speakers 400. Drafting table & chair $129. Call 843-2241
Women's 10-speed Schwinn Traveler III $125
843-5296, 5:7 p.m or ask for Laurian, 221c
Summerfield
AUTOSALES
COMPLETE TERMINAL. Zenith ZT 11 Terminal with built-in Auto Digital modem, auto log-on feature, parallel centronics) and RS22 portes. Zenith ZT 12M灵肖 Monitor 460. 842/2968
TWIN RED in very good cond. $20. Call 841-2901.
with built in Auto Dial modem, and ogn
manual dialer for any number. ZM123
ZM123 ZM123 HI Mon register $405. 824-268
Furniture (Hold a bed $40, Dresser $40,
Bathroom $40, Desk $40, Shelves $40)
Bag bag $10, Camera Jie $40, Fashion
bag $10, Job Clea Jie $40, 843-456
1971 Buck Skylark, PS, PB, AT, AC, excellent
body. Body rough. 862; Call 841-7146 or 864-568
1972 Ford. Extra clean, perfect interior. Good mechanic condition K530. Ask for K448. B434-7723. 1972 Fired, white leather interior. AT, FS. PK. B448. 1972 Fired, same rust, four K448. B449-692
1973 V W. Karmann Ghia. Good condition and inexpensive to run. Price negotiable. 841-8073.
1972 Triumph TR7 recently rebuilt engine, new starter, alternator, clutch plate, AM/FM stereo cassette, power antenna, air radios, no on/off runs, great call. Gush 841,1223 and runs
1978 Mustang II a.c. great, vgl on gas, new tires. A good
tire for a student. $250. 943-248-290
65 VW Bug, strong engine. Phil. 842-2822. eve. &
workends.
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND in Wescool classroom on Aug. 31. Pen & Pencil set in holder. Call 864 4520, or come to 3116
Lost: Cahoon Cat, one yr old. Last seen - 17th &
Iowa, please call 642-4999 or return - 1715 Indiana
Reserve
loving orange & white weeded man cat, friend, answers to Carmichael, lives in lukes block of Louisiana and rums the bread neighborhood. If found, please call 843-2531.
HELP WANTED
Bartenders & Doormen. Must be 21. Apply after 2 p.m.
at: rooney.mcw in Wichita, Wisconsin
p.m. at Romeo's.
Child care is offered for group care home
children. At least one spouse must have
bachelor degree from an accredited college. Must have background in child psychology. Must have strong desire to work with and to improve the learning environment of children. Care home has excellent 9 year record with well-developed Teaching Family Model and an active, compassionate approach. Current Certified Teaching Parents will provide on 90 days on sight training. Program required for Admission to School Services. Applicants must be available to work.
1. 1987 Applicant must be working toward bachelor degree or in graduate school. Ottawa University, local, and 2 colleges within 25 miles. Send resume to JobForce, a nationally employed employer. Salary can be with experience. Room: Board, health insurance. Send resume to Yeshiva Services, Inc., P.O. Box 201.
Computer Science Student, well versed in computer operations, qualified to install installations of Microsoft Windows, mission sales and payroll for installations and operator training. Mickey Work Business Systems
Coordinator Newsletter editor for the East Lawrence Improvement Association, a neighborhood based organization, will send you a $100 appointment must have administrative experience, organizing skills, ability to publish periodic newsletter, some knowledge of customer relations, diverse groups and individuals and a demonstrated commitment to helping people help others. Send resume to Jennifer W. self-starting. Apply by letter and resume, with two letters of recommendation by September 10th. Contact Barbara Bassett, RS, 645-8244 ELLA EIJA MF 842-9749
dependable female to assist disabled with care.
No experience required. Morning, weekend &
evening hour available. Call between 1:54
- 792-0288.
FRESHMEN - It's not too late to join NAVAL
BUTC. Call 644-106)
GRADEDATE ASSISTANT Primary duty to assist with production of journals and occasional publications. Provide assistance with special projects for Center for Humane Studies may include teaching skills which will enhance experience with ATMS and or WordStar word processing. Experience with six months' flexibility in schedule.
Micro Computer sales person, Foll and part time
inside sale, some outside sale. Knowledge of
hardware and software required. Send or bring
resume to Compatparkt, 711 W.铁道, Lawrence.
ten months (liability in scheduling work is possible and salary ranges are $429-$1090 for application and resume to the Center for Application of Management in Kansas [694-8740] or by September 7, 1984)
respond responsible person to care for two great kids
i my home, a 9 m, to 1 m, p81 0481
Immediate hires for part-time grit personnel.
All shifts available. Especially room rushes &
merrings. Apply in person at Vista restaurants
329 W. 11th
Openings for part and full-time fountain personnel. All shifts available. Apply in person at Vista "estaurants, 127 W. 5th H
Part-time, bartender and Cocktail waitresses.
Must be 21 yrs. of age. The New Place: 2406 Iowa,
842 950
'bane teacher qualified in Suzuki method needed
'biliam's Music House. 843-3907
fine graduate research assistant to assist the Associate Dean of Architecture with the construction of new libraries and research $290 per month, to begin as soon as possible. Appointment ends in 8-15-33. Submit resume with phone number to Janiece Ballow. **M. Marvin, Lawrence KS 69043**. Applications on Job Board.
SOLID WOOD Student desks. $89. The Furniture
$arn. 1811 W. 6th
Someone to drive a piano tuner around on Tues-
day and Thursday. Pulliam's Music: 843-207
day and Thursday, Pauluma's Music @ 843-700
University of Kansas Budget局 has an open
position for a continual hull time graduate,
resume by September 25. Applications
department during summer. The position will assist with the
process of budget and accounting transfer to
the university. Participate in the preparation of the four University budgets. The person assuming this position will gain a good
education and experience working in the
workplace to work within the University financial environ-
ment. Acceptance is a K.U. graduate program, 7
years of post-secondary education and
munications will required $6,800 per month for a
half time appointment. Date Sep. 31
2014. For information, call W. Winkler.
The University Daily KANSAN
WATTERS AND WATTERS NEEDED. Garrison's nightly is interviewing workmates and waiting for massage treatments. Experience helpful, but not necessary. Phone 842-7573 for an appointment.
Bilderlehre & Driehler. *Must be digitally benakernable, harfbearnend und work with stakeholders*. are perioed by Appliy Hui - Well 2 a p.m. in nineteen on, at Piazza Nuova Hui - Well 2 a p.m. in nineteen on.
Wanted. Part time shift supervisor. Must be 18, able to work nights and weekends. Apply in person only at Border Rendition 1528 W. 21st St.
MISCELLANEOUS
Work Study position move open in the organiza-
tion of a new position. The work study
container ctypk type position will continue the end
of Spring Semester 1985. Prefer application
to position for Spring Semester 1986. Applica-
tions are available and need to be returned to room 204.
PERSONAL
Wide choice Desk Lamps and Accessories to brighten your room at The Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 6th.
Applications available in 319 Strong Hall, EOE
nEWARD for info leading to the return of my
paint, taken last paint from sth 41f at Art Bldg
28 x 19 on canvas. Contact Susan Bethke
b492370. Keep trying.
S. W.M. 36 inmate, seeks a taste of freedom thru correspondence: Serious inquiries only. B. Lemons, Box 2, Lansing, KS 6041
Happy 22nd
BIG GUY!
Sensitive, nurturing women and men are needed to spend positive time with children of domestic violence, on a one-to-one basis or in group settings. If possible, avoid breaking the cycle of violence, please call for Women's Transitional Care services; 414 6087 before Sep. 8. WTCS, the battered woman shelter, is looking for volunteers who can help support victims. Voters of all ages, race and ethnic backgrounds are encouraged to apply. A community service opportunity will be pursued. Volunteer for daytime as well as evening are needed. Call 414 6087 before Sep. 8.
BUSINESS PERS
COMPRESENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
highly advanced and outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater area; a call for appointment at 845-190-3600.
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
Mornings with kids
3-5 days at Head Start.
Coul 832-2515 for information
Call 842-2515 for information.
FIRST AID MUSIC, dance and other Latin American Music. JJ. La Gorda, Sept. 10, 8 p.m. at the Jazebus. $2. sponsored by Latin American Solidarity.
Barb's Vintage Rose
New Arrival
Vintage Clothing 1920-1950
Velvets, Silks, Wools
11% Max. Price: 641-3461
Mail-in Card 80 cents
Inflation Fighters, 8 East 5th. For your needs in dresses and matti suits to Couture & browns Horseshoes, dresses and matti suits to Couture & browns Horseshoes.
LOOK AND FEEL GREAT
Sunny day
EUROPEAN
FREE DAY MEMBERSHIP*
& HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA + HOLIDAY PLAZA
Aerobics, Weight Room,
Environmental Hot Tub Room
(OH 25% OFF SINGLE MEMBERSHIP)
Good Until Sept. 10, 84
FALL SALE
2 For 1
GET NOTICED
KWALITY.COMICS, SALE, Aug. 23rd thru Sept.
LAMP CLOSE OUT Lava L1. A $29. 95 $16. 85
LAMP DISCONNECTED Lava L2. A $34. 95 $16. 85
LAMP DISCONNECTED Lava L3. Systems Veronica B 804, 364
STAEFETE/MARS Tech prespa. 7 pen set
$3.36 1.96 for $22. 9 with head supply. Strips
L804, 364
Computerark
KNOWLEDGE SERVEES EDUCATION
Zeutha 2014 & University 814069
Mirrow 2014 & University 814069
Commodore 2014 & University 814069
THE BEST WORKOUT IN TOWN. Lawrence
Aerobics by Christopher M. Thompson, F.I.A. at 1 p.m. 5 t.
School's John Gym, 129 Vermont Come to a
FREE class, N. 3, 4, 6, 7
M
The New Place, for a rich atmosphere at an affor-
dable price. The New Place, a private club. 2406
"ona.842.923".
INDIAMAJONES
ENTIC HATS
BY STETSON
NOW AVAILABLE
O NOW MANY OTHER HATS
PLUS MANY OTHER HATS
THE ETC. SHOP
THE FUN PLACE TO BE
BEATEN-NEW 1950's
WOOL BANDED JACKETS
CUSTOM SKMING Dressmaking and alterations.
Call 842.5373. Reasonable prices.
TWINT BEADS $2 each, or 6 for $10 Call 841-6066.
5 p.m. 10 p.m.
SERVICES OFFERED
121 Strong Hall.
COMMUTERS Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
NEED A RIDE-HIDER? Use the Self Servie Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kassarry. COMMUTERS! Self Servie Car Pool Exchange
TUTORS/TUTES Inquire at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
KANSAN
Charme Beaute Salon is now offering Haircuts for
$7, and permits for $2 & up. Call or come in for a
professional cut or perm at a great price. Charme
Salon, 1035 Mass. 843-3390
Charme Beauty Salon - Item of the $1 Haircut
complete auto care for domestics and imports at
Gateway Auto Center on W 6th st. across from
Sunrise Drive, in 841 5700
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown All haircuts. $5 No appointment
necessary
MATH TUTOR for most courses, 843-9032
TEENIA: Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner Advanced Group Individual 842 5585
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing. Judy.
842 7945
TYPING
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers Word Processing, Professional Results - resumes, papers, a specialty. Call 749-1118
24 Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fast service. 811-5060
Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term papers, dissertations etc. IBM correcting selections III. 842. 674 or 842. 261. Noon - 10:30 p.m.
Always try the best for professional service.
Term papers, thesis, resumes, etc. Reasonable
842-3246
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI
CLIENT 841-350
DEMANDABLE, professional experienced.
JEANETTE SAFFER - Typing Service
TRANSCRIPT also, standard cassette tape
8430977
Professional TYPEING, EDITING GLAPHICS.
IBM Correcting Selectable, Katherine. 842 93713 before 5pm
RELIABLE, experienced typing/word processing
of term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. $1.25 a
nage. Make Mike after 6:00, 8:43, 943 743.
Somersite & Avance | Professionals at Competitive Rates Word Processing, Typing "Typescript in APA Style" Lawrence 901 Kentucky 841-3449 841-3035 202. Western 323-3816
TOP TYPING. 1203 Iowa. Professional typing processing, editing Resumes from start to finish, repetitive letters, editing our specatures. Email resume. Self-recruitment self-recruiting. Mon. Fri. 9. 6/4. 843 675
WANTED
Experienced typist. Term papers, thesis, all-moccalene IHM Correcting Selector Eilec or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9554 Mrs. Wright
Female roommate Trailer屋, good location $115/mo plus 1/2 gas & elem. 1 smoke 749-6932 Female roommate wanted to share two bedroom duplex (completely) furnished with
concentrate wanted to share nice two bedroom doubles. Completely furnished with washer and dryer $150/mo plus utilities. Choose to room 841.2600.
Roammate: to share large house 1/4 rent, 1/4
utility, on bus route 749 3286
Roommate for a duplex, one half block off of campus. Rent $100 plus 1/2 utilities. Call 842 908 or 841 0815.
We buy VW's, running or not. Call Metric Motors,
812-9200
---
CLASSIFIEDS
Classified
Including:
Write ad here:
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Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Phone
Name
Address
Dates to run
to
1 Day $2.80
2-3 Days $3.55
4-5 Days $3.75
10 Days or 2 Weeks $6.75
Classified Display
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1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
10 weeks $8.90 $8.90 $8.75 $8.75
For every 5 weeks
Bottles 754 604 754 815
Mail or deliver to 119 Stauffer - Flint Hall
September 6,1984 Page 16
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
'Rushbacker' Anderson a rarity among linemen
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Associate Sports Editor
Jeff Anderson is listed as the starting left defensive tackle on the KU football team, but in the KU defensive scheme Anderson is known as the "rushbacker."
"I've never come across a defense that had a rushbacker," Anderson said. "It's kind of like an outside linebacker and defensive end all rolled into one."
Folded into one:
Instead of lining up in a three-point stance and butting heads with opposing offensive tackles, Anderson lines up outside the tackle in a two-point stance.
"My responsibilities basically are to keep the tight end and tackles off the linebackers and to keep the outside contained and turn the flow to the inside." Anderson said. "We need to get tackles (just that, my ears back) and get the quarterback. It's basically a free-wheeling position."
wearing positional
Anderson, a junior from Evergreen, Colo., should have plenty of opportunities to get the quarterback Saturday, when KU opens its season against Wichita State Shocker quarterback Brian McDonald completed 18 of 37 passes for 131 yards in
WSU's season-opening loss to Southwest Texas State last Saturday.
"If we get a good pass rush and contain the quarterback, we can pretty much shut them down, if we do our job," Anderson said.
At 6-foot-3 and 225 pounds, Anderson will be at a size disadvantage against most of the offensive lineman he'll face this season. Saturday, he line up against Jerry Quick, a 6-5, 295-pound tackle.
"if I had any choice, I'd want to play against him all year long, because I know I can beat him because of quickness," Anderson said.
KU's defensive line as a whole is relatively small. The average size of the four starting interior linemen — Anderson, Robert Tucker, Steve Nave and Phil Forte — is 227 pounds. That isn't the kind of size that strikes fear into the hearts of opponents.
"It it does bother me in a way," Anderson said. "It would be nice to have linemen that are 67, 280 or 290, but with the people we have, since we don't have the size, we have the quickness to make up for it."
Because of the size deficiency, KU's wide-tackle six defense has been modified somewhat this year with the addition of the rushbacker position.
"In the wide-tackle six you have to have a certain kind of personnel." Anderson said. "We really didn't have that last year. With this defense we have the adequate personnel."
Anderson, whose father played football and basketball at KU in the mid 1950s, earned prep all-America honors as a defensive tackle at Evergreen High and was recruited by all the Big Eight conference schools. A pre-med major, Anderson said he chose KU because of its academic reputation.
acceded. he was KU's third-string tight end at this time last year. He was switched to defense in spring drills, and impressed the coaches enough to be named the team's most improved defensive lineman.
"Everyday I grow more comfortable with it," Anderson said.
Sylvester Byrd, KU's starter at tight end last year, decided to redshirt this year, leaving KU with no experienced tight ends. KU head coach Mike Gottfried said Anderson was too valuable on defense to move back to tight end. That suits Anderson fine.
sorry.
"I came to Kansas with the idea that I was going to play tight end, but right now I wouldn't want to think about playing any other position except rushbacker," he said.
White boosts KC into tie for lead
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo — Managers Dick Howser of Kansas City and Billy Gardner of Minnesota both wanted Frank White at the plate in the eighth inning of Wednesday night's game between the two American League West front-runners.
Gardner, in fact, had relief pitcher Ron Davis walk Jorge Orta intentionally with two outs and the score 1-1 to get to White. Pat Sheridan opened the inning for the Royals with a double.
Howser wanted White at the plate because he was one of the few Royals in the lineup who has ever been involved in a pennant race.
White came through for Howser, hitting a double to the left-field corner to score both runners and trigger a three-run inning. The hit gave the Royals a 4-1 victory and a share of first place with the Twins with identical 70-69 records — Kansas City's first appearance at the ton since opening day.
"Normally Frank's a No. 6 or No. 7 hitter." Howser said. "But with all of our injuries, we've had to use him at No. 5 — and No. 5 hitters are supposed to drive in runs. You want Frank White up there. He gets the big hit. He's done it throughout his career here."
Sheridan hit a one-out double down the left-field line off Minnesota starter Mike Smithson, 13-12, and
Davis came on in relief. After Darry Motley popped out to shallow center Davis walked the left-handed hitter Orta to get to the right-handed hitter White.
But White hit a 1-0 pitch for his second game-winning RBI in as many nights for the Royals, who also won Tuesday night, 4-1. Dane lorg followed with an RBI single for an insurance run.
Charlie Leibrandt allowed eight hits, did not吹 a batter and struck out one over eight innings, improving his record to 9-6. Dan Quisberry pitched the ninth inning for his league-leading 38th save.
league reading book
The Twins opened the third with back-to-back singles to center by Ron Washington and Kirby Puckett
MICHAEL KING
JACKIE KELLY/KANSAN
Top KU cross country runners Greg Leibert (left) and Brent Steiner stretch out before practice at Memorial Stadium yesterday. As the two most experienced runners, they will try to lead the team to an improvement on its fourth place finish in the Big Eight Conference last year.
Timmons cutting down on miles
By CHRIS LAZZARINO Sports Writer
The competition for the top spot on this year's men's cross country team is tight, with two top returning starters for Coach Bob Timmons leading the pack.
Seniors Brent Steiner and Greg Leibert are in command of the top two positions. Beyond that, little is known about what will happen. Timmons said.
"the team is looking good. Brent and Greg look like the best now." Timmons said. "But beyond that, I don't know where anyone will be. No one has run full speed yet. Everything will be proven in the time trials."
The time trials will be Saturday KU opens its cross country season Sept. 15 in a dual against Southern Illinois.
Timmons is using a training program that is different from the one he has used in past years. The
program has the runners log fewer miles but run faster, and seems to be effective for the top two runners.
Steiner has been plagued by a painful right knee, but putting in fewer miles keeps his knee in better shape.
"My knee is still painful, but so far it really isn't I bothering me." Steiner said. "My knee bothered me a bit this summer, but I still came in in better shape than in the past."
"The workouts are definitely easier this year, but people don't seem to be working as hard because everyone is in pretty good shape. Coach Timmons is realizing individual differences in runners."
Steiner finished third individually at the 1983 Big Eight Conference Championships in Lawrence last fall with a time of 30 minutes, 33.62 seconds.
Leibert echoed Steiner's praise for the new training regimen.
"in high school, I put in over 100 miles per week. My coach thought that that type of program would
improve my running." Leibert said
improve my running " Leibert said.
However, Leibert said that after coming to KU and running for Timmons, he found that a training program involving fewer miles worked better.
"I have found that running 60 to 65 miles per week works much better for me," he said.
Injuries hit the Jayhawks hard last year and staying healthy is a must if the Jayhawks are to improve on last year's fourth place finish in the Big Eight Conference Championships, Leibert and Steiner said.
Iowa State finished first in the conference last year. Leibert said that the Cyclones, Colorado and Kansas State looked good this year.
"If we suffer some injuries, we could be in sad shape," Leibert said. "If we stay healthy, well, we will just have to wait and see what happens."
Both Letbert and Steiner said that they are coming into this season in good shape, but neither would say who will run in the top spot for KU.
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Fired up
Pushed and prodded by fierce southwest winds, a grass fire yesterday in southern Jefferson County scarred 800 acres of rangeland and drew firefighters from
several cities. The hot wind was no help at the fire, but the blustery day was a breeze for Charlie Perry, who has a windmill on his farm near Lawrence. See page 3.
WINDAY
Breezy High, 95. Low, 60. Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 95, No. 10 (USPS 650-640)
Friday, September 7, 1984
U.S. nuclear first use possible, Ferraro says
By SUZANNE BROWN Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Geraldine Ferraro said yesterday that she could foresee a time when the United States might have to use a nuclear weapon first.
But the Democratic candidate for vice president would not describe the battle conditions that might force the United States to fire a nuclear weapon before its opponent.
Ferraro appeared at a reception and lathonete at the Hilton Plaza Inn in Kansas City, Mo., to garner support from Missouri Republican candidates. He voteregistration drives for the 1984 campaign.
Registration drive At a news conference before the $1,000-a person reception, Ferraro explained the difference between a first strike and a first use of nuclear weapons to about 50 reporters.
"A first strike is you decide that you're going to take all your weapons and throw them," she said. "I was absolutely correct in saying that I don't see conditions for a first attack."
HOWEVER, A FIRST use of weapons, she said, occurred when nations were involved in a war using conventional, non-nuclear weapons, and government leaders of one country decided to attack another. Such nuclear weapons, such as artillery shells, as a deterrent to the enemy.
Herrero said in a statement. Ferraro said that the United States could
not even discuss a no-first use policy until it had strengthened its conventional forces in Europe to match those of the Soviet Union. When asked whether she could conceive of a first-use policy by the United States, Ferraro replied "Yes."
Ferraro was polite but firm in her reponses to reporters' questions. The 49-year-old Queens, N.Y., congresswoman appeared poised throughout the 20-minute conference, furthering media opinion that she has successfully weathered last month's storm of controversy over her and her husband's finances.
Reporter at yesterday's conference did not mention the finances.
FERRARO REITERATED IER belief that the threat of nuclear war was the most important issue in this year's campaign. She laughed when a reporter mentioned Vice President George Bush's remark that Ferraro was scaring people with her talk of
"I'm sorry I'm frightening Vice President Bush," she said "You can't go through life pretending that everything is just rosy You don't protect people by not telling them what's going on."
ALEXANDRA BURKINSON
See FERRARO, p. 5, col. 1
KC campaign visit draws aid, support from students
By JOHN HANNA
Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Susan Rohman yesterday leamed against the steering wheel of a maroon van, the 17th vehicle in the 18-vehicle motorcade of Rep. Geraldine Ferraro. Democratic candidate for vice president.
Rohlman, Zenda freshman, was one of about 20 members of KU's College Young Democrats who worked with the Democratic campaign of Walter Mondale and Ferraro as it stopped in Kansas City yesterday and Wednesday.
"We're about time we had a woman in there," Rohlman said as she waited in the parking lot of the Hilton Plaza Inn.
Ferraro arrived about 11:30 a.m. at the Hilton to attend a fund-raising reception and luncheon and to meet members of the local and national press.
ROHMAN AND THE OTHER members of the College Young Democrates spent the two days of Ferraro's Kansas City visit driving vehicles in the motorcade, carrying luggage, typing schedules and running messages for Ferraro's staff.
Alison Young, Ormah, Neb., freshman also was working for the campaign as a member of the College Young Democrats. She said she was impressed with Ferraro's energy when she typed the candidate's schedule Wednesday.
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
"It had 'free time,' in all caps," she said, "and she had about 15 minutes."
Later, at Kansas City International Airport, the College Young Democrats met with Ferraro.
Young said she had missed about seven hours of class in two days.
of hours in a two day.
"My teachers don't know," she said. "This
See CROWD; p. 5, col. 4
Geraldine Ferraro, Democratic vice-presidential candidate, ty. Mo., Hilton Plaza Inn. About 300 people paid $250 each to talks with guests at a fund-raising luncheon at the Kansas Ci- attend the lunchun, which was yesterday.
KU, WSU ready for game
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Associate Sports Editor
If misery loves company, then the Kansas Jayhawk football team should welcome Wichita State with open arms when the two teams square off in KU's season opener tomorrow.
Game time is 1:30 p.m. at Memorial Stadium
KU's football prospects haven't been too promising so far. The Jayhawks are picked to finish last in the Big Eight conference this year. They are under a 2-year NCAA probation. Four key players have been declared academically ineligible. Sylvester Byrd, last year's starter at tilted end, is redshifting this year.
BUT WUS'T OUTLOOK is just as grim. They, too, are under NCAA probation. The Shockers are rebuilding under first-year head coach Ron Chismar. They're in
in their season-opening game last Saturday, WSU lost 38-13 to Southwest Texas State, an NCAA Division I A team that moved up this year from Division II.
danger of losing NCAA Division I-A status if they don't average 21,000 fans at home games this year. While KU has only 81 players on scholarship, the lowest total in the Big Eight conference, WSU has only 75 players in all.
THE SHOCKERS HAVE one advantage in that they've already played a game, but that has its drawbacks, too. Chismar points out.
"We've got a very young program," Chismaar said. "We're not to the point where we can concentrate on individual threes or try and get slick and fancy."
Chismar said his team concentrated on
the just basics' in preparation for this
winter season.
See WSU, p. 16, col. 3
Late arrival puts some in smaller rooms
Bv JULIE COMINE
Staff Reporter
Monica Olivera, a freshman from Lima,
Peru. still hasn't unpacked her suitcases.
She has lived in an ironing room on the seventh floor of Oliver Hall since she arrived at the University of Kansas about two weeks ago.
Olivera was assigned to the temporary room — next door to a trash chute at the end of the hallway — because regular rooms in the residence halls already were booked.
"I'd kind of like to stay here now," she said. "It's going to be terrible to have to move in the middle of the semester. It'll disrupt my studying, and I'll have to meet new friends."
Olivera said she didn't know when she would be moved to a regular-sized room in another hall.
students were living in the smaller end rooms and ironing rooms in Hashinger, McCollum and Oliver halls.
FRED MCEHLENIE, DIRECTOR of residential programs, said yesterday that 57
Most of the students assigned to end rooms arrived late at the University and came to the office of residential programs asking for a place to stay.
About 20 students are placed in temporary housing at the beginning of each school year, McElhenei said. These residents move to regular rooms as students drop out of school, join fraternities and sororites or decide to move off campus.
"the hails have been fuller," McElhenie said, "but this year the problem seems to be a little more pronounced."
The designed capacity for the hall system, not including end rooms, is 4,751 students, he said.
MCCELHENIE SAID HIS office and resident directors in KU's eight residence halls were working to find space for students now living in end rooms on a first-come, first-served basis.
But first, McEhene and his staff will work to move about 45 students who were reassigned to McCollum Hall because of a computer error.
"we try to take people out in the order they came in," he said.
"The computer, essentially, overbooked Elsworth Hall." he said.
For example, McElhennie said, the computer assigned two students to room 316 in Ellsworth, which is the office of Ellen Swadley, house manager.
WHEN THE STUDENTS who were incorrectly booked into Ellsworth and are now in McCollum are reassigned, students in end rooms will be contacted as space becomes available.
In past years, end rooms have been rented to prospective KU students visiting the campus, graduate students finishing research and students needing housing during holiday breaks. The rental fee is $10 a night. McElhene said.
Undergraduate women less sexually active, study show
By HOLLIE MARKLAND
Staff Reporter
Women on college campuses are less likely to enter into a sexual relationship now that they were five years ago, according to a recent study by a KU associate professor of psychology.
"The number of undergraduate women engaging in sexual intercourse has gone back down to the level it was in in early 1970s," said Meg Gerrard, the professor
Gerrard said that only 38 percent of the women surveyed from 1983-1984 indicated that they were sexually active. Gerrard defined sexually active as having sexual intercourse at least once a month.
In the late 1970s, slightly more than 50 percent of the women who were surveyed indicated that they were sexually active.
"It surprised me that the decline was so dramatic," Gerrard said.
GERRARD CONDUCTED THE first of the three-part survey of 19 to 20-year-old women at the University of Texas at Austin
Gerrard returned to Austin to canvass Texas women five years later during the 1978-1979 school year and again during the 1983-1984 school year.
nuring the academic year of 1973/1974. She found that 35 percent of the undergraduate women indicated that they had had sexual intercourse at least once a month.
She plans to return to Austin in five years to continue the survey.
years ago at the University of Kansas, she said.
The findings from her survey were roughly comparable to a similar study conducted free-
EVIDENCE FROM OTHER universities also supported the results of her survey, she said, but she could not draw a direct conclusion about KU women from her research in Austin.
Gerrard attributed the decline in sexual activity among college women to a generally more conservative mood on campuses nationwide and to increased concern about venereal disease.
She said that today's women were more
assertive about sex.
"In the late 1970s, women felt that everyone was doing it and that they had no right to say no." Gerrard said. "Now women are making their own decisions about whether to be involved in a sexual relationship."
Gerrard said the women's movement indirectly had influenced the results of her survey.
"THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT has allowed women to take more responsibility for decisions than they used to," she said.
September 7,1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily
KANSAN
nine Chileans are killed protesting military rule
SANTIAGO, Chile — The acrid smell of burned rubber pervaded the capital yesterday following two days of protests of Chile's military government. Nine people died, more than 100 were injured and more than 1,000 were arrested.
The remains of tire barricades smoldered in Santiago, where the yesterday's quiet contrasted with the scene Wednesday night, when demonstrators in working-class and middle-class nests burned barrels and burned the barricades to show their opposition to military rule under President Augusto Pinoche Ugarte.
Dali to have skin operation
BARCELONA, Spain — Surrealist artist Salvador Dali, who was seriously burned by a fire in the bedroom of his 12th century castle, agreed yesterday to undergo a “high risk” skin graft operation to save his life.
Surrounded by friends and a notary, Dali, 80, agreed to undergo the operation this morning after being advised that otherwise his chances of survival were "null," his doctors at El Pilar clinic in Barcelona said.
Woman hit while aiding duck
DALLAS — A 21-year-old woman jogger was bitten, battered and decked while trying to defend a duck.
r une identified woman, a professional model, on Wednesday spotted 'Tammy Rene Bowden, 21, tuskless with a duck in a Dallas park.
Dallas bawns.
Bowden claims she was holding the duck for a child to pet. The model says Bowden was throttling it.
The model told Bowden to unhand the duck, and Bowden turned on her, yanking her hair, slugging her and finally biting her police said.
her, police said.
Bowen was charged with misdemeanor assault and released late Wednesday on $200 bond.
There were no additional charges. The bird was not injured.
Mondale gets Jackson's nod, attacks Reagan
By United Press International
Walter Mondale fired a double blast of criticism at President Reagan's use of religion in politics yesterday and got a ringing endorsement at a church meeting from the Rev. Jesse Jackson.
In appearances before a Jewish service organization and a black Baptist church convention in Washington, the Democratic presidential candidate accused the Reagan administration of embracing zealots on the "extreme fringe" who want to use government power to impose their religious beliefs on the nation.
While the Democratic challenger blasted the intrusion of the Moral Majority and
religious right into government, President Reagan said the Constitution guarantees there will be no state religion.
The battle over the role of religion in American government, which has been simmering since Reagan attended a prayer breakfast in Dallas the morning after he was renominated, escalated sharply as the two candidates separately addressed the national convention in Washington of B'nai B'rith, the Jewish service organization.
The speech was Reagan's only political appearance of the day, while Mondale delivered the same message to the Baptist National Convention, an organization of 30,000 black churches, and expanded it into an attack on Reagan's record on civil rights, jobs and social justice.
In contrast to his almost dry delivery to B'nai Brith, Mondale's speech to the Baptists was a rousing, table-thumping, lively performance, repeated cheers from the convention hall.
Mondale was introduced by Jackson, who called Mondale "a man of integrity and intelligence," and said, "If you followed me in January and February and March and April and May and June and July and August, stay with me in September and October and elect Walter Mondale in November."
Mondale's supporters on Capitol Hill also took up the religion issue, with Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee charities and packages to his colleagues yesterday "to help
you put your Republican opponent on the defensive for the GOP's radical departure from the necessary separation between church and state."
The packages included copies of the Republican platform, speeches by Reagan and Mondale on the issue, and comments by past presidents and leading politicians.
Coelho noted in his letter that the separation of church and state theme is a "delicate issue," and advised House Democrats seeking re-election to "challenge your opponent to either embrace or disavow" the Republican position.
Before leaving Washington, Mondale met with House and Senate Democrats who are concerned that he must step up his campaign against Reagan.
Denver Bureau of Elections
814 14th Street
Denver, Colorado 80202
Dear Sir:
I would like to request that you send to me at the above address an application to vote and a request for an absentee ballot. I would very much like to vote in the November general election so I wold appreciate your help in making the necessary arrangements.
Although I am physically living in Washington, D.C., I have been told by the local elections board that I am not considered a resident here since I did not come here voluntarily. Therefore, I must vote in the state in which I last lived.
Sincerely,
John W. Hinckley, Jr.
Father gives kidney to girl
Sincerely,
John W. Hinckley, Jr.
United Press International
DENVER — John W. Hinckley Jr., sentenced to a Washington mental institution in 1982 for shooting President Reagan, wants to vote in the November general election. Hinckley this week wrote the Denver bureau requesting an absentee ballot, after election officials in Washington denied his application to register to vote there. In Colorado, his home state, an election official said he was unsure whether state law would allow Hinckley to vote.
By United Press International
MINNEAPOLIS — In a first-of-its-kind operation, doctors at the University of Minnesota Hospital yesterday removed the kidney of a Florida man and transplanted it into the body of his tiny daughter.
Walter Reed, 28, of Brandon, Fla., and his 18-month-old daughter, Stephanie, were "doing fine" after the less than four-hour operation performed by Dr. John S. Najarian, the university's surgery chairman, hospital spokeswoman Mary Stanik said.
"Stephanie in its critical but stable condition," Stanki said. "That's very normal. The father is doing fine. He's more stable and calm. The doctors said everything went well."
Najaran said before the surgery that his team of surgeons has performed nearly 300 kidney transplants on children under age 10. But the operation is a first on a child of Stenhane's aid and alim, he said.
Stephanie is the size of a 6-month-old child, her growth stunted by an extremely rare genetic disorder.
Stanik noted that the transplanted kidney was considerably larger than the child's
malfunctioning organ.
"A kidney will shrink, but right now it's a tight fit. She'll be slightly distended (but she will grow into it." Stank said. "In about a year everything will be all right."
The operation was complicated by double arteries coming from Reed's left kidney.
"The double arteries make it a more meticulous process," Najarian said. "Also, he has large vessels and she has small ones, and even getting the father's kidney inside the baby's body presents problems of its own."
Stepname suffers from a form of kidney inflammation so rare that fewer than 100 cases have been documented worldwide Doctors said the specific type of disease doesn't even have a name.
"Maybe when Stephanie is healthy, they'll name it after her," her mother, Judy, joked nervously Wednesday.
Without a healthy, functioning kidney, doctors said Stephanie's growth might forever be stunted. Her life has been a series of dialysis bag changes and tube feedings.
Stephane will remain hospitalized for an indefinite period while doctors monitor her to see if the kidney will be rejected or will become infected.
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September 7,1984
Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Kansas Union celebration to feature Carlin speech
Gov. John Carlin will speak at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Kansas Union as part of next week's Kansas Union Open House celebration in the Union.
The Student Union Association will have a ballroom dancing seminar from 7 to 10 p.m. Thursday in the Union, and the KU student council will be for a 10-speed bicycle and other prizes.
On Sept. 14 the Hawk's Nest will have $1 pitchers and free popcorn from 2 to 5 p.m., and R.E.M. will give a 4 p.m. concert at Hoch Auditorium.
On Sept. 15, free beer will be available from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Oread Book Shop,
and Get Smart will give a free concert at 9 p.m.
Russian is colloquy subject
French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre the theories will be used to illustrate concepts of the Russian language in a linguistic collogy titled "Jean-Paul Sartre and the Russian Instrumental"; at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in 2016 Blake Hall
Herbert Galton, professor of Slavic languages and literatures and of Soviet and East European studies, will present the colloquy.
Water specialists to assemble
Contamination of ground water and the decline in the Ogallala aquifer will be issues discussed at the 29th annual Midwest Groundwater Conference Oct. 13 at the Lawrence Holidore, 200 W Turnipke Access Road.
About 200 water specialists from the Midwest will attend the conference, said Tom McClain, an assistant scientist for the Kansas Geological Survey. Most of the participants will be representatives of agencies, colleges, professors and students.
Jewish center plans welcome
Newcomers to Lawrence will be welcomed with a brunch and art show at 12:30 p.m. Sunday at the Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Dr.
Joanne Pickar, social chairman at the center, said yesterday that new residents of Lawrence would have a chance to ask about the city and meet other residents.
The art show will feature the works of Herda Galton, a former resident of Lawrence. The show will be open to the public at 2:00 p.m.
Club may start recycling drive
The KU Solar Club may start a drive to recycle newspaper used on campus.
Philip White, Dodge City senior and president of the club, said yesterday that he had appointed a committee to look into the details of the plan.
"We have to be real careful how we go about these things to be sure we don't see them fade away," he said.
Anyone interested in the project may attend a committee meeting at 7 p.m. Sunday at 833 Tennessee St.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny, with a high in the mid-90% and southwesterly winds of 15 to 25 mph. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance for thunderstorms. The low will be near northwest from 5 to 15 mph. Tomorrow will partly sunny and much cooler, with a high in the low 80% and morning rain showers likely.
Where to call
- Do you have an idea for a story or a photograph?
If so, call the Kansan at 864 4810. If you order or news release deals with campus or area news, ask for Doug Cunningham, campus editor. For entertainment and Or Campus items, ask for Wortman. For sports information, ask for Gord Diamant, sports editor
Photo suggestions should go to Dave Hornback photo editor.
For other questions or complaints, ask for Don Knox, editor, or Paul Sevant.
Mangling notes.
The number of the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising, is 864-430.
Fire and wind Fires scorch rangeland, damage home
By JOHN REIMRINGER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A grass fire in southern Jefferson County yesterday burned about 800 acres of rangeland about 5 miles north of Highway 24, and firefighters still were trying to contain a flare-up last night.
The fire started at about 11:25 a.m. according to the Sarcoxie Fire Department One fire truck received minor damage, and another vehicle was damaged in the fire department spokesman said last night.
Jefferson County Sheriff Roy Dunnaway said that one firefighter from McClouth had received facial injuries but had continued to fight the fire.
At 9 p.m. the Jefferson County sheriff's office reported a new flare-up.
More than a dozen fire departments from Jefferson and surrounding counties resumed their duties.
sponsored to the fire
THE LAWRENCE FIRE Department
Dunnaway said that about 200 people were involved in fighting the fire. Many of those who struggled to contain the blaze were civilians, which made it difficult to estimate the number of workers.
sent five men, a tank truck and a four-wheel-drive pump truck, Fire Chief Jim McSwain said.
Bulldozers, backhoes and tank trucks of water from several area businesses also were used in the fight, he said.
The fire's eastern advance was stopped at the dirt road that bordered the edge of rancher Sam Campbell's property. A charred base on Campbell's mailbox on the west side of the road was the only apparent damage to Campbell's property.
A variety of fire-fighting equipment and law enforcement vehicles crowded the entrance to the ranch as a command post was set up there to coordinate fire-fighting
"IT DIDN'T TOUCH us." Becky Campbell said as she served water ice from a
large cooler to firefighters. She was assisted by her four-year-old son, Michael, who wore a plastic fire helmet of his own.
"These are the most important people out here," said one firefighter as he drank the cold water.
On the west side of the road north of Campbell's house, the fire had been stopped just short of a white wood fence that surrounded another home.
Dunnaway said that no homes had been damaged, and no crops had been destroyed, although the edges of some fields had been burned.
Bob Campbell said the country was upland ranch land, and the burned range had been destroyed.
both Campbell and Dunnaway estimated that five property owners had suffered losses.
CAMPBELL SAID THE fire supposedly had started at the site of a metal corral, when a piece of hot metal from an electric welding machine fell into the dry grass.
That report, however, had not been officially confirmed last night.
The area has had no significant rainfall for two months, Campbell said, leaving the land bone-dry.
Yesterday afternoon a strong wind from the southwest drove smoke across the charred fields from areas that still were smouldering.
The fire was fought over a two-square mile area. Four-wheel drive trucks were used to reach some of the more inaccessible areas.
In Lawrence, a fire broke out in the bedroom of a house at 1319 Pennsylvania St. after a four-year-old boy lit a mattress with a cigarette lit yesterday afternoon.
DAMAGE IN THE HOUSE was continued mainly to the bedroom, and Lawrence firefighters were able to bring the fire under control after only 2½ minutes.
...
Some information for this story was supplied by staff reporter Laurette Schultz.
firefighters look over smoldering fields in southern Jefferson County where a grass fire that started yesterday morning burned about 800 acres. Chris Magen/KANSAS
High winds,heat produce fire hazard
Staff Reporter
BY LAURETTA SCHULTZ
Staff Reporter
High, hot winds whipped through Kansas yesterday, driving up temperatures across the state and creating dangerous fire hazards for much of the area.
Southwest winds gusted to 35 mph in the Lawrence area, and the KU Weather Service reported a high temperature of 96 degrees.
But the high winds pleased Charlie Perry. Perry, a worker with the U.S. Geological Survey, has a wind mill at his farm about 20 miles south of Lawrence, and days like yesterday help him generate a lot of electricity for his house.
Usually August and September are calm
months, and I may only generate one to three kilowatt hours of electricity." he said.
"But, days where the wind gusts around 35 miles per hour, I'll get 120 to 150 kilowatt hours.
"Our house is on top of this hill, and we used to just live with the wind. Now we don't mind it a bit when it blows."
Phil Shideler of the National Weather Service said the high temperatures and increased wind speed had come ahead of a low pressure system that would move through the state this weekend.
"We're going to get a real rooster coaster ride with temperatures and stable and unstable weather in the next few weeks." Shidel者说. "Every four or five days a low pressure system will come through, and we'll see a dramatic warm-up in temperatures and increased wind circulation "
suspect said the weather service had expected higher temperatures for yesterday — between 100 and 108 degrees — but the intense heat did not develop.
Across the state, the wind gusted to 35 and 40 mph, with the highest gust recorded in Russell at 32 mph.
The Wichita and Salina areas experienced reduced visibility because of blowing dust. Salina reported restricted visibility to three miles, and Wichita had reduced visibility to
Lawrence Fire Department officials said yesterday afternoon that a statewide ban on burning had been enacted. The National Weather Service said the rangeland fire danger index had reached the extreme category and would remain in that category
as long as high winds and dry conditions across the state continued.
The rangeland fire danger index is based on four conditions: percentage of grain on the land, temperature, wind speed and humidity.
The weather services said high winds would continue today, and the high would be near 98 degrees. But things are looking up for the weekend.
"Saturday should be an excellent day for a football game," Shidler said. "The high will be around 80 degrees with mild winds around five miles an hour."
The KU Weather Service said there was a remote chance of an early morning shower tomorrow, but no significant moisture was expected.
Chinese officials find Kansas people friendly
Staff Reporter
By CHRISSY CLEARY
The people of Kansas are as friendly as the people of China, said Cheng Zhenyuan, the interpreter for a Chinese delegation visiting the University of Kansas for the first time yesterday.
"The people are very friendly — like the brothers and sisters of Henan." Chen said. They are most hospitable. We appreciate their kindness and patience in education. We have much to learn from you".
promote trade between the "sister states."
Messages between members of the delegation and their Kansas counterparts were relayed slowly through an interpreter. Some of them were still smiling all remained smiling during the exchanges.
Cheng and six other delegates from Henan province in China visited the state in response to an invitation from Kansas Gov. John Carlin, who visited Henan in June to
The delegates wore small patches of the Kansas state flower, the sunflower, on their lapels throughout the day. They received the patches at a welcoming ceremony for Henan's Governor, He Jhukang, yesterday morning in Topeka.
Henan's seven-member Scientific and Technological delegation attended a luncheon at the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center. At 2 p.m., three members of the delegation toured the science library in Malott Hall to see how the library works and
to see the resources available to students and faculty.
The rest of the delegation toured the pharmaceutical lab of McCollium Laboratory on West Campus with Thomas Patton, associate professor of pharmacy.
The delegation described the McCollum Laboratory as "very advanced, very clean and quiet and a good environment to work in." their interpreter said.
An hour later, they visited the Space Technology Center on West Campus and attended talks given by Sam Shmugman, professor elect of engineering, and David Dowing, associate professor of aeronautical engineering
"We were deeply impressed after the tour of the space research laboratory," Li
Changze, a member of the delegation and president of the Henan Scientific and Technological Commission.
"We are especially interested in the design and production of light planes and the remote sensing system technology developed at the space research laboratory," he said.
Cheng said Henan peasants were beginning to buy light planes for agricultural uses, such as spraying for insects. Henan's aviation schools are also involved in research. Cheng said the delegation expressed interest in learning from the space research lab
"If possible, we would like to have an exchange program in technology work and information," Cheng said. "It's part of the exchange of the sister relationship of this state and our province."
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September 7,1984 Page 4
OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 60-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kanawha 6043, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and trust periods. Second class postpaid mail at Lawrence, Kanawha 6044 Submission by mail are required. $24 in Douglas County and Hillsborough County to the student and the student activity address to POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kanawha 6043
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Canada decides
Oh Canada!
Oh Canada! Canada's Conservative Party demolished the Liberal Party in national elections Tuesday. The vote will mean the first majority government by the Conservative Party in two decades.
The Conservatives won 50 percent of the vote and 75 percent of the seats in the House of Commons; the Liberal Party fell from 147 seats to 40.
Party felt from 147 seats to 40. Landslide elections have occurred in the past throughout the free world, but the significance of Canada's most recent election is that the Liberal Party has been in power for all but nine months since 1963; for nine months in 1979, the Conservatives ruled with a minority government.
The Liberals, led by Pierre Trudeau for 15 years, are king of the hill no longer.
Mulroney's campaign stands out on several p.
The name to remember for the moment in association with Canada is Brian Mulroney, who will become prime minister. Mulroney's campaign stands out on several points.
Multinational campaigns are The prime minister-to-be emphasized improvement in Canada's economy. For example, the nation's unemployment rate now stands at 11.2 percent.
employment are now in addition. Mulroney said he would seek better relations with the United States. This lack of Uncle Sam-bashing is a refreshing change.
An element that added color to the campaign — and possibly affected some votes, too — was the habit of Mulreney's Liberal opponent, John Turner, of patting females on the behind. Some leadership!
Turner, defeated Liberal prime minister, had other problems; he had only recently replaced Trudeau, a leader once popular but increasingly controversial by the time he left office.
Canada is different from the United States: efforts to equate the two nations are hazardous 'at best'.
Yet some politicians south of Canada might benefit from paying extra attention to several aspects of the Conservatives' recipe for success. Strong leadership and economic prosperity appear to turn voters on, while attacks on the United States as the force for evil in the world do not.
Beer barrel blues
Real Lawrence men, apparently, don't want to drink low-alcohol beer.
low alcohol beer.
LA, the brave new marketing experiment by Anheuser-Busch, isn't catching on in this city of crowded bars and well-stocked refrigerators. As one drinker who'd rather not make the switch said, "College students don't drink beer for the taste. They drink beer to get drunk."
the taste. They drink better to get the best from Anheuser-Busch spokesman blamed the slow sales on the usual sluggishness of a new product. But Lawrence drinkers may well be thinking with more than just their taste buds. Most consumers don't want to jump right in when a new product hits the market after all, who wants to get caught up in another corporation's attempt to create a market where none has existed? We can thank corporate snow jobs for the rise of such waste products as designer jeans and mouthwash.
The appeal of a brewery to the vanity of those who want to match their buddies beer-for-beer like real men - but still be able to find their way to the door and the car - is equally contrived.
As long as colleges and bars exist, students will go out to drink with their friends in the time-honored rites of seeking truth and escape. Some will want to stay somewhat sober for whatever reason.
whatever reason.
Sometimes the funniest, most interesting or most spirited person in a bar hasn't had a drink the whole night. Some people actually don't need beer to have a good time. The low sales of low-alcohol beer are an encouraging sign that the city isn't quite as gullible as Anheuser-Busch thought it would be.
Uphill struggle
Bicyclists beware!
Bengals Now you will face additional scrutiny from campus police and rightly so.
and right so. Kansas traffic laws are designed to protect everyone who uses the roads, and campus police say they will begin stringent enforcement of those laws.
stringent enforcement of those who Complaints about unsafe bicyclists are an annual occurrence; people traveling by car complain about bicyclists who ignore stop signs, and people traveling by foot do not care to serve as moving targets.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker of the campus police points out that motorists and pedestrians must contribute their share to traffic safety by cooperating with bicyclists.
Despite the best efforts of campus police, however, problems will likely recur as long as students are in a rush to get on and off - campus, as long as hills provide a tempting speed range, and as long as shortcuts beckon pedestrians to ignore crosswalks, at the expense of safety and healthy grass.
Miracle diets yield food for thought
In light of the fast pace of this advanced society, which we as citizens of the United States are so privileged to live in, it is not hard to understand how we have been blessed with wonderful wonders scientific discovery.
Only in the heartland of opportunity and ambition do we find the scientific cures for all of life's woes.
So you think 18 is too early for wrinkles and, at the age of 21, you have already found those silver-tinted strands of hair you thought were reserved for mom and dad.
Don't worry, and put your troubles behind you, because somewhere, somehow, an enterprising new company will have discovered a new pill, powdered drink, lotion or gadget that will fix all of the mistakes that Mother Nature made at the time of your birth.
couldn't have or more than they had to begin with. In fact, individual satisfaction with one's physical form is almost unheard of.
your school.
The wonder cures of today strike an amazing resemblance to the hair tonics and elixirs of eternal youth that were popular in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
People bought them 90 years ago and they will continue to do so, because people throughout time have always wanted either what they
The only difference between the cures of the past and those of today is that now these businesses boast of cures for everything from unwanted
A
Staff Columnist
ROBIN
PALMER
facial hair and cellulite to the color of the skin.
Although baldness still plagues the masculinity of many young men, why worry about the shiny spot on the top of your head when you should really be worrying about eliminating acne overnight? You also can find pills that supposedly stimulate your entire life.
Amazing as it may seem, there are more cures for physical imper
Yet people still reach out for even the strangest and most expensive remedy.
feections than there are problems themselves.
For those people who have tried to limit themselves to only four or five meals a day, and still have not been able to lose their unwanted pounds in just one month, the answer is a new grapefruit "super pill."
A price of $12 for a 14-day supply will guarantee the loss of 10 pounds without the hassle of exercise or calorie counting.
Eat all you want, take this amazing pill before every meal, and leave the work to the grapefruit's dietary calories. Eat more of it and reduce calories in the food you eat.
If that doesn't convince you, try the next breakthrough that is rocking the diet industry: a formula that stimulates the "growth hormones," which in turn speed up the rate at which the body digests food.
With this method you can lose weight while you sleep, because this formula continues both to burn tissue and form up labby tissue 24 hours a day.
Another diet tablet triggers the
high-speed, fat-shrinking ability of this product in 24-48 hours. The pounds drop off because this tablet shrinks the actual fat cells and deposits.
it pits and formulas bother you or if the doctor-proven evidence does not quite convince you, other possibilities are available for the cynics in life.
Fast, safe and proven-effective hypnosis can drop those 50 pounds you have been carrying around for years. Even if you just want to lose those small bulges that make wearing a bathing suit to Lone Star Lake impossible, this could be the solution you've been waiting for.
All you need to do is to purchase a cassette tape that hypnotizes you into losing weight. The theme is, "Control the mind before the body."
And if all else fails, try the old standby — just shut your mouth and refrain from eating.
Computer enrollment process lacks heart
There are some things about my fellow students that I will never understand. I don't know why some wear knee-length plaid shorts, why some join College Republicans or why some even come to school.
But what really bewilders me is why so many students like our present enrollment procedure.
You see. I hate computerized enrollment. I detest it. I never liked it and never will.
I know that such an admission is heresy, but I remember the distant days of the past, when Allen Field House was more than a place where
students saw basketball games, and
things were different. . . .
things were unclear.
Enrolling has never been all
THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT MIDDLETON
MICHAEL ROBINSON
Staff Columnist
laughs, in my first experience at the field house. I spent two hours going
through the motions before I discovered that my financial aid hadn't arrived and I would have to come back the next day.
But enrolling at the field house was different. It was an adventure then. One didn't merely peruse the timetable; one wandered through the bright sunlit concrete beneath the stands, past folding chairs and tables covered by boxes filled with punched computer cards
The people who staffed the tables were connected with the departments they represented. If you needed to know something about one
of the courses offered, more often than not, they could give you some information. :
Enrolment was also something of a social happening, where old friends ran into each other and had time to chat.
Numerous arguments exist for turning enrollment over to the IBM speed, efficiency, flexibility, timeliness, savings and, of course, money savings.
LCM
But I've also had the opportunity to experience some of the other products of computer enrollment times six or seven people deep running the length of Strong Hall, students enrolling at the wrong time, the wrong times being printed on cards
Once we had only enrollment and late enrollment to get everyone into school. Now we have main early (early) and late events, and late event and late enrollment
Adding and dropping classes has become a multicolored nightmare for students as well as instructors
One noticeable thing about the problems with computer enrollment is that they are people problems, that is, they are visited upon the people who have to go through the process. One noticeable thing about the advantages is that they are institutional advantages.
That gets to the heart of the central flaw with using the computer. It is as quick, cold, slam-bam thank you-ma enrolment.
But I don't have to like it. And I won't.
The staff members at the terminals do their jobs efficiently and well, but they couldn't care less what you take.
sow. I'm no fool. I have no illusions about getting the University to change back, to forget about computerized learning. I am not stupid one. But I'm not a stupid one.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Student's view of Nigeria shows lack of understanding
To the editor:
"itus me that Bill Wilcox should be the first KU student to study for a full year at one of Nigeria's finest universities ("KU student sees two cultures in Nigeria," Aug. 31 Kanu). It would, I fancy, be proper of me to say congratulations, and this I do most sincerely.
Somehow I find myself having to quarrel with Wilcox for trying to misguide the KU reading public
First, there are no "juju" markets. Unfortunately, he does not and cannot understand the concept of juju.
SECONDLY I THINK QUEEN is more of understanding of the term culture. Besides, he even goes further to talk of two cultures in Nigeria. I begin to wonder whether Wilcox tried hard to travel to other parts of the country
Or maybe he spent most of his time checking out the local joints with the ladies of the night, and then he comes back here and tells us about some "ancient" woman whom he "figured" out wanted to sleep with him so that she would have a child with a "caucasoid" nose. He must be a joker with a nice way of figuring things out.
I can, however, offer two possible explanations for what might have taken place. First of all, he probably approached a prostitute.
Secondly, it could be that this ancient lady was curious as for whether he had the same "biological instruments" as the regular guys. This, in fact, I see as the more relevant of the two.
Again, he talks about a "primitive" Nigerian society in which animal sacrifices have become the order of the day. But, of course, his
So tell me, was it necessary for Wilcox to adopt primitive behaviors? Because he claimed that the toilets didn't work, this means that he probably had to dig a hole in the ground to plant his waste on Nigerian soil.
I can assure him that Nigerians are, more than ever before, facing up to their difficulties and successfully solving them.
Let's get serious now. You see, those days are gone when a lot of people thought the African lived in trees
If these people for whom he did the twist, and therefore thought he had made happy, should read what he has said, then I am sorry to say that their jwp would be set into motion, and that would be unpleasant.
exchange program worked because he received instructions from a campus that had "modern Western" buildings and served him plenty of Coca-Cola so he could cool off under the grueling Nigerian sun.
Obineche Uzoma Chiedzie
Nigorie, graduate student
Obineche Uzoma Chiedozie
Lagos, Nigeria, graduate student
Primeval picture
To the趴室
As a student at the University of
Wilkes-Barre it is great to have heard of
Bill Wilcox's adventurous tour
through Benin City in Nigeria
To the editor:
I was displeased, however, with some ambiguous information concerning Wileo's primitive description of the Benin City people and their way of life in or out of the marketplace.
marketplace. As a citizen of the United States who has not traveled to Africa, 1
which it is a shame that so many people today have some sort of misconception about Africa; needless to say, people like Wilcox who do not understand the word "culture" give erroneous information that in essence affects a vast majority of us
My advice to the next exchange students from KU is to make sure they get and keep the word "cultural influence" in its right perspective, always remembering that everybody throughout the world isn't the same.
question whether I should believe Wilcox or my dear friends from this land of dried bats and monkey heads, which Wilcox described.
James L. Dunson Los Angeles junior
I guess you can say that the story in the Kansan about the Benin City people in Nigeria was the work of a perd.
It is good to hear of the exchange program that the University of Kansas has initiated with the University of Benin in Benin City, Nigeria.
To the editor:
lest attempt fails
sity to be learning.
I do hope, however, that any more students who are going on the exchange program or any other way do not come back as lightened as Bill Wilcox did, whatever blame that might be attributed to the grueling Nigerian sun.
it is quite offensive that someone thinks of those in your home country as people who regard light-skimmedness as a status symbol or that the "ancient" women or their daughters or both had wishes to sleep with him just so their children would
oid'' noses.
To the editor:
have "caucasid" noses
If Wilcox is trying to make jest of his experiences in Benin, he really missed by a long shot.
Avo Alao
Lagos, Nigeria, junior
I read with interest the article by sports editor Greg Daman in the Aug. 31 Kansan titled "Low ticket sales cause for concern."
New conditions cut attendance
In the article he says that in 1958, 93 percent of KU students purchased tickets to football games as contrasted with today's 22 percent. I think that the concern expressed in this article is predicated, at least in part, on incorrect information.
As I recall — I was an undergraduate then — in those halcyon days of the late 1980s and early 60s, all students were admitted to all regularly scheduled athletic events with their student identification cards. In a practice for students with guests to use ID cards of students who were not planning to attend a particular game. It was not necessary for a student to purchase any tickets for himself.
It is not, therefore, too surprising that the percentage of attendance among the student population was much higher than
Lawrence Bradford
Atchison graduate student
University Daily Kansan, September 7. 1984
continued from p. 1
Ferraro
Page 5
"I think we have an obligation to respond to the president's attempt to mix religion and politics," she said. "If we failed to respond, we'd be wrong."
REAGAN HAS BEEN criticized by Democrats and moderate Republicans for his comments at a prayer breakfast the morning after he was renominated at the Republican National Convention last month. Reagan had detailed the history of America as a nation "under God" and called for the preservation of that moral tone in government today.
In Washington yesterday, Mondale defended the United States' traditional separation of church and state before a gathering of the Jewish service organization B'all R bith.
Ferraro, the daughter of an Italian immigrant, drew a handful of protesters who criticized her stand on abortion. Sne is a member of the Roman Catholic Church but consistently has supported abortion rights.
FEBRERO DENIED THAT there was a
paradox in her championing of the lower and middle classes and her attendance at a $250-a-plate luncheon, where nearly 300 people paid to see her.
She cited her attendance at a rally Wednesday night at the Radisson Muelebach Hotel in downtown Kansas City and her visit to Truman High School in Independence to visit students earlier that day in defense.
"The common man or woman does not have to pay anything to see their candidate," she said.
Karen Schafer, in charge of Kansas City's Victory Fund, said that the reception and luncheon had brought in about $75,000 for the Democratic Party's national registration
AT THE LUNCHON, Ferraro greeted an enthusiastic audience, which included Karen Carlin, wife of Kansas Governor John Carlin; Ferraro's, two daughters, Laura, 18, and
Donna, 22; and many Missouri politicians,
notably Sen. Tom Eagleton.
Missouri is considered important in the presidential election because either party has a chance to win. The state's 11 electoral candidates, Republican Party candidate, is expected to win the election in Kansas.
Ferraro told the partisan crowd that she and Mondale were going to "pull a Harry Truman" and win the election. Truman came from behind to defeat Thomas Dewey in 1948.
The remark was one of several references to the predicted victory of Reagan and Bush this year. In the news conference earlier, she denied a reporter's challenge that she didn't like the new wave of patriotism that seemed to have swept in during Reagan's tenure.
"MY DEFINITION OF patriotism is that which makes us a stronger America," she said. "It's giving people jobs. It's preserving our national security."
continued from p. 1
is a once in a lifetime chance. This is an understandable excuse."
Nancy Hiebert, Douglas County commissioner, said Ferraro could help the Democrats win Douglas County in the presidential race.
"SHE CAN REALLY generate support where a less vibrant and able candidate might not be able to," she said.
Hibbert was one of about 280 people who paid $250 to attend the luncheon. She also had attended a $1,000-a-person reception at the Hilton at noon and had walked away with Ferraro's autograph on red stationary.
"Douglas County, in presidential elections, has often been in the Republican column," she said. "I think this year that, with Geraldine Ferraro, it will be very difficult to make predictions based on past happenings."
But not every one at the hotel was a Mondale-Ferraro supporter.
LEON ROSCOE, 80, a retired Kansas City. Mo., resident, was at the hotel to attend a regional Shriners' convention this weekend.
He said he had met Ferraro and shaken hands with her in the corridor outside the room where the luncheon was held. Although he considered her a friendly woman, he said, he would not vote for her because he never had been a Democrat.
About 50 protesters from various Missouri and Kansas pro-life groups lined the streets around the hotel as Ferraro spoke inside a news conference. One choice stand in a morning news conference.
GARY TERBITS, A Kansas City, Mo. picketer, said he and the others did not support the Democratic ticket because of Gerry's bad record and a sign that said "Gerry loves baby killers."
"We want people on the campaign trail to know that a pro-abortion stand will cause them trouble," he said.
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The meeting is at 2 p.m. on every Sunday in Room 102; Robinson Gym starting September 9. The class will be taught by a Martial Art Master. Everybody who has been longing for a true meditation must not miss this chance to join. There is an instruction fee.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
Songwriters to compete
By the Kansan Staff
Hidden talents may surface Sunday as local and area songwriters compete in the second annual Kaw Pairing writers' Weekend at Potter Lake.
"It's the only time you get to hear what local people are writing," said Rick Frydman, organizer of the festival and KU graduate.
"There are a lot of really good songwriters in this town, some good talent that nobody knew about," he said.
The festival is a time for songwriters and listeners to get out of the smoky bar scene and really listen to creative music, said Frydman, who has a Saturday morning radio show on KJHK.
Of the 42 entrants, 25 were selected to compete from noon to 6:00 p.m. Sunday. The finalists from each district will be awarded Lawruew, Topeka, Emporia and Hutchinson.
To kick off the weekend of festivi
ties, David Halley, who has performed on the "Austin City Limits" television show, will sing at an outdoor party from 7:00 p.m. to midnight Friday at 11th and Maine streets.
Halley and Williams will judge the 25 contestants on Sunday.
streets:
Lucinda Williams, country and
b singer from Austin, Texas, will
perform at 9:00 p.m. Saturday at
Bogart's Bar, 613 Vermont St. Both
performances cost $3.
The first-place winner will receive three free hours of recording time from Ramona Recordings Studios. The second-place winner will receive cash prizes.
The festival is sponsored by 10 Lawrence businesses.
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WEDNESDAY
In case of rain, meeting and practice will be postponed until Tuesday.
Organizational Meeting and Practice
EDITOR'S NOTE: The University Daily Kansan welcomes listings for its On Campus column. These events must be free and open to the public, and listings must be submitted to the Kansan, 111 Stauffer/Flint Hall, three flights a week from campus or publishes On Campus as a public service and does not guarantee publication of every item.
TODAY KU FOLKDANCE CLUB will
WOMEN'S SUPPORT GROUP will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union.
ON CAMPUS
KJHIK OPEN HOUSE for faculty and underwriters, present and past, from 2 to 5 p.m. at KJHIK
meet at 7:30 p.m. at Potter Pavilion. Beginning Israeli dances will be taught. In case of rain, the dance will be moved to the Military Science Building.
HIGHER EDUCATION WEEK
There will be an organizational meeting on Thursday, Sept. 13 at 5 pm in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union for all those interested in helping plan for the week. Please come.
Monday, Sept. 10th 7:30 p.m. 23rd and Iowa
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【题图】
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Computational & Dental Dysplasia
University Dance Company
Student/Faculty Concert
Saturday, September 8 8 p.m.
Sunday, September 9 2 p.m.
Stanton Prayer Theatre
$3.50 general admission
$2 students with KUID
conserved in part by Student Affairs
Sponsored in part by Student Activity Fee
STUDIES IN
BIBLICAL PROPHECY
September 9-16
TO EXAMINE SCRIPTURES
THAT SPEAK OF END TIMES
Topics to be included
- What is God's goal for end times?
* How do today's nations fit into this plan?
* What does Christ teach us about faith?
* Will the Church go through the Tribulation?
* What does the Bible teach about the anti-Christ?
These studies are illustrated with over 2,000 color slides shown in multimedia using six projectors on a 28-foot wide screen. Printed materials will also be available. There is no admission charge and the public is cordially invited to attend
GUEST SPEAKER, Rev Royal W. Edwards is a minister of the Free Methodic Church with 20 years pastoral experience in Southern California and Arizona. He has served as principal in private Christian schools and taught for Azusa Pacific and Chapman colleges
All meetings to be held at:
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
802 W. 21d. Tern.
Lawrence (842-2343)
Sunday, September 9
8:30 & 11 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.
ROYAL EDWARDS
Monday - Friday
September 10-14
7:00 p.m.
Sunday, September 16
8:30 & 11 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.
- Free Methodist Church
FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH
K.U. GIFT ITEMS
GIFTS UNIQUE
841-7272
POSTERS
COSTUMES & MASKS
JACK DANIELS GIFTS
GAG GIFTS
745 NEW HAMPSHIRE
UNIQUE CARDS THEATRICAL MAKE-UP CHIPPENDALE ITEMS PLAYBOY
Also in: Topeka Manhattan'
LOAN OF
OPPORTUNITY.
It's higher education, at a lower cost. guaranteed by the government.
No question about it, the extra earning power of a college degree is with much cost it costs.
The question is, how to handle the high cost of higher education at a time when you may have no income?
The answer is a Guaranteed Student Loan from The First. Once you apply and qualify, you can borrow up to $2,500 a year for college or $5,000 a year for graduate school. At 8% interest for first time borrowers.
Contact The First, or your university financial aid office for more information and a Guaranteed Student Loan application.
You'll never have to make a single payment until 6-months after graduation. And you can take up to ten years to pay it back.
TheFirst
The First National Bank of Lawrence
South Bank, 1807 W. 23rd St., Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 843-0152
Member FDIC An Equal Opportunity Lender
Use Kansan Classified.
This week on campus:
The Kansas Union Open House
Tuesday 11
KLZR 106 Lay
KU Bookstore $1.06 Specials
Hawk's Nest
$1.06 Lunch Special
11 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
Jaybowl $1.06 Bowling
1-5 p.m.
Registering begins for KU
Bookstore's free drawing to be held Thursday
Speaker: Gov. John Carlin 7
Wednesday 12
KU Bookstore Sidewalk Sale
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
SUA Travel and Outdoor Recreation Fair 7-10 p.m.
SUA Movie: "Pauline at the Beach" 7:30 p.m.
Friday 14
"R. E. M." concert in Hoch Auditorium 9 p.m.
Thursday 13
SUA popular film series "The Right Stuff" 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Midnight movie "M*A*S*A"
Rain date for sidewalk sale
Last day to enter drawing for
12-speed bicycle and other
prizes at KU Bookstore
KU Bookstore drawing at 4 p.m. in store
TGIF: s
popcorn in the Haw
2-5 p.m.
Joe Domme Ballroom Dancing Seminar 7 p.m.
Saturday 15
Chuck Berg Band 10-11:30 a.m.
Oread Book Shop's 15th Anniversary Celebration
15% off any purchase, free bee
7-9 p.m.
5% off any purchase, free bee
Jaybowl-free bowling and billiards 7-11 p.m.
Simultaneous Chess Tournament 7-9 p.m.
ournament 7-9 p.m.
Free Concert "Get Smart" 9 p.m.
Sept. 11-15 (all week)
Popcorn Wagon selling cinnamon, caramel, cheese and buttered popcorn
Hawklets selling beverages and snacks beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Academic Book Fair in Oread Book Shop
September 11-15 at
THE KANSAS UNION
---
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Dally Kansan, September 7, 1984
Page 7
Professor's article in national magazine
By JULIE MANGAN Staff Reporter
A KU professor soon will see his byline in National Geographic magazine because of his interest in cancer research.
Robert F. Weaver, chairman of the biochemistry department, said his article for the December issue of National Geographic encompassed genetic engineering and the use of monoclonal antibodies.
Weaver's research in genetic engineering, mentioned only a few times in the article, involves cloning
a gene for a toxin called Ricin, which comes from castor beans.
"WE ARE CLONING this gene so we can produce pure Ricin in bacteria." Weaver said. The combination of the toxin and antibodies directed against cancer will kill cancer cells but not healthy cells.
The toxin kills the cancer because an antibody recognizing some protein on the surface of cancer cells will bind only to those cells, he said.
Weaver said his team of nine graduate students, one post-doctoral assistant, two visiting scholars from China and a technician still were researching the toxin-antibody combination. The team is getting results, but not as fast as he would like, he said.
In addition to the Ricin project, which is supported by Eli Lilly and Co., Weaver and his research assistants are examining the control of gene expression in an insect virus.
"We are interested in the way genes turn off and on." Weaver said.
ONE REASON FOR their interest, he said, is that normal cells changing to cancer cells seem to turn new genes on or possibly turn old genes off. The researchers might be able to understand the operation of cells more easily by working on an insect
virus containing 100 genes rather than a human cell with about 100,000 genes.
The article is Weaver's second for National Geographic. His first article, published in September 1976, short piece called "The Cancer Puzzle."
WEAVER WROTE THE genetic engineering article in 1978, but the magazine didn't print it because engineering is hard to illustrate.
The magazine solved the illustration problem by hiring a freelance photographer who is good at illustrating difficult subjects, Weaver said.
WE
FIX
CHAINS
FAST
749-4333
800 Mass
RENTACOLOR TV
Student Discounts for You.
Call Mike 1-764-8660
FREE Delivery, Installation,
& Service.
لله عز وجل
A HOLY MAN
KWALITY COMICS
Comics & Science Fiction
107 W. 7th. 843-7239
Boyd's Coins-Antiques
Class Rings
Buy-Sell-Trade—Pawn
Gold-Silver—Coins
Watches-Antiques
731 New Hampshire
Lawrence, K. 66044 913-842-8773
STUDENTS, COME GET INVOLVED!!
---
GET IN SHAPE!!
1 Year.
• Co-ed classes
• Air conditioning
• No routines to learn
• Unlimited visits
• Tanning bed available
• Fully carpeted
Classes 6 days a week
Call for appointment
842-1983
THE NEW ME
FACTOR-E
Aerobics
711 W. 23
The Malls
Shopping Center
Save 10%
with this ad
Good for student
enrollment only
RESEARCH PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP
THE FOLLOWING STUDENT SENATE COMMITTEES ARE NOW OPEN:
Woodruff Auditorium
- FINANCE
- UNIVERSITY AFFAIRS
* STUDENT RIGHTS
- CULTURAL AFFAIRS
- ELECTIONS
APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE
STUDENT/SENIOR OFFICE, 105-B KANSAIS
STUDENT SENATE OFFICE, 105B KANASA
DEADLY ENERGY OFFICE, 105B KANASA
STUDENT SENATE
UNION, DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS IS
SEPT. 14 AT 5:00 n.m.
SUA FILMS
---
Raid for by the Student Senate
Learn about: * defining a topic
* organizing your notes
* using the library
* managing your time
Wednesday, September 12. 6 to 9 p.m.
Downs Auditorium, Dyche Hall
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
FRIDAY & SATURDAY 3:30 p.m.,7&9:30 p.m.
being the best teachers.
Educating
Rita
MICHAEL CAINE · JULIE WALTERS
PG
---
Woodruff Auditorium
i i i
$1.50
Woodruff Auditorium
FRIDAY & SATURDAY MIDNIGHT MOVIE
Spinal TAP
SUNDAY 2 p.m.
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
$2
$1.50
SENIORS:
DON'T BE LEFT OUT!
HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO APPEAR IN THE 1985 JAYHAWKER
SENIOR PORTRAITS
Shooting begins Monday, September 10 $3 sitting fee
(waived when you buy a yearbook)
Call yearbook office for appointment
12-5 864-3728
Call your book office for appointment
1
STUDENTS
COULD THE NAVY INTEREST YOU IN PAID TUITION?
If you are a student at the University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Scholarship. The Navy Scholarship provides full tuition, all text books plus $100 a month spending money.
When you graduate, you will have a job in the fleet as a naval or marine officer. You will train in Nuclear Submarines. Surface Ships, Naval Aircraft or one of many other exciting fields.
Call Lieutenant Joe Johannes at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps (NROTC).
Paid Tuition, Spending Money, and a Job. That is Navy ROTC.
CHECK OUT THE ADVANTAGES OF NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS
Gals . . Dance to the Beat in Robinson's Shoes:
APACHE ... in tawny
taupe, steel grey,
teak, putty or navy
leather...
$39.95
MIA $ ^{\textcircled{R}} $
SIDE-DIP ... in navy,
steel grey, black, red.
khaki or tawny
taupe leather ...
$34.95
FISHERMAN'S MOC ...
open work in grey, red.
cashew or black
leather ...
$41.95
MADE IN CHINA
SINCE 1950
The 23rd St. Marching Cobras—Tomorrow! performing "LIVE and IN-PERSON" 11 a.m. FREE gifts for everyone . . . while supply lasts!
Guys . . . Dance to the Beat in Robinson's Shoes!
LOOP... the kiltie look in soft grey or tan leather.
WEEJUN... the penny loater in cordo or balck. Also in tassel style.
TURBO... laid back tie. In Grey, taupe or light blue leather.
Bass Since 1876
837 Massachusetts
843-1800
ROBINSON'S Open 9 to 5:30 Mon.-Sat.
Thurs. til 8:30
---
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 7, 1984
Page 8
Student enjoys duties as rodeo queen
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
Contestants in most pageants are judged on beauty, poise and talent. But Teddi Bankes will also have to ride a horse to win her crown.
Bankes, Abilene senior, is Miss Rodeo Kansas and will compete in the Miss Rodeo America pageant in December.
FARIDA
Teddi Bankes
"The purpose of the contest is to choose a queen to represent the Professional Rodeo Association nationwide," Bankes said.
The contest is composed of women from 42 states, including Hawaii, and one from Alberta, Canada. Banks have voted in the states generally participate.
But the talent portion of the contest is based on horsemanship and the contestant's knowledge of rodeo, she said.
Questions in the personal interview are similar to the questions Miss America contestants face, except they have a rodeo twist. Bankes said. Each contestant is questioned in front of an audience, with no time to prepare an answer.
BANKES WAS CROWNED Miss Rodeo Kansas in Wichita in November 1983.
She said that the Miss Rodeo pageant was similar to the Miss America pageant. Contestants are judged on poise and appearance, talent, performance in a personal view and extemporaneous speaking.
THE POISE AND appearance section of the pageant includes a modeling competition, Bankes said.
something concerning humane society claims that rodeos are cruel to animals," she said.
The horsesmenship section of the national contest will differ from the state pageants in that the contestants won't ride their own horses, she said.
"A typical question might be
Instead of swimsuits, we model traditional Western wear. The outfits are pretty conservative," she said.
BANNES THAT THAT as Miss Rodeo Kansas she was a public relations agent for the Professional Rodeo Association. She travels to rodeos and makes public appearances throughout the state.
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
07 Mass. phone: 843-11
However, Bankes warned against viewing Miss Rodeo as a beauty pageant.
The national pageant will be held during the National Finals Rodeo in Oklahoma City in December.
is gaining is one of the greatest rewards of being Miss Rodeo Kansas, said Banks, who is majoring in relations and communications.
"Whether you are pretty or not really doesn't have anything to do with it," she said. "It's more of a talent contest."
The public relations experience she
"I have to do most of the PR work myself," she said. "I couldn't have asked for a better internship this summer."
She is optimistic about her chances to win.
Her title also has provided her with opportunities to improve her public poise, she said.
"Sometimes I have to go from one-on-one conversations with people I hardly know to giving a speech in front of 10,000 people," she said.
But Bankes said that the one-onone aspect was her favorite.
Banks said that if she were crowned Miss Rodeo America, her duties essentially would be the same, only on a national scale.
"I think I've got the talent and experience to make the top 10," she said. "但 after that, it can come up. I had to fall off her horse or tear her clothes."
RENT A PIANO
Low Cost—Month to Month
LAWRENCE PIANO RENTAL
2601 IOWA 843-3008
--september 8th 5:00-midnight templin hall
Applications for
STUDENT ORGANIZATION OFFICE SPACE IN THE KANSAS UNION ARE NOW BEING TAKEN, ANY STUDENT ORGANIZATION MAY APPLY
Pick up Information & Applications at the SUA Office, 4th level Kansas Union
Deadline is Sept. 14, 5 p.m.
TOWER
MOUNT OREAD BICYCLE CLUB MEETING
Monday September 10 7 pm at the Kansas Union Big 8 Room Slide Show on Toure deFrance
hugahawk
84
Stroh's
KLZR 106
bring i.d.
ASSOCIATION of university residence halls
biology club
END YOUR WEEK WITH US—
BIOLOGY CLUB IS HAVING A SPECIAL GET TOGETHER THIS FRIDAY
WITH MUNCHIES, BEER AND MAYBE EVEN YOUR FAVORITE
BIOLOGY PROF!
IT'S ALL DESIGNED TO INTRUCTO OURSELVES TO YOU AND MAYBE INTEREST YOU IN US. WE GATHER EVERY FRIDAY IN THE SUNFLOWER ROOM. 3rd LEVEL OF THE KANSAS UNION AT 4:00 FOR CONVERSATION. BIOLOGY DISCUSSION AND A LITTLE TGIF RELAXATION
DROP ON BY!
-it's not just for Breakfast anymore..
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
الحركة المتابعة للسير
معروف الأول في مجال الدكتورات وغيره من التعليمات العلمية العادية
1948/9/4 بين الباحث العالية التقني الجامعي الأستاذ أ. ودائيل
من المجال الدكتورات العالية التقني الجامعي الأستاذ أ. ودائيل.
**The Community Bldg(11th & Vermont)**
**المستوى :**
AKΛ/XΩ 4th ANNUAL WHEAT MEET
PARTY: SATURDAY, SEPT. 8th 7 p.m. BURGE UNION
TRACK MEET FOR KU CANCER RESEARCH
TOP BANDS FEATURING:
STEVE
BOB&
RICH
UNIDOS
STEVE BOB& RICH
Stroh's
100 Kegs All the BEER you can drink!
- Free Pepsi Pizza Shuttle pizza by the slice
Track Meet Sept.22nd Memorial Stadium
DONATIONS
$3.50 in advance
$4.50 at the gate
Buy Tickets from:
AKΛ: 842-7556
or
XΩ: 843-5800
---
University Daily Kansan, September 7, 1984
Page 9
CAMPUS AND AREA
KU's withdrawal symptoms stem from less KIPPS usage
By MARY CARTER Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas is suffering some withdrawal symptoms after decreasing its use of the Kansas Integrated Personnel Payroll System of the University Sonate Executive Committee told SenEx yesterday.
The change in the system, Arno Knapper, the chairman, said, "is
showing some withdrawal symptoms in terms of costs and delays in implementing alternative retirement programs."
"The administration is appealing to the Board of Regents to appeal to the departmental administration to move things along faster.
Consequently, Knapper said, 'these alternatives on retirement programs are not going to get programmed in as soon as they'd'
hoped so we can deduct it from our paychecks," he said.
paychecks, he said. The latest delay with KIPPS is not the University's first.
The University decided late in December either to find a replacement for KIPPS or to revise the system to accommodate KU's complicated payroll.
KU joined the state's new computerized payroll system last October. About 475 KU employees did not receive their paychecks on time in November and December, for another 600 receipts for the amount. Payroll problems continued during the first few months of 1984.
"The University has withdrawn from the program in the sense that now the state does only two things," said Richard Mann, KU information systems director. "The state prints the paychecks and takes care of
some deductions, like pensions, that go to a third party.
"THE CHECKS ARE now calculated on campus, and as a result, the computer will have to be reprogrammed. That's the delay."
Mann said he had been told that re-programming the payroll computer would take 500 computer hours and cost about $17,000.
Several SenEx members expressed concern that the delay might
financially handicap some faculty members.
But Mann said faculty members were losing money only in the sense that they have not had the opportunity to alternate retirement programs.
The Board of Regents last year approved three alternative retirement programs to the basic retirement program that unclassified employees and faculty members now have.
You Are Cordially Invited to Attend The Grand Opening Republican Headquarters
Sunday, Sept. 9, 1984
4:30-6 p.m.
1601 West 23rd
Suite 104 843-2961
Please attend and plan to meet G.O.P. Candidates and elected officials.
Refreshments Served.
Political Advertisement paid for by Douglas County Central Committee.
VOTE
American Flag
GO THE EXTRA YARDS
FOR A GREAT STEAK-OUT
And Super Salad-Fruit-Hot Bar
Western Sizzlin Steak House
ALL YOU CAN EAT KUID 10% off
Western Sizzlin'
2620 Iowa
ar
PIZZA Shoppe
PIZZA BATTER WITH 12 PADRINGS
842-0600
6th and Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
WE DELIVER!
MEAL for 4
MEAL 101
Single Topping
KING SIZE PIZZA
4 Dinner Salads Pitcher of Pepsi
$1095
plus tax
DINE-IN ONLY
Expiration Date 1-15-83
UDK
TRIPLE TOPPING
KING SIZE PIZZA
and
32 OZ. PEPSI
$895
plus tax
DELIVERED!!
Expiration Date 1-15-83
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Department of Music Presents
Claude Frank, pianist
Scholarship Benefit Concert
8:00 p.m. Wednesday, September 12, 1984
Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office/All seats reserved/Fo
reservations, call 913/864-3982
Public: $8 & $6; KU Students with ID: $4 & $3; Senior Citizens and
Other Students: $7 & $5
All proceeds benefit the KU Music Scholarship Fund
All proceeds benefit the KU Music Scholarship Fund
Program
Sonata in G major, Op. 78
Three Prelude
Danzas Argentinas
Sonata in C minor, Op. 111
Franz Schubert
Claude Debussy
Alberto Ginastera
Ludwig van Beethoven
---
100
V
KU
ku
KU STUDENTS ATHLETIC TICKET INFORMATION
ONLY $45.00
SAVE ON YOUR SEASON
STUDENT BASKETBALL SEATING IS LIMITED!
— AN ALL-SPORTS TICKET GUARANTEES YOU A BASKETBALL SEAT —
FOOTBALL, BASKETBALL AND KANSAS RELAYS TICKETS BY PURCHASING THE SPECIAL "ALL SPORTS" TICKET FOR
- A wide open offense that broke eight school and three Big Eight records last season.
KU FOOTBALL
- A home schedule featuring Wichita State, Oklahoma and Nebraska.
- Choice of sitting in open seating section or reserved seating section.
KU BASKETBALL
- Led by second-year Coach Mike Gottfried.
- A home schedule featuring Houston,
Missouri, Oklahoma and K-State
- 1964 Big Eight Tournament Champs
- Led by Coach Larry Brown
- One of the nation's top recruiting classes.
“All Sports” Tickets— $45.00
Football Reserved Seating— $26.00
Football Open Seating— $23.00
Tickets can be purchased at the athletic ticket office in Allen Field House on weekdays from 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Student sales will also be held in front of Wescoe Hall from September 4th to the 7th from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. If you bought a ticket this summer, you can pick it up at the Field House.
An "All Sports" ticket could be your only chance to see K.U. Basketball!!
THERE IS A REASON!
AVERAGE SAT, GPA COMPARISONS
888 NAT/L 1024 KU ROTC 1162 ARMY ROTC 2.72 KU ROTC 2.82 GPA SAT
ARMY ROTC.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
KAW VALLEY SONGWRITERS'
WEEKEND
Sept. 7-9 1984
FOLK & ROCKIN'
DAVID HALLEY ... OUTDOOR PARTY
FRIEDAY SEPT. 7 ... 5 - MIDNIGHT
11TH & MAINE
COUNTRY/DELA BURS SAGINA
LUCINDA WILLIAMS
Saturday 8:30 9:00 pm
BOGART'S BAR
611 VIRGENT
611 VI
SONG WRITERB'
CONTEST
SUNDAY SEPT. 9TH
12:00—6:00 PM
POTTER'S LAKE
IN CASE OF GRAVITY ALL SHOW
WILL GRANT POCKETT'S CARE
SPONSORS:
BOGAR'S BAR
GREAT PLAINS NURSIMATIC SERVICES (CON-
FERS) FROSTING
JANE FRYDMAN LAW OFFICE
KEEP RECORD AND STORIES (PLYPU
KIRH RADIO E9 10)
PARADISE AND LUNA CAFE
PARADOX BRIDGING STUDIO
SUNLOWER SURPRIUS
THIS CAN'T BE YOGUIT
21. New York
22. New Hampshire
23. WA
24. Seattle
25. WA
26. World Abstraction
27. Massachusetts
28. Massachusetts
29. Massachusetts
30. Louisiana (Mail- Shipping Center)
THE PLACE TO BE THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING IS AT A BIG "LIVE MUSIC" PARTY AT 11TH AND MAINE (STONE HOUSE ACROSS FROM THE FOOTBALL STADIUM). PARTY STARTS AT 5 PM WITH BEER AND VOLLEYBALL. AT 8 THE LOCAL FOLK/ROCK BAND "THE JOLLY RANCHERS" WILL PERFORM. AT 9 GET READY FOR "AUSTIN CITY LIMIT'S"
COUNTRY/ROCKER, DAVID HALLEY. $3 COVER CHARGE. COME TALK TO US TODAY AT OUR INFORMATION TABLE SET UP IN FRONT OF THE KANSAS UNION.
CAMPUS AND AREA
Investigators trying to find cause
Page 10
Two killed at oil company explosion
University Daily Kansan, September 7, 1984
ANTHONY, Kan. — Investigators interviewed witnesses Thursday to determine the cause of an oil company explosion that killed two people and forced the evacuation of thousands of the south central Kaukaas town.
By United Press International
The blast at the Farmers Oil Co. on
Wednesday night started a fire that shot flames 200 feet into the air. A series of smaller explosions rocked businesses and residences for about 30 minutes.
Country Magistrate John Moore, who lives nearby, said, "It looked just like the atomic bomb mushroom, and it was all filled with flames."
The two victims were identified as Ronnie R. Gertle, 17, Harper, and Joe Wayne Pierce, 32. Wakita, Okla. Pierce was a truck driver who stopped the oil company. Gertle had stopped by the shop to visit with its owner.
and it was all fixed The fire burned out of control about 3.5 hours.
The bodies were found in the garage where the blast originated. They were burned beyond recognition.
Gettle's mother, Dorothy, said her son was a friend of the company's co-owner, Kenneth Ray Graves, 51, who was in critical condition with burns over 70 percent of his body. Graves was backing a truck into the garage only minutes before the explosion.
Harper Police Chief Ed Starks said the explosion was apparently from propane although no official cause had been determined.
Drinking Myth of the Week
"I DRIVE BETTER AFTER A FEW DRINKS."
People often think they're driving better than ever when in fact, they're not! In Kansas, "driving while intoxicated" is legally defined as a blood alcohol level of .10%. Even professional drivers were worse drivers when their blood alcohol level was as low as .03% to .05%
The Student Assistance Center
KU Faculty, Staff, Students, and State Employees
ZENITH data systems
You may purchase Zenith Micro Computers and Monitors at substantial savings.
available models are:
Zenith 150-18B Compatible
320K RAM Dual Drive
Zenith 100 Dual Drive 192K RAM
12" amber monitor
13" color monitor
call
W
Imprinted Software Systems Inc. 749-4774 for additional details
Truly Awesome...
Jet powered funny car exhibition
Saturday, September 8th
• Featured on ESPM • 5.000 hp
• 0-270 mph in 6 seconds
• plus a full drag race program
Gates open: 4 p.m.
Eliminations: 7:30 p.m.
Jet car exhibition: 8.9, 10 p.m.
Spectator admission $10
Pit passes $2 extra
Coolers and cameras welcome
HEPRO
LAWRENCE DRAGWAY West of Lawrence off Highway 40
The body of the Lawrence woman, Marguerite L. Vinyard, was discovered Aug. 5 in her home at 2100 Tennessee St.
noon-6 p.m.
every Friday
West Coast Saloon 25¢ DRAWS
NO COVER!!!
A K.U. TGIF tradition!
841-BREW
competent to stand trial, a preliminary hearing will follow the competency hearing. The competency hearing will be at 9 a.m. at the Judicial and Law Enforcement Building.
A Lawrence teen-ager charged with first degree murder and aggravated burglary in the death of an 80-year-old Lawrence woman last month is to appear at a competency hearing this morning.
2222 Iowa
If the teen-ager, Donald E. Alexander, 18, of 303 W. 21st St., is found
Local teen's hearing today
By the Kansan Staff
A
BACK-TO-SCHOOL EYEGLASS SPECIAL — $24.95
Choose any frame in our vast selection, your reading or distance prescription lenses, in glass or plastic, and pay only $24.95.
Limited to prescriptions no higher than (plus) or (minus) 4.50 diopters. Additional charges for photochromatics, etc. For Bifocals of any prescription, take $25 off the regular price. We can fill your doctor's prescription. This ad cannot be used in conjunction with any other optical promotion. Use your Visa or Mastercard.
This Special does not include Boutique Frames. Some restrictions do apply.
This offer good August 27 through September 8, 1984
HUTTON
842-5208 OPTICAL CO 742 Mass.
Mon. - Wed. & Fri. 10-6
Thurs. 10-8
Sat. 10-2
I I I I
DOMINO'S PIZZA
$5.99
Two pizzas for one low price.
DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERS DOUBLES
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You're not seeing double! It's just our latest way of saying that Domino's Pizza Delivers.™ Now you can have two delicious 10" or 14" pizzas for one low price. They're custom-made with your choice of items on each pizza they don't have to be the same! And Domino's Pizza* uses only the freshest ingredients and 100% real dairy cheese.
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Just give us a call and we'll deliver your pizzas within 30 minutes — or they're free! *
832 Iowa St.
841-8002
Lawrence
1445 W. 23rd St.
841-7900
Hours
4:30pm-1am Sun-Thurs.
4:30pm-2am Fri. & Sat.
Domino's Doubles
Two 10" cheese pizzas only $5.99.
Two 14" cheese pizzas only $8.99.
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Pepperoni, Mushrooms, Sausage Ground Beef, Ham, Onions, Green Peppers, Black Olives, Jalapenos Pineapple Extra Cheese and Extra Thick Crust. Two 10" pizzas $1.25 per item Two 14" pizzas $1.49 per item
Cola available.
Good at participating stores in Kansas only.
Limited delivery area.
Our drivers carry less than $2000.
*Weather conditions permitting.
Prices do not include sales tax. 1984 Domino's Pizza, Inc.
1984 Dominos Pizza, Inc
30 minute challenge
If your Domino's Pizzas do not arrive within 30 minutes, present this coupon and get your pizzas **free!***
Lawrence
1445 W 23rd St.
11 7000
341-7900
832 Iowa St.
841-8002
*Weather conditions permitting One coupon per order
17005/KAD-024
DOWNWARD
PIZZA
---
University Daily Kansan, September 7, 1984
Page 11
V
PIKEFEST '84
---
COME TO PIKEFEST AT THE PIKE HOUSE 2000 STEWART AVENUE
Beginning 3 pm Friday September 7 Ending 12 am Saturday September 8
Drink FREE BEER
Drink FREE BI All Evening Long By Miller High Life
Miller
HIGH LIFE
Live Music From THE CLIQUE
1980
Tickets Are $3 In Advance $4 At The Gate
All Proceeds Benefit THE AMERICAN RED CROSS
Unity government planned for Israel
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
By United Press International
JERUSALEM — Labor Party leader Shimon Peres said yesterday he had reached complete agreement with caretaker Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir on a unity government under which they would alternate as the head of government
Israel television said the new
unipartisan Cabinet will be presented
for approval next Wednesday to the
Knesset Israel's parliament.
The agreement, which was announced after an hour-long summit, brought Peres the premiership he has sought unsuccessfully since 1977. But he will have to share it with Shamir, the Likelid Bank and power-powering system that would give each 25 months as prime minister.
Israel television said the summit produced final agreement on a 20-member Cabinet, to each for
Shamir apparently agreed to give up the chairmanship of the inner cabinet in return for the powerful Trade and Industry portfolio, which he intends to give to former Defense Minister Alire Sharon.
University Daily Kansan, September 7, 1984
Beirut's Sabra and Chatila refugee camps in 1982.
Likud and Labor. There will be a 10-member inner Cabinet, to be headed by Peres.
Sharon has had no specific Cabinet duties since a commission of inquiry found him indirectly responsible for the massacre of Palestinians in
"But for minor details, we are in complete agreement about the composition of the government and the management of the Cabinet." Peres told reporters.
"I hope that in the second part of next week we will have a government of national unity." Shamar told reporters, saying "not all the problems, but almost all the problems, have been solved."
Typhoon kills 1,363
By United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — The death toll from Typhoon Ike soared to 1,363 yesterday as the government, refusing help from abroad, shipped relief supplies to victims of the Philippines' worst recorded storm this century.
Four days after Ike slammed into the country with 137 mph winds officials were still assessing
the extent of damage nationwide.
An estimated 1.12 million were left homeless by lke and by Tropical Storm June.
Ike, meanwhile, was churning across the South China Sea toward Vietnam.
A compilation of reports from the government, the military, the Red Cross and the state-run news agency showed 1,363 died in Ike's two-day rampage, with more than 300 others injured.
Give someone special
a dozen standard roses
for $10, cash and carry.
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2103 W. 28th St Terrace
Lawrance, KA 66044 (913) 843-6990
PACIFIC CITY UNIVERSITY
REPRESENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS AS A STUDENT AMBASSADOR
For more information contact:
—The Office of Admissions, 126 Strong Hall
—Student Senate, B105 Kansas Union
—Your Organized Living Group President
Deadline Monday, September 17.1984
Levi
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extra length add $2.00
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the gap
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September 10, 17, and 24 (Mondays)
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Register and pay $15 materials fee at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
Class size limited.
The Topeka Capital-Journal
STUDENTS
Special student subscriber offer! Your $15.00 semester subscription price will give you the very best, State, Local, National and SPORTS news that is available in Kansas.
FOR DELIVERY CON
East of Iowa
A.E. Hall, 843-2276
West of Iowa
Randy Flyer, 842-8727
Wide of Iowa. S, of 15th Richard Todd. H42-4264 East of Iowa. N, of 19th E.N. Christie. B42-0692
AFRICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION GENERAL MEETING
Saturday, September 8, 7-10 p.m. Council Room, Level 4 Kansas Union
BE THERE!
Funded by the Student Activity Fee
Funny Looking
Binkenstock sandal
1337
MASS.
FOOTPRINTS
841-7027
GLSOK PRESENTS
GO POP
GO POP
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Gay Old Party
8:00 - 1:00
$ 2.50
MUSIC BY
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SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 8
KANSAS ROOM
KANSAS UNION
SPONSORED BY
GAY AND LESBIAN
SERVICES.
OF, KANSAS
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W. 23RD
SOUTHERN HILLS
SHOPPING CENTER
PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST - FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W. 23RD
SOUTHERN HILLS
SHOPPING CENTER
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
Delivery During Lunch Also
EASY AS
1 SINGLE
1 PIZZA
Dur Small
2 DOUBLE
2 PIZZAS
Dur Medium
3 TRIPLE
3 PIZZAS
Dur Large
MENU
ANY FEATURE THE UNIVERSAL SIZE PIZZA ID
ONES OR SQUARE TRESSES ONE TO TWO POINTS
STANDARD CHEESE
A HAND FASHIONED CRUST WITH A GENEROUS
TOPPING OF TOMATO SAUCE AND CHERRIES THE
STARTING POINT FOR YOUR FAVORITE
COMBINATION
$4'00 $7'00 $9'00
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $1'00
ALL TOPPINGS 50¢ PER TOPPING PER PIZZA
EXPRESS SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CHEESE WITH ADDITIONAL
TOPPING OF PEPPERON HAM MUSHROOMS
ONIONS AND GRINN PEPPERS
$5'50 $10'00 $15'00
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $1'00
FARM SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CHEESE TURPED FOR THE
VEGETARIAN WITH MUSHROOMS ONIONS GREEN
PEPPERON BLACK OLIVS DICESTOMATES AND
EXTRA CHEESE
$6'00 $11'00 $16'00
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $1'50
SUPER SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CHEESE OVERLOADED WITH
PEPPERON ITALIAN SADAGE GROUND BEEF
ONIONS BLACK OLIVS DICESTOMATES
EXTRA CHEESE MUSHROOMS AND JALAPENOS OPTIONAL
$6'50 $12'00 $17'00
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $1'50
HOURS
Mon, Thurs - 11a.m. 2a.m.
Fri & Sat - 11a.m. 3a.m.
Sunday - 11a.m. 1a.m.
NO SUBSTITUTIONS ON ANY SHUTTLES
"NO COUPON" SPECIALS
TUESDAY TWO FERMS Any Double with 2 toppings & 2 Pepsi's — $19'90 Value ¥8'00
SUNDAY SUPER SPECIAL Two Super Shuttles & 2 Pepsi's — $12'90 Value ¥10'00
WE ACCEPT CHECKS
(25¢ Service Charge)
16oz. Pepsi’s - 25¢!
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-84
EASY AS
1
SINGLE
1 PIZZA
Our Small
2
DOUBLE
2 PIZZAS
Our Medium
3
TRIPLE
3 PIZZAS
Our Large
MENU
WE STAUNT THE UNIVERSE OUT PIZZA TO
INCHES & Slices FEED ONE TO TWO PURPOSE
STANDARD CHEESE
A HAND FASHIONED CRUST WITH A GENEROUS
TOPPING OF TOMATO SLAG AND CHIPS. THE
STARTING FORM IS FOR LARGE COMBINATION
$400 $700 $900
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $200
ALL TOPPINGS 50¢ PER TOPPING PER PIZZA
EXPRESS SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CHEESE WITH ADDITIONAL
TOPPING OF PEPPERON HAM MUCHMUCHS
ONIONS AND GREEN PEPPERS
$550 $1000 $1500
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $500
FARM SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CHEESE TOPPED FOR THE
VEGETARIAN WITH MUCHMUCHS ONIONS GREEN
PEPPERON BLACK DIVIES SLICED TOMATOS AND
EXTRA CHEESE
$600 $1100 $1600
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $500
SUPER SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CHEESE OVERLOADED WITH
PEPPERON ITALIAN SAUGAGE GROUND BEEF
ONIONS BLACK DIVIES SLICED CHICKEN
MUCHMUCHS AND ALAPARTS (OPTIONAL)
$650 $1200 $1700
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $600
TOPPINGS
ITALIAN SAUGAGE
GROUND BEEF
HAM
BACON BITS
ANGHOVIES
PNCAPPLE
EXTRA CHEESE
MUSHRODS
ONIONS
GREEN PEPPERS
BLACK ONES
GREEN OLIVES
SLICED TOMATOES
JALAPENOS
SAUERKRAUT
HOURS
Mon - Thurs. - 11 a.m.
Fri & Sat. - 11 a.m.3
Sunday - 11 a.m.
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11a.m.-4p.m.
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11a.m.-4p.m.
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11a.m.-4p.m.
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF
Any Triple
Pizzas
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-84
PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF
Any Triple Pizzas
842-1212
PIZZA
SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF
Any Triple
Pizzas
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12/31/84
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12/31/84
PIZZA
SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Double
Pizzas
842-1212
NAME___
ADDRESS___
DATE___
EXPIRES 12/31/84
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
DATE ___
EXPIRES 12/31/84
PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST & FREE DELIVERY 842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Double
Pizzas
842-1212
PIZZA
SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE
DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Double
Pizzas
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12/31/84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
PART- FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE DELIVERY
50¢ OFF
Any Single Pizza
842-1212
PIZZA
SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
50¢ OFF
Any Single
Pizza
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPRESS 12-31-84
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
DATE ___
EXPRES 12-31-84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
50¢ OFF
Any Single Pizza
842-1212
NAME:
ADDRESS:
DATE:
EXPRES 12/31/84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11a.m.-4p.m.
842-1212
NAME:
ADDRESS:
DATE:
EXPRES 12/31/84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
IAST - FREE DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11a.m.-4p.m.
842-1212
PIZZA
SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
1 1 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPRES 12-31-84
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 13-31-84
University Daily Kansan, September 7, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Page 13
Soviets replace defense head
By United Press International
MOSCOW — Marshal Nikolai Ogarkov, the Soviet military's chief of staff and defender of the downing of a Korean airliner last September, has been removed from his post, the official Soviet news agency Tass said yesterday.
Marshal Sergei Akhromeyev, first deputy chief of staff, replaced ogarkov, who was the second most important man in the defense hierarchy, Tass said.
Ogarkov, 67, gained international
prominence last September as the man chosen to explain why Soviet fighter planes shot down a Korean Airlines 747, killing 269 people.
He appeared at a rare news conference then, saying the decision was justified because the plane was part of a U.S. spy mission over sensitive Soviet military installations.
Ogarkov has been involved in every major military campaign of the Soviet Union since World War I. It was not clear whether he was removed to assume another post, or if he was fired in a military shakeup.
Western diplomats said it was too early to weigh the significance of the brief announcement.
"Nikolai Ogarkov has been relieved of the post of chief of the general staff of the U.S.S.R. armed forces, U.S.S.R. first deputy defense minister in connection with a new appointment," Tass said.
The Tass announcement coincided with news that Secretary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko will meet in New York on Sept. 26, despite the current chily relations between Moscow and Washington.
MOSCOW — Three Soviet customers circling the Earth aboard the Salutum 7 space station yesterday broke the 211-day space-endurance record.
Soviets break own space record
By United Press International
The new record was set at 12:10 a.m. Mozov time today (3:12 p.m. CDT yesterday) by Leond Kizim, Vladimir Soloyuv and Olg Altek.
The previous record was set by cosmonauts Valentin Lebedev and Anatoly Berezovoy, who returned to Earth on Dec. 10, 1982 after
completing 211 days, nine hours and five minutes in space.
Under the rules of the International Aviation Federation, however, the trio will have to exceed the old mark by 5 percent, or another 10.5 days, to be entered in the record books.
The three blasted off from their central Asian space station on Feb. 8 and entered their Salyut-7 space station the next day to begin orbiting the Earth.
The cosmonauts have been living and working in an area only 20.4 feet long and 13.2 feet in diameter within
the 50-foot long cylindrical space station.
Atkov, a physician, has reported his colleagues in fine condition throughout the long mission.
The their home for the past seven months includes such amenities as a table, shower, toilets and berths fixed to walls. It also contains a moving track and a special bicycle to counter the effects on their muscles of prolonged weightlessness.
There was no official word on when the cosmonauts would return to Earth.
West Coast Saloon KU
presents... KU Fan Appreciation Weekend!!!
$1.75 pitchers for anyone in a KANSAS shirt.Friday thru Saturday night.
Is Your House Not A Home??
TABLE & COFFEE TABLE
House
MARRIAGE
LIVING
FURNITURE
841-BREW
Home
Let
2222 Iowa
Westside 449 Florida
Greenhouse Help!
842-0039
440 Florida
Special on Low Light Chinese Evergreens (great for offices) $5 off 6" pots
Beautiful Fall Mums are in!
come in and register for a
$25 CACTUS GARDEN
--on all ($17-$60) floorplants make the homeward move at
--on all ($17-$60) floorplants make the homeward move at
Bicycle
SAVE $3-$10
on all ($17-$50) floorplants
make the house more alive
Westside Greenhouse
thu Sept 30 440 Florida
842-0039
0
BIKING AROUND LAWRENCE
Mt Oread Bicycle Club
MEXICO
BORDER BANDIDO
Sept. 15: Eudora Evening Ride, 3:15 pm
Sept. 22: Clinton Lake, 8:30 am
Bring your swimming suit
TOURS: All tours leave from South Park Sept. 8: Ride to Baldwin, 8 am breakfast at Blackjack Inn
Sept. 29: Perry Lake, 8:30 am 50 mi.
Routes for tourists and racers
Sept. 22: Clinton Lake, CO Bring your swimming suit
--with this coupon
Not valid with other offers
Expire Sept. 9, 1984
FIRST CLUB RACE OF THE SEASON:
Sat. Sept, 8th, 10am:
12 mi.Time Trial,$1 entry fee (no charge for bike club members)
Entries at SUA Office or call 864-3477. Start: 2 mi. N of Kasold & Peterson.
Does watching the Hawks trounce Wichita St. make you hungry? We can cure it!
For info on all bike club activities, call 864-3477 or stop by the SUA Office.
ALL YOU CAN EAT TACO & SALAD BAR
$2.99 reg $3.69
842-8861
1528 W. 23 RD.
Not valid with other offers
Expires Sept. 9, 1988
Across from Post Office
Come look us over and register to win!
GREAT DEALS-
GREAT SELECTION!
SOUNDS GREAT CAR STEREO
25th & Iowa
get
MILPINE
1 Block West of Kief's Gramophone Shop
- Mattress & Foundation
or choose instead
842-1438
FURNITURE BARN
Overland Park, KS 913-345-140
- Rectiner
- Diatto
comprehensive
medication
maternity
recreation
government
gymnasium
Golden Park, KN 913-745-1400
The NEW Place
2406 WOA
842-3993
The NEW Place
2406 IOWA
843-1592
Computerark
KNOWLEDGE SERVICE EDUCATION
Zethen
Monroe
Commodore
Epsilon
Orlando
Brother
Ziln & Louisiana
841-0094
Main Shipping Center
GQ
For more information
611 West 9th
843-2138
FREE WATERBED!
to be given away at the
FURNITURE BARN
OPEN TIL 9 PM
EVERY NIGHT
THE GRANDER MAN
WE DELIVER!
704 MASS
843-7398
842-2696 1811 W. 6th Lawrence
DRINKS FREE BEER
All Night Long— $2.50 for girls w/KUID $5.00 for guys w/KUID
"THE ROCK & ROLL BANDS ARE GONE"
LARGEST 18 & OVER
DANCE NIGHTCLUB
IN LAWRENCE
DANCE MUSIC
TONIGHT
AT
The ALL New
"NOW THE MOST POWERFUL BAR SOUND SYSTEM IN LAWRENCE"
Pladium
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
DRESS CODE
TGIF DROWN NIGHT EVERYBODY
TGIF Featuring Dance Music All Night Long
"Where the Greek Meet"
Tonight Doors open at 7:30 p.m.
★ The ALL NEW PLADIUM ★
901 Mississippi Lawrence, KS
841-4600
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, September 7, 1984
Page 14
South Africa torn by riots, violence
By United Press International
SHRPEVILLE, South Africa — About 2,000 blacks blocked the main road through a riot-torn area yesterday, forcing Law and Order Minister Louis le Grange to reroute his tour of townships rocked by three days of riots that left 32 dead.
Le Grange accompanied by Defense Minister Gen. Magnus Malan and other Cabinet ministers, blamed unnamed "individuals, forces and organizations" for the violence that swept through several black townships south of Johannesburg.
He promised to keep police in the townships "as long as it is necessary."
necessary. The violence flared Monday in the townships of Sharpeville and nearby Sebokeng, 40 miles east of Johannesburg, with residents complaining of hikes in rents and electricity rates.
Protests spread to Boipotong and Evaon townships in Johannesburg's Transvaal province as well as Thabang and Vaal Dam townships in the neighboring Orange Free State.
POLICE SENT IN to quell the rioters eventually quieted the neighbors Wednesday.
BOSTON — Massachusetts filed suit yesterday to block the federal government's planned 26.9 sale of oil exploration leases on 6.5 million acres of prime fishing waters off the New England coast.
By United Press International
Suit filed to block drilling in fishing waters
The suit filed in U.S. District Court charges that Interior Secretary William Clark and his department failed to adequately consider potential damage to fishing and tourism sites, even if oil or natural gas is not found.
Massachusetts in seven years to halt such oil and gas lease sales, also states that several endangered species of whales could be jeopardized by drilling.
The state asked the court to declare the sale illegal and issue a permanent injunction.
The complaint, the third filed by
"If it were up to me, there would be no drilling on Georges Bank," said state Attorney General X. K. Franklin, too valuable to risk in that fashion.
THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT planned to sell 1,138 tracts of land in the waters that provide about 15 percent of the nation's annual fish
catch. The transaction would be the largest ever held concerning North Atlantic waters.
Govern. Michael S. Dukakis has said the state asked that 1,000 tracts at depths less than 1,300 feet be deleted from the water supply. Department dropped only 546 tracts.
A department spokeswoman sait
that 199 traps requested by the
state law.
"Offshore drilling is proceeding off the coastline of 30 nations, most of which have fishing industries and vigilant environmental activists," said Frank Tivnan, spokesman for the Massachusetts Petroleum Council.
"Nowhere has offshore drilling harmed a fishery or been stopped by environmentalists."
A SUIT FILED in the late 1970s succeeded in delaying the first lease sale by 21 months. Following a December 1979 sale, eight exploratory wells were drilled at the cost of hundreds of millions of dollars, but oil or gas were not found.
The second planned lease sale in March 1983 was blocked when a U.S. District Court judge in Boston ruled that the Interior Department's environmental impact statement estimating relative risks and benefits of drilling was inadequate.
Need a TV...
Rentacolor TV.
Student Discounts, Free Delivery, Free Installation.
Call Mike: 1-784-8660
highlight and write quick as a flash
TEXTAR more than just a highlighter
Switch from highlighting to jotting notes without changing pens. Textar comes in six bright fluorescent colors, each with a blue ballpoint pen.
SYSACUTLER TEXTAR fluorescent mark & write
Available now at your college store.
TEXTAR more than just a highlighter
STAEDTLER LEXTAR blaupunkt
mark & write
TENTION
SUDENTS
COUPON
$3 Your Choice $3 Save $3 OFF the
Reg. price on the following
-100 sheet box Kodak Paper
-100 ft. roll Tri-X Film TX402
-Any filter for camera lens
-2x Teleconverter
-Any Enlarging Easel
$3 Expires 9-15-84 $3
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YOUR MEMORIES
SEND SNAPSHOTS
DOWNTOWN
1107 Massachusetts
843-4435
Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30
HILLCREST
919 Iowa
841-8668
Mon.-Fri. 10:8
Sat. 10:6
ZERCHER
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We
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PAPER
for a Good Look
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843-4435
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841-8668
Mon.-Fri. 10-8
Sat. 10-6
ZERCHER
PHOTO
PAPER
for a Good Look
We use Kodak
PAPER
for a Good Look
Ronnie's
Old Time Rock & Roll
530 Wisconsin
Lawrence Ks.
749.3891
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Friday & Saturday
HOTLINE
10 p.m.-2 a.m.
Tuesday Nights Are Ladies Nights 7 p.m..11 p.m. Free Well Drinks and Draft Beer For The Ladies
Memberships Available
Ronnie's Is A Private Club
Better than ever
That's the FUJI line for 1984
More bike for less money.
Don't settle for second best
KU
15 E. 8th, Downtown 843-0498 Tue.-Sat.10-5:30
The Woman in Red
Program in Bed: 5-15 7-35 9-30
VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1059
1 p.m. PRE-GAME SHOW
1:30 p.m. KU VS Wichita State
at Memorial Stadium
$209⁹⁵
'CK'S BIKE SHOP
Fuji.
LIVE FOOTBALL BROADCAST SATURDAY
BERKLEY
• alloy frame
• alloy tires
• Sunntour AR
• dérailleurs
$ 209.95
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
JOSEPH MILLER
TELEVISION VIDEO
Pimce
Purple Rain
7.20 9.25 11.35 Sun
KLZR
Sale Dates Sept. 8-Sept.15, 1984
UP TO 40% OFF
CINEMA 1
TELEPHONE 547-2600
FLASHPOINT
R
SAT. SUN.
10AM - 8PM
SELECTED FRAMED ARTWORK by Monet, Sanchez, O'Keefe, Schurr
An Adventure of Possibility
BO DEREK
Bolero
HILLCREST 1
917-620-3044
(815) 561-9000
CLINT EASTWOOD
A cap on the edge
TIGHTROPE®
7:20 8:30 9:00 Daily
COUNTY BAY WALK
GHOSTBUSTERS
EXPO
7.15 - 9.30 8:00 DOYLY
no other coupons or disc apply with special sale prices
KLZR
106
HILLCREST 2
SEE AND LOOK
THE NIGHTMARE WEEKEND
Their time has come!
REVENGE OF THE NERDS
FrameUp custom framing & gallery
SUNSET MUSIC CONCERT 7:30 PM
RED DAWN
Red Dawn 4:20
Fri. Sat. Sun.
ICE PARKS 10:30
Twilight Bargain Show
2214 Yale Rd.
Next to Hillcrest
Pizza At Stephanie's
841-8010
6:00 PM
Roll
Throw
Spread
Sprinkle
Heap
Sprinkle
Cook
Box
6:25 PM ENJOY
Pizza At
STEPHANIE'S
Pizza At Stephanies
BIG MONSTER
Pizza At Stephanie's
DIZZAM
STEPHANIES
Buy Any 1 Item Large Pizza and 2-16 oz. Cokes
MEAL DEAL
ALL FOR $7.78
FREE DELIVERY
SHIPPING ON ALL ORDERS (EXCEPT
IN US AND CANADA)
841-8010
It's a MEAL DEAL
Savings for Real
2214 Yale Roa
One coupon per order.
---
SOMEONE IS DAY!
2 FOR 1
Order any Large Pizza and get another one of Equal Value FREE!!!
One Discount Per Order
Coupon Expires Sept. 19, 1984
841-8010
Savings for Real
2214 Yale Road
One coupon per order
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN OUR SERVICE ZONE
---
September 7,1984
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
The University Daily KANSAN
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
CLASSED SKILLS
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days or 2 Weeks
10-15 2.00 3.15 3.75 6.75
16-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80
E1-25 4.10 3.15 5.25 8.05
Words added 90 90 75c 10c
AD DEADLINES
Thursday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Classified Display
classified display advertisements can be only one
column wide and no more than six inches deep.
Classified display advertisements are displayed
classified display advertisements even for logos.
POLICIES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
this earned rate discount
* Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
Brand items can be advertised in BERL of a charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed on your website or on the company's business email at 843-4588.
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD CASE count as 1 word
- working days prior to publication
• Always based on consecutive day insertions
- Always rates based on current active day increments only.
- Classified display ads do not gain towards monthly earned rate discount.
* Count of all mail order items must be submitted.
Applications are now being accepted for Student Committee Members for the 1986 Karnataka Matters. Applications are available from www.karnatakamattress.org as part of this great KKI Tradition. Deadline for application: Sept 20
On Sale Near You! $3.50 ea
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established.
- Contracts are not provided for classified or
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- **Bind box ads** - please add a $2 service charge.
- **Checks must be company all classified ads mailed to:** The University Daily Kansas.
become a KU Student Ambassador! Interested students should have a general working knowledge of the University and be able to communicate effectively to senior students to high school students. This position requires that applicants be full time students enrolled in a credit hour or on average 8 hours per week. Applications are available in the Office of Admissions. 128 Strong Hall. The deadline for applications is October 30.
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement.
- correct insertion in any pre-insertion
* no re-rows on canalization of pre-part classified
MUM SALE
**Budget Stretcher coupons Thurs. evenings. Buy $1 & receive $1 coupon toward next purchase**
**Cross Reference Malls Shopping Center**
MOM SALE
Lambda Sigma
Parent's Day Mum Sale
September 4, 2018
**IMPROVE YOUR READING: COMPLEXION**
AND SPEED **ON THIS WEEK**
Monday, September 10 to Tuesday, September 14 from 2:45 to 7:00 p.m. Materials fee $13.
Register at the Student Assistance Center, 120 West 6th Street, New York, NY 10019.
DEALING WITH THAT UNAKY FEELING,
I will talk about conversations, make new
relationships and have fun.
September 16, 6: 30 - 9:00 p.m. f.RICE. Please
contact us at 121 Strong Hall, 804-4544.
Assistance 121 Strong Hall, 804-4544.
jennsens Relays Student Committee is looking for new members. Pick up application at the Track Office, 143 Allen Field House. Deadline is Sept. 21.
$1st true you can buy jeeps for $44 through the
$5th government? Get the facts today! Call
123-742-1142 Iphone: 2304
PLYMOUTH THIRFT SHOP for clothing and housewares Sat 9:12 30; Tue 9:4; Thur 9:12 30.
8:30 gm 43 Vermont
KWALYALL COMICS, SALE Ang. 23rd thru Sept
8th, 102 W.7 H, 843-7239
SENIORS. Don't be left out. Shooting for Senior portraits for the 18th Jayhawk begin Monday Sep. 9 at 8:59 siting. Call bookyear for apportionment. 12:5 6.84-3728
THE FAR SIDE
RESEARCH PAPERS! 306-page catalogue–15,278 copies* Taskb $2.00 RESEARCH I 1321 Idahoe, IMt Los Angeles 90025 (213) 472-8268
RESEARCH PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS
WORKSHOP | HANDLE a topic, organize your note, use the library, manage your time, Wednesday, September 12, 5: 6 to 9 p.m., Downs Auditorium, Ivych Hall. FREED, Presented by the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
Rent 19" Color TV $28.96 a month Curtis
Mathes. 144 W 21rd 842-5751 9:30 - 9:00
M-F. 9:30 - 9:00 Sat.
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. 144 W. 21rd 842-5751 9:30-9:00
M.F. 9:30-9:00, Sat
SPINSTER'S BOOKS. Lawrence's Womyn's my-saint, children's bookstore for ALL women, collectively operated by lishus, you invite to our 3-ry; at City Hall, 212 North Main Street, Open house (1101) 1/2 Mass. - 60 Palpick Park and Womyn's dance @ 8 p.m.; at Clinton Pork, 212 North Main Street. For schedule of events, directions:
Shirley Bennett, founder of Charme Beauty Salon, is now at Angles Beauty Salon, 940 Massachusetts. M.F. Call 843/476 for Shirley September Special Shampoo & Harbour - 843
of large long distance telephone bills. Switch to TMI, your only quick and efficient local long distance company in Lawrence, Kansas. If you want a 90% or anywhere in the U.S. Hawaii, Puerto Rico and Alaska. There are no monthly minimums, no service fees. For more information, call your TMI representative.
ENTERTAINMENT
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All requests. Lighting included. Reasonable Rates. References: 249,1121
Comedy Writers: I need original stand up
Mike, Mike, 837-7500
FOR RENT
2-BR Apt, like New, on Buuroute, C/A, W/D in clued. $300/room 841-1314. 843-0038
3-BR Ap. Utilities paid, 7 blocks - K U. 2. unlocked downtown Covered parking, large backyard, sun deck, 408 West 6th. Phone 764 2233 for info.
1 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse w/garage Swimming pool available Excellent southwest location $85/month Call 841.9337
Male or female roommate. Three college girl
bathrooms. Two bathrooms. Two bedrooms.
Trailside toilet doubles. 4.14 plan. 5 others. Very
clean.
Bv GARY LARSON
Jason
© 1984 Universal Press Syndicate
9.7
BLOOM COUNTY
"Oh, quit worrying about it, Andrew. They're just love handles."
SO. WITH THE
BASES LOADED,
YASTURMNI
COMES UP TO
BAT...
PLEASE, OH
PLEASE DON'T
HAVE LET
ANYONE
RECRIEVER
OVER THIS.
3 bedroom House, new furniture, new carpet, fireplace, walk up to K. U10 392 BU 8928 AVALON APARTMENTS. Gas & water paid in these large one & two bedrooms. Ready for immediate occupancy. Close to K. U10, basement. For more info, call Kaveri Valley Mall at
Designed for a group of students, huge and energy efficient $600/mo. 79-1682 843-9479 Female Christian roommate needed to share $75/mo plus utilities West Hill Park Large, furnished apartment (6. rooms.) Large, furnished apartment (6. rooms.) Central, central air, garage, close to K.U. Very nice a car or a truck.
HERE COMES THE FIRST
PITCH AND I COME
OUTTA THAT Hole, RABBIT,
OR I'M A-COMIN' IN
AFTER YA!!
New leasing one, two & three bedroom apartments, and ready for you to move into. Good locations, some on busine. Contact Kaw Valley Mgt 1-811-6900-3242.
Opportunity for roommates; one block from campus,
4 big bedroom, living room, kitchen with dining area,
bathroom with 2 winters; back porch overlooking laundry, hospital, just remodeled $110 per roommate for 4; also roommate for 3. See for 3. See for 3. Call 842 7269, 749-7114, 842-4545.
OLD MILK APARTMENTS. Now leasing newly remodeled one and two bedrooms apts — walking distance to K I U. and on barefoot. Ready for mobile moving. New kitchen, bath, laundry, etc. at 841-600 for more info
Spacious 3-bedroom apartments available for Fall, for 1 or 2 people. Include fully equipped kitchen, carpeting, central air and laundry facilities. Kitchen with stainless steel faucets. For more information, call 847-2233.
'ry cooperative living' Sunflower House, 1406
tennessee 749.8821 Ask for Dawn. Inexpensive
bathrooms are available
`wo bedroom townhouse in Moodbrook`
available for sublease from mid-Sept. Rent reduced:
`841-3514`
ORPHIREISEIVENE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
o早发 and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care, confidentiality assured Greater
area; call for appointment.
435 145-340
BUSINESS PERS
FIRSTA LATINA. reage, salute and other Latin American Music DJ. -La Gorida M., Sept. 16, 8 p.m. at the Jazzzle. $2. Sponsored by Latin American Solidarity.
FIGHT SEXUAL ASSAULT Douglas County Hail Victim Support Service offers free education programming (films and speakers for classes, hallowen traps etc. Call 841-9865)
Barbs Vintage Rose
New Arrival
Vintage Closet 1920-1950
Velvets, Silks, Wools
918 %s. Mass. B41-2451
918 %s. Mass. B41-2451
Knowledge Service Education
South Delta
32% education in Student Faculty Study
19% education in Business
21 & Education 641-0004
22 & Education 841-0004
Barbs Vintage Rose
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
Mornings with kids
3-5 years at Head Start
© 2012 9:06 a.m. First emptiness
If you or someone you love has been a victim of sexual assault. Rape Victim Support Service call 814-243-8416 or 814-243-8906 for referral, 24 hours a day. Visit a United Student Fund shelter supported agency.
1234567890
Call 842-2515 for information
TENNIS ANYONE?
Inflation Fighter, 8 East 210. For your needs in vantage and party clothes, hats, gloves, ties, dresses and suits come In & browse Hours 10 to 5:30 Sat, 10 to 5:30 Sun
Tennis Singles Tournament
Sunday, September 9th
1 pm Robinson
First and Second Rounds
Sun
1970s
First And Second Rounds
EUROPEAN
FALL SALE
LOOK AND FEEL GREAT
2 For 1
SUNTANNING, HOT TUB,
& HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
Aerobics, Weight Room Environmental Hot Tub Room
KWALITY COMICS, SALE, Aug. 23rd thru Sept
8th. 107 W. 7H. 843-7299
CLAMP OUTLACE 0, Live LAA, LAA1, reg $29.5 $18.5
Crownlight reg. 77-56 17-5, white supplies last
String Office, 1094 Vermont. 843 3644
NOBODY
DOWN HERE
BUT US
CARROTS!
OOOOO! THAT
DOES IT, YA
LONG-EARED
VARMINT. GOT
READY TO BIT
FILLED WITH
LEAD!!
FREE DAY MEMBERSHIP*
GET NOTICED
THE BEST WORKOUT IN TOWN! Leonard
School, 1200 West Church Street,
Johnson School, 1128 North Vermont,
Cormoran 6-4
(OR 25% OFF SINGLE MEMBERSHIP)
STAEDTLER/MARS Tech pen special 7 pen set
$33.10 4 pen set $22.50 while supplies last. Strong's
Office Systems
by Berke Breathed
BLAM! BLAM!
BLA — AND
WOSTRINKT SLIPES
HOME, THAT'S THE
GAME, GOOD NIGHT!
The New Place. for a rich atmosphere at an affordable price. The New Place, a private club, 2004
uva 822 9503
M
PLUS MANY OTHER HATS
THE ETC. SHOP
INDIAN FOYER
AUTHENTIC HATS
B STETSON
NOW SALMAN F
"FRIDAYS" AT CANTERBURY
732 MAJ. 845-0617
THE FUN PLACE TO BE
VINTAGE-1950's
WOOL BANED JACKETS
VII
Refreshment and Conversation with Dr. Max Sutton
C.S. Lewis and the *inkings*
Canterbury House
1116 Louisiana
4 p.m. until 5:30
AUM SEWING Dressmaking and altera-
tions. Call 842-5375. Reasonable prices.
ADVENTURE TRAVEL, INC.
Welcome to KU!
and would you believe
it's not too early to
make your Christmas
Holiday Travel Plans!
For Lowest Air Fares and Efficient Courteous Service—Call
Adventure Travel, Inc.
1203 Iowa Street
843-0964
FOR SALE
1976 Kawasaki K2 400, bookrack, highways pegs,
windshield, 370 miles, excellent condition. $700.
841 3222
channel 200 watts $250 843-3280
1980 Honda Hawk 400 cc. Low miles, excellent
79 HONDA CX-500. Priced starting new Dumplings
continuous training
1980 Yamaha XN 400 #7560 841.3332 452 California
AUDI Fox, 1977, d-dr. auto, $1950. Electronic
speakers $120 each. Pioneer amplifier, 80W, $200.
Konammer amplifier 75W, $30, 841, $1912
Apple i64 16K, disk drive with controller $99
Apple i84 18K, onboard monitor. Apple printer
i90 25K, network adapter. MacBook
M1 PC I5 $299, I3 $299, I2 $299, M1 PC I6
Billfolds, briefcases, collections, folios, hand-
bags, luggage, notebooks and much more at
Serrel Leather. 914 Massachusetts. 324-646
COLUMBIA 3-speed girl's bike. Like new conditon $50.862.7137
Bookcases, beds, desks. Everything But Ice. 616
Vermont.
Commodore- 64 computer with dataset
Word processing, color graphics! Great for
students. Like new pads, $36, price negotiable
Call Tim. Days: 84194830, 7409282
FOR SALE: Bookcases, starting at 49.95 The Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 6th
Flexible airline 100,000 ft capacity. Regular $49.95, on sale $19.95. Berry's Sissima and Vacuum Center, 2480 Iola Hawaii (Holiday Plaza) 842-1565
SAVE $300
No rent until October 2-3 bedroom apartment
Guitar: Ibenez Acoustic, electric cutaway
-mos. old- 8275 - 8754 - 3800 Tim
Men's 23" lightweight 12-speed. Men's tail 10-speed, women's 10-speed, men's 5-speed. Call 842.257.5 p.m.
Horse for sale Appalachia Gelding about 8 years old. 4400 Oklahoma. Call 863-2529
Phone 843/2528 after 5 p.m.
Oak Drafting table/desk. Good condition. Best of
fer. 841,5461.
The Ultimate System ALPINE 3214N Dig Air Rev DV200
Dig Air Rev DV200, with SA 900/900,
Personal Computer System: APPLE Macintosh,
including printer, MacWrite, MacPaint, and
Microsoft BASIC $2500 Call 842-3383
Oak table, 4 chairs, desk, dressers, bed, chest
books, and tables, etc. $843-283 for 5 to 30.
Pentax 15mm Camera $20. For more info call
842-9077.
Queen Size Waterbeds $179.95 complete. The Fur
niture Barn. 1811 W. 6th.
Samick studio piano, 2 yrs. old, black. $2000
Yamaha MT-41 4-track recorder. $700 Mike
843.759
Solid Wood. 5 Drawer Chests $89.95 The Fur
furniture Barn. 1811 W. 6th.
Twin Mattresses and Foundations $119 per set The Furniture Barn 1811 W 6th
Used Metal Office Chairs - Side chairs with & without arms $4 & $10-30mm Swivel chair with caster pins $5. Ease. Swivel chair with casters $28 & 849.294 after 5 m
WINDSURFING SAIL BOARDS prized from $449
Large selection of imported models. NATURAL WAY 280 Massachusetts 941-000
Western Civilization Notes; including New Supplement on Sale on Sale; uses them to use their knowledge in exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization available.* **The Book:** The Book.
Yamaha receiver Pioneer tape deck with 2
speakers: $400 Drawing table & chair: $120 Call:
843.244
Furniture Hide a bed $40. Dresser $40.
Table chairs $40. Day bed $40. Small cabinet $40.
Bean bag $40. Call Joe at 863-304 or 843-7511.
COMPATTER TERMINAL Zenith ZT 1 (Terminal with built-in Auto Digital autoconfiguration on feature parallels (contraints) and RS232 ports. ZENTH ZVM 11 Hesitron Hexon 480, 625-254
For furnishings for your living, we have what you need. Thrift stores at 628 Vermont and 16 E.9th
paint, yellowleather, must 894-6644.
Ford Extra Rubber. Interior, good
Gearbox. Ask for KD484 8372-
1921 T-Bird, white leather interior, AT, PS, PB,
Pilz Tilt and power seat some. R$99. Sale
1973 V W Karmann Ghia Good condition and
in w.r. Stock. Price negotiable 841-8073
AUTO SALES
971 Malibu 1350-21i, PB, PC, New starter,
diatom, water pump, tires, exhaust, $900
sequestrate. Call 841-3530 after 7, ask for Paul
tobiler
1967 Mustang, 6-cyl. 3-speed, very nice, new
nautil, must sell, 841 606-607, or 842 1469
1925 Olds 84, four room, very nice car, $8,000 miles,
air automatic, cruise control, lift climbing, cladding,
interior good tires, everything works, $109,
Presti McCall, IQ 1683, 1983 North 2st
1973 Trump TIG 176 recently refurbished engine, new starter, alternator, clutch plate. am/FM Stereo cassette; power antenna; avr. radios; a/b radio & runs great. Call: 842-1022 (855) 321-7996.
1078 Trans Am. 400, PS, PB, AC = Beautiful car!
$4500 8125 only 4 a.p.m.
1978 Mustang II. 4 cyl, great on gas, new tires. A good car for a student. $2500. 842-2488
1980 Mercury Zephyr Z7 2 door, 4 speed, 6 cyl,
38.000 miles, $295, Preston McCall, 1981 N, brd.
14.000 miles
65 VW Bug, strong engine. Phil. 842.382. eve. & weekends
Slick, White 1966 Cadillac Hearse. Make appointment to see: 864-1425
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND in Wescoe classroom on Aug. 31, Pen &
Pencil set in holder. Call 864-4520, or come to 3116 Wescoe
FOUND): 3 m old female, golden Labrador on
ki Campus. Twice wearing Yellow wilton
collar. Playful. Call Lawrence Humane Society at
841-6905
Lost: Calico Cat, one yr old. Last seen - 17th &
Iowa, please call 841-466 or return - 1715 Indiana,
Reward
Missing. Yellow cat w/ black & silver collar. Lost around 14th & Tennessee. REWARD. Call 784-4656.
HELP WANTED
Apply at Mazzo's Pizza, 27th & Iowa. No experience needed, just hard work
Mazzo's Pizza 21th & Iowa
Bartenders & Doormen. Must be 21. Apply after 2
Asst. Manager position available Health life, vacation and advancement included. Apply at Mazzo's Pizza 21th & Iowa
Bartenders & Doormen. Must be 21. Apply after 24
pm. on ronnie's, 30 Wisconsin.
p.m. at 10am, 310 W. 24th Street
Business 310 Tutor Wanted as soon as possible
Hours only. Please call 842 6663
Cold care workers wanted for care home care Married couple. At least one spouse must have bachelor degree from an accredited college. Must have a coursework in adolescent psychology. Must have strong desire to work with and to improve the care home care has excellent 9 year record with well developed Teaching Family Model and an active program. Care home care has excellent 9 year record with current Certified Teaching Parents will provide 60-90 days on sight training. Program funded by Kansas Bee. All students must be available to begin training between October 1 and November 1, 1984. Applicant must be working toward Bachelor's degree. Careers may be available in University, local, and 2 colleges within 25 miles. Easy access to Kansas City colleges. Equal opportunity employment. Experience room, board, health insurance. Send resume to Youth Services, Inc. P.O. Box 221.
Computer Science Student, well versed in computer operations, qualified to handle installations of computers and support mission sales and pay hourly for installation and operator training. Midwest Business Systems
Coordinator Newsletter editor for the East Lawrence Improvement Association, a neighborhood based organization, is responsible for managing $200 mo. Applicants must have administrative expertise, organizing skills, ability to publish periodic newsletter, some familiarity with local business and industry, and a demonstrated commitment to helping people help themselves. Must be dedicated, energetic, and willing to devote time and two letters of recommendation, by September 16, to the ELLA, 1300 New York Street, Lawrence, KS 73040.
DAY CARE HELPER 12-5-30 or 3-5-30 daily Child development or education major. Prefer experience. Call 842 2223
Dependable female to assist disabled with care.
No experience required. Mornings, weekend
& evening hours available. Call between 15,
190-0288
Experienced Drummer for Weekend Rock & Roll Band 841-4444 Professionals inquiries only FRESHMEN It isn't too late to join NAVAL
ROTC Call 643-316
GOVERNMENT IDS $1.659 - $0.533 / yes*
**
GOVERNMENT JOB$ 16,559 $50,533/year
Now Hiring Your area Call 805-687-6000 Ext.
109738
GRADUATE ASSISTANT: Primary duty to assist with production of journals and occasional publications in humanities, secondarily. Additional duties may be required. Historical Hamster Studies may be required. Excellent typing and proofreading skills essential. Experience with ATMs and JOB assignments. Appointment is 5 for
two months, flexibility in scheduling work in possible) and salary range is $420 - 480. Submit letter of application and a copy of resumes to Twine Antee, University of Kansas (684-749) by September 7, 1994
Mini Computer Sales person. Full part and time inside sales, some outside sales. Knowledge of hardware and software required. Send or bring resume to Comparket, 71 W. 28t, Lavender
Openings for part and full time fountain personel. All shifts available. Apply in person at Vista restaurants, 132 W. 7th H.
castume Bartender and Cocktail waitresses.
Must be 21 yrs, of age. The New Place 2406 Iowa. 842-923-5950
Immediate openings for part time grill personnel
All shifts available. Availability non rushes &
mornings. Apply in person at Vista restaurants
1327 W. 9th
Part time help at Day Care Home. One cook needed, 11, 1. Mon, Fri. Afternoon Asst. needed 3. Call 8431417.
piano teacher qualified in Zurich method needed.
Pallium's Music House, 843-3907
SOLID WOOD Student desks $89 The Furniture
Barn 1811 W 6th.
- university of Knaan Budget Office has an opening for a continuous half time graduate assistant position with possible full time employment during summer. The position will require training in transfer transfers for the University budget and will help with the technical preparation of the four University Budgets. The position will be offered to fund accounting and have an opportunity to work within the University financial environment. Acceptance in a J. U. graduate program requires completion of the University communications skills required $400-$480 per month for a half time appointment Close date Sep. 21st 10:44 for information; call Jane Wharton
Someone to drive a piano tauren around on Day and Thursday, Palluin's music. 843-3067
Applications available in 319 Strong Hall EOE
Wanted: Part-time shift supervisor. Must be 18,
able to work nights and weekends. Apply in
person only at Border Bandido 1528 W. 23rd St.
Work-Study position now open in the organiza-
tion and activities center at Northwestern
University. You will continue to the end
of Spring Semester two. Prefer applicable
expenses including meals, travel and need
available and need to be returned to room
108. Please visit us at www.northwestu.edu
MISSCELLANEOUS
FUTTON Cotton Mattress providing comfortable support for the spine. Easy portable. 0% off tuition fees with this ad. Blue Heron Futons 841-9442
Wide choice Desk Lamps and Accessories to brighten your room at The Furniture Barn. 1811 W. 6th.
PERSONAL
Howlett Packard Printer/ plotter for use with HP-4U/CV/CX Mark, 843-5116
sensitive, nurturing women and men are needed a speedive pulse time with children of domestic violence, on a one-to-one basis or in group settings. We offer the need to break the cycle of violence; please call Woman's Transition Care Services 814.0677 before Sep 8. VTCS, the battered shelter mother, is the first step in helping women and adolescents Women of all ages race and ethnic backgrounds are encouraged to apply A community-based program provides volunteers and trained Volunteers for daytime as well as evening needed; call 814.0677 before Sep 8.
Dear Cric, HAPPY 21st. BIRTHDAY With Love. K.L.
S W M 36 inmate seeks a taste of freedom thrust
correspondence Serious inquiries only B
*berms* 2 Box 2 Lanning KS 66043
are needed. can also be taught to students.
**MATH TUTOR** for most courses, 841-9032
SERVICES OFFERED
Main Lobby, Selt serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
NEED A RIDE/RIDE? Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union COMMUTEIS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall
TUTORMS. List your name with us. We refer student impairs to you. Student Assistance Center.
121 Strong Hall
TUTORS-TUTES. Inquire at the Student Assistance Center, 123 Strong Hall
Charme Beauty Salon is now offering Haircuts for $1, and perm for $21 & up. Call or come for a professional hair perm at a great price! Charme Beauty Salon 847-350-8390
Charine Beauty Salon - Home of S F Harcourt Environmental campus photo studios - Modeling, Dance and Theatre portfolio or composites JMP DENSTRON call 842-7194 for information
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown. All haircuts. $5. No appointment
necessary.
Sunshine Avenue Montessori Pre-school. A M & M preschool and kindergarten program in the Montessori school in serving in nursing education and students. Visit, with your child at 213 Maple Blvd. EF - 0968
Voice Lessons—DMA voice candidate accepting non-credit singers. Experience with all type voices: 341-495
MATH TEACHER for most courses, 843-902
TENNIS. Take lessons from experienced instructor. Beginner Advanced. Group/Individual.
842-5585
TYPING
24-Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes,
dissertations, papers Close to campus Best
quality and fast service. 841-5000
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing. Judy
8427945
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers Word Processing, Professional Results - resumes, papers, a specialty. Call 714-1118
Always try the best for professional service
Term papers, theses, resumes, etc. Reasonable
842.3246
Call Terry for your typing needs letters, term papers, dissertations etc. IBM correcting select II. 84235 or 843. 2671) 10:00 p.m. (m
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANDELLE, TIENAFFER - Typing Service
TRANS/IRRITION also; standard cassette tape
941.8877
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI,
CLIENT 841.3510
Professional TYPING, EDITING GRAPHICS.
IBM Correcting Electric, Kathy. 842-3278 before 9
PST.
RELIABLE, experienced typing / word processing
of term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. $1.25 a
nase. Call Mike after 6pm. 843-7437
Somersite & Rae, Inc. (Professionals at Competitive Rates; Word Processing; "Typing" in APA style in *APA Lawrence*: 801 Kansas; 414-6446; Troxy, 200; Western, 232, 3814)
TIP TOP TYPING. 1203 Iowa. Professional typing, processing, editing. Resumes from start to finish, repetitive letters, editing, our specialties, and correspondence. Coron. F. 95, 143-867 967
WANTED
Experimented typist Tern paper, theses, all micellaneous, 10M Correcting Selectic Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544, Mr. Wright.
Roommate Housemate Trailer house, good location $150 per month + 1/2 gas e. ice. 1 smoke 749-8737 650-5074 bedding duplex. Completely furnished with bedroom duplex. 500+ plan incl. Warder and dryer. $300 per month. Close to bus.
Female roommate to share condo. Pool, all amenities. 1185 plus utilities. Debbie or Carr. 84D-6215
We buy VW's, running or not. Call Metric Motors.
841 6600
The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
September 7,1984 Page 16
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
Victories a must for OU's Switzer
Some people are never satisfied.
Give them a winning season and they want a conference championship. Give them a conference championship and they want a national championship. Give them a national championship and they want more national championships.
That, in a nutshell, is the case at the University of Oklahoma, where football and winning go hand in hand.
NEVERTHELESS, IT IS HARD to believe that Sooner coach Barry Switzer, who has a record of 106-213 at Oklahoma, is in danger of losing his job because his team has had six losses in what. What a tragedy an 8-4 season is.
Football fans in the state of Kansas should feel sorry for those poor souls down South. After all the Sooners
PETER SMITH
GREG
DAMMAN
Sports Editor
couldn't even manage a trip to the Orange Bowl last season, and if they couldn't go to the Orange Bowl, they weren't going anywhere. The heck with all of those other bowl games.
In Oklahoma, football fans don't measure success by bowl game appearances. They can go to a bowl game any old year. They want national championships. Who cares if they already have won five national championships? Five can't enough, and in Oklahoma eight isn't enough.
It's hard for Kansas football fans to feel sorry for the Soupons, but it's hard not to feel sorry for Swiss. In 11 seasons as bead coach, his teams have finished in the Top 10 seven times. He has the nation's best record among coaches with 10 or more years on the job.
THROUGH THE YEARS,
tradition-rich football schools have placed unbelievable amounts of pressure on coaches to produce winning seasons. Now, Oklahoma has started the trend toward putting pressure on coaches to not only win, but produce national championships as well.
Unfortunately for Switzerland, the outlook for 1984 is not bright. As usual he has a bundle of talented players, but not nearly as many as he had in the mid 1970s, when the Sooners won two of their national championships.
To make matters worse for Switzerland, Oklahoma plays six teams this year. Nebraska, Texas, Colorado and Missouri — that went to bowl games in 1983. And it should be noted that five of those teams found bowl
games other than the Orange Bowl worth playing in.
BUT BEFORE KANSAS FANS start feeling too sorry for Switzerland, it should be noted that it wasn't long ago that a Kansas coach was placed under about the same type of pressure.
had basketball coach at KU for 19 years. Ted Owens compiled a record of 348-182. His victory total placed him among the top 24 coaches in the country. He was fired in 1983 after two straight losing seasons.
Although Owens, like Switzerland, had a winning record overall, the big difference is that he was fired for producing teams with losing records, not teams with winning records. Even winning doesn't make Switzerland a success in the eyes of Sooner faithful.
ANOTHER BLOT on Owens' record was his inability to consistently beat rivals Kansas' State and Missouri.
Switzer has the same problem. As las as the Sooners are concerned, Texas is the team to beat. But the Longhorns have won four of the last five games between the two teams.
OU fans want to know why they can't beat Texas. Switer's answer is simple. The Longhorns have more talent.
Texas is one of the top football talent-producing states in the nation. About 2,000 high schools play football in Texas and about 100,000 schools play football in Texas.
THE NUMBERS SEEM TO give Texas a big recruiting advantage. But, don't think for a minute that Oklahoma doesn't benefit from Texas' surplus of football talent.
The Sooners received more than just a little help over the years from native Texans such as Joe Washington, Greg Pritt and Billy Sims. Also, six of the Sooners returning starters for 1984 are from Texas, including fullback Earl Johnson, the 1983 Big Eight Newcomer of the Year.
However, six players do not make a team. Switzerland knows that, and with his job on the line, he is grapping for answers.
Kansas fans would be glad to know that even though the Jayhawks haven't beaten the Sooners since 1975, our state has been indirectly losing its most recent pass-rassing 8.4 seasons. The following quote from Switzer tells why.
"IF OKLAHOMA WAS sitting on the Kansas state line we'd have even less tradition," Switzer said. "But if it was sitting down on the Red River (on the Texas-Oklahoma border) we'd have even better tradition. We can't beat Texas on players they want to recruit."
So take heart. If the Jayhawks can't beat Oklahoma, at least the location of our state can lessen the pressure on them to cause the Sooners to lose to Texas.
KANSAS (0-0)
Offense
JE- Johnny Holloway, 5-11, 183 brj.
LT- Jim Davis, 6, 245 brj.
LG- Paul Oswald, 6, 240 so.
C- Benny Simkea, 6, 245 brj.
RG- Doug Cipher, 6, 245 brj.
RT- Bob Pieper, 6, 252 so.
QH- Skip Peete, 6, 252 so.
QL- Skip Peete, 6, 185 brj.
QH-Mike Norseth, 6, 253 brj.
FM- Mark Henderson, 6, 210 so.
TB-Robert Mimbs, 6, 190 brj.
Offense
Defense
LE- Arnold Fields, 6-1, 190 jr.
LT- Jeff Anderson, 6-3, 225 jr.
LG- Phil Forte, 6-3, 200 so.
RG- Steve Nave, 6-2, 244 jr.
RT- Robert Tucker, 6-3, 240 jr.
RE- Guy Gamble, 6-3, 283 jr.
RL- Josh Wynne, 6-3, 283 jr.
DR- Darrell Williams, 6-2, 180 jr.
LCB- Dino Bell, 5-9, 180 jr.
S-Wayne Ziegler, 6-2, 190 so.
RCB- Raim Waltom, 6-0, 185 jr.
KICKOFF: 1:30 p.m. at Memorial Stadium
LT- Leroy Seek, 6- 38 br, 29F
NG- Keith Blunt, 6- 35 jr, 25J
RT- Mitchell Morris, 6- 42 br, 28F
B-LMitch Gee, 6- 322 sr, 25I
ILB- Nathaniel Hays, 5-11, 26 br
OM- Glenn Iseley, 5-11, 26 br
B-LMitch Gee, 6- 213 sr, 25I
CB- Robert孝福, 5-10, 169 br
CS- Darrell Whitley, 5-11, 196 br
FS- Curtis Whitten, 6- 10 155 br
CB- Maurice Foworth, 5-10, 165 br
WICHITA ST. (0-1) Defense
KICKOP 130 p.m. at Memorial Sloan Kirkton
KICKOP STANDING Kansas leads. 42. Kansas defeated WSU 75-4 last
year in Lawrence.
SE—Albert Hundley, 6-3, 186 jr.
LT—George Baxter, 6-4, 247 jr.
LG—Jim Sachs, 6-0, 240 jr.
C—Tim Brock, 6-2, 235 jr.
RG—Pat Cain, 6-4, 162 jr.
RU—Jerry Quick, 6-5, 29 jr.
RB—John Bell, 6-4, 196 jr.
FL—Kevin Pierce, 6-4, 181 jr.
QB—Brian McDonald, 6-4, 177 jr.
FB—Dwight Eaton, 6-0, 228 jr.
TB—Eric Denson, 3-1, 181 jr.
Both Gottfried and Chismair said that their teams were healthy and that all of their players would be available to play.
Offense
"We got him the ball enough, he just wasn't able to do enough with it," Chismar said. "We need to try to balance things out a little more this week."
WSU continued from p. 5
WSU also has a top-flight runner in junior tailback Eric Denson. He needs 204 yards to become WSU's all-time leading rusher, and gained 1,072 yards last year for the last Saturday, but did catch five passes for 79 yards.
KU head coach Mike Goffried held a game-type screensapt images last week, which might help offset the loss that WSU has already played a game.
CHISMAR WHO PREVIOUSLY was an assistant at Arizona State, ditched WSU's dive-option offense this year in favor of a pro-style passing game WSU sophomore quarterback Brian McDonald passed for 313 yards and three touchdowns last Saturday.
Tomorrow's game could be an aerial circus. Last year's KU team passed more often than any other in Jayhawk history. Gottfried hasn't indicated that he'll be any less inclined to use a passing game this season. Byrd Ku will have three wide receivers in the starting offensive lineup.
"We hope so." Gottfried said.
"That's why we did it. We'll see if it's helped us on Saturday."
"It's also a disadvantage because they've had a chance to look at our film and we know nothing about them." Chismar said. "All I know about them is what I've read in the papers."
THE SHOCKER OFFENSIVE line has two starters from last year and includes three seniors. However, four starters didn't participate in spring drills. Chismar said the fact that the unit had worked together long helped account for the difficulties WSU had running the ball last week.
WSU's defense opened the floodgates for Southwest Texas State last week, allowing 491 yards of total offense — 288 on the ground and 193 through the air. Chismar said the Shockers' opponent had a lot to do with that.
"Southwest Texas had an excellent ballclub," he said. "They had some big people up front and were able to move the ball on us all night."
The Shocker defensive line has no returning starters, and the top returner, 226-pound sophomore Tony Dupuisse, is sidedeline for the season. The next pick is offensive linemen, Leroy Seek and Keith Blunt, are transplanted offensive linemen.
THE LINEBACKERS AND secondary are much more experienced. Two of the four linebackers are returning starters, including Nathan Hayes, a 26-pound senior who was an All Missouri Valley Conference selection last year. Three returns return in the secondary.
Chusmar said that he saw no reason for stressing the intratext rivalry between the two.
sent Pittsburgh ahead for good with a 3-yard throw to another cookie, Weegie Thompson, in the third quarter.
"I don't think we have to do that," he said. "Our kids know it's a great opportunity. Being a state school, it's a big feather in your cap if you win. For us to be playing a Big Eight school is a great challenge. It's going to take an extraordinary effort for us to win this game."
Steelers defeat Jets, 23-17
By United Press International
Anderson hit field goals of 32 and 48 yards in the second period and a 27 yarder in the final quarter. The loss spoiled the Jets' first home game in Giants Stadium after 20 years at Shea Stadium in New York. They was their eight loss in as many tries against the Steelers.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — David Woodley, starting just one four days after suffering a concussion, twisted two touchdown passes and Gary Anderson kicked three field goals last night, helping the New York Jets continue their mastery of the New Jersey Jets with a 23-17 victory.
Woodley completed 14 of 25 passes for 187 yards, while Ryan managed only 11 of 27 for just 126 yards.
Woodley, knocked out in a loss to Kansas City on Sunday, threw a 6-yard touchdown pass to rookie Louis Lips in the first period. He
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — New York Jet cornerback John Lynn bats a pass away from Pittsburgh Steeler wide receiver John Stallworth during the first quarter of their game at Giants Stadium. Pittsburgh defeated the Jets last night, 23-17
82795
abc
SPORTS ALMANAC
Tennis Results
U. S. Open Championships At New York, Sept. 6
MPH
Quart
Jayne Jones (3), Sambel Harb, Fla.
John Joyd, Britain, 7.5, 6.2, 6.0
John McRoe (1). New York, del.
Gene Mayer, Golf Island.
FLa, 7.5, 6.4, 6.0
Women's Doubles
Quarterfinals
Christiane Jolson, Switzerland, and Marcela Mesker, the Netherlands (10), del Alcazaba Moulin and Paula Smith. U.S. (7). 62-64 Double Dresses
Betsy Nageisen and Anne White, U.S. (15); def.
Chris Evert Lloyd and Billie Jean King, U.S. (9);
74. 44. 63.
Buratte Potter and Ferdy Titanus, U.S. (4:2); Mary Loi Patik and Robert Sequenus, S.A. (6:1), 6:2 Elburg Burand and Scott Davaus, S.A. (7:1); David Bancroft, Lloyd Britain, I.B. (6:4), 6:44 R芬桥康 South Africa and Colin Dodewelsch, Britain (14:4) and Colin Gunther, Switzerland, I.B. (3:4), 6:1, 6:2
W 1 L Pct. GB
Detroit 89 51 636
Toronto 80 54 578
Baltimore 79 53 623
New York 74 64 536
Boston 74 68 532
Cleveland 74 65 352
Pearson 74 78 400
Milwaukee 74 68 352
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Minneapolis 70 69 504 --
Kansas City 70 69 504 --
Cattleford 70 69 504 --
Chicago 66 74 468 --
Oakland 66 74 468 --
Seattle 63 77 456 --
San Diego 63 77 456 --
Oakland (Conroy 1-4) at Cleveland
Hilyeen 15 (6), 6:05 p.m.
New York (Nikro 16-7) at Boston
(0jeda 10-10) 6.35 p.m
(Opelia 10:10) x 3.52 pft.
Milwaukee (McClure 4-6) at Baltimore (McClure 4-6)
(hurst 2:10), 7:30 p.m.
Texas (Mashen 8:11) at Minnesota (Viola
14:12), 7:35 p.m.
Blyleven 15-6): 6-05 p.m.
Detroit (Petry) 16-8) at Toronto
Thursday's Game
Chicago 7, Oakland 3
Seattle (Young 4-6) at Kansas City
(Black 14-11) 7.35 pm
(D Martinez 5.71) · 7:0 p.m.
California (Zahn) · 10:09 at Chicago
Detroit Petry 16.8) at Toronto (Alexander 13.5) . 6.35 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
(Opendra 10:00) 6:35 p.m.
Milwaukee, McClure 4:6 at Baltimore
California (Zahn) 10:9) at Chicago
(hurst 2:10) 7:30 p.m.
Texas (Mastin 8:1) at Minnesota (Viola
East
W. L. Pct. GB
Chicago 85 55 607
New York 79 84 652
Philadelphia 73 66 525
St. Louis 72 66 112
Maryland 72 66 112
Pittsburgh 61 79 436
West 85 61 567
San Diego 85 61 567
Houston 71 70 564 9
Atlanta 71 70 564 9
Alabama 71 70 471 13
Cincinnati 59 82 418 21
San Francisco 58 82 414 21
St. Louis Horton 8/10 at Pittsburgh
Todor 8/10 6-35 n.p.
francisco 58 8. 21
**Thursday's Results**
Houston 14, San Francisco 2
Cincinnati 10, San Diego 3
Detroit 10, Montreal 7
Pittsburgh 2, New York 0
St. Louis 6, Philadelphia 5
Houston 10
Tudor 8:10) 6-35 p.m.
Philadelphia (Hawley 8:1) at Montreal
Houston (Niekro 13:10) at San Diego (Lollar 10:11), 9:05 p.m.
Chicago Huthven 5-9 at New York
Gooden 14-81 7:15 p.m.
[Smith 10-11] 6.35 p.m.
Chicago [Ruthven 5-9] at New York
Chennai/Hong Kong 11.4
Angeles/Honeycutt 10.9) : 9.35 p.m.
Atlanta (McMurtry 9.4) at San
Philadelphia (Rawley 8.3) at Montreal
(School 10.11) at 4:55 pm
Lollar 10-11, 9:50 p.m.
Crinniati (Robinson) 1-1) at Los
Gooden 14:8) 7:15 p.m
San Antonio (Niekro 13:10) at San Diego
Atlanta McMurtry 9-14) at San Francisco (Harmann 2.0) 9:00 p.m.
| | W | L | T | Pct | PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Miami | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1000 | 35 | 17 |
| England | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1000 | 40 | 17 |
| NJ Jets | 1 | 1 | 0 | 560 | 40 | 17 |
| Buffalo | 1 | 1 | 0 | 560 | 40 | 17 |
| Philadelphia | 1 | 1 | 0 | 560 | 40 | 17 |
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
American Conference
San Diego 1 0 0 1000 42 13
Kansas City 1 0 0 1000 17 27
Seattle 1 0 0 1000 16 19
LA Knights 1 0 0 1000 24 14
Dover 1 0 0 1000 20 17
Central
Pittsburgh 1 1 0 500 30 54
Cincinnati 1 1 0 100 17 20
Houston 1 1 0 000 14 24
Cleveland 0 1 0 000 0 33
National Conference
London
W L T Pt PF FA 27
NY Giants 1 0 0 000 28 14
Miami 1 0 0 000 27 28
Philadelphia 1 0 0 000 27 28
Seattle 1 0 0 000 17 24
NLA Union 1 0 0 000 17 24
Central
Chicago 1 0 0 1.000 34 14
Green Bay 1 0 0 1.000 24 23
Detroit 1 0 1 000 27 30
Tampa Bay 1 0 1 000 36 28
Denver 1 0 1 000 13 42
Alanta 1 0 0 1 000 36 28
San Francisco 1 0 0 1 000 36 27
New Orleans 1 0 1 000 28 36
I. Rams 1 0 1 000 13 20
Thursday's Result
Ditchburn 91, N.V. Jets 17
Hawksburgh
Sunday's Games
Buffalo at St. Louis, noun
Dallas at N.Y. Giants, noon
Oklahoma City at Ole Miss, noon
Denver at Chicago, noon
Detroit at Atlanta, noon
Detroit at Atlanta, noon
Minnapolis at Philadelphia, noon
New England at Miami, noon
New England at Miami, noon
p.m. Cleveland at L.A. 3 p.m.
San Diego at Seattle, 3 p.m.
Indiana at Buffalo, noon
Monday's Game
1980 WS
Monday, April 25
Washington at San Francisco. 8 p.m.
NEW YORK — Jimmy Connors returns a serve from John Lloyd in quarterfinal action at the U.S. Open Tennis Championships. Connors advanced to the semifinals with his 7.5-6.2, 6.0 victory yesterday. See Sports Almanac for more U.S. Open results.
Cross country women may be KU's best ever
Sports Writer
By CHRIS LAZZARINO
Sports Writer
KU women's cross country coach Cliff Rovello doesn't hesitate to describe his team as the best KU has ever had.
"All seven of our runners will probably finish in the top ten in KU history," Rovelo said.
Six of Rovelo's top runners were on last year's squad, which was hurt by inexperience and finished sixth in the Big Eight Conference.
"Basically, all of the girls on the team last year were in their first year of competing in the Big Eight. Rovello said, "We improved during the course of the year, but we weren't." The difference this year is significant.
The Jayhawks open their season Sept 15 in a duel with Southern Illinois at Rim Rock Farm, the Jayhawks home course.
"Right now we are at the level we were at five to six weeks into the season last year. These girls believe in themselves this year. They know what this conference is about and they know they can compete."
The top returning seniors are Caryne Finlay, Paula Berquist, and Susan Glatter Berquist placed 19th at last year's conference meet, the most KU finish. She was named most valuable runner on last year's team
The top returning junior is Kyle Wood, Sophomores Cindy Blackley and Tracey Keith are also expected to join the top seven position; Roveto said.
Freshman Trisha Mangen is making the adjustment to college cross
country quickly, Roveto said. And freshmen Trish Alaina and Kellie Audley are expected to round out the list of KU's top runners, he said.
The most improved team, however, is KU, and the conference should be one of the top three in the nation. Roveto said.
As to who will win the conference meet and move on to the district meet for a chance at nationals. Rovelo cannot say.
"I would have picked Missouri to win the conference, but they have been hit by injuries," he said. "Iowa State is very fine and KState looks good, but they lost a couple of girls well. Nebraska has a fine team as well. Oklahoma State and Oklahoma are not great, but they recruited good foreign distance runners. They will be improving fast."
The fact that KU even has a chance is an honor for the girls on the team, Rovero said, because most of them normally run distances from 800 meters to two miles. Cross-country courses are 9000 meters, or 3.1 miles.
The race for top honors in the Big Eight will be close all year, Rovetto said, because no team is a clear favorite.
"We are really dominated by middle distance runners, but these girls believe in themselves. And if they do it, they believe, they will do it." Rovello said.
Rovello pointed out that having a team of predominantly middle-distance runners does have its advantages.
"We are really going to have a tremendous middle distance squad for indoor track this season." Rovelo said.
Associate Sports Editor
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Associate Smarts Editor
KU volleyball begins with Jayhawk Classic
KU head volleyball coach Bob Lockwood said his team would have a somewhat different look than in the past when it opens its season tomorrow at the Jayhawk Classic.
nry begins at 10 a.m. at Robinson
Gymnasium, when the Jayhawks
take on Central Missouri State
Oklahoma City will face Central
Missouri at 3 p.m. The final
NU will be录取 Oklahoma City
at 3 p.m. Admission is free.
The Jayhawks will have their varsity-alumni game 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Robinson
"WE'LL BE a little more offensive-minded this year than we usually are," Lockwood said. "Always before, we were known as a defensive team, for keeping the ball in play. We still stress that, but this year we have a lot of players who are aggressive, an activist, and have a lot of enthusiasm, and that should make a difference in our won loss record."
Last year, KU had a 1621 record overall, and tied for fifth in the Big Eight conference. Colorado and Oklahoma State don't field volleyball.
"Our main goal is to finish higher than we did last year," Lockwood said. "At this point we're not in the position to challenge for the conference title."
KU lost two seniors off last year's team, Lori Erickson and Leslie Loyd, but Lockwood brought in eight
recruits to help make up for those losses.
ERICKSON WILL BE MISSED especially. She was a second team All Big Eight pick last year, and helped her win the best power hitter in the league.
"You don't replace her with just one player," Lockwood said. "What we have now is six good hitters to take her place."
Lockwood said the team will be molded around senior setters Beth Vivian and Jax Hunt, both returning starters. Six other players will rotate to make up the other four players on the court.
Those six are sophomores Sue Rudi and Julie Ester and freshmen Jude Desch, Kristi Conway, Eileen Schwartz and Tammy Hill. Easter started last year as a middle blocker Rupf redshifted last year after starting her freshman year as an outside hitter and middle blocker.
10 OF THE 16 players on the Jayhawk roster are freshmen, but Lockwood said that wasn't necessarily a problem. He said that once they become accustomed to the higher level of play in the Big Eight Conference, they'll make for an improved team this year.
Two rules changes will be in effect in tomorrow's games. No blocking of the serve on the front line will be allowed. Also, a double hit will be allowed on straight spikes, meaning players will be allowed to let the ball roll on their arms when blocking a snake.
Lockwood said the rules changes won't officially take effect until Oct 1.
P. R. H.
Fair affair
Many Kansans trekked this week to Hutchinson, where the Kansas State Fair brought out the cows, the cotton candy and a canopy of carnival lights. Thousands turned out, including Randy Reaves, who came from Independence, Mo., just to see the Beach Boys for a 22nd time. See story. page three.
Cloudy
Sun
High, low 80s. Low, mid-60s.
Details on page 2.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 95, No.11 (USPS 650-640)
Seven football players lose eligibility
By BRENDA STOCKMAN Staff Manager
Staff Reporter
Seven KU football players — including six key defensive players — didn't play in Saturday's game because their academic diploma did not meet the game requirement assistant athlete director said.
The eligibility status of the players remains uncertain. The sports information section of ESPN.com has a lot to say.
Lanny Rose, the assistant director, said that certification of eligibility was delayed by paperwork that could not be completed before spring. Rose said she may not be certified this season. Rose said.
The seven players declared academically ineligible this weekend brings the total to 11. Four players were declared ineligible in August.
SIX OF THE PLAYERS late Friday were declared temporarily academically ineligible, said Doug Vance, director of the sports information office. A seventh player was declared temporarily ineligible Saturday before being the KU-Wichita State University game.
Rose said, "Generally speaking, the process is very long and requires lots of steps and paperwork. It's just the way the system works."
Certification can be delayed by grades from summer courses, correspondence courses, grade appeals, teachers' failure to transfer grades from other schools, he said.
The process for certification begins, he said, when the athletic department submits the list of athletes to the office of admissions and records. From there, the two offices
work together to determine the eligibility of athletes.
**notes:**
THE SEVEN PLAYERS who were declared to be ineligible for Saturday's game were:
*Steve Nave. Coffeyville junior and defensive guard. He was listed as a starter on this week's depth chart.*
*Darnell Williams, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore and linebacker He also was listed as a starter.
- Eldridge Avery, Los Angeles sophomore and defensive guard. He was listed as a back up to Nave this week.
- Dane Griffin, Lawrence junior and linebacker. He was listed on the second string.
*Joe Masaniai, Honolulu senior and defensive tackle. He was listed on the second string.*
- Derek Berry, East St. Louis, Ill. sophomore and free safety. He was listed on the third team this week.
- John Brunet, Fremont, Calif., junior and quarterback. He was not listed on the depth chart.
Head football coach Mike Gottfred said after the game that it was inappropriate to comment on the players' academic status and their permanent eligibility was determined.
Walter Crockett, a member of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation and professor of psychology, said, "I'm sorry it happened. I think that's a shame that they lost so many players they were counting on. On the other hand, I'm kind of proud of the University for insisting people keep up with their classwork."
Monday, September 10, 1984
See INELIGIBLE, p. 5, col. 1
Jayhawks cruise past Shockers
KANSAS 22 WSU 90
By GREG DAMMAN Sports Editor
Sports Editor
Playing under the cloud of possible academic ineligibility for six defensive players, the KU football team used a pawtowatch defense and a career-best 150 rushing yards from Robert Mimbs to defeat Wichita State Saturday in Kansas Memorial Stadium.
University of Kansas running back Robert Mimbs tries to break the tackle of Mitch Gee, Wichita State University outside linebacker, as he picks up yardage during the opening
Even without the six players, two of whom were starters, the KU defense limited the Shockers to 188 yards of total offense. Meanwhile, the Kansas offense kept Michaels state off guard by cutting down on his passing use of a running attack led by Mimbs.
Buddy Mangine/KANSAN
"THE THING YOU worry about is our leadership," KU head coach Mike Gottfred said after the game. "We played very few seniors today, and a lot of young players. Rick Bredesen started his first college football game today and he didn't even play linebacker in high school. He was a running back."
The six defensive players who were not allowed to play Saturday — linebackers Darnell Williams and Dane Griffin, defensive linemen SteveNavie, Eldridge Avery and Joe Masaniam and safety Derok Berry — are all in a response concerning their eligibility.
Williams and Nave were listed as starters for the Wichita State game, while Berry was a part-time starter last year. Masani; Avery and Griffin were listed as backups. A seven player, reserve quarterback John Rivers, also awaiting word on his eligibility.
home game of the KU football season. Mimbs set a personal record of 150 yards in the game. The Jayhawks beat the Shockers 31-7
THE JAYHAWKS GAINED yards on the ground against the Shockers, but the Kansas passing attack was not exactly silent. On KU's first possession, quarterback Mike Norseth making his first start, ended a nine-play drive with a 22-yard touchdown pass to receiver Johnny Holloway with 12:22 left in the first quarter Dodge
Schwartzburg kicked the extra point, and KU led. 7-0.
Norseth he hit tight end Mark Parks for a touchdown pass with 8:16 left in the first quarter Schwartzburg added the extra point. KU led 140.
The Kansas defense held the Shockers on their first possession, and after a short line game, they tied it up 4-yard line. UT used five straight rushing plays to get to the Wichita State 12 yard line.
WICHTA STATE'S NEXT possession began on its 30-yard line after Schwartz- burg's kick off sailed out of the end zone. A rushing play for no gain, a 12-yard sacd of Wichita State quarterback Brian McDonald by lineman Robert Tucker, and a pass for no gain, and the Shockers were again forced to punt.
goal by Schwartzburg. The longest play in the drive was a 10-yard run around left end by Mimbs.
In the first quarter, Kansas' defense held Wichita State to total of minus seven yards offense.
The Jayawhack offense took over on its 42 and quickly made the score 17.0 with a goal from Gavin McLean.
"What we did on defense was cut everything down," KU defensive coordinator
See GAME, p. 5, col. 3
New rivalry yet to evolve into fan feud
By JOHN EGAN Staff Reporter
For years, KU's arch-rivalry with Kansas State University — a long-time tead brand with Snob Hill vs. Silo Tech jokes — has sparked sharp jabs among alumni and students from the two schools.
But so far, few jokes have evolved from another, much younger cross-stress rivalry: the University of Kansas and Wichita State University.
On the football field, KU and Wichita State had met only six times before Saturday. KU has won four of those contests.
THE JAYHAWKS AND THE Shockers battled on the gridiron this weekend, and the 'Hawks trounced the Shockers, 31-7, with
MONDAY MORNING
The NCAA has put both teams on probation, which prohibits them from appearing in bowl games or on television.
little fanfare in a game that one Wichita State
fumbled the "Probation Bowl."
A few yellow-and-black Wichita State hats and T-shirts cropped up, and a small section of Shockers fans rooted their team on. But in the KU season opener, KU and Wichita State fans didn't seem too charged up. Many of them played the game at least 15 minutes before ended.
Under a cloudless sky on the hill near Memorial Stadium, KU and Wichita State fans alike seemed to pay more attention to beer and cackles than cheer and tackles.
"There's more of a rivalry in basketball last year's game especially," he said.
"NOBODY CARES ABOUT Wichita State," Jeff Hankins, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, said minutes after Wichita State scored its only touchdown of the day.
His friend, Roger Stires, Hill City sophomore, said. "The rivalty's definitely between the two."
Nonetheless, many Wichita State fans — who witnessed a 57-6 loss to KU last season — stood up for their team by making the trek to Lawrence.
"If we'd have won our opener, there'd be a lot more," said Ron Welliver, a Wichita State alumnus from Wichita. Wichita State lost its game to Southwest Texas State. 38-31
Wellver was one of a group of 13 Wichitans that made the trip. The group drove to Lawrence in a five-vehicle caravan, including a van that was marked with a phone number, "Shocker Fan Fun Van." The fans planned to spend Saturday at a local hotel.
ALTHOUGH THE GROUP traveled 162 miles to cheer its team against KU. Wellervil said healthier rivalries existed in Utah and Missouri, its Missouri Valley Conference opponents.
He said he hoped that a good rivalry would develop between the two Kansas schools
However, KU and Wichita State are not scheduled to compete in football next season.
Just before walking to the stadium, Weller said: "It won't be an entirely wasted
Student jobs open, employers say
See RIVALRY, p. 5, col. 3
Rv MARY CARTER
Staff Reporter
Several employers in Lawrence, including officials at the University of Kansas, are scratching their heads and wondering whether folks really are better off than they were a year ago.
The student employment division of the office of financial aid has a surplus on on- and off-camps, work-study and hourly wage jobs available, said Pam Houston, coordinator of student employment and assistant director of financial aid.
The employers aren't sure whether it's financial security or scheduling problems, but KU students aren't grabbing up jobs the way they did at this time last year.
"KIND OF amazed." Houston said. "It seems we're advertising the same number of jobs as last year, but there seem to be fewer apprentices."
Through the office of financial aid on campus employers and many off campus employees list job openings for college boards. Send your resume to Strong Hall. Hourly as well as work study jobs are listed
"I don't know if they've decided not to work or are just waiting."
individual students in specific jobs, Houston said.
The office of financial aid doesn't place
THE NUMBER OF students eligible for work-study jobs this year is about the same as last year. Houston said. Although the amount of funds set aside by the government for work-study wages is down significantly from last year, departments are aware of this and have advertised only positions they can afford.
Students' eligibility for work-study employment is determined by family income, and 80 percent of work-study wages are paid by the federal government. The employing department pays the other 20 percent. Hourly job wages are paid solely by the employer.
"I don't have any specific figures because we don't place people." Houston said. "But I have had several employers call me back to see if the openings have even been posted.
"I have been getting desperate cries from numerous departments to send work-study students. But I haven't been seeing the work-study people to send."
"There's always a problem getting work-study jobs filled right away, but it has been particularly difficult this year," she said "In our campus clinical jobs and off campus jobs."
THE COMPUTER SCIENCE department has filled its two workstudy openings but
had only three applicants, said Carmela
Sibes, department office manager.
I can't speak for last year, because I didn't do the hiring then. But two or three years ago we had a steady stream of people walking in to ask about the jobs." she said.
"We used to have enough apply that we could have the pick of a pool."
Sibley called the change from two years ago "dramatic."
She said she didn't know whether students were receiving more scholarships or finding jobs.
Sibley said she thought the requirements for work-study eligibility kept many away
"A lot of kids cannot get on work-study because of the financial requirements," she said. "On paper, their parents make too much money."
A WORK-STUDY OPENING for an office helper in the department of music is still unfilled.
"Part of it may be that we didn't get it on the board in time," said Mary Cade, secretary in the music office. "But there hasn't been that much response."
Response has been slow for openings at the law school, too.
"We had an opening for a building helper.
See JOBS, p. 6, col. 1
Local Republican leaders reply to Reagan's critics
Local Republican Party leaders used last night's opening of their headquarters to answer the Democratic Party's criticism of President Reagan — and to counter with charges of their own.
Staff Reporter
Jim Van Sklye, Republican candidate for the 2nd District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, told the crowd of about 100 supporters at the Douglas County Republican Headquarters, 1601 W. 23rd St., that the Republican Party excited young people now the way the Democratic Party did a decade ago.
"YOU USED TO HEAR that students would start out as Democrats," he said. "Now we have them starting out as Republicans because they see the opportunity, and they see that the Republican Party is the party that's offering new ideas and ideas for the future."
By SUZANNE BROWN
Van Slyke, a 26-year-old Topake lawyer, is opposing incumbent Rep Jim Jenkins.
"amy Galyardt, chairman of the Douglas County Republican Central Committee, disagreed with Slattery's remark at the opening last week of the Douglas County Democratic Headquarters that young people did not agree with Reagan's
Slattery, also of Topeka, for the seat in Conressor.
Galyard said students perceived that it was those policies that had improved the economy and given them hope for the future.
"YOUNG PEOPLE TODAY feel that there are doors open for them," he said. "When they graduate, they are getting interviews, and there are jobs and positions that they can go to, instead of a dead-end street."
Vern Chesbroo, executive director of the Kansas Republican Party, said that Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale was not a serious alternative to Republican leadership
See OPENING, p. 6, col. 1
O
September 10, 1984
Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The Universities Daily KANSAN
Lebanese leader ordered Moslems to attack Israelis
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Nabib Berri, Lebanon's justice minister and leader of the Shite Moslem Amal militia, yesterday said he has ordered attacks on Israel's 10,000 occupation troops in southern Lebanon to force them out of the region.
Berri, also minister in charge of southern Lebanon, told a Shite rally in Beirut's southern suburbs that he would boycott all future Cabinet sessions unless the meetings focused on the two-year Israeli occupation.
"I have started giving orders to more than 50 youths as a trial and, by God, we'll blow ourselves up with them," said Berri, in an apparent reference to possible suicide bombing attacks against the Israeli troops.
Court denies stay of execution
ANGOLA, La. A | A divided U.S.
Supreme Court refused yesterday to stop
the execution of Timothy Baldwin, scheduled to die shortly after midnight for beating an 85-year-old blind woman to death.
Justice Byron White referred the request for a stay of execution to the full court, which ruled about 5.45 p.m. — a little more than seven hours before the 46-year-old former Cub Scout leader and father of seven was to be strapped into Louisiana's electric chair.
Baldwin was convicted of killing Mary James Peters, the godmother of his youngest son and a neighbor in West Monroe, La.
Swimmers spoil Israel's water
TEL AVIV, Israel — The Sea of Galilee, the source of 40 percent of Israel's drinking water, has been polluted by an unprecedented wave of vacationers, it was reported yesterday.
reported less. The Marvie newspaper said recent news that a government agency showed Israel could risk their health by drinking from the lake, where a record 100,000 campers and swimmers have swarmed to the sea this summer.
Corrections
Because of a photographer's error, a caption in Thursday's Kansas incorrectly stated that William Blue, a professor of Spanish and Portuguese, was the first at KU to use microcomputers as a teaching aid. Faculty members in other areas of the University were using microcomputers before Blue did.
Because of an editor's error, the starting time for a Friday concert sponsored by the Student Union Activities was incorrectly reported in the Sept. 7 Kansan. The R.E.M. concert will start at 9 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium.
AUGUST 28, 1964
United Press International
QUEBEC CITY — Pope John Paul II walks with Canada's Gov. Gen. Jeanne Sauve on the first day of his 12 day visit to Canada. The journey, which began yesterday, is the first ever by a pope to Canada.
United Press International
Canada receives pope in historic pilgrimage
By United Press International
QUEBEC — Pope John Paul II began a historic pilgrimage to Canada yesterday with a vow to serve as a "witness of hope" for the faithful and a call to priests and nuns to honor their celibacy.
Hundreds of thousands of people, cheering loudly and waving white and gold papal flags and paper cutouts of gold-colored doves, lined the streets of Quebec to witness the first pal visit ever to Canada.
Within hours of his arrival, the pope addressed one of the most sensitive issues facing the church in North America by declaring he would proclaim his opposition to marriage for priests repeatedly as he traveled across Canada on his 12-day tour.
**04. 61-YEAR-OLD pontiff made the appeal for celibacy and prayed for new vocations among the young in an address to representatives of Canada's religious orders in the chapel of the Seminaire de Quebec.**
After praying at the tomb of the Blessed Francois de Laval, Quebec's first bishop, the pope told the priests, nuns and brothers: "And now I would like to say, and I will wait, until we come once during my journey, that the church strongly counts on your action and witness.
LIBERAL THEOLOGIANS have long campaigned for a married priesthood and the ordination of women, both of which the pope strongly opposes.
"True, your role has changed over the las few years. But the essential element of your particular vocation remains: the gift of sel in consecrated cebabey and a life of prayer and active charity."
Later, during a mass before 250,000 people, Pope John Paul delivered his first major homily at the sports stadium of Laval University. He warned that the Christian
tradition was "shattered" with materialism He said Catholics must develop a new culture "that will integrate the modernity of America even while preserving its deep-seated humanity."
Arriving in Quebec, Pope John Paul said he came to Canada as "pastor and brother" to the 11.4 million Catholics who make up 43 percent of Canada's 25 million people. He said his visit symbolized Christians "journey in the faith."
"I WOULD LIKE to come among you as a witness of hope," he told an airport audience of 2,000 invited guests, including Prime Minister John Turner, Quebec Premier René Levesque and Governor General Jeanne Rene
"My word does not claim to furnish an answer to all your questions or to replace your searching.
"I would like to speak to you about the issues of our times, concerning culture, the community, technology, the family, sharing and justice," the pope said of his tour of 14 cities in eight of the 10 Canadian provinces.
"I wish, above all, to speak to you about the fundamental problems, about the faith, about the experience of God, about hope. Let us travel together. Let us look to the One who
THE PONTFIT LOOKED rested and spoke in a strong voice upon arrival aboard his chartered Alitalia DC-10 when an almost nine-hour flight from Rome's Leonardo Du Viport airport.
Pope John Paul, removing his zucchetto — skullcap — and brushing back his silver hair against a stiff breeze in bright sunshine knot to kiss the tarmac at Ancienne-Lorette Airport to start his 23rd foreign tour toope
A 21-gun salute sounded and the 22nd regiment "Vandoos," in scarlet jackets and black fur hats, formed an honor guard as military helicopters flew in formation overhead.
Candidates debate over tax cuts and budgets
By United Press International
The presidential contenders yesterday spoke out on issues other than religion — Walter Mondale charged Ronald Reagan's defies will "sock it to" Middle America and the president pitched hard for ethnic votes. Monday, after attending services at the Chevy Chase, Md., Presbyterian Church, was asked his reaction to Reagan's comments last week to a Jewish group that he believes in the constitutional wall between church and state, despite his earlier remarks that politics and morality were inseparable.
"I HOPE HE'S retreating to what I think is the proper position as a president," Mondale said. "But I'm going to wait and see."
Reagan flew to Pennsylvania to attend a festival of Catholic Polish-Americans His prepared speech avoided direct reference to
the religion question, stressing instead his rebuilding of America's faith in itself and calling on Democrats to abandon their party in his favor this fall.
Moral Majority leader Rev. Jerry Falwell, in a CBS appearance yesterday, said that Monday had tried to spur the religion controversy, "for lack of an issue." Fundamentalist supporters of Reagan have a right to speak out as conservatives, Falwell said
to speak out as conscript in B.D.Y., with D.N. DANIEL MOYNIHAN, D-N.Y., with
tongue firmly in cheek, told ABC TV interviewers, "I absolutely believe President Reagan when he says he does not want to establish a state religion — that would require him to attend services."
Constitutional scholar Laurence Tribe, also appearing on CBS, rejected a comparison of Reagan's strong advocacy of school prayer and similar issues with the church-based campaigning of Democrat Jesse Jackson.
LARGE PIZZA, MEDIUM PRICE!
The next time you're at a Pizza Hut restaurant, enjoy a large pizza for the price of a medium with the same number of toppings. Choose your favorite, including Pizza Hut Pan
Pizza, and any toppings on the menu. It's our way of saying we like seeing you. Bring some friends or family so we can hear them say "Ooohh." "Aaahh" and "Mmmm" too.
Pizza
Purchase any large pizza and pay the price of a medium pizza with the same number of toppings and same price. Prices on Campus.
SUPER SAVINGS
style crust. Dime or carrot.
Please present crispy with
crust and flavor.
Will not be served in HOT
cooked form.
LAWRENCE
LAWRENCE
* 1606 W. 23rd St.
- 1606 W. 23rd St
932 Massachusetts St.
Pizza Hut.
Large two-topping pizza and a pitcher of soft drink for $9.95.
Dine-in or Carryout.
FAMILY FEAST
Please present coupon when ordering. Offer extended to other coupons per case you purchase at the Fortress. The restaurant will accept coupons only with a valid code in your account.
- 1606 W. 23rd St.
- LAWRENCE
- 804 Iowa
- 932 Massachusetts St.
Pizza Hut.
TODAY I zapped 8,213 killer bees, chewed up 262 little green men and blew up 2 galaxies.
STOP ME BEFORE I KILL AGAIN!
Playing video games all day can be fun, but I'd much rather be recruiting the men who will become "Charter Members" of KU's newest fraternity...PHI KAPPA TAU. If you're looking for a unique challenge, return the interest form below or contact:
K. Steven Lilly Director of Expansion 1625 Edgehill Lawrence, Kansas 66044 842-9474
(chip here)
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS QUESTIONNAIRE
AGE
NAME ___
CAMPUS ADDRESS ___
CITY, STATE, ZIP ___
MAJOR ___
HIGH SCHOOL ACTIVITIES ___
PHONE ___
G.P.A.
September 10, 1984 Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Teen found competent to stand trial for murder
A Lawrence teen-ager Friday was found competent to stand trial on charges of first degree murder and aggravated burglary for an 30-year-old Lawrence woman
A preliminary hearing that was to follow the competency hearing Friday in Douglas County District Court was postponed until August 15, when a lawyer more time to review evidence
Donald E. Alexander, 18, of 302 W. 21st St., was inaugurated Aug. 21 in connection with the Aug. 5 death of Marguerite L. Vinyard, 2100 Tennessee St. According to the coroner's report, Vinyard was beaten and sexually assaulted.
The only witness called at the hearing was Frances MCauley, a clinical psychologist at the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center. MCauley said Alexander was competent to understand the charges against him and assist in his own defense.
Haskell official to speak
Charles G. Geboe, vice president of Haskell Indian Junior College, will speak at University Forum at noon Wednesday for a Christian Christian Ministries, 1280 Oread Ave.
He will discuss "Haskell's Centennial: Its Past and Its Future."
Gebee is a member of the Yankton Sioux tribe. Before coming to Haskell, he was director of Indian Education for South Dakota and director of the Indian Community Action Project at the University of South Dakota
Women's voter group to meet
The first is a kick-off meeting 11:45 a.m. Thursday at Trinity Episcopal Church Parish Hall, 1019 Vermont St. Lunch will be served, and at 12:30 p.m., two League members will present a program on the Society and the LWA National Convention
The Lawrence League of Women Voters will have two meetings this month to try to
Group schedules first meeting
The second meeting will be at 7:30 p.m.
Sept. 17 at the Lawrence Public Library
Room, 76. Vermont St. The
program concern League studies and
organization.
The Sacred Order of Universal Love will hold its first meeting at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday on the outdoor terrace on the sixth floor of the Kansas Union
The group has scheduled its second meeting for 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.
SOUL is a non-profit student religious organization.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of morning thunder-showers. The high will be in the low 80s with winds variable from 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be fair with the low in the low mid-60s. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with the high in the mid to upper 80s.
Where to call
Do you have an idea for a story or a photograph?
If so, call the Kanas at 844-6341. If your idea or press release deals with campus or area news, ask for Doug Cunningham, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, ask for Susan Wortman, entertainment items, ask for Doug Daimon, sports editor.
- Photo suggestions should go to Dave Hornback, photo editor.
- For other questions or complaints, ask for Don Knox, editor, or Paul Sevart, managing editor.
: The number of the Kansas business of
fice, which handles all advertising, is
864 4358.
New budget chairman named
*Scott McNall, professor of sociology was chosen Friday as the 1984-45 chairman of the College Budget Committee (CRUD)
McNail replaces Anthony Genova, professor of philosophy.
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
By JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter
In hope of preventing problems similar to those that plagued last fall's Student Senate elections, the Senate Rights Committee Tuesday will begin debate on proposed election reforms.
The proposed reforms include stricter rules for write-in candidates, stricter enrollment requirements for all candidates and the requirement that colleges give instructive face-to-face computers in polling.
The Senate Ethics and Standards Committee, a temporary committee set up this spring by Senate officers, made the recommendations after meetings this summer.
PAUL RAPPOPORT, CHAIRMAN of the Ethics and Standards Committee, last week presented the recommendations in a letter to Dr. Martin Highberger, student body vice president.
"There are a lot of gray areas where people have pointed out that there's really not anything specifically written down."3 To attempt to clarify some of the areas.
recommendations in the form of amendments to the Senate rules.
"Most of the things that we've come up with were from foul-ups in the past," Polack said. "A lot of it did come from November."
IN JANUARY, CHANCELLOR Gene A. BUG invalidated the presidential and vice presidential elections of November at the recommendation of the University Judicial Board. The members had described the case as "Fraught with inconsistencies and ambiguities."
In that election, the top three coalitions, Priority, Momentum and the Costume Party, finished within 50 votes of each other. Priority Coalition's candidates, Scott Swenson and Dennis Strickland, were declared the winners.
After a recount, Priority was declared the winner again, but Costume Party finished second by only two votes. The total number of votes for the three coalitions after the first count was 3,089 votes, compared with 3,144 votes after the second count.
KEVIN WALKER, MOMENTUM'S presidential candidate, ran a write-in campaign, and at least 39 votes marked "Momentum" were invalidated because they did not contain the names of Walker and his running mate.
Walker appealed the election to the
University Judicial Board, but he was not enrolled at the University of Kansas when the board recommended in December that a new election be held.
The Senate held new elections in the spring, and the Priority and Momentum coalitions dropped out. The Costume Party won a second term under president, and Highberger, were elected
Polack said, "If you talk to a lot of students, all they know about the Student Senate elections, and the Student Senate in general is the elections fiasco last fall.
'That's not good.'
AFTER THE SPRING elections, Robert Walker, then Student Senate Executive Committee chairman, Vogel and Highberger set up the Ethics and Standards Committee to review the elections rules and offer recommendations for change.
Rapportpout the committee disbanded about two weeks ago after its work was finished. Most recommendations were additions to the rules to make them more specific.
- Investigating computer polling methods, such as a system similar to one used for checking out of books in Watson Library.
- Requiring write-in candidates to notify the Elections Committee chairman about
their campaigns two days before the election
**designing** *White-ii* balloons **to have** the candles facing up, letter-for-letter, on the ballon to be valid.
- requiring candidates to be in "good academic standing" and to have their fees paid.
- Requiring candidates to be enrolled for six hours or for their school's half-time equivalency to run
- Setting the number of members of the Elections Committee from 13 to 17 and its ouroam at a majority of the members.
- Setting the dates of the Student Senate elections on the second consecutive Wednesday and Thursday of November.
Polack said he hoped that the Rights Committee would be finished with the proposed reforms by the end of its first meeting of the semester, scheduled for 7 p.m. Tuesday in Parlors A and B of the Kansas Union.
If the committee does not finish with them, Polack said, he will schedule another meeting for before the next Student Executive Committee meeting, Sept. 15. If it appears the Rights Committee, Students will put the reform on the Student Senate's agenda.
Thousands enjoy fair, Beach Boys
By CHIRISSY CLEARY
Staff Reporter
HUTCHINSON — Children clutched giant stuffed bears. Bright lights spun in a kaleidoscope of colors as the Ferris wheels curled around in the night sky. The aromas of pizza, pop and cotton candy lingered along the strip of game booths.
MARIE M. BELL
"Walk on up! Give it a try! Just two balls for a dollar!" cried game booth vendors.
The opening night of the 1984 Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson on Friday was windy, but fair goers came by the thousands to enjoy rides, games, a Beach Boys concert, and a display of leading a University of Kansas Kansas State University science and technology booth.
Julie Ann Sherman 2. under the watch of her aunt, Marilyn Sherman, both of Ark City, rides the merry-go-round
A seven-foot Bull snake from the KU Natural History Museum brought many visitors to the KU K-State booth, although the booth's main purpose was to show how the two research institutions have created new jobs, inventions and to show what the taxpayers money is being spent on, said Scott Johnson, K-State student coordinator.
Last year more than 300,000 people attended the fair, and this year could be even bigger. Lynette Landrith, who is with State Fair publicity office, said yesterday
"We don't have a count for opening night, since its free," Landrith said. "But this year, over 1,100 more people came to the fair on Saturday."
Gov. He Jhukang of Henan Province of China and Kansas Gov. John Carlin exchanged greetings Saturday morning in front of the Chinese Culture and Trade
Exhibition. They officially opened the exhibit, which displayed jewelry, silk and leather garments, fur coats and pottery. A four foot jade statue with a $15,000 price tag brought astonished gasps from many onlookers.
One of the biggest opening night attractions was a one hour and a half Beach Boys concert. The wind helped cool off more than usual, but the stage lights stage lights as they danced to old favorites
such as "Help Me Rhonda" and "I Get Around" One young popcorn vendor was reprimanded for "getting out of hand" as she danced up the Grandstand steps with her wares.
The group also sang "Heaven," a song dedicated to Dennis Wilson, a member of the band who drowned earlier this year. Wilson's son sat near the back of the stage for the concert.
Many Hutchinson people think "big names" in entertainment have attracted people who otherwise might not come to the fair.
"The quality entertainment has improved from the fiddler from Arkansas to big names like the Beach Boys," said Jerry Stucky, co-owner of the five Pronto Pups stands at the fair. "That brings in a lot of people."
Absentee ballot the answer for students far from home
Staff Reporter
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ
Contusion about how to apply for absentee ballots may have kept many students from voting in past elections, some students and election officials said recently.
But, they also said that this election year could be different
asked during the weekend about absentee voting.
"A lot of students just don't think about it," said Kim Wolfe, Hiawata junior. "But since it's a big election, maybe more students will."
TWENTY-FIVE STUDENTS REGISTERED in other counties all made the same basic remarks yes, they plan to vote by absentee ballot, no, they haven't done anything about getting one. Seventeen of the eight know how to apply for an absentee ballot.
"I think it's an important thing to know how to get one, but I don't how," said Regan Kirk, New Caanan, Conn., freshman.
Getting an absentee ballot in most states is a fairly simple task. In most counties, voters can apply for absence ballots at the county
Wolfe is typical of out-of-county students
clerk's office where they are registered Some larger cities have election offices where absente ballots can be obtained
Voters can write to the county clerk or election commissioner to ask to receive an absentee ballot. The voter must include his name and address as it appears on his voter registration, date of birth and the address where the ballot is to be mailed. Some states require the voter to include his social security number.
INSTEAD OF VOTING by absentee ballot, John M尔德baum, Kansas City, Mo., senior, did something the Douglas County Clerk's office said a lot of students do. He
re-registered in Douglas County using his
lawrence address.
"They had a booth set up during enrollment a couple of years ago so I registered here." Mandela baum said. "It's much more comfortable said it to vote or voting by absentee ballot."
But, in Kansas, election laws make getting an absentee ballot relatively easy Any registered voter can go the county clerk's office and request an absentee ballot for any other registered voter. Marilyn Chapman, Sedgwick County election commissioner, said many KU students from Wichita had their parents get absentee ballots for them
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
SENIOR YEARBOOK PORTRAITS
...
Shooting is taking place now in Student Organizations & Activities Office
403 Kansas Union
MAKE
YOUR Stop by 121B Kansas
Photographer hours:
now Call 864-3728
12-8 Mon. & Thurs.
9-6 Tues., Wed., & Fri.
APPOINT MENT. Union 12-5 or
'THEY SHOOT SENIORS,' DON'T THEY 'THEY
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
13th Walnut Valley Festival September 13, 14, 15, 16, 1984
Featuring in Person:
- Berline, Cray & Hickman,
Nicole, Dr. Peel
- Bryan Bowers
- Hot Kite
Red Knuckles & The Trailblazers
- John McCutcheon
- Cathy Barton & Dave Para
- The Tennessee Gentlemen
- Mark O'Connor
Art Thieme
- Mark O'Connor
* Touchstone
- Foster Family String Band
- Swift Kick Cloggers
- Walt Michael & Compan
- Juggernaut String Band
- Patrick Couton & George Fisch
- Lindsay Haisle
- Mark Nelson
Winfield Fairgrounds Winfield, Kansas
- Mark Nelson
- Steve Rock
- Stevie Beck
- Joel Mabus
Winfield Fairgrounds
50 comments per contest
Please write for contest rules. Contests are limited to
- Joel Mabus
- Rolly Brown
2 May 1922 Speedy Fri Sat or Sun
- Roz Brown
- Dan Huckabo
- Russell Cook
*Dan Hudkaukee*
*Chameleon Puppet Theatre*
wv
Arts & Craft Fair
Workshops
Tax Information:
Apt. Number $200 for 1st $300 for 2nd $400 for 3rd $500 for 4th $600 for 5th $700 for 6th $800 for 7th $900 for 8th $1000 for 9th $1100 for 10th $1200 for 11th $1300 for 12th $1400 for 13th $1500 for 14th $1600 for 15th $1700 for 16th $1800 for 17th $1900 for 18th $2000 for 19th $2100 for 1
Winfield. Kansas
Alabama to Thursday evening to come participating a weekend tour
Boston to New York City on Saturday, 12 with alt. with
Well policed grounds
Normal orders after September 5th. Advance tickets guarantee admission.
For more information and
Weekend ticket includes
advance tickets write
ANY USE RECEIVED SEPARATELY MAY BE REFUSED
hold at the gate
NO REFUND>
camping
No Animals. No Beer or Naked. No Drugs and
Alcohol. No Drugs and
No Motorcycles
No motorcycles (due to noise)
valley
walnut
association, inc.
918 Main P.O. Box 245N Winfield, Kansas 67156
This will be the BEST FESTIVAL IN THE U.S. this year!!! 510922173260
OPINION
September 10, 1984 Page 4
The University Daily
KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily, Kansas (USP5 606440) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Fint Hall, Lawn, Kansas 76092, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawn, Kansas 606440. Subscriptions by mail are for $1 six or more months or $2 a week in Douglas County and $18 for six months or a year outside the county. Student postage paid at Lawn, Kansas 606440. Subscription changes to the University Daily Kansas 118 Staffer Fint Hall, Lawn, Kansas 76092.
DON KNOX Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE IESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
DAVE WANAMAKER Business Manager
DOUG CUNNINGHAM
Campus Editor
LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
SUSANNE, SHAW
General Manager and News Advice
JILL GOLDBLATT Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Football season
The thrill of victory can lead to euphoria. The Jayhawks opening-game victory needs to be kept in perspective.
opening game victory needed. Certainly the KU football team deserves hearty congratulations for its victory Saturday over Wichita State University. The Jayhawks, with the help of an altered defensive alignment and some inexperienced players, put together a winning performance.
One victory, however, does not a season make; in the case of the football Hawks, that is true for two reasons.
First, the team faces a difficult schedule; for example, highly rated Florida State University is KU's opponent on Saturday.
In addition, the academic eligibility of seven members of the team is in question; the status of the seven is to be updated later this week.
The eligibility question appears crucial in light of the fact that four other players have already been lost for the season because of problems with grades. Plus, many of last season's key players are gone.
Ultimately, all student-athletes are responsible for their grades, as are all students. Athletes experience many demands on their time and energy, and a recent report by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation gains added urgency from the latest academic eligibility problems. The report stressed the need for better academic standing among athletes, especially those in revenue sports.
Undoubtedly, KU has high academic standards, and administrators deserve praise for their efforts to enforce those standards.
An autumn afternoon can be spent in much worse ways than to enjoy a hard-played game of football.
Alf Landon at 97
Aft Landon's walks these days are limited to half-hour strolls around his estate in Topeka.
Such exercise, however, represents the same tenacity that took him on the campaign trail for a chance at the White House in 1936.
Landon, who celebrated his 97th birthday yesterday, suffered a broken hip last year, but this accident was not enough to keep the former presidential contender down. Landon has made a valiant recovery, progressing enough to leave his steel walker aside and rely only on a cane or an aide's arm as he takes his daily walks.
Although he was soundly defeated by Franklin D. Roosevelt in his bid for the presidency, Landon recovered from this setback as well. He did not run again for office, but continued his participation in politics and the Republican party in particular.
History already tends to treat him kindly, recalling his loyalty to the GOP and his years as governor of Kansas in the early 1930s.
In his golden years, Landon's reputation as one of the state's finest politicians glows ever brighter.
President Reagan told Landon, "You're kind of an inspiration. It makes me feel good about the whole business."
As the 1984 presidential race nears the finish line, Republicans are attacking the Democrats and the Democrats, the Republicans.
But people in both parties acknowledge All Landon's contributions to the world of politics.
Change of heart
Anderson's endorsement of Mondale is curious and ironic. Many pundits blamed the Anderson campaign's siphoning of potential Carter-Mondale supporters for the Democratic picket's loss in 1980.
Former presidential candidate John Anderson has emerged from political obscurity and stepped up on the stump for Walter Mondale.
His decision to endorse the man he helped defeat four years ago should have no measurable impact on the election.
The people who have the most to lose are the millions of Americans who believed his pitch in 1900. He was tired of politics as usual, he said then, and was convinced that a third party could offer politically meaty alternatives to the major parties.
His decision to endorse Monday, the gray, old plow horse of the Democratic Party, repudiates his 1980 catechism. It also threatens to undermine the possibility that a viable third party will someday emerge in this country.
If Anderson's National Unity Party does, in fact, endorses Mondale and does attempt to transfer $7.8 million in public funds to his campaign, it will betray both the voters who broke from the major parties in 1980 and the system itself.
Bangor (Maine) Daily News
Women still must strive for equality
A man's brain is much larger and finer than that of any brute. Woman's brain is smaller than man's. ... The brain of the uneducated male somewhat resembles in size and form that of the educated female. ... Because of the finer quality of woman's brain, she is man's equal in most respects, and in some particulars his superior. ... A Greek proverb reckons it as the extreme displace of sloth to be governed by a woman. — "Our Thrones and Crowns." J. I. Potts, 1885.
In those immortal words from advertising land - you've come a long way, baby.
At least that was the tone of comments by everyone from Bella Abzug to George Will at the Democratic convention after Walter Monroe's death and the Republican of Rep. Geraldine Ferraro as vice-presidential running mate.
The honeymoon, however, has ended for Fritz. Gerry and the Democrats, and the post convention euphoria has given way to financial allegations and attempts to outsell an incumbent who's quite a salesman.
Feminists have not reached the point to rest on their laurels.
A Gallup poll just days after Mondale's announcement in July indicated that, assuming both candidates were equally qualified, most of those questioned would be more likely to win in the highest office in the land.
Of the men, 57 percent surveyed said they thought that a male president would do a better job on foreign policy, and 60 percent of the females thought that foreign policy was a man's job.
And on Soviet and Central American policy the economy and unemployment, the majority of those who were employed by a man was better suited for the job.
For the conduct of foreign affairs, 59 percent favored a man, 9 percent favored a woman and 26 percent said his country's sex did not make a difference.
In one category, however, females were favored
A whopping 34 percent said a woman would do more to improve
"the quality of American life"; 29 percent said a male would do more, and 31 percent indicated no difference.
The survey failed to elaborate about what must happen for the "quality of American life" to improve. It seems odd that a woman
Staff Columnist
would be a better choice to improve the quality of our life, yet a man would be a better choice for foreigners, unemployment and the economy.
better blueberry muffin, or to maintain a home (or several) and family and still be able to hobbin comfortably with the politicians in Washing
Maybe improvement in the quality of life means the ability to bake a
Perhaps a better indication of where women stand in the equality movement is that two years ago, and again last year. Congress failed to support the addition of three short sections to our governing document: that equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged on account of sex, that Congress shall give women equal rights in provision, and that the provision shall be in effect two years after ratification.
Studies still show that women are earning less than men, at an average of 62 cents to a man's dollar.
All the usual explanations for the difference, such as that men have higher career goals and expect to spend more time in the work force, are losing ground, and don't justify
the predominance of males in some fields
The argument that other variables hurt women in the eyes of a potential employer and cause them to earn less — marital status, education, hours and weeks worked doesn't account for the gap that still exists.
The women's movement has increased the acceptance of the principle of equality, but the opinion that women are not as capable as men in many leadership positions, fields such as engineering, science and some skilled labor jobs, is still too prevalent.
In another Gallup poll this summer, 80 percent of the respondents said they would vote for a qualified female presidential candidate of their party, an increase from 31 percent in 1937 and 58 percent in 1969. So, "baby," you've come a long
pee, peep, puffs, and
So, "baby," you've come a long way.
But you have a long, long way to go.
FEMALE
MALE
"Reagan wanted to devastate the program," Slattery said.
Students can back financial aid cuts
"It's cool for young people to be conservative now," says Democratic Rep. Jim Slattery.
According to Slattery, however,
many of these trendy conservatives
are not really conservatives. When
they see the issues, they're not
conservative.
Although I doubt that many KU students choose their political beliefs on the basis of whether they are "cool" it must nonetheless be a great relief for consenters on KU to choose to support them at a "cool" political philosophy.
In an apparent attempt to provide an example of such an issue, Slattery cited President Reagan's lack of sympathy for students in his policies, specifically those that would cut back on student financial aid.
Obviously, Slattery was counting on such a remark to shatter the illusions of college conservatives and bring them back to their fiscal senses. Vote for me, Slattery says, and I will go to Washington and vote for an increase in the amount of
money you can get from the federal government
Disappointingly, many students will see the benefit of having such a man in Washington as the voice voting decisions like this are easy because they
7
CHARLES
HIMMELBERG
Staff Columnist
invoke little more than the autonomic nervous system
But widespread support for Reagan on college campuses indicates that some students must be willing to forego financial aid in favor of fiscal austerity and adherence to principle.
For the benefit of the congressman and his perplexed campaign strategists, here a area team might be willing to go along with cuts to federally
financed aid.
The most urgent reason is the necessity of further budget cuts in the face of runaway budget deficits. With programs such as Social Security and food stamps facing tightening, it sounds a little selfish to demand federal dollars for student financial and cheeks.
It is also a worn but still valid argument that education is the responsibility of the states, and that the states are responsible for the providing of financial aid. In fact, the states and private sources provide the majority of financial aid to college students, and the cutting off of federal sources would not have catastrophic consequences.
Finally, the most interesting argument questions whether the proper role of the federal government is to provide financial assistance to students pursuing undergraduate and, in particular, graduate degrees.
Education, the traditional argument goes, is a "public good," that is, a free society benefits from the use of education. The other aspect of the argument is, particularly valid at the
basic levels of education Knowledge of how to read and write is important so that the members of a free society can make informed and intelligent
This argument, however, becomes progressively weaker at higher levels of education. The benefits from higher education are more private in nature. College graduates earn higher incomes and also derive benefit from their education in the form of such intangibles as social status and an educated outlook on life.
Because higher education entails so many elements that are, in fact, private in nature, and because the primary benefit to society is accomplished by the time one graduates from high school, these students have a "right" in some absolute sense to higher education.
For all of the above reasons and others not mentioned here, it is indeed conceivable that many students might hesitate to secure a more comfortable life at the expense of their neighbor's tax dollars.
God and man at the White House
While I was driving through Arkansas last week, I tuned in a nighttime radio call in show just in time to hear a rustic ask the show of "How come all them liberals are again 'God'?"
The show's host blainly said, "I just don't understand that myself Maybe somebody out there has the answer and will call us."
Nobody called to explain the evil ways of liberals; nobody called to dispute the whacky statement.
The Rev. Jerry Falwell and company have succeeded. They've
A. M. BRAWNER
Syndicated Columnist
MIKE
ROYKO
managed to convince many people that God is a conservative Republican.
Among those who have seen the light is President Reagan, who is now
saying that "religion and politics are necessarily related." He says that those who are against such things as school prayer are "intolerant of
I've spent much of my adult life observing politicians double-dealing, double-talking, side-stepping and backtracking.
You would think Reagan spends half of his time on a special hotline to heaven.
Yet he hardly ever sets foot in a of course. Reagan can seek spiritual guidance anywhere; in the
Reagan and others who are puffing school prayer have little patience with those who say that nothing stops students from praying silently in
Churches debate homosexual role
Most church bodies continue to oppose any official recognition or rights for homosexuals within a church and continue to stress that homosexual activity is contrary to the Bible and Christian belief
Oval Office, his jet or his body building room
How can we be sure he does? For that matter, how can we be sure that his staff prays?
At the same time, however, groups organized to defend homosexuals within churches say they are growing in strength.
United Methodists, who have been arguing over the question of the role of homosexuals for more than a decade, are considering another chapter in the long debate.
Here we have the President asking us to take his word that he prays, yet he doesn't trust schoolchildren to offer up a few silent words of their own.
At an October meeting, Methodism's Judicial Council will decide the legality of a prohibition on the ordination of homosexuals that was adopted by the denomination's highest legislative body.
Meanwhile, the Catholic Coalition for Gay Civil Rights is battling with a prominent Catholic leader, New York Archbishop John J. O'Connor.
The coalition, which claims a membership of 3,500 priests, theo
DAVID E.
ANDERSON
United Press International
O'Connor and officials of the Salvation Army have said they would
not sign a city directive that requires all private agencies doing business with the city not to discriminate
loggers, pastoral workers and members of Roman Catholic religious communities, is fighting O'Connor's opposition to a New York City law that bans employment discrimination against homosexuals.
It has begun a program to identify congregations that have "inclusive ministries" for homosexuals
The group, comprising about 300 homosexual and heterosexual members, gathered in St Paul Minn. less to confront the church than to affirm members' problems of commitment.
The New York archicadee, which has $75 million in contracts with the city, especially in child-care facilities, said that to sign the directive would violate church condemnation of homosexuality.
If Reagan is really sore about the importance of daily prayer in the school, why doesn't he set an example - daily prayer on the White House lawn
Another group, Lutherans Concerned for Gay and Lesbian People, recently celebrated its 10th anniversary.
If you think about it, who is in greater need of wisdom and goodness — some runny nosed 80 year old or the powerful people of the White House?
Naturally, nobody would be required to pray. A presidential aid could offer personal reasons to decline After all, the advocates of classroom prayer say that students would have that right
There might also be a problem in the selection of a suitable, all-purpose prayer that wouldn't offer anyone
These problems, however, can be overcome. If he finds them difficult the president can always pray. $ \textcircled{1} $
If he does that privately, too, we can never be sure, can we?
University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1984
Page 5
Ineligible continued from p.1
Del Brinkman, KUAC faculty representative and dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications, said, "The ultimate responsibility goes back to any student or athlete who cannot have the proper grade point average."
But, he said, the number of student athletes who have academic problems is fewer than the number of students who have problems and are not student athletes.
Anthony Redwood, KUAC chairman and business professor, said the question of academic eligibility for student athletes wasn't new to KU or to other schools.
At the universities of Nebraska and Missouri, no players have been declared ineligible; Iowa State University and the University of Colorado each have one ineligible player; and the University of Oklahoma has two ineligible players.
However, officials from five of the seven other Big Eight Conference schools contacted this weekend said that they had two or fewer eligible football players this season.
KUAC board members and University officials said that they were sorry that the athletes were ineligible but that the situation only echoed the need for the athletic department's new long-range plan, which the board approved last week.
IN THE PLAN, KUAC cited the academic support system as being one of the weak
parts of the athletic program. The plan said. "The present academic support program for student athletes is perceived to be inadequate relative to need."
Don Green, KUAC member and professor of petroleum engineering, said, "It's dangerous to draw implications, to point fingers without looking at the facts."
David Ambler, KUAC secretary and vice chancellor for student affairs, said that KU's high level of academic standards could exacerbate student-athlete eligibility problems. They said they had no record also hindered the recruitment of good athletes who were good students as well.
STUDENTS WHO ARE good athletes and have good academic records go to schools with consistent winning records, something KUJacks. Amber said.
The four players declared ineligible in August are:
- Sandy McGee, Lynn, Mass., senior and wide receiver. He was listed as a potential starter during preseason.
- Len Gant, Burlington, N.C., senior and linebacker. He also was listed as a potential season starter.
- Marcus Bond, Newark, N.J., junior and defensive lineman.
● Kevin Pointer, Los Angeles junior,
cornerback
Information for this story also was supplied by reporter Julie Comine.
weekend. We're going into Kansas City to see the Royals tomorrow."
While the Jayhawks and Shockers were gearing up for the game, another, more friendly rivalry was brewing on the road from Wichita.
Rivalry continued from p. 1
JAN WULCOTT, AN ECONOMICS instructor at Wichita State's college of business, and nine of her friends — six of them Jayhawk fans — came to Lawrence in a midweek trip to the beds on who won the game — six put witchcraft down on KU and four on Wichita State.
Besides betting, the rivalry took other forms.
"He sang the 'Jayhawk whatever it is' the whole way up," she said, pointing to her friend, Marc Colcby, a KU alumnus. "I only did 'Rah, Wichita' once."
The friendly rivalry continued, as Colby said. "KU people have always been famous for stooping down to other people's levels and treating them equal."
Along those lines, another KU fan said,
"I'm embarrassed. We have rivalries with a lot more classier universities than that. I hate Wichita State."
A GROUP OF ABOUT 12 KU fans who live in Wichita thought the potential for a
KU-Wichita State football rivalry was ripe.
"We've got to continue to play," said one man clad in crimson and blue. "I think it a rivalty that through the years could be a lot of fun in Kansas."
Another man in the group said. "The basketball rivalry is far better and far more important."
Many in the group thought the rivalry was one-sided, brought about by Wichita State fans. And they continue to support their crimson-and-blue maater.
Game continued from p. 1
"God knows we're trying to bring culture to Wichita," one woman said jokingly.
Vince Hoch said. "We were moving a lot of new kids in so we stayed very basic."
The first was a diving catch of a McDonalds pass at the Wichita State 43-yard line.
TWO OF THE PLAYERS, freshman linebacker Bredesen and noseguard Pat Kelley, were recently moved from offense to defense in a little time to practice at their new positions.
Even with the absence of six players, the KU defense managed to hold Wichita State scoreless in the first half. KU safety Wayne Ziegler had two interceptions in the first half.
1:38 left in the first quarter. The second came on a tipped pass in the second quarter that Ziegler caught on the two and returned 17 yards.
"I was glad to be in the right spot at the right time." Ziegler said. "The guys who stepped in did a super job of filling the shoes of the guys who left. I'm not sure, the way we played, whether it affected us at all."
WICHTIA STATE HEAD Coach Ron Chismar said that his team had not practiced against the defense the Jayhawks used.
Nevertheless, the Shockers struck early in the second half, with McDonald completing a 42-yard pass to tight end Rick Reinsberg at the KU one-yard line. Three plays later, McDonald scored, making the score 17-7 with 11-17 left in the third quarter.
With 25 seconds remaining in the third quarter, Breedsen recovered a Wichita State fumble at the WSU 26. On the next play, Mimbs went all the way for a touchdown behind a key block from guard Doug Certain, and the score was 24-7.
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University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
Jobs continued from p.1
and nobody applied," said Jackie Beardall, a secretary in the law school placement and admissions office. "We've had very few calls. I don't know if they're having problems
Beardall said that the job requirements of typing and knowing how to work with microcomputers may have discouraged some applicants.
A few off campus employers haven't seen
as many prospective employees as they would like, either
"WE'VE HAD SOME applications, but not nearly as many as last year," said Ginny Connelly, secretary at Schumm Foods, which has openings for waitresses at two of the company's restaurants in downtown Lawrence.
Opening
had about 30 applicants," she said. "That sounds like a lot, but we usually get more than that. They usually start coming back early to look for jobs. This year, we didn't have that."
science
"Since the kids got back to school, we've
Houston said that the owner of a Lawrence aquatics company told her last week that there had been no response for the opening in his company.
continued from p. 1
"If Monday's the answer, there sure had to be a silly question," he said.
Chesboro's comment was no surprise in a national Republican campaign that has been marked by buoyant scorn of the opposition, which is trailing by almost 30 points in recent polls. Last week, Reagan referred to Mondale as "what's his-name" when he talked to reporters.
vative who seemed pleased with the right-wing spirit coming to the fore during Reagan's administration
SEVERAL LOCAL CANDIDATES attented last night's opening, including incumbent State Sens. Wint Winter JR., R.Lawrence, and Jim Allen, R-Ottawa, both of whom are running for re-election this year.
Landon celebrates 97 years tells Reagan he'll win bid
The optimistic mood at the headquarters' opening was reflected in the remarks of Van Slyke, a young conser-
"I think that most young people today have a greater sense of patriotism, a greater sense of pride in the United States than perhaps the last generation or two," he said. "I was in college during the Carter administration, and I was embarrassed."
By United Press International
TOPEKA — Republican Party patriarch Al Llandon, who accepted birthday greetings from President Reagan in a telephone call on Wednesday, said the chance of losing his re-election bid this fall.
Landon, who also marked his 97th birthday yesterday with a lawn party thrown by Kansas Republicans at his Southern-style mansion, was noticeably excited after receiving Reagan's brief call from Camp David.
Sitting in his memento-filled living room, the former Kansas governor and presidential contender told Reagan he was one of the most popular presidents in history.
REAGAN WAS FUL of good words for Landon, calling him an inspiration and jokingly saying Landon's age was an incentive for himself.
"In all my 97 years I don't know of a president who has occupied such a strong, stout-hearted position of leadership that you do," said Landon.
"I've been celebrating my 39th birthday now for about 34 years and you've been celebrating yours about 24 years longer." Reagan said. "You're kind of an inspiration. It makes me feel good about the whole business."
Reagan, who visited Landon on his 65th birthday and delivered a landdon Lecture at Kansas State University, called the Republican statesman a folk hero and complimented the "fine Republican tradition in your family."
"I HOPE I can carry Kansas in November and I'll take any advice you have with regard to that," Reagan said.
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SIX MORE PROPAGANDISTS FALL THROUGH THE "PRO-CHOICE" PAPER PODIUM
Because "pro-choice" people are an infinitely creative lot committed to circumventing the factual, occasional examinations of their illogic can be instructive. Consider for a moment the offerings of the following six "pro-choice" propagandists.
After attending an abortion hearing in 1969, Gloria Steinem, of Ms. magazine fame, found herself wondering "how much power would we (women) ever have if we had no power over the fate of our own bodies."
Five years ago, Congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro told her peers in the House of Representatives that "As a Catholic I accept the premise that a fertilized ovum is a baby ... (but) I have no right to impose my belief on (others)."
In the August 28th Kansas City Times, syndicated columnist William Safire accused New York Archbishop John J. O'Connor of being "eager to enshrine his church's views on abortion as national law" after the archbishop told Catholics that they could not "in good conscience" vote for pro-abortion candidates.
Janet Gallagher, an attorney who directs the Civil Liberties and Public Policy Program at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts, claims, in the September issue of Ms. magazine, that the Roe vs. Wade decision was an expression of "a general legal trend toward honoring individual decision-making in the area of health care." Ms. Gallagher then patiently explains that "the real question . . . has less to do with the status of the fetus than with the status of women . . . in short, control over our bodies and our lives."
Rosalind Patchesy, the author of Abortion and Women's Choice, confesses to discovering "a moral obligation to nonpersons—fetuses, animals, trees and all organic life," but notes that "The problem is, of course, that the survival of these living things may conflict with some important rights and needs of actual persons, and that in the face of such conflict, we must give priority to actual conscious human beings over other forms of life."
The Orlando Sentinel's Howard Means admits, in the September 1st Kansas City Times, that President Reagan was correct when he recently told a group in Dallas, "politics and morality are inseparable" because, in Mr. Mean's words, "Morality has to do with good and evil, with the distinction between right and wrong, between what is virtuous and what is vicious." Even after describing as an "awful beast" (any) political body that constantly subjugates moral decisions to expedient ends" and stating that the "central religious work of Western culture, the Bible ... adijures us not to kill", Mr Means finds those adamantly opposed to abortion guilty of "using religion ... as a bludgeon ... (rather than) a guide" in their attempts to bring this bloody bandwagon to a halt.
What these admittedly inspired individuals have in common is a willingness to avoid the actual.
Ms. Steinem and Ms. Gallagher ignore the genetically unique individual whose presence in the womb constitutes a pregnancy when they concern themselves only with the comfort of the pregnant woman.
Both Ms. Ferraro and Mr. Satire cling to the discredited notion that the Catholic Church alone views the fertilized ovum, whose activities and development have been carefully observed and scrupulously recorded, as a baby deserving of legal protection.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terr
By refusing to concede that intrauterine beings are, in Ms. Petschek's words, "actual conscious human beings," Ms. Petschek and Mr. Means remain able to see nothing, as Mr. Means puts it, "wrong" or "vicious" in a procedure which savagely eliminates the immediately unwanted members of this select group.
"Thousands of cases interpreted the Constitution before Roe v. Wade was argued ... (but) Before January 22, 1973, the date of the decision of Roe v. Wade, no right to an abortion existed in the Constitution. No one doubts that the life in the womb . . . conceived by two human beings, possessed of the human chromosomal code, possessed of every genetic feature of human beings—is a human boy or a human girl. The child in the womb has blood and brains; a respiratory system, a circulatory system, (and) a uninary system ... (thus) the terrible social fact (is) that Americans are now killing their offspring on a scale exceeding that of any war."
In the fall of 1981, University of California Professor of Law John T. Noonan, Jr. testified before the Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on the Constitution. Here are a few excerpts from his testimony:
Although, like all abortion advocates, these six prominent propagandists understandably wished to skirt such information as the preceding, its existence should foredoom every such attempt to persuade.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1984
Page 7
Beach office takes Senate to students
Buddy Manogue/KANSAN
BELLA CITY
FROD COAST
Donna 'Bong' Highberger, student body vice president, talks with Laura Coulter, Preston junior, in front of Wesco Hall. Highberger and Carla Vogel (left), student body president, Friday promoted the idea of using bicycles for campus transportation. Looking at the bicycle is Miles McNall (right). Lawrence senior.
By JOHN HANNA Staff Renorter
Staff Reporter
About 10 students gathered around the small brown table in front of Wescoe Hall on Friday. The wind rustled through the papers on the table.
Less than five feet away, two musicians, one with a guitar, and the other with a baroque, sang folk songs on the acoustic "Blues" for curious passersby.
"IT'S OUR MASCOT," he said, smiling.
Dennis "Boog" Highberger, student body vice president, sat behind the table. And every few minutes, he lifted up the plastic pink flamingo that he was holding and waved it happily at a car driving down Jayhawk Boulevard.
student Senate had hit the streets.
Highberger and Carla Vogel, student body president, moved their office from the Kansas University during lunch hour Friday to Wescoe Hall beach. The Association of Student Affairs recognized Students of Kansas, about forming a student union at the University and a list of their ideas on issues such as South Africa and its apartheid.
they also had invited Mark Lumpe, RFD 2, and Dick Powers. Prairie Village junior, to play their instruments as they discussed student government with students who stopped by.
Vogel said she and Highberger had put his office outside to reach more students and to let them know about Student Senate. Highberger said they also wanted to have a little fun talking to students.
"IT'S HARD TO talk to people when you're stuck in the office," Vorel said.
Vogel and Higberger moved their
office outside once during the summer and Vogel said that they planned to do it again by the end of the month. She said they also were planning to visit bars near campus to meet more students.
after glancing at it curiously, and about 100 people watched from the steps of Wescoc Hall. But the table had eight to ten students surrounding it most of the time.
Highbuster could not say how many people he and Vogel had met
while they were outside, but he said that it was more than the number they met in the office.
Many students passed by the table
some people probably think it's pretty weird," Higgerber said. "There will always be people who think that way."
Marching Cobras dance downtown
By ERIKA BLACKSHER Staff Reporter
They sat on the curb, dallied in shops, stood in the back of pickups.
About 600 people lingered around downtown Lawrence Saturday afternoon waiting to see 40 musicians from the sound of pounding drums.
The Marching 23rd Street Cobras, led by founder and sponsor Willie Smith, gave the crowd what he had always needed—a unique energy packed show.
energy. WITH SMITH, WITH WHISTLE IN mouth and sporting a baby blue tuxedo with a sequined Cobra on the back, directed the teen-agers into speedy dance routines.
Breakdancing, flip flops and beating drums were all part of the 20-minute show that drew five minutes of applause.
"You don't see it anywhere else because there's nothing copied," he said. "We don't turn any talent down."
"If you can break dance, we use you. If you can do acrobatics, we use you. It's an organization open to doing it and to do good."
Denise Garrett, a spectator who had seen the Cobras before, said, "it's unbelievable. They're so stupid together. They don't miss a beat."
Robinson Shoe Co., 837 Massachusetts St., sponsored the parade Saturday to give people a chance to see the Cobras and to promote the store, which opened April 2,
said Jeff Wiard, general manager of the shoe store chain.
THE 107-MEMBER DRILL team has performed their routines around the nation. They have appeared on the television shows "P.M. Magazine" and "Good Morning America."
"When I first started, I had to go out looking for performances," Smith said. "Now I don't have to answer the phone."
"It INCREASED FROM 13 boys to 27 boys, and each year it increased," he said. "By 1976, the bicentennial year, the girls started complaining."
Smith started the organization in 1970 to raise money for Lincoln Academy, which had been damaged by a fire.
The members of the now co-ed drill team come from inner-city Kansas City, Mo., schools. The members, all between 12 and 17, must maintain a C- grade average to perform. Smith said he checked on the members grades just as a father would.
One motive for continuing the drill team was to keep the teens off the street and give them a chance to deviate their time to, Smith said.
"I'm the only man in the world with 107 children, and I love all of them." Smith said.
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
STUDENT CREATIVE ANACRONIST will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Jawhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
SMALL WORLD will meet from 9:15 a.m to 11 a.m at the First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd St.
ANNESTY INTERNATIONAL will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1984
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Student Union Activities (SUA) Board and its volunteers have been a part of the Kansas Union since 1938 planning and providing entertainment and activities for the University of Kansas community throughout the year.
SUA offers a broad spectrum of programs.A 12-member student board and several hundred committee members plan these activities for KU students, faculty, and staff. For such a broad spectrum of programs,SUA needs many enthusiastic students with a wide variety of interests and ideas.The key to our success is your involvement.
pr public relations
PUBLIC RELATIONS
Public Relations sponsors programs to present various aspects of SUA and the Kansas Union to campus. Among the programs are Kansas Union Open House, the Burge Union Open House, Christmas Madrigal Dinner, and the SUA slide show. Posters, brochures, and flyers are also produced. In cooperation with the other programming areas, Public Relations committees often work on other events such as dances held in the Kansas Union ballroom. A graphics committee to design posters and other publicity material is also an important branch of Public Relations.
FORUMS
FORUMS
Discovering and discussing new ideas, weighing important issues, and realizing attitudes and opinions of others are important elements of campus life and personal growth. The Forums program freely offers this opportunity to the University by inviting respected and entertaining authorities to address current, sometimes controversial, issues. In recent years, Forums have brought John Houseman, Alex Haley, Ralph Nader, and Bella Abzug to name a few. Student and faculty are encouraged to submit their suggestions for speakers—local, regional, or national—or for issues to be considered.
SIE
Special
Events
SPECIAL EVENTS
RUA
Special
Events
The dedicated involvement of hundreds of studentis each semester helps make this programming area so special. Special Events is the primary concert producing entity on campus, responsible for bringing a variety of exciting local and national talent to the University. Many enthusiastic students become involved by working on the production staff, stage crew, publicity, operating spotlights, or by joining our ranks of ushers and security personnel. Students are an especially valuable resource for Special Events. Everyone is encouraged to sign up in the SUA office and get involved. SUA provides a great opportunity to gain experience in the field of live entertainment production for students who are interested.
SYA FILMS
FILMS
The SUA Film Series is one of the largest and most comprehensive series in the area. Whether you're an avid film buff or an occasional moviegoer, SUA Films has something to offer. The film chairperson and film committee are chosen in the spring to select next year's films. A love for movies is the only requirement for the committee. The free film calendar, available at the SUA office, has complete information on the entire semester's movies. Special films coming up this semester include: Eric Rohmer's "Pauline at the Beach," five re-released Alfred Hitchcock films, Fredric Fellini's "And the Ship Sails On" and an independent film, "Liquid Sky."
Fine Arts
FINE ARTS
Fine Arts is designed to supplement the educational, cultural and recreational activities of the University. Currently, this includes the Union gallery, poets and writers series, drama series, arts and crafts bazaar, picture rental and photo contests. Other creative areas include Burge Union concerts, theatre productions—like Second City—and visiting artists from throughout the country Fine Arts also are available to take home. The picture lending library allows the student to check out prints.
iR indoor recreation
INDOOR RECREATION
Indoor Recreation provides a wide variety of different services for the students. Indoor recreation is in charge of the Jaybowl and sponsors all-campus tournaments to determine the best players on the hill. Campus champions in each event then can represent at the regional tournament. Other clubs sponsored are Dungeons and Dragons, Strato-Matic Baseball, and Strategy and Wargaming Club. Novice or expert, you're invited to join these groups for friendly competition.
sua outdoor recreation
OUTDOOR RECREATION
Outdoor Recreation offers a wide variety of well established and organized clubs in which you can experience the great outdoors. From the Bike and Frisbee Clubs, to Orienteering, Mountaineering and the Sailing Clubs. Anyone can find their own niche within these organizations. Discounted rental rates on camping equipment and accessories are offered through Wilderness Discovery. So come by and discover Outdoor Recreation.
[Illustration of a person carrying a suitcase]
TRAVEL
Imagine Breckenridge over Christmas and skiing again at Steamboat Springs or getting away from it all to the sun and fun of Padre Island over spring break. SUA Travel's trips are every bit as exciting as they've always been or more so. But have you heard? We also sell Eurail passes, international student identification cards and youth hostel passes. Need information on travel? Come in and see us.
SUA Office
Level 4 of the Kansas Union
Open 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Monday through Friday Or Call 864-3477 for more information
SUA
SUA-We're Here to Serve You
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1984
Page 9
Student Union Activities Presents KANSAS UNION OPEN HOUSE WEEK
Tuesday, September 11
Speaker: Governor John Carlin 7:00 pm Alderson Auditorium
KLZR 106 Day At The Union
Jaybowl - one lane rental for an hour 1pm-5pm $1.06 free billiards
Hawk's Nest- hot dog, french fries, small soft drink $1.06 11:00 am - 3:30 pm Bookstore-sale, register for free drawing
Wednesday September 12
Travel And Outdoor Recreation Fair Union Ballroom 7:00 pm- 10:00 pm
Bookstore Sidewalk Sale 10:00 am-4:00 pm in front of the Union
S
Joe Domme Ballroom Dancing Seminar Big Eight Room 7:00 pm
rain date for sidewalk sale
Thursday, September 13
Friday, September 14
Popular Film Series The Right Stuff' 2:30 pm and 7:30 pm Midnight Movie M*A*S*H*
R. E.M. Concert Special Guest The dB's Hoch Auditorium 9:00 pm
K U Bookstore Drawing 4 pm TGIF $1.00 pitchers and FREE popcorn 2-5 pm in the HAWK'S NEST
Saturday, September 15
Oread Book Shop 15th Anniversary 15% off any purchases, free beer
Chuck Berg Band Union Lobby 10:00 am 11:30 am
Free Concert "Get Smart"Union Ballroom 9:00 pm refreshments sold
Jaybowl - free bowling and billiards 7:00 pm 11:00 pm
Simultaneous Chess Tournament 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm Union Lobby
Free Films Alderson Auditorium 7:00 pm- 9:00 pm
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1984
Page 10
Bra
Kris Wade, Emporia, adjusts the microphone as she prepares Contest. Each performer had to sing original material at the to perform at the Second Annual Kaw Valley Songwriter's contest yesterday afternoon at Potter Lake Pavilion.
Performers play, sing own music in contest
By DAN HOWELL Staff Reporter
One of the contestants might have launched into Barbra Streisand's "Don't Rain on My Parade."
After all, wind, rain and fog touched Lawrence during the weekend, and skies were still mostly cloudy yesterday afternoon.
But a parade of performers in the Second Annual Kaw Valley Songwriters' Contest sang and strummed only original music. And the rain stained away.
The contest yesterday at Potter Lake brought together 25 performers and more than 130 listeners for an afternoon of music in the folk, folk-rock and country styles.
BRAD BOERGER, LAWRENCE, won first place and three hours of recording time donated by Ramona Recording Studios. 724 Massachusetts St.
Todd Newman, Lawrence, won the $50 second prize, and Gael Miller, Lawrence, won the $100 third prize.
Rick Frydman, Lawrence first-year law student, organized the event again this year. "My goal is to get people to listen to what people are singing." he said.
Frydman said that visits to Austin, Texas,
had contributed to the contest idea.
Frydman said that the contest idea developed because he and some friends had long enjoyed the open microphone sessions at local taverns, and that they thought more people should hear the music being performed in the area.
"There was a lot of talent, but only 20 to 30 people were hearing it," he said.
"AUSTIN HAS A great music and song-
writing scene," he said.
Four or five places in Austin feature original music on most weekends. Fryman
The contest was only one of three events
during the weekend Performances on Friday and Saturday evenings featured two musicians from Austin, David Halley and Lucinda Williams. The two judged yesterday's contest and performed during breaks.
Williams told the hillside audience that songwriting had no single approach or limits.
She said people have their own natural styles.
"Everybody always asks me which comes first, the music or the lyrics," she said. "I hate to say, but I can't remember."
Frisbie said that he was nervous about performing in public, but that he was glad for the opportunity.
"It takes a while to find out what you're supposed to sound like," she said. "I try to stay away from too many unrequited-love songs."
JACK FRISIE. A contestant from Osakaosa, said he had been writing songs and performing publicly for only a few months. He has blued the guitar for about 14 years.
"I see what other people are doing, and I get a little public exposure," he said.
Frydman said that in the first contest last fall, all entrants were from Lawrence, and that all had the chance to perform. Changes were made for this year.
"A friend said the name 'Kaw Valley' made it sound like it should be more than Lawrence, so we expanded it," he said.
Frydman said schedule considerations also forced a change. Entrants this year had to submit a report for review by Aug. 25, and 25 of the 42 entrants were selected to perform.
FINALISTS CAME FROM as far as Hutchinson, he said, and 15 were from Lawrence.
"It is a very fair representation of the talent we have in this area," he said.
Frydman said he thought the response to contest announcements was good.
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University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1984 Page 11
NATION AND WORLD
Police investigate abuse at preschool
By United Press International
NASHVILLE, Teen. — Authorities removed about 65 children from a Nashville day-care center following reports that some of them may have been sexually abused.
Officials said Saturday that police and the state Department of Human Services had been investigating Miss Ann's Preschool for a week and that all employees and children would be questioned.
Some of the children were placed in the school by the state because they had been abused or neglected at home.
"We are conducting a joint investigation with the Department of Human Services," said Metro Youth Guidance Maj. George Currey. "Be beyond that, I really cannot comment."
Authorities said the investigation
started when a child was examined at a medical center and taken to a hospital for further examination. A hospital doctor notified police that the child had been abused in the groin area.
Police said three other children may have been abused at the center.
Anna Hier, owner of the day care center, confirmed the investigation but added, "All but one of my staff have been cleared.
"The center itself has been cleared. We still have our license and are still accepting children." she said.
But police said the investigation had not ruled out the possibility that more than one staff member might have abused the children.
James Curtis, Hier's attorney, said he would not comment until "I get all the facts."
Stormy Diana stalls off Florida coast
By United Press International
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Tropical storm Diana, on the verge of becoming a hurricane with winds up to 70 mph, ground to a halt off Jacksonville last night and forecasters said waves of 12 feet or more would lash the coast if the storm moved ashore.
south move, But the National Hurricane Center in Miami said when Diana begins to move again it is expected to rumble northward on a track virtually paralleling the coast, and had no indication where it might strike land.
It was already so close to shore that "any variation to the left will bring the center on the coast," forecasters said last night.
THE STORM, ITS winds only 4 mph sly of hurricane strength,
was stalled 60 miles southeast of Jacksonville Beach. A hurricane
watch was in force as far north as Oregon Inlet, N.C.
"It almost a hurricane right now. It doesn't take much strengthening for it to achieve hurricane strength," forester Hal Gerrish said. "Just a slight shift to the left and the storm will be on the coast. Our forecasting track indicates it is going to curve right along the coast for the next day, moving parallel to the coastline."
A large area of gale-horse winds extended 150 miles north of the storm's center and 80 miles to the south. Some squalls had moved inland.
Residents of six low-lying northeast Florida counties were warned to be ready to evacuate in case of flooding. At Jacksonville Beach, owners were taping store windows and heavy clouds moved in from the sea.
AT MAYPORT NAVAL Air Station, Petty Officer Peter Davis
said ships and boats were moved to hurricane moorings inland and boaters were staying off the water.
"They're all buttoned up. I haven't seen a single boat out all day," Davis said.
In Jacksonville, the fist major population center in Diana's path, city workers were put on alert and some were called out to clean up debris that winds could toss through the air.
"The weather here has just been kind of rainy. The (St. Johns) River is up maybe 7 feet," said Dr. Richard Leibowitz, a dentist who lives on the river a few miles from the beach. "Two or three weeks we had a real wind blow through here. It was much worse then."
"Kids are out playing in the mud puddles today."
THE HURRICANE WATCH is in effect from Jacksonville north to Oregon Inlet, N.C. Seas of 12 to
18 feet were predicted from St. Augustine north to Savannah.
Partner south, NASA officials decided to delay the transfer of the space shuttle Discovery from Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., to the oceanside shuttle launch pad at Cape Canaveral, Fla.
NASA spokesman Jim Ball said Discovery flew from California to Altus AFB, Okla., and would spend the night there or at Eglin AFB, in Florida's Panhandle.
"The space shuttle Discovery will not be flown back to Cape Canaveral tonight," Ball said. "While the effects of weather associated with Tropical Storm Diana have been diminishing in the Cape (Canaveral) area, the continued chance of rainstorms prompted officials to delay Discovery's return."
OFFICIALS SAID HIGH winds and seas kicked up when Diana formed.
Congressional and governor's races are on for primaries in 10 states
By United Press International
Two women making long-shot bids to topple popular Republican senators, battles for five congressional seats, including Geraldine Ferraro, and governor's races in three states highlight primarys tomorrow in 40
In Colorado, Democratic Lt. G. Nancy Dick, who has never lost a political race, faces attorney Carlos Lucero, who is running in his first, for the right to take on Republican
Sen. William Armstrong in November.
veneris.
Dick, who stumbled early in her bid for the Democratic Senate nomination, is now believed to have a slight edge on Lucero but the race is expected to be extremely close.
IN MINNESEA, REPUBLICAN Sen. Rudy Boshwitz is heavily favored over a couple of unknows for renomination. To face him in November, Secretary of State Joan Growe is favored to win the Democratic nomination over state Treasurer Robert Mattson.
Growe is considered the "best shot to pick up a (Republican incumbent)'s" seat" in November, according to the Women's Campaign Fund in Washington, D.C. And the Democrat whose mittee has listed her race "among the top eight in the country they believe a Democrat can win."
Five congressional seats are up for grabs in Colorado, New Hampshire and New York, including a hotly contested battle to succeed Ferraro, the Democratic nominee for vice president.
THERE IS A four-way Democratic race in Ferraro's Queens, N.Y. district. Two Republicans also areying, but the eventual Republican nominee is given little chance of winning the seat in a heavily Democratic area.
Rep. Richard Ottinger, D-N.Y., and Rep. Barber Canable, R-N.Y., also are retiring at the end of their terms. Four men seek the Democratic nomination to succeed Ottinger; one Republican candidate is unopposed. Conable's district has no primary.
In New Hampshire's 1st District, Rep. Norm D'Amours is stepping down after five terms to challenge Sen. Gordon Humphrey, R.N.H.
Sen. Gordon Humphrey and D'Arrous and Humphrey are both unopposed in the primary.
To replace D'Amours, five Republicans — mostly conservative — and three Democrats are seeking their respective party nominations.
IN COLORADO'S 3RD District — the state's only congressional primary — Republicans and Democrats are running to retain Democratic Rep Ray
Kogovsek.
Democratic state Sen. Richard Soash faces W. Mitchell, a wheelchair-bound former mayor of Crested Butte who uses only the letter W as a first name. On the Republican side, rancher and investment banker Mike Strang faces Phil Klimsitch, a lawyer.
There are governor's races in New Hampshire, where incumbent John Sununu faces token opposition on the Republican side, and in Rhode Island and Vermont — where no incumbent is running.
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University Daily Kansan, September 10. 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
Peres loses ally in battle for unity government
By United Press International
TEL, AVIV, Israel — Prime Minister designate Shimon Peres lost his closest political ally, the left-wing Mapam party, as he struggled yesterday to crush a last-minute rebellion in his Labor party against a national unity government.
In a stormy session of the party's 70-member Executive Council, critics defended the accord for a bipartisan agreement to Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's
Likud bloc while most speakers demanded that he back out of the deal. Israel Radio said.
"GIVE ME AN alternative to a national unity government aside from new elections," the radio quoted Peres as telling the group. "Such elections would be conducted against the backdrop of a disastrous economic situation, and in any case, no one can forecast the results."
But Bad Yaacobi, a senior Labor legislator who helped negotiate the agreement, said "everything is more or less open."
He and other Labor Party officials
said dissatisfaction was running high over Peres' decision to bow to Shamir's demand that key economic Cabinet posts go to Likud ministers, including Ariel Sharon.
The Labor Party's 1,200 member Central Committee votes late today on the unity agreement.
In a blow to Peres, the left wing Mapa party voted 400 to 19 on its 15-year alliance with Labor once a unity government is formed. Mapa won six seats in parliament on the Labor Alignment ticket.
THE PARDON OR rehabilitation of Sharon opens the way for him to
become prime minister," said Marapam leader Victor Shem-Tov. "I ask Shimon Peres, my friend Shimon, to whom are you holding out your hand? To those who destroyed the society that got us into the Lebanese quagmire.
Sharon was forced to resign as defense chief last year after an inquiry found him indirectly responsible for the 1962 massacre of Palestinian refugees in Beirut by Lebanese Christian philanthropists.
Sharon, who has a long record of elashes with his superiors over charges of insubordination and
recklessness, is designated to hold the post of minister of trade and industry in the new Cabinet, which Peres said he wants to present to parliament Wednesday.
YAACOBI SAID "NOT a few" of the Central Committee members consider the accord "so problematic that it should not be ratified." Simcha Dinitz, a labor legislator and former ambassador to Washington, said he could not predict the vote.
But Israel Television predicted Peres would triumph, and Israel would have a new government this week.
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1
University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1984 Page 13
NATION AND WORLD
Artist Dali to remain at hospital
Dali Officials think Khadafy seeks better ties to U.S.
By United Press International
BARCELONA, Spain — Salvador Dali's condition worsened slightly yesterday, and doctors said respiratory problems and a fever would keep the 80-year-old artist in the intensive care unit for the immediate future.
Doan's personal physician, mean-
white, said in an interview that the
80-year-old surrealist painter was
"psychopathic."
Dali was placed in intensive care at El Pilar Clinic in Barcelona last Friday following a six-hour skin graft operation Dali had been seriously burned in a bedroom fire Aug. 30.
Dali's personal doctor, in an interview published yesterday, defended himself against allegations that the artist had received inadequate care. He pained a nightmarish picture of Dali's behavior.
Dr. Juan Garcia San Miguel said in the interview with the Madrid newspaper Diario 16 that Dali, bedridden at his 12th century castle north of Barcelona, often would insult them and insult in their faces.
He said Dali had been under psychiatric care until recently.
"Dali has a psychopathic personality with clear characteristics of hysteria and has suffered very profound depressions," he said.
By United Press International
TRIPOLI, Libya — A surprising consensus has emerged among diplomats in Libya's capital that Col. Moammar Khadify is seeking better relations with the West — especially the United States.
In this context, the inhabitants of Tripoli's embassy row say, the 42-year-old strongman's beidering him in Morocco, a U.S. mails sense.
"Many of his strident statements attacking President Reagan are just for domestic consumption," one senior diplomat said.
"Khalady has been looking for dialogue with the United States regularly through various countries, including moderate Arab nations such as Kuwait, and through Austria because of his personal friendship
with (former Chancellor) Bruno Kreisky. Now he hopes to use Morocco to reach Washington."
**LIBNY A LEGISLATURE. THE People's Congress, and 99.97 percent of the Moroccan who voted in a referendum ratified the union last week. Under the agreement both states retain sovereignty but subscribe to a mutual defense pact and will have a rotating presidency.
In speeches last weekmarking his 15 years in power, Khadify threatened to "vanquish" the United States and what he called its "new Nazism." But diplomats familiar with the Arab world said such drum-beating had to be read upside down.
"It's a way of acting," one said
"He thinks the more aggressive he behaves the more you will be inclined to come to terms with him."
The diplomats said Khadafy is
"I he tears Reagan's stubbornness could do him serious harm," one said.
aware of his military weakness in the face of the United States.
OILMEN IN TRIPOLI provided another reason Khadiya may want to smooth relations with Washington. They said Libyan oil wells have deteriorated for lack of adequate maintenance since Exxon withdrew from Libya in 1981 and Mobil pulled out in 1982.
Khadiya knows that the American technicians who drilled the wells originally would be the best people to restore them to full productivity, the
Morocco's King Hassan II has made few public pronouncements on the controversial treaty. But he is known to hope the treaty will help end his debilitating war with Polisario Front guerrillas seeking to
detach the Western Sahara from his kingdom.
The union almost certainly means that Libya has agreed to stop its huge supplies of arms and money to Polisario. That could deal a mortal blow to the Front, which is believed to have received more support from Libya recently than from its traditional backer, Algeria.
HASSAN'S ARMY MADE headway against Polisario recently after completing a sophisticated U.S.-equipped defense line along a vulnerable portion of its frontier with Algeria. Polisario fighters now hold the long way through Mauritania to enter Moroccan-held territory.
Morocco also stands to gain from the treaty financially because Moroccan will be able to work in Libya without permits.
but the treaty poses some risks for
Hassan. State Department officials have warned that military aid to Morocco — worth $56 million this year — would be cut off unless there were cast-iron guarantees that U.S. military equipment would not fall into Libyan hands.
As for Libya, most of its gains from the accord are diplomatic. Khadifa needs to bolster his deteriorating position in northern Libya and 5,000 Libyan troops are supporting rebel leader Geokoumi Wede-
THE LIBAN LEADER is thought to be anxious to deflect criticism of his military adventure expected at November's summit of the Organization for African Unity in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Since Hassan is influential with numerous African states, the union treaty would probably help water down such criticism.
Growing world turmoil threatens U.N. role, leader says
By United Press International
UNITED NATIONS — The United Nations has managed to stave off a world war in its four decades as an international referee, but growing political violence is threatening its mission to keep the peace, Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar warned yesterday.
"We have now had nearly 40 years of experience, 40 years of change, and, for all the conflict of our time, 40 years without a global war."
rerez de Cuellar said in his annual report to the 39th session of the General Assembly, which opens next week.
THE U.N. CHIEF bernamed a steady increase in various forms of politically motivated violence, including hijacking, kidnapping, car bombing and assassination.
"Our society is, in some sectors, becoming an armed camp," he said. "Order, elvity and even public life are threatened by threat in many parts of the world."
appalling,” Perez de Cuellar said. “It is not enough to condemn or try to control such acts of violence. Attention has also to be focused on ways of dealing with the root causes of these phenomena.”
"The toll of innocent victims is
Peace keeping efforts are impelled, he said, largely because one person's freedom fighter is another one's terrorist, one's champion of human rights is another's subordinate one's plaintiff is another's criminal.
IN THE PERUVIAN diplomat's third annual report as secretary-general, he said short-term national interest and opportunism are the common interest in world affairs as well as in the United Nations.
"This is the world we have to deal with."
"There has been a retreat from internationalism and multilateralism at a time when actual developments both in relation to China and the economy would seem to demand their strengthening," he said.
great-power tension accentuated by a lack of progress in disarmament and arms control, which has heightened fears of nuclear confrontation." Perez de Cuellar said.
erroris
PEREZ DE CUELLAR ended his report with a call for a multilateral and rational approach to the problems of international peace and development.
"Virtually nothing that has happened has shown that these problems can be solved effectively by purely bilateral or unilateral
"The past year has been a time of
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This week on campus: The Kansas Union Open House
Tuesday 11
KLZR 106 Day
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Hawk's Nest
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11 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
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Speaker Gov John Carlin 7
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KU Bookstore Sidewalk Sale
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
SUA Travel and Outdoor Recreation Fair 7-10 p.m.
SUA Movie: "Pauline at the Beach" 7:30 p.m
Friday 14
Thursday 3
"R. E. M." concert in Hoch Auditorium 9 p.m.
SUA popular film series: "The Right Stuff" 2.30 and 7.30 p.m.
Midnight movie "M" 8:15 p.m.
TGIF: $1 pitchers and free popcorn in the Hawk's Nest 2-5 p.m.
Rain date for sidewalk sale
Last day to enter drawing for 12-speed bicycle and other prizes at KU Bookstore
Joe Domme Ballroom Dancing Seminar 7 p.m.
2-5 p.m.
KU Bookstore draw-
ing at 4 p.m. in store
Saturday 5
Chuck Berg Band 10-11:30 a.m.
Chuck Berg Band 10-11-30 a m.
Oread Book Shop's 15th Anniversary Celebration 7-9 p.m.
15% off any purchase, free beer
Jaybowl—free bowling and billiards 7-11 p.m.
Simultaneous Chess Tournament 7-9 p.m.
Free Films 7-9 p.m.
Free Concert "Get Smart" 9 p.m.
Sept. 11-15 (all week)
Popcorn Wagon selling cinnamon, caramel, cheese and buttered popcorn
lawklets selling beverages and snacks beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Academic Book Fair in Oread Book Shop
September 11-15 at
THE KANSAS UNION
University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1984
SPORTS
Page 14
SPORTS ALMANAC
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W 1. W 1. Perl GB
Chicago 75 37 609
New York 80 63 645
St. Louis 74 67 325
Pittsburgh 74 67 325
Philadelphia 70 72 114
Montego Bay 70 72 114
Tennessee 67 325
San Diego
Houston
Atlanta
Los Angeles
San Francisco
San Diego
18 62 561
72 73 696
71 64 19
77 77 465
77 77 453
61 82 427
61 82 427
San Francisco 4, Seattle 2
St. Louis 9, Pittsburgh 2
Montevera 4, Philadelphia 8
New York 9, Los Angeles 6, Cincinnati 3
San Diego 10, Houston 5
St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1
Villanova 5, Chicago 1
Cleveland 5 (11 inms)
Cincinnati 5, Los Angeles 1
San Diego 8, Houston 1
Dallas 4
Philadelphia - Koosman 11.11 at Chica- go
Montreal (Palmer 6-3) at Pittsburgh
(Candelaria 12-10), 6:35 p.m.
Montreal (Palmer 6-3) at Pittsburgh
Cambodia 12 (4) E. 9:35 p. 6,
St. Louis 12 (La Point) 9-10 at New York
St. Louis (LaPoint 9-10) at New York
Fernandez 4-4, 6-35 p.m.
Atlanta (Camp 6-6) at Houston (M-
Atlanta (Camp 6-6) at Houston (M.
Scott 5-11) 7:40 p.m.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Tampa Bay W 1.1 Pct. GB
Detroit 92 61 Pct. 68
Gary 89 62 Pct. 50
Baltimore 77 64 Pct. 14
New York 77 64 Pct. 14
Boston 77 64 Pct. 14
Worst
Kansas City 73 69 314
Minnesota 71 58 304
Michigan 70 54 184
Chicago 66 76 460
Seattle 66 82 450
Oakland 63 80 419
Nationals 62 80 419
Cleveland Milwaukee
Sunday 14 teams
Minnesota 1, Oakland 9, Cleveland 10, Fortress 12, New York 12, Boston 6, Chicago 6, California 5, Milwaukee 1, Kansas City 5, Seattle 4
Sunday 14 results
Cleveland 7, Houston 13, Detroit 7, Toronto 8, New York 1, Baltimore 4, Milwaukee 9, Texas 9, Minnesota 3, Cleveland 12, Seattle 6, Chicago 8, California 2
New York (Shirley 1-3) at Toronto
(Stark M.) 6/5/97
Detroit (Beringuer 8.9) at Baltimore
(Flaganau 11.12), 6:35 pm
Falkirk 11-12) at 6:30 p.m.
Milwaukee (Sutton 12-11) at Boston
Kansas City City (Guideball) 10-17
Minnesota (Smithsonian) 13-12 17. 35 p.m.
Oakland
MinWake up 10:45 a.m.
Boyd 10:95 - 6:35 p.m.
Miramar 10:55 - 6:35 p.m.
Gabuza 10:11 at
Chicago Dusboh 11-22
Burris (12-7) 9:35 p.m.
Detroit Seahawks 10-14
Seattle Beaettle
Texas (Darwin 8.9) at Seattle (Beattie 10.15) 8:35 p.m.
Minnesota (Smithson 13:12) 7:35 p.m.
Chicago (Dolson 13:12) at Oakland
Tuesday's Games
Detroit at Baltimore, night
Milwaukee at Boston, night
New York at Toronto, night
Kansas at Minnesota, night
Cleveland at California, night
Tampa at Miami, night
Texas at Seattle, night
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
eason Conference
W 2 L T Pct FF 63 Pt 24
Miamiapolis 1 0 0 100 00 64
NY Jets 1 1 0 500 40 37
New England 1 1 0 500 40 37
Oklahoma 1 2 0 000 24 58
Cities Cont.
Pittsburgh 1 1 0 500 50 54
Cincinnati 1 0 2 000 39 47
Houston 2 0 2 000 35 59
Cleveland 2 0 0 200 17 53
National Conference
Seattle 2 0 0 1000 64 17
LA Raiders 2 0 0 1000 64 21
Kansas City 2 0 0 1000 59 23
Denver 1 1 0 500 59 44
Dallas 1 1 0 500 59 44
American Conference East
W L T L Pct PF FA 34
NY Giants 2 0 0 1 0 590 46 34
Oakland 1 1 0 1 590 46 45
Philadelphia 1 1 0 1 590 46 45
Washington 1 1 0 1 590 47 15
Chicago 1 0 0 1 000 61 14
Detroit 1 1 0 1 000 54 14
Green Bay 1 1 0 000 31 27
Tampa Bay 0 1 0 000 37 31
Miami 0 0 2 000 31 61
Washington, D.C. to San Francisco, 8 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 16
Cincinnati to New York, noon
Seattle at New England, noon,
Atlanta at New England, noon
Atlanta at noon
Special ends Sept. 6
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Week
San Francisco 1 0 0 000 30 27
Atlanta 1 1 0 500 30 15
LA Rams 1 1 0 500 33 37
New Orleans 1 1 0 500 45 49
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HIGHER EDUCATION WEEK
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Paid for by the Student Senate
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KARATE
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classes will meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 5:30 p.m. Robinson Gymnasium Room 130 For More Information contact Bruce Thatcher 864-3363
KU big brother— big sister program
Date
Be a friend to a Lawrence youth
CLASSES ARE STARTING THIS TUESDAY FOR BEGINNING AND ADVANCED INSTRUCTION
Wednesday, September 12 or Thursday, September 13
time Place
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ORIENTATION SESSIONS
Must Attend One of the Sessions!
FOR MORE INFO... CONTACT JEFF AT 841-9216
佛人见水成佛
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有水之口
ZEN MEDITATION
Intensive Retreat September 13-16
Public Talk Saturday, September 1:30 p.m.
Master Dharma Teacher George Bowman
Please inquire about regular classes and formal practice schedule.
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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14th
TICKETS at SUA BOX OFFICE; All Capital Automated Ticket Outlets including Full-Line Jones Stores, Caper's Corner Records, both 7th Heaven Stores, Crown Center Ticket Office and Love Records; Omni Electronics in Lawrence; Budget Tapes and Records in Topeka; and through Dial-A-Tic at 816/753-6617.
HOCH AUDITORIUM 9 pm
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September 10, 1984
Page 15
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- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD LETTERS count as 2 words
Handheld Display advertisements can be only wide width and/or no more than six inches deep. Minimum height is not made. No restrictions on handheld display advertisements except for larger displays.
- Teachless are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements
- Deadlines same as Replay Advertisement – 2 weeks days prior to publication
• No refunds on postmortems
- until credit has been established
- Teachers are not provided for Classified or
- Muscle rates based on comressive day inertions,
only.
to the University Daily Kansas
• All students will be required to pay in advance.
this earned rate discount.
* Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
The University Daily KANSAN
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- Classified display ads do not count towards more likely earned tax discount.
correct insertion of any advertisement
- No rebands on canceled or prepaid classified advertising
Fund cards can be advertised in RRL of charge for a private or extending three days. Those ads can be placed on websites or through the business credit card (844.4108).
- Bind box ads, please add a $2 service charge
· Bind company to all company ad lists marked
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Applications are now being accepted for Student Committee Members for the 186 Kansas Healts. Applications are available at the Traffic Office 742. Application Deadline for application: Sept 20
Become a KU Student Ambassador! Interested students should have a general working knowledge of the University and be able to communicate that knowledge in a friendly and open
mature to high school students. This position requires that applicants be full-time students (enrolled in 12 credit hours or more) and possess a minimum of 35 cumulative grade point averages for high school and 18-28强 Hall. The deadline for applications is Monday, September 17.
Budget Stretcher coupons Thurs. evenings. Buy $10 & receive $1 coupon toward next purchase. Cross Reference: Malls Shanning Center
DEALING WITH THAT UNSANE FREELING
WITH TOUCH IN交流 conversations, make new
informations to the staff and be ready
September 10 at 6:30 a.m. p.M.FREE. Please
register to attend at the Student Assistance
Center.
IMPROVE YOUR READING COMPREHENSION AND SPEED. Three class sessions on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 24: 7 to 9: 0 to 9: 0pm. Materials fee. $15. Register at the Student Assistance Center 121 S. 3rd St., Ste. 88.
If it true you can buy jeeps for $44 through the U.S. government! Get the facts today! Call 1-866-722-1421 or 3294
K. U. House Director first meeting will be Thursday, Sept. 11 at 2 p.m at the Kappa Psi Hall 1002 W. 12th St. Rise Room will be hosted Kansas Relational Student Committee is looking for
Kansas Relays Student Committee is looking for
guest members. Pick up application at the Track
Office, 141 Allen Field House. Deadline is Sept. 21,
2014.
SEARCH PAPERS: 296 pages catalog. 15,728
from IBM or HSWS 296 pages (1123 idle book)
296 pages (1123 idle book)
BAYMOUTH TRIBIT SHOP for clothing and
watches. Sat 9.12.30; Tue 9.4. Thur 9.12.30;
Sat 9.4. p.m. WRS Ventron
Bend 19" Color L V. $28.96 a month Curtis
Mathes 1447 W 23rd 842-5751 Open 9:30 9:00
F. 9:30 Sat
SEARCH PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS
Your note to the library, manage your time
and note your study plan. Prepare for
addition. Dyche Hall FIRE. Presented by
the Assistance Center 121, Browns Hall
THE FAR SIDE
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. 1447 W. 23rd 842-5751. Open 9:30 - 9:00,
M F; 9:30 - 9:00, Sat.
SENIHS YEARBOOK PORTRAITS? Shooting is taking place now, in Student Organizations & Activities Office, 401 Kansas Union. Call your office for appointment, 12.5-512 R. Kansai
Shirley Bennett, formerly of Charme Beauty Salon, is now at Angles美容 salon, 940 Massachusetts. M.F. Call 843 4040 for Shirley September Special Shampoo & Hairrest =
Tired of large long distance telephone bills? Switch to TMI, your only quick and efficient local long distance company in Lawrence. We are located anywhere in the U.S. Hawaii, Puerto Rico and Alaska. There are no monthly minimums, no service fees. For more info, call your TMI representative.
University Studios' quality party pics Call
Photography at 843-5279
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All requests. Lighting included. Reasonable Rates. References: 749-112.
ENTERTAINMENT
Comedy Writers: 1 need original stand up
direction. Mike: 843-756
FORRENT
2 BR Apt. like New, on Busroute, C/A, W/D in included $300;呜 841-1314, 844-0038
HAP Api 6 Gibson paid 7 blocks + 2 blocks + 2 blocks
West 40 West 60 West 60 West 40 West 60 West 60
for deck 40 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West 60 West
porch, fireplace to walk KU 1301 KU 824-9298
AVALON APARTMENTS Gas & water paid in
large large one & two bathrooms. Close to KU, and close to KU, and on basin for more info, call Kaw Valley Mgate at
Designed for a group of students. Classes, hage and energy efficiency. $600.00 794.168 843.942
Large furnished apartment 6 rooms
large furnished apartment 4 rooms
close up to large foyer, very couple of
apartments, 12'x10' building.
Male or female roommates. Three college girls
and two boys. One pre-teen girl. Trainee to lose weight $141 plus 4vertices. Very
friendly.
trivive抚养活!Sinkflower House. 146
Tennessee. 249,897! Ask for Downiex Incorporated.
146
By GARY LARSON
25 100 30 10 50
TRIVIA TONIGHT
1065
9/10
© 1984 Universal Press Syndicate
"Yes! That's right! The answer is 'Wisconsin'!
Another 50 points for God, and .. uh-oh,
looks like Norman, our current champion,
hasn't even scored yet."
BLOOM COUNTY
ATLANTIC CITY, TO
BE IN THE MISTER
AMERICA MOSTANT
I'M MOST BLOOM
COUNTY MEMBER?
WHAT?
New leasing one, two & three bedroom apartments, ready. Pass on you to move into good locations, some on busine. Contact Kaw Valley Mgt. at 841 230-6957.
OLD MILL APARTMENTS. Now leasing newly remodeled one and two bedroom apartments — walking distance to K U., and on brownstones. Ready for hire. Call 718-290-4500 or visit www.kuvailvalley.net; at 841-6800 for more info.
MISTER BLOOD -- ? WELL IF THERE WAS I'VE BE IT NO SUCH THING !
SAVE $300
No rent until October 2-3 bedroom apartment
Phone 843-2528 after 5 p.m.
FOR SALE
Polo Pato Wagon, brown, crush, 4-speed, good radio and rubber, runs well $50 cash. 749-1193. 91 Kawasaki K24 korek, bookrack, heavy pegs, windmill, 320 miles, excellent condition, $700.
1977 Kawasaki KZ 750, great. $700. Fender pa 6
channel, 200 watts, $250. RM4-320.
cramer, 200 Warburg, 86-453-854-511
1980 Honda Hawk 400 cc, six miles, excellent
condition
council for education in the state of california
1980 Yumaha XN 400 $750. 841-3332 432 California
79 HONDA CX-300, Plext fairing, new Dunlops,
1026-282-5500, 1026-282-5500.
Apple IIe 164k, disk drive with controller $299.
Apple IIe 18k, anmber monitor. Apple printer controller $299.
IBM PC MPC 300k, disk drive $799.
IBM PC MPC 120k, disk drive $799. IBM Portable 5K,
300k, disk drive $199. Call员席 84237 or 84238.
Biddels, briefcases, collections, folios, hand-
hacks, luggage and much more at Secured Leather. 914 Massachusetts. 842 6046.
Commodore- 64 computer with dataset. Do word processing, color graphics. Great. for students. Like new. upd. $99. price negotiable. Call Tim Davis. B31804R $79. 4262
COLUMBIA 3-speed girl's bike. Like new condition. $50,842 7137
FOR SALE. Bookcases, starting at 49.95 The Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 6th
For furnishing for your living, we have what you need. Thrift stores at 628 Vermont and 16 E. 9th St. Guitar: Dennis, Acoustic, electric cutaway - 30 old. $25, 842. 200 Tux
Flexible armLEASE, 100-wat capability. Regular $49.95, on sale $9.95. Rob's Bath. Sewing and Vacuum Center. 2489 Iowa. (Holiday Plaza). 847-196.
Twin Gain Twin - new 850 cc motor. Kerwek exer
haust. Durand, oillok, cooler, nightfighting, far
much much. Must sell immediately
842-5481 keep tyring
Oak Drafting table/desk Good condition. Best of for
841-5461
Pentax Slimm Camera $220 For more info call
842.9778
Personal Computer System: APPLE MacIntosh,
including printer, MacWrite, MacPaint, and
Microsoft BASIC $2500 Call 842 383
The Ultimate System ALPINE 7136
Dig Adapter Dohly AUDI W120H83 mips
Dohly Adapter AUDI W120H83 mips
ELEC Power Booster Bionostar Acoustics C200
ELEC Power Booster Bionostar Acoustics C200
ELEC Power Booster Bionostar Acoustics C200
Air Amps High DM, power & speaker cables
The painting Barn 181 W. 9th.
Barn 180 W. 6th.
Queen size Water bed $80. Drawing board $10. Call
841-1434
841-1444
Right handed full fail for fencing class. $22. Originally
$15 Used only one semester 841 1661
Nuskam studio nama 2 vrs. old. black. $2000
Samack studio piano, 2 vs. old, black $200
Yamaha MT-44 4-track recorder, $700 Mike,
847359
Solid Wood. 5 Drawer. Chests. $89.99 The Furiture Barn. 1 Width. 60 h.
Twin Mattresses and Foundations: $119 per set
The Furniture Barn: 1011 W. 6th
WINDSURFING SAILBOARDS priced from $549
Large selection of imported models NATURAL
WAY, 82 Massachusetts, 841-0106
Used Metal Office Chairs: Side chairs with & without arms $5 and $10. Stowel swim chair with caps $13. Exec. Swivel chair with castors $20, 84224 after 5 p.m.
Western Civilization Notes: including New Supplement. Now on Sale. Make sure to use them for exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Creek, the location.
Yamaha receiver. Pioneer tape deck with 2
speakers. $490 Drafting table & chair. $120 Call
843.2341
AUTO SALES
Zenith Z100 Computer inc. Multiplian Wordstar
home account. Z Dos, Z Basic. Call after 5:30
p.m. 749-9866
COMPILER TERMINAL 1. Zenith ZT 21 Terminal with built-in audio (Zenith audio), auto login on feature, parallel coreronics) and 2S I2C ports. Zenith ZT 31 Monitor 3600, 842-294.
Furniture Hide-a-bed $10. Dresser $40.
Table/chairs $40. Day bed $40. Small cabinet $15.
Bean bag $10. Call Joe at 964-8348 or 843-8156
1922 Ford. Extra clean, interior perfect. Good mechanical condition $550. Ask for Ford k84 1472 1723 T128. white leather interior. AT PS. PB. Dash. white leather, some rust. K85. Call 844-6992
1967 Mustang, 6 cyl, 3-speed, very nice, new paint, reliable. must sell 841 6067 or 842 1409
1967 Mustang, 6 cyl, 3-speed, very nice, new paint, reliable. must sell 841 6067 or 842 1409
1950 Olds D-4, door; very nice car, 85,000 miles,
air automatic, cruise control, lift stairing, clerical,
interior good trees, everything works, $1950.
Precall McCain (D), 1963, North 2d St.
1973 V.W. Karmann Gioe condition and inexpensive to buy Price negotiable 841-8673
17 Z 28 Camaro, brown w/ blue interior .350
M-22 Trans. 50's. Craggs NISSAN m4 84189
1976 Volvo wagon, air, automatic, cloth interior,
84.000 miles, $295, Preston McCall, 1883 N 3rd,
841-607
good car Am, 420, PS, PR, AC Beautiful car!
1978 Mustang II, 4 cyl., great on gas, new tires. A good car for a student $250, 642 248
65. VW Bug, strong engine. Phil. 842 2822, eve. & weekends.
1974 Malibu 530-261l PS, PB, AC new starter,
aluminum water pump, water tires, exhaust $200
negotiate. Call 843-323 after 7, ask for Paul Rotherbier
- mercury Zephyr Z7, 2-door, 4-speed, 6-cyl.
80,000 miles, $299, Presmont McCall, 1881 N 3rd,
841-6467
STEVE 'THE MISTER
AMERICA PROJEKT
IS A CULTURAL
APPEARANCE TO A FAB
REPERTISETS A SUPERFICIAL AND
SILLY MASculine
STEREOTYPE!
by Berke Breathed
Only $500 842/7196 for 4 p.m.
1980 Mercury Zephyr Z7 2 doon, 4 speed, 6 cyl.
Mercury Zephyr Z7 2 doon, Matlab 9.2d, N.2d
WHAT COULD POSSIBLY BE MORE FABULOUS THAN DREW A LAWYER? "THE LONE BOTTLE MARK I COME"
VROOM!!
Yamaha SEA Turbo XK50 L1, 400 miles,
watergate, lighter, heatable, battery perfect,
$2300 HONDA CR250, ridden 5 times, $1000
842 262
Clean used WV's for sale. Metric Motors, 841-6603.
Slick, White 1966 Cadillac Hearse; Make appointment to see. 844-125.
Tiring of pricing cars that need lots of work? Extra
clean 73 Cordoba, 79,000 miles. $135.
Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z 1990 Datum
280 ZX. Full Power, $5995. Preston McCall,
841-607. 183 West North 3rd
OUND: 3 mo. old female, golden Labrador on
uC campus. Twice evening. Wearing yellow nylon
ollar. Playful. Call Lawrence Humane Society at
413-6835
FOUND in Wescoe classroom on Aug. 31, Pen &
encil set in holder: Call 864-4520, or come to 3116
Vascoe.
Apply at Mazzo's Pizza, 27th & Iowa. No experience needed, just hard work
Missing. Yellow w/ black & silver collar. Lost
around 14th & Tennessee. REWARD. Call
729-4056
LOST AND FOUND
HELP WANTED
Ast. Manager position available Health, life-
vacation and advancement included Apply at
the Pizza 20th & Ilawu
Bartenders & Doormen. Must be 21. Apply after 2 p.m. at romeNn. the 530 Wisconsin.
business 510 Tutor Wanted as soon as possible
fourly rate. Please call 842-6633
strong desire to work with and to improve the lives of adolescent boys age 10-17. This group care home has excellent 9 year record with well trained board members, a board of directors to support the program, and a board of directors to support the program.
iPhone Services. Applicants must be available to begin training from the beginning and must be working toward bachelor degree or in graduate school. Oklahoma State University offers easy Access to Katy City College. Equal opportunity is guaranteed. Experience room, board health insurance. Send resume to Youth Services, Inc. P O Box 221.
Computer Science Student, well versed in computer operations, qualified for technical work. Could be part time commission sales and paid hourly for installations and operator training. Midwest Business Systems
provide 60-90 days on sight training. Program funded by Kansas Dept. Social and Rehabilitation Services. Applicants must be available to learn traininna between October 1 and November
Coordinator/Newsletter editor for the East Lawrence Improvement Association, a neighborhood based organization, has been appointed $200 million. Applicants must have administrative expertise, organize skills, ability to publish periodic newsletter, some familiarity with local issues and contacts of individuals, and a demonstrated commitment to helping people help themselves. Must be dedicated, energetic, and committed. Will accept two letters of recommendation, by September 10, to the ELIA, 1200 New York Street, LAWRENCE KS
DAY CARE HELPER 12.50 or 3.50 daily
daily development or education major Prefer ex-
sence. Call 842-2225
Dependable female to assist disabled with care.
No experience required. Morning, weekend & evening hours available. Call between 1.5
+91-490-0288
Experienced Drummer for Weekend Rock & Roll Band, 414-841, Professional music lovers only
PREEMPTION! It's not okay to join ROTC!
ROTC: Call 664 3161
GOVERNMENT JOB $16,559 $50,553/year
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,599 $50,533/year
Now Hiring Your area Call 805-687-6000 Ext
R9738
Micro Computer Sales person. Full part and time inside sales, some outside sales. Knowledge of hardware and software required. Send or bring to Composter at 711 W.248. Lazerware.
Opening for part and full time family personnel. All shifts available. Apply in person at Vista
Immediate openings for part-time grill personnel
All shifts available. Especially moon rushes
& mornings. Apply in person at Vista restaurants
1327 W 6th
Part-time Bartender and Cocktail waitresses.
Must be 21 yrs. of age. The New Place 2406 Iowa
842 903
part time teachers aids needed Monday thru Friday, weekdays, mornings or evenings. $13.50 hr. Study and or experience with children, ages 4 to 16. Learn at Learning Center, 31 Marine, 4 p.m. weekly.
Part time Help at Day Care Home One cook needed, 1.1 Mon - Fri. Afternoon Asst. needed 3.
5. Call 843-4147
SOLID WOOD Student desks: $89. The Furniture
Barn, 1811 W, 6th
position for a continuous half time graduate assistant position with possible full time employment during summer. The position will assist with the preparation of curriculum and will help with the technical preparation of the curriculum. University budget and will help with the technical preparation of the position will gain a good exposure to the funding and have an opportunity for fund accounting and have an opportunity for acceptance in a K.U. program, 7 first, in accounting, and good written and oral competence. Participate in a half time appointment. Date: Sep. 24th 10am. For information, call Jana Whakehack.
Applications available in Strong Hall EOE
*MIRT RPC Very outgoing, very responsible
application. We are a strong nightlife
alternative, also the partypic photographer for
the Miraktic Park and Turtle Bay.
(120) 814-3561, AT Wheel Stop 201 &low
(120) 814-3561, AT Wheel Stop 201 &low
BUSINESS PERS
*European style sage cake, offering a variety of diebold dishes prepared from scratch, on premium parchment paper, served in the Laurence Inn. Look for our coupon in the Lawrence took the HAWKEN CAFE, new & New Hampshire.
The New Place: for a rich atmosphere at an affordable price. The New Place, a private club, 2406 Iowa, 842-9593
Inflation Fighter, E. 7th E. For your needs in
vintage and party clothes, hats, gloves, ties,
dresses and men suits. Come in & browse Hours
10 to 5:30. Sat. 10 to 10:30. 5:30.
FIGHT SEXUAL ASSAULT. Douglas County Haven Victim Service Support offers free educational programming (films and speakers) for classes, groups or calls. Call 843-8955.
Highest quality dry transfer lettering
LETREASET at student pricing, $4.95 per sheet,
just $8.95. Strong its Office Systems, 1040 Vermont;
836-3644
if you or someone you love has been a victim of sexual assault, Rape Victim Support Service can help. Call 814-2342 or 843-5360 for referral, 24 hrs a day, every week. A United Student Senate Committee chair.
CUSTOM SEWING Dressmaking and alterations. Call 842-5375. Reasonable prices.
MISCELLANEOUS
FUTTON Cotton Mattresses providing comfortable support for the spine. Easy portable. 10% off tutors' t-shirt 1/2 with this ad. Blue Iberon Fautons. 86-943
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
Mornings with kids
3-5 years at Head Start
Call 842-2515 for information
Hewlett-Packard: Printer, for plotter with HP-41C/CV, Mark, 843-5116.
Y
Wide choice Desk Lamps and Accessories to brighten your room at The Furniture Barn. 1811 W. 6th
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care, confidentiality assured Greater area city call for appointment. 913.434.1400
AMY from Jenks, call Mark from Jenks at GP.
"Alfred," "Happy (belated) 22nd," "again," Love,
your summer, "romown," Miss F.
Hey Eime, so ya had a good time, buh? Saturday
nights, eh, ooof! Toto.
FIESTA MATRINA, juga segue and also laten Latin American Muc o Dj. LA Garda Muc, Sept. 18 p.m. at the Jazebusie. $2. Sponsored by Latin American Solidarity.
HEARTBREAK Red & Blue Baby bag lest
tuesday morning. 6th & Maire. Contains baby's first music box. Please return for REWARD
841-1733
PERSONAL
PROBLEMS? Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center listens. Free 24 hr. 841-2345, or new location. 119 Massachusetts.
THE ETC. SHC.
732 Mass, 843-6113
THE FUN PLACE TO BE
RHINSTONE, GLOVES,
PARTY DRESSES, ETC.
S W M. 36 inmate, seeks a taste of freedom thru correspondence. Serious inquiries only B Lemons, box 2 Lanning, KS 66043
HUMAN HATS
AUTHENTIC HATS
BY STETSON
NOW AVAILABLE
Sensitive, nurturing women and men are needed to spend positive time with children of domestic violence, on a one-to-one basis or in group activities. For more information, please break the cycle of violence, please call Women's Transitional Care services: 841-6887 from Sept. 8, WTCS; the battered woman shelter, is looking for
Schooner Club meets at Sgt. Preston's from 7 p.m. - 2 a.m. tonight only $1 refills. Plenty of schooners are still avail.
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTOR for most courses, 843 9032
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Storm Hall.
PLUS MANY OTHER HATS
Announcing: Troy Anderson, formerly of Command Performance, has joined the staff at H’s Hersi Hair Design His opening special. Harurow will be presenting for the special book 841.599.1281 Connecticut.
strong high
TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center,
121 Strong Hall
(COMMUTERS) Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
NEED A RIDE/RIDER* Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
TUTORS/TUTES Inquire at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
Charme Beauty Salon is now offering Harcarts for 47, and permits for $2 & up. Call or come for a professional cut or perm at a great price! Charme Beauty Salon, 1039 Moss Ave., 831-5308.
Carmen Beauty Salon - Hame of the F 1hrur
Environmental campus photo studies - Modeling
lume and Theatre portfolios or composites
IMBRSIONS 942.704 for art/entertainment
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716.
Quick Lube, oil filter for $9.66 Call for appointment, 841-5700
Quick Lube Center, 12 major brands of oil. Call for appointment, 841-5700
Lawrence now has a Quick Lube Center, Call for
rewarmment. #41270Q.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary
Sunshine Accres Montessori Pre-school, A.M. & M.B., part of kindergarten children program. Part day at school for 16+ years, with year in serving KC faculty and students. Visit with your child, at 214, Maga, OH, I-918.
Voice Lessons — DMA voice candidate accepting non-credit singers. Experience with all type voices: 841-4506
Get Something Going!
Cash.
And carry.
MATH TUTOR for most courses, 843-9032
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
24 Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fastest service. 841 506
Cash in on shopping convenience without ever stealing home, and carry savings one step further. Many classified areas are placed within easy reach of your car on vaue to you. Take advantage of quality merchandise at an affordable price with the convenience of shopping at home. read
TYPING
Always try the best for professional service.
Term papers, thesis, resumes, etc. Reasonable
842.3246
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing. Judy 842-7945
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced Group: Individual 842-5585
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers Word Processing. Professional Results — resumes, papers, a specialty. Call 749-1118
Call Terry for your typing needs: letters, term papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correct selec tic II 842-754 or 843-677. 10:00 p.m.
DEPENDABLE professional experienced
JEANTE TSHIP - Packing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard cassette tape
841897.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFF!
CIENT_841.3510
Professional TYPING, EDITING GRAPHICS.
IBM Correcting Selectric, Kathy. 842-3378 before 9 p.m.
Somersville & Assoc. Inc. Professors at Competitive Rates. Word Processing. Typing. Exposition in APSA Style. Lawrence - 801 Kentucky 814.8440 Topeka 803.2330 Western 233.816
WANTED
TIP TOP TYPING 1803 Iowa Professional typing processing, editing Resumes from start to finish, repetitive letters, editing, specializes in word processing and data analysis for self correcting M. Friar 9.5, 843-9675
RELIABLE, experienced typing/word processing,
of term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. $1 2 a
page. Call Mike after 6 o.m. 843-5473
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. IBM Correction Selective. Eite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 841.954. Mrs. Wright
Female Roomatee Trailer house, good location $151/mm plus 1/2 gas & elec 1 smoke 749-6033
Female Roomatee non-smoker to share area $100/mm plus 1.2 inches 841-2058
Female roommate wanted to share nice two bedroom duplex. Completely furnished with washer and dryer $150 plus utilities. Close to campus. 841-268.
Female roommate to share condo Pool, all amenities $185 plus utilities Debbie or Cari,
843-6215
Graduate student needs roommate to share clean.
2 bedroom apt. on Tennessee. $150/mo plus 1/2
apts. Sept. rent prorated. Call 843-6707
Room:mate Female grad or serious student non-smoker preferred, to share a nice.
no snapper, preferred to share a nice 2 bedroom Apartment. All utilities Paid Call 812-8881. We buy WV, running or not. Call Metre Motors. 841-6600
ANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Classified Heading
Write ad here
Net a Winner...
THE CLASSIFIEDS
Phone ___ Classified Display
1 col. x 1 inch = $4.20
Name ___
Address ___
Dates to run ___ to__
1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
1-15 words $2.60 $3.15 $3.75 $6.75
For every
1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
1-15 words $2.60 $3.15 $3.75 $6.75
For every 5 words added 254 504 754 $1.05
Mail or deliver to 119 Stauffer - Flint Hall
SPORTS
September 10,1984 Page 16
The University Daily KANSAN
Royals vault to first place with victory over Seattle
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Darryl Molley and Don Slaughter back-to-back sacrifice flies in the ninth inning yesterday, rallying the Kansas City Royals into sole possession of the American League West in a 6-5 victory over the Seattle Mariners.
With Seattle leading 5-4, pinch hitter Jorge Oraff opened the ninth with a single off Ed Nunez, 2-2, and pinch runner Onix Concepción took third on Willey Wilson's double Pat Sheridan was walked intentionally to load the bases and Mottley had two runs fly in, scoring Concepción with the tying run and moving Wilson to third.
Ed Vande Berg relieved Nunez and pinch hitter Slaughter drove his first pitch to medium left field. Wilson easily beat the Kansas City's fifth straight victory. Kansas City its fifth straight victory.
The victory, combined with Minnesota's 9-3 loss to Texas, gave the Royals a one-game lead over the Twins and California, pending the result of California's game with Chicago last night. The last time Kansas City was in the playoffs was May 3, 1983. The last time the Royals did so late in the season was September 18, 1982.
Mark Husmann, whose error in the ninth allowed Seattle to go ahead, gave up one hit over three innings and improved to 3-1.
McEnroe whips Lendl in Open
NEW YORK — John McEnroe shrugged off the effects of a five-set semifinal match Saturday and humbled Lani Linddor for winning, winning the U.S. Open Championship.
After being on court for 3 hours and 45 minutes Saturday night for a semifinal match with Jimmy Connors that ended shortly before midnight, McEnroe needed only 1 hour and 40 minutes to defeat Lendl 6-3, 4-1, 6-1.
It was the 60th victory this year for McEnroe, the world's top-ranked player, and allowed him to regain the U.S. crown he last held in 1981.
Earlier, Martina Navratilova reached another milestone when she soared over the $2 million mark in 1984 earnings by winning women's doubles title with Pam Shriver
The top seeds defeated Anne Hobbs and Wendy Turnbull, 6-2, 6-4, with the winners earning $2,000 apiece with the $160,000 Navratlova got for winning the $39,500 winner. Ongoing her earnings for the year to $2,025,256 and for her career to $8,409,345.
Ex-KSU coach denies charges
MANHATTAN, Kan. — The former head women's basketball coach at Kansas State University says she is shocked and hurt over allegations by a former assistant coach and four former players that she made payments to her players.
Lynn Hickey responded over the weekend to a report published Friday in The Manhattan Mercury. The newspaper quoted former assistant women's basketball coach Susan Anthony and four former players as saying Hickey rented an apartment for the players, paid off a bad check written by one player and lent money to two players to buy bus tickets home.
NCAA rules prohibit coaches from lending money to student athletes or providing "extra benefits" that constitute participation in intercollegiate athletics.
Anthony was fired last month and filed a lawsuit last week alleging racial discrimination because she was not promoted to Hickey's job. That post was given to Matilda Willis. Hickey, who posted a 125-69 record in five seasons at Kansas State, resigned in June to accept a head-cooking job at Texas A&M.
Volleyball team splits matches
Kansas' volleyball team spit its matches at Saturday's Early Bird Invitational at Robinson Gymnasium.
Central Missouri State, ranked as high as No. 7 in Division II volleyball last year, defeated KU in four games, 14-16, 13-15, 15-7 and 11-15. But Kansas finished the tournament with a victory over Oklahoma City in four games, 15-13, 12-15, 15-16 and
Central Missouri State took three games to defeat Oklahoma. City, 15-9, 15-4 and
"It was a good experience to play Central Michigan State. I was pleased with our performance. We did well, but we have a lot to learn," said Coach Bob Lockwood
Lockwood aggrudged out the tournament by giving player on the team three and two seminars on the squand and the rest of the roster is dominated by sophomores and freshmen.
"Our biggest problem was that we were inconsistent. At times we looked real good but other times we didn't. That really is to be expected early in the season, though. It am very pleased that we got to use everyone on the squad." Lockwood said.
the jayhawks next match is the eight team Rice Invitational Friday and Saturday in Houston.
Sikes wins Richmond Classic
RICHMOND, Va. - Dian Kesks held off a late threat from Lee Elder and shot a 1 under 71 for yesterday for a 8 under 20 in the Senior PGA's Richmond Classic.
Elder shot a 70 and wound up at 26.
Sikes, who won $30,000, led most of the last round, but Elder right to close when Sikes shot the 13th and 14th. Elder got even with a birdie on No. 15, but Sikes shot par from there while Elder bogged No. 17.
GA's numbriums
Elder's shot a 70 and wound up at 208.
Patchwork defense keys Jayhawk victory
Ry PHIL ELLENBECKER
Associate Sports Editor
KU defensive coordinator Vince Hoch stood outside the Jayhawk's locker room after their 31-7 victory over Wichita State Saturday and pulled a piece of paper out of
WICHITA STATE
4
61
On it he had listened the things his defensive unit had to do to shut off Wichita State. The team was playing with a heavy defense.
The chase is on as KU defensive linemen Guy Gamble, State quarterback Brian McDonald in the first quarter
"With one exception, we eliminated the long ball," he said. "If you can do it against a team like Wichita State you can shut them off."
BUDDY MANGINE/KANSAN
The WSU offense scored 31 points in its season opener against Southwest Texas State the week before Quarterback Brian McKenzie passed for 113 yards and three touchdowns.
Saturday, McDonald completed nine of 24 passes for 119 yards and had two passes intercepted by KU safety Wayne Ziegler. KU defenders broke up seven WSU passes, including two each by cornerback Dino Bell and end Arnold Fields.
ONLY on WSU's first drive of the second half did KU's secondary suffer any serious breakdown. McDonald completed a 42-yard pass to tight end Rick Remsburg on that drive to set up a one-yard touchdown run by McDonald. WSU's only score of the day.
KU's皮 cover passage was aided by the relentless pressure put on McDonald by the defensive line, and, on occasion, the linebackers. Guard Phil Forte. Tackle Robert Tucker and linebacker Willie Pless had one sack annee.
WSU didn't fare any better on the ground than in the air. Expecting to see the wide-tackle defensive front that KU used last year, the Shockers seemed baffled by the slightly altered front that KU used Saturday. They averaged about two yards a rise from Eric Denson, who rushed for 1017 yards last year, was held up to 45 yards on 14 carries.
"They had a fairly good sized line, but all spring and fall we worked against our own offensive line, and they're bigger than Wichita State's was," Forte said.
of the KU WSU game. Tucker dropped McDonald for a 317 victory Saturday at Kunga Memorial Stadium.
"THEY PLAYED A DEFENSE that we hadn't practiced against," said WSU head coach Chirismar. "But it's our job to make that adjustment. At the half we changed a couple of things, but we did not make any amazing discoveries about how to beat
The Jayhawks were forced to replace five first or second unit defensive players after Friday's announcement that they were academically ineligible.
WSU to part on 10 of its 15 possessions, five of those in three downs.
All told, KU's patchwork defense forced
"We had a lot of kids who had to grow up in hurry." Hoch said "Kirk Bredesen (who
replaced Darnell Williams at linebacker is a good example. He didn't find out he was going to start until right before the game when he just moved in as noseman on Wednesday.
"I thought our coaches did a super job of preparing our players. We obviously were a team," she said.
Mimbs alone nearly tops WSU team offense output
By CHRIS LAZZARINO
Sports Writer
Tailback Kim Mimbs had the best game of his career Saturday in KU 31-7 thrashing of Wichita State, gaining nearly as many points and receiving as the entire Shocker队.
Mimbs gained 150 yards rushing on 18 attempts, 84 yards more than the entire WSU team gained on the ground. He finished the game with 181 total yards, while WSU had 112.
"The offensive line opened up big holes. All I had to do was run through them. It was hard."
Mimbs was nearly able to outgain WSU's entire offense because of the play of KU's defense, which played without five players out. But the game because of academic problems.
"They did a great job of holding them. We went out there and did a job and played as a drummer."
"I just ran where the hole was and everything was working, so we just kept running. Mum?"
For the first time since Mike Gottfried took over as head coach, the Jayhawks gained more yards on the ground through the air.
The fact that the Jayhawks kept the ball on the ground did not surprise Mims.
"We expected to run the ball. We didn't really say how much we were going to run it. We were going to pass and mix it up and make it even." Mimbs said.
Mimba's best game before Saturday was
second round against the Buford, which he
won by a 3-1 score. The Buffalo Buford
Last season Mirbs was the Jayhawks
nard leading rusher in scoring, behind
Karl Hermanson and E.J. Johns.
yards. Mirbs caught 27 passes for 315 yards in 1983
Against WSU, the Jayhawks alternated Lynn Williams with Mimbs at tailback.
"We were trying to confuse them and not let them know what we were trying to do at the time. I think that it did kind of confuse them." Mimbs said.
Williams finished the game as the say hawks second leading rusher with 47 yards. Mimbs had two tumbles in the game. The first one came in the second quarter after a 22 yard gain and the second one came in the third quarter after an 18 yard gain
"Those were two good hits. I caught myself trying to spin out of it," Mimbs said. "Coach Gottried told me not to worry about it. He said everything would work out, and it do!"
"He's a good back. We've got to find ways to get the ball in his hands. He's always moving up the field." Gotfried said. "If anybody wants the football, it's him. I'm not afraid to give him the football, or to throw to him."
Gottfried has confidence in Mumbs' abilities as a runner and a receiver.
Mimbs had two consecutive gains of over 10 yards, the first for 25 yards and the second for 14 yards, called back because of holding up the knees, however, wasn't upset by the penalties.
Although KU let several players this fall because of academic inelegibility, the team secured a victory in its first game for the first time since defeating Tulsa, 15-11 in the 180 open.
"I can't get mad about it. It's part of football. We all came back from it as a team." he said
"We wanted it as a team real bad. Then a couple of things (academic problems) happened You cann't get down. That kind of thing makes you want to win even more. Mimbs said."
OSU defeats No.13 ASU; NU stomps on Wyoming
By United Press International
Nebraska, starting the season as the nation's No. 2 rated team, whipped Wyoming 427 in its opener Saturday The Cornshuskers were led by I-back Jeff Smith, who rushed for 170 yards and a touchdown.
The Cornhuskers rushed for 440 yards and all six of their touchdowns, with reserve quarterback Travis Turner scoring twice and Craig Sundberg, Tom Rathman, Smith and Thurman Hoskins each scoring once. Smith, the replacement for Mike Rozier at I back, rushed for 170 of those yards.
In other Big Eight Conference games Saturday, No. 10 Oklahoma downed Stanford 19.7, Oklahoma State beat No. 13 Arizona State 45.3, Kansas defeated Wichita State 31.7, Illinois toppled Missouri 30.24, Michigan State mopped Colorado underbelt kicked Kansas State 26.14 and No. 14 Iowa demolished Iowa State 59.21
Oklahoma quarterback Danny Bradley rushed for 100 yards and one touchdown as OU successfully returned to the wishbone offense after its one-year absence. The Sooners rushed for 258 yards with Bradley scoring on a 12-yard run and Earl Johnson on a four-yard run.
Tailbacks Shawn Jones and Charles Crawford combined for 238 rushing yards as Oklahoma State tore apart an Arizona State defense that had nine starters from a year ago. The 45 points were the most successful in Westinghouse.州 State scored 51 in 1978.
a tremendous tribute to our defense. Jones said . "I knew it would be OK if we had
"To hold Arizona State to three points is
Illinois avenged its only regular-season defeat of a year ago, but not before withstanding a 14-point, fourth quarter Missouri rally. The defending big Ten champions were not able to put the Tigers away until Guy Testatiert scored on the final play of the game. Missouri had driven to the Illinois 23 yard line.
Colorado scored all 21 of its points in the fourth quarter but blew a chance to claim a tie with its Big Ten foe when Larry Eckel missed a 32 yard field goal with 22 seconds left — one of four field goals he missed during the course of the afternoon.
Vanderbilt quarterback Kurt Page completed 15-02-23 passes for 196 yards, including a 55-yard touchdown pass to Keith Edwards. Kansas State scored its single touchdown on a 25-yard interception return by freshman defensive back Brad Lambert.
"This is a tough way to get the season started." Kansas State Coach Jim Dickey said. "We had guys who played hard on defense. We just didn't get enough of a pass rush. I thought the secondary played pretty good but their guy just threw unbelievably well. He threw the short pass extremely well."
Chuck Long threw for four touchdowns and the Iowa defense intercepted five passes as the Hawkeyes hammered Big Eight rival Iowa State. Alex Espinoza came off the bench for Iowa State in the second quarter and completed 21-of-31 passes for 286 yards and three touch-downs.
Blackledge leads aerial attack over Bengals
By United Press International
CINCINNATI -- Todd Blackledge passed for two touchdowns and Nick Lowy kicked a 40-yard field goal with 1:50 remaining yesterday to seal the Kansas City Chiefs 27.2 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals.
Blackledge, a second-year NFL quarterback, lobbied touchdown passes of 46 yards to Anthony Hancock and 19 yards to Carlos Carson. Lowery provided the Chiefs' decisive final six points on field goals of 52 and 40 yards.
Kansas City, after defeating the Steelers 37-27 in Pittsburgh last week, improved its record to 2-0 yesterday thanks mainly to Blackledge and Lowery.
"I'm a team player," said Blackledge. "I don't care if I throw a couple of touchdown passes or spend the entire afternoon handing off, as long as we win."
Cincinnati lost its second straight game.
Chicago 27. Denver 0
CHICAGO — Walter Payton scored on a 72 yard touchdown run — the longest of his career — and broke Jim Brown's career combined yardage mark with 179 yards rushing in the Bears' shutout yesterday of the Broncos.
Indianapolis 35. Houston 21
HOUSTON — Mike Pagel threw three touchdown passes, including two to Ray Butler, to lead the Colts to victory yesterday over the Oilers.
Pagel's first touchdown pass of the season, to Butter with 72 seconds left in the first half, gave the Colts a 21-14 lead.
L.A. Rams 20, Cleveland 17
· L.A. Raiders 28, Green Bay 7
ANAHEIM, Cailf — Olympic gold medal sprinter Ron Brown tied the score with a 5-yard touchdown catch and Mike Lansford kicked a 27-yard field goal with 1:25 remaining in the game yesterday to push the Rams over the Browns
The game-winning drive was highlighted by the running of Eric Dickerson, who finished with 102 vards on 27 carries.
Seattle 31, San Diego 17
SEATTLE — Dave Krieg ran for two touchdowns and passed to rookie Daryl Turner for another score as the Seattle Seahawks beat the San Diego Chargers yesterday.
The game marked the Seahawks' debut of France Harris, who carried 14 times for 46 yards in spot duty.
Miami 28, New England 7
LOS ANGELES - Frank Hawkins, Marcus Allen and Derrick Jensen rushed for second-half touchdowns yesterday, helping the Raiders down the Packers.
The Raiders shut down Green Bay's explosive receivers to improve to 2-0
The Dolphins added the final score with 2:33 left when Mike Kozlowski intercepted a pass on the Dolphin 14 and lateraled to William Judson for an 86-yard return.
MIAMI — Dan Marino hit Mark Clayton for two touchdowns in the first four minutes of the second half yesterday to send the Dolphins to a victory over the Patriots.
Philadelphia 19, Minnesota 17
Detroit 27, Atlanta 24
Jaworski was forced to scramble before finding Spagnaola, who beat cornerback John Swain to cap an 11 play drive.
ATLANTA — Ed Murray kicked a 48 yard
PHILADELPHIA - Ron Jaworski threw a 1-yard touchdown pass to John Spagnola with two seconds remaining yesterday to lift the Eagles to a victory over the Vikings
field goal with 5:06 gone in overtime yesterday to give the Lions a victory over the Falcons.
The Falcons, down 17-0 early in the second quarter, battled back to tie the score at 17-17 and 24-24.
New Orleans 17; Tampa Bay 13
NEW ORLANS — Hokie Gajam scored on an 8-yard run with less than two minutes remaining yesterday to give the Saints a win over Tampa Bay, punished by hard-hitting defense and penalties.
N.Y. Giants 28, Dallas 7
EAST RUTHERFORD N.J. Andy Headen headed for a club-run 84 yards and Phil Simms fired three touchdowns in the game, driving Cowboys to 10 out of the mistake nine.
St. Louis 37, Buffalo 7
ST. LOUIS — Otis Anderson scored two first-half touchdowns and Neil Loon threw two scoring passes to lead the Cardinals to a rout of the Bills yesterday.
1
Anderson rushed for 43 yards on 20 carries to raise his career total to 6,328 yards. 17th on
Henry W. Fletcher
Polished 'Boots'
Custodians work into the night to keep its just finished look. Waiters in its private club wear the classic black and white. The K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center, that $5
million palace of elegance at 1266 Oread Ave., has been a source of pride and occasional grumbles since it opened in June 1983. See photos and story, page 6.
Wild Boar
Sunny
High, 93. Low, 70 Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Tuesday, September 11, 1984
Vol. 95, No. 12 (USPS 650-640)
South Africa investments to be debated
By JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The Student Senate Finance Committee tonight will discuss attempts to cut KU ties with companies that do business in the Republic of South Africa.
The committee will consider a bill that would prohibit the use of student activity fees for the purchase of products from companies that do business in South Africa.
In a similar move, the Senate Minority Affairs Committee on Sept. 19 will debate a resolution that calls for the Kansas University Endowment Association to sever connections with such companies.
And the University Council's Human Relations Committee is studying the possibility of a University Council resolution to allow its board resolution, its chairman said yesterday.
DENNIS "BOOG" HIGIBERGER, student body vice president, is sponsoring the Student Senate bill and resolution. He said both were a response to South Africa's practice of apartheid, a form of racial segregation.
Carla Vogel, student body president, also supports the bill and resolution.
"The reason that we're focusing on South Africa is that it's most bluntable there," he
"This is definitely a student issue." Vogel said. "U.S. students should stand up and say, 'We will not tolerate this to happen.'"
Higherberger's bill would cover all groups that receive money from the $24 student activity fee that each student pays at the beginning of each semester. For fiscal year 1985, the Student Senate allocated more than $493,000 in student fees.
THE BILL ALSO would establish a Social Responsibility Subcommittee that would enforce the restrictions.
Vogel said she expected a fight when the measures reached the Senate floor after they went through the committees.
"I feel this is something senators need to discuss," she said. "I don't think they should let it slide.
"Sure, there will be a fight. I'd be surprised if there wasn't . . . It is natural."
A construction worker stands on the peak of the Fred B. Anschutz Sports Pavilion roof as he watches work below him. The building is scheduled to be completed Oct. 15.
WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Donald Reagan said yesterday he was afraid Walter Mondale's newly announced tax plans could kill "the golden goose," and increase taxes to the highest proportion of the economy ever.
Mondale, telling President Reagan "enough is enough," yesterday presented a four-year plan to slash budget deficits by slowing the military buildup and increasing taxes, mainly on the wealthiest Americans.
By United Press International
"He is again relying on what I would say was a tried and true Carter-Mondale principle," Regan told a news conference. That is, spend more tax money. Less taxes to pay in the new money supply, inflate the economy and gain more taxes that way."
REGAN SAMD HIS "cursory" analysis "seems to indicate even using his figures it would bring taxes to close to 21 percent of our gross national product by 1983. That's the highest we've ever been taxed in our history."
Began said additional taxes under Monday would total about $250 billion through 1989.
The average family, he said, would pay about $1,000 more in taxes if Monday's spending cuts were realized.
"But if he doesn't achieve all of the blue smoke that's in there, he would then have to cut the defect to get to his promises and be able to say, 'That would be over $1,800 per household.'"
But even that figure was far less than the possible total Regan only a week earlier charged would be the case. In A Reagan-Bush campaign analysis of promises attributed to Monaco, he said that time. Regan said his household could pay up to $8,300 more in taxes by 1989.
MONDALE AIDES SAID 75 percent of the new taxes — amounting to $85 billion a year at the end of a first Mondale term — would be paid by the upper 14 percent of the wage earners. A family of four making $100,000 would pay $2,600 more a year in taxes, they said, while the same family earning $30,000 would pay about $85 more.
See AFRICA, p. 5, col.1
All money raised by the tax hikes would go into a trust fund that could be used only to reduce deficits. Mondale said he would also institute a "pay as you go" plan to forbid new spending unless there was a source of revenue to pay for it.
President Reagan, asked about Mondale's plan during an Oval Office photo session, dismissed it. "It's new thing," he said.
dissatisfied he said. "He told us several weeks ago he was going to raise the people's taxes, and now he's repeating it," the president told reporters.
REAGAN'S POLITICAL ADVISER, Lyn Nozger, was even tougher, calling Mondale's plan "a recovery-killing concoction
ready-made to produce a recession that will throw millions of Americans out of work again, pile new and higher taxes on the backs of the average citizen and make deficits higher, not lower."
When fully implemented in 1989, the Monday plan would cut the projected annual budget deficit of $263 billion by two-thirds, to $86 billion, roughly half what it is forecast to be this year.
Mondale would modify the 1981 Reagan tax cut program, which slashed federal revenue by an estimated $750 billion over five years, for those with higher incomes.
Indexing — adjusting tax tables to account for inflation — would be restricted for families making more than $25,000 only to the amount that inflation exceeds 4 percent. Inflation has been running below that level this year.
THEER ALSO WOULD be a 10 percent tax surcharge for families with an income over $100.000. And there would be a minimum 15 percent tax imposed on all businesses.
Mondale said if the deficit was not cut, Reagan's budget policies "will double the national debt, raise interest on the debt by $100 billion a year, hike interest rates, choke off investment and clobber trade even more destroy rural America, attack entire industries, kill more jobs and shrink our future."
"This is the most detailed and specific plan any candidate for president has ever written."
"I challenge Mr. Reagan to stop avoiding the deficit issue and start telling you what he intends to do about it. Mr. Reagan, all my cards are on the table — face up Americans are calling your hand."
But Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., said Monday failed to address the spending side in any substantive way. He's going to reduce the deficit by reducing interest rates, and he's going to reduce interest rates by cutting federal aid that he didn't present. "That sounds to me like a dog trying to catch his own tail — no clear direction there."
Engineering research labs reorganize after professors' departures
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ
Staff Reporter
Two KU engineering research labs have been combined as part of a reorganization made after several engineering professors left during the summer.
Lab will operate under a joint budget as the Electrical and Computer Engineering Research Lab, said Richard Moore, director of the Remote Sensing Lab and professor of electrical and chemical engineering.
The Remote Sensing Lab and the Telecommunication and Information Research
electric and chemical facilities.
"It is important to stress, however, that the two labs will retain their individual identification." Moore said yesterday.
at the earth and atmosphere. Moore said. He said the KU lab was known as the best remote sensing center at a university. Some work is done from airplanes, and additional work involves the use of satellites.
The Remote Sensing Lab studies the application of microwaves for use in looking
THREE PROFESSORS FROM THE Remote Sensing Lab left during the summer, two of them taking grant money and graduate students with them. Three other professors in the engineering department also left.
The grants had been awarded for specific projects, so when the professors left, the grant money followed them to the schools where the professors would be working.
Fawwaz Ulaby, former director of the Remote Sensing Lab, moved to the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. Adrian Fung, former professor of electrical engineering at the lab, moved to the University of Texas at Arlington.
Ulaby was not available for comment, but Fung estimated that the grants Ulaby received while at KU averaged between $500,000 and $750,000 a year. Fung had taken grants for $2,000 for a NASA project and about $600,000 for a National Science Foundation project with him to Texas, he said.
Fung said that if he had stayed at KU, the
See REMOTE, p. 5, col. 4
Government rejects equipment after microcircuits test poorly
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Defense Department yesterday rejected use of military equipment containing suspected faulty microcircuits that may have been installed in thousands of weapons and gear ports, the Pentagon said.
The microcircuits — tiny silicon chips that are used in everything from stereo equipment to aircraft carriers — were produced by the Texas Instruments Corp. of Midland, Texas, and were suspected faulty after testing irregularities were uncovered by the company, the Pentagon said.
As many as 4,700 different kinds of microcircuits are involved, but it is not yet known how many of the devices have been installed in weapons and other military gear, a spokesman for the Defense Logistics Agency, John Goldsmith, said.
Lighthouse Agency said no lives had been lost or aircraft or other equipment destroyed because of part failure.
whose device are in many parts and equipment." Goldsmith said in a telephone interview. "This stuff is so universally used now. We don't know how many (parts) are involved."
BUT THE IMPLIICATIONS of the problem were enormous because of the widespread use of the microcircuits
As an indication of how widespread the problem could be if the chips were found to be faulty, Goldsmith said an earlier review of 546 devices used by IBM "resulted in an estimate of 15 million involved parts over a period of about eight years."
Texas Instruments, which produces home computers and calculators for the commercial market, discovered the problem following a complaint by the IBM Corp. to Y. A. about a "potential problem" with the services, the Defense Logistics Agency said.
Texas Instruments is providing a list to the Pentagon of as many as 80 defense contractors who have ordered the microcircuits from the company for use in parts that go into weapons and other military equipment. Goldsmith said.
A resulting complete investigation by the technical staff at Texas Instruments "revealed a more extensive problem which affected all of their 90-plus customers," the agency said in a background paper.
"I're terribly complicated." Norman Neuerstein, a spokesman for the company at its Dallas headquarters said. "We've had to be very careful of collecting a self audit in this general area."
Change urged in state scholarships
The company informed the Defense Logistics Agency of the problem Sept. 6.
By MARY CARTER
Staff Reporter
More than 1,000 winners of state academic scholarships did not chose to attend Kansas institutions of higher learning last year, an official of the Board of Regents said yesterday.
If the Regents and several other education groups have their way, those scholarships will soon provide a better incentive for Kansas' brightest students to attend state colleges and universities.
Between $70,000 and $800,000 worth of scholarship money were awarded last year to new and renewing scholars, said Gene Casper. Regents director of special projects.
"We named about 1,000 new scholars last year and awarded 2,000 scholarships including renewals. Casper said, "A lot of people don't know in the 1,000-plus range, don't stay in state."
STUDENTS RECEIVE THE scholarship money only if they attend college in Kansas Officials hope that the greater monetary awards being contemplated will prompt more of the students to study in the state.
The Legislative Educational Planning Committee, a joint committee of the Kansas Legislature, last month heard three groups endorse plans to make state scholarships bigger and based more on merit than they are now.
The scholarship program is not on the agenda of this week's meeting, but State Sen Joe Harder, R-Moundridge, committee
chairman, said that he hoped the committee would squeeze in some discussion of the program.
The committee could vote on scholarship recommendations as early as its next meeting, but Harder said he wasn't sure when that would be.
The scholarship money comes from State Student Incentive Grant funds. The federal government finances 50 percent of the awards, with the state providing the rest.
THE PRESENT STATE scholarship program, established in 1934, gives $500 annually to each state scholar 'The number of scholars受资助 according to the amount of available
Scholars are selected on the basis of American College Testing program scores, but the financial awards are based on need. Scholars are ineligible for the need-aid program.
"As a result, many State Scholars' receive nothing but a certificate," says a report by the Pew Research Center.
Scholarship applicants would have to have
"We have proposed 125 awards of $2,000 each, based on merit, to attend Kansas College."
THE REGENTS' PLAN calls for the phasing out of the present state program and for the creation of a Distinguished Scholars program based solely on merit.
"It seems quite apparent that we are losing our very brightest high school students." Casper said. "We want to make a real effort to teach them how to be them a financial incentive to stay in Kansas."
composite ACT scores of at least 30, he said. The scholarships would be renewable with a 3.5 grade point average.
we're talking about $250,000 during the first year and as much as $1 million in four years," he said.
The money would come from the state general fund, he said.
The Regents' plan also calls for the establishment of a Kansas Higher Education Opportunity Grant program. State Student Incentive Grant funds would be given to institutions of higher learning and carmarked for need-based scholarships.
THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS of Kansas endorsed the Regents' program during a presentation to the committee Aug. 14, but the attention be given need for scholarships.
we saw need as the top priority," said Mark Tallman, executive director of ASK. "We hope they will at least be flexible on the maximum award."
The Kansas Independent College Association also endorsed changes in the state program.
we basically agreed with everybody else that the maximum award is too small." said Bob Kelly, executive director of the association. "We recommend a first merit competition in the spring of the junior year, based on ACT scores."
ACP scores
According to the independent college association plan, students whose ACT scores were in the top 3 percent or 4 percent would be guaranteed an amount of money, to be between $500 and $1,000.
September 11,1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily KANSAN
Volcanoes threaten towns in Indonesia, Philippines
Thousands of villagers fled their homes yesterday to escape molten lava flowing from an Indonesian volcano, and a separate volcanic eruption in the Philippines and thrombosed villages in that nation's second natural disaster in a week.
They said more than 13.000 people were cleared from small villages clustered along Karengetang's slopes.
Rivers of lava from Karengetang Volcano in northern Indonesia scorched rice fields as several minor earthquakes set off by the eruption of the 5,833-foot volcano rumbled through the region, officials said.
in the Philippines, Mayon Volcano 200 miles southeast of Manila, rumbled to life Sunday night.
Donovan called to grand jury
NEW YORK — Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan has been asked to testify before a grand jury investigating allegations that his former construction company swindled the government, but Donovan dismissed the probe yesterday as a "rehash of old charges."
Donovan served as a vice president of the Schiavone Construction Co. in Secaucus, N.J. from 1959 until his appointment to President Reagan's Cabinet in
Donovan's tenure as Labor Secretary has been marked by investigations into his links with Schiavone.
In a nine-month investigation in 1983, a special prosecutor concluded there was no evidence to support allegations Sichawne paid "to show" salaries to union officials on the job and that Donovan knew of the payoffs.
Pranksters to re-enact deed
IHOME — Three university students who claim they sculpted a stone head that was recovered from a canal and attributed to the Italian artist Ameedo Modigliani began chiseling a replica yesterday to show how the prank was carried out.
The three. Pietro Luridiana, Pierfrancesco Ferrucci and Michele Guardi accee began "Operation Motigliam" 2 at 4 PM on the state television company RMI.
The pranksters' claim to have sculpted one of three heads attributed to Modigliani has caused a scandal in the international art world.
Legend says Modigliani, one of Italy's most famous artists from this century, threw three stone heads he had sculpted into the Royal Canal of his hometown of Leghorn after friends scorned them.
Compiled from United Press Interna-
tional reports
Hurricane veers away from coast
By United Press International
SAYANNAH, Ga — Diana, the first Atlantic Caribbean hurricane of 1984, veered slightly away from land yesterday evening, following a wobble north northeast along the Southeastern coast with 90-mph winds and 12-foot storm tides.
and 12:00pm Nester. yesterday, schools were closed earlier in coastal towns in Georgia and South Carolina and hundreds of seaside residents packed up and fled to high ground. Many residents returned home yesterday afternoon as Diana drifted northward.
The hurricane was born yesterday morning and by evening was about 130 miles east-southeast of Savannah, Ga. and 130 miles south-southeast of Charleston, S.C. the National Hurricane Center in Miami reported.
A man stands on a ramp, pushing against a white curved wall. The floor is covered with black tiles.
Diana, which sprang up out of nowhere Saturday, stalled for about two hours yesterday afternoon, then began to drift toward the northeast at about five mph. A well-defined eye 20 miles across formed in the storm's center.
"THAT MEANS IT'S getting stronger. It's becoming a classical type hurricane pattern, with a calm center and increasingly stronger winds around it." said forecaster Gilbert
Although the storm was drifting to the northeast, Clark warred only a slight change in its steering currents could bring it ashore in just a few hours, and coastal residents in Georgia and South Carolina were told to be ready for quick action.
Civil defense officials and Georgia Gov.
WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, N.C. — Ferrell Scott, of Wilm- his boat out of the water. Scott and area residents prepared inston, wades through knee deep water as he prepares to take yesterday for the predicted arrival of Hurricane Diang.
Joe Frank Harris called for the evacuation of some 2,000 residents of Jekyll, St. Simons and Cumberland islands on the Georgia coast Hundreds left but many returned home yesterday afternoon as Diana moved away
DENNIS J. McKelvin, owner of a surfer's shop at Folly Beach in Charleston, S.C., said, "One good thing this has done is created great surf. Today it's been a consistent four feet. The kids are having a ball."
Forecasters predicted Diana would send 12-foot walls of water crashing into the coast if the hurricane turned west and hit land Unusually high tides, caused by a full moon would account in part for the high surges
Peres wins approval to form bipartisan administration
By United Press International
Labor Party Secretary Haim Bar-Lev announced the vote totals as the meeting broke up late yesterday in Tel Aviv.
TEL AVIV, Israel — Shimon Peres won final approval yesterday from his reluctant Labor Party to form a national unity government with the rival Lakud bloc and become Israel's eighth prime minister in the nation's 36-year history.
After four hours of debate, the Labor Party's Central Committee cast aside its reservations that had threatened to derail the accord and voted 394 to 166 to allow Peres to form a bipartisan administration with caretaker Prime Minister Shikhaz Shahkir.
Shamir's Herut Party — the leading faction in the Likud coalition — is expected to approve the unity accord today and Peres will present his new government to parliament tomorrow.
Under the accord, Peres will serve as Israel's eighth prime minister until 1986 and then be succeeded by Shurim, who will serve as the Prime Minister of bipartisan Cabinet will remain unchanged.
The proposed political partnership of the rival blocs followed inconclusive July 23
elections in which neither Labor nor the Likud won enough seats for a majority in the Knesset, the Israeli parliament.
Struggling to overcome growing opposition within Labor to the agreement, Peres said the alternative to a unity government would be that the government could lead to another dead administration.
The Likid has been in power since Menachem Begin became prime minister in 1977. Begin, who retired last September, was hospitalized yesterday for treatment of his prostate and reported in good condition.
Labor officials said resentment was running high over the allocation of key
economic Cabinet posts to Likud ministers and the ascent of former Defense Minister Ariel Sharon to a position of influence
Peres came under fire from the kibbutz faction of Labor, which has 120 representatives in the Central Committee. In a stormy meeting, the kibbutzuks decided to stay in the party despite objections to a bipartisan Cabinet.
Hours before the Central Committee vote, a delegation of activists from Peace Now — the group spearheading opposition to Israel's military involvement in Lebanon — met with Peres to protest Sharon's inclusion in the new Cabinet.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Football clinic for women to feature Gottfried talk
KU head football coach Mike Gottfried will conduct the second half of a women's football clinic at 7:30 p.m. today in the Party on the Burge Island. Admission free.
Today's clinic will focus on defense. Last week's session, attended by about 50 women, centered on offense.
Candidates to address meeting
Candidates for state legislative offices will speak to the first fall semester meeting of the Classified Senate at 7 p.m. today in 305 Frank R. Burge Union.
Book sale at Spencer Museum
Art books are on sale from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today through Friday at the Spencer Museum of Art book shop inside the museum.
The entire selection of the book shop stock is priced between 50 cents and $75. Posters, prints and notecards are also available.
Seminar will focus on suicide
Edwin Schnobman, professor of psychology at the University of California at Los Angeles, will speak on suicide at 11 p.m. tomorrow in the Walnut Room of the
Schneidman's speech is the first seminar in a series sponsored by the KU department of psychology.
Tulsa man to talk about stocks
State agency opens office here
Ronald G. Harper, chairman and chief executive officer of MPSI Systems Inc of Tulsa, Okla., will speak at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Burge Union about how companies open up stock for sale to the public.
His speech, "Going Public," includes a video presentation on MPSI, which Harper founded with a $500 investment.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment in August opened a new office in Lawrence to increase the company's efficiency, an information officer for the department's Topeka office said yesterday.
Glass blower to be honored
The new office, 808 West 24th St., was developed to consolidate two of the health and environment department's offices in Topeka and Bonner Springs closer to Kansas City and other surrounding counties, said Bob Moody, the officer.
Vernon Brecha, associate professor of design, is being honored this week for his work in glass blowing by the Japan Art Glass Society and their international exhibition in Tokyo.
Brejcha's glasswork, along with work by glass blowers from several other countries, will be featured in an exhibition by the Japanese craft association. Brejcha seven other Americans' work would also be included in the exhibit.
Weather
Today will be sunny with a high in the low to mid-90s. Winds will be from the south at 10 to 15 mph. Tonight will be clear with a low around 70
Where to call
Do you have an idea for a story or a photograph?
If so, call the Kananist 864-4810. If your idea or press release deals with campus or area news, ask for Doug Cunningham, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, ask for Susan Wortman, entertainment editor, on campus news, ask for the sports editor.
Photo suggestions should go to Dave Hornback. photo editor
For other questions or complaints, ask for Dan Kroos, editor, or Paul Sevant.
The number of the Kansas business of
fice, which handles all advertising, is
864-4358.
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
Beauty of old city hall recognized nationally
By CHRIS BARBER
Staff Reporter
It no longer serves as Lawrence's city hall, but the Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum has been recognized as one of the 100 most beautiful city halls in the United States.
The museum, 1047 Massachusetts St., is included in the recently released book "America's City Halls." The book — part of a three-year project to recognize city halls across the United States — is the result of a joint effort by the American Institute of Architects, the U.S. Conference of Mayors and the U.S. Department of the Interior.
"It's very much of an honor," said Steve Jansen, director of the museum. "We are in some very distinguished company."
For example, the book also lists the Philadelphia City Hall, which the authors say rivals Paris' Louvre in architectural design.
THE WATKINS MUSEUM was considered one of the finest buildings west of the Mississippi River when it was built in 1888, Jansen said. The building, originally a bank, was designed by Cobb and Frost, a Chicago architectural firm.
"It cost $100,000 to build, and we were told it would cost $3 million to replace it today." Jansen said.
The building is an example of Richardsonian Romanesque architecture, said Chris Theis, associate director of the school of architecture and urban design.
"Romanesque is characterized by massive cut stone and rounded arches." Theirs said.
"The arch over the front doorway would be an example of this. Richardsonian simply means it was part of the revival of Romanesque taking place at that time."
The building was the property of Jabez Bunting Watkins, a local millionaire landowner.
AFTER WATKINS' DEATH, rising taxes and repair bills made the building an economic liability for Watkins' widow, Elizabeth, Jansen said.
"She couldn't have sold it, so donating the building to the city was in her best interest," Jansen said.
City officials were pleased by the gift, he said, because it allowed the city to concentrate its resources elsewhere until it could buy a building of its own.
In 1967, increasing maintenance costs led the city to declare that it would not support further renovation of the building. Jansen said.
The building served as city hall from 1929 to 1970.
The property reverted back to the Watkins estate when city offices were moved from the building in 1970. It was obtained by the Douglas County Historical Society in 1971 under the condition that it not be run for profit, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places the same year.
"In the last 10 years, we have tried to restore the building to how it was before it was a city hall." Janssen said. "When it was a hotel with a 10-foot ceiling and little cubicles installed."
CITY OF NEWARK
The Elizabeth M. Wattins Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St., formally the Lawrence City Hall, was selected as one of the 100 most beautiful city halls in the United States. The museum, built in 1888, is included in a recently released book, "America's City Halls."
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Bad checks a problem for merchants, Union
By JOHN REIMRINGER Staff Reporter
Students at the University of Kansas generally don't write more bad checks than other Lawrence residents, but the problems of collecting make merchants vigilant about checking identification, several businessmen say.
I'm looking forward to the day that we don't take checks, said Jim Lewis, owner of the Macy's department store.
Lewis said yesterday that he thought checks eventually would be replaced by electronic banking machines like the ZIP and Money-Matic machines available in some places, where money could be drawn directly from customers' accounts.
Rusty's now requires two forms of identification, including a picture D. to cash a check, Lewis said. Rusty's also issues a check-cashing card.
Near the end of each semester Rusty's also requires a permanent address from students, be said
MOST PEOPLE DO not seem to mind being required to show identification, Lewis
said. "The people that generally raise a ruckus over giving identification are the ones with something to hide."
When a check written to Rusty's doesn't clear the bank, he said, it is sent directly to Checkrite, a Denver-based, nationwide check recovery and verification firm, which has a franchise in Topeka.
If Checkite is unable to collect on the bad check, Rusty's files charges with the Douglas County district attorney and also informs the Lawrence Credit Bureau, Lewis said.
The president of the Topika franchise of Checkrite, who asked not to be identified to avoid possible harassment, said that his firm was one of many retail stores and many service centers in Lawrence.
CHECKRITE PROVIDES ITS customers with a regularly updated list of the names of people who have outstanding checks with its customers, he said.
In collecting bad checks, "we follow the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and the Privacy Act," he said.
Checkrite also works closely with the district attorneys in its area, he said.
"Most people don't intentionally write bad checks," he said.
He said that Checkrite didn't have more problems with students than with other groups.
The Union writes off $5,000 to $10,000 of bad checks each year. Ferrington said.
WHEN THE UNION receives a bad check, he said, two attempts are made to clear the check through the financial institution. Two notices will then be sent to the check writer. The notices include a postage-free envelope for returning payment, but the first notice carries a $5 fine, and on the second notice, the fine goes up to $10.
If the check is not made good, the student's name is placed on the University hold list, and a hold is placed on the student's enrollment and Transcripts. Ferguson said.
The final step is going to the district attorney, he said.
Jerry Harper. Douglas County district attorney, said his office handed bad checks the same way it handled other types of crime. Cases are reviewed to determine whether
enough evidence is available to warrant prosecution.
WRITING A BAD check can be either a felony or a misdemeanor, Harper said. It becomes a felony when the check is written for more than $150.
"It's an awful stupid way to go to jail," he said.
Throughout August of this year, 1,328 had checks with a value of $78,575.90, were brought to his attention. Harper said he should make more checks and 40 police charges had been filed.
Usually the charges involved several bad checks written by the same person, often as many as 10 or 15 checks. he said. Other charges had been settled out of court.
Harper said that college students didn't write more or fewer bad checks than other students.
John Webb, managing partner of Green's Fine Wines, 800 W. 23rd St., said, "We have a lot of bad checks come back, but the final result is we are able to collect on most of us."
HE ATTRIBUTED SUCCESSFUL collection to the care his employees exercised in accepting checks.
Parents, band events at same game break KU tradition
Staff Reporter
By BRENDA STOCKMAN
The University of Kansas will break a tradition Saturday when, for the first time, Parents Day and Band Day are held simultaneously because of scheduling constraints.
Susan Wachter, athletic department business director, said that although the two events were being held together over a period, they not be a problem at Saturday's game.
Athletic Director Monte Johnson said that another change Saturday would be the absence of an evening program sponsored by the athletic department.
Bob Hope to KU. Last year the department featured country and western singer Roy Clark.
A program is not scheduled because the University lost $13,000 on Parents Day entertainment during the last two years, Wachter said.
WACHTER SAID LAST week that the tally of tickets sold for Saturday's game was not available yet but that the stadium would accommodate the parents and the anticipated 5,200 high school band members.
Parents Day and Band Day were combined after the Homecoming Committee, which schedules and plans Parents Day, Band Day and Homecoming Day, looked at the football schedule for this season and decided that Parents Day and Band Day had to be at the same time or that one of the special events would have to be canceled, said Bob Foster, director of hands and chairman of the Homecoming Committee.
Foster said that before making the decision, the committee had considered the anticipated game attendance, the possibility of a band from the opposing team being here, the time of the season and other potential
In 1982, the department brought comedian
conflicts with each game.
"YOU CAN'T HAVE BAND Day in the form KU's traditionally had it and have another band here." Foster said. Guest bands perform during halftime at the football game, which wouldn't leave time for the high school bands to perform, he said.
Foster said Band Day needed to be during the first part of the season, before the high school bands were too busy
Seating for the bands must be available, Foster said, so games that draw large crowds usually are avoided.
Only five home games are scheduled this season. Of the three in the first half of the season, the KU-Florida State game was the best choice. Foster said.
The game on Oct. 6 between KU and Iowa State was not considered because it falls on a weekend.
THE COMMITTEE DECIDED that the first game would not be a good choice because Wichita State University was
bringing its band, according to Foster. That left one day for both events.
Linda Thompson, director of admissions,
said that the only casualty from combining
the two special events was the band office's
open house for parents.
Foster said that the open house had been canceled because band and staff members would be busy all day with Band Day activities. So far, he said, he hadn't had any concerts or meetings about the cancellation or about being busy during most Parents Day activities.
Although the athletic department won't be sponsoring any entertainment, almost 30 special activities will be sponsored by numerous groups throughout the day.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES will sponsor a free dance concert featuring Get Smart Dance.
Almost 70 bands, here to attend Band Day. will march in a parade at 9 am down Massachusetts Street, Foster said.
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September 11, 1984 Page 4
OPINION
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily Kansas, USPS 60-640 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall Law. Kansas 60-640, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods Second class postpaid at Lawrence, Kansas 60449 Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $4 a year outside the county. Student postpaid at Lawrence, Kansas 60449, includes address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall Law, Kansas 60-640
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Help wanted
A valuable educational opportunity at the University of Kansas is currently going untapped. The experts are at a loss to explain why.
It's not a closed section. Room is currently available for more than 250 students. Furthermore, the tuition costs are nonexistent. In fact, students are actually paid to take advantage of this opportunity. That's because it's not a class
it's a job.
The student employment division of the Office of Financial Aid reports that many jobs available to students are not being filled. A quick glance at the job board in the basement of Strong Hall indicates that more than 250 jobs are up for grabs.
Both on-campus and off-campus jobs are open, as are work-study and hourly wage positions. The skills that are needed vary widely, too; some jobs involve physical labor while others require clerical and computer skills.
Employers have offered possible explanations ranging from financial security to scheduling problems, but one thing is certain. Students are missing out on a potentially valuable opportunity.
College work experience is, in the vernacular, good resume material. Job recruiters look for evidence of responsibility and maturity on a resume. Few things can provide evidence as convincing as work experience.
Moreover, working one's way through school forces a student to budget his time. A student who is employed often grips about the demands on his time but discovers a semester later that his grades have improved because of more efficient time utilization.
In short, holding a part-time job can contribute substantially to the university experience. A wise student takes advantage of this opportunity to pad the pocketbook and bolster the resume at the same time.
In search of input
Student body president Carla Vogel and vice president Dennis "Boog" Highberger took to the streets Friday to bring their office closer to the students.
Vogel, Highberger, their pink flamingo mascot and a couple of musicians set up an informal "office" in front of Wescole Hall to talk with students. They also distributed material about Student Senate, Associated Students of Kansas and some international issues.
Friday's streetside gathering was the second time the leaders have tackled the problem of little feedback from the students.
If the students won't come to them, they will go to the students.
Although some of the students who watched them thought their unorthodox office was slightly odd, and although chances are slim that the lunch-hour meeting will yield more student input and subsequent Senate action, the leader's attempts to reach the students is commendable.
Since the beginning of their campaign, Vogel and Highberger have demonstrated that they know the meaning of the "ol" college try," and seem to be trying to change the Senate's reputation as a group that has not actively sought student input.
Welcome relief
As almost any upperclassman who has taken a math class at the University of Kansas knows, the classrooms on the third floor of Strong Hall have until recently been unbearable hot during the early fall and late spring.
Now, however, thanks to the addition of some room air conditioners, this year's freshman class will not have to experience the agony of integrating functions in the steam-sauna conditions of those classrooms.
Minor building improvements can often, as in this case, yield major benefits to the quality of the learning environment at KU.
Here's to present and future "minor" improvements.
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten and 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 hometown, or faculty or staff information. The Kansan also provides 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
Pole gives world view to Americans
Sitting in a sauna at Robinson Gymnasium after his karate workout, the scholar from Poland drew praise from surrounding Americans when he spoke of his hatred for the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Young Russian soldiers are dying in an unpopular war, he said, and the Soviet actions are doomed, ultimately, to failure.
Their faces glowing, the Americans nodded in agreement.
book — to be written in Japanese — about the influence of Genghis Khan and the Mongols on Japan and other East Asian countries. He is now back in Poland.
The outspoken traveler of the world, however, surprised and provoked his conversation partners when he turned the table and leveled equally harsh criticism at the U.S. government for its invasion of Grenada.
The United States must be desperate, indeed, if it has to prove its military strength by overrunning the Western itemshe said.
The episode in the sauna was typical of those experienced by the scholar from Poland.
His name was Slawomir Szulec, and he was doing research in the spring at the University of Kansas. Szulec also went to KU, at KU, he contended his work on a
When he spoke impassionately about the progress of the Solidarity labor movement, Americans listened
.
CHARLES BARNES Staff Columnis
attentively, proud of their nation's support of that just cause.
But when he tried to tell Americans that President Ronald Reagan's vocal support was just empty rhetoric and that Reagan, in light of his actions against the striking air-controller unions, was not a defender of lawless government that people dismiss him as anti-American.
These same Americans could not understand why the citizens of
Poland think that they cannot count on the United States when push comes to shove.
A recent example, the scholar told me, was the trade sanctions that Reagan imposed against Poland in late 1961.
They did not realize that in the shallow world of superpower politics, the Polish people have been burned once too often.
One effect of the sanctions was that supplies of beef and poultry to the average person were severely curtailed. Farmers who were fortunate enough to get their animals fed survived the animals for a source of protein. A shortage of eggs resulted.
A joke soon began to circulate among the Polish people, and the president was dubbed the great "chicken killer."
Communist Party officials weathered the shortages in style and continued to eat beef and cake.
In the end, the only people who suffered from Reagan's actions were the common people. the people for whom he said he had initiated the sanctions.
its policies, he said, but the Polish people have learned also to distrust the United States.
Perhaps if I went to Central or South America, I would find that the United States was hated the most and Soviet Union second most, he said.
The scholar did, however, have a number of positive things to say about the United States.
The Constitution guarantees the people many freedoms, he said; in general, he said, he would rather live in a country with a free-market system than one with a socialist economy.
His chief complaint was that at a time when many people around the world were looking to the United States as a beacon of hope, most Americans were unconcerned about world affairs and disinterested in how U.S. government policies affected other countries.
Many Americans are spotted and complacent and live on a very superficial level, he said; they are unwilling to look beyond their short-term, narrow self-interests.
Egypt ponders modernization's effect
NEW YORK — Will the stampede toward the consumer society cause unbearable strains on Islam? Everybody in Egypt keeps watching for signs
Suddenly a television set is in every mud but along the Nile Migrant workers, mainly going to the Arab country, are selling their $2 billion to $4 billion a year.
These remittances go to buy land, homes, pumps, tractors, livestock and farm machinery in villages where cultivation methods have been preserved by those who still believe that the earth is faint watch "I Love Lucy" reruns.
Mosque attendance is way up Holier-than-thou piety is not unknown, in May, 14 members of the long illegal Muslim Brotherhood were elected to the 448 seat Parliament, sending a chill down many spines. They would create an Islamic state.
You might think that this is a ridiculous idea — who would want to stay in a house just because the house is depicted on television? — but I have no doubts that the plan will work. I base this on personal experience, not statistics. News, and whenever I am out with a camera crew putting a story together, I hear one question from people more than any other.
In the Sudan, where the Brotherhood grew powerful by skillfully taking over universities and banks, they already have. Egyptians seem
RICHARD CRITCHFIELD
This new move in Texas, it seems, might be the logical extension of our television mania
Cairo asks itself. Can it happen here? Besides being the cultural center of the Muslim world, Cairo is the world's most densely populated city.
Yet nobody goes hungry. The average Egyptian gets half his daily calorie intake from three loaves of heavily subsidized Arab bread that cost the equivalent of one U.S. penny each.
New York Times Syndicate
appalled by the Sudan's descent into floggings and amputations.
NOTICE OF
FORCELLAURE
I suppose he has a point. There was a time when tourist attractions became successful because they had the good fortune to be located on an especially beautiful portion of the Earth Either that, or because some enterprising businessman had constructed amusement facilities.
Vacationing with J.R.
As you might have heard, South fork Ranch, near Plano, Texas, has been sold to a real estate developer for more than $1 million.
The ranch is undoubtedly a very nice piece of property, but the factor that sent the price so high had nothing to do with the objective value of the land. It happens to be the place where the 'Dallas' television series is taped.
He also will construct a 20,000 square foot party building that will hold up to 2,000 people.
Trippet said he would convert the main house — an 8,000-square foot house that has become so famous on television into an exclusive three-bedroom hotel that would be a minimum of $2,600 a night.
Terry Trippet, the developer who purchased Southork Ranch, said he planned to turn the property into a hotel-and entertainment complex.
When asked why he had purchased the property, Tripp replied, "Well, wouldn't you want to own it, too?"
People all over the country want to sail on that boat, just as people all over the country will want to stay in the house they have seen on "Dallas." It doesn't matter that the great majority of the scenes from "Dallas"
"Could you get me a trip on the Love Boat?"
P
BOB
GREENE
Syndicated
Columnist
aren't even shot at Soughtfork. the property is used mainly for exterior pictures of the house.
When the Southfork attraction does, indeed, succeed, you can be there will be more and more touristic attractions put together around the islands of course are obvious, such as the Hawaiian estate in "Magnum, P.I."
But there are even more intriguing, imaginative possibilities. How about a slumber party on Johnny Carson's couch?
a marshmallow roast in the "Monday Night Football" broadcast both?
This probably does not bode well for the future of America's vacations. I would think more deeply about it, but I'm in kind of a hurry I should have stayed home the weekend in the ring from "Georgia Championship Wrestling."
The thing you should know is that some people have just read each of those suggestions, and thought, "That would really be fun." It's impossible to employ parody when I write about what we see in many ways, become as we see in real life.
Unlike the new rich peasants, virtual serfs until the 1952 revolution, Egypt's post-1976 economic boom has passed by iow-paid, government salaried civil servants, junior army officers and public-sector factory workers. They might swell the Muslim militants ranks. In contrast, unskilled workers have seen an annual 9 percent rise in income in real terms over the past eight years.
Workers' remittances are now more than Egypt will get this year from such items as oil exports ($2.6 billion) and foreign economic aid ($2 billion), half of it from the United States and worthily being spent on getting food production up and the birth rate down).
The villagers seem to be torn between wanting all the new consumer goods while sticking to their older values. They want the TV set, but they want to watch Muslims praying on it, Or, as the writer V.S. Naiapul once put it, they like the West's tools but not its ideas.
The late President Anwar el-Sadat, in a 1976 interview, warned those who had tried to Westernize too
Richard Critchfield, who lives in Washington, D.C., writes on rural development for the Economist of Spain and often spent four months in Egypt.
They also see that Confucianism, by subordinating individual interest to group interest, has played much more impact in East Asia's economic growth.
quickly to "look to our community, our people and our Muslim heritage."
Until Islam finds its Calvin or Contucus, it may be fated — doomed, one might say — to keep battling the process of modernization that happens in the villages when those new appliances wear out 't.
Thoughtful Muslims — and this includes a good many Muslim Brotherhood members — would like to reconcile Islam as far as possible with modern science and technology. They recognize that Islam has never had its version of the Protestant faith, but has embraced the environment through hard work and a more scientific control of matter and energy.
To the editor:
In recounting the rise to power of Adolph Hitler, so as to allude to the rise of conservative politics in the country, Hitler engages in considerable tabling.
For openers, he ludicrously compares Germany between the world
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
In his column that unabashedly equates Republican politics with Nazi ideology (Sept. 5, "Fable tells story about leadership"), Mike Robinson shows himself distressingly ignorant of the functioning of a pluralistic democracy and that of an absolute dictatorship.
Columnist fables on history
For instance, he says that he first became enamored of Beirgan back in 1980 because "he talked tough on defense and national security, talk that was refreshing at a time of Afghanistan and hostages in Iran." Apparently Hess still finds this gibberish refreshing, even though nothing's changed in Afghanistan and the now-forgaten Beirut debacle makes the hostage crisis seem like small potatoes.
Fuzzy on Reagan
Jordan Stump Lawrence senior
Vince Hess' column of Sept 5 ("President shows worth in actions") displays exactly the sort of fuzzy non-talking characteristic peculiar to many knee-jerk conservatives his defense of President Reagan is based on not facts but on anecdotes that say absolutely nothing about Reagan's putative abilities as a president.
To the editor
I assume that Hess has a brain. He should practice using it
Hess mysteriously concludes from this down home witticism that Reagan would not "lose his head in a nuclear confrontation" So this is the kind of reasoning ability it takes to become the Kaiser's editorial editor.
Hess is also impressed by the fact that Reagan was once a broadcaster and an actor, leading us to believe that we can all look forward to Hess whole-hearted endorsement of Col Rilly in 1988.
Finally, Hess presents us with Reagan's touching words to Nancy after the assassination attempt he forget to tuck. "He has what a card!
Then, in the midst of a zany rewriting of history, Robinson barely masks his astonishing and amusing accusations. According to Robinson:
wars (an economy in ruins, crushing war reparations owed the Allies, and a destroyed monarchy with no history of democratic institutions) with post-Vietnam America (a nation at the center of recession, and 200 years of bicameral legislation, two-party government and free elections.)
- Germans didn't oppose Hitler's "excesses" (like dismantling the Bundestag, or the annexation of Czechoslovakia) in Czeckland; they feared "affected" by them.
- Reagan's acknowledged personal charisma actually "controls" public opinion — perhaps through those good old organs of Republican propaganda, CBS and the Washington Post?
- - Complaining minorities in Nazi Germany were either "ignored or scorned" (I suppose annihilation is a form of scorn.)
- President Reagan somehow orchestrated the display of patriotism at the Olympic Games
It is trite that Robinson attributes Reagan's popularity to the fact that he, like Hitler, communicates by breaking "everything down into terms the masses (can) understand." Robinson's entire column is called "The People of Race" because racism best exemplified, in course, by Reagan equals Hitler.
I suggest that Robinson take a freshman history course or, better yet, read a book
Tim Williams
Tin Williams Teaching assistant
Department of French & Italian
Who's a bigot?
To the editor:
If I assume for a moment that Chuck Vanasse (Aug 30 letter) is, as he claims, not a bigot, then I must conclude that whatever God his worships is, indeed, a bigot, and that the folks like Vanasse who lovingly cower to this supreme phony are merely misguided
Dong Humphreys Great Bend senior
University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1984
Africa
Page 5
continued from p.1
Russ Ptacek, Nunemaker senator and co-chairman of the Minority Affairs Committee, said he could not support the bill or the resolution without more information.
Ptaeke said the bill could put too many restrictions on the organizations that received money from the student activity fee.
"FISICALLY, FVE ALWAYS been one to say that when you are spending public money, you should spend it where you get the most benefit," he said. "This certainly could be a great concern."
Vogel and Higherbagger have a list of more than 300 companies with ties to South Africa, and it includes such companies as Coca-Cola Co. and International Business Machines Corp. The Africa Fund, a national research group, compiled the list.
Vogel and Highbagger this month also set up a temporary committee to study and take action against South Africa because of its apartheid.
Highberger's resolution calls for the
Endowment Association to divest itself from investments in corporations doing business in South Africa and not to make new investments in such companies.
HIGHERERGER SAID THE most recent figures on such investments of the Endowment Association were from 1978, when the organization had $8 million invested in such companies.
He said figures were difficult to get from the Endowment Association because it was a private corporation.
Steve Mennaugh, director of public relations for the Endowment Association, said that only Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, could answer questions about such a resolution.
Seymour could not be reached for comment
Menaigh said the Endowment Association had a policy that allowed donors to require that their money not be invested in companies that did business in South Africa.
SMALL WORLD will meet from 9:15 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. at the First Presbyterian Church, 2411 S. Broadway.
TODAY
ON CAMPUS
A FITNESS AWARENESS Techniques
will be at 7 p.m. in 230 Robinson
Gymnasium
THE SUA STRATEGY Games Club will meet on Tuesday, to 11 p.m. in the Trail Room
THE STUDENT SENATE Rights Committee will meet in parlor A and B
with the following officers:
Jason Kline
THE STUDENT SENATE Finance Committee will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union.
A LINGUISTIC COLLOQUY will take place at 7:0 p.m. in 2016 Blake Hall Herbert Galton will speak about "Jean-Paul Sartre and the Russian Instrumental"
COLLEGE YOUNG DEMOCRATS will meet at 9 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
University would have received about $49,000 for the NASA project and $60,000 for the NSF project next year.
"THE KU REMOTE Sensing Lab is simply trying to go in a different direction than I want to go." Fung said.
Remote continued from p.1
"It's not that we combined because the professors left," he said. "It was just a chance."
Moore said that the present Remote Sensing Lab had $560.00 in grants with $260.00 in equipment to be installed in the lab after Oct. 1.
Moore said the reorganization of the labs did not occur because of the professors' leaving. He also said that the combined labs were enriched with about $1 million in research grants.
"Of course, there were all kinds of adjustments to be made after the professors left," Moore said. "It will take some time to rebuild. But we are still very big, and we
have new things going now which will almost replace what we've lost."
THE STAFF OF the new combined lab includes about 60 graduate and undergraduate students, Moore said.
Moore said that besides the graduate students who left to follow the professors, the lab lost many students who had finished working on doctorate and master's degrees.
Kenneth Demarest was hired as an assistant professor to fill one staff vacancy, and Siva Prasad Gognien is now a visiting professor at the lab. The engineering department is advertising to find three or four more professors, said Julian Holtzman, chairman of the electrical engineering department.
In addition to Ulaby and Fung, Albert Biggs, professor of electrical engineering at the Remote Sensing Lab, left at the end of the summer.
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Paid for by the Student Senate
There will be an organizational meeting on Thursday, Sept. 13 at 5 pm in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union for all those interested in helping plan for the week. Please come.
WED. Vern's
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READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED
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THE SHINING HALL
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September 10, 17, and 24 (Mondays)
7:30 a.m to 9:30 a.m
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Class size limited.
Register and pay $15 materials fee at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Notarization of legal documents
- Advice on most legal matters
INTERESTED IN AN EXERCISE PROGRAM??
Come To 202 Robinson For A Fitness Awareness Techniques Seminar (F.A.T.S.) Tonight at 7 pm
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee.
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Department of Music Presents
Claude Frank, pianist in a
Scholarship Benefit Concert
8:00 p.m. Wednesday, September 12, 1984
Crafton-Preyre Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office/All seats reserved/For reservations, call 913/864-3982
Public: $8 & $6; KU Students with ID: $4 & $3; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $7 & $5
All proceeds benefit the KU Music Scholarship Fund
8:00 p.m. Wednesday, September 12, 1984
All proceeds benefit the KU Music Scholarship Fund
Program
Sonata in G major, Op. 78
Three Prelude
Danzas Argentinas
Found in Conte, III
Sonata in C minor, Op. 111
Franz Schubert
Claude Debussy
Alberto Ginastera
Ludwig van Beethoven
---
100
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long distance winners.
Longest Bicycle Race
The singest one day massted start race is the 515.620 km (342.885 mi) Bodeaux Paris Race in 1981
Herman van Springer averaged 47.868 hr (29.32 mph)
covering 584 km (362.14 m) in 13 hrs 38 min 18 sec
AT&T long distance lets the good times run for you, too
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• 40% discounts evenings, 60% nights and weekends
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It's a winning combination. Why settle for less?
L. R. M. C.
The Greater Communities Ride of America Records.
Held at The Springfield Publishing Company, New York, NY.
Visit the display in the Kansas Union Bookstore
The more you hear the better we sound. $ ^{9 0} $
AT&T
For details on exciting new plans—ideal for students—visit the display in the campus bookstore.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1984
POSH
BROWN'S CHAMBER
At left, 26 swivel chairs surround the conference table in the Phillips Board Room on first floor. Portraits of the five KU alumni who have headed the Phillips Petroleum Co. — including Kenneth S. "Boots" Adams — hang on the room's dark
hang on the room's dark wooden walls.
THE DINER SHOWROOM
An impeccably clean towel on his arm and glasses of water on his tray, Bryan King welcomes visitors to the Alumni Center. King, Bonner Springs senior, has worked at the Alumni Center since it opened.
C
Above, a gold and crystal chandelier灯的 foyer. A staircase carpeted in a paisley print spirals up to the Learned Club, the center's private club.
Right, a grand piano is one of the classic furnishings found in the Bruckmiller Room, one of three spacious reception rooms open to Learned Club members.
Photos by Steven Purcell
Story by Julie Comine
---
A palace on the Hill
The place, without a doubt, is posh.
The crimson and blue carpets look as if they are vacuumed every hour
Chandelier sparkle Brass astrarays and doorknobs shine Dark walnut paneling glows. And the mirrors in the elevators are fingerprint-free.
Welcome to the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center.
The $5 million Alumni Center, 1266 Eread Ave., is part palace, part history museum and part administrative headquarters for the University of Kansas Alumni Association.
Since the three-story building opened its doors in 1983, it has been praised and panned by alumni, faculty and students.
"This is an elegant, beautiful facility." Fred Williams, executive director of the Alumni Association, said last week. "When alumni come back to the University, they have a spot of their own — a place to meet them and the University in an official form."
"I've been very greatly disappointed," said Arthur Skidmore, associate professor of philosophy. "I'd hoped it would primarily be a place where faculty, alumni and guests could gather subsequent to lectures, concerts and films.
Some think the Alamani Center is too formal, too preoccupied with coat-and-tie receptions and invitation-only luncheons
"There's so much academic need at the University," said Tim Miller, lecturer in religious studies. "It makes you wonder why millions are being spent on something that's not directly connected to the central vision of the University."
others think the Alumni Center symbolizes extravagance during a time of budget reductions and crowded classrooms.
"This isn't that place."
Williams noted, however, that the building was constructed entirely with private funds.
The family of the late Kenneth S. Atamia
is a 1921 KU graduate who lives in
St. Louis, Missouri, and pledges to
$2 million for the construction of the Alumni Center.
An anonymous donor gave $700,000 for the building. Williams said The Kansas University Endowment Association solicited the remaining funds from faculty and private citizens and donated the land for the building.
"It's there as a service to alumni." Williams said. "But those alumni in turn benefit the University through their continued participation — private contributions informing us of career opportunities, recruiting future students."
The building is open to Alumni Association members who have paid their dues, Williams said. This year, 32,000 alumni are members
Dues are $25 a year or $500 for a lifetime membership. Recent graduates, alumni who have passed their 45th anniversary of graduation, and current KU faculty and staff are eligible for discounts
Members of the Alumni Association, however, don't have to be KU graduates
"We consider an alumnus as anyone who has completed a semester at KU." Williams said "In addition, we have associate degrees from the University and parents who never attended KU."
The Alumni Center, northeast of the Kansas Union, is colonial in style, with its dusty bricks, white shutters and iron-rod fence.
The first floor, designed primarily for use by members of the KU Retirees' Club, features a library, music room, recreation room - complete with exercise bike - craft room, snack room and several conference rooms.
A broad staircase ascends to the Learned Club, a private club that takes up the second floor. Although non members can tour the first and third floors from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday, the Learned Club is open only to those Alumni Association members who purchase special memberships.
Learned Club memberships cost $25 for Douglas County residents and $15 for non-residents.
The club — composed of three spacious meeting rooms, a dining room and a pub — has been the site of dozens of cocktail parties, catered banquets and receptions in the past year.
Learned Club waiters dressed in classic black-and-white uniforms serve food and drinks until 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday.
The third floor includes the offices of the Alumni Association and the Kansas Alumni magazine.
University memorabilia surrounds the Alumni Association employees. Faded photographs of campus buildings hang on the walls. Old yearbooks, space-shuttle souvenirs and the shovel from the Alumni Center's 1981 ground breaking sit in glass showcases.
Since the Alumni Association was founded in 1883, its main function has been to collect and update information on former KU students. Alumni Association workers have records for more than 200,000 former students, including 163,951 present mailing addresses.
"Because it's the newest building on campus, it's tougher to clean," said Johnny White. custodial supervisor "We're under clear scrutiny."
White and his staff "must have an eye for detail," he said. Brass must be polished, ledges dusted, smudges wiped clean
Another team of Alumni Center employees - the custodial crew - works each night from 4 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. to keep the building shining and spollen.
And the thick carpets, which cover 90 percent of the Alumni Center's floors, get
"We hit them when they need it — not every hour." White said. "But we do vacuum the hallways twice a day."
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1984 Page 7
Carlin to select new Regents member
By HOLLIE MARKLAND Staff Reporter
Gov. John Carlin plans to appoint a new member to the Board of Regents before the next Regents meeting on Tuesday. Gov. Ralph Grosse's press secretary said last week.
Carin's appointment will fill the spot that the resignation of Jordan Haines, a Wichita bank executive, was announced. He had served on the board since 1977.
Carlin last week interviewed three Wichita businessmen: Lawrence Jones, president of the Coleman Co.;
Martin Umansky, chairman of the board of television station KAKE; and Donald Slawson, president of Cos., a diversified oil SONSST).
Michael Swenson, the press secretary, said that the governor did not plan to interview any more candidates.
"Probably the three candidates he has talked to will be the lot from which the new member will be swanson said, "but it isn't definite."
The candidates all said they could not comment about the Regents post before Carlin made his appointment.
Lawrence Jones, who will be 53 this month, graduated from Wichita State University in 1983. He earned his master's and doctorate degrees from the Harvard University School of Business.
At Wichita State University, he was a professor of business and director of university faculty. He joined the Coleman Co. in 1964 and became the company president in 1971. He is member of the College Board and a past president of the Wichita State endowment association.
Donald Slawson, 51, graduated from the University of Kansas in 1956
and founded his own oil company in 1957. He is the director of Kansas Independent Oil and Gas Association and was the 1983-84 president of University of Kansas Alumni Association.
Martin Umansky, 68, is a 1941 graduate of the University of Missouri-Columbia School of Journalism. He worked at the KAKE radio station, and in 1954 moved to the KAKE television station.
He was president and general manager of KAKE until two years ago, when he became chairman of the board.
TUESDAY 10¢ DRAWS
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Every Wednesday 8:00 to 11:00
Budweiser draft beer & bar brand whiskey
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Student Union Activities
presents
THE
KANSAS UNION
OPEN HOUSE WEEK
September 11-15
******************
***************************************
Tuesday, September 11
Guest Speaker:
Governor John Carlin
BUTTERFLY'S
SPEAKERS
7 p.m. Alderson Auditorium
4th Level Kansas Union
***************************************************
DELTA UPSILON
Coors
BREWING
KLZR 106
presents
"4th Annual Drink-Up"
(for Brandon Salvini)
featuring
"WIZARD"
Potter's Pavillion 6 p.m.-12 Friday, Sept. 14
$4.50 Donation$3.50 Advance
STUDENTS
COULD THE NAVY INTEREST YOU IN PAID TUITION?
If you are a student at the University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Scholarship. The Navy Scholarship provides full tuition, all text books plus $100 a month spending money.
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Call Lieutenant Joe Johannes at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps (NROTC).
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University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 8
Students' study of downtown architecture led to poster
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
A study of downtown Lawrence is the basis for a poster to be presented to the Lawrence City Commission during tonight by a local business group.
A group of KU graduate students in the School of Architecture and Urban Design conducted the study for an architecture workshop course, with
the original intent of developing guidelines for future development downtown.
"As we got into it, we found that downtown was developed with very few guidelines, but it has still developed well," said Dean Palos. a city-county planner and one of the students.
of the students.
"It's this diversity that gives downtown its character," Palos said. Palos, Paul. Caviness. Michael
Wilde were the students who conducted the study. Caviness and Palos then took the idea of a poster to the Downtown Lawrence Association, which agreed to help. Palos said.
"It's basically just a visualization of what we tried to say in the report," he said.
Palos, Paul Caviness, Michael Foubert, Jim Scott and Ruediger
DURING THE 7 p.m. commission meeting today at City Hall, the DLA will give the commission a copy of the poster, which shows how each block of Massachusetts Street would appear without signs, cars and trees. Pales said that response to the poster had been good.
Caviness said that one of the reasons the study was done was to show future downtown developers that there are definite patterns to Lawrence's downtown — patterns that can be followed.
"People who remodel shops often don't appreciate the environment they're building in," said Caviness.
"BASICALLY WE'VE FOUND that people who appreciate buildings treat them well, and those who don't put new covers or bad signs on them." Caviness said. "But this is usually from a lack of awareness of what constitutes good design, not an overriding commercial interest.
But Palas said that the study should also reassure Lawrence residents that their downtown doesn't have to be ruined by redevelopment.
"There are basic patterns to the
architecture of downtown, and redevelopment can fit in with them. Palos said.
Caviness saw the older architecture of Lawrence's downtown as one of its strong points.
"The downtown is pretty well preserved," Caviness said. "Town with suburban malls have tended to make downtown more like then. The difference has escaped it and preserved the character of downtown."
FrameUP custom framing & gallery
15% OFF All Posters Over $10
Not valid with any other coupon
Expires 11/15/84
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843-0498
Tues.-Sat. 10-5:30
KU big brother— big sister program
Be a friend to a Lawrence youth
Wednesday, September 12 or Thursday, September 13
Time Place
7 p.m. 4012 Wescoe
ORIENTATION SESSIONS
Must Attend One of the Sessions!
OR MORE INFO. CONTACT JEFF AT 841-921
FOR MORE INFO ... CONTACT JEFF AT 841-9216
106 DAY
For Tuesday, Sept. 11th!
A Special 106 Day for KLRZ Help Celebrate the Kansas Union Open House
THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE • A Store Full of 106 Specials • All Day
THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE: A Store Full of 100 Specials. All Day.
ALC 43 Color Print Filp Processing. Any # of Exposures $1.06
Single Subject Spiral Notebook with Dil. Oversized Pocket $1.06
Jayhawk Points Cap. Regular $2.95 $1.06
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ENJOY A FAMILY WEEKEND IN THE COUNTRY
$46 THE DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS Ask for the "Summer Family Special" when you reserve a room any Friday Saturday or Sunday night now through
PER ROOM PER NIGHT Labor Day Bring the kids along. You'll get a deluxe double room, so up to 4 people can stay Or for only $56.90 per room per night well include a delicious buffet breakfast for two! Swim in our indoor pool, relax in a soothing hot-tub, play raquetball, enjoy exquisite cuisine and service. Shop the Oak Park, Bannister and Metcalf South Malls. Or just relax and enjoy being waited on for a change. Naturally, this offer is subject to room availability. For reservations, call (800) 528-0444 or dial direct (913) 649-4500. The Doubletree Hotel at Corporate Woods, 10100 College Boulevard, Overland Park, Kansas (I-435 at U.S. 69)
DOUBLETREE
"Count on us when you need a Favor"
J & M Favors
* imprinted specialties*
Now at a New Location
2201C W. 25th (Behind Gibsons)
Best Quality 841-4349 Best Prices
国
上悟心見水佛像
二海清山寺
梵壽河
ZEN MEDITATION
Please inquire about regular classes and formal practice schedule.
Kansas Zen Center
1115 Ohio Street
842-8909
Intensive Retreat September 14, 1:30 p.m.
Public Talk Saturday September 1:30 p.m.
Master Dharma Teacher George Bowman
Have you
heared the latest?
Undercover's
"Sunrise"
Sale
Wed. Sept. 12
7 a.m.-8 a.m. 30%
8 a.m.-9 a.m. 25%
9 a.m.-10 a.m. 20%
10 a.m.-5:30 10%
Selected items
50% off
21 W. 9th
UNDERCOVER
This Tuesday on campus: A 106 special you'll relish!
SEPTEMBER
Today and today only, between 11 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. in the Hawk's Nest on
level 2 you can get a hot dog, french fries and small drink for only $1.06 — a rare deal
11
you'll relish!
Look for more
KLZR 100
specials in the
KU Bookstores
Kansas O
Sept. 11-15
and the Jaybowl.
This event is one of many cities planned
Kansas Union Open House
Sept. 11-15 For more information
call 864 3477 or 864 4596
THE KANSAS UNION OPEN HOUSE · SEPT. 11-15
Level 2
HAWK'S NEST
Our Draws On Tuesdays Won't Cost You A Dime! They're Free 8-11 pm.
THE BEST DEAL
IN TOWN!
Free Beer 8 11pm.
$1.00 Drinks All Night Long
$2.00 Cover
23RD & OUSDAHL
GAMMONS
SNOW
University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1984
Page 9
CAMPUS AND AREA
Black gains a goal, group leader says
By DENEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
The Black Student Union will follow the path of blacks across the nation who have made political and social contributions to new BSU president last week.
Christine Cressie, the president,
said a black presidential candidate,
black mayors and a black Miss
America had given black students
incentive to become more active at
the University of Kansas.
Cressie recently replaced Rochelle Moore as BSU president when Moore did not return for the fall semester.
BUS kicked off the year with its first general assembly meeting last night in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union, during which members discussed BSU goals and issues and elected additional officers.
gains We, as well, should be motivated to do the same," Cressie said.
"The number of issues discussed gave a clear picture of the insensitivity to minority students on the KU campus and the difficulty of being a black student on a white campus." Cobb said. "Proof of the success of the meeting will lie in the near future."
This is a year when blacks nationwide have made substantial
* STUDIOS * STARTING AT
* ONE BEDROOM $200
* TWO BEDROOM
* THREE BEDROOM
CREEDA RYWOOD
AUCTIONS
2411 Cedarwood Ave. Phone #83-1116
The NEW Place
2005 CWA
849-7631
Leaders of several black campus organizations met with the administration last year to discuss students' concerns about Student Senate elections, in which the count of ballots resulted in different winners at each count, incidents in which some white fraternity and sorority members were killed during Halloween, and the Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in companies that do business in South Africa.
Robert Colb, executive vice chancellor, said the result of the meeting had been positive.
CHECK MATE!!
HAIR SETTING FOR MEN & WOMEN
$2 discount with KU ID
Silver Clipper
To please you is all pleasure
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
107 Mass. phone: 843-11
CHECK MATE!
Strategy and Wargames Club
Will Meet Tuesday
7-11 pm In The Trail Room
Of The Kansas Union
H
Everyone Is Welcome Includes Backgammon Chess 60 And All Wargames
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Balfour INTERNATIONAL
Balfour
CONVERSE AND
FOOTJOY SHOES
1/2 PRICE
NEW!
* Tennis
* Racquetball
* Aerobic
* Basketball
* Saucony
* Asst. Running
935 Mass. 749-5194
Laurence, Ks.
NEW!
SUA
Travel &
Outdoor Recreation Fair Wed., Sept.12 7---10pm Union Ballroom
SUA FILMS
TONIGHT
"EFFERVESCENT."
"Eric Rohner's effortlessly witty, entervescent new French film I hope will new admirers for Mr. Rohmer, one of the most original and elegant film makers at work today in any country. Another rare Rohmer treat!"
-Vincent Canby, NEW YORK TIMES
"BRILLIANT"
"Amanda Langlet as Pauline emerges from the Brittany beaches as one of the most sparkling nymphets in cinema history. A brilliant summer entertainment."
-Andrew Sarris, VILLAGE VOICE
"DELIGHTFUL
A film of summer sunlight, bare skin and escalating amour under standings - wit and irony abound. An erotic round that can only lead to those wonderful Rohmer insights into the mind and heart."
-David Ansen, NEWSWEEK
ERIC ROHMER'S
Pauline
at the beach
A
ERIC ROHMER'S Pauline at the beach
Woodruff Auditorium Level 5, Kansas Union
7:30 p.m. $2.00
Today On Campus:
KZR 106 DAY in the
Kansas Union Bookstore
SEPTEMBER
11
Super 106 Day Savings throughout the store! Save on Film processing: any size roll, C-41 processing is only $1.06. 4000 Gift-Pax will be given away FREE while supplies last. Other great values include a Jayhawk Painters Cap, Reg. price $2.95 only $1.06, LEDU Desk Lamp Reg. price $24.95 only $10.06, Single Subject Spiral notebook w/pocket Reg. $1.79 only $1.06. SIGN UP FOR OUR FREE DRAWING for a 12 speed bicycle, radio clock telephones and much more!
Look for n.
Specials in the I
Nest and
the
Jaybowl.
This event is one of
activities planner
week-long Kansas'
House, Sen-
information..
KU Bookstores
Kansas Union 864-4640
University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Williams says she owns photographs
By United Press International
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. — A lawyer for former Miss America Vanessa Williams said yesterday the deposed beauty queen owned the sexually explicit photos of her that appeared in Penthouse magazine and should be naid for their publication.
Williams, who resigned in July after it was learned the photos were to be published, sued photographer Tom Chiapell in state Supreme Court Friday, but lawyers declined to reveal details until yesterday.
Her lawyer, Helenie Freeman, said the suit seeks damages in "excess of $10,000," with a jury to set the exact amount.
The suit claims the pictures were published "without consent or written authorization," a charge denied by Penthouse.
Williams, 21, of Milwood, N.Y., also wants to be paid the money that Chiapel received from Penthouse for selling the pictures. Chiapel was paid what Penthouse called the highest sum ever for such photos.
It also claims the photos caused Williams "great distress, humiliation, exposure to public ridicule and loss of extremely valuable business opportunities."
"The suit seeks to impose 'constructive trust' on the photos, said Freeman. "That she has them and they belong to her, that no one else can publish them."
STUDENTS, COME GET INVOLVED!!
THE FOLLOWING STUDENT SENATE COMMITTEES ARE NOW OPEN:
- FINANCE
- UNIVERSITY AFFAIRS
- STUDENT RIGHTS
- CULTURAL AFFAIRS
APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE, 105-B KANSAS UNION. DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS IS TUESDAY, SEPT. 11 AT 5:00 p.m.
- ELECTIONS
Q
Paid for by the Student Senate
ENTIRE STOCK
OF...
LEATHER
JACKETS
GOLDEN DAYS GOLDEN DAYS
89$99
Originally $120 - $175
OXFORD SHIRTS
2 FOR $18
Originally $13
CORDUROY
PANTS
2199
Originally $27
1/2 PRICE
SWEATER SALE
Buy one sweater at current ticket price, and receive a second sweater of equal value or less at 1/2 PRICE!
1/2 PRICE
RELATED
SEPERATES SALE
Buy one item at current ticket price, and receive a second item of equal value or less at 1/2 PRICE!
SALESALE
1/2 PRICE
DRESS SALE
Buy one street-length dress at current ticket price, and receive a second dress of equal value or less at 1/2 PRICE!
NOVELTY SWEAT SHIRTS $5 OFF Originally $25
GOLDEN DAYS GOLDEN DAYS
20% OFF
Originally $6 - $22
ENTIRE STOCK OF...
CORDUROY BLAZERS
14. 99 Originally $24.99
SALESALE
Fashion Doesn't Cost A Fortune A
MAURICES
706 MASSACHUSETTS STREET, DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
Come to the
EARLY BIRD SALE
and save
25% ON ALL
COTTONS
7-9 a.m.
on
Wednesday
Morning
YARNBARN
918 Mass.
NEOLT DRAWING TABLES
JJJ
SALE
- SLEEK·STURDY·STABLE Save 15% on These Already Well Priced Drawing Tables
Priced Unassembled—Sale Ends Sept. 30
36" Reg. 164.75 SALE 140.00
42" Reg. 169.50 SALE 144.00
48" Reg. 186.50 SALE 158.52
$29^{1/2}$ x $37^{1/2}$ Reg. 149.27 SALE 126.88
STRONG'S OFFICE SYSTEMS
NEW YORKER NOW
Big 32 oz.
PEPSI
49¢ reg. 85¢
Expires
9/16/84 Bring in this coupon
913843-3644 1040Vermont, Lawrence, Kansas 66044
NACHO CHIPS
and cheese
and jalepenos
69¢ reg. 96¢
Expires
9/16/84
Bring in this coupon
NEW YORKER
PIZZA
Bring your Friends
VIDEO MADNESS
101 TOKENS
for
$7.00
(less than 7* per play)
Bring your professors
Bring your house mother
Offer
expires
9/16/84
BRING IN THIS COUPON
Bring the family
1021 MASS.
PLAY THE VERY BEST GAMES!!!
VIDEO
Bring your professors
Bring the family
1021 MASS.
PLAY THE VERY BEST GAMES!!!
NATION AND WORLD
Page 11
University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1984
House bill to replace warnings
DOUBLE FEATURE
Hent VCR & Movies
Curtis Mathews / www.curtismathews.com / 848-7951
TUESDAY
BUCK·BREAK
ALL SEATS $100
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
BOUNTOWN
FEBRUARY 26TH AT 5:30 PM
Prince
Purple Rain
7:30 9:35 1:35 Sat, Sun
TUESDAY
BUCK·BREAK
ALL SEATS $100
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
Prince Purple Rain
BOUNT LOW
TELEFON TEL 864-253-9785
VARSITY
An Adventure Easily
BO DEREK
Bolero
TELEFON TEL 864-253-9785
HILLCREST 1
CLINT
EASTWOOD
A top on the edge
TIGHTROPE
TELEFON TEL 864-253-9785
HILLCREST 2
Their time now!
REVENGE
OF THE
NEROS
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
DOWNSTONE
TELEVISION
Prince
Purple Rain
An Adventure Factory
BO
DEREK
Bolero
P
TIOSI
HILLCREST 3
TH AND IOWA
TELEPHONE 842-8400
GHOSTDUSTERS
HALLOWEEN EDITION
8:35 PM - 9:30 PM Daily
CINEMA 1 JERSEY WINDOWS FLASHPOINT
R
7:30 9:30 5:10 Sat. Sun
CINEMA 2 JERSEY WINDOWS FLASHPOINT
WILDEAS The Woman in Red
Woman in Red 3:15 7:35 9:30
By United Press International
CINEMA 2
JIM DOWD AND RYAN
ONE WILDER The Woman in Red
Woman in Red * 5.15 7.35 9.30
WASHINGTON — The House passed legislation yesterday to replace the 13-year-old warning on cigarette packs and ads with labels detailing specific health risks from smoking, including cancer and heart
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
5 p.m.-midnight
841-3268
President Reagan for his signature.
The House acted on a voice vote and sent the measure to the Senate, where passage is expected, perhaps this week. It would then go to
The carefully crafted compromise, worked out during months of negotiations between health groups and the tobacco industry, calls for four labels to be rotated each three months.
Place a want ad
The labels must appear on packages within one year of enactment.
Each label would begin "Surgeon General's Warning." They continue:
- Smoking causes lung cancer,
heart disease, emphysema and may
complicate pregnancy.
- Quitting smoking now greatly reduces serious risks to your health."
- Smoking by pregnant women may result in fetal injury, premature birth and low birth weight."
- Cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide."
The present warning, required by law on all cigarette advertising and packages, says, "The Surgeon General recommends that smoking is hazardous to your health."
Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, the country's top medical official.
said in a report this spring that smoking is the No. 1 preventable cause of illness and death, heart disease is the nation's leading killer, claiming more than twice as many lives each year as cancer, the No. 2 killer
Rep. Albert Gore, D Tenn., who mediated the negotiations on the compromise, said, "The process of getting this bill to this point had all the ups and downs of a problem pregnancy with a difficult delivery."
LOOK AND FEEL GREAT
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING, HOT TUB,
& HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA *HOLIDAY PLAZA*
841-6232
OFFERING:
- European Suntraining Lounes
* Aerobic & Jazz Exercise
* Weight Room & Slimming Plans
* Environmental Hot Tub Room
KEEP YOUR SUMMER TAN!
FREE DAY
MEMBERSHIP *
FALL SALE 2 for 1
(or 25% off single membership)
(or 25% off single membership)
Offer extended until Sept.14
music
RECORD SALE... CASSETTES and RECORDS.
GET NOTICED
MAJOR LABELS TOP ARTISTS
AFFORDABLE PRICES
S1.98 and up!
On Sale for Limited Time Shop Early for Best Selection
Pop, Rock, Folk Jazz and Classics
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.
Mon. thru Fri.-8:00-5:00
Game Saturdays-9:00-5:00
E PARKING
RESEARCH PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP
STORE HOURS:
Sat.-10:00-4:00
Learn about: * defining a topic
* organizing your notes
* using the library
* managing your time
Wednesday, September 12, 6:30 to 9 p.m.
Downs Auditorium, Dyche Hall
PRESENTED BY the Student Assistance Center
FREE PARKING
STRONG HALF
HALF HALF
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
819 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 843-3470
TEXICO
BORDER BANDIDO
TEXAS
URRITO SALE
$1.29
Save $1
A 10" burrito stuffed with meat, beans or both, and lettuce. All smothered in our tangy tomato sauce and topped with real cheddar cheese!
Monday-Thursday Sept. 10-13 CARRYOUTS AVAILABLE not valid with other offers
1528 W. 23RD. Across from Post Office
842-8861
EUROPEAN REPUBLIC
Please Register To Vote!
—Notice of Voter Registration—
Sept. 10 thru Sept. 14 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
in front of Wescoe Hall
The Douglas County Republican Party encourages you to register to vote, so that on November 6 you may cast your ballot for our outstanding Republican candidates dedicated to serving the citizens of Douglas County.
Political Advertisement paid for by Douglas County Republican Central Committee.
S
5
The incredible Kaepa sportshoe is as practical as it is unique. The patented double lace design gives an extra snug fit. Come into Arensberg's today and try 'em on. Your feet never had it so good.
Step in the right direction.
DOUBLE DUTY
ARENSBERG'S SHOES
Quality Footwear for the whole family since 1958.
This week on campus:
evsa.hns
The Kansas Union Open House
Tuesday 11
Tuesday 11
KLZR 106 Day
KU Bookstore $1.06 Specials
Hawk's Nest
$1.06 Lunch Special
11 a.m.-3.30 p.m.
Jaybowl $1.06 Bowling
Special 1-5 p.m.
Registering begins for KU
Bookstore's free drawing to be held Thursday
Speaker Gov John Carlin 7
Wednesday 12
KU Bookstore Sidewalk Sale 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
SUA Travel and Outdoor Recreation Fair 7-10 p.m
SUA Movie: "Pauline at the Beach" 7:30 p.m
Friday 14
"R, E, M" concert in Hoch Auditorium 9 p.m.
SUA popular film series. "The Right Stuff" 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Midnight movie. "M* A' S* H* TGIF. $1 pitches and free popcorn in the Hawk's Nest 2-5 p.m.
KU Bookstore drawing at 4 p.m. in store
ing at 4 p.m. in s
Thursday 13
Last day to enter drawing for 12-speed bicycle and other prizes at KU Bookstore
Rain date for sidewalk sale
Joe Domme Ballroom Dancing Seminar 7 p.m.
Saturday 15
Chuck Berg Band 10-11:30 a.m.
Oread Book Shop's 15th Anniversary Celebration
15% off any purchase, free beer
Jaybowl—free bowling and billiards 7-11 p.m.
Simultaneous Chess Tournament 7-9 p.m.
Free Concert "Get Smart" 9 p.m.
Sept. 11-15 (all week)
Popcorn Wagon selling cinnamon, caramel, cheese and buttered popcorn
Hawklets selling beverages and snacks beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Academic Book Fair in Oread Book Shop
September 11-15 at
THE KANSAS UNION
1
University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1984 Page 12
NATION AND WORLD
Romanian leader headed for Bonn
By United Press International
BONN, West Germany — Romanian President Nikolai Causescu, again defying Soviet pressure, will visit Bonn despite abrupt cancellations of trips to West Germany by two other East bloc leaders, officials said yesterday.
West German government spokesman, Juergen Sudhoff, also said a planned meeting late this month at the United Nations between Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher and his Soviet counterpart. Andrei Gromyko, remained "firmly scheduled."
Doubts about the two diplomatic contacts with the East bloc were raised Sunday when Bulgarian head of state Todor Zhivkov suddenly canceled a scheduled Sept. 19-22 trip to Bonn.
The move came a week after the surprise cancellation of an anticipated visit from Fast German leader Erich Honecker.
Asked whether the Oct. 15-19 Ceasecua visit was now imperiled, Sudhoff said, "I think you already have the answer." He then quoted a Romanian Embassy spokesman in Bonn who said earlier, "Of course the president is coming."
ROMANIA, AN EAST bloc maverick that often takes an independent stance in foreign policy, was the only Soviet ally to defy the Los Angeles Olympics boycott and attend the games.
"We make our own policy," said a Romanian diplomat in Rom.
a Ruhmanian soldier, Bulgaria said Zhkov cancelled his trip because of the NATO air war games and the basing of U.S. Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in West Germany. Honnecker blamed undiplomatic remarks by Bonn politician's for his move.
The real reason for the cancellations, according to West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl's ruling coalition, was pressure from Moscow, which has revived a propaganda campaign against resurgent nationalism in West Germany.
Kohl, alluding to the rumored illness of Soviet leader Konstantin Chernenko, told his Christian Democratic party leaders that the national East bloc problems as well as the chill in East-West relations.
PARTY SPOKEMAN WOLTER von Tiesenhausen issued a statement calling the developments a result of "Moscow's pressure on its satellites."
Secret Service agents break counterfeit ring
By United Press International
NEW YORK — Ten former Soviet citizens have been arrested in Brooklyn and Israel on charges of printing $13 million in phony U.S. bills as part of an international counterfeiting conspiracy, federal officials announced yesterday.
The ring had enough paper to print more than $100 million in U.S. currency, authorities said. None of the counterfeit bills have gone into circulation.
"It it was a very sophisticated venture," said U.S. Secret Service special agent James D'Amelio at a news conference in Manhattan.
The money was to be circulated in the United States, Europe and Israel, he said.
The defendants had three counterfeit printing plants in Israel and one in Clifton, N.J., D'Amelio said.
Computerark
Knowledge SERVICE EDUCATION
Zenith Epson Keyroo
Morrow Oktaiden Brother
to become operational within a week.
Seven suspects were arrested in
Tel Aviv and three were picked up in
Brooklyn in raids Friday. More
arrests were expected, D'Amelio said.
Israeli and U.S. agents moved in when they learned the U.S. base was to become operational within a week.
Israeli police seized $13 million in counterfeit U.S. bills, three printing machines, counterfeit plates and negatives of $10, $20, $50 and $100
Morton
Commodore
23rd & Louisiana
22rd & Louisiana
Mali Bouncing Center
841-0094
"The quality of the notes is fairly deceptive," D'Amelio said. "They could do some harm to the economy."
The 10 defendants, who include a father and his two sons as well as a family of three brothers, were from a k-ktent group of Georgian Russians.
843 5968 647 Massachusetts Street
Convent House 202 Lawrence National Bank
SANFORD KALLOWAY
Eye Examinations • Eye Glasses
Contact Lenses • Visual Training
DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG
OPEN TIL 9 PM
EVERY NIGHT
THE GRINDER MAN
WE
DELIVER!
704 MASS
843-7398
Offered by
841-5255, 841-1212,
749-2415, 842-4455.
Mastercraft Management
Honda of Tanglewood—10th and Arkansas.
We still have limited number of completely furnished apartments and townhouses. Some are perfect for three people; all close to campus! Call or stop by Hanover Place—14th and Mass..
KU STUDENTS AND FACULTY
Sundance—7th and Florida or
GQ
HAIRSTYling
For Men & Women
511 West 9th
843-2138
Task FORCE .84
SUBstantial Savings Late Night Happy Hour!
OKINAWAN GOJORY
CLASSES ARE STARTING THIS TUESDAY
FOR BEGINNING AND ADVANCED INSTRUCTION
classes will meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays
at 5:30 p.m. Robinson Gymnasium Room 130
For More Information contact Bruce Thatcher 864-3363
KU KARATE CLUB OKINAWAN GOJU RYU
Voter Registration Drive
KARATE
KIL KARATE CLUB
8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
On Wescoe Beach Sept. 10-14 Sept.24-28
Make YOUR voice known!
Yello Sub
23rd & Louisiana
841-3268
9 p.m.-1 a.m.
no coupon necessary
offer good thru Sept. 25
not valid for deliveries
X-Large footlong
$3.00 reg. 3.50-4.00
Large 6"
$1.50 reg. 1.85-2.15
Register NOW!
Paid for by Student Activity Fee
KARATE
the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755
WHITENIGHTS
SUNRISE SALE
Sero "purist" button down shirt...$19.32 each
100% cotton knit shirts . . lots of mediums...$19.32 each
Entire remaining stock of shorts...$19.32 each
All remaining summer **SUITS & SPORT COATS**... $ \frac{1}{2} $ price
Newly delivered . . . All cotton corduroy coats...$99.99
Selected group of lined jackets & windbreakers... $ \frac{1}{3} $ off
Selected neckwear... $ \frac{1}{2} $ price
Starts at 7 a.m. Wednesday . . . One day only!!!
Sunny Day
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
SENIOR YEARBOOK PORTRAITS
Shooting is taking place now in Student Organizations & Activities Office 403 Kansas Union
403 Kansas Uniion
YOUR APPOINTMENT. Stop by 121B Kansas Photographer hours: Union 12-5 or 12-8 Mon. & Thurs. Call 864-3728 9-6 Tues., Wed., & Fri.
$3.00 sitting fee paid when you purchase a 1984 Jayhawker
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
Beautiful Buy
SALE PRICE
$99.95
This Week!
CENTRAL STATE UNIVERSITY
CENTRAL STATE UNIVERSITY
CENTRAL STATE UNIVERSITY
THE STATE UNIVERSITY
FALLENBURG
ORLANDO
UNIVERSITY
STATE UNIVERSITY
This Week!
SILADIUM $ ^{*} $ COLLEGE RINGS
Your college ring is now more affordable than ever. Save on an incredible variety of Siladium ring styles with custom features that express your taste and achievements. Each Siladium ring is custom made, with careful attention to detail. And every ArtCarved ring is backed by a Full Lifetime Warranty. Don't miss out. It's the perfect time to get a beautiful buy on a great college ring. See your ArtCarved representative soon.
Sept. 11-12
ARTCARVED
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Time
Deposit Required: Master Card or Visa Accepted
KU Bookstore—Kansas Union
$ \textcircled{c} $1984 ArtCarved Class Rings, Inc
1
1
4
September 11, 1984
Page 13
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily
The University Daily KANSAN
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1- Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
10-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75
16-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80
21-25 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.85
For every 5 words add .25c 50c 75c 1.05
AD DEADLINES
POLICIES
Classified Tragalys determinations can be only done with wide cards and no more than nine inches deep. Minimum depths are one inch. No apertures allowed in the trays or on the card. The apertures allowed in a trays are four inches deep.
Nanabee Thursday, p.m.
Tuesday Friday, p.m.
Wednesday Monday, p.m.
Thursday Friday, p.m.
Friday Wednesday, p.m.
Classified Display . . . . .
- Words set in HOLD FACE count as 3 words
* Deadlines same as Display Advertisement - 2 working days prior to publication
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in ALL UNCOUNT count as 1 words
- Allow rates based on cosmetics after day insertions
- Allow a maximum of three times for coverage
- unpaid credit has been established.
* Teachers' education is not provided for classified in
- classified display advertisements
- classified display ads do not count towards mall cart earned rate discount
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
A guard can only administer 100% of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed by a criminal or a lawyer, call the San Bernardino agency at 843-4158.
- What box ads please add a $2 service change
• Checks must be company all-service ads made
- Not issued on an allocation of prepaid classified advertising
- *Only earned rate discount*
*Samples of all mail order items must be submitted*
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- • No responsibility is assumed for minor injuries in concert or mention of any advertisement.
* • Hardship on cancellation of prepaid classified
Applications are now being accepted for Student
Member委员会 (Members for the 1985 Kansai Hall
Festival). Applications can be submitted to
Allen Field House. Have a part of this great KiKu
Pradition deadline for application. Sept 20
Budget Stretcher coupons Thurs. evening. Buy $0 & receive $1 coupon toward next purchase. Gross Savings: Mall's shopping Center
DANIELLEIGHT SPECIAL This Thursday Eve.
8 to 20% off all hibbles in stock CROSS
REFERENCE. Mall Shopping Center
PLYMOUTH THIRT SHOP for clothing and
bareware. Sat. 9 12:30, Tue. 9 4:4, Thur 9 12:30,
Sat. 9 p.m. 94:35 Vermont
GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS
INTERNAL COMPUTER SPECIALIST CAPSTONE HALL
applicant will be involved in design and implementation of a survey to study microcomputer system development. Graduate systems processing student Gatis in geography, planning, computer science and information technology. Knowledge of application programming in BASIC experience with microcomputers required background and coursework in geography in college or equivalent. Remote Serving Program Room 240 Virtus Hall 604477. Application deadline is May 18th. Optional Active employer.
kYL House Directors first meeting will be the Thurs. 11 at 12 p.m. at 2 p.m at the Kappa Pappa House 1902 W 15th St. Sun Rise will be hostess. Kalani Babylon Student Committee is looking for new members. Pick up application at the Track 14. Allen Jaffer House. Deadline: Sept 21.
[QESEARCH PAPERS] 306 page catalog. 15,278
opics: Rush $2.90 RESEARCH, 11322 Ibaugh, 206
MB, Los Angeles (213) 47,8726
INSEARCH PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS
In the past 12 months, we have tutored mrs. We are the library, nurturing your time Wednesday, September 21st at 9 p.m. in bldg. B301. Visit us at Student Assistance Center 121 Strong Hall.
[Open VCII with 2 incos. overnight RS-Curtiss
1447 LW, Zirod B425251 Open 9:30 9:00
M-F 9:30 5:00
fent 19' Color T-V $28.98 a month Cortis
Matthes, 1447 W, 32rd B427531 Open 9:30 - 9:00
F-9:30 - 9:00
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All requests. Lighting included. Reasonable Rates. Interviews. 749-1227
THE FAR SIDE
SENIOR YEARBOOK POETRYISTS Shooting is taking place now, in Student Organizations & Office activities 400 Kansas Union. Call your booklet number 12.5 12.1 B. Krausman 804.8720
Shirley Bennett, formerly of Charme Beauty Salon, is now at Angles Beauty Salon, 940 Massachusetts, M.F. Fell 8414705 for Shirley Summer Special. Shirley A. Harrell = 888-236-2686.
Tried of large long distance phone bills' switch to TMI your only quick and efficient local long distance company in Lawrence Weed. I'm calling for you anywhere in the U.S. Hawaii, Puerto Rico and Alaska. There are no monthly mummies, no servery, no call-in to call your TMI代表 @ 843-9066.
University Studios' quality party pics. Call
Photography at 843-3730
FORRENT
1HR Apt Utilities paid, 7 blocks, KU., 2 blocks downtown. Covered parking, large backyard, sun deck. 408 West 6th Phone 764-2332 for info
1 bedroom房, new furniture, new carpet, spring, fireplace, walk to KU 103 KU 842. 1968 AVALON APARTMENTS Gas & water paid in these large one & two bedrooms apt. Ready for immediate occupancy. Close to KU. to home. For more info. call Kaile Valley on at busine
Large furnished one-bedroom Apt w/ AC
unities paid $215. Sept F BEE 11th & Kentucky
Call 842-537-5 p - m - 7 m
SAVE $300
No rent until October
2-3 bedroom apartment
1237 Ohio
Now leasing one, two & three bedrooms, apts,
duplexes. Ready for you to move into Good locations some on businex Contact Kaval Valley Mngt at 814 600
OLD MILL APARTMENTS. Now leasing new nearby one and two bedroom apartments - walking distance in KU and on boundless Ready for installment plans. Located at 841 Kalvay Valley in 841 600m for more info
Spacious 1 bedroom apartments available for Fall, for or 2 people! Include fully equipped kit chair carpeting, central air, laundry facilities, rm kt this roar gas & water paid. For more in
By GARY LARSON
© 1984 Universal Press Syndicate
9/11
"Well, that cat's doing it again. Keeping that poor thing alive just to play with it awhile."
BLOOM COUNTY
Male or female roommate. Three college girls looking for 4th bedroom a large 4-bedroom Traitlid towhouse $140 plus 1/4 utilities Very comfortably 841-907 806
Sublease thru Dec 11. Available October
2 bedroom at Pepperfruit Apts, Unfurished,
honorate. 843-7197 evenings, 296-206 days
TWO STORY APT On has route 2B, 1.8/12 hh,
A. cured fennec D. w. hookup No children or
pets please. Prefer quater, mature couple or
divide? 50 pts. plusilities. Dep. and 1 year
Try cooperative living' Sunflower House, 100
Tennessee. 749-6871. Ask for Dawn Inexpensive &
private rooms are available
FOR SALE
1942 Patta Wagon, brown, crisp 4- speed, good
radio and rubber, runs well $90 cash 749-1138
1953 Toyota Corolla, good condition, rests great,
must sell $843.836 or 823-4822
1978 Ford Clubwagon window Van: $250
VANGUARD 40 Olympic class Sailboat: $250.
843-705
1976 Kawasaki K2 400, bookrack, highways pegs,
windshield, 3700 miles, excellent condition, $700
841-3332
1977 Kawasaki KZ 750, great, $790. Fender pa 6
chippeu, 200 watts, 845-834-3230
1981 Red Horn 70, Passport with baskets. 100 miles and in good condition. $355, negotiable. Call 212-642-7077.
1980 Honda Hawk 400 cc, Low miles, excellent condition. Helmet included.
79 HONDA CX 500 Plexi-fairing, new Dumont,
E.C. CX 900 negotiable. B438-8900, three-quarters
condition heater, cover $500, 684 ft³
1980 Yamaha XS 400 x 750. 841-3322. 452 California
AUDI Fox, 1977, 4-dr, auto, $1850. Electrovoice speakers $20 ea. Pioneer amplifier, $30, $200. Kenwood amplifier $75, $130, $64, $192
Billfolds, briefcases, collections, folios, hand bags, luggage, notebooks and much more at Secrel Leather, 914 Massachusetts. 824-606.
Apple iHe 64k, disk drive with controller $298
Apple iHe 128k, amber monitor, Apple grip device $298
Apple iHe 128k, hard drive, IBM BMPK 128k, 128k, drive $799 IBM Portable 16k, drive $799 Callen, Callen @ 84235730
Callen @ 84235730
FINE JEWAGE IN ATLANTIC CITY...
WITH THE FAMOUS MYSTERIES
OF AMERICA'S LOST REALMS
ANYTHING THE EXECUTED CONSTANTS
JUST AND WORSE NEVER ASYET
THEY ALL ANSWIT THE CROWNOW
OF AMERICA'S NEW MARKLY IDEAL
TO HAVE THEIR PRESSES
BETWEEN THE BANNERS
HAI HAI HA!!
HOOT HOOT HOOT
NEW
COLUMBIA 3 speed girl's bike Like new condition $50.8427137
Commodore- 64 computer with dataset. Dword processing, color graphics' Great for students. Like new $200, free negotiable Tim Call. Days 839-845. Eyes 74-482.
Flexible arm lamps. 100 watt capability. Regular $49.45, on sale $19.90. Baino's Bernsima and Vacuum Center. 24094 Iowa (Holidays Plaza) 821 106
Honda Trac Van Cam. New S20c motor kevac lever. Dodols,油松 cooler, rightfiring right for much much more. Must install immediately. N242A0. Keep tyring.
For furnishings for your living, we have what you need. Thrift stores at 618 Vermont and 16 E. 908. Guitar: Denco. Accorde, electric-cutaway - adm. alt. 8273, 9430-2008. Tim
Oak Drafting table desk. Good condition. Best offer.
841 5461
Pentax 35mm Camera, $220. For more info call:
841-967-8750
Personal Computer System: APPLE Macintosh,
including printer, MacWrite, MacPaint and
Microsoft BASIC 9500. Call 821-2333
The Ultimate System ALPINE 7130 (150)
Dialectate DX8000 (150) N99-8200
N99-8400 N99-8600 N99-8800
EXEERT Xavier Xorner Architecture Cockpit
Cockpit Xorner DP, power and speaker cocks
DP, power and speaker cocks
Right handed hand for fencing class 22 (originally
55) Used only one semester: 841.1661
JUST JUDI $ 500 WORK FOUR
NEVERVEN $ 500 PAWK AND MAKS
JOY $ 500 JOY
WON'T BE ON $ 1000 YOU WON'T BE ON $ 4000 LOOK LOVE
FOR THE TIME I WILL $ 2000 ONE $ 1000 ONE
Samik studio piano, 2 yrs old black £200
Yamaha MT 44 trumpet recorder £1500
iana Reel to Reel, Pioneer Amp. Speakers & faxes. IYA8. 841-7025.
[AKAIR 27] Turing Bike; chrome moly frame
& Exo Mount components, 12 speed
wide gear range, Blackburn rack and Ego
enders. Call 842-262, evenings.
Used Metal Office Chairs. Side chairs with & without arms $1 and $10. Snooze Swivel chair with castors $13. Excel. Swivel chair with castors $30. 8232 324. 5 p.m.
Western Civilization Notes, including New Suppliment. Now on Sale! Make sure to use them in your own presentations or as part of your waime preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' available at Fort Erie Press.
Yamaha receiver, Pioneer tape deck with 2 speakers. $40 Drilling table & chair $120 Call 841-230
AUTO SALES
COMPATIER TERMINAL Zenith ZT1 (Terminal with built in Auto Digital auto_log on feature, parallel centrires) and RS232 ports. ZENith ZT1 12B with hs monitor 482.8248
26th Z100 Computer, mdl. Multiplan Wordstar
some account. D Dos. Z Basic. Call after 5:30
mj. 249-366
Pablo Picasso
1976 Volvo wagon, air, automatic, clutch interior,
84,000 miles, $295, Preston McCall, 183 N. Ird.
814-6677
1983 Silver Monte Carlo, V8, PS, PB, AC excellent condition, 18,500 miles. Call 774-7365 evenings.
weekends.
19.51 Malibu 35692101 PS, PB, AC, New starter,
aluminator, water pump, tires, exhaust
**negotiable** Call 8443380 after 7, ask for Paul
Robinder
1922 Ford. Extra clean interior. Perfect good mechanical condition $56. Ask for Kirk $441.7723 1923 VW. Karmann Ghu. Good condition and inexpensive to run. Price招揽: 841.0637
1980 Mercury Zephyr Z2. 2-door. 4-speed. 4-cyl.
30,000 miles. $296. Preston McCall. 1983 N. Ird.
841-6067
1967 Mustang 6 cyl, 3 speed, very nice, new paint,
reliable. must be 841 6067, or 842 1499
17 Z 28 Carraro, brown w/b blue interior .350
M 22 Trous. 50% Cragser JS 841 3899
Cleaned VW for sale. Metric Mateur, 844-609-3128
FOREST ERA, 149d, 4pc front wheel drive AM/FM, great mpg, fun to drive. New tires, bat seats. Batteries: 829-841-7361
1978 Trans Am, 400, PS, PB, AC – Beautiful car!
Only $400; 6400 after 4 p.m
Cars with personality & style 1949 restored Chevy
Fleetline Dodge $3000 1966 unrestored
Plymouth Delight station wagon $830 843 7025
Slick, White 1966 Cadillac Hearse; Make appoint ment to see: 864-1425
65 VW. Bug, strong engine, Phil, 842-3822, eve & weekends
Prepaid pricing cars that need lots of work *Extr*
clean 75 Cardinal, 79.000 miles, $1255, 423.028
Z Z Z Z Z
1978 Mustang II 4-cyl. great gas, new tires. A good car for a student $2500 642-2488
Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z 1979 Datson
200 XZ, Full Power, 1996, Preston McCall,
814-6467, 183 North 1rd
by Berke Breathed
NOT
CACE!
...OR
THROWING UP!
WELL THAT BEATS MY INARTEST SPITTING
I HEAK MISTER NEW JERSEY IS BREAKBELCHING
Yamaha SEA TURBO XK50-L 400 miles, watergate, lighter, new battery, perfect condition $200 HONDA CR250 rubber 3 times; $100842262
100lb OBR 48, four door, very car seat, 85,000 miles,
air automatic, crash control, lift sliding, cloak,
clothing good tires, everything works, $1995.
Prest McCall (Maine), 1983 North 2nd St.
A European in a style cake offering a variety of diecast replicas from famous brands and serving beer. Join us for our lunch, brunch and dinner. Look for our coupon in the Lawrence & New Hampshire "in the MARKETPLACE"
BUSINESS PERS
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
Mornings with kids
3-5 years at Head Start.
Call 842-2515, for information
COMPRESIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care; confidentiality assured Greater
Milwaukee area. Call for appointment
913-455-1067
FIGHT SEXUAL ASSAULT Douglas County Haven Victim Support Service offers free educational programming (films and speakers) for classes, living groups, etc. Call 843-9850.
V V
THE ETC. SHOP
732 MUSES, 843-51
THE FUN PLACE TO BE
RIHNSTONE, GLOVES,
PARTY DRESSES, ETC.
INDIAN FORES
AUTHENTIC HATS
BY STETSON
NOW AVAILABLE
If you or someone you tape has been a victim of sexual violence, Rape Victim Support Service can help Call 814-2344 or 804-1966 for referral, 24 hrs a day, a United Fund Student Center location.
Highest quality dry transfer lettering
At student at university pricing. $6.95 per sheet.
list$8.95. Strong in Office Systems. 1040 Vermont.
834.364
PLUS MANY OTHER HATS
What do GEORGE BUSH.
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT,
and GEORGE WASHINGTON
have in common with
T.S. ELIOT,
W.H. AUDEN,
WALTER CRONKITE,
and LIONEL PETCHE?
1973
Worship and Christian nurture within the Anglican communion
THE EPSCOPA CHURCH
WELCOMES YOU
1116 LOUISEIA
HOLY EU'CHARIST SUNDAY 5 pm
CANTERBURY HOUSE
1116 LOUISIANA
Inflation Fighter, E-12th. For your needs,
vintage and party dresses, hats, gloves, ties,
dresses and three suits. Crown in & browse.
Hours 10:00 to 5:30, Sat. 10:00 to 5:30
PROBLEMS' Headquarters Crisis. Counseling Center listens. Free 21 hr, 841,234; or new location, 149 Massachusetts.
STAEDTLER MARS Tech pen special 7 pen set $33.95 Set $22.50 while supplies last. Strong's Office Systems, 140 Vermont, 843-3644
WTS, the battered women shelter is looking for sensitive, strong women to act as volunteer advocates. Women of all ages, race and ethnic backgrounds are encouraged to apply. A commitment to the self-determination of women is required. The shelter is needed; call 841-6027 before Sep 8.
Sensitive, nurturing women and men are needed to spend positive time with children of domestic violence survivors. They should be informed of the services offered to assisting time to help break the cycle of violence; please call Women's Aid (03) 7981 2514.
The New Place, for a rich atmosphere at an affluent dale price. The New Place, a private club. 2406 Iowa. 842.9500.
HELP WANTED
CUSTOM SEWING Dressmaking and alterations Call 842-5373 Reasonable prices
Apply at Mazzo's Pizza, 27th & Iowa. No ex-
perience needed, just hard work
Asst. Manager position available Health life
vacation and advancement included Apply at
Mazzo's Pizza 27th & Iowa
Computer Science Student, well versed in computer operations, qualified to build installations of Windows operating systems and misses part of the job pathway for installations and operator training. Microsoft Business Systems
Business 310 Tutor Wanted as soon as possible
Hourly rate. Call 812-6961
DAY CARE HELPER 125-30 or 15-30 daily
Child development or education major. Prefer ex-
périence. Call 842 2223.
STUDENT ASSISTANT
NEEDED
Parttime Batterier and Cocktail waitresses
Must be 21 yrs. of age. The New Place: 2406 Iowa.
842-9300
Dependable female to assist disabled with care.
No experience required. Mornings, weekend & evening hours available. Call between 15,
749-0288
Experienced Drummer for Weekend Rock & Roll Band. 841 4444. Professional inquiries only.
STUDENT-ENRIQUE NEEDTED
The School of Pharmacy is now offering students the Senior Pharmacy Officer training program. Students will have an experience studied with one or more pharmacists and will be appointed to a senior pharmacy studies lab. They will be appointed
Part-time Help at Day Care Home. One cook needed. 11-3, Mon-Fri Afternoon Asst. needed. 3-5 Call: 843-4147
rart time teachers aid needs Monday thru
weeks, womens days or evenings. $3.35 hr.
Stud and or experience with children, ages 16-
Apply to Children Learning Center 311 Maine 2.
Research Assistant needed to observe in elementary school classrooms. Must be a RU student. $15.15 per hour per week. 4 mrs.; 3 fpr. $15.15 per hour per week. North Harbor Health Deadline: 14:44. Whee is an AA/EOE.
MISCELLANEOUS
FREE FULL KITCHEN to go on sale ...
PUTTON COTTON Mattresses providing complete support for the spine. Easily portable, 16" x 20". With this aid, blue Hibernia #81-9443.
Hewlett Packard Printer/ planner for use with HP 41/C/VC/XM. Card 843-516F
PERSONAL
FRESHMEN. It's not too late to join NAVAL
ROTC. Call 864-3164
Danny (KB) Eaves's revenge is coming soon!
check mail for further calls. Friends of
us
Micro Computer Sales person, full part and time.
Inside sales, some outside sales, knowledge of
hardware and software required, send of
resume to Comparkard. 711 W.204 Larsen
S. W.M. 36 inmate, seeks a taste of freedom thru correspondence. Serious inquiries only. B. Lemons, Box 2, Lansing, KS 66041
(openings for part and full time (townan personnel All shifts available Apply in personal Vista restaurants. 197 W. 6th
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND 1 m old female golden Labrador or
ku campus. Twice evening, wearing yellow nylon
collar. Playful Call Lawrence Humane Society at
841-6835
HEARTBROKEN Red & Blue Baby bag kit
tuesday morning, 4th & Marine Contains baby
sirt music box. Please return for REWARD
841-1773
Immediate appointments for part-time girl personnel.
All shift available. Express room nurses &
mortgages. Apply in person at Vista restaurants.
1527 W. 4th
SERVICES OFFERED
Missing: Yellow w/c w/ black & silver collar Lost around 14th & Tennessee REWARD Call 79-466
University of Kansas Budget office has an opening for a continuous half-time graduate assistant position in the Summer学期. The position will assist with the process of budget preparation and help the student University budget and will help with the technical preparation of the four University Budgets. The position will be based on the ability to fund accounting and have an opportunity to work within the university financial environment, including accounting, and good written and oral competencies in accounting, and good writing and oral competencies in a half-time appointment. Closing date Sep 21st 2004. Information call Anna Whitaker. Budget office
Announcing Troy Anderson, formerly of Command Performance, has joined the staff at His & Her design firm. Its opening strategy, Harcourt, 51 Perm., $2.6. *Come see Troy for that special event.*
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Struth Hall.
TUTOR'S List your name with us. We refer stu-
dent inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center.
121 Strong Hall
(GOMMETERS) Self serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Applications available in Strong Hall EOE:
PRIME PIX Very tightening, very responsible
application for the printing of
weeding告他. be a party pix photographer for
Whistle PIX APPLY IN HALL 4 pix
applicant.
NEED A RIDE HIER! Use the Self Service Car Pool Exchange! Mobil Lobby, Kansas Union
COMMUTERS! Self Service Car Pool Exchange
TUTIONS TUTERS. Impair at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall
Charme Beauty Salon is now offering Haircuts for $7, and perm for $22 & Up or Call in or come for a professional cut or perm at a great price! Charme Beauty Salon, 103 Mias, 843-380
Charter Beauty Home 4 Home of the 78 Carrout
Environmental campus photo studies - Modeling,
dance and Theatre portion or compares it
Purchase call: 423-7348 for information.
Quick Labs, oil filter for $9.66. Call for appointment:
841-5200
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
Quick Lite Center. 12 name brands of oil. Call (800) 470-2650. PHIOS.
for appointment, no phone.
Lawrence now has a Quick Lube Center, Call for
STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Massachusetts.
downtown. All haircuts. $5. No appointment necessary.
STRAIGHT AHEAD. A self help group for people wanting independence from morgans is now forming. Call Headquarters for more info 812-2453.
Ultimate Hair and Skin Care Center, Haircuts
H. Hanna Cave is from Europe and has worked
in France, Germany, England, Belgium and
Germany. Call G. Wagel, Walk his wife
[4 EAST 88 749 0472]
Sunshine Acres Moorestes Pre-school. A.M. & M.B. programs and kindergarten ages. Part day at the school, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., with year in service KIU faculty and students. Visit with your child, at 2141 Maple Hill, O.K. 1963.
Voice Lessons—DMA voice candidate accepting non-credit singers. Experience with all type voices: 841-4096
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instruc
tor. Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual
on site.
TYPING
TIPING PLUS assistance with composition edgar, grammar, spelling, research, these dissertations; papers, letters, applications resume Haver M.S. Degree 841-6254
24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes.
dissertations. papers. Close to campus. Best quality and fast service. B11 5006
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing Judy 842-7945
Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, term papers, dissertations, etc. MH correcting selecti 314 ii 7454 or 8412 9671. Noun 10.30 p m
Always try the best for professional service
Term papers, thesis, resumes, etc. Reasonable
842.3246
ON TIME PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI
CENT. 841;310
Alphatmega Computer Services offers Word Processing, Professional Results - resumes, papers a speciality. Call 749-1181
Professional TYPING, EDITING, GRAPHICS,
IBM Correcting Electric, Kathy, 842 3758 before 9E
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JANETTE SHAPER - SHAFFER - Transfer Service
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard cassette tape
841 847 803
Assume & Aisee, Inc. professionals at Competitive Rates, Word Processing, Typing "X" in application in APA Style" Lawrence, 901 Kennett Street, 801-Blufft, 702 West, 323-8018.
WANTED
Typing in my home. Have IBM Correcting Select
II. Rationale prices. Call Judy at 834-0891.
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting Selecitic Electric on Pica, and will correct Spelling. Phone 841-9534. Mrs Wright.
roommate Trailer house, good location $115/mi + 1/2 gas & e-1 smoke $749/623 Female Roommate no smoker to share home campus area $130/mi + 1/2 child room
Experienced back massage师 needed. Prefer Mc Colum or Ellsworth patient Call Scott at 844-603-6126 after 6 m.
Female roommate to share condo Pool, all amenities $185 plus utilities Debbie or Carr. 840-6215
Female roommate wanted to share two-two-bedroom duplex. Completely furnished with washer and driver $150 per plus utilities. Close to campus. 841-268
Graduate student needs roommate to clean clear,
2 bedroom apt. am Tennessee. $150 mo. plus 1/2
unit Sept. 30 request. Call 8416 6707
Male Roommate to share 2 BR. Park 25 Apt.
in Lawrence. 1/2 utilities. 1/2 rent. 144-290, for
Apt.
Rommatee Female grad or serious student,
non-smoker preferred, to share a nice
2bedroom Apt All utilities Paid Call 842-0801
Roommates wanted to share a house full hood, rate rates and rent. Phone and Cable TV extra. Washer dryer. Non-smoker. Call 841-2823 after 3 p.m.
Roommate to share nine, three bedroom, Ap 150* maits ad paid despatch, B41.814
We buy VW, running or not, Call Metric Motors, B41.609
The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Classified Heading
Write ad here
Net a Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Phone ___ Classified: Display
1 col. x 1 inch = $4.20
Name ___
Address ___
Dates to run ___
1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
1-15 words $2.60 $3.15 $3.75 $6.75
For every 15 words add $25 $50 $75 $1.05
Mail or deliver to 119 Stauffer - Flint Hall
1
September 11, 1984 Page 14
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
Wolf, McEnroe's brother will play KC exhibition
Kansas sophomore tennis player Mike Wolf will face Pat McEuroce, younger brother of 1984 U.S. Open champion John McEuroce in an exhibition match at 7 p.m., Wednesday in Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo.
Pat McEnroe is a freshman at Stanford University, and he is considered one of the nation's top collegiate tennis players.
immediately following the Wolf Pat McEnroe match, Bjorn Borg and John McEnroe will play in the main event.
Wolf finished second in the Big Eight Conference last year in singles, and he teamed with Michael Center to finish second in the conference in doubles. He advanced to the NCAA Championships and was ranked 57th in the final collegiate poll.
Kelly leads golfers with 79
"In my opinion, he's one of the top 25 returning players in the country coming out of that poll," KU tennis coach Scott Perlman said.
Maureen Kelly led the KU women's golf team yesterday with a 79 on the first day of the Susie Maxwell Burning Golf Tournament in Norman, Okla. Kelly's score left her tied for fourth place.
left her bed on our back.
In team scoring, the KU women finished
the day in sixth place out of eight teams.
Oklahoma State led the pack with a score
of 314, followed by Michigan State; 315,
Oklahoma; 322, Louisiana State; 330,
Nebraska; 334, Kansas; 335, Missouri; 341,
Wichita State; 360.
Individual scores for Kansas on the part 64 course were Tina Gneuchw, 84; Ann Brayenm, 85; Susan Pekar, 87; and Marilee Scheid, 87. Robin Hood, of Oklahoma State, and Kathy Teichert, of Michigan State, were tied for the lead at 75.
The second round of the tournament will be played today
KU swimmers 1-2 in triathlon
Clark Campbell and Ed E Nelson, both freshmen on the KU swimming team, placed first and second, respectively, in the Baptist Medical Center Triathlon Sunday at Raim Tree Lake in Lee's Summit, Mo.
Rugby team defeats OU
Summer 2017
The triathlon covered 26 miles and involved swimming, bicycling and running.
The Kansas Rugby Club defeated the Oklahoma Rugby Club, 27-17. Saturday at Shenk Fields in Lawrence. The KU collegiate team lost to the OU collegiate team, 30-10.
the next match for the club team will be Sept. 15 and 16 at the Aspen, Colo. Ruggederet The collegiate team will be in action the same two days in the Kaw Valley Cup in Topeka
Compiled from staff reports
Marquis
R C U R Y
KANSAS 81
JAYHAWK
AG AUG
Bob Nelson, known by most of his friends as the "old Jawhawk," has been a KU fan since 1939 and is beginning his
tenth year of predicting college football scores on the Lawrence cable television show "The Fearless Forecasters."
Nelson doubles as fan, forecaster
By GREG DAMMAN
Sports Editor
If "the old Jayhawk" was mentioned to someone who is only a game day fan of the KU football and basketball teams, it's likely that the only thing that would enter their mind would be an aging version of the mythical bird.
But to longtime fans and people closely associated to KU athletes, "the old Jay hawk" is 62 year-old Bob Nelson — KU's No. 1 fan.
"My close friends call me Nelly." Nelson said. "But everyone else knows me as the old Jayhawk. I got that old Jayhawk name when I got old, I guess."
Nelson has been a KU fan since watching his first Jayhawk football game in 1959. The Wichita State game Saturday marked the beginning of his 45th season as a Jayhawk fan.
Nelson works as the program manager for the KU division of continuing education. His office walls are covered with KU football and basketball schedules — some for the coming
season, but most from past years KU football and basketball media guides are close at hand on his desk
"I CAN'T RECALL the last time I missed a home football game." Nelson said. "But I'd guess that I've only missed three or four games in 45 years. I'm one of the few people to watch Kansas play in all six of its bowl games."
For the past 10 years, Neison has worked as a game predictor on the Lawrence cable television show "The Football Forecasters" with Rich Bailey and Charlie Crabtree. The show will be televised in Lawrence at 6:30 p.m. Thursday and 9:30 p.m. Wednesdays during the season.
Nelson guessed that he had been to more KU sports events than anyone except former KU head trainer Nesmith. Nelson said that his years as a dayhawk fan allowed him to develop close relationships with a number of KU coaches and athletes
called after Saturday's game he said. "Don't be surprised to see the ball in the air in 60 or 70 times. Wichita State threw the ball 30 times against Southwest Texas State, but don't ask me where Southwest Texas State is. I'm still trying to figure that one out."
"My fondest memories of my years at KU are my associations with the coaches and players," he said. "Kansas has had a lot of great athletes. It's obvious. All you have to do is go down to Allen Field House and look at all the pictures on the wall."
Gottried is the tenth man to coach the KU football team since Nelson watched his first game in 1939. With an offense that passes early and often, Gottfred has impressed Nelson as being a coach who fields exciting teams.
"We don't know of any show that's run in the area as long as ours has," Nelson said. "We have a guest predictor every week, and clown it up quite a bit."
Although he has season football tickets, Nelson has spent his Saturdays in recent years working in the press box in Memorial Stadium. His job has usually involved spotting player numbers for public address and radio announcers
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"THINK MIKE GOTT Fried is really an outstanding coach," he said. "He knows offense as well as anyone."
Twins defeat Kansas City for tie at top
By United Press International
MINNEAPOLIS — Tim Teufel's RBI double that was lost in the lights by outfielders Darryl Motley and Willy Wilson in the third innning got the Minnesota Twins started Monday night on their way to a 7-3 triumph over the Kansas City Royals.
Pitching a complete game for the ninth time, Smithson, 14-12, struck out six and walked two. He allowed eight hits in the game. Two of the hits he allowed were homers by Steve Babbion; his 24th, in the seventh, and Frank White, his 16th, in the eighth innings.
Tim Launder walked to lead off the Twins third off starter Mark Gubica, 10-12, and moved to third one out later on Kirby Puckett's single to center Teulé hit a high fly that Motley and Wilson lost in the lids and the bat before the second pitch. Puckett took third. Mickey Hatcher then hit a sacrifice fly to right field, scoring Puckett for a 2-0 Twin lead.
The victory enabled the Twins to move into a tie with Kansas City for first place in the American League West. Both teams have 73-70 records.
a 300 page
Wilson opened the Royals' sixth inning with a single, stole second and moved to third on an error when catcher Laudner's throw sailed into center field. One out later, Motley singled home Wilson.
With one out in the Twins fifth, Puckett singled to center, stole second and scored on Kent Irkeb's single to right, giving the Twins a 3-0 edge.
The Twins collected six straight singles in the eighth, scoring four insurance runs. Put Putnam, Torn Brumansky, Gary Garett, pinch hit by Cory Boudreau, Bush and Puckett all singled in the innings.
Twins' manager Billy Gardner was ejected from the game in the eighth inning when he complained about a call by first base bump Marty Springsted. Hirkeb fielded a grounder by Wilson behind the bag and sidet into the ground as Springsted tried to ruin Wilson was safe and Gardner protested so vehemently that he was tossed out of the game.
tossed on the game
The Royals will face the Twins in Minnesota again today, with game time set for 7:35 p.m.
In other American League action, New York defeated Toronto, 6-2. Baltimore beat Detroit, 3-1; and Milwaukee defeated Boston, 7-4.
In the National League. Chicago slipped by Philadelphia. 3-2; Montreal knocked off Pittsburgh, 8-5; and St. Louis edged New York. 3-2
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I'll keep them safe. They're not hurt.
Pigskin pupils
Football's come a long way since the Four Horsemen rode over Army, but that fact hasn't discouraged head football coach Mike Gottfried. Last night, in the second of
two sessions, he and his staff quizzed fans on the importance of signals and strategy, but men weren't allowed. This class was for women only. See story, p. 3.
winey
Windy High, 97. Low, 68. Details on page 3.
The University Dailv
KANSAN
Vol. 95, No. 13 (USPS 650-640)
Wednesday, September 12, 1984
Dave Hornback/KANSAN
I'll just put it in my notebook.
Gov. John Carlin talks with Leo Redmond, Overland Park junior, (left) and Kirstin Buterbaugh Myers, Shawnee sophmore, at the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center. Carlin discussed local and national politics with Redmond. Myers and six other members of KU College Young Democrats at a luncheon yesterday.
Carlin says Mondale will win election
Staff Reporter
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ Staff Reporter
Supporters of Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale should expect President Reagan to lead in the polls until he campaigns, Gov. John Carlin said yesterday.
However, as election day approaches, Americans will focus on the campaign issues instead of the candidates' personalities, and Mondale will win, he said.
The governor spoke informally during a lunch with eight members of the KU College Young Democrats at the K.S. "Boots" Adams University Center. He discussed several presidential race and the strategies Democrats needed to follow to be successful in November.
"REAGAN IS GOING to carry a pretty safe and comfortable lead in the polls right up to the election," Carlin said. "That will get very nerve-racking for Mondale supporters, but it is important not to overreact and become down and disheartened."
and become down and understated. Mondale will trail in the polls early
See related story p. 5
because Americans will continue to be dazzled by Reagan's likable personality, Carlin said.
"We have a very well liked president and he is very easy for most people to trust." Carlin said. "I like the President, he's a nice guy."
Reagan is also popular with students for the same reasons, Carlin said.
THE SAME REASON...WHAT DOES?
*STUDENTS THINK RONALD Reagan*
represents this image, they'd like to be associated with," he said. "But when the issues are laid out on the table, they don't agree with him."
agree with this. Carlin said, the Democrats should not try to turn the campaign into a popularity contest. The only way Mondale can win the election is by focusing on the issues.
"I would be very tragic if we don't have a series of debates between Reagan and Mondale on the issues." Carlin said. "I think there is a serious question as to whether the president is in the position to lead on the issues.
Ronald Reagan is apparently going to try to pull off this election without ever being
Kirstin Butterburn Myers, president of the KU College Young Democrats, asked Carlin
if Kansas was a lost cause for the Democratic Party because Reagan was supposed to sween the state.
"THERE DEFINITELY is a chance it can be turned around," Carlin said. "Kansans disagree with the president on the issues, so they want us to move away from the point of view that it can be done."
If Democratic voters think that their party can't win, Carlin said, they won't turn out to vote. This could hurt Democratic efforts in states like state legislative races around the country.
"There's more involved here than the national race," he said. "The turnout for the presidential race affects the legislative races. If Democrats don't turn out to vote for Mondale because they think it's hopeless, they won't be casting Democratic votes for other races, either."
Diana rages as thousands seek shelter
By United Press International
WILMINGTON, N.C. — Hurricane Diana ragged off the coast of North Carolina early today, hurling 10 foot waves against aban denaches beaches with winds up to 135 mph.
As many as 100,000 people tied the storm. Winds of more than 100 mph roared through the streets of Wilmington, left almost empty by residents who rushed inland in such panic that 1,000 National Guardmen had to be called out to unsmart traffic.
TREES BENT AND snapped, signs blow away and walls of rain beat against buildings. Power lines were ripped loose and sparks flacked through the blackness and blinding rain. Transformers exploded with hollow booms.
tourism booms.
The storm was 20 miles south-southeast of downtown Wilmington, and at midnight EDT had moved only 10 miles in six hours.
Forecaster Mark Zimmer at the National Hurricane Center in Miami said it appeared Diana would angle into the coast between Wilmington and Morehead City. The National Weather Service in Raleigh predicted a landfall on the coast at Onslow County, near the sprawling Marine base at Camp Lejeune, in today's early morning
It was headed north of the area where Hurricane Donna killed 50 people and caused $1.3 billion damage 24 years ago to the day.
GOV. JIM HUNT called for evacuation north of Wilmington "in view of the apparent track of the storm and the expected flooding in the lowlying central areas." He urged coastal residents of Pamlico, Craven Beautiful, Hyde and inland hinterlands to move inland and called out the National Guard to assist in the evacuation.
At Camp LeJeune, a spokesman said the base was at "condition one-wind alert". Non-essential personnel were sent home and 3,000 people, most from their mobile and coastal homes, took shelter on the base.
Coastal battles took shipper Winds of 10 mph whipped the Oak Island Coast Guard station at Cape Fear, where Coast Guardsmen worked to save the two-man crew of a fishing vessel that failed to reach home in time.
FIRE SIRENS HOWLED out the storm warning at midday across the beaches and marshlands of the North Carolina coast from Wilmington to Cape Fear, the dreaded shoals
See DIANA, p. 5, col. 3
Staff Reporter
BY SUZANNE BROWN
When President Reagan told a Christian prayer breakfast last month that religion and politics were linked, he raised a cloud of controversy among politicians and theologians.
Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale reviled his opponent's stand on gun control.
But both local clergymen and KU professors are divided over the importance of the
"Religion has been a part of American politics for a tremendous amount of time," said Allan Cigler, associate professor of political science. "As long as polities are involved with trying to put into play the good life, religion will be involved."
CIGLER SAID THAT the debate about Reagan's remarks, which the president has since amended to soften what some said was their appearance of intolerance, was one of political strategy rather than of philosophical convictions.
"I think Walter Mondale wants to remind certain voters who are primarily Democratic, especially Catholics and Jews, of Reagan's fundamentalist views," he said. "He wants to remind them that Reagan is playing footie with the American right."
playing roles in the
president has long been associated
with conservative Christian groups that
support such government measures as
anti-abortion legislation and organized
praer in public school classrooms.
the tee. Jack Bremer, pastor of Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., said that American churches always had involved themselves with social issues, such as slavery and prison conditions.
BUT HE SAID that Reagan wanted religion to be something other than a social institution.
To try to impose a single view like
Reagan has done is an effort to impose a partisan, sectarian view as public policy he
Bremer said Reagan's attempt to push a voluntary school prayer amendment through Congress was an example of the president's attempt to foster his own dogmatic views on the rest of the nation. The amendment failed, but the House of Representatives in July introduced a education bill that included a provision for voluntary silent prayer in the classroom.
DAVID TAIT, PASTOR at Trinity Episcopal Church, 1011 Vermont St., disagreed. Tait said that every political leader had religious convictions, even if he was an antheist, and that politicians had an obligation to make these convictions known to others
Bremer said that he thought Monday had a point when he warned that Reagan's views sought to violate the separation of church and state expressed in the First Amendment to the Constitution.
A boy runs under a tree.
STITT RORINSON, PROFESSOR of history, said that the founding fathers would probably have greater sympathy for the Democratic Party than he stands on a clear power base.
In the pockeying for Americans' votes, both Reagan and Mondale have repeatedly called such historical giants as Thomas Jefferson and James Madison their allies.
"A person who says that religion is irrelevant to politics is either mistaken or a hypocrite."
However, Tait did not believe that any church should support one political candidate
Many (undamentals) Christian groups support President Reagan's re-election.
"They'd come closer to Mondale than they would to Reagan," he said.
The Rev. J.C. Ford, pastor at the north Lawrence Baptist Church, 445 Lions St., said he did not think that the current controversy was only a political play by both sides.
A student walks in the shade of a large elm tree near the Military Science Building. The tree, a favorite of many KU students, may be cut down soon to make room for a new science and technology library.
Elm tree may fall victim to libraryv
See RELIGION, p. 5, col. 1
By JULIE COMINE
Staff Reporter
CONSTRUCTION ON THE library should begin in 1987, said Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning. Last month, the university will draw preliminary plans for the library.
The elm — one of the largest and best-loved trees on campus — can't be moved and replanted because of the expense. Wiechert said.
A 50-foot American elm tree just north of the Military Science Building could be splintered into hundreds of pieces of firwood within three years.
"We're very conscious of the tree and have pointed it out to the architects," he said. "It's just too large and too old to be moved."
Contractors might have to cut down the 70-year old tree to make room for KU's long-awaited science and technology library, said Jim Matbes, assistant director of landscape maintenance for facilities operations.
The library is planned to be built between the Military Science Building and Hochs
santess said that to move a tree the size of the elm would cost between $4,000 and $6,000. The circumference of the tree's trunk is about 11 feet.
Even if moved and replanted, there is no guarantee that the elm would survive, he said.
WEICHERT SAID THE library might be built around the elm, the branches of which form an 18-foot umbrella over the grass and sidewalks outside the Military Science
Although constructing the library around the tree had not been ruled out, he said, he worried that the tree might die after the library was built around it.
"The concern I have is that because it is an elm tree and elm trees have had problems with Dutch elm disease, we would
Dutch elm disease plugs up the vascular system of elm trees, cutting off the flow of nutrients from the roots, and eventually killing the tree.
DURING THE LAST three years, several facilities operations workers, KU students and Lawrence citizens have told University officials their concerns for the free Mathes said.
not want to design the building around the tree," Wiechert said.
"American elms are becoming rare," he said. "Most elms on campuses were wiped out in the past."
Mathes said the tree was healthy, but was one of few elmains remaining on campus.
"It's such a special tree — one of the five largest at the University," he said. "It would be a shame to see it go."
Jocelyn Kitchen, Manhattan junior, became visibly upset when she heard about the tree.
Robert Suddow, professor of art, said he and other professors frequently had taken freshman drawing classes outside to work under the elm tree.
"No, not that tree!" she said "That's the nicest tree I've seen in Lawrence
"I usually don't go for causes, but I could save that tree. I'd lay in front of it and let them kill me first before they cut it down."
"ITS ONE OF THE best trees on campus, he said. I think if there's any tree we need to clean up,
Plans for the science and technology library have been discussed for more than a
See TREE, p. 5, col. 1
September 12, 1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily
KANSAN
Protesters in Chile gather at tomb of former leader
SANTIAGO. Chile — Riot police fired tear gas to disperse protesters yesterday at the tomb of former President Salvador Allende on the 11th anniversary of the military coup that topped his government and installed Augusto Finochet.
In a nationally broadcast speech marking the anniversary of the coup that brought him to power, Pinochet, the nation's military president, said the armed forces would remain in power until at least 1989.
In Vina del Mar, a Pacific Coast resort 88 miles west of Santiago, fire police fired gas canisters to break up a march by about 600 people who visited the local cemetery and threw red carnations on Altene's tomb. At least eight people were arrested, news reports said.
Stricken freighter breaks up
OSTEND, Belgium — the sunken French friebrer, Mont Louis, which holds a radioactive cargo, yesterday snapped in and was looted by security forces on waves off the coast of Belgium.
The ship's oil tank ruptured, spewing oil that covered Belgian beaches 12 miles away. Sailors said the weather was too rough for divers to determine the fate of the 30 containers of toxic uranium hexafluoride aboard the freighter, which sank in the North Sea on Aug. 25 after colliding with a passenger ferry.
Authorities said the uranium hexafluoride's radioactivity was minimal and would only harm marine life within several hundred feet if it leaked into the North Sea.
Greene's 80th calls for a beer
LONDON — An 18th century brewery founded by an ancestor of British novelist Graham Greene is brewing 100,000 bottles each season. The wine will be sold by the author.
Greene, author of "The Third Man," "The Heart of the Matter," "The Comedians," "Our Man in Havana," "A Burn Out Case," and dozens of other books, is one of the most popular novelists in the English language.
The Greene, King and Sons Brewery in Bury St Edmunds, northeast of London, has begun brewing 100,000 bottles of "St. Edmund Special Brew" to commemorate Greene's birthday, brewer marketing director Simon Redman said.
He turns 80 on Oct. 2.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
PAPA
United Press International
MONTREAL — Pope John Paul II greets a crowd of 350,000, near Montreal's Jarry Park, from the Popemobile, a bulletproof vehicle. During an outdoor bestiettion ceremony
yesterday in the park, the pope declared Sister Marie-Leonie Paradis of Canada, founder of an order of housekeeping nuns, "blessed," one step below sointhood.
Reagan explains economic theory
By United Press International
WASHINGTON President Reagan, using his hands to draw imaginary revenue and spending lines in the air, said yesterday his past budget requests for public spending spending up $49 billion.
Arguing that the annual deficit would be $40 billion to $50 billion lower if Congress had given him all the cuts he sought in his first four budgets, Reagan said that with enough economic growth a 5.5 percent a year — “the guy would just about disappear from that alone.”
In Chicago, Democratic presidential nominee Walter Mondale challenged Reagan to a debate in Boulder.
MONDALE UNVEILED HIS plan Monday for cutting the defect by two-thirds and criticized Reagan's reaction. He said the reaction was that deficits are not a problem.
"If he doesn't like my plan, good, show us his own. Let's have a debate." Mondale said.
"Well, that's not going to wash," Mondale said. "The American people know there is a profound problem. The American people want leadership not salesmanship.
Reagan declined to detail specific budget plans, as Mondale did Monday, but delivered an explanation of his economic theory during a brief session with reporters at the White House.
ON MONDAY, MONDALE advocated a four-year program to slash deficits by $177 billion by 1989, including $54 billion in spending cuts — about half from the Pentagon — and $85 billion in new taxes in that year, three-fourths paid by the top 14 percent of wage earners.
Asked about Mondale's deficit reduction proposal, Reagan said, "I don't think he's really submitted a budget reduction plan.1
think he's submitted a tax plan, a tax increase plan."
"It's as simple as this," Reagan said, explaining his program by using his hands to show intersecting planes. "If that rate of increase in spending can be brought down as we've brought it down already — if at the rate of revenue increases, that rate of revenues begins to climb at a steeper rate — those two lines have to meet and where they meet is a balanced budget."
ON MONDALE'S CHALENGE that he come forward before the election with a defect-cutting plan, Reagan said. "As for any specifies on our part, they're volume
In the past, Reagan has proposed cutting Social Security benefits, food stamps, school lunches, veterans benefits, cost-of-living raises for federal employees and retirees, health and child education programs, student loans and highway funds and several other programs.
Reagan plans first meeting with Soviets
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, announcing his first high-level talks with a Soviet leader, said yesterday he will meet with Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko to convince the Kremlin that the United States "means no harm" and wants to ease the threat of nuclear war.
The Sept. 28 session at the White House was aimed in part at undercutting Democratic challenger Walter Mondale's claims that Reagan's policies have plunged the country into a collision course with the Soviets by fostering an arms race.
In Chicago, Mondale he says he hopes Reagan's meeting with Gromyko makes progress toward peace, but he called it "the most important of the two years for Reagan to meet a Soviet leader."
"The most important thing is what understanding I can reach with Foreign Minister Gromyko, to convince him that the United States means no harm." Reagan told reporters in announcing that the Soviet foreign minister had accepted his invitation.
"It's pretty pathetic that the administration in the middle of a campaign for re-election is meeting not with his counterpart and then the foreign minister." Mondale told reporters.
In Toledo, Ohio, Mondale's running-mate,
Geraldine Ferraro described Reagan's an
nouncement as "wonderful ... absolutely
terrific."
But she added, "We should not lose sight of the fact that it's taken 3 years to do it," and noted the icy state of U.S. Soviet relations is underscored by the continuing arms race.
Reagan, referring to nuclear stockpiles, stressed the importance of trying "to see if we cannot lessen this threat hanging over the world, and for which the Soviet Union and the United States are mainly responsible."
He said nuclear weapons "could affect nations, all nations, whether they were involved in a controversy or not. It would have an effect on all of civilization and I just want to see if we can't do something that will rid the world of this threat."
Saying the session will touch “on a range of issues of international importance.” Reagan sought to dampen expectations by saying: “The time has come that maybe anything this can perhaps get is better understanding between our two countries. Should take place
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NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily
KANSAN
Protesters in Chile gather at tomb of former leader
SANTIAGO, Chile — Riot police fired tear gas to disperse protesters yesterday at the tomb of former President Salvador Alende on the 11th anniversary of the military coup that toppled his government and installed Augusto Pinochet.
In a nationally broadcast speech marking the anniversary of the coup that brought him to power, Pinochet, the nation's military president, said the armed forces would remain in power until at least 1989.
In Vina del Mar, a Pacific Coast resort 88 miles west of Santiago, police fire tear gas canisters to break up a march by about 600 people who visited the local cemetery and threw red carnations on Allende's tomb. At least eight people were arrested, news reports said.
Stricken freighter breaks up
OSTEND, Belgium — the sunken French (reicher, Mont Louis), which holds a radioactive cargo, yesterday snapped in 2015 by a drone. It is behind and 20 feet off the coast of Belgium.
The ship's oil tank ruptured, spewing oil that covered Belgiar beaches 12 miles away. Sailors said the weather was too rough for divers to determine the fate of the 30 containers of toxic uranium hexafluoride aboard the freighter, which sank in the North Sea on Aug. 25 after colliding with a passenger ferry.
Authorities said the uranium hexafluoride's radioactivity was minimal and would only harm marine life within several hundred feet if it leaked into the North Sea.
Greene's 80th calls for a beer
LONDON — An 18th century brewery founded by an ancestor of British novelist Graham Greene is brewing 100,000 bottles each bottle will be surnamed by the author.
Greene, author of "The Third Man," "The Heart of the Matter," "The Comedians," "Our Man in Havana," "A Burn Out Case," and dozens of other books, is one of the most popular novelists in the English language.
He turns 80 on Oct. 2.
The Greene, King and Sons Brewery in Bury St. Edmunds, northeast of London, has begun brewing 100,000 bottles of "St. Edmund Special Brew" to commemorate Greene's birthday, brewery marketing director Simon Redman said.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
United Press International
PASSA DI CONGREGIONE
MONTREAL — Pope John Paul II greets a crowd of 350,000,
near Montreal's Jarry Park, from the Popemobile, a bulletproof
vehicle. During an outdoor bestietification ceremony
yesterday in the park, the pope declared Sister Marie-Leonie Paradis of Canada, founder of an order of housekeeping nuns, "blessed," one step below saimthood.
Reagan explains economic theory
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - President Reagan, using his hands to draw imaginary revenue and spending lines in the air, said yesterday his past budgets point the way to the public budget.
Arguing that the annual deficit would be $40 billion to $50 billion lower if Congress had given him all the cuts he sought in his first four budgets, Reagan said that with enough economic growth - 5.5 percent a year — "the deficit would just about disappear from that alone."
In Chicago, Democratic presidential nominee Walter Mondale challenged Reagan to a race in the Chicago area.
MONDALE UNVEILED HIS plan Monday for cutting the deficit by two-thirds and criticized Reagan's reaction. He said the recession was that deficits are not a problem.
"Well, that's not going to wash," Mondale said. "The American people know there is a profound problem. The American people want leadership not salesmanship.
If he doesn't like my plan, good, show us his own. Let's have a debate. Mondale said.
Reagan declined to detail specific budget plans, as Mondale did Monday, but delivered an explanation of his economic theory during a session with reporters at the White House.
ON MUNDAY, MONDALE advocated a four-year program to slash deficits by $177 billion by 1989, including $54 billion in spending cuts — about half from the Pentagon — and $85 billion in new taxes in that year, three-fourths paid by the top 14 percent of wage earners.
Asked about Monday's deficit reduction proposal, Reagan said, "I don't think he's really submitted a budget reduction plan. I
think he's submitted a tax plan, a tax increase plan."
"It's as simple as this," Reagan said, explaining his program by using his hands to show intersecting planes. "If that rate of increase in spending can be brought down as we we've built it down already — if at the rate of 5 percent, then the rate of revenues begins to climb at a steeper rate — those two lines have to meet and where they meet is a balanced budget."
ON MONDALE'S CHALLENGE that he come forward before the election with a defect cutting plan. Reagan said, "As for any specifics on our part, they're volum
In the past, Reagan has proposed cutting Social Security benefits, food stamps, school lunches, veterans' benefits, cost-of-living raises for federal employees and retirees, health and child education programs, student loans, and highway funds and several other programs.
Reagan plans first meeting with Soviets
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, announcing his first high-level talks with a Soviet leader, said yesterday he will meet with Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko to compare the Kremlin that the United States threat of nuclear war.
The Sept. 28 session at the White House was aimed in part at undercutting Democratic challenger Walter Mondale's claims that Reagan's policies have plunged the country into a collision course with the Soviets by fostering an arms race.
"The most important thing is what understanding I can reach with Foreign Minister Gromyko, to convince him that the United States means no harm." Reagan told reporters in announcing that the Soviet foreign minister had accepted his invitation.
In Chicago, Mondale said he hopes Reagan's meeting with Gromyko makes progress toward peace, but he called it "a little too much." Two years for Reagan to meet a Soviet leader.
“It’s pretty pathetic that the administration in the middle of a campaign for re-election is meeting not with his counterpart and being the foreign minister”. Mordale told reporters.
"I's pathetic it took us 3~ years to get here," he said, as we measured against four years of growth.
But she added, "We should not lose sight of the fact that it's taken 3*years to do it," and noted the icy state of U.S. Soviet relations is underscored by the continuing arms race.
Reagan, referring to nuclear stockpiles, stressed the importance of trying "to see if we cannot lessen this threat hanging over the water." The United States are mainly responsible.
He said nuclear weapons "could affect nations, all nations, whether they were involved in a controversy or not. It would have an effect on all of civilization and I just want to see if we can't do something that will rid the world of this threat."
Saying the session will touch "on a range of issues of international importance." Reagan sought to dampen expectations by saying: "The time has come that maybe anything the can perhaps get to a better understanding between our two countries. Should take place."
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1. **Identify the main parts of the image:** The image contains a rectangular frame with a black background and white text in the center.
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Final check of the text:
**1. Identify the main parts of the image.**
Yes, the transcription is correct.
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The text starts at the top and bottom of the frame.
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The text is clearly centered within a black rectangle.
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The text is centered within this black rectangle.
Final answer:
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CAMPUS AND AREA
September 12, 1984 Page 3
The University Daily KANSAN
Participant in revolution to teach at KU in spring
Mariano Fiallo, president of Nicaragua's Supreme Election Council, will join the KU faculty spring for one semester. KU officials announced yester-
Fiallos, who earned his doctorate in political science from the University of Kansas in 1968, will fill the Rose Morgan Professorship in the department of political science and the Center for Latin American Studies.
"This is an unparalleled opportunity for students to study a revolution with someone who has participated in it from the outside and inside," said Charles Stansifer, director of the Center for Latin American Studies.
The Sandistas, a revolutionary group, overthrew the Nicaraguan government of Anastasio Somoza in 1979 after a violent civil war.
Fallos is scheduled to speak at 7 p.m. Friday at the Kansas City Skill Center, 2700 E. 18th St in Kansas City, Mo. He will speak on the upcoming Nicaraguan elections, the first since the Sandinistas took power.
Coors boycott to be discussed
The first meeting of the Student Senate will take place at 7 p.m. today in 100 Smith Hall. The items on the agenda include a possible boycott of the Adolph Coors Co. and a petition for a fast-food franchise in the Kansas Union.
Senators will vote whether to override a veto on a petition asking the Union Memorial Board to include a fast food restaurant in plans for the renovation of the Union.
The senators will also discuss a petition asking the Union Memorial Board to boycott Coors beer because of allegedly racist remarks made in February by William K. Coors, chairman of the board Coors.
Alcoholism is topic of talk
Donald W. Goodwin, chairman of the psychiatry department at the College of Health Sciences, will speak on "Two Alcoholisms" at 10:30 a.m. Friday on the College of Health Sciences campus in Kansas City, Kan.
Academic adviser reassigned
Goodwin will speak in Eleanor Taylor Auditorium on the campus.
The academic adviser for the athletic department has been assigned new duties. Lonny Rose, assistant athletic director, said yesterday.
Mike Fisher, former academic adviser for the athletic department, is now the director of the personal support services division. He was reassigned in mid-August, Rose said.
Weather
The reassignment did not come as a result of the current inelegible status of 11 football players. Rose said. No announcement has been made on their status.
Today will be sunny, windy and hot with a high in the mid- to upper 90s. Gusty winds of 20 to 30 mph will be from the south. Tonight will be fair and the low will be in the upper 60s. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a chance of thunderstorms. The high will be in the upper 80s to low 90s.
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
Where to call
Do you have an idea for a story or a photograph?
If so, call the Kansan at 843-6810. If you are or press release deals with campus or area news, ask for Doug Cunningham, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, visit the art department. For sports editor. For sports editor. For Greg Grawman, sports editor
proto suggestions should go to Dave Hornback photo editor.
For other questions or complaints, ask for Don Knox, editor, or Paul Sevant.
The number of the Kansas business of fice, which handles all advertising, is 864-4358.
Resolution on South Africa killed
By HOLLIE MARKLAND
Staff Reporter
The Student Senate Finance Committee last night voted 5-4 to kill a resolution prohibiting student organizations from buying products manufactured by companies with ties to South Africa.
The Finance Committee questioned the feasibility of the resolution because it lacked specifics about how student organizations could participate that had no connections with South Africa.
ACCOUNTING TO STATE statutes, any student organization that makes a purchase costing more than $150 must go through a bid process. The organization cannot choose the company it buys from, and the bid goes to the lowest responsible bidder.
If it had passed, the resolution would have been a statement against racial segregation as practiced in South Africa, said Chris Barrick of the ad hoc committee in South Africa.
Dennis "Boog" Highbierger, student body vice president and sponsor of the resolution, said he would not reintroduce the bill to the Finance Committee, although the Student
"TM TIRED OF picking a dead horse," Highberger said. "I suppose this is sort of a defeat, but this won't stop us. We'll keep working."
Senate Minority Affairs Committee was still considering a resolution that asks the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest from South Africa.
Sandra Binyon, Wichita senior, who was at the meeting, said she did not think the issue affected students at the University of Kansas. She said the senate should drop consideration of the resolution because it would not benefit students.
But committee member Lynn Anthony said that in the past the senate had not hesitated to deal with social issues, for example a recent effort to boycott the Adolf Coors Co.
"This is not a student-oriented resolution," Binyon said. "I don't think Student Senate should be bothered with it."
"If we are going to attack one moral issue," she said, "why not another?"
THE RESOLUTION WOULD have required student organizations that receive money from the $24 student activity fee to spend their money with companies that do no business in South Africa.
The resolution called for a social responsibility subcommittee to enforce the spending limitations, but the resolution did not detail how the committee would enforce the resolution.
The resolution did not detail how violations of the resolution would be handled. Some members of the committee called the resolution unworkable.
Eric Wynkoop, graduate student senator, also said that the resolution was not a legitimate issue for the Senate to handle.
"There has never been a float in the homecoming parade against apartheid," Wynkoo said. "Radical groups on campus have always been concerned, but not the student group. The club is in Student Senate, it is bringing it up and saying it's student issue, and it's not."
Student organizations received a total of $938,000 from the student activity fee in fiscal year 1985.
In other business, the Finance Committee voted to give $1,098.93 to the Associated Students of Kansas Task Force '84.
The money will go for posters and pamphlets to promote the ASK voter registration drive.
Union burger battle hot topic for Senate
By JOHN HANNA
Staff Reporter
The Student Senate tonight will move a battle over burgers in the Kansas Union to its front burner.
In their first meeting of the semester, student senators will vote on a proposal to override the veto of a petition asking the Union Memorial Board to include a corporate-owned fast food franchise in the renovation plans for the Kansas Union.
IN APRIL, THE STUDENT Senate approved the petition, but Carla Vogel, student body president and Dennis "Boog" Highsmith, student body vice president, vetoed it the next day.
The petition is the first item on the agenda (for the 7 p.m. meeting in 100 Smith Hall. A two-thirds vote of the full Senate is required to override the veto.
Russ Piacek, Nunemaker senator and co-sponsor of the petition, said yesterday that tonight's meeting would be a forum for debate on the petition.
A fast-food restaurant like Burger King
Corp. or McDonald's Corp. in the Union would be popular with students and convenient for them, Ptacek said. It also would allow the Union to lower its book prices, he said, by funneling restaurant profits back into the Union.
"I think this just reflects their unwillingness to conform to what the majority of students want for food services," he said.
Vogel and Highberger's veto was not right.
Plateck
"AT MOST, THEIR vet was a glorified letter of rejection. Their arguments are absurd, and they seem to be grasping at straws to defeat this proposal."
But Highberger said yesterday that a fast-food restaurant would not fit in with the University atmosphere and would take control of food services away from the Union.
Highberger said he was somewhat annoyed with the issue. He said he hoped discussion of the issue would help.
"I guess it is a concern that I should be more patient with, but I think it really is trivial," he said. "I just think a few people are behind the idea.
universities.
Placeck said the issue would die if the Union Memorial Board did not take action on the petition this fall.
I don't. That's where all of our major differences come from."
Russ thinks capitalism is a good idea, and
SINCE LAST SEPTEMBER, Ptacek has been working with McDonald's and Burger King, trying to bring the fast food chains into the plans for renovating the Union.
The Union Memorial Board has been planning a $4.1 million renovation of the building for about 16 months, said Jm Long. The project was done still is considering proposals, Long said.
The board should have a final plan prepared by this fall. Long said, and renovation could begin in late 1985 or early 1986.
He said the final plan probably would include a fast-food restaurant in the Union's food services, whether it was owned by a corporation or by the Union.
A committee of the board, acting on a presentation by Ptacek, has been considering the proposal for a fast-food restaurant since the end of April.
Black unrest causes riots in S. Africa
By HEATHER R. BIGGINS Staff Reporter
Riding over rent increases and the denial of black rights in South Africa last week left 31 dead, 300 injured, and some South African students at KU concerned.
Black unrest came the day South Africa's new constitution took effect, Sept. 3. Under the new system, South Africa's white ruler minority gives Asian and mixed-race minorities limited political rights while still denying representation to blacks, who make up 73 percent of the population.
One way to reduce the threat of 22 million non-whites against 4.5 million whites is to separate the blacks from the rest of the political system, according to Marion Scheepers, Potchefstroom, South Africa, graduate student, who is white.
"It's a dangerous way of living when the minority governs the majority," he said. "To ensure white control, the government reduces the threat by allowing some political rights to the Asians and coloreds while continuing to exclude blacks."
Scheepers said that coloreds were of mixed white and black descent.
Non-whites, excluding blacks, have registered widespread indifference and opposition when only 30 percent of the registered mixed-race voters went to the polls Aug. 22, and 20 percent of the Asian voters went a week later.
But Paul Mamabolo, Johannesburg,
South Africa, sophomore, who is black,
said. "The Asians and coloreds are telling
our government that they don't want to
play their game and that they won't betray
the blacks."
Aparthiet foes say inferior black schooling, rent increases and unmet demands by blacks for equal rights sparked the violence that began in usually docile rural townships near Mamabolo's home town.
The only way to resolve the unrest is to increase boycott, riots, international pressure and for leaders to meet and address the problem of an unjust system. Mamabolo said
Gottfried prepares women for football fundamentals
Staff Reporter
Before class, the students were intent studying for a quiz they would take within
But the quiz wasn't on world politics or science. It tested the students' knowledge of college football referees' signals.
Last night, 32 women ranging in age from their teens to their 60s, learned about defensive football during a clinic conducted by Mike Gottfried and members of his staff.
After the quiz, the coaches gave the women a detailed look at the often confused, often amusing game of football in the Party Room of the Frank R. Burge Union.
THE FREE CLINIC, established last year by Gottfried, was taught in two sessions. Last week the clinic opened.
Doris Henton, 608 W. Sixth St., prepared for the 10-task quiz on reference signals by [H]eather.
"This game is really simple," said Jay Bonds, defensive end coach. "Coaches have made it confusing. When I entered it, it was already confusing."
"I like this one best," she said, demonstrating the call for an illegal procedure not permitted.
AS THE WOMEN ENTERED the classroom, they picked up sheets showing 14 referees' signals. Later, a referee, wearing a
black-and-white striped uniform. demon
strated the 10 signals that were on the quiz.
The women wrote down what each gesture meant, such as the raising of both arms to signal a touchdown, field goal or point after touchdown.
As a college student at Wichita State University, Starr said she didn't go to football games. But at last week's game between the University of Kansas and Wichita State, Starr said she used some of the knowledge that she learned from last week's
Pat Parks of Hiawatha, whose son, Mark, plays tight end for the Jayhawks, saw the clinic as an opportunity to learn more about the game her son plays - and to deliver some clean laundry to Mark
"WE DECIDED WE'd come down every day if they'd do it." Parks said about the church.
Linda Sutter, 1915 Edgele Road, a physical education teacher at Lawrence High School, was surprised when she ended up modeling football gear
"This is kind of stylish with the big shoulders." Sutter said as she tried on a pair of shoulder pads. "These are really light, too."
She also learned something she could apply to her life.
"Now I can watch my son play and be a little bit more informed," Sutter said. "I'm still a little confused, but see, I've got my notes."
BENETT COOPER
Steven Purcell/KANSAN
Doris Henton, left, 608 W. 61th Street, and Jenny Kowal, 601 Louisiana St., practice official's signals at a clinic held to educate women about the basics of football. The clinic last night was the second half of a clinic led by head football coach Mike Gottfried and members of his staff.
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY
SENIOR YEARBOOK PORTRAITS
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$3.00 sitting fee paid when you purchase a 1984 Jayhawker
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
13th Walnut Valley Festival September 13,14,15,16,1984
Featuring in Person
- Berline, Cray & Hickman
- New Grass Revival
- Port Rent
* Red Knuckles & The Trailblazer
* Red Knuckles & Chicken
- John McCutcheon
- John McCutc
- Trapezoid
- The Tennessee Gentlemen
• Mark O'Geehan
- Mark O'Connor
- Swift Kick Cloggers
- Foster Family String Band
Wife Michael & Germany
Art Theme
Cathy Barton & Dave Para
Willi Kirk Chingg
Patrick Couton & George Fischo
- Lindsay Haisley
- Mark Nelson
- Walt Michael *
* Juggernaut String Band *
Winfield Fairgrounds
Ticket Information
- Stevie Beck
* Joel Mabus
- Rolly Brown
- Rolly Brown
- Russell Cook
Please write for contest rules. Contests are limited to
- Roz Brown
- Dan Huckabee
At Gate Werewolf KK 111 111 111 111 111
Admire to Trader events in order purchasing a second trader.
Please provide 25 foot boat.
Dan Tuckaukee
Chameleon Puppet Theatre
Winfield, Kansas
Arts & Craft Fair
Children under age 12 free with what
WV
Well policed grounds. Weekend ticket include
Workshops 8 contests
advance tickets write
You may order online after September 30th. Your order number is:
00024861740959050080000000000
For more information and
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No Animals, No Beer or
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No Motorcycles (due to noise)
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This will be the BEST FESTIVAL IN THE U.S. this year!!! (316) 221-3250
September 12, 1984
OPINION
Page 4
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 602440) is published at the University of Kansas. 188 Staffer Fint Hall, Lawen, Kansan 60403, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postpaid mail at Lawen, Kansan 60404 Subscriptions by mail at lawen.kansan.edu. $2 a year in Douglas County and $10 for the county for the student address to the county Student Postmaster. Postmaster send address changes to the University Daily Kansan. 188 Staffer Fint Hall, Lawen, Kansan 60403
DON KNOX
Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE HESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
DOUG CUNNINGHAM Campus Editor
DAVE WANAMAKEB
Business Manager
LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager
SUSANNE SHAW General Manager and News Adviser
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
JILL GOLDBLATT Campus Sales Manager
Campus lights
Findings of a study to be presented soon to the University of Kansas should shed some light on the state's and the University's commitment to safety.
University's commitment. The study, being conducted by Ron Helms, professor and director of architecture, will evaluate the efficiency and effectiveness of the current lighting system at KU. A similar study Helms did on the University of Colorado's lighting system 10 years ago led to widespread improvements in the lighting of that campus.
The aim is to try to make the KU campus a safer place for students at night.
So far, the figures haven't been compiled to show that the KU campus suffers from a general problem of poor lighting, but KU police, administrators and students seem to agree that, at least in some areas, additional lights are needed.
Not surprisingly, money will be an important factor. Safety is not cheap. If improvements are to be made in the lighting system, they will have to paid for, and the money will have to come from somewhere.
The most likely source would be the Kansas Legislature, and an encouraging sign is that the University recently received $25,000 from the state to use on lighting.
A more comprehensive effort to update campus lighting, however, might require considerably more than that. If ever an occasion called for the cooperation of students, faculty and staff, this is it, because lighting affects all of those groups.
Officials of the University administration and student government should get together, as soon as Helms' report is out, to assess the need and look for ways to fulfill it.
Church and state
After President Reagan said last month in Dallas that "politics and morality are inseparable," he and Democratic candidate Walter Mondale spent the next several days trading shots on what is at best an unproductive issue
The candidates, however, soon figured out that they had little to gain and much to lose on the issue. Reagan made the initial remark where he thought it would be well received, before 17,000 fundamentalist religious leaders and convention delegates.
Reagan said later that he had been talking only about "people who would deny such things as chaplains in the military." Mondale later conceded to a Southern audience that yes, religion had a place in politics. Within days, the two were agreeing that the constitutional "wall" separating church and state was not to be crossed. What could have been a time-consuming campaign issue, with which neither candidates nor voters could gain much, was defused.
In an election year of soaring deficits, MX missiles and questionable financial-disclosure forms, the candidates should not be wasting precious campaign time on issues such as the separation of church and state, on which they obviously agree in principle.
obviously agree in principle.
The proposal that Mondale made Monday to slow down military spending and raise taxes by $85 billion in his first year of office should give both sides a chance to get off the issue of religion and the state, and on to something from which the voters can learn.
Michael Jackson needs privacy, too
Suppose I were a homosexual
Suppose I slept in my deep freeze
every night. Suppose I collected
whips, chains and studded leather
underwear. You'd be horrified if you
came across those secrets (Relax,
Ma. I'm not, I don't and I don't). But
you probably wouldn't tear my
drawers and closets apart to uncover
these secrets.
I'm a 5-foot 6-140 pound, 23-year old journalism major. My biggest turnouts are taking out the trash and washing two loads of laundry weekly.
Boring, buh? Right. I'm an every day taxpayer. For those reasons, you probably don't give a darn what goes on in my bedroom. That's the way it should be if my doings don't affect the quality of your life
All of this matters because it brings us to the idiotic press conference last week at which Michael Jackson was forced to deny both that he was a homosexual and that he had used female hormones to preserve his high voice. Not only was this press conference a complete waste of time, but it highlighted the sickness and emptiness of our society's soul.
Michael Jackson must be as nice a guy as Brooke Shields shes he is. He denied the charges (one of which came from a report in the New York Times, of all places) calmly yet sharply in a written statement. If bombarded by questions from re porters about my miscreantity, my reports have been, "None of your damn business." And it IS none of the public's business, just like my imaginary collection of torture tools.
My torture tools wouldn't directly affect the quality of your life unless I used them against you or your loved ones.
So Michael Jackson may have had a few hormone treatments. So he may be homosexual, bisexual, trisexual or quadrasexual, or maybe one-third woman, one-third man, one-third woman, one-third living fish in treatment of the stage his waste-basket probably fills as quickly as mine
So lots of women have plucked eyebrows and lifted faces. So lots of men have nose jobs and muscles hyped by steroids. So lots of men and women are homosexual. You probably know people in each category, whether or not you realize what they have done or what they are.
No construction worker would have to call a press conference to explain why he did or didn't get a vasectomy. So why does Michael Jackson have to explain why he did or didn't have his
eye brows plucked? It's none of our business.
Michael Jackson is probably an everyday, heterosexual male — a nice guy, it seems — whose manner happens to be somewhat effeminate. He is not gay, and me is that he can afford to hire someone to take out the trash for him.
Is the responsibility to explain every move, every word and every prescription the price a celebrity
M.
BRUCE F
HONOMICHL
Staff Columnist
must pay? Celebrites take out the trash and go to the bathroom as often as you and I, yet they quirk, the smile, the sigh, the smile, the sigh, the smile
We drift from one boyfriend or girlfriend to another, almost never coming close enough to know that person's quirks. We often choose classes without knowing the credentials of the instructors or the demands of the class. We take the words of our parents often as gospel, whether right or wrong or simply out of date.
Yet the private life of a person such as Michael Jackson, who has a direct lasting effect on the lives of a few of us, is toddler for phoons.
Sin, silliness, stupidity, clumsiness and variaity are part of human nature.
Don't tell me that some of you haven't made some offhand crack about bombing the Soviets. Don't tell me that some of you haven't stuck your fingers in your ears and made silly faces in public. President Putin's administration spent weeks trying to explain its way out of both incidents.
A pox on your house if you laugh without sinning.
God created us to be sinful.
I wouldn't want MY son to take hormones to remain a soprano. And I was raised to believe that homosexuality is a sin. But I'm not going to throw stones at Michael Jackson's house, whether or not he takes hormonal pills. It's HIS house. HIS wastebasket and its HIS sexual preference. Period. And none of them have anything to do with MY life or yours.
I don't have time, anyway. There is this sale on leather underwear.
LON
Tie in Senate trouble
WASHINGTON — Democrats lost control of the Senate in the 1980 landslide that swept Ronald Reagan into the White House. They are looking with hope at the November elections.
The Republicans, who now outnumber Democrats 55-45, might lose their majority, but the election also produces a historical rarity — a tie.
The last time Democrats and Republicans were of equal numbers in the Senate was in 1881, and the tie resulted in trouble for all involved
Before the deadlock was resolved, what should have been an easy 11-day Senate session stretched into 11 weeks.
A recent publication of the historical office of the secretary of the Senate recalled the events surrounding the deadlock.
Although the Senate's party balance has been nearly even on several
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
ront pinpoints the availability of desserts at residence halls as a
To the editor:
Article adds to student worry over weight
To the value
Christy Fisher's Sept. 4 article ("Study says freshman weight gain most dramatic") concerning freshman weight gain provided a great deal of information that may provoke anxiety about weight gain within a highly vulnerable population.
It appears inherent within the article that all weight gain is negative. Certainly weight gain is to be expected during late adolescent and early adult development. It is also important that weight gain results from an increase in fatty tissue The bathroom scales are a crude and inappropriate
measure of fitness.
it would seem that Ann Kohl, Wakkins Hospital dietitian, views residence halls as a major contributor to undesirable weight gain. She notes that "the majority of people who see me for weight direction live in the dormitories." I suspect that the Wakkins Hospital staff treats a large number of residence hall students because of proximity, rather than because residence hall students have a disproportionate high amount of eating-related concerns
Avon lady finds surprise in quiet home
At one time or another, most of us have heard the doorbell ring and a female voice say: "Avon calling."
remark too. But I doubt whether we've heard it quite the way a young man named Eddie O'Brien recently did.
ROBERT
SHEPHARD
United Press International
Let me son at the beguin.
O'Brien, I8, has a kid sister, Lisa,
and Lisia had a part-time job
selling Avon cosmetics.
one day. Lisa's supervisor phoned to ask about Lisa's sales. Lisa hadn't been selling much, so the supervisor said she would come over with some sales instructional books. They made an appointment to meet the next morning at the O'Brien home, which is on the far North Side of Chicago.
Let me start at the beginning
Lisa had a baby-sitting job that afternoon, so she finally hopped on her bike and left for it.
Eddie was home at the time, but he didn't know anything about Lisa's appointment with the Avon supervisor.
A little while after Lisa left, the Avon lady showed up. She rang the doorbell, but nobody answered.
the Avon lady let herself into the house.
That's because Eddie had gone into the washroom to take a shower.
This was a mistake because the O'Briens have a dog. Although it is small dog, a terrier, it has a fierce nature and sharp teeth.
So, as the Avon lady walked through the house, looking for Lisa.
PETER B. HALVARD
the dog darted out from under a table or somewhere, leaped into the air, and nipped the Avon lady on her bottom.
Seeing that the door was unlocked.
MIKE ROYKO
Syndicated Columnist
Naturally, this made her scream. It also caused her to try to escape from the dot.
Seeing a door slightly open, she ran to it, rushed into the room, and closed the door behind her.
Because of the noise of the shower and his own singing, and because the washroom door had been almost closed, Eddie had been unaware of
major contributor to weight gain and suggests that an "out of sight, out of mind" approach would eliminate temptation. The steady flow of pizza delivery vehicles and the constant line at Joe's Bakery suggest that increased accessibility may not be the biggest factor in students' dietary tabits.
It turned out to be the downstairs bathroom. And in it, behind sliding shower doors, was young Edie.
the presence of the Avon lady and her encounter with his dog.
All he knew was that the washroom door had suddenly opened and closed and through the glass he could see the silhouette of another human
And that's understandable. When you think about it, there are few moments when we are as totally vulnerable and defenseless as when we are standing bare-bottomed naked in the shower. Maybe Anthony had seen the movie "Beyoncé" planted the seeds of fear deep in our subconscious.
It scared the hell out of him.
I also question the Kansan's decision to publish an information-based article next to a cartoon depicting a KU freshman surrounded by junk food and envisioning herself as Miss Piggy. The article correctly notes the stress of freshman adjustment to student life.
Eddie opened the shower door an inch or two and peeled out.
There, in his bathroom, stood a total stranger. True, the stranger was a woman. But who says women
can't be hornicidal maniacs or fiends?
So Eddie screamed, "Who are you?"
'in the country, is sad.'
You think you think upon bearing those words under those circumstances?' Right. You would think that you were dealing with a complete loony. Which is exactly what Eddie thought.
"I'm the Avon lady," she said.
"Avon lady?" Eddie screamed.
"Avon lady? What are you doing in my bathroom?"
"I was just bitten by your dog." "My dog bit you?"
"Yes. I'm hiding from your dog."
"I don't understand any of this."
Eddie said.
"Do something about your dog "
"But I don't have any clothes in here."
The woman explained and the thumping of Eddie's heart subsided enough for him to say, "What do you want me to do?"
Since then, Lisa has given up her Avon job. And the Avon lady had a lawyer send the O'Brien family a letter, asking them to pay for the medical treatment.
"Well, I don't know about that," Maria said, "but I'll tell you one thing. She didn't do much good for Eddie's nerves."
"The letter said that our dog caused her great bodily injury," said Eddie's mother, Maria.
That problem was solved when she handed him a towel.
handed him a call." Eddie said. "Turn around." Eddie said.
Torn through.
In a few minutes, Eddie had corralled the raging little beast in the kitchen, and the Avon lady was on her way to seek medical treatment for her wounded bottom.
Unfortunately, the article and illustration may serve as added stressors to a student population already highly concerned with personal appearance.
But then, the University of Kansas has no intercollegiate soccer, any way.
Rick Barrett Lawrence graduate student
Future camps land-use plans indicate extension of these lots eastward into the Campanile hill just to the south of Memorial Stadium. The impression given by the picture to the contrary, this is not a spot for soccer, or any other recreational activity for that matter
Doug McKay Professor of physics and astronomy
Irony in photo
To the editor:
This picture, of Bryan Tulp jugging his soccer ball, was taken right beside a new football patrons parking lot that was built this summer on open campus recreation area. The players in this park and the others that now stretch from 11th Street over to Potter Lake.
The irony, literally hidden, in your front page picture in the Sept. 6 Karsan is too choice to let pass unnoticed.
occasions, only at the beginning of the 47th Congress in 1881 did both parties have equal numbers — 37 senators each plus two independents
A special session of the Senate was convened on March 4 of that year to deal with Cabinet and agency nominations. A designation in President James Garrifold.
Democrats, who had lost their absolute majority in the 1882 election, thought that they had the votes of both independents, but one of them, Sen William Mabone of Virginia, sided with the Republicans on the crucial vote for committee assignments.
That put the party split at 38:38 and meant that Vice President Chester Arthur, a Republican, would cast the tie-breaking vote for his party.
Mahone's vote did not come cheaply, however Among the Republican's concessions was to make Mahone, though only a freshman senator, chairman of the Agriculture Committee.
The Republicans prepared to elect new Senate officers to replace the Democratic holdovers. But with several GOP senators absent, the Democrats were able to stay the proceedings. The Senate then tried each time the Republicans tried to muster the 39 vote quorum needed to conduct business.
the democraters hoped that these could strike a bargain that would keep their Senate officers in place and ensure the federal committee chairmanships.
After a while, a split developed between President Garfield and Sen. Roscoe Conkling, R.N.Y.
Congkick blocking Garrison's choices for New York customs collector, and the president retaliated May 4 by withdrawing the nominations of five other New Yorkers backed by Congkis.
Coming and the other New York senator, Thomas Platt, then resigned; they thought that the state legislature would quickly re-elect them and send a message to the White House. As it turned out, the two men failed to be re-elected.
Meanwhile, the resignations gave the Democrats a two vote majority in the Senate, but they agreed not to reopen the issue of committee control. The Republicans in turn agreed to keep the Democratic officers of the Senate, and the session finally adjourned May 20.
University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1984
Page 5
Religion continued from p. 1
"The debate has been stimulated by those who want to formulate an atheistic society." he said.
Ford said that those who believed that a public official should separate his personal beliefs from his public actions, as vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro had done in opposing anti-abortion policies, were misjudged.
"To try to divorce your faith from some facets of your life is not even in harmony with the Bible," he said.
MEI. DUBINICK, ASSOCIATE professor of public administration and president of the Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Avenue in Boston, MA, who is in Boean's call for morality in government.
"That's no big deal unless you read between the lines to see some plot by fundamentalists," he said. "And I don't think anyone sees that."
Dubnick said he thought that the president
basically adhered to the traditional separation of church and state. He said Mondale probably recognized that Reagan only wanted a clearer moral tone in American society.
"I think Mondale's just making certain that's what Reagan meant," he said.
However, Dubnick said that many Jews were upset over some recent policies and developments in the federal government, such as this year's Supreme Court decision allowing nativity scenes to be displayed on state property.
DURNICK SAID MANY Jews would keep a ward, live on land consonants with religious beliefs, and learn to speak English.
Father Al Rockers, priest at the Corpus Christi Rectory, 1201 Jana Drive, said that Reagan's religious position was formulated partly as a way to garner votes.
"I think he's expedient politically," he said,
"it's the right thing to say to a lot of people."
National guardsm们 were called out to direct the frantic exodus from Wilmington, where roads leading inland were jammed with evacuees. Nearly 14,000 people in North and South Carolina huddled in public shelters jammed to capacity. A coastal area where several hundred thousand people resided was virtually abandoned.
where the pirate Blackbeard once lurked.
Diana continued from p. 1
Sheriff's Cap, B.D. Mayes in Brunswick County said a handful of threatened residents in his county refused to leave. "We told them if they weren't going to leave, they had to tell us who their next of kin is so we could notify them," he said.
PETTY OFFICER GRADY Sillings said the Oak Island Coast Guard station received a distress call at 7 p.m. from a 40-foot fishing boat on Campbell Island in the Cape Fear River.
"He went aground and his side is to the
sillage." Sillings yelled over the station's
telephone, the scream of the hurricane nearly drowning his voice. "The boat is going to start breaking up. We've got pretty high winds here, running about 100 mph. We've got 10-foot waves breaking on the beach.
"I instructed him to get to Campbell Island and set off flares if he's got them. I told him to take life jackets with him. We will try and get down there to him if the storm subsides a little bit. Right now if we tried to get to him, we'd just break up."
Zimmer said the storm's steering currents were weak and it was wurching back and forth near the shore.
MOTEL CLERKS REPORTED no vacancies for 100 miles inland Hurricane parties began in motel bars while lights flashing. In the revelers droveed out the mound of the wind.
The wealthy Grand Strand area of high-rise condominiums and golf courses around Myrtle Beach, S.C., was spared the
devastation feared earlier, when forecasters expected the storm to come as ashore between Wilmington and Myrtle Beach at high tide; hurling waves 16 feet high against the coast
"Everybody is hunting for rooms and we just don't know where to send them," said Lee Martin at the Holiday Inn in Florence, S.C. 75 miles inland from Myrtle Beach. "My computer shows there are no rooms in Holiday Inns as far north as Lenoir, N.C."
The highest winds, the hurricane center said, were packed tightly in the 25-mile wide area around Diana's eye, which was 10 miles wide.
National Guard Maj. Gen. Hubert Leonard in Wilmington said, "We have 210 men on duty in Wilmington and 355 are on their way to Greenville and Little Washington. We have two jeeps with floodlights, and armored personnel carriers to maneuver through debris."
Tree continued from p. 1
decade, but lack of state funds has delayed construction. Last spring, the Kansas Legislature identified the library as a major project unappropriated $170,000 for preliminary planning.
Pekham, Guyton, Albers, and Viebs Inc. an architectural company in Kansas City, Mo., is working with University and state officials on the library plans.
The plans should be finished by January 1985. Wiechert said. They then will be presented to the Legislature for approval
"We're hoping that by getting the plans moving, the Legislature might consider accelerating funding for the project," he said.
JIM RANZ, DEEN OF libraries, said the new library was "desperately needed" to ease overcrowding at Watson Library and other campus libraries and reading rooms.
"It's not going to be strictly a science library." Ranz said "In the long run, it will be very much like Watson."
Ranz said he knew that the library had landscaping problems.
"That's what the planning money is for," he said. "As a librarian, I'm more concerned with what's inside the building, not what's outside of it."
Wiechert said that KU officials anticipated that the library would be built in two phases. When finished, it will be almost as large as Watson, with close to 151,000 square feet of library space.
THE FIRST PHASE, tentatively scheduled for completion in 1989 at a cost of $13.9 million, will include space for all primary sciences, mathematics, computer science, architecture and geography.
Construction on the second phase, which has not officially been proposed, should begin around 1990, Wiechert said. Business, engineering and music materials will be stored in the areas built during the second phase.
Carlin urges business, schools to cooperate
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ Staff Reporter
Universities must turn to the private sector for financial support to meet the demands of the future. Gov. John Carlin said last night.
CARLIN SPENT THE entire day on campus attending lunch with the KU College Young Democrats, an education forum with local educators, a meeting with Dale P Scannell, dean of the School of Education, a conference with Chancellor Gene A Budig.
Carlin speak to about 60 people at the first Student Union Activities Education Forum for this year in the Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Carlin stressed the importance of funds from private industry and alumni members of universities.
In his speech, the governor said a relationship between industries and universities.
sity research projects would be especially beneficial.
"Universities hold the key to research needed by the private sector," he said. "If our universities serve as laboratories for growth and development through increased economic development."
This increase will produce more state funds to be pumped back into the educational system, he said.
"It is a circular process, and it is a circle that is currently small but has tremendous growth potential," Carlin said.
CARLIN SAID PRIVATE funds also could be used for projects other than buildings.
be used for projects other than
"We think nothing of holding special fund-raising drives to build alumni centers or sports facilities," he said. "Why not a special alumni drive to endow faculty chairs?"
*"Buildings are an important part of a university, but what takes place within them*
During his speech, Carlin complimented Kansas universities, but challenged them to improve in several areas.
right," he said. "But we also have an image problem that casts a shadow on our ability to attract the best and brightest faculty members to our universities."
Carlin also spoke about the importance of combining a liberal arts education with technical or business educations to produce well-rounded graduates.
'Obylogly we are doing a lot of things'
"IT IS IMPERATIVE for the liberal arts and the more career-oriented disciplines of business, engineering and computer sciences, but not so much as one another rather than compete," he said.
Carlin said some programs at universities may need to be scrutinized and changed.
"We need to examine graduation requirements in all our schools to make sure students are prepared for a technological environment, how to communicate with people," he said.
At the education forum, Carlin and local educators discussed teacher certification testing, teaching internships, improvements in school in-service programs and the status of schools of education at Kansas universities.
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KWALITY COMICS Comics & Science Fiction 107 W. 7th. 843-7239
Date
KU big brother big sister program
Be a friend to a Lawrence youth
Wednesday, September 12 or Thursday, September 13
Time Place
7 p.m. 4012 Wescoe
ORIENTATION SESSIONS
Must Attend One of the Sessions!
FOR MORE INFO...CONTACT JEFF AT 841-9216
Sale
9:30-4:30
Spencer Museum Book Shop
September 11-14
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Up to 50% savings on selected art books, note cards, post cards and posters.
GETTING A JOB... DON'T LET TIME RUN OUT
松青清之手
- - CLIP AND SAVE - - - - -
September 18
September 27
October 10
October 31
Videotape available for viewing by appointment.
BEGINNING THE JOB SEARCH
“GETTING DOWN TO BASICS”
2:30-3:20 (L)
3:30-4:20 (P)
3:30-4:20 (P)
3:30-4:20 (P)
CAREER EMPLOYMENT WORKSHOPS
September 21
October 4
October 10
October 22
3:30-4:20 (C)
3:30-4:20 (C)
3:30-4:20 (C)
2:30-3:20 (C)
INTERVIEWING III
“SUCCESSFUL INTERVIEWING”
INTERVIEWING I "PREPARING FOR THE INTERVIEW"
September 19
September 28
October 8
October 17
GOVERNMENT AND MILITARY
EMPLOYMENT
2.30-3.20 (C)
3.30-4.20 (C)
3.30-4.20 (C)
2.30-3.20 (C)
November 8 3:30-4:20 (P)
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT
FALL 1984 UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT CENTER
WRITING EFFECTIVE RESUMES AND LETTERS
September 25 3:30-4:20 (P)
October 16 3:30-4:20 (P)
October 24 3:30-4:20 (P)
October 30 3:30-4:20 (P)
November 14 3:30-4:20 (P)
DRESS FOR SUCCESS FASHION SHOW
September 21 1:00-2:00 (U)
WORKSHOP LOCATIONS
CAREER OPTIONS FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS
(Call the Placement Center to sign up for this
series. All workshops meet from 3:30-
5:00 p.m.)
2:30-3:20 (C)
3:30-4:20 (C)
3:30-4:20 (C)
3:30-3:20 (C)
INTERVIEWING II
"HOW NOT TO INTERVIEW"
October 4 Assessing skills
October 11 Defining options
October 18 Researching the market
October 25 Resumes and Vitae
November 1 Interview skills
September 20
October 2
October 9
October 18
INTERVIEWING IV
"SECONDARY INTERVIEWING AND
DRESSING FOR JOB SUCCESS"
(C) Carruth O'Leary, Rm. 201 (North wing)
(P) Carruth O'Leary, Rm. 102 (Main Floor)
(L) Lippincott Hall, Rm. 3, Lower Level
(U) Kansas Union Big Eight Room
November 6 3:30-4:20 (C)
November 7 3:30-4:20 (C)
CONTACT: UNIVERSITYPLACEMENT CENTER—223 CARRUTH-O'LEARY HALL—TELE 864-3624 FOR INFORMATION/OTHER WORKSHOPS
ALL WORKSHOPS ARE FREE
1. 已知向量 a = (1, -2, 3) 和 b = (2, -1, -4), 则 $ \overrightarrow{a} $ 与 $ \overrightarrow{b} $ 相交的坐标为 ___。
University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
Core curriculum discussed
By ERIKA BLACKSHER Staff Reporter
Two recent additions to proposed curriculum changes have pushed the two-year effort to stiffen general education requirements in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences one step further.
The college Task Force on General Education met with the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising last week to discuss, for the first time, a final recommendation for a core curriculum, said J. Young, chairman of the task force and associate dean of the college.
THE TWO NEW proposals introduced in the report issued last week suggested the formation of a rhetoric/logic requirement and a non-western culture requirement. Students could satisfy the learning communication studies taking communication studies 130 or philosophy 148 or philosophy 149.
The non-western culture requirement could be satisfied by taking three credit hours of a course
approved first by the committee and the college.
That requirement was designed to introduce the student to cultures different from the western world, Young said.
These changes, if passed by the College Assembly during the spring semester, would probably not go into effect until fall semester 1986. Young said. The College Assembly is the governing body of the college and is comprised of students, faculty and administrators.
A SUBCOMMITTEE of the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advertising now must review the new document. After discussion and possible modification, the working document will be presented to the College Assembly. Cate Klassen, associate chairman of the committee and associate chairman of the department of physics and astronomy.
The University Committee on Core Curriculum also is working on University wide, curriculum effects schools outside the college.
have proposed similar changes concerning basic English and math requirements.
The college and the University
THE COLLEGE REPORT submitted by the task force recommends that students seeking bachelor of arts or bachelor of general studies degrees enroll in English 101 upon entering the college, if they have not yet qualified for a third year English course.
Students would be required to have passed English 101 before being eligible to take a third-level English course, such as English 210.
The report recommended that English 101 students take a competency exam as part of the common final exam in that class.
The report also suggested changing the math/logic requirement to a math requirement. Students would be required to enroll immediately in a basic math course, math 101 or math 102, if they had not already qualified to take a second-level math course.
THE REPORT ALSO suggested that the math department develop a competency exam that all math 101 students would have to pass.
County Commission weighs agenda format
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
At a study session, a county advisory board and the heads of several county departments said they favored changing the commission's long-standing policy of having an informal, unpublicized agenda. The change, several officials at the session said, would increase public involvement in county issues.
The Douglas County Commission yesterday moved toward establishing formal agendas for county commission meetings and publicizing the agendas in the local news media.
Action on the issue will be delayed until the heads of county departments have been consulted whether there are any conflicts.
FORMAL AGENDAS NORMALLY have not been compiled
because many county commission items come up at the last minute, said Commissioner Bob Neis.
Commissioner Nancy Hiebert said that this created a loose agenda practice, which she objected to because county residents were often uninformed about the commission's actions. She also pointed out that public comment prevented public comment and that interested citizens were forced to call the commission office for information.
"The general public has indicated that they would like to know what is coming up at commission meetings." Heibert said. "I've had people come up to me two days after commission meetings and say, I wish I would have been there." He added that the increase would increase public awareness, accessibility, comment and opportunities."
Jazzercise Demonstration
Tonight!!
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There will be an organizational meeting on Thursday, Sept. 13 at 5 pm in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union for all those interested in helping plan for the week. Please come.
HIGHER EDUCATION WEEK
Paid for by the Student Senate
Legal Services for Students
MUSICIANS!
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
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- A great atmosphere for relaxing with friends.
Come light the fuse that blows the blues away
The OhSe Smokhouse Restaurant is all you need to say bye-bye to the back-to-school blues.
Every day 2:00-4:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.-closing
- And the tastiest barbeque, hamburgers and salad bar in Lawrence. Come to the OhS Smokehouse Restaurant and blow those blues away
- And the tastiest barbeque
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SAVE $1.00 ON CHOPPED BRISKET SANDWICH
Regular Price $2.29
Bring in this coupon for $1.00 off the regular price of a chopped brisket sandwich with generous quantities of pit smoked brisket covered with our own barbeque sauce on a specially baked bun
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University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1984
Page 7
KROGER MEANS
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KANSAS CITY
FASHION
ADVENTURE
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1984
Page 8
New radio voice of the Jayhawks starts this fall
By BRENDA STOCKMAN
Staff Reporter
A new "voice of the Kansas Jayhawks" combined with a different radio broadcasting system have started a new era in KU inter-collegiate sports broadcasting this fall.
This spring, the athletic department decided to scrap its own broadcast network in favor of selling the broadcast rights to KU athletic events. The sale of the broadcast rights will earn the department a minimum of $5,000 more this year than last.
PETER M. GROSSMAN
The change in broadcast marketing coincided with a change in the play-by-play announcer of football and basketball games.
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN Bob Davis
Davis was hired by Learfair Communications, Jefferson City, Mo., last spring after Learfair purchased the broadcast rights
AFTER NINE CONSECTIVE years, Tom Hedrick is no longer the 'voice of the Jayhawks.' His successor is Bob Davis, an account executive for KLWN-AM in Lawrence.
Hedrick said recently that he agreed with Monte Johnson, athletic director, who thought the broadcasts could use a "change of voice."
Davis said his performance on
Saturday during KU's season-
opening football game against Wichita State University had been acceptable.
"I don't suppose you're ever completely satisfied," he said.
Davis said he was pleased with the way the announcing crew worked together.
THE BROADCAST UNDER the new system included a 30-minute pre-game show that had not been done before. Davis said. Other added features include interviews with the coaches and a review of events at other Big Eight Conference schools.
Davis' contract is for one year, but he said, "I'd certainly like to do it as
passes as long as he. Davis, who has been a broadcaster for 16 years, is a three-time winner of the Kansas sportsscaster of the year award. He has done play-by-play announcing for Fort Hays State University and has filled in for Hedrick at KU.
long as possible."
Listening to KU's first football game of the season instead of announcing the game was strange, Hedrick said.
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Tom Hendrick
He left the position not because the network had changed, but because "I wanted to try something different," he said.
A. D. C.
Hedrick, who also called KU games during the 1960s, said he was burnt out after 16 years of Jayhawk broadcasting
AS DIRECTOR OF the network,
Hedrick sold advertising, did the
play-by-play and promoted the show
to stations around the state.
Hedrick remains at KU as an assistant professor of broadcasting in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications. He is also a free-lance announcer.
"I wanted to stay at the University and have a solid paycheck," Hetrick said.
Although Davis has replaced Hedrick, KU sporting events can still be heard around the state. Learfield has contracted with stations statewide
that will carry the shows, said Doug Vance, director of the sports information office.
The rights fee under the new contract with Learfield Communications is $55,000 for the first year. Vance said.
Hedrick said the network made a $50,000 profit last year.
VANCE SAID, "If the equity exceeds a certain amount then it's a shared revenue."
"In addition to the rights fee, there are a lot of other promotional areas we gain from." Vance said.
KU and Learfield will begin to divide the revenue after it reaches $110,000.
Some of the promotions Leairfield must provide under the contract are 20 billboards, 50,000 bumper stickers, a call in show with the coaches and a minimum of five promotion spots on the play-by-play broadcasts, he said.
Vance said 28 stations had contracted with Leafear to carry broadcasts of KU's football games.
Hedrick said that last year between 25 and 28 stations had contracted to carry the football and basketball play-by-plays.
LEARMFIELD BOUGHT the radio broadcasting rights for KU's inter-collegiate events for five years. Vance said.
Robert Fowler, general manager of Learfield Communications' Sports, said that Learfield also owned the rights to events at Iowa State University. Oklahoma State University and the University of Missouri.
Learfield has been invited to buy the rights to the other four universities in the Big Eight, but Fowler would probably turn down the invitation.
"We want to solidify the network operations at KU, OSU and ISU." Fowler said.
He said that this was the first year Learfield would be broadcasting events at the three universities
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
UNIVERSITY FORUM will meet at 11:45 a.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Charles Geboe, vice president of Haskell Indian Junior College, and entitled "Haskell Centennial: The Past and The Future." Call 843-4933 for luncheon reservations.
THE BROWN BAG LUNCH at noon in 119 Lippincott Hall will feature George Woodyard, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, speaking on "New Currents in Latin American Theatre."
YOUNG AMERICANS for Freedom will meet at 7 p.m. in the International Room of the Union.
COLLEGE YOUNG DEMOCRATS will meet at 9 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
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Sale, east of the Kansas Union. Super buys on clothing, supplies and books with many miscellaneous items too! Sale hours are between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.so stop in between classes and rummage our sale tables. Don't forget to sign up for our free drawing for a 12 speed
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University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1984
Page 9
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CAMPUS AND AREA
There she is . . Miss Kansas packs lucky Jayhawk
University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1984
Page 10
By MARY CARTER Staff Reporter
A black silk organza-and-rhinestone evening gown and a red swim suit weren't the only special things Nancy Lynn Cobb packed last week before she left for the Miss America pageant.
She also took a miniature Jayhawk
it has a crown and a banner and a little KU on one wing," she said yesterday from her hotel room in City. "It's my good luck charm."
In July, Cobb, Wichita junior, won the right to compete in Saturday's Miss America pageant when she was 17 and was assasinated at the state palace in Pratt.
SHE TRAVELED TO New Jersey on Saturday and began the week with a splash on Sunday as photographs of her jumping into a swimming pool as
other contestants looked on were published in newpapers across the country.
"I didn't think the pictures were too attractive," she said, laughing. "We were at a photo session, and the lady in charge said, 'We need a volunteer.' All the girls just stood there in their cover-ups and high heels. There was silence for about 10 seconds, and then I said, 'Oh, I'll do
Monday, Cobb was featured with Miss Kentucky on "Good Morning America."
"I didn't get to see it, but I was thrilled," she said. "They did not interview us or anything They just went down the caesaral and evening gown rehearsal."
The recent publicity over Vanessa Williams' mude photos and subsequent resignation has drawn more press than ever to the pageant, Cobb.
said. "We have been told that there are about one quarter more (reporters) here than last year. They ask all kinds of questions."
"THE PRESS IS CRAZY," she
One reporter asked Cobb if she had ever been photographed nude.
"He kind of gasped and stared at me when I said yes," she said. "Then I told him it was him I was about one or two, and on a bearskin rug."
This year's contestants didn't have to sign any special statements about the results.
"We all just want it to be over with so we can get on with the pageant." she said. "It has created a lot of interest and brought a lot more press to the pageant. Ticket sales are up 20 percent, but sales are not up as much as is sold out. We think it will turn out to be a positive experience in the end."
CORB HAS HEARD THE computer predictions that she'll be a finalist, but she's not taking them to heart.
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
Commission OKs airport contract
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission last night ratified by a 3.2 vote a contract to build a new terminal at the Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Amyx said his vote was consistent with his philosophy about the terminal.
Commissioners Nancy Shontz and Mike Amyx voted against ratifying the contract, for reasons stemming from the contract's original conception last year.
"We need maintenance facilities for the pilots and their planes before we need a terminal." Amyx said after the meeting. Then, airport traffic could be increased to the height of the terminal would be needed, he said.
Shontz agreed, but stressed technical assistance for pilots as a necessity before a terminal could be built.
Shontz and Amyx have been at odds with the other three commissioners, whose opinion is that building the terminal will attract more traffic to the airport, Shontz said.
Shontz also objected to the contract because she thought that the project was too expensive and that it would be collecting the final design was unfair.
"The eventual winners of the competition had several months longer to work on their project," she said.
Wited Securities, a bonding firm from Wichita, had agreed to buy the bonds for the terminal months before the selection competition, Shontz said, giving the eventual winners the advantage of having their financial package prepared at the time of the selection.
Michael Treanor, who with Allen C. Belot was assigned the contract to design the terminal last June, said
the two had been working on the drawings and expected to finish them in November. The bidding for the terminal contract will begin when the drawings are finished, he said.
In other action, the commission:
- Approved a site plan for the southeast corner of Ninth and New Hampshire streets.
An office of the Trading Post and a vintage car lot will occupy the site, which was originally a Snappy Gas Station.
*Approved a site plan for Pinecrest Apartments, 2522-2560 Redbud Lane.
Jeff Messick, of Walter Hicks Associates, the firm representing the site plan, said the plan was basically a rehabilitation of the 16 four-plexes and parking areas in the development.
- Accepted a petition to pave the portion of Ridge Court near 27th Street.
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Department of Music Presents
Claude Frank pianist in a Scholarship Benefit Concert
8:00 p.m. Wednesday, September 12, 1984
8:00 p.m. Wednesday, September 12, 1984
Crafton-Preyre Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office/All seats reserved/For reservations, call 913/864-3982
Public: $8 & $6; KU Students with ID: $4 & $3; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $7 & $5
All participants benefit the KU Music Scholarship Fund
All proceeds benefit the KU Music Scholarship Fund
Program
---
Sonata in G major, Op. 78
Danzas Argentinas
Sonata in C minor, Op. 111
Franz Schubert
Claude Debussy
Alberto Ginastera
Ludwig van Beethoven
100
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1984 Page 11
Israeli leaders striving for unity
By United Press International
TEL, AVIV, Israel — Prime Minister designate Shimon Peres said yesterday he and Likul bdocler Yitzhak Shamir would sign a post forming Israel's first unity government in 14 years, but 11th-hour negotiations to resolve differences continued.
Former Defense Minister Ariel Sharon, a member of the Lilud kibbe's Herut Party, told state-owned Israel Television he did not believe a majority government was possible when the Israeli Parliament, or Knesset, was to meet for a vote of confidence of the unity government.
SHARON SAID THE agreement would fail because under its terms the Labor Party could renge on about 20 new Jewish settlements the linked coalition agreed to have built on the Israel-occupied West Bank he said the issue was a main
difference separating the two parties.
Israeli newspapers reported yesterday that a favorable vote appeared certain in the Knesset, given that both Labor and Herut were expected to accept the agreement.
Peres' announcement yesterday to Israel Radio came after the central committee of his Labor Party and Shamir's Herut Party both agree in mission to a list of Cuban members to be represented in the government.
Herut is the leading party in the Lakud bloc.
Negotiations between representatives of the two parties continued early today. Depending on their outcome, the agreement could be signed later today before the Knesset votes on ending the six-week political impasse at a time of economic crisis for Israel.
A UNITY GOVERNMENT would be Israel's first since a Labor-led
government from 1967-1970
The agreement hammered out by the party leaders after weeks of painstaking negotiations provides for an unprecedented rotation of the prime ministership, with Peres hold the post until 1986.
Shamir will serve as foreign minister under Peres and then trade jobs with him for the 25-month period ending in November 1988.
closing in on workers.
Peres encountered few problems in winning the approval of Labor's central committee for a list of Labor members who would become Cabinet ministers.
But Sharun won approval for the unity government and Herut's Cabinet appointments only after a stormy 2½-hour debate by the party's central committee in which former Defense Minister Ariel Sharon called for a secret vote on the Cabinet list but was overruled
SHARON OBJECTED TO Shamir's decisions against giving jobs to Yigal Cohen-Orgad, the
current finance minister, and to Yoram Aridor, Cohen-Orgad's predecessor.
The Heret appointments include Sharon as minister of industry and trade and current Defense Minister Moshe Arens as minister without a portfolio.
Key appointments to the unty Cabinet from Labor include former President Yitzhak Navon as deputy prime minister and minister of education and former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rubin as defense minister.
If the vote of confidence passes the Knesset, Labor takes over the prime minister's job for the first time since 1977. Rabin resigned that year over disclosures his wife held bank accounts in the United States, in violation of Israeli law.
New elections were held in 1977 and the Likud coalition, headed by Menachem Begin, took power while Labor became the opposition party for the first time since Israel's creation in 1948.
Guerrillas killed in fights against Nicaragua
By United Press International
Nicaragua's Defense Ministry reported yesterday that 11 rebels backed by the United States possibly including an American had been killed in recent clashes with soldiers along the nation's Caribbean coast.
The guerrillas, fighting to oust Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista government, countered Managua's claim with an announcement from Honduras that fighting in the mountainous northern Nicaraguan provinces killed or wounded 175 Sandinista soldiers.
Neither casualty claim could be independently confirmed.
The Defense Ministry also said rebehs had kidnapped N32 Nicaraguan civilians during the past few days, among them Rya Hooker, a college
In El Salvador, leftist guerrillas battling the government of President Jose Napoleon Duarte said over their clandestine Radio Venceneros that they had killed or wounded army combat during the past two weeks.
professor, educated in the United States who is a candidate for the lestist Sandimista Front in the November elections.
for comment on the rebel claim but said earlier that less than six soldiers were wounded in recent operations, which they said killed 23 insurgents
Army spokesmen were unavailable
In Managua, the Defense Ministry said a rebel killed Saturday in eastern Zelaya province appeared to be an American. The identity of the man was not known but the Defense Ministry statement said the man appeared to be an American.
Bombs kill four Beirut radio says
By United Press International
BEHRUT, Lebanon — Guerrilla bombing attacks yesterday killed four Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon only days after a Shite militia leader threatened suicide bombing in Syria upon quipation. Berat radio said.
In Tel Aviv, an Israeli military spokesman denied reports of any Israeli casualties.
But Beurit radio said guerrillas bombed Israeli troops twice in southern Lebanon, prompting Isis to begin a search for suspects.
IN THE FIRST bombing, three soldiers were killed and several others wounded near the southern Lebanese village of Aita Al Shaab, a Shite village one mile from the Israeli border, the report said.
Israeli soldier the second bomb was planted near the Shite market town of Nataliyah, 8 miles to the north, where one Israeli soldier was reported killed.
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The reported attacks came two days after Justice Minister Nabih Berri told a parade of his Shiite Muslim Amal militia that he had ordered 30 youths to make suicide attacks against Israel targets in the South.
In other developments, Prime Minister Rashid Karami announced that the Cabinet would meet in full session today despite
"GOING TO CABINET meetings is not important, but securing solutions is," Berri said, adding that Tourism Minister and Druse Muslim militia leader Waidul Mughna planned to buyout the meeting.
vows by Berri to boycott Cabinet meetings.
The prime minister said that the meetings with the envoys, aimed at securing the two ministers' attendance, were positive, but gave no further details. Beirut radio said. Jumbait already has missed the last two Cabinet meetings.
AS KARAMI NEGOTIATED in Beirut, rival Muslim militiamen in the northern port city of Tripoli exchanged brief gunfire despite a peace plan negotiated by Syria, security sources said. There were no immediate reports of casualties.
The security sources said they hoped the violence did not signal the collapse of a two-day ceasefire agreement and a return to the rival militias' long-running feud, which has killed more than 500 people this year.
norm and Jumbblat are demanding the Christian government start discussions between individual ministers on political reforms, promised after their Muslim militias' military victories over the government last year.
LOOK AND FEEL GREAT
* STUDIOS STARTWOAT
* TWO BEDROOM $200
* TWO BEDROOM *DUPLEXES
CEDARWOOD
ADA DAYTONA
2411 Cedarwood Ave. Phone 883-1116
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING, HOT TUB,
& HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
$2 discount with KU ID
Silver Clipper
To please you is all pleasure
HAVE YOU BEEN to the WHEEL LATELY?
FREE DAY
MEMBERSHIP *
KEEP YOUR SUMMER TAN!
GHOSTBUSTERS
7.26 9:38 5:00 Daily
CINEMA 1 FILMBOARD 340-620 FLASHPOINT R
R
J. 9:30 A.M. 15:00 P.M. Sun.
FALL SALE
2 for 1
(or 25% off single membership)
Offer extended until Sept. 14
WILLCREST 2
THE ICONIC HOME MARKET
Their time has come!
REVENGE OF THE NERDS
7.30 & 9.30 Dairy
CINEMA 2
TELEPHONE ONLINE
THE MUSEES The Woman in Red
Woman in Red $ 1.15 7:35 9:30
Twilight Bargain Show
GET NOTICED
NOW OPEN 24 HOURS
HILLCREST at 9th & Iowa
SOUTH at 23rd & Louisiana
— Also Open 24 Hours —
RUSTY'S BAKERY - THE BEST IN TOWN
PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 12-18
HILLCREST 1
914-307-4000
CLINT
EASTWOOD
A cap on the edge
TIGHTROPE.
2 1/2 W x 10 Dia.
RUSTY'S FOODCENTERS LAWRENCE * 8
24HOURS
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TELEPHONE BRISTON
An Adventure in Fantasy
BO
DEREK
Bolero
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
BROADWAY STAR
Puncher
Purple Rain
7 38 & 9 38, 21 55 Rail St. Durant
RED BARON
Pizzas
PEPPERoni
TWO
FRENCH
PIZZAS
PIZZA
RED, BARON
Cocktails and Wine Bar
TUPTEROM
FRUIT
ALCOHOL
BAR
Det Monte
GRAIN
WHOLE SHEET
WHOLE KERNEL Corn
Del Monte
QUALITY
CUT GREEN
SWEET PEAS
NO SALT ADDED
Del Monte
QUALITY
SINCE 1947
WHOLE KERNEL COW
ROUND STEAK
Boneless
RUMP ROAST 1.79
135 LB.
Del Monte VEGETABLES 16.17 oz can
FRENCH STYLE GREEN BEANS. SWEET PEAS, NO SALT
CUT GREEN BEANS SWEET PEAS
CUT GREEN BEANS, NO SALT MIXED VEGETABLES
FRENCH STYLE GREEN BEANS, NO SALT
CREAM STYLE CORN, NO SALT
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WHOLE KERNEL CORN, NO SALT
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RED BARON
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PIZ ZAS 12 OZ.
SAUSAGE OR
PEPPERONI
169
BORNLESS RUMP ROAST 1.79 LB.
Rusty's
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KRAFT GRATED 8 OZ CAN
PARMESAN CHEESE
SARGENTO
PIZZA CHEESE
8 OZ. .99
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IGA TOMATO SAUCE 8 OZ. CAN .19
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COLORADO
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RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
NO. 256
DOUBLE COUPON
AmI Intl
manufacturer's own free coupon from Rusty's
get the duplicate from Rusty's
free shipping items and fluid milk
To try to reduce holiday free coupons,
discounts greater than one dollar or less,
find one coupon per manufacturer's own free
family.
EXPIRES SEPT. 19, 1984
DOUBLE C
Manufacturers' costs of shipments and freight
offers them no inclusion in船费, but includes
taxes, duties and land taxes.
To help validate your shipment cost,
suppliers must provide the value of the item
and include the cost per manufacurer's cost.
EXPIRES SEPT. 19, 1984
FRESH LARGE
WHITE MUSHROOMS
MILD MEDIUM
YELLOW ONIONS
4 lbs. S1
图
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
NO. 256
— DOUBLE COUPON —
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NO. 256
— DOUBLE COUPON —
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EXPIRES SEPT. 19, 1984
EXPIRES SEPT. 19, 1984
EXPIRES SEPT. 19, 1984
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
NO. 256
— DOUBLE COUPON —
Amt. Intl.
manufacturer's full coupon and
include the savings from Rusty's
manufacturer's full coupon and
include the savings from Rusty's
manufacturer's full coupon and include the savings from Rusty's
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But to obtain free, interest-free
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EXPIRES SEPT 19, 1984
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
256
COUpon
Amt Till
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S II
NO. 2
DOUBLE C
manufacturer, trust off company from the
buyer, guarantee the service from the
buyer, follow dates and stock level.
For in-house manufacturer this company
greater than one office in a country.
For one company per manufacturer,
the same company per manufacturer.
EXPIRES SEPT. 19, 1984
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
256
COUPON —
Amt Intl
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
NO. 256
DOUBLE COUPON
All
Felt
This coupon is valid from the date indicated on the back cover and shall not be redeemed before the expiration date. This coupon is for one coupon per manufacturer, not a single coupon per manufacturer.
EXPIRES SEPT. 19, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1984
10659
Microchip delayed shuttle
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — A faulty microcircuit sparked a computer failure aboard the space shuttle Discovery in June, forcing a postponement of one day of the countdown for its maiden voyage, a top Pentagon official said yesterday.
Donald Moore, deputy executive director for quality assurance of the Defense Logistics Agency, cited the tiny, pronged electronic part as one of 15 million produced and 'imadequately tested' by the CIA. Court and toold to the IBM plant at Oswego, N.Y., during the past eight years.
He said the 15 million microcircuits that are "potentially suspect" as faulty were components in more than 50 weapons, including two late models of the B-32 bomber - the prime U.S. airborne weapon designed to carry nuclear bombs.
Norman Neureituer, Texas Instrument's corporate staff vice president, acknowledged the company made the vital failed microchip, but denied the company's "testing irregularities" caused a delay in Discovery's launch.
"It is erroneous to say TI was responsible for the delay in the race while" he said in Dallas.
"A tire goes flat, a light bulb burns out under certain circumstances," he said. "We and IBM (maker of the shuttle computer) view it as a random failure."
Neuretiere refused to link the shuttle delay to recent disclosures that a number of key tests apparently were improperly conducted on microcircuits used in a vast array of military hardware.
Other weapons affected by the suspected faulty microcircuits include the new B-1B bomber, the F-111 bomber, the F-15 fighter, sonar aboard the Ohio class submarines carrying missiles and the Los Angeles class attack subs. Navy's A-6 and A-72 bombers and the P-0C Orion aircraft that has submarines, industry sources said.
In the latest and potentially most damaging quality control problem
plagging the defense establishment, the Pentagon has halted acceptance of weapons and other military gear from defense contractors who may have used them in war. In instruments until it is determined whether they are faulty.
"Any weapon that might contain sophisticated systems could be involved." Moore said.
Moore was asked whether a Texas Instruments semi-coordinator, which was not manufactured to military specifications, was responsible for the failure of the IBM's $12.2 million backup coordinator at the Disc Computer Company that led to a one-day postponement June 25 in the countdown.
"That's absolutely correct," he replied. He said the component caused a circuit to break in the computer.
An engine problem that surfaced later in the countdown forced a two-month delay in Discovery's maiden voyage.
Pentagon spokesman Michael Burch cited the possibility of a criminal investigation.
CHARLOTTE, Teen. — Mary Ann Garton Bass married her son and his kinship from him for six years because "she did not want any other woman to have him," a prosecutor said yesterday.
By United Press International
"The son just discovered the true relationship about two weeks ago after hearing rumors and talk from relatives," said Assistant District Attorney General Dan Cook. "He was very emotionally upset and distracted when he found out. It's just bizarre."
Incestuous marriage news to son
BASS, 43. WAS CHARGED with felonious criminal incest for marrying Danny James Sullivan, 26, in 1978. A separate legal action has been filed to have the marriage annulled.
The woman pleaded not guilty and was released Monday on $5,000 bond.
Bass was seeking psychiatric help for an "obsession" with her son, officials said.
The penalty for criminal incest is imprisonment for not less than five and not more than 21 years.
BASS WAS SULLIVAN'S natural mother and she had also formally adopted him. He was unaware of either fact, officials said.
When he was 18, Sullivan became curious about his natural parents and returned to the Charlotte area to look for them. Someone suggested he talk to a kid calling him she was his mother. Cook, Sant, and Sullivan went to visit her.
They dated, fell in love and married on Jan 29, 1978. Stullin wished to stay.
ANOTHER BIZARRE TWIST was added, Cook said, by a court petition"filed by Bass and her ex-husband, Charles Bass, who was not the child's natural father, to formally adopt Sullivan as their son.
Couple convicted for letting daughter die
By United Press International
David B. and Kathine C. Bergmann, Ligonier, Ind., whose 9-month old daughter died June 7 of what a doctor called the worst case of meningitis he'd ever seen, are the third and fourth members of the Gauche family in Indiana in the past month of allowing a child to die without treatment.
ALHION, Ind — A fundamentalist couple who prayed, fasted and quoted Scripture over a dying infant daughter without calling a doctor was convicted yesterday of reckless homicide and child neglect.
The Bergmanns' secretive church, which teaches reliance on prayer and faith in God for healing and rejects medicine and doctors, rarely allows members to discuss their beliefs in public.
"I didn't kill my daughter," Mrs. Bergmann, 27, told jurors in closing arguments."
GQ HAIRSTYLE
For Her of Love
611 West 9th
843-2138
Yello Sub Delivery
every night
6 p.m. midnight
841-3268
KU STUDENTS AND FACULTY
We still have limited number of completely furnished apartments and townhomes. Some are perfect for three people; all close to campus! Call or stop by Hanover Place—14th and Mass
and Mass.
Sundance—7th and Florida or
Florida of Tanglewood—10th and Arkansas.
841-5255, 841-1212,
749-2415, 842-4455.
Offered by:
Mastercraft Management
every Wednesday 7 p.m.-midnight $1 cover
LADIES DRINK FREE
2222 Iowa
841-BREW
Student Union Activities presents THE KANSAS UNION OPEN HOUSE WEEK
**********
West Coast Saloon
September 12 Travel and Outdoor Recreation Fair Kansas Union Ballroom 7 p.m.-10 p.m.
Bookstore Sidewalk Sale
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
in front of the Kansas Union
***********************
When you graduate, you will have a job in the fleet as a naval or marine officer. You will train in Nuclear Submarines, Surface Ships, Naval Aircraft or one of many other exciting fields.
If you are a student at the University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Scholarship. The Navy Scholarship provides full tuition, all text books plus $100 a month spending money.
Call Lieutenant Joe Johannes at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps (NROTC).
CHECK OUT THE ADVANTAGES OF NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS
COULD THE NAVY INTEREST YOU IN PAID TUITION?
Paid Tuition, Spending Money, and a Job. That is Navy ROTC
STUDENTS
FrameUp
custom framing & gallery
UP TO 40% OFF
SELECTED FRAMED ARTWORK by Monet, Sanchez, O'Keefe, Schurr
Sale Dates Sept. 8-Sept.15,1984
15 E. 8th, Downtown 843-0498 Tue.-Sat. 10-5:30
no other coupons or disc. apply with special sale prices
PARKS AND TREASURES
ENJOY A FAMILY WEEKEND IN THE COUNTRY
$46 THE DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS Ask for the Family Weekend Special when you reserve a room any Friday Saturday or Sunday night. Bring the
kids along. you get a classroom room, so up to 4 people can stay. Or for only $56-90 per room per night we will include a delicious buffet breakfast for two! Swim in our indoor pool, relax in a soothing hot-tub, play racquetball, enjoy exquisite cuisine and service. Shop the Park, Bannister and Metcalf South Malls. Or just relax and enjoy being waited on for a change. Naturally, this offer is subject to room availability. For reservations, call (800) 528-0444 or dial direct (913) 649-4500 The Doubletree Hotel at Corporate Woods, 10100 College Boulevard, Overland Park, Kansas (1-435 at U.S. 69)
DOUBLE RIEF HOTEL
KANSAS CITY
ZEN MEDITATION
圆悟人一见此佛
一浮于云上
故而曰
圆悟人一见此佛
一浮于云上
故而曰
Intensive Retreat September 14-16
Public Talk Saturday, September 15, 1:30 p.m.
Master Dharma Teacher George Bowman
Kansas Zen Center
1115 Ohio Street
842-8909
Please inquire about regular classes and formal practice schedule.
BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL
Accessories with the purchase of any
- Free Racks
$50 FREE
- Free Pumps
- Free Locks & Cable
- Free Lights
etc., etc., etc.
Sekai
Raleigh
Motobecane
Sokai
Bicycle Annex
SVA FILMS
TONIGHT
"FFEERVESCENT."
'Eric Rohmer's effortlessly witty, effervescent new French man I hope will win new admirers for Mr. Rohmer, one of the most original and elegant film makers at work today in any country. Another rare Rohmer treat' -
-Vincent Cunby. NEW YORK TIMES
"BRILLIANT."
"BRILLIANT"
- Anamelle Langlet as Pauline emerges from the Brittany beaches as one of the most inspiring cinema a history. A bright summer entertainment!
- Andrew Sarris. VILLAGE VOICE
"DELIGHTFUL
"DELIGHTFUL
A film of summer sunlight,
bare skin and escalating
amorous misunder-
standings - wit and irony.
abound. An erotic round
that can only lead to
those wonderful Rolher
insights into the mind and
heart."
-David Ansen, NEWSWEEK
I
ERIC ROHMER'S Pauline at the beach
Woodruff Auditorium Level 5, Kansas Union 7:30 p.m. $2.00
---
University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1984
Page 13
SPORTS ALMANAC
Minnesota 5, Kansas City 1
a b b h i l
Wilson ef c
Jonfr e f
Molley l f
McRae h f
White 2h
Ballant i f
Ballant i f
Pigry 2h
Pigry 2h
Walsh 2h
KANSAS CITY MINNESOTA
a b h i j k l
Pukketet h 1
Teufelh 2
Hulcher h 1
Hulcher h 1
Tranemack h 1
Garthb h 1
Lambert c 1
Lambert c 1
Lambert c 1
a b h i j k l
Dent ss 0 0 0 0
toberts ph. 0 0 0 0
Conceptions 86 87 88
Totals 31 1 64 Totals 25 5 9 5
Kansas City 000 000 000—1
Minnesota 001 000 10x—5
Gauert HI-Heikb (25) Brunnyk (30)
SP - Niaphil (30)
IP II E ER BB SO
Kansas C19
Lleibrand L (6.7)
Berkshire H
Sberhagen
Hamburg
1.6 2.3 1.1 0.2
1.1 1.1 1.1 0.2
Vienna W1a (6.2)
Wilhelm St (7.9) A 20,902
*Vola* W (16 12) 9 6 1 1 2 9
*WP- Leibbrandt* T - 2.21 J - 20.992
Game-winning RBI – Hatcher (12)
E. Ballan, Bancanela, Slaughter DP:
Minnesota 1. LOB Kansas City 6.
Minnesota 7. 2B Motley, Teoule 18.
W 18 Pct
Boston 30 60 72
Chicago 80 65 500 7
New York 80 65 500 7
Philadelphia 76 69 521 11
Milwaukee 76 69 521 11
Philadelphia 76 69 521 11
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia 6 Chequered 3 Pittsburgh 6 Montreal 1 New York 2 San Francisco 3 Cincinnati 7 San Francisco 9 Atlanta 8 Home Depot 9 San Diego
Tuesday's Results
Wednesday's Games
Montreal Smith -11-11 at Chicago
Broadway 11-30
WARRIOR
San Diego 10 62 566 --
Houston 12 73 497 10
Albuquerque 17 74 490 11
San Jose 17 74 465 14
Wednesday's Games
(Borch 5:1), 1:20 p.m.
St. Louis Kearns 4:14 and Forsch 2:4) at
Philadelphia (Rawley 8:4 and K. Gross 8:5); 2.
Cincinnati 62 81 429 20
San Francisco 61 83 424 20
Bord 3:11 (1) : 20 p.m.
St. Louis (Kespira 4-4 and Forsch 2-4) at
6:15 p.m.
Philadelphia (Hawley 8.4 and K. Gross 8.5) 2.
4:35 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Tudor 9.10) at New York
Fittsburgh / Tudor 9:10 at New York
Goodenix 6:15, p.m.
NFL Team Statistics
Gooden 15.8) 6.35 p.m.
San Francisco Grant 1-2) at Cincinnati
(705) 614-7995
Tulips 92' 3.6 x 15'p
Atlanta Perez 11-6) at Houston Nikroo
10' 7 x 14'p
San Francisco / Grant 12: at Cincinnati
Tibbs 32: 6:35 p.m.
Alanta / Peper 11:6 at Houston / Nekro
14:10) 7:40 p.m.
Los Angeles (Valenzuela 11:15) at San Diego
(Drakeway 8:2) 9:05 p.m.
NFL Team Statistics AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE Offense
| int. | rush | pass | loss |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| San Diego | 941 | 277 | 154 |
| Cincinnati | 814 | 134 | 64 |
| Pittsburgh | 738 | 167 | 301 |
| Miami | 646 | 167 | 198 |
| Seattle | 777 | 118 | 51 |
| Indianapolis | 674 | 102 | 499 |
| New York City | 697 | 102 | 498 |
| Kansas City | 641 | 128 | 397 |
| Atlanta | 397 | 168 | 419 |
| Baltimore | 367 | 148 | 349 |
| Buffalo | 492 | 168 | 394 |
| NY Jets | 492 | 168 | 394 |
| Cleveland | 406 | 322 | 240 |
| Denver | 403 | 312 | 240 |
| Philadelphia | 453 | 134 | 319 |
Pittsburgh 146 171 363
LA Beachers 485 291 250
San Francisco 335 198 200
Seattle 535 149 366
New York Jets 653 184 148
Chicago Bears 634 168 148
Cincinnati 646 195 451
New England 669 165 501
Miami 691 283 208
Missouri 698 110 398
Indianapolis 723 227 498
Buffalo 801 123 475
Deerwood 804 121 478
Kansas City 863 169 358
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
| FIRST | W | L | PCT | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Detroit | 91 | 52 | .641 | 17 |
| Toronto | 83 | 65 | .605 | 17 |
| Baltimore | 78 | 65 | .543 | 14 |
| New York | 77 | 66 | .530 | 14 |
| Boston | 76 | 65 | .530 | 14 |
| Cleveland | 64 | 84 | .449 | 32 |
| Milwaukee | 60 | 84 | .447 | 32 |
Minnesota 74 70 514
Kansas City 73 21 593
California 71 70 504
Chicago 66 77 462
Oakland 67 78 471
Tuesday's Results
--req, value $2.82
Toronto 10, New York 3
Chicago 16, Los Angeles 4
Dallas 8, Baltimore 2
Minneapolis 5, Kansas City 9
Chicago 7, Oakland 8
Chicago 10, Boston 9
Chicago Burts 2-11 at Oakland (Control 1-3) 2:15 p.m.
Contro 1.5 - 2.5 p.m.
New York (Fontenai 6.8) at Toronto
(Fontenai 6.3)
(Alexander 13, 5) 6 p.m. (D)
Detroit (Morton) 17:10 at Baltimore (D)
Kansas City Black (14.11) at Minnesota
Pittsburgh 7-5 3:12 m.
Milwaukee (McClure, 4-6) at Boston (Drooks in), 11:35 a.m.
Butcher 12.8, 7.3 p.m
Cleveland (Hyeonse 16.6) at California
College
Kison 4:3) 9:30 p.m.
Texas (Mason 4:2) at Seattle (Young 4:7)
9:35 p.m.
--req, value $2.82
WELCOME TO THE PUB
TacoVia'
Expires 9/26/84
1 SANCHO
1 TACO and a MEDIUM DRINK $1.98
Open late every night
1700 W. 23rd.
Try The Sanctuary For Lunch!
DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS
Noon to 2 p.m
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
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98
99
100
All you can eat
$275
Join Us For Good Food At The Sanctuary!
- Special -
$750
16 oz. T-BONE!
comes with fries, salad, dinner
This not a coupon item!
Not good with any other coupon or offer
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan Reciprocal with over 235 clubs.
843-0540
SCHUMM FOODS COMPANY
TABLE SERVICE & FOOD SERVICE EMPLOYEES NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. and evening shifts open
Some experience necessary
— Good starting salary
- 6 month raise
Extra quarterly profit sharing
Apply at: Schumm Food Co. office
"above the Smokehouse"
between 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
--becoming buses in Armenia ROTC.
Probably because buses ROTC is install of the kind of people other people group of their interest to meet.
WOW! FILM DEVELOPING! THRU SEPT. 13th
12 EXP $1.06
24 EXPOSURES... $2.06
15 EXPOSURES... $1.56
36 EXPOSURES... $3.06
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.: Lawrence, Ks.
OFFER APPLIES TO BUSS. LLC
COLLEGE PRINT ONLY
BECOME A 4-LETTER MAN.
ARMY
ROTC ROTC ROTC
In other words, when people join Army
BOTC they often most people a lot like them.
Who are a lot of interesting and exciting
most notable lives in Armenia BCTC?
RBC students want to be high achievers who are interested in more than their studies. They prefer to study with a teammate, but they love being a great team.
CONTACT: Captain Moon, Rm 213
Mil Sci Bldg, 804-3311
address
For more information, contact your Professor at
the provided address.
ARMY ROTC.
BE ALLYOU CAN BE.
SUA
MAGAZINE EDITED BY
TOM MCKAY
Travel & Outdoor Recreation Fair Wed., Sept.12 7--10pm Union Ballroom
Fairness
Educated people are our greatest asset. It is vital that we invest State resources in the fair and full funding of our institutions of
1970-80
higher education particularly, the flagship university of our Regents System—the University of Kansas.
I will continue to work for you and our University.
John
SOLBACH
Continued fairness . . .
Pd. Adv. Pay for Boys - H reflect School Committee
Lowly Winner coachiicipation - LJ Sinebock Treasure
HOT NEWS
INTRODUCING
HOT NEW
SALAD BAR
ITEMS
FROM
SIRLOIN
STOCKADE
W
Iowa
N
S
23rd
Ridge
Court
E
2923 Ridge Court
- Breaded Zucchini, Okra or Squash
* Potato Skins
When you purchase any entree at Satinin Stockade, you can enjoy your 50-item salad bar plus 'hot' new items like
Expires Oct. 15, 1984 Offer good with Denise only
$5.00 OFF
Denise Criss
- Corn *
* Corn * many more of your favorites PLUS some delicious
surprises.
Welcome Back Just wanted to let you know that I'm At Reflections
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
1015 IOWA
FREE CONE WITH EACH MEAL!
shampoo, cut, blowdry permanent waves, & highlighting.
(1234567890)
FURNITURE RENTAL
QUALITY FURNISHINGS at affordable prices
Individual Items - Complete Groups GENEROUS PURCHASE OPTION
C
Months Leaving
No Deposits
Quick Delivery
PRODUCED
NARRING
LAWRENCE
FOR JEANE'S
MODERN-SECTIONAL-RATTAN
CONTEMPORARY-TRADITIONAL
Brand Name Household Furnishings well as
MODERN-SECTIONAL
CONTEMPORARY-TRADITIONAL
Brand Name
Household
Furnishings
as well as
HOM
HOME DECORATION
LITTON
Microwave Cooking
RCA
Electronics
N
FURNITURE
Thompson-Crawley FURNITURE RENTAL
FURNITURE RENTAL
520 F. 32nd Terrace
841-5212
520 E. 22nd Terrace
FAMOUS BRANDS WAREHOUSE
CLOTHING SALE
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY ONLY
LADIES DESIGNER JEANS
• BON JOUR • BRITANNIA
• OLEG CASSINI • OSCAR DE LARENTA
• Calvin Klein
Reg. $38
TOP NAME BRANDS
IZOD, Levi, Union Bay,
Puritan, Campus, Arrow
Generra, Bon Jour, Calvin
Klein, Gloria Vanderbilt,
Liz Claiborne
MENS FAMOUS NAME
BUTTON DOWN
OXFORD
CLOTH DRESS
SHIRTS
$5.99
Reg. $24
MEN'S AND LADIES
FAMOUS MAKER
SWEATERS
(Cottons, acrylics, wools,
asstd. styles...values to $45)
FROM $9.99
MEN'S FAMOUS
NAME
SPORT SHIRTS
Reg. $18
2.99
LADIES
FALL
TOPS
$1.99
SPECIAL ASSORTMENT
MEN'S GENERRA
SLACKS
Twills
&
Cords
Reg. $34
$9.99
RACKS RESTORED DAILY
WITH NEW MERCHANDISE
GLORIA VANDERBILT
BLOUSES AND
COTTON WOOL
SWEATERS
$10.99
REG. $38
POLO
BY RALPH LAUREN
BOYS
KNITS &
OXFORDS
STRIPES
& SOLIDS
$12.99
IF
perf.
to $45
MENS FASHION SPECIALS!
SWEATSHIRT
ASSORTMENT
FROM
$5.99
COTTON
SWEATERS
BY CALVIN
KLEIN &
RON CHERESKIN
12.99
Levi's
SPORT
SHIRTS
6.99
2 DAYS ONLY
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SOUTHERN HILL SHOPPING CENTER
POLO BY RALPH LAUREN BOYS
POLO
BY RALPH LAUREN
BOYS
KNITS & OXFORDS STRIPES & SOLIDS $12.99 IF perf. to $45
WEDNESDAY...SEPT.12...10AM-9PM THURSDAY...SEPT.13...10AM-9PM
SOUTHERN HILL SHOPPING CENTER 1601 West 23rd Street AT OUSDAHL, WEST SIDE OF CENTER BEHIND PERKINS
September 12,1984 Page 15
The University Daily KANSANC
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily KANSAN
CLASSIFIED RATES
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
B45 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75
B20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80
B23 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.85
over 5 months old 25c 50c 75c 1.05
AD DEADLINES
Mon
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
$4.20
per inch inch
OfficeFind Display ... $4.20
per inch inch
OfficeFind displays advertisements can be only a wide and wide more than six inches deep.
Classified Display $4.20
per column inch
Classified display advertisements can be only one
wide and wide or more than six inches deep.
Large depth can be one or two columns deep.
Small depth can be one or two columns deep.
Neither advertiser's warranty exp for larger
Advertisers in classified display ads.
POLICIES
- Words set in BOOZ!
* Deadlines same as Booz Advertisement - 1-3
* Words set in publication
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
applications are now being accepted for Student
applications Members for the 1935 Kansas Believe-
ing Field House. Become a part of this great KU
rallition. Deadline for application. Sept. 30
- Blind non-adjs - please add $2 & service charge
* Checks must accompany all classified ads marked by the University Daily Kanran
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in HOLD FACE count as 1xwords
* Deadlines same as Display Advertisement—2
product Stretcher coupons Thurs. evenings Buy 10 & receive $1 coupon toward next purchase reference Malls Shopping Center
- Working beyond beginnings
* Move rates based on consecutive day increments
- Deductions same as Display Advertisement – working days prior to publication
- Deductions same as Post Display insertions
"ERIDAYS' AT CANTERBURY
- **More rates have to be issued, or only**
- **No responsibility is assumed for more than one item per order of any advertisement**
- All unauthorized credit has been established
- Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements
- No responsibility for damages centres or alteration of any advertisement
* No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified
ARCH PAPERS 306 page catalog. 15,278
Bash $2.90 RESEARCH 11322 IHSA
Los Angeles 900521 2131 -477-8226
VIII
(Classified displays affected towards most)
(Classified displays do not count towards most)
- Checks must accompany all classified ads notice to The University, Daily Kansan
• All advertisements will be required to pay in adamax
GRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS SPECIALIST COMPUTER SPECIALIST Haiti graduate research resource in design and implementation of a survey to identify microcomputer hardware software for geography students in design, implementation of a survey to identify microcomputer hardware software for geography students in geography, planning, computer science or related discipline required for accreditation. Experience in NASP experience with microcomputers required background and or coursework in geography in undergraduate or bachelor's degree from the Geographic Science Program. Room 2403 Wheels Hall. 904-4725 Applications deadline is January 1st. Opportunity at employer.
171 SOUTH THRIFT SHOP for clothing and
sports. Sat 12:30 Tue 9:4 Thur 9:12:30
Mon 9:41 Van 94:30
- correct inception of any advertised
• no reprints on cancellation of pre-paid classified
advertising
ADRELIGHT SPECIAL. Thus Thursday Eve.
0:00 - 2:00, off all hides in stock
SPEHENCE, Mail shopping Center
this earned rate discount
* Examples of all mail order items must be submitted by
* email or other送寄方式
In the University Tampa Kauai
• All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
Kansas Delta Student Committee is looking for new members. Pick up application at the Track 143 Allen Field House. Deadline is Sept. 21.
EGARCH PAPER WRITING STUDY SKILLS
WORKSHOP: Learn to define a topic, organize
concepts, use the library, manage your time
Wednesday, September 12. 9 p.m.-10 p.m., Dining
Audunner, Dyche Hall FREEL, from 12 Noon-
Assistance Center, 12 Strung Hall
647-847-3520
hairy, Bennett, of Charme Beauty
Hairy is now at Angles Beauty Salon, 940
Kearnsworths. M'Call 813-6450 for Shurley
nother Special Shampoo & Haircut - 88
THE FAR SIDE
Rent 19° Color T. V $28.80 a month. Curtis Mathes 144 W. Ward 212 D. 852-531 Open 9:30 - 9:00 M-F 9:30 - 10:00 Sat
Rent VRX with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Matts. 1447 W. 23rd, 842-5751 Open 9:30 - 9:00,
M/F, 5:30 - 6:00
SENIORS YEARBOOK PROTOTHEA'S Showing is taking place now, in Student Organizations & Activities Office. 405 Kaukai Union Call your office for appointment. 12, 5, 31. B. Kaukai
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All requests. Lighting included. Reasonable Rates. Referees: 749-1211
Tried of large long distance bills? Switch to TML your only quick and efficient long distance company in Lawrence, WA 95067. Call anywhere in the U.S. Hawaii, Puerto Rico and Alaska. There are no monthly minimums, no servery charge; call into your TML representative at 843-9506.
All to Kansas Students and Personnel. From, July Hueh, Candidate for Representation. From, July Hueh. Do not act directly as being conducted in your area this month. It is important to sign up and to become involved in the initiative. Thank you! Committee to ELEC JACK, MID. (Ailee Vaughn,
University Studies, quality party pics. Cal.
Photography at 841-3279
FOR RENT
3 BR Apt. Utilities paid, 7 blocks. K.U. 2 blocks downtown Covered parking, large backyard, bayport. West 80th St. Phone 264 223 for info
Available now. Permitted two bedroom apart-
ment. 1290 Wheat. One block north of Unim-
bell canin, new kitchen, large parch, furnace
$40 plus gas and electricity. 842-1164
Large, furnished one-bedroom Apt. w/ AC
luxury Paid, SLS, Sept. FREE, 11th & Kentucky.
0424-637-9287 or 7-6pm - 7-pm
SAVE $300
No rent until October
2-bedroom home
1 room upstairs
Phone 845 2528 after 5 p.m.
SAVE $300
Lease 4-bedroom house $350/mo. Off street
parking Call 843-0570
Male or female roommate Three college girls looking for 8 roommate Large 4 bedroom Traitville townhouse $140 plus/1 utilities Very comfortable 841-907
- opportunity for roommates. One block from campus,
4 big bedrooms, living room. kitchen with
dining area, bathroom with 2 vintages, back patio.
Bedrooms have windows and a bathroom 160
per roommate for 4 also, 3 bedroom unit like
above for $12 per room for 3. To improve
appreciate all utilities call 844-7249, 791-1144
By GARY LARSON
© 1984 Universal Press Syndicate
The young dog's nightmare premature mange
BLOOM COUNTY
spacious 6-bedroom apartments available for fall; for 1 or 2 people include fully equipped kitchen, carpeting, central air, laundry room, bathrooms, water & gas water payer. For more in-call 843 7233.
Sublease thru Dec 31 Available October
2 bedroom at Pepperfield Apts; Uninured, on
haute suite 8437179 events, 296/205 days
Rese 842 5036
Try cooperative living! Sunflower House, 1406
Tennessee 749 8871 Ask for Dawn. Inexpensive &
private rooms are available
TWO STORY APT. On his route, 2 IR/1, 8H/2A
A; CPT needed; W D wookup. No children or
pets please. Prefer quiet, mature couple or in-
division if you play volumes. Dep and 3 yrs.
FOR SALE
10 speed, lightweight competition bike, bought in Europe $200. Also 10-speed Schwinn Varsity, $75. Price negotiated. Kit. 842-6885
1975 Toyota Corolla, good condition, runs great,
must sell. $500, 843 0156 or 8427 4822
1978 Ford Clubwagon window Van: $2250
VANGUARD 470 Olympic class Sailboat: $2500
841-7025
843-7025
1980 Honda Hawk 400 cc. Low miles, excellent condition. Helmet, cover. $900. 864-1116
180 Red Hoda 70, Passport with haskets: 100 miles and in good condition $35, negotiable Call 624-6722 Data
3-Piece living room set, couch, love seat, coffee table, end table, leather stuffed chair: 841.8484, after 6 p.m.
1981 Fender Stratocaster, $375. Classical Guitar,
$100. After 5:30, 749-669
after 6 h p.m.
79 HONDA CX 500. Plexi-fairing, new Dunlops,
S.C. 430, unavailable 843-2900, evenings
AUDI FOX. 1977, 4 dr, auto, $1950. Electrovoice
speakers $120 ea. Pioneer amplifier. 80W, $200.
Kennedoy amplifier 72W. 830, 841, 1912.
8 Channel P.A. board with set of speakers, $500
Shawn, 842-6523
Apple IIe 164k, disk drive with controller $799.
Apple IIe 18k, antibacter monitor. Apple printer
$299.
Apple IIe 18k, hard drive HIM PCF J128. drive I DRYM HIM Portable 128K
HIM PCF J128. drive I DRYM HIM Portable 128K
drive I DRYM Drive 164k. Call Jennifer at 825-237-8700
Balloids, briefcases, collections, hands, luggage, notebooks and much more at Several Leafless, 914 Massachusetts 842-6046
THE GENERAL STOR.
**Used** furniture and household misc.
Open 7 days 1:5 p.m
7th and New Hampton
(below P. Herman) 843,8328
MEXICO AMERICA
POSSIT!
STEVE
WITCH WEN
PREJURE!
Commodore- 44 computer with dataset. Do best preparing color graphics' Great for pre-production. paid $200, price negotiable. Call Num.: B334.8934. Eyes: 749-4262
20LUMBIA 3-speed girl's bike. Like new con-
trols. $50,842-7137
u. students. make KAN sites just a 'bad memory'.
For Stata. ADD Viewpoint computer terminal,
modem, carrying case. Interfaces any computer
network $225 - Jeff.8418313
Electra X280 electric guitar, hardshell case,
"Crate" amplifier, strap, plus acoustic pickup, all near
$255. $429. [B471935]
For furnishings for your living, we have what you need. Thrift stores at 629 Vermont and 16 E with Gilson Sunnirtal Jr., orange table in Gold & Dain 24-D, Bath 24-D. Both含衣物。Evans. L24-D, Morns.
Pentax Slim Camera $220 For more info call
(800) 762-5411
Guitar 丹瑟 Accountic electric cutaway - 3
mold 亦老 $275 8462-900 TIP
Personal Computer System, APPLE Macintosh,
including printer MacWrite, MacPoint and
MacPrint.
The Ultimate System ALPINE 3156
EAX Powered by Cisco
SA-2900 | SA-4900 | SA-900 EQ Fader
EAX Elective Router Ronin Acoustics 4000
Honda Twin Cam - New 1800cc motor. Kerber wring
hatch, Dumpers, oil cooler, nightlight, Flaring,
motor much more. Must sell immediately.
Radar detector. Escort 1964 7 months old. wd. wires $200 or best price 841-0031.
RALEIGH RECORD Brand new men's 24
$150 844 6340 evenings.
w papers. $20 or best after. 841-6631
Hand raised foil for fencing class B2 (originally
%65). Fold only one semester. B41-1661
Samick studio piano, 2 yrs. old, black, $200
Yamaha MT-44 4-track recorder, $700
Mike, 841 759
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplement. Now on Sale! Maps use to listen to them. Prepare for classroom exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Town Creek Cemetery.
Used Metal Office Chairs. Side chairs with & without arms $10 & $16. Sleek Swivel chair with casters $13. Exec. Swivel chair with casters $28, 822 or 5.3 p.m.
Yamaha receiver. Pioneer tape deck with 2
phone cards. 400-Drilling table & chair. 812-Call
card.
Sony Reel to Reel, Pioneer Amp, Speakers &
Tapes. $175. 843-7025
COMPILER TERMINAL Zenith ZT1 11 Terminal with built-in Auto Dual Monitor, auto log on feature, parallel (controres) and RS232 ports. Zenith ZT1 Mii Hexason KM40 842-2964
Zenith Z 19 Terminal and J-cat modem Communicates (P.6 and Honeywell, $750 retail, Price挺 841-894
Windsurfer Sailboat - SR 1882 model Regatta
sail. 12 ft long *$400 or less* BP 341-0033
TAIRM24* 19" Wide by bike model frame,
606 EX, and Mounttech components, 12 speed,
wide range gearing, Blackburn rack and Eagle
rack. Call 842-2952, evenings
Zenith 210 Computer (re: m.multiplian Wordstar
borne account; Z Dos. Cail After call; Re-
starting account)
AUTO SALES
1947 Pinto Wagon, brown, crap, 4-speed, good radio and rubber tires, good traction, good interior, nice race car, 80,000 miles, air automatic,舱控 cruiser, tilt steering, cloth interior, good leather, fuel tank, 602-4601 6002-4601 8003 North 3rd St
WHAT?
JUZZ! GET
THE STAGE, BLOOB!
LOOK AT YOURSELF
YER LOONG POINTS
IN THE SWIMSUIT
COMMITTEE.
GET MY MINDS
FOUR POINTS!
TITY BUTTY
THIRD PRINCESS
SKI POINTS.
bv Berke Breathed
1994 Mumbai 502 201 PST, PSI AC. New State
University, Attendance Schedule. Call
643-825-7142. Ask for Paul Fondra
1971 Z.28 Camaro, brown w/blue interior 150
M 22 Trans, 30's, Crager SS mags. 841-3899
paint, reliable. must sell 841-6087 or 842-1469
1972 Z C Camaro. camero b/w blue interior 350
expensive to run. Price negotiable 841-0973-
174 Malibu Mailbll 211, PS PR, AC. New starter,
old dealer.
1972 Ford, Extra clean, perfect interior. Good mechanical condition $550 Ask for Fred. 843-1772
1971 V W. Karmann Ghia. Good condition and in
need of run. Price negotiable. 841-4072
M-22 Traits. 70's Clipper skirts & hats. 1972 Ford. Extra clean, perfect interior. Good
1967 Mustang 6-cyl. 3-speed, very nice, new
2000 Mustang 6-cyl. 4-speed, very nice, new
OH, BUT THEN DON'T FOR
A SECOND THINK THAT I
BELIEVE THE BE AFPAIRS
TO BE JUDGED PRIMARYLY
ON PHYSICAL EXFECTION.
OK, HOW TACK!
HOW PERFECTLY RUDE!
BUG OFF!
DIDN'T I TELL YOU TO SHAVE YOUR HACK ?
300 POINTS!!
1978 Ford Farmour, 35,000 miles, 2-door, blue,
4-cyl. PS, PB, nice stereo, $1965, mountable
822778.
1983Silver Monte Carlo, V8, PS, PB, AC, excellent condition. 18,500 miles. Call 7747365 evenings, weekends.
Most Mastogl II. 4-cyl, great on gas, new tires. A good truck for a student. $250, $842,298.
1980 Mercury Zephyr Z7, 2-door, 4-speed, 6-cyl.
58,000 miles $2995, Preston McCall, 1883 N. 3rd,
841-607
Cars with personal & style 1948 unrestored Chevrolet Fleetline $3000 1968 unrestored Plymouth Deluxe station wagon $700 843-7025
1975 Volvo wagon, air, automatic, cloth interior,
84,000 miles $2955, Preston McCall, 1983 N. 3rd,
614-606
Clean used WV's for sale. Mertc Motors, 841 6000
FORD FIESTA, 816-434, 4wp front drive. AM-FM, great mpg. fun to drive. New tires, hatery, brakes, exhaust 2004-811 3401
July $400, 842-715 after 4 p.m.
1979 MGB, New Tup, excellent condition $250, or
make an offer. Call 842-5283
65 VW Bug, strong engine. Phil, 842-2822, eve &
weekends.
1978 Mustang I 4-5YE 29630 $249 dg. new tires a Good car for a student $2900 $282 2480
good car for a student $2500 842-2686
1978 Trans Am, 400, PS, PB, AC - Beautiful car!
Only $4500, 842-7195 after 4 p.m.
Tired of pricing cars that need lots of work? Extra clean '75 Cordoba, 79,000 miles. $1395,842/208
Yamaha SEA TURBO XJ60 L5. 400 miles,
wastegate, lighten, new battery, perfect condition, $220, HONDA CR250, ridden 5 times, $1000
847-9626
ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ Z.1079 Datum
200 ZX, Full Power $996, Preston McCall,
841 667, 1936 North 3rd
PERSONAL
AMY from Jenks, call Mark from Jenks at GP
CCQ YOU'RE a brat, not me!
Love, MDG
S W M 36 inmate, seeks a taste of freedom thru correspondence Serious impurities only B Lemons. Box 2 Lanning. KS 69041
A European style cake, offering a variety of dessert tables dishes from scratch, on premium parchment paper. Bake at 350°F for 45 minutes. Dinner. Look for our coupon in the Lawrence book. The HINKLEY CAFE, 261 W. New Hampshire Avenue, MIDTOWN LANE MARKETT
BUSINESS PERS.
Student Special
Waterbed Conditioner .48 a bottle With K. U.I.D.
SATERBED WORKS
RIGHT SENIUAL ASSAULT Douglas County Victim Support Service offer free educational programming (films and speakers) for classes living around, etc. Call 843-6985
V V
THE ETC. SHOP
THE FUN PLACE TO BE
RHINESTONES, GLOVES,
PARTY DRESSSES, ETC.
INDIANA JONES
AUTHENTIC HATS
BY STETSON
NOW AVAILABLE
If you or someone you love has been a victim of sexual assault, Rape Victim Support Service can help Call 614-2381 or 841-5006 for referral to a day every day. A M14 issued Paid Student Service card.
PLUS MANY OTHER HATS
Inflation Fighter, 8 East 7th. For your needs in inflation recovery and menu items, Come & Browse. Hours are Monday through Friday.
Highest price: dry transfer lettering
LETTESTA at student pricing $9.95 per sheet.
li$8.95. Strong in Office Systems. 100 Vermont.
3644
FOOD SAVINGS
Laches. Treat yourselves to 30 cent drinks and 25 cent draws at St. Pietre. Tension from t7.
Community Mercantile
Lawrence's Natural Food Grocery
PROBLEMS* Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center lastens. Free 24 hr. 841-2245, or new location. 119 Massachusetts.
(TAEDTLEM-MAHS Tech) pen special 2 pen set
33.50, 4 pen set 22 $30 while supplies last. Strong's
Office systems, 104 Vermont, 843 644
The New Place for a rich atmosphere at an affluent price. The New Place, a private club, 286 Iowa. 842-9300
Your drinking water may be hazardous to your health. Multipure your water. 842.2618
CUSTOM SEWING. Dressmaking and alterations. Call 842-5375. Reasonable prices.
health. Multipurpose your water: 842-7618
CUSTOM SEWING
Dressmaking and altera-
tions. Call 842-7573. Reasonable prices.
Wholesale Sound Rental P.A. Guitar and Ross ampx, miles, Graphic EQ, Disco systems 841-6495
Asst. Manager position available. Health, life-
vacation and advancement included. Apply at
Mazzio's 27th & Iowa
HELP WANTED
Dependable female to assist disabled with care.
No experience required. Mornings, weekends &
evening hours, available. Call between 15,
749-0288
Apply at Mazzeo's Pizza, 27th & Iowa. No ex-
pressions! Our job is hard.
Part time positions as female companies to
family wife. Wage $40/hour. Time to read and
study during working hours. Call 842-6708, 8:30 - 9:30 p.m.
rart-time Help at Day Care Home. One cooked
need 11-1. Mon-Fri Afternoon Asst needed 3-
5. Call 843-4147
Small Computer Sales person. Full part and time inside sales, some outside sales. Knowledge of hardware and software required. Send or bring resume to Comparker, 71 W.207, Lavender
Part-time teachers aids need Monday thru Friday, weekday mornings or afternoon 8:35 am. Study and/or experience with children, ages 14. Apply to Children's Learning Center, 101 Master 2.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16.599 $9.533 year
Now Hiring Your area Call 805-687-6000 Ext.
8124
Experienced Drummer for weekend Rock & Roll Band 841-444. Professional inquiries only
It's not too late to join NAVAL
Research Assistant needed to observe in elementary school classrooms. Must be a KU Student. $3.50 hr 10 hours per week, 4 mns; preemergency appointments. Auxiliary at KU must be an AE/OR.
p.m.
Part-time Pre-school/ Kindergarten teacher
Prefer experience and Montessori background.
Call 845-2221 or 843-3131.
STUDENT ASSISTANT
NEEDED
University of Kansas Budget Office has an opening for a continuous half-time graduate assistant position with possible full-time postdoctoral role. The office will assist with the process of budget and accounting transfers for the undergraduate students in preparation of the four University Budgets. The person assuming this position will have an opportunity to work within the University financial environment. Acceptance. In lieu of a salary, you will need a good and written oral communications skill required. $400 per month for a one-year position and $1200 per month for 1044 information. Call Anna Whitaker Budget
DAY CARE HELPER 12.50 or 3.50 daily
Child development or education expert Prefer ex-tenence
Call 842-2223
STUDENT ASSISTANT
NEEDED
The School of Nursing at Wake Forest University offers a degree in nursing with online training and clinical practice. Complete Writing Studio for an assignment requirement.
Office. 804-196-366
Applications available in IBO Strong Hall, EOE
Business II Tutor Wanted as soon as possible
Hourly rate. Call 821 6663
Immediate openings for part-time gril personnel All shifts available. Expecially non rusher and mornings. Apply in person at Vista restaurants 120-745-4633.
MISCELLANEOUS
FREE Puffy Kitten to a good home 842-0618
FUTTONS Cotton Mattresses providing comfortable support for the spine. Easy Portable %60
injection with this, in with this, blue Hue Blanket 841-0441
At McCollum Hall Tickets $2.50
openings for part and full-time (unitary person)
all shifts available. Apply in person at Vista
restaurants. 127 W. 9th
WELCOME TO OUR LATIN FIESTA Friday, Sept. 14
ALL YOU CAN DRINK!!!
...
Hewlett Packard. Printer. planner for use with HP-1C UCV CXM. 843.5116
Kitchen is open 8:11, 30 p.m. for wings to go. Mon day through Friday Only at the Wheel
Girls is open 6:15 p.m. to the Wilmington High
league through Friday (ny) at the Wheel.
ADMES ONLY, 7-12, 25 cent Draws. Gays at 9 hrs
at the Wheel.
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND 3 mo old Female golden Labrador or
ku campus. True evening Wearing yellow nylon
collar Playful Call Lawrence Humane Society at
483 6583
HEARMSTOKEN Hedel & Blue Baby bag lot
tuesday morning 8 & Maine Contains baby's
first music box. Please return for REWARD
841-1732
Missing Yellow cat w. black & silver collar Last around 10th & Tennessee REWARD Call 496-606
SERVICES OFFERED
Announcing: Troy Anderson, formerly of Command Performance, has joined the staff at His & Hers Bird Design. His opening special, Haracen 7. Perm. 52m. See Troy Try for that special.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in
Lawrence 841-5716
Charine Beauty Salon Home of the $7 Haircut
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Stroete Hall.
Strong hand
TUTOPS. List your name with us. We refer student injuries to you. Student Assistance Center.
121 Strong Hall
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Food Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Self Serve Car
Main Lobby, Kansas University TUTORS/TUETES. Inquire at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
Charme Beauty Salon is now offering Haircars for $7, and permits for $2 & up. Call or come for a professional haircut or perm at a great price. Charme Beauty Salon, 813 Mass, 843-1309
Environmental campus photo studies--Modeling Dance and Theatre portfolios or composites. PRESSIONS call 821 794 for information
SunshineAcres Montessori Pre-school. A.M. & M.P. Pre-school and kindergarten programs. Visit the day care center with your child. Visit the faculty and students. Visit with your child, at 2141 Maple, EI 8/1980.
STRAIGHT AHEAD. A self help group for people wanting independence from marijuana, is now forming. Call Headquarters for more info.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown All haircuts, $5. No appointment
required.
Voice Lessons - DMA voice candidate accepting non-credit singers. Experience with all type voices 814-496.
TYPING
Ultimate Hair and Skin Care Center, Hairstudios. $hama Cause is from Europe and has worked in France, Germany, England, Belgium and Tel Aviv. Ask for Huma or Greg. Walk yourselves around.
TENNIS. Take lessons from experienced instructor.
Beginner/Advanced. Group Individual.
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Mail or deliver to: 119 Stauffer - Flint Hall
1
September 12, 1984 Page 16
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
1980
KU sophomore tennis player Mike Wolf faces John McEnroe's younger brother Pat in an exhibition match at 7 p.m. today at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo. Immediately after the match, John McEnroe and Bjorn Borg will play in the main event.
Wolf anticipating match
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Associate Sports Editor
It isn't everyday that KU sophomore tennis player Mike Wolf plays in front of 10,000 fans. He'll have that chance today at 7 p.m when he faces Pat McEnroe in an exhibition match at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo.
After those two finish, they'll make way for the main event, an exhibition between Pat's brother John, ranked first among the world's professional tennis players, and Bjorn Borg, the man he succeeded in the No.1 spot. Borg has been retired the past three years.
WOLF SAID he was a little apprehensive about playing in front of so many people, but that he hoped the experience would help him if he
decided to turn professional
"I hope that if I keep on working, I'll be getting better and better and I'll be playing in front of large crowds like that in the future." Wolf said. "I'll be a good test to see how I respond in a crowd situation."
Wolf won't have to worry about a hostile crowd. He went to high school in the Kansas City area — at Blue Valley — and he'll have a large continent of KU fans cheering him on.
"I belong to a fraternity, Sigma Chi, and a lot of guys from there will be at the match and they'll all be here," she said. "Soil should be pretty exciting."
Wolf's professional aspirations aren't wistful thinking. He qualified for the NCAA Championships last spring and was one of 32 players invited to the Olympic Trials
Perelman said that Wolf was one of the top 15 returning collegiate players in the country
WOLF HAS PLAYED the younger McEnroe twice, narrowly losing both times.
WOLF MAY FIND himself among the tennis elite someday, but as he talked about tonight's match he showed that he's still very much a fan.
"One of the most exciting things about it is the fact that I'll get a chance to meet and talk to John McEnroe and Björn Borg, who I consider to be the two best players in the world," he said.
"It's a good opportunity, not only for me but for my team, the University, just all the people involved that will get a chance to be seen."
Minnesota beats Kansas City, 5-1, takes lead over Royals in division
By United Press International
MINNEAPOLIS — Ask the fans it left field at the Metrodome who their favorite player is and they'll unamously cheer for Mickey Hatcher, a clubhouse clown who has become the clutch bitter for the Minnesota Twins.
Hatcher singled in two runs, and Kent Hrbek and Tom Brunansky smacked back-to-back bomers in support of Frank Viola's strong pitching, powering the Twins to a 5-4 victory last night over the Kansas City Royals.
The victory gave the Twins a one-game lead over the Royals in the American League West.
Hatcher, whose fun-loving nature helps to keep the Twins relaxed, said the Twins were in the driver's seat — and they would go on the road to the division title.
we're ready to take this division. These two games are big for us in deciding whether we'll finish in place," the Twins' left fielder said.
In Hatcher's last 12 at-bats with runners in scoring position in the seventh inning or later, he has had five nine hits, three walks and 13 RBI.
"When you get a man on second base and you're up, all you should really be trying for is to drive in that runner," said Hatcher. "It's foolish to try and make it 3-0 on one swing of the bat because then you might get yourself in trouble."
The Royals had trouble against Viola, 16-12, who scattered six hits and struck out nine. The Twins left-hander did not allow a run until the ninth when Darryl Motley, Hal McRae and Frank White singled and D劳 Slaughter a sacrifice fly
The Twins took a 1-0 lead in the first against Charlie Leibrandt. 9-7, when Tim Teufel hit a one-out double to left and scored on a single by Hatcher.
The same combination of a Teufel double and a Hatcher single increased the Twins' lead to 2-0 in the seventh. Hatcher followed Hatcher's single with an inside the park-homer to center, his 25th, and Brunanusk added a homer to left, his 30th, to make the score 5-0.
KU softball team opens fall season
By CHRIS LAZZARINO
Sports Writer
Sports Writer
The KU women's softball team opened its fall season yesterday, sweeping a double-header from Johnson County Community College at Holcim Sports Complex at 25th and Iowa Streets.
KU shut out J C C C. in both games, winning the first 7-0 and the second 4-0.
said, "I don't want to solidify the rest for the rest of the season now. The purpose of the whole fall season is to get practice. These games are for the players to earn or settle down in their positions."
Head coach Bob Stancliff used the games to evaluate the various aspects of the team and to give the players practice in game situations.
Stanclift said he has a good nucleus of 11 players returning to this year's team. The only senior on the team is Kim Cobb, who will catch or play first base.
"It is early in the season," Stancliff
first base.
Pitching for the Jayhawks yesterday was junior Tracy Burge Bunge had a strong day against Johnson County, but Stancill said that she was not fully recovered from a hairline fracture in the small bone of her lower leg.
Bunge dominated Johnson County all afternoon. In the first game, she allowed only two batters to reach first base and had two strike outs. In the second game, she struck out in batters and allowed five batters to reach base
The teams played until they had to vacate the Holcob diamond for the city men's fall softball league. In two innings played after the second game, Bunge struck out four batters.
Cobb caught the first game and had two hits, scored two runs and had two RBI's Kelly Downs caught the second game and had KU's only extra-base hit, a triple.
Football team prepares for Florida State
By the Kansan Staff
Norseth was questionable for today's practice.
KU quarterback Mike Norseth suffered a pulled stomach muscle and was unable to finish practice yesterday as the Jayhawks prepared for Saturday's game against Florida State.
Fullback Mark Henderson injured his knee during the three-hour workout, but the seriousness of the injury was unclear. Henderson head coach Mike Gottfried said
"You're only going to get one shot at him," Gotttried said of Allen. "He's not going to be stopped with an arm."
The KU defense worked on tackling techniques yesterday in preparation for the Florida State offense, which features Heisman Trophy candidate Greg Allen. Last year, Allen was a United Press International All-America针 at running back
No changes have been made on the
depth chart since the Wichita State game, although freshmen Mike Werner and Von Lacey were moved from the offensive line to the defensive line, and freshman David Smith was moved from defensive tackle to nose guard.
Gottried is still awaiting word on the eligibility of seven KU players who were held out of the Wichita State game. An announcement from the sports information office is expected soon, but no specific date has been set.
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Hair apparent
Heads are turning for some of the wild styles at Prime Cut Hair Co., where just about anything goes in haircuts. Some do it for a lark, others to make a statement, but
the bearers of the outrageous hair agree it's fun to have locks that stand out — or up, or in a neat spiderweb, or in shocking bright purple. See story, page 6.
Hot
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The University Daily
KANSAN
Vof. 95, No.14 (USPS 650-640)
Thursday, September 13, 1984
KU football loses six more players to academics
By BRENDA STOCKMAN
Staff Reporter
Six of seven football players temporarily declared academically ineligible last week will be ingible to play this season, the University of Kansas athletic department announced yesterday.
This brings the total number of ineligible football players to 10. Four players were declared academically ineligible in mid-August.
Until yesterday, the eligibility of the seven players was uncertain.
REPRESENTATIVES OF ALL other schools in the Big Eight Conference said their schools had two or fewer ineligible players this season.
Lonny Rose, assistant athletic director, said in a prepared statement. "We examined the academic records for these players and evaluated the status of any petitions they had filed. From this we determined that they would not be eligible this fall."
The six ineligible players are:
Darnell Williams, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore and linebacker. He was listed on the depth chart as a starter.
- Eldridge Avery, Carson, Calif., sophomore and defensive guard. He was listed on the second string
- *Dane Griffin, Lawrence junior and
lineman. He was listed on the second string.*
- Joe Masiani, Honolulu senior and defensive tackle. He was listed on the second seas
*Derek Berry, East St. Louis, Ill., sapmorthe and free safety. He was on board at the crash.*
John Brunet, Fremont, Calif., junior and quarterback will return to the roster this week. He is not listed on the depth chart
At practice last night, KU head football coach Mike Gottried said, "I'm not talking about it. It doesn't matter what you try and do." And he said that the team sounding right. I just want to concentrate or
one thing now, and that's the Florida State game on Saturday.
ANTHONY REDWOOD, CHAIRMAN of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporate Board and professor of business, said, "I think it's unfortunate that this is being sorted out so late and that it affected so many."
Athletic Director: Monte Johnson could not be reached for comment last night.
University and athletic department officials have struggled in recent years to improve the academic performance of the athletes.
In 1981, a special committee report on athletics and academics suggested changes that have transferred the monitoring, certification and advising of student athletes from the athletic department to the office of academic affairs.
COMMITTEE MEMBERS SAID then that they hoped the changes would improve the academic performance of athletes.
Three years later, however, the changes
have not yielded all that was expected, some KUAC board members said.
Redwood said, "There have been a lot of positive changes. It's unfortunate that the positive elements of those haven't born fruit.
"If all the steps are in the right direction,
the hell are we in this mess?" Redwood slopes
"I don't think we have this sort out anywhere near as well as it needs to be sorted out," said Redwood. "That's what we're going to do by hook or by crook this year."
Rose said that most of the uncertainty in determining the players' permanent eligibility resulted from delays in processing the naperwork required to certify the players.
The certification process begins when the athletic department sends the list of athletes to the office of admissions and records. After that, the athletic department and the
GIL DYCK, DEAN of educational services,
oversees the certification process. He said
that he did not know what caused the delay in
determining the eligibility of the athletes.
department of educational services work together to certify each student athlete.
To be eligible for intercollegiate competition, student athletes at KU must meet standards of the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the Big Eight. Dyck said.
A student must have a 1.6 grade point average if he has fewer than 60 credit hours. Dyck said. If a student has taken more than 60 credit hours he must have a 1.8 to be eligible. Each student must complete 24 credit hours during the year preceding the sports season.
ROSE SAID THAT some of the reasons for the current eligibility problems were under the control of the athletic department and that some of them were not.
"Clearly it is up to the student to complete the (class) work." Rose said, "but we have to be sure they're getting proper advice.
Word play translated
"It appeared in this instance that six of the players on the surface didn't do what they needed to, but were led to believe if they did a
KU students decipher campaign year jargon
See ATHLETE. p. 5, col. 1
Staff Reporter
By JULIE COMINE Staff Reporter
Students in Communication Studies 553. "The Rhetoric of Political Campaigns," say they now pay more attention to the race than before. Neither Mondale and President Ronald Reagan.
Students in a communications studies class at the University of Kansas are learning to penetrate the political word play of the 1984 film *Nightmare*. Students learn that devices as metapheta, repetition and humor
Wendi Shelton, Lawrence senior, said the class had made her more aware of each candidate's "speaking strategy."
"I WAS WATCHING the 30-minute Reagan commercial the other night," she said, "and I started laughing because I recognized several of the things we'd learned about in
"All candidates use language as their basic resource to win votes," she said. "They have to like to talk in order to be politicians."
Ellen Gold, an associate professor of communication studies who has taught the class since 1974, said voters had to be aware not only of what politicians say, but of how
The students taking the class represent a variety of political views, Gold said.
"The class is 40 percent Republican because we're in Kansas; it's 40 percent Democrat because we're at the University of Oklahoma," she said, whose coursees of the nature of the course," she said.
THE COURSE FOCUSES on speeches and debates dating back to 1960, with pays particular attention to this year's presidential election.
Students began the semester by reading speeches from this year's Democratic and Republican candidates.
Geoff Helley, St. Louis senior, said that studying texts of the acceptance speeches given at the nominating conventions had strengthened his support for Reagan.
"The class helps you look beyond what you
see on TV," he said. "Looking at the reprint of Mondale's speech in the Congressional Quarterly made me want to support the Reagan Bush ticket even more."
Students also will watch videotapes of the 1960 and 1880 presidential debates and read speeches by candidates ranging from Barry Goldwater to John Anderson.
DURING YESTERDAY'S CLASS, Gold passed around several editorial columns and cartoons, sparking a 20 minute discussion of this week's political rhetoric.
Class members interpreted the implications and hidden meanings of Mondale's defect reduction plan by the candidates recent performance in issue 2 and Reagan's 30-minute commercial.
The Reagan commercial. Gold said, is an excellent example of how a candidate can use technology.
"You see snaps of Reagan's acceptance speech at the convention, snaps of on the street interviews with Reagan supporters. You see pictures of Mr. Obama and Glenn America in the background," she said.
"It's a selective view, but it effectively reagan Reagan's campaign theme."
From a rhetorical perspective, this year's campaign is interesting. Gold said
After discussing current events, the class delved into a paragraph by-paragraph analysis of a speech John F. Kennedy gave to President Roosevelt in Ministerial Association in September 1990.
Rhetorical strategy depends on the context of the speech, Gold said. When Kennedy spoke to the group of ministers in Houston, he purposely downplayed his ties with the Roman Catholic Church and stressed that the campaign involved more important issues.
"REAGAN HAS CLEARLY communicated his vision of America to the people," she said. At the same time, Monday is a day of innovative strategies to get back in the race.
"It's important to understand the history of campaigns." Gold said. "The best information we have about how politicians work is by looking at past campaigns."
HILTON
---
Mike Wolf, a sophomore on the KU tennis team, throws himself off balance to return a shot from Patrick McEnroe. John McEnroe's brother, Walt challenged McEnroe last night at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo., in front of the largest crowd in his career. Patrick McEnroe is a freshman at Stanford University. See story, p. 16.
Senate nips beer boycott, ends burger debate
Rv. 10HN HANNA
Staff Reporter
senators by a unanimous voice vote defeated a petition calling for the Union Memorial Board to stop buying Coors beer or Coors products because of remarks made in February by William K. Coors, chairman of the board of the company.
Plans for a boycott of the Adolph Coors Co. and a skirmish overburgers in the Kansas Union ended last night at the Student Senate's first meeting of the semester.
The vote followed an hour-long presentation of a report by Labile George, Richmond Heights. Mo. senior and David Epstein, a former member of the Minority Affairs Committee.
THE REPORT CAME from their trip on Aug. 30 to Coors' main plant in Golden, Colo. Coors invited the students after hearing of a possible boycott, and the company paid for the trip.
because they had made their feelings known to company officials.
Epstein and George said the trip was more effective than a boycott would have been
During the presentation, some senators questioned the credibility of an investigation from a trip that was paid for by Coors. But the senator, who allowed them to see the other side of the issue.
During the trip, George and Epstein met with Coors officials, employees and members of groups such as the National Organization of Women and B'nai B'rith. They also investigated the company's hiring and employee relations practices.
Epstein said, "He has learned the hard way. Now that the lesson has been learned, what is the point of a boycott? There is none."
"An outside boycott will never compare to an inside conversation." George said.
'AND GEORGE SAID.' 'I don't think my
friend was swayed by dinner or one night
aparture.
The Rocky Mountain News reported that during a speech in February, Coors said that blacks "lacked the intellectual capacity to succeed" and that African blacks were
"infectiously interior of American banks." Epstein and George said that Coors' choice of words was offensive but that they did not reflect the company as a whole.
"intellectually inferior" to American blacks
BUT EARLIER IN April, the Association of University Residence Halls, the hall government of five residence halls and the KU Panhellenic Association approved boy-
In April the Senate tabled the petition against Coors until after the trip The interfraternity Council also tabled a boycott proposal.
Hashinger Hall, one of the five residence halls to support a boycott, rescinded its decision last month because its government denied that he was involved, said Mark von Schlemmer, hall president.
James Jeffrey, president of AURH, said last night that he did not know how the Senate's action would affect the other boycotts.
Also last night, the Senate narrowly missed overruling a veto on a petition calling for the Union Memorial Board to include a
corporate-owned fast food franchise in its plans for renovation of the Union
TWENTY-THREE VOTES, or a two-thirds majority of the senators present, were necessary to override the veto by Carla Vogel, student body president, and Dennis "Bog" Highberger, student body vice president. The Senate voted 20-13.
Highberger and Russ Placek, Nunemaker senator and co-sponsor of the bill, agreed that the vote had accomplished nothing because the petition already had been passed on to the Union Memorial Board.
Senate rules require that a petition that is vetoed be placed on the agenda of the next
PTMCEK SAID. "ML that it does is that it allows Boog and Carla to make a political statement about their anti-capitalist feelings."
"I was just following the rules that were there when I took office." Highberger said. "I think all of the rules are silly, but I was offended by offend anyone by throwing the rules away."
Tapes offer alternative for students
Staff Reporter
By DAVID LASSITER
A novel idea for students and their Walkmats has just hit the KU campus.
"People could blast their cardrums with literature instead of music, said Andrea Bohm. "You can have a life of yourself."
The Oread Bookshop will begin selling cassette recordings of popular literature today, making it possible for students to tap into the required readings for some classes.
This is the first time the companies have started mass producing these kinds of tape.
"NOW COMMUTERS CAN do homework while traveling or walking to class." Furst said. "They can do other things while they listen to these tapes."
Martha Furst, trade buyer for the book shop, said that the tapes were being made for people who didn't want to sit down and read the book.
"They were produced before, but it was kind of a drag to get them," she said.
Metacam tapes include the complete work, Furst said. The Metacam tapes, which are 60 minutes long, will sell for $5.98. The Metacam collection will include such classics as "Moby Dick," "Jane Eyre," "The Grapes of Wrath," and "1984."
two companies, Metacam and Cliffs Cassettes, make the tapes. Cliffs Cassettes is a
Cliffs Cassettes also has condensed taped versions of popular literature.
"THEY ARE BASICALLY the same as Cliff's Notes, but there is no commentary included about the work." Furst said.
The bookshop carries 12 different Cliffs Cassettes, which include popular Shake speare plays such as "Hamlet" and "Macbeth." The 60-minute tails sell for $7.95.
Both collections of tapes are recorded by actors and include sound effects.
"Sounds like it might reduce the amount of imagination it takes to read a novel," denounces the author.
Other students had different ideas about the use of the tapes.
"I'm just the sort of person who feels that if you have your studies to do, you should study," said Lisa Schaefer, Green Bay, Wis. freshman.
"I've used Cliffs Notes before, but I'd rather read the book," Schaefer said.
John Seestrub, Wichita junior, said. "Think the tapes are a good idea for people who have to go back," he said.
"YOU COULD LISTEN to the tapes at the same time as you read the book. You'd be enhancing your ability to comprehend the book. It would be worth buying the tapes (or not)."
Jennifer Sparkman, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, didn't think the tapes would be a great convenience to students. She thought it would be just as easy to read the book.
Sparkman said, "I'd be willing to try it, though."
DeVarennes said, "It would take just as much attention to listen to the tape as it took to read."
If the tapes become popular. Furst said, the bookshop will continue to market them as they become available.
Cliffs Cassettes already has started to produce five more of the tapes, including "Crime and Punishment."
September 13, 1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily KANSAN
Dollar collapse a danger for world, report warns
WASHINGTON — A report by the International Monetary Fund warned yesterday that any sudden collapse of the dollar could jeopardize word finance and said that most Third World nations had surprising progress during the past year.
In its annual report, the fund said many developing countries, especially those in Africa, have made progress.
However, countries in Central America and many in Africa have seen broad deterioration in their standards of living, during the past year, the report said.
One staff director told reporters that the main concern of the report was the effect of the rise of U.S. interest rates on other countries.
Guccione may publish photos
NEW YORK — Penthouse publisher Bob Gucione said yesterday he had 350 color slides of a Miss America contestant posing nude and would publish them if she wins the beauty pageant in Atlantic City this weekend.
Greciane, whose publication of photos of Miss America Vanessa Williams in sexually explicit poses prompted her to resign in July, refused to identify the beauty queen pictured in the slides.
Reagan to increase rebels' aid
WASHINGTON — President Reagan will step up aid to Nicaragua "Contra" rebels fighting the Sandinista government if reelected, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Jane Kirkpatrick said yesterday.
But Reagan will not send U.S. troops to tight Nicaragua's leftist government if he wins in November, she said after an address, to the Republican National Hispanic Assembly.
Insignia for the Kirkpatrick charged Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale with 'neo-isolationism' in his plans for the hemisphere, which she said would increase the chances of guerrilla victories
Musicians raise furor at hotel
NEW DELHI, India - The New York Philharmonic performed on national television yesterday before an audience of millions amid a furoir raised by the musicians, who stumped out of their five-star hotel complaining of cockroaches, ool odors and filth.
The audience applauded wildly after the orchestra performed Beechwood's Piano Concerto No. 3 and Brahm's Symphony No. 4; dispelling some of the bad feelings caused by a spat that erupted Tuesday night after a lavish reception
defense attorney Brian Greenspan's office said later that he would appeal the extradition order, but said that he had not yet decided whether to file a request for a hearing. Smith's extradition date could be postponed until the appeal was heard. No date was set.
Smith, who had been free on $75,000 bail
was escorted out of the courtroom and placed in the West Detention Center. She also faces 13 drug-related charges as a result of Bolush's death.
In Los Angeles, Detective Russell Kuster, an investigator in the Hollywood division, said he expected Smith to appeal the order, which she fought for more than a year.
"The way things were going it seemed to be just a matter of time," Kuster said of the extradition order.
Woman ordered extradited for Belushi death
"It's not over yet," he said. "We expect her lawyer to appeal and a final ruling to be made within 15 days. But we still expect to bring her back."
By United Press International
TORONTO — Cathy Evelyn Smith, a former singer who once admitted injecting a fatal "speedball" of heroin and cocaine into comedian John Belushi, was ordered extradited yesterday to Los Angeles to stand trial for murder.
bring her back.
Greenspain said Smith, who appeared unmoved by the ruling, was in relatively "good spirits" because "she realized there was a strong possibility this result would occur."
Saying there was enough evidence to commit the Toronto woman to trial, County Court Judge Stephen Borins ordered the extradition to be carried out within 15 days and also ordered that she be held in custody until extradition.
He took special care to note that her being extradited was "not a standard of guilt."
Smith is charged in Los Angeles with
having administered a fatal overdose of heroin and cocaine to Beulah, a star of movies and the "Saturday Night Live" and in the "Sunset Strip hotel room March 3, 1982
"There exists evidence upon which a reasonable jury, properly instructed in law, could bring in a verdict of guilty." Borins said in his 34 page ruling.
During the three-day hearing, Greenspan had argued the murder charge against Smith in California did not constitute murder in California if it worst, the charge would be manslaughter.
"The question is not whether the conduct alleged against Catherine Smith, in constituting murder contrary to ... the California law, was carried out, and had it taken place in Canada," Borins wrote.
"The question is whether the conduct alleged against Catherine Smith would have constituted any criminal offense pursuant to Canadian law had it occurred in Canada."
Borin's judgment followed a three-day hearing that ended Aug. 22.
In his summation at the hearing, Greenspan said there was only the word of two of Belushi's friends - Leslie Marks and Nelson Lyon - that Smith had injected them and the comedian with heroin and cocaine.
In affidavits submitted at the hearing, Marks and Lyon had said they saw Smith inject Belushi several times. According to earlier evidence, Belushi had been injected 24 times in the last 30 hours of his life — mostly by Smith.
Greenspan told reporters he raised the drug identification issue since the U.S. extradition warrant specifically accused Smith of administering heroin and cocaine.
In his ruling, Borins said: "For the purposes of the extradition hearing it must be accepted that Marks and Lyons are competent witnesses whose evidence is credible."
Diana turns toward coast
By United Press International
WILMINGTON, N.C. — Hurricane Diana turned toward North Carolina's coast again last night, aiming its 110 mph fury at thousands who returned home despite warnings that "we have a disaster in the making."
Diana raked the coastline with hurricane winds and 10-foot waves Tuesday night before backing away and drifting aimlessly offshore during the day. At nightfall, headed back toward sea mist again and backed up. Did Diana could hit near Ultramount within hours.
State officials issued urgent pleas for a new evacuation of thousands who returned home yesterday when the storm stalled offshore.
"Hurricane Diana is still a dangerous storm. The inconvenience of a shelter is a small price to pay for the security they offer." Emergency Management Director Tom Pugh
At Long Beach, just south of Wilmington, about 3,000 people left storm shelters yesterday and returned to their homes. The city urged them to evacuate, but many refused said Mayor Ben Thomas
"We'll end up with about 1,000 to 1,500 people at Long Beach. Some of them just won't go. If they don't evacuate, we can't be responsible for their well-being." Thomas said.
PACIFIC OCEAN
The remains of two beach houses rest in the sand after collapsing when high tides and wind caused by Hurricane Diana eroded their foundations. The owners of the homes were not present when they collapsed yesterday.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Budget director resigns after dispute with Carlin
TOPEKA — A refusal by state Budget Director Lyle Muchmore to give in to Gov John Carlin on the hiring of a non-civil service worker in the budget office yesterday led to Muchmore's resignation at Carlin's request.
Michael Swenson, Carlin's press secretary, said yesterday that Muchmore's resignation stemmed chiefly from a philosophical difference between Muchmore and Carlin over who had final authority on appointed positions in Muchmore's department.
Carlin announced that Aiden Shields, a native of Lindsborg and now assistant for governmental operations for Missouri Gov Christopher Bond, would be the next director. Muchmore is expected to remain until Shields takes over in mid-Movember.
Local man charged with rape
An additional charge, rape, has been filed against Donald E. Alexander, 18, of 303 W. 21st St., in connection with the death of an elderly Lawrence woman last month.
An amended complaint was filed Tuesday in Douglas County District Court against Alexander, who already had been charged with aggravated burglary and felony murder in the death of Marguerite Vernier. 80. She was found dead Aug. 5.
An autopsy revealed that Vinyard had died of head and chest injuries and had been sexually assaulted. Last week, a Douglas County judge ruled Alexander was competent to stand trial and set his preliminary hearing for Tuesday.
Winnie the Pooh may be on the loose and buryee in Dauphin County.
Someone removed 230 pounds of honey from a beehive belonging to Don Clement, Route 1, Lecompont, between Friday morning and Monday morning. A fence surrounding the hives was cut, and the honey was removed from the hive by cutting the wax around the edges, a sheriff's report said.
Young Democrats reimbursed
Dee Clement, Clement's wife, said yesterday that the thief or thieves had to know what they were doing around bees to steal the honey, which was valued at $500
KU's College Young Democrats received $100 from the Kansas Democratic State Committee, the secretary-treasurer of the group said yesterday.
The money reimbursed the College Democrats for funds used in their voter registration drive at KU, Pete Wickhund, the secretary treasurer, said.
Beatrice Schmidt, projects director of the State Committee, said the KU group had gone the extra mile in registration by having its workers depersonalized so that students could register to vote without going to their county clerk's office.
Former ambassador to speak
Andrew Conch, a former official in Sierra Leone, West Africa, will speak on "African Studies in the Soviet Union" and "The Middle East." Monday in Alcove B of the Kansas Union.
Conteh, a visiting professor, has taught international law at universities in London and Kiev. He is a former African ambassador to the Soviet Union, the German Democratic Republic, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Romania.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy and cooler. The high will be around 90 and there is a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms. Winds will be from the north at up to 180 mph. Tumults in upper 36s. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and cooler. The high will be 75 to 80
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, the Kansan yesterday incorrectly identified the priest at Corpus Christi Recory. 1281 Jana Drive. The priest is the Rev. Frank
Braille menu plan begins; few respond
By CHRIS BARBER
Staff Reporter
A project to make restaurant menus available in Braille to local blind customers has received little response, according to the project's director.
The project, which gives local restaurants the opportunity to have Braille menus printed for a small fee, was started by Cindy Hallenbeck, a member of the Lawrence Commission on the Needs of Persons Having Disabilities.
Hallenbeck sent letters to 82 area restaurants in June, offering to print Braille copies of their menu.
BUT HALLENBECK SAID yesterday that only four Lawrence restaurants had ordered braille menus. These were the Rum Tree and the Veranda, 200 West McDonald Drive, Mr. Steak Restaurant, 920 West 23rd St. and Mel Amigos, 2600 Iowa St.
He said that the lack of interest might result from a lack of requests for Braille menus at local restaurants.
"Only a small percentage of blind persons read Braille," she said.
But because of the small amount of requests, a restaurant would not need many copies of their menu in Braille and would not have to spend a lot of money to have it done.
"The prices are as low as we can go without losing money," she said. "We're not making a profit on this."
But Hallenbeck said it was important to have menus available if a request came up.
"I think that the people who do read Braille would appreciate it," she said. "We need to emphasize Braille as a viable medium for reading."
HALLENBECK SAID THAT Braille reading had acquired a negative connotation since cassette tapes had become available to the blind. Because most blind persons are not blind from birth, she said, they don't want to go to the trouble of learning Braille at a later age.
"But I think that a blind person who depends solely on tapes is illiterate. It's much easier to have information readily available than shuffle through a bunch of "she said."
Hallenbeck and her husband Charles, professor of psychology, make copies of the menus, she said. They type the menu into a Brailler, a machine that prints Braille.
HALLENBECK SMD THAT the "entry," the first menu in Braille, was the most expensive at $1.50 per page because it took time to set up the first copy. Additional menus cost 75 cents a page.
Charles Barnett, owner and manager of the Eldridge House Restaurant and Club, Seventh and Massachusetts streets, said that he already had Braille menus when Hallenbeck sent her letter.
Bob Forbes, manager of Mel Amigos, said that he had ordered Braille menus as a result.
Todd Wertz, manager of the Rum Tree,
said that the restaurant had five Braille
means but had not had any requests for
them.
1986
Stephani Imholte, graduate student from Buffalo, Minn.
secludes herself to study on a benc overlooking Hallt Mall
Inholte was studying Spanish this week for a course called Golden Age Drama.
Haskell vice president defends students
BY SUZANNE BROWN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The vice president of Haskell Indian Junior College wants to clear up some misunderstandings about his students.
They do not all drink to excess, Charles Geboe, the vice president of the school, said yesterday. And the students do not want to isolate themselves from the community.
"Our students are probably the least understood thing about our school," he said. Gebo, a member of the Yankton Sioux Tribe, was the guest speaker at yesterday's luncheon that was sponsored by Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Gebo noted the adjustments many students made when they came to Haskell. Some, whom Gebo described as street-wise kids from large cities such as Chicago and
HE USED THE occasion of his school's 100th anniversary to discuss the difficulties faced by Haskell's 770 students, who come from more than 50 North American tribes. Haskell's centennial celebration will be Sept. 28.
Gebeb said the stories that arose about Haskell students — such as a reputation for wild behavior — were unfortunate stereotypes perpetuated by a carousing few.
"I tell the students, don't let a few of them screw it up for everybody," he said.
PABLO BOLERA
Charles Geboe
villages at the base of mountains, were frightened by it.
Los Angeles, were not used to a small community, like Lawrence. Others from tiny
w for them" be said.
"Most of our students coming right out of high school wouldn't last a semester in KU," he said.
"It is a little scary for them," he said.
GEBOE SAID THAT the college, which is financed by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, a federal agency, provided a bridge for Indian students between reservation high schools and U.S. universities.
However, Gebo said that Haskell was successful in helping many of its students prepare for college. He said that the number of graduates who entered KU after graduation was increasing.
Geboe said that very few of Haskell's students come from Kansas. Most students are from tribes located in Arizona, New Mexico and Alaska.
For example, one student's hometown is a small community at the foot of the Grand Canyon. To reach civilization from there, the residents must make an 8-hour trek up the mountainside and then journey another 90 miles to the nearest town.
GIVEN SUCH DIVERSE backgrounds, it was no wonder Haskell students had trouble adjusting in Lawrence. Gobee said
Woman considered for Regents position
By the Kansan Staff
Carlin said Tuesday that he had interviewed Joan Kamas on Sept. 5.
A Wichita woman is now one of four candidates for the vacant position on the Board of Regents, Gov John Carlin's press secretary said yesterday.
Although Swenson said last week that the governor would appoint the Regents member from a group of three Wichita businessmen,
"I feel honored being considered for this position," Karnas said. "I would really like to be the president."
Swenson said the governor would not yet announce the name of the appointee.
"The governor may indeed have made a decision, but he is going to take a few days to think it over." Swenson said.
Kamas, 53, is a journalism graduate from Wichita State University. For the first six months of 1984, she was the interim executive director for the Wichita State Alumni Association and is a past president of the group.
The three other candidates for the appointment are Wichita businessman: Lawrence Jones, Donald Slawson and Martin Umsky.
Bill to shorten testing time for generic drugs
By DAN HOWELL
Staff Reporter
A bill pending in Congress would make generic prescription drugs, often 25 percent or more cheaper than brand names, available to local pharmaceutical officials said this week.
Howard Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy, said the bill would shorten the testing process for generic drugs if the active ingredient is not entirely and effectiveness tests used since 1962
patented active ingredient created by a company's research. A generic drug uses the same ingredient and cannot be marketed to another original company's patent has expired
MOSSBERG SAID THE bill reflected the interests of companies making generic drugs and companies with brand names to protect.
A brand-name drug usually carries a
In return, he said, companies that spend heavily on research to develop new chemicals would have their investments protected longer. Patents on such chemicals now last 17
"There was a compromise to speed up the time to get genetics on the market," he said.
Clyde Chapman, director of the Consumer Affairs Association, 819 Vermont St., said the federal Food and Drug Administration has issued a drug sales tax in the next few years.
years, but new patents would last as long as 22 years.
Greater acceptance of generic drugs and expiring patents on widely-used drugs such as dyazide and valium may give generic or more of the prescription drug market.
SOME INDUSTRY FIGURES show that generic drugs now make up about 20 percent of the market and cost from about 30 percent
to 75 percent of brand-name drugs
Mossberg said that the FDA, which must approve drugs for marketing, had since 1962 required generic equivalents to pass the same tests as new drugs.
John Baughman, director of pharmacy at Watkins Hospital, said that he thought generic drugs typically saved consumers 24 percent more than that but she saw another side to the legislation.
Using the same chemical compound does not assure the same result. Baughman said, because the compression and the binding agent used in making a pill both affect how fast the body will absorb the medicine.
Call now for Parent's Day reservations. 841-7226
Nabil's Restaurant
KU students get a 10% discount on Sunday nights with KUID.
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Hillcrest Shopping Center
Open 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
5 p.m.-10 p.m.
For parties of five (5) or more,
please call for reservations. 841-7226.
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Apply at: Schumm Food Co. office 7191/2 Mass.
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between 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
HIGHER EDUCATION WEEK
Paid for by the Student Senate
There will be an organizational meeting on Thursday, Sept. 13 at 5 pm in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union for all those interested in helping plan for the week. Please come.
big sister program
KU big brother一 big sister program
Be a friend to a Lawrence youth
Date
Wednesday, September 12 or
Thursday, September 13
Time Place
7 p.m. 4012 Wescoe
Time
Place
ORIENTATION SESSIONS
Must Attend One of the Sessions!
FOR MORE INFO...CONTACT JEFF AT 841-9216
September 13, 1984
OPINION
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kansan (USP$ 600-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawen, Kansan 6040, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawen, Kansan 6040. Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or round trip to the United States for $275. Second class subscriptions are $1 and are paid through the student activity fee (*POSTMASTER*). Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawen, Kansan 6040.
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Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE HESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
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General Manager and News Adviser
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Warning smokers
The Senate this week is expected to pass legislation requiring detailed warnings of the effects of cigarette smoking to be printed on the cigarette packages.
Now people not only will be told that cigarette smoking is dangerous to their health, they will be given specifics — that smoking causes emphysema, heart disease and may complicate pregnancy.
In this instance, at least it cannot be said that people are too easily threatened into action.
In the 13-year period since the first warning was printed on the packages, the number of adults who smoke has decreased. But more than one-third of American adults still smoke.
The fact that senators from the "tobacco states" are supporting the rule is a sign that people are willing to recognize the danger of smoking, and realize that one warning is not enough.
Ultimately, social pressure and self-image probably will be what causes people to stop smoking, not a set of statistics or some faceless surgeon general. But as long as it appears that the public is unaware of the dangers of smoking, the need will be present to inform people of a common, but life-threatening habit.
Plugging Title IX
A group of Olympic athletes descended on the Capitol in Washington, D.C., yesterday, but the occasion wasn't another of the myriad tributes to the achievements of America's Olympians. Instead, these athletes, including several female and disabled participants in the Los Angeles Games, were urging members of the Senate to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1984.
Rights Act of 1864. The act, which passed the House by a 375-32 vote and has bipartisan sponsorship, would plug a hole in Title IX of the current Civil Rights Act. That hole was left when the Supreme Court ruled that only the specific programs that receive federal funds are subject to federal guidelines. Before the ruling, if any program in a school received federal funds, the entire school would have to meet these guidelines. The guidelines bar discrimination against women, minorities, the elderly and the disabled.
In practical terms, the difference boils down to whether an entire university should be prohibited from discriminating if the chemistry department gets a federal grant. The Supreme Court said no, but the new Civil Rights Act would change that.
Why does this interest a group of athletes? Because they believe that without the increased spending on women's programs spawned by Title IX, female athletes would never have achieved the level of competitiveness that enabled U.S. women to be as successful as they were in the 1984 Olympic Games.
If, as all the National Collegiate Athletic Association commercials tell us, athletics are an important, positive influence upon American youth, is this any less true for females than it is for males? And shouldn't female college athletes have the same opportunities?
Not all of the young women who compete in athletics at its more elemental levels will go on to medal-winning performances at future Olympics; not all young men do. What they will do is learn the importance of growth and interaction which comes from competition against others and against themselves.
REMARKABLY PRECISE!
WHO ARE THEY?
REAGAN'S DISARMAMENT
NEGOTIATORS!
WRIGHT ©1983 MINMI NEWS
They deserve that right
But that can't be the definition of wimpy as it applies to Walter Mondale.
San Francisco columnist Arthur Hoppe says a "wimp" is the opposite of a "yahoo." A yahoo, in Hoppe's formula, is a person who, through various forms of rude and offensive behavior, gets his way at the expense of other persons. The other persons,
Mondale and the 'wimp' image
We're hearing the term "wimp" used frequently these days, usually in the same breath with "Walter Mondale."
"Walter Mondale is wimpy," people say.
"Mondale wouldn't make a good president because he is a wimp."
What is a wim? Where did that term come from? You probably won't find it in a dictionary, unless you are familiar with Pocket Dictionary or Proper Names.
That source says that "Wimpy" is the trade name for a fast-food hamburger, which got its monkier from a cartoon character who was "rarely seen without a half-eaten hamburger."
by their lack of obnoxious behavior, are the wimps.
If we continue with that premise, we can say that, because America traditionally rewards displays of strength and braggadocio and ridi-
JOHN SIMONSON
Staff Columnist
cules passive and submissive behavior, a wimp is a misfit in our society.
A wimp is a weakling, a milque- toast.
So how did Walter Mondale earn such a label?
It might have been because he lacks an actor's talent for inspirational oratory. He is rather bland at the podium.
But I think Mondale is considered wimpy because of his association
with the Father of Wimpdom, Jimmy Carter.
Carter, of course, will be remembered as the weakest leader in recorded history.
"Jimmy Carter" O, yeah. What a weak president! O'liff Jimmy just laid down and let the world run over him and the country."
But, just for the record, let's remember a few of the items on Carter's wimpy presidential record:
- He was an outspoken advocate of human rights worldwide. Politically oppressed people in Soviet bloc countries and in South Africa received hope from Carter's plea for simple human freedoms.
- *He allowed for the return of the Panaman Canal to the Panamanians, thereby displaying a willingness to challenge imperialism in imperialist image Latin America.
- He was instrumental in bringing about peace negotiations between Egypt and Israel, which culminated in the Camp David accord.
- He showed compassion in par-
donning draft dodgers from the Vietnam War, reasoning that those people should not be punished if the individuals who instigated the war were not punished.
- During the hostage crisis in Iran, Carter resisted what must have been a strong impulse to punish Iran with a show of force and risk the lives of the American captives.
Ronald Reagan should be wimpy.
Now let's see a show of hands from all those who expect to see Ronald Reagan renovating a slum during his retirement years.
And Carter is still at it. Just last week, the former president and his wife were in overalls in a New York tenement, working with a non-profit Christian group to renovate a six-story slum on the lower East Side.
Walter Mondale could do a ld worse than be associated with a compassionate a human being Jimmy Carter.
If that's what wimpy means, then I'll take the wimp ticket.
Skating rink brings back memories
One evening last weekend I was cajoled into going to the roller skating rink and was completely unaware of the time the warp awaiting
Of course I was terrified at the thought of standing on a few wheels hardly larger than a silver dollar, much less trying to roll in a circle of whirling maniacs. But while I was fearing what my rear end would have to face, I happened to notice what was going on around me, and suddenly I was remembering my old junior high school days at the rink.
Hanging out at the roller rink hasn't changed much. There are a few basic differences that can be expected with changing times and passing fancies, but for the most part you can still see what we were all like
back then.
what is it about rolling around in endless circles that is so entertaining? Of course, what is it about rolling around in a bar that's so entertaining?
I know that these kids must be out here at the rink night after night.
I
LAURIE McGHEE
Staff Columnist
because they're wizards on wheels. It makes me wonder how many parents know how talented their sons and daughters actually are.
Poor audience, equipment taint lecture
His credentials are displayed on the front cover of Time magazine each week.
Rudi Hoglund, art director for one of the most popular weekly news magazines, seemed a good choice for the Hallmark series, the Hallmark Symposium Series.
One of his more intriguing points was about Time's effort to be prepared for whatever situation might arise. He used as an example Time's preparation of three covers for the last presidential election. One cover featured Carter as the victor, one had Reagan, and one had the two candidates sharing the front cover in the rare event that the election had been a tie — with the vote going to Congress.
Never mind that Wescoe Hall was the site for the lecture. Most people who have attended programs at the University of Kansas have reconciled themselves to the shortcomings of the facility.
The lecture still had the potential to be a topnotch event.
By the time the crowd headed for the exits, Hogtund had proven that he had some interesting things to say
Irene M.
Although Hoglund enlightened the audience about some of the activities of a major magazine's art department, the lecture was medicene. Some students in the capacity crowd were partially responsible.
MARGARET
SAFRANEK
Staff Columnist
May interested audiences everywhere be spared the students who
You can spot them the minute they walk into the lecture or performance. They come in dragging their feet and discussing, with at least one fellow sufferer, how long they might be forced to stay. Their only goal is to gather sufficient information to survive the next class discussion.
attend only because of a class requirement.
Some students in the capacity crowd were partially responsible.
Others come and quickly search
the crowd for a fellow classmate or friend who might be willing to hand in the necessary attendance card at the door on the way out.
But should the lecture prove absolutely too much for the student, no problem. His solution is to rise from his carefully selected seat in the middle of the row at some inopportune point in the lecture, forcing half of the row to do the same before he exits.
If that fails, they are forced to sit through the lecture. Writing letters, reading books, or best of all, visiting an institution makes the tolerant palate.
Vet these thoughtless students, lacking the consideration to sit near the back of the audience, do not deserve all of the blame for the shortcomings of the lecture.
One of the few advantages of using Wescow was the opportunity for audio-visuals, a major part of Hogland's presentation.
Surely anyone working on preparations for the lecture anticipated that an artist would be sharing some of his work through a medium
besides words.
not apparently the people in charge of the lecture either did not prepare ahead of time or forgot one of the laws of guest lectures: When audio-visual equipment is needed, it's bound to screw up; plan accordingly.
Professors who conduct classes in the same lecture hall use the equipment regularly with rarely more than a minor trip-up.
But the people working with the lecture series fell flat on their faces.
More than 300 people in the audience, sitting in a hall that felt only slightly air-conditioned on a 100-degree night, waited patiently while a first, then second, third and fourth attempts were made to get the projectors working.
but it endures.
I must have been pretty good on skates in my day too, but I can't remember. I do know I went skating at least two night a week, so I must have been pretty good.
They finally did resume operating, placing fault more with the operators than with the equipment.
Many other programs are ahead this semester at KU.
But as Hogland pointed out, if you want a first-class product, you can't overlook the small details.
It took me about half an hour just to get the feel of being on wheels again, but all around me were kids who can't even drive a car, acting as if they were simply walking effortlessly across the floor, talking and dancing moves with the music I felt like an idiot, and none of my years could have made up for my uncoordinated falls and the terrified look on my face I can remember making fun of those kinds of people then, so I know what they were thinking.
I can recall having discovered young love for the first time at this age. Young love hasn't changed much. The girls are still taller than most of the guys, and they still wear combs in their back pockets. When they dance, the girl puts her wrist on a towel, then dances and holds on to the belt loops in her jeans. The more smitten ones cling like Velcro and can't unlock their gazes.
Most of the musical selections ranged from Motley Crue (same song played at least twice) to the Scorpions to Ratt. Heavy Metal is in, folks, and these kids know what's on going. And they especially love Prince — how can an 11/year/odd possibly understand the complicated mind of Prince? That's what I wanna know.
They still have dises jockeys. This one had a particularly difficult time getting the kids to do the Hokey Pokey. When announced, it received moans and groans of protest. Most of the kids left the floor completely, except for the youngest ones. One delinquent boy in a black t-shirt, jeans and long hair skated around the group despite warnings to get off the floor if he was not participating. Hasn't there always been at least one of those in every crowd? The Hokey Pokey may be not too cool any more,
No. I did not participate in the Hokey Pokey.
Clothing fads come and go, even in college, but these kids know what is cool and not cool to wear. I can remember what particular style was cool then, but I do know that it was about the time I discovered that makeup will enhance a girl's apearance. But then it seemed like something special, and it was worn sparingly. Now it's a mandatory standard, along with a permanent wave and distressed denim jeans. Some of the jeans, incidentally, are more than distressed when the girls buy them a size too small. Tight is still tops.
I was having too much fun to worry about my lack of expertise or distressed denim jeans. But just watching all the activity made me realize a lot of things I never have before. It was like looking into a mirror and seeing how I was so many years ago, and how we all were at work on the project. We knew who I am today. It turned out to be the kind of escape you learn from — and the kind that makes you glad that you can never go back
GUEST COLUMNS
The University Daily Kansan invites individuals and groups to submit guest columns. Columns should be typewritten and double-spaced and should not exceed 625 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. Columns can be mailed or brought to the Kanan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kanan reserves the right to edit or reject columns.
University Daily Kansan, September 13, 1984
continued from p. 1
Page 5
Athlete
certain amount of work then they would be able, when in fact this was inaccurate.
Rose would not say who had given the athletes incorrect information, but said it would be naive to believe that with 400 votes she would not be errors made in academic advising.
IN MID-AUGUST, THE athletic department reassigned its academic adviser, Mike Fisher, to director of the personal adviser and he had been the academic advisor since 1977.
Rose said the reassignment was made in response to the KUAC's long-range plan and studies done last spring and not in response to the present eligibility problem.
On Aug. 28, the KUAC released its long range plan after a one-year study of the
athletic department's problems and goals.
The plan said. "The present academic support program for student athletes is perceived to be inadequate relative to need."
To solve the problem, the plan said coaches should recruit athletes with better academic backgrounds and offer better academic advising and tutoring.
The athletic department already has taken steps to meet some of the plan's goals, including:
- Shifting the academic tutoring of athletes from the athletic department to Supportive Educational Services.
- Dividing the advising of athletes into two postitions, one for academics and one for personal support, which Fisher will head.
Buskirk, Wichita graduate student, said that he would direct the academic support services on a temporary basis until a director was appointed to support for the athletic department is hired.
Paul Buskirk will continue as special assistant for athletic advising, monitoring the progress of student athletes and arranging advisers for student athletes. Rose said. Buskirk works for the office of academic affairs.
ROSE SAID THAT another change made this year would be to better inform the faculty advisers of student athletes about eligibility standards of the NCAA and the Big Ten.
Norm Yetman, chairman of the KUAC
academic support committee and professor
Yetman participated in a forum on athletics and academics last spring sponsored by the American Association of University Professors. The forum was held in response to a dispute between head basketball coach Larry Brown and David Katzman, professor of history, over the class grade given to point guard Cedric Hunter.
of sociology and American studies, said that he didn't feel that that was necessary, because academic advising and eligibility were not the same thing.
Hunter was one of 12 academically inclinable athletes last spring.
THE KU FOOTBALL team has more ineligible players than any other school in the Big Eight this season.
The universities of Nebraska and Missouri
have no ineligible players. Kansas State University, Oklahoma State University, Iowa State University and the University of Colorado each have one ineligible player. The University of Oklahoma has two ineligible players this season.
The four players declared ineligible in August were;
*Sandy McGee, Lynn, Mass., senior and wide receiver. He was listed as a potential starter.*
*Len Gant, Burlington, N.C., senior and linebacker.
- Marcus Bond, Newark, N.J., junior and defensive lineman.
- Kevin Pointer, Los Angeles junior and cornerback.
1984
WIN
$100!
Come in this Saturday and enter our contest to win a $100 gift certificate! just guess the retail price of the stereo equipment installed in the University Audio Z28 and WIN!
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estimate the total retail price of all audio equipment not counting sales tax or installation fees, and ensure the feeding price wins. in event of a hit a drawing will be to determine the winner.
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University
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2319 Louisiana ▪ Lawrence
841-3775
September 13, 1984 Page 6
ENTERTAINMENT
The University Daily KANSAN
At Prime Cut, bizarre hair is almost normal
Through the picture window, black leather, lit cigarettes and bizarre haircuts can be seen moving around the room. The scene looks more like a cut-out from a New York nightclub than downtown Lawrence.
"It doesn't always look like this in here," says
Barbara Loveall, owner of Prime Cut Hair Co., 1341 Massachusetts St. "I don't want people to get the idea that all we do here is these kinds of hair cuts."
But an increasing number of progressive hair styles are coming out of the local shop.
"PEOPLE REALLY FREAK out when our weird customers are in the shop at the same time as our normal customers," said Daren Karr, one of four stylishs in the shop.
Karr, one of his friends,
Karr has worked in the shop for the past
year. He loves to cut hair in styles which are
out of the ordinary, he said. He likes it so
much, he said, he'd like to move to New York so
he could do it all the time.
A
"I'm not afraid to cut anything off of anyone." Karr said. "I don't do a lot of mohawks here. I like to be a little bit more creative. People usually do their own mohawks anyway."
POLICE DEPT.
THE REACTIONS STEWART gets about her hair do not always make her life easy. Her social life has been upset, too. Stewart lives in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. The other women in the hall are very cold towards her, she said.
makes my hair
Beth Stewart, Lawrence freshman, said
that most of the time, she likes the attention
her purple hair gets.
"Its fun to see people's reactions," Stewart said.
"I do a lot of cuts like this," Sullivan said. "Darren and I were at the Hawk's Crossing the other night. Between the two of us, we decided we had done practically everyone's hair in the place."
Lauren Sullivan, who has been cutting hair at Prime Cut for three years, styled Stewart's hair.
A certain amount of psychology is involved in giving someone a wild hair cut. Karr and Sullivan said.
"No one says anything to me, not anything." Stewart said. Her roommate is a friend from high school, so she keeps her from getting too lonely, she said.
"YOU HAVE TO FEEL out people to see how radical you can go." Karr said.
Stewart had her hair cut and colored purple because it sounded like a fun idea, she said. Her parents accepted the new hair style, and in fact, her mother said she liked the color.
"Sometimes you can work someone into a more radical look if you have enough time. I can take a Farrah Fawcett type and in a few months have her hair cut totally different, if she trusts me."
"sometimes you know someone isn't really ready for this, or sometimes I can't get a hold on what they really want. That's when I do a boring cut." Sullivan said.
boring cut. 'Survivor cuts'
"The these styles are just a form of expression," she said, and sometimes they can really bring a hidden part of a person's personality to the surface. Her little sister, Martha Sullivan, is a good example.
"Her cut has brought more of herself out," sullyman said.
MARTHA IS A senior at Lawrence High School, 2017 Louisiana - St. Her curly, strawberry colored hair is almost shoulder-length on top and is pulled over to one side to reveal the side and back of her head. Over her right ear and on the back of her head the hair is shaved to about one-fourth inch in length.
Martha said her friends didn't really treat her differently. She thinks that sometimes they might be jealous when they go out because of the attention she gets.
Sullivan said her customers did get stared at. In other cities the reactions are more severe, but in Lawrence people react by not reacting.
"LAWRENCE HAS THIS ATTITUDE that it is too cool to react to anything, but Lawrence isn't as cool as it thinks it is." Sullivan said.
Sullivan has her ideas for hair styles from various places. Sometimes a customer will come in and describe something that they have seen on someone else.
When she travels out of the state, she keeps her eyes open for different types of hair styles that she might be able to alter or duplicate for one of her customers.
Harvey Stafford, Wichita freshman, wasn't worried that his hair, which stands high on his head, would keep him from being accepted when he came to the University. "I was thinking, 'What happens if my
accepted when he came to the University
"I was thinking. What happens if my
father is on the list?"
THIN LINES OF HAIR ngzag across his head to form a spider web design.
"I was out in California this summer and saw a girl with a gun like this," Stafford said.
"Before this I had a crew cut. I don't consider myself punk." he said, "I call it hard core, which is new punk rock — fast, hard, politically aware.
Stafford is a painter. His work earned him a place in the KU Gold Show.
"I really want someone to ask me if I am punk so I can use a new line I heard. I want to say, 'No. I'm not punk! I am not ugly.'"
"I think my parents kind of write this haircut off to artistic temperament," Stafford said. "The first time I came home with my hair cut, my mother told me not to do that."
For Robert Myles Waldman, Overland Park freshman, the haircut was for his sanity than anything else. he said.
"I worked at Q104 radio station this
Above, seven of Prime Cuts' customers exhibit their haircuts. The customers are Martha Sullivan, 2017 Louisiana St.; Harvey Stafford, Wichita freshman; Robert Myles Waldman, Overland Park freshman; Lindsay Perkins; Leawood freshman; Ramona Curtis, 2221 Ohio St.; Beth Stewart, Lawrence freshman; Deanna Parsons, Essex, N.Y., senior.
Left, Darren Karr, stylist at Prime Cut, puts the finishing touches on Lindsay Perkins's new cut.
Story by David Lassiter Photos by Joe Wilkins III
summer as a disc jockey. When I was there I started listening to groups like the English Beat, XTC and Elvis Costello," Waldman said.
sure.
The haircut just followed his musical change. His hair is not radically short. In fact, it is longer than most. One jagged spike of hair drops over his forehead and rests on the end of his nose.
September Calendar
13
Arnie Johnson Band. Johnny's Tavern,
401 N. Second St.
Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus. Kemper Arena, Kansas City. Performances through September 16.
City Light Orchestra. The Jazzhaus, 928
2 Massachusetts St., also playing
September 14.
14
R.E.M. 9 p.m., Hoch Auditorium.
Tickets are $9 for students and $10 for general admission.
Gary and the Cruisers. Just a
Playhouse, 806 W.24th St.
Sue Malloy and Carol Dressler. Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second, also playing September 15.
15
Desert Architecture exhibit opens at the University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology in Spooner Hall. The exhibit will run until December 12. The museum is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays and 1 to 5 p.m. on Sundays.
Renaissance Festival. Bonner Springs Weekends through October 7.
mation can
Band Day Parade. 9 a.m., from 7th and
Massachusetts streets to 11th and
Massachusetts streets.
Cider Days Arts & Crafts Festival.
Topeka, also on September 16. For information:
(913) 272/9290.
Carol Sloane. The Jazzhaus, 926
Massachusetts St.
Chocolate Exhibition. Hyatt Regency Hotel, Kansas City, also on September 16. For information call: (816)474/9969.
Yes. 7:30 p.m. Sandstone Center, Bonner Springs
16
Visiting Artists Series: Linda Maxey, marimba. 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
18
R.E.M. musicians play music as they like it
By TODD NELSON Staff Reporter
The adjectives in the English language don't work well for R.E.M. They just don't properly describe the group's music.
pass player Mike Mills has been working on that problem. He recently summed up the R.E.M. sound in a few words. "I'd say it's 'not wasteful,'" he said. "We just try not to have anything boring in there."
"We're just doing what sounds best to us," R.E.M. is on the second leg of its tour after the release of "Reckoning," the band's second album. It will perform at 9 p.m. tomorrow in Hoch Auditorium. The dB's, a four-piece band from North Carolina, will open the concert.
CRITICS APPEAR TO have been anything but bored with R.E.M. The group's debut album, "Murmur," almost beat Michael Jackson's "Thriller" for first place in the 1983 Village Voice Pazz and Jop writers poll. Rolling Stone's critics' poll named "Murmur" as album of the year and R.E.M. as best new artists.
The band hasn't sought overnight stardom on the momentum of one big single. Mills said.
'Why play music that's easy and obvious?' he asked. We're not concerned with airplay. That's something the record companies worry about.
"I'm really glad we've gotten where we are the way we have. It's been a pretty steady growth. If it never got bigger, we'd be fine — we could still find plenty of places to play. As long as we keep trying, I'd hate to stagnate"
long to keep up," ReEM's follow-up to "Reckoning." R.E.M.'s follow-up to "Murmur." features stronger songs and a more direct sound. Mills said.
THE TITLE REFLECTS the position in which the band now sees itself, he said.
"The second album is a turning point. One group will have one good album, then go nowhere," he said. "It's also a plus on the other side." But I don't think any of us use it very much.
that any of us use.
R.E.M. intended "Reckoning" to be different from "Murmur" for several reasons, he said.
When making the "Murmur" album, the band relied on producers Mitch Easter and Don Dixon, who also produced "Reckoning," to create and sustain a mood that seemed to weave the individual songs together, Mills said.
"We WERE'NT REALLY sure what to do in the studio," he said. So the band used lots of overdubs, adding layers of acoustic guitars to some songs and intermittent piano parts to others.
But things were different with "Beckoning" because the songs were stronger, each intended to stand on its own, Mills said. The final product had fewer overdubs and sounded more like "Chronic Town." R.E.M.'s 1982 extended-play record
Reviewers of the new album have made much of the fact that singer Michael Stipe's vocals can be understood with greater frequency than on R.E.M.'s other records. But that was not necessarily intentional, Mills said.
"The lyrics are not poetry. Mills said,
"They're not meant to stand on their own
MORE IMPORTANT to R.E.M., he said, is the mood that the lyrics and music together evoke. The mood is what R.E.M. builds its songs around. Mills said. From night to night, the specific words that Stipe sings in concert might vary from the recorded version of the song, but the song's mood will be the same.
R. E.M. formed in April 1980, in Athens, Ga., where University of Georgia students, Stipe and guitarist Peter Buck were living in an abandoned church. They recruited drummer Bill Berry and Mills, also students who had played together in campus, to lead high school in Mascau, Ga. The group made its debut as a party for friends at the church.
ingle
The dB's third album, "Like This," is scheduled for national release today. It is the group's first U.S. release, after two British releases, "Stands for deciBels," and "Re percussion."
TOMORROW NIGHT will be R.E.M. S third appearance in Lawrence R.E.M. played at Off the Wall Hall in 1981 and at the Lawrence Opera House in 1982
single
Members of both bands have been friends since 1861, when R.E.M. met the dB's in New York City. Mills said The bands will probably play some songs together tomorrow night.
For the Opera House show, Peter Hol-sapple, db's singer-songwriter and guitarist opened the show with a solo set. He later joined R.E.M. on stage for several songs, including "Black and White," the db's first single.
Art of University Dance Co. is a far leap from classical
By ERIKA BLACKSHER
Staff Reporter
The KU University Dance Company opened its 1844-85 season last weekend with eight dances, which were choreographed by students and faculty members of the company and performed for more than 400 people.
Far from the typical pink tutk. Far from the fluttering Swan Lake; dancers clad in simple costumes snaked and flowed across the stage in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall on Saturday and Sunday.
Janet Hamburg, coordinator of dance and artistic director of the company, said the performing group focused on modern dance
"MODERN DANCE HAS many different definitions," she said. "It expresses not one point of view, but many, giving it variety and texture."
Scott Williams, Tonganoxie junior and member of the company for a year, said the exploratory nature of modern dance allowed the performer to express messages and ideas.
"Modern dance is more theatrical with each move representing something different," he said. "Each piece presents a story or hidden message."
"Carvings," choreographed by Karla Flott, a former member of the company, was one of the dances performed Saturday and Sunday. The dance represented a primitive society performed by a quintet of dancers
"I wanted the audience to feel a sense of ritual," Flott said. "I wanted them to be pulled into that ancient world."
"DANSES ELECTRONIQUES a la Jazz"
another dance performed last weekend, comprised seven short dances that, when performed together, flowed into a whole.
Edward Mattilia, professor of music theory, produced the score for the dance.
Hamburg said, "The music amplified the texture and mood of each little dance."
Arielle Thomas, professor of dance, is new to the dance company this year.
These and the six other dances were introduced at the company's spring concert last year.
However, Hamburg said the rest of the performances planned for the 1984-85 acade demre year would be new material
Hamburg said Thomas would add her perspective to the choreography and a lot of new material to the company.
The dancers devote at least 20 hours a week to practice. The time demands and the quality of the productions qualify the performers as semiprofessionals. Hamburg said.
THE COMPANY, established in 1978, is a semiprofessional performing group. Although all 15 members of the performing company are students, Hamburg said, the group is considered semiprofessional.
The group was started to provide students with the opportunity to try dance as a profession, Hamburg said. The company is a professional training ground to see if they want to continue in the field, she said.
The company usually performs three or four times on campus each year and at the annual Kansas Dance Festival in Wichita.
MEMBERS ALSO WORK on their tech niques by taking classes from visiting artists. This year the visiting artists will be the Hubbard Steel Dance Company from Chicagc. They will be here for two days in April.
"It's definitely a goal to have an artist in residence," Hamburg said. However, the company's budget of $1440 for the 1984-85 year does not allow for that, she said.
A formal concert in Murphy Hall costs more than $2,000, she said. "As of now, we cannot do a December concert"
(1)
In order for the company to have future performances, it will have to ask Student Senate for supplemental funds, she said
"The students work very hard," she said "and it makes it all the more difficult when we have to cancel a concert because we can't afford it."
"What we live for is to dance and perform."
ENTERTAINMENT
University Daily Kansan, September 13, 1984
Page
Larry Weaver/KANSAN
1075
Pianist Claude Frank reherses on the Steinway grand piano in benefit concert in that theater last night, and the proceeds will Crafton/Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Frank gave a go to the KU Music Scholarship Fund.
Musician performs classical style
By SUSAN WORTMAN Entertainment Editor
That air of formality so typical of classical musicians — the one that comes with the black tuxedo and stark stage lighting — wasn't there this time. Maybe just a little, but it vanshed like the dying note of a song.
"That is because the music is so formal," said Claud Frank who is the artist in residence at the University of Kansas and a visiting artist. He will be at KU at least six more times before the end of the school year, performing and teaching.
He has intense brown eyes and a casual manner. He talks leaning back in his chair, smoking a cigarette. He smokes only one. His music may be formal, but the man isn't.
R KANK WAS BORN into a musical family in 1925. His mother was a semiprofessional singer and his father was a lawyer. From his
parents, and especially from his mother, he developed his love for music. His love began her love.
"My mother said that I was singing at nine months," he said. "But you know mothers. Take that for what it's worth."
Frank isn't quite sure why he liked the piano. Maybe, he said, it came from the fascination he had with the Steinway piano that stood in their living room in Nuremberg, Germany – off limits to him.
"It was beautiful," he said, "but I didn't get to really play it as a child. Most German schools have music classes."
HIS MOTHER let him start piano lessons when he was 6. After three or four weeks, most children kick all the way to the piano bench, begging for a ride. Rather than abogot, the piano even then
He was 12 in 1938, when everyone feared that every day would erupt into World War II. Frank fled from Germany to Paris, then to the United States.
"But I continued lessons through all the
rigamarole of immigration and moving," he said. When he arrived in the Unites States, Frank began studying the piano full-time.
"NOW, I PLAY some bad tennis. I play very badly, and I love to ski. I'm passionate about skiing. Even when I'm on tour, I find a free day to ski."
Even though he was a serious player from the beginning, Frank said he didn't miss out on any part of his childhood, except baseball. "In Europe, we don't have baseball so that was one thing I missed, but I did a lot of it, running bicycling, and I played football," he said.
that is how he keeps himself from having to play the piano instead of getting to create music
But still, he said; he struggles to keep the excitement in the everyday playing. "It is what you have to do and what you want to do," he said. "But the interest is constantly kindled. The work is so exciting, so creative so difficult. The music is so difficult that one never plays well enough."
Film shows complexities of author's life and works
By KAREN MASSMAN
Associate Entertainment Editor
"Burroughs." Showing Sept. 14-18 in the Spencer Museum Auditorium of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art. A reception with author William S. Burroughs and director Howard Brookner will follow the Sept. 14 showing. Advance tickets for Sept. 14 are available in the Spencer Museum bookstore. Tickets may be purchased at the door for the other showings.
The critics have called William S. Burroughs a writer, poet and prophet. He has traveled the world and has done what most people only read about.
This weekend, Lawrence audiences will have an opportunity to see him from a different point of view — from that of the movie camera.
Howard Broinker, director of "Burroughs," has拼 together a portrait of Burroughs through photographs and excerpts from his books.
However, the film is not an analytical portrait of the life and works of a man. Brokker has managed to put the quiet, reserved man at ease so he can film this rare view of Burroughs' mannerisms and lifestyle.
HE GETS BURROUGHS to talk almost detached, as if he were telling a story about someone else. He talks about his romantic relationships with men and women, the accidental killing of his wife, his writing and his 15-year addiction to heroin and morphine. He talks about his books, including "Junkie," "Nova Express," "Naked Lunch," "The Ticket that Exploded" and "The Soft Machine" They are, for the most part, reflections of the attitudes, activities and people who have influenced his life.
The film opens with a cut from "Saturday Night Live" featuring actress Lauren Hutton reading excerpts from his works. It quickly moves to an interview with Burroughs.
As he walks through his parents' house in St. Louis, where he was born in 1914, he rememberes be afraid of everything. He shared a room with his brother. Mortimer, because he was afraid of the dark and couldn't sleep at night.
HE CARRIED HIS CHILDHOOD fears with him into his adult life and into his writing. He remembers trying opium for the first time, told it would make him have sweet dreams.
Burroughs' dry humor is captured not only when he reads excerpts from his novels, but also in his character acting. In one of the funniest clips, Burroughs plays a strange unethical doctor, Doctor Benway, a character that he often resurrects in other works and speeches he gives.
Burroughs once studied to be a doctor in Vienna after he graduated from Harvard University where he studied literature, linguistics and anthropology. But, because he was discontent with his future as a doctor, he decided to become a professional spy. It would, have been an ideal profession for someone with such a mysterious incination like Burroughs, but he was rejected by the OSS, the agency that later would evolve into the CIA. Burroughs attributed the rejection to the hatred of an acquaintance.
"Burroughs" leaves the viewer with great insight into the works and life of an interesting, yet very complex William S. Burroughs.
THE RELATIONSHIP between Burroughs and his wife, Joan, is recounted by Allen Ginsberg, a fellow writer and one of Burroughs' lovers. He remembers that Burrough's and his wife were very similar in attitudes and spirits.
At a party one night, Joan Burroughs persuaded her husband to perform their William Tell act, Ginsberg said. She placed a champagne glass on her head and Eurrourbis aimed his pistol. However, after a night of drinking, he missed the glass and shot Joan in the head.
it was after her death that Burroughs began to write seriously. Ginsberg said. Burroughs spent several years in Tangiers and wrote often to him. The letters were later published.
In 1951, he traveled to London to get help for his drug addiction. Howard Hunke, another author and the man who introduced Burroughs to drugs, describes Burroughs as one of the few heavy drug addicts who was able to recover.
MATTHEW VARIOUS CLIPS are dispersed throughout the 90-minute film, it never rambles. Brookner has assembled the material almost in chronological order. It is often humorous, often sad, and always precise.
"Burroughs" leaves the viewer with great insight into the works and life of an interesting, yet very complex William S. Burroughs.
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We choose to use only quality mozzarella cheese which is low in butter fat. We make our own dough fresh. And we throw the dough by hand to keep it soft and to develop the gluten. Our sauce contains a selection of herbs and real Romano cheese which gives our pizzas a special spiciness and flavor.
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We choose to use only quality mozzarella cheese which is low in butter fat. We make our own dough fresh. And we throw the dough by hand to keep it soft and to develop the gluten. Our sauce contains a selection of herbs and real Romano cheese which gives our pizzas a special spiciness and flavor.
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BRING A BUDDY TO LUNCH!
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Dine-In Only!
Expires September 14, 1984.
Pizza At Stephanie's
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Order any Small Pizza & get another of equal value
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841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
Price does not include sales tax
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN OUR SERVICE ZONE
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Order any Large Pizza & get another one of equal value
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2214 Yale Rd.
Price does not include sales tax
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FREE DELIVERY
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CAMPUS AND AREA
GQ
冰热人品 完美体验
For Agrand Hotel
611 West 9th
843-2138
University Daily Kansan, September 13, 1984
Page 8
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
5 p.m.-midnight
841-3268
SPACE FOR RENT
Air Conditioning Smoke Filtered Atmosphere Ample Parking For further information call 842-2699
Today On Campus:
Kansas Union
Bicycle Drawing
13
Only one more day to sign up for the chance to win the 12 speed bicycle and other gifts. Friday at 4:00 p.m. the drawing will be held for the bicycle. 2 clock radio telephones, a clock radio, 4 brass trunks, 18 stereo headphones, picture frame, 2
canvas carry-all bags and many pen lights.
This event is one of many activities planned for the week-long Kansas Union Open House, Sept. 11-15. For more information call 864-3477 or 864-4596.
KUu
KUBookstores
Kansas Union 864-4640
SUA FILMS
TONIGHT
"EFFERVESCENT."
'EFFERVESCENT'
"Eric Rohmer's effortlessly witty, effervescent new French film I hope will win more awards for Mr. Rohmer's talent and the most original and elegant craftsmakers at work today in any country. Another rare Rohmer treat"
-Vincent Canby, NEW YORK TIMES
"BRILLIANT"
"A曼达 langlet as Pauline emerges from the Brittany beaches as one of the most sparkling nymphets in cinema history. A brilliant summer entertainment."
-Andrew Sarris, VILLAGE VOICE
"DELIGHTFUL
A film of summer sunlight, bore skin and escalating amorous misunderstandings - wilt and irony abound. An erotic round that can only lead to those wonderful Rohmer insights into the mind and heart"
-David Anson, NEWSWEEK
ERIC ROHMER'S
Pauline
at the beach
I
Woodruff Auditorium Level 5, Kansas Union
7:30 p.m.
$2.00
Need a TV...
Rentacolor TV.
Student Discounts, Free Delivery, Free Installation, & Free Service
Call Mike: 1-764-8660
KWALITY COMICS
Comics & Science Fiction
107 W. 7th. 843-7239
Come On Down To The Sanctuary
For
QUARTER DRAWS
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9 p.m. to Midnight
The Sanctuary
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For the best selection of
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shop at
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841-2160
Hours:
M-F 10.8 Sat 10.5
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Sylvia Haas, owner
2711 West Sixth
www.rainboutique.com
749-1156
BUTTON
SPECIAL KU STUDENT RATES AND SERVICES.
CALL FOR INFORMATION.
I've invested my career in color. After years of teaching color theory in college, I developed colors and techniques unique to Rainbowtique. I know how color can transform personal appearance as well as build inner confidence for both men and women.
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AT OUSDAHL, WEST SIDE OF CENTER,
BEHIND PERKINS
University Daily Kansan, September 13, 1984
Page 9
CAMPUS AND AREA
KU sues former bus director
By the Kansan Staff
The University of Kansas has filed a civil suit against McMurry, former director of KU on Wheels, asking "in excess of $10,000" and punitive damages.
"The purpose of the suit is simply additional attempt to recover the state's money," said Mary Prewitt, University's head of public relations. University is banding the case.
Pewitt said she was unwilling to state the actual amount the University would demand. McMurry was sentenced to eight to 20 years in prison by 1983 McMurry also was ordered to pay $27,054 in restitution to KU.
She said yesterday that "in excess of $10,000" was a legal phrase required by Kansas statutes to both party what action was being taken
When the University will be required to state a definite dollar amount will depend on how the case proceeds, she said.
McMurry is in charge of KU on Wheels from 1973 until his arrest on Sept. 15, 1982 on five counts of theft $20,425 from the bus system.
On June 10, 1983. McMurry pleaded no contest to the five felony charges.
serving his sentence at a state honor camp in El Dorado.
"There's case law that essentially says the judge can't order incarceration and restitution at the same time." Prewitt said.
Restitution was included in the sentence, she said, so that if McMurry appeared before a parole board, the board would know how much money he owed the University and that restitution was an appropriate condition for parole.
Criminal case orders, such as those issued in McMurry's original trial, and civil case orders are enforced in different ways, she said.
Fall arrival of KU students causes utility orders to soar
"If you've got both, then you've got all the options covered." Prewitt said.
By the Kansan Staff
When about 20,000 students flood Lawrence in August, many of them need phones, light and power.
For the Kansas Power and Light Company and Southeastern Bell Telephone Company, that means hooking up lines and turning on power for three to four times more people than usual.
In August, the Kansas Power and Light Company processed almost 7,000 service orders, about 5,000
more than usually are processed in an average month, said Joe Fike, office manager of the company.
Southwestern Bell Telephone Company had a 150 percent increase in new service activity in August, said Donna Johnson, manager for media relations for Southwestern Bell Telephone Company in Kansas.
Exact figures for Lawrence are unavailable because new service figures are lumped together with those of other colleges, including about 15 college towns.
Marla Geary, staff manager for
Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, said, however, that the college rush had caused most of the increased business.
Both companies gear up for the rush by adding extra staff and by extending part-time employees/hours to full time.
"Every year we know it's coming, and every year we pull in people to deal with the college rush," Geary said.
The telephone company issued applications for new service to KU fraternities and sororites to speed up the hook-up process for students.
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presents "4th Annual Drink-Up" (for Brandon Salvini) featuring "WIZARD"
Potter's Pavillion 6 p.m.-12 Friday, Sept.14
$4.50 Donation$3.50 Advance
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Committee still undecided about memorial site, design
University Daily Kansan, September 13, 1984
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
07 Mass phone: 843-1
By the Kansan Staff
The Vietnam Memorial Committee has not made a final decision on the location for KU's Vietnam Memorial, but the Chandler Court is still a possibility, committee members said last night.
Chandler Court, south of the Burge Union, was the original site the committee chose for the Vietnam Memorial after Chancellor Gene A. Budig in October approved its construction.
sider the issue.
Page 10
"They're all on equal footing until a final decision has been made," said Margaret Berlin, a member of the committee, which was formed after the Student Senate started to con-
However, in June, the committee decided to reconsider the location because the memorial would face the Party Room of the Burge Union. The committee also was concerned about the nearby construction of the Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
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842-9593
Y
Tennis Doubles Entry Deadline:
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Entry Fee: $1 plus one Unopened Can
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BUY ONE GET ONE FREE!
BUY ONE GET ONE FREE!
Bring a friend and choose any item from our menu, get the next item of same or lesser value FREE!
Must present coupon at time of ordering.
Offer ends 9/23/84
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan
Reciprocal with over 235 clubs.
843-0540
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49¢ reg. 85¢
Expires 9/16/84 Bring in this coupon
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69¢ reg. 96¢
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M-S 10-6
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Let's Go Crazy At GAMMONS.
THE BEATLES
Forty Movie Tickets To Be Given Away.
Thursday night we're going crazy. Get ready to step out like never before. Right after 10 o'clock we're having a music dance contest and you're invited to enter. Our judges will pick the 20 best couples and each winning couple will receive two free tickets to the movie PURPLE RAIN. Dress up and get down to the dance contest this Thursday night. What a great way to win tickets to a great movie.
TONIGHT
No cover
25' draws and $1.00 bar drinks
Happy Hour prices 11:00 to close
GAMMONS SNOWBOARD
23rd & Ousdahl So. Hills Center
University Daily Kansan, September 13, 1984 Page 11
CAMPUS AND AREA
Interlibrary computer finds books not at KU
By DAN HOWELL Staff Reporter
Students doing research can reach outside the KU libraries to obtain other library books or materials more quickly and precisely than ever, KU library officials said this week.
Most large libraries in the United States have listed parts of their collections in an enormous computer index, said Sandra Brandt, director of interlibrary services.
"It's a huge data base," she said.
"It will tell you what books are owned by library."
Interlibrary loans allow a person to use a book from one library by borrowing it through another library, usually near home.
Brandt said most transactions still would be handled through paper records for many years because of the lowest cost of converting the catalogs.
But with requests for interlibrary
loans increasing at about 14 percent a year for five years, Brandt said, the computer network helps.
She said the computer index carried books acquired since 1976, the year the University began using the system.
Clinton Howard, assistant dean for technical services, said that about 260,000 volumes, about 12 percent of the material were listed on the computer system.
Howard said the computer system made it much easier to pinpoint which libraries owned a book than it was with printed lists.
"If you couldn't find it in the paper directory, you had to guess who might have it," he said.
Brandt said those who wanted to request interlibrary loans should allow a minimum of two to three weeks for items to arrive. Items from within Kansas may arrive sooner because of courier service, but overseas transactions often take two months or more.
SMALL WORLD will meet at 9:15 a.m. at First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 3rd St.
ON CAMPUS
Today
A DISCUSSION about microcomputer contracts with Zenith will be at 3:30 p.m. in the auditorium in the Computer Center.
THE UNIVERSITY SENATE will meet at 3:30 p.m. in, woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
THE KU GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Burge Union, Klaus Kuschenmeister, East German author in residence, will discuss "Politics in the German Democratic Republic."
A RICE AND BEAN dinner will be served by Latin American Solidarity at 6 p.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
MARANATHA CHRISTIAN
MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m.
in room 301 in Frank R. Burge
Union.
LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will meet at 7 p.m. in the Cork Room in the Kansas Union
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
SENIOR YEARBOOK PORTRAITS
Tribal Warrior
Shooting is taking place now in Student Organizations & Activities Office 403 Kansas (Union
MAKE
YOUR Stop by 121B Kansas
POINT:
MASK (Union 12-5 or
Call 864-3728
Photographer hours:
12-8 Mon. & Thurs.
9-6 Tues., Wed., & Fri.
$3.00 sitting fee paid when you purchase a 1984 Jayhawker
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
91 STREET MASSACHUSETTS
Weavers Inc
Sexing Conference Since 1857
Shop Thursdays
til 8:30 P.M.
Weavers One
Serving Lawrence Since 1857
THE 3
MOST WANTED
SPORTSWEAR
ITEMS!
Sweater Vest Reg $42 34.99
Turtleneck Top Reg $15 11.99
Skirts Reg $23-$32 17.99
To 26.99
The argyle wool tweed vest is available in camel or grey combinations. S-M-L. Our polyester and cotton turtleneck tops are in the most wanted fall colors. S-M-L. Our collection of skirts includes corduroy, twirl or wool blends in assorted styles.
Jr. and Misses Sizes. Main Floor Sportswear
Shop Thursdays
til 8:30 P.M.
Weaver's Inc
Serving Conference Since 1857
THE 3
MOST WANTED
SPORTSWEAR
ITEMS!
Sweater Vest Reg $42 34.99
Turtleneck Top Reg $15 11.99
Skirts Reg $23-$32 17.99
To 26.99
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Jr. and Misses Sizes. Main Floor Sportswear
GODFATHER'S PIZZA
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$3 OFF any Large Pizza
or $2 OFF any Medium Pizza
FREE 2 liter
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711 WEST 23RD
843-6282
ES Inc
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$3 OFF any Large Pizza or $2 OFF any Medium Pizza
FREE 2 liter bottles of
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711 WEST 23RB
843-6282
TO YOUR DOOR
FREE 2 liter bottles of
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April 17, 1988
234 West 6th Street
New York, NY 10014
tomorrow night
SUA
Special
evento
DANCE FLOOR!
R.E.M.
KZR
106
WITH SPECIAL GUESTS: the dB's
DANCE FLOOR!
1973
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14th HOCH AUDITORIUM •9 pm
TICKETS $10/$9 ALL SEATS RESERVED $1 DISCOUNT AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTS W/KUID
TICKETS at SUA BOX OFFICE; All Capital Automated Ticket Outlets including Full-Line Jones Stores, Caper's Corner Records, both 7th Heaven Stores, Crown Center Ticket Office and Love Records; Omni Electronics in Lawrence; Budget Tapes and Records in Topeka; and through Dial-A-Tic at 816/753-6617.
PRODUCED BY NEW WEST/CONTEMPORARY
---
---
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, September 13, 1984
Page 12
House panel to study Ferraro's disclosures
By United Press International
WASHINGTON Vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro's finances are once again under scrutiny after the House ethics committee voted unanimously yesterday to investigate whether Ferraro violated the law by refusing to pay taxes and during six years in Congress.
Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, ethics committee chairman, stressed that he would not allow the
The inquiry began at the request of a conservative group which charged that Ferraro committed 50 to 60 years of the Ethics in Government Act.
"WE ARE SIMPLY saying they the charges) warrant investigation and we are undertaking the investigation," said Stokes, who refused to estimate how long it might take. It is considered unlikely the investigation would be finished in the seven weeks remaining before the election.
In a statement, Ferraro's running mate, Walter Mondale, said: "I have every confidence that the House ethics committee will reach the same conclusion that the American people and I have reached: Garaldine Ferraro is an honest, decent public servant worthy of the people's trust."
KNOWLEDGE SERVICE EDUCATION
Zenith Epion Kayroi
Morrow Oxidata Brother
Communique
"We can speed it up, we can't slow it down and we have to go by the rules," said Rep. Floyd Spence of South Carolina, the ranking Democrat on the 12-member committee
Whether or not she becomes the next vice president on Jan. 5, Ferraro ceases to be a member of Congress and would no longer be under the jurisdiction of the House Peace on Standards or Official Conduct.
Computerark
Ferraro said; "I have made the most complete and thorough disclosure of any candidate for national office in American history. As I understand the committee rules, receipt of the conservative action group's complaint virtually obligated them to process it.
69. 647 Massarotes Sheet
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Laurence Kassett
DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG
23rd & Louisiana
Marks Shopping Center
841-0094
MIDWEST BUSINESS SYSTEMS
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* Blue Print Service
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* Office Supplies & Supplies
812 Mass
842 4134
HARVEST STORE FOR NEW MEN'S
$2 discount with KU ID
Silver Clipper
To please you is all pleased.
$50 FREE
Accessories with the purchase of any
- Free Pumps
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Raleigh
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Sekai
100
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Minsky's PIZZA
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Good for any Thursday til 10-13-84
There's only one problem with religions that have all the answers. They don't allow questions.
If you sometimes have questions about God and the meaning of life, come and join the search for answers in the fellowship of the Episcopal Church. The Episcopal Church
CANTEJUNY MOUSE • LUIC 10114 Louisiana EUCHARIST • SUNDAY 2 P.M.
Student Union Activities presents THE KANSAS UNION OPEN HOUSE WEEK
*******************
September 13
Joe Domme Ballroom Dancing
Seminar
7 p.m. Big Eight Room
CANTERBURY HOUSE *1116 LOUISIANA EUCHARIST • SUNDAY 5 P.M.
**********
Bookstore Sidewalk Sale 10 a.m.-4 p.m. in front of the Kansas Union
in front of the Kansas Union
STUDENTS
COULD THE NAVY INTEREST YOU IN PAID TUITION?
If you are a student at the University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Scholarship. The Navy Scholarship provides full tuition, all text books plus $100 a month spending money.
When you graduate, you will have a job in the fleet as a naval or marine officer. You will train in Nuclear Submarines, Surface Ships, Naval Aircraft or one of many other exciting fields.
CHECK OUT THE ADVANTAGES OF NAVAL
ROTCT SCHOLARSHIPS
Call Lieutenant Joe Johannes at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps (NROTC).
Paid Tuition, Spending Money, and a Job. That is Navy ROTC.
DOUBLE FEATURE
Host VCR & Movies
Videography & TV
Curtis Mathas (612) 597-8230
Curti Mathas (612) 597-8230
OPEN TIL 9 PM
EVERY NIGHT
THE GRINDER MAN
WE DELIVER!
704 MASS
843-7398
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
DOWNLOAD
TELEPHONE 212-578-5088
Puncher
Purple Rain
7:30 9:35 5:15 sat. sun
VARSITY
SHOWTOWN
TELEPHONE NUMBER
An Adventure in Ecstasy
BO
DEREK
Bolero
WILLCREST 2
Their time has come!
REVENGE OF THE NERDS
7. 15 & 26 & 08 Daily
HILLCREST 1
WET AND DRY
BOARD WOOD
CUNT
EASTWOOD
A cup on the edge.
TIGHTROPE OK
7:20 9:00 9:00 Daily
GHOSTBUSTERS
COLUMN BROADWAY
7:35 9:35 5:00 Daily
HILLCREST 3
TELPHONE 812-6000
CINEMA 1 ILLUSTRATED AND DIVIDED
FLASHPOINT
R
7:30 8:30 5:10 Sat. Sun
CINEMA 2 ILLUSTRATED AND DIVIDED
SINE WILDER The Woman in Red
Woman in red $ 15 7:35 9:30
* Twilight Bargain Show
CINEMA 1
13TH OCTOBER 2009
AT THE BROADWAY
FLASHPOINT
R
7:00 8:30 9:10 Sat. Evening
CINEMA 2 TELEVISION AND RADIO
THE Woman in Red
GINE WILDER
Woman in red 5·15 7·35 9·30
Twilight Ugrain Show
LARGEST 18 & OVER
DANCE NIGHTCLUB
IN LAWRENCE
LARGEST 18 & OVER
DANCE NIGHTCLUB
IN LAWRENCE
WHERE THE
GREEK MEET
"THE ROCK & ROLL
BANDS ARE GONE"
"THE ROCK & ROLL BANDS ARE GONE"
TONIGHT AT The ALL New
All
POWERFUL BAR
SOUND SYSTEM
DRESS CODE
Pladium
AND
Wed. $1.50 pitchers all nite long
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
DANCE MUSIC
LADIES get in for Just $1.00
DRINKFREE
All Night Long—With KUID Plus Guys Drink Free All Nite for Just $5 w/KUID
Ladies Night!!
Mon. Quarter Pitcher Nite 25¢ pitches all nite long
Specials:
Tues. College ID Nite everybody in free w/KUID
Featuring Dance Music All Nite Long Tonight
Doors open at 7:30 p.m.
★
The ALL NEW PLADIUM ★
901 Mississippi Lawrence, KS
★
841-4600
Thurs. LADIES NITE
Specials:
Thurs. LADIES NI
Fri. TGIF
free beer
all nite
Sat.
PARTY! PARTY!
PARTY!
Dance music all
nite long and
every nite!
University Daily Kansan, September 13, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Reagan and Mondale dispute deficits, taxes
Page 13
By United Press International
Paradise
Arbor
Walter Mondale offered his version yesterday of a Reagan plan to cut deficits, slash federal aid for the elderly and the poor President Reagan analyzed Monday's data on workers, and called it a "fairly late"
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Palm trees &
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Pancakes &
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And no more
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[Vice President George Bush tried to talk about foreign affairs in Atlanta, but was peppered by questions about his 1980 stand on abortion. Ferraro simply threw away her planned speech and took up the same subject before a crowd in Scranton, Pa.
* STUDIOS STARTING AT
* ONE BEDROOM $200
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* OVERLINES
DEARWood MADMUNITIES
2411 Cedarwood Ave. Phone 863-1116
In its first presidential trial heat since July 8, the ABC Washington Post poll of 1.507 registered voters across the nation found Reagan leading Mondale 56 percent to 40
percent. The Reagan lead was only 7 percentage points in the earlier sampling. The margin of error was plus or minus 3 points.
As the two presidential candidates traded volleys on defenses and taxes, their running mates found them still dogged by the abortion issue.
RENTACOLOR TV
Student Discounts for You.
Call Mike 1-764-B660
FREE Delivery, Installation,
& Service.
In Davenport, Iowa, and Peoria,
III. Mondale pounded the theme that
Reagan had good reason to remain
in office and plan to reduce the
federal detal.
Mondale said without higher taxes to lower the deficit. Reagan might be forced to cut $107 bills in social programs.
HAVE YOU BEEN to the WHEEL LATELY?
Reagan was in upstate New York, where he appealed to traditionally Democratic ethics to switch parties and blasted the Mondale promise of tax hikes that would not affect working people.
Mondale told an Illinois audience, "Mr. Reagan is stonewalling the American people, and that won't play in Peoria."
"The Democratic candidate contends that working Americans wouldn't be hurt by his tax increases. That's a fair tale."
WHEN YOU DECIDE TO LOSE WEIGHT,
I LOST
42 POUNDS
MYSELF
AND I CAN
HELP YOU REACH
YOUR GOAL!
Call Today
841-DIET
NO SHOTS • NO DRUGS
NO CONTRACTS
IT COULD CHANGE YOUR LIFE
LOESE WEIGHT;
Cathy Kessinger DIET CENTER COUNSELOR
935 Iowa/Hillcrest Medical Bldg.
7 a.m.-6 p.m. M-F,
7 a.m.-noon Sat.
DIET CENTER
CASE STUDIO
Balfour
CONVERSE AND FOOTJOY SHOES
1/2 PRICE
CONVERSE
CONVERSE
CONVERSE
- Tennis
* Racquetball
* Aerobic
* Basketball
* Saucony
* Asst. Running
935 Mass. 749-5194
Lawrence, Ks.
FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH GIFTS UNIQUE
K.U. GIFT ITEMS
POSTERS
COSTUMES & MASKS
JACK DANIELS GIFTS
GAG GIFTS
UNIQUE CARDS
THEATRICAL MAKE-UP
CHIPPENDALE ITEMS
PLAYBOY
Also in: Topeka Manhattan
841-7272 745 NEW HAMPSHIRE
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver's Inc
Serving Lawrence Since 1857
K
Shop Thursdays Til 8:30 P.M.
Now thru Saturday Great Price on 3 of our Best Selling Styles!
N
NOW $24.90 Reg.$30
Ladies Shoes
1st Floor
P.R. HERMAN'S
TO HENRY KING
PIZZERIA
THE ONLY REAL PIZZA IN TOWN
- 16" Pizza-$6.50
eat in, carry-out only
- 14" Pizza-$5.00
- Daily Specials -
Stop buying processed pizza from our competitors.Call or visit P.R.Herman's for the only real pizza in town
- Coming Soon—Sub Sandwiches *
Fast, Free Delivery
700 New Hampshire
843-3434
Next to The Hatter
BUT IT WILL NEVER HAPPEN TO ME . . .
GET STREETWISE!
THIS WORKSHOP WILL FOCUS ON RAPE AWARENESS, EDUCATION,
AND PREVENTION AS WELL AS OFFER PARTICIPANTS A CHANCE
TO ACTIVELY LEARN SELF-PROTECTION SKILLS.
TO ACTIVELY LEARN SELF-PROTECTION SKILLS.
TIME: 7-9 p.m.
DATE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18
KANSAS UNION
PLACE: REGIONALIST ROOM,
SPONSORED BY THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT JUDY BROWDER AT (864-3552).
You and
The University of Kansas
Parents Day 1984
Saturday, September 15, 1984
All-University Reception
with the Chuck Berg Band
10:00-11:30 a.m.
Kansas Union Main Lobby
Open Houses and Academic Activities
Architecture and Urban Designr
Business
Chemistry
College Honors Program
Computing Services
Education
Engineering
Journalism
Language Laboratories
Military Science
Pharmacy
Study Abroad
Football
Halftime entertainment by Band Day participants
KU vs. Florida State
1:30 p.m., Memorial Stadium
Reserved Tickets $13.00
Tickets on sale at Allen Field
House Ticket Office, 864-
3141
Lambda Sigma Mum Sale
Members of Lambda Sigma sophomore honorary society will sell chrysanthemum corsages in living groups September 4-14, in the Burge and Kansas Unions from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. on September 15, and in Memorial Stadium from noon to 1:30 p.m. on September 15. Proceeds support Lambda Sigma activities.
Exhibits
Art and Design Gallery Snow Entomological Museum Museum of Natural History Spencer Museum of Art Museum of Anthropology Spencer Research Library Kansas Union Gallery
Band Day Parade Downtown Lawrence
Entertainment
SUA Free Films, 7:00 p.m. Kansas Union
SUA Free Dance-Concert with Get Smart, 9:00 p.m.
Kansas Union
Saturday Seminars and More
SPORTS ALMANAC
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Page 14
W 13 L Pct. GB
Detroit 82 93 65
Toronto 83 65 56
Baltimore 79 65 54
New York 77 67 35
Denton 76 69 52
Cleveland 76 69 52
Milwaukee 60 85 44
West
Minnesota 74 71 510 —
Kansas City 71 71 510 —
California 71 72 500 2
Chicago 67 78 52 7
Oakland 67 78 459 7
Seattle 65 80 448 9
Texas 62 81 431 11
Wednesday's Results
**Results**
Chicago 4, Oakland 2
Toronto 2, New York 1
Halifax 3, Detroit 1
Baltimore 1, Ottawa 1
Kansas City 6, Minnesota 2
Cincinnati 7, California 7
Texas at Seattle night
**Thursday's Games**
New York *West Point* 6:08 at Toronto
Lead 13:48 6:35 pm
Cleveland *Horns* 0:14 at California
Zachary *Stone* 0:14
Texas (Tanana 14-13) at Seattle (Moore
5:15), 9:35 p.m.
W L. Pct. GB
Chicago 88 58 603
New York 81 54 627
Philadelphia 77 69 527
St Louis 76 69 514
St. Louis 76 74 106
Pittsburgh 63 83 432
West
San Diego 81,64 559 / 10
Houston 72,14 654 / 10
Atlanta 72,74 980 / 10
Los Angeles 69,77 473 12 / 10
Texas Los Angeles 63,83 613 12 / 10
Cleveland 61,28 48
NATIONAL LEAGUE
University Daily Kansan, September 13, 1984
director's chair wine glasses champagne basket
**Wednesday's Results**
Chicago 12, St Louis 9, Philadelphia 5, St Louis 1, 1st game
Philadelphia 5, St Louis 3, 2nd game
New York 7, Pittsburgh 6, San Francisco 4
Conway 7, San Francisco 4
Atlanta 4, Houston
Los Angeles 4, San Diego 1
**Thursday's Results**
Pittsburgh McWilliams 9;10 at New York
New York 9;10 at Montreal (Rogers) 6;13 at Chicago
Sutcliffe 14;11 2 p.m.
Davis 14;11 19:11 at Philadephia
(Denny 6; 8); 8:3 p.m.
fields
the apartment store
712 massachusetts 842-7187
Basket
—Gandhi
Support the Lawrence CROP walk
H
Earth provides enough for everyone's need. But not for everyone's greed.
September 30
JLC
catch us University Lutheran 15th & Iowa-843.6662 Sunday Worship 10:30 am
West Coast Saloon LIGHT NIGHT
Tonite at West Coast cheap light prices 7 p.m.-midnight
Light pitchers...only $1.50
Light draws...only 40¢
Light bottles...only 60¢
Tab...only 40¢
841-BREW 2222 Iowa
WORSHIP
Sunday Evening...
T
T
T
Followed by supper ($1)
5:30 pm
ECM STUDENT CHRISTIAN CENTER
1204 Oread
(One block North of the Kansas Union)
1204 Oread
(One block North of the Kansas Union
ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES:
The United Methodist Church
The Presbyterian Church (USA)
The United Church of Christ
The Church of the Brethren
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan
Recruit all with 235 clubs
843-0540
Try The Sanctuary For Lunch!
DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS
All you $275
can eat.
Noon to 2 p.m.
Voter Registration Drive
Task FORCE '84
On Wescoe Beach
Sept. 10-14
Sept. 24-28
8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
Make YOUR voice known! Register NOW!
Paid for by Student Activity Fee
KU Faculty, Staff, Students and State Employees
ZENITH data systems
You may purchase Zenith Micro Computers and Monitors at 32% discount
available models are:
Zenith 150-IBM Compatible
320K RAM Dual Drive $ 1903
Zenith 100 Dual Drive
192K RAM $2535
17
Imprinted Software Systems Inc.
2201-G W. 25th Behind Gibsons
749-4774 for additional details
12" amber monitor $101
13" color monitor $380
If
FASHIONS IN MOTION IS NOW!
Offering a Catalog Containing a complete Line of Intimate Apparel.
SAVE! Each Catalog Contains a Certificate Valued at $7¢⁰
Order One Catalog for $5¢⁰
SAVE! Six Catalogs Gives You $42¢⁰ Worth of Certificates
Order A Year's Subscription
of Six Catalogs For Only $30¢⁰
Enclosed is a $5th check or money order for one catalog.
Enclosed is a $30th check or money order for a year's subscription
Mail to Fashions in Motion
500 Richards Rd. Kansas City, Mo 64116
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE ZIP
CLOSEOUT SALE
Computer Work Stations & Printer Stands
50% OFF LIST
42'' Worktables $130 $65
Were Now
Printer Stands $120 $60
Cash & Carry
The
Wood 11th & Haskell
Works 842-7797
GRAND OPENING SALE!
GRAND
OPENING
SALE!
We're having a tremendous sale this week. It's our Grand Opening and we invite you to take advantage of our unbelievable prices now thru Saturday. Professional, knowledgeable salespeople and High Tech's lowest prices. That's what we're all about at Computer Outlet and that's why we're the fastest growing computer store in town.
Buy: Columbia 256K with keyboard, for $1000.00 off list.
Get Free: Open Access integrated software (as well as regular software package).
**Buy:** A Toshiba 1351 for $300 off list price (dot matrix speed with letter quality results!).
Got Free: Your choice of $100 in supplies (paper, disks, printer stand, ribbons) Save $400.
Buy: One box dual sided Memorex diskettes.
Buy: A locking plastic 70 disk capacity storage box (Data Defender).
Get Free: 3 Generik diskettes.
Get Free: 10 Generik diskettes.
Buy: Lotus 1-2-3, R-base or Wordstar ProPack at 20% off list.
Got Free: Flight Simulator or Friendly Arcade.
Buy: APC.
Get Free: High quality amber monitor.
Buv: Any 1200 Hayes or Multimodem.
Buy: Any RGB color monitor.
Get Free: Sidekick (the calculator-calendar program).
Got Free: Any game (up to $50 list price).
These are just a few of the many different products we have at special prices all this week. Remember, sale runs through this Saturday only.
COMPUTER OUTLET "High Tech's Lowest Prices."
804 New Hampshire Lawrence, Ks. 843-PLUG.
suppliers of IBM/PC to city governments IBM/PC is a trademark of International Business Machines
1
September 13, 1984
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
The University Daily KANSAN
CLASSIFIED RATES
CAREFULLY SPECIFIED WORDS
| | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0.15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 |
| 0.20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 |
| 0.25 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.45 |
| Every 5 words add. | 2.50 | 3.90 | 7.50 | 1.05 |
AD DEADLINES
| Classified Display | $4.20 |
| :--- | :--- |
| 1 | per column inch |
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Day Wednesday 5 p.m.
POLICIES
ERTISEMENTS
cried not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance
- Testimonials are not provided for classified or
testimonials
Applications are now being accepted for Student Committee Members for the 1985 Kansas Hurricane Program, a five-year program that will provide House Become a part of this great KU Tradition. Deadline for application: Sept 20
Bristol Street campus Thurs. evening; events by September 23th
Mall of Commerce Reference Malls Shopping Center
PROGRAM LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
Topics include language and improving skills in reading, writing, speaking and listening comprehension; Webcasting; computerized impressions in reading; Kansas University Kansas UNOTE
This is the last foreign language program to offer students in Kansas University. Address: 121 Struthall Hall, 641-864
to The University Daily Kansas
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD DATE count as 3 words
* Deadlines same as Display Advertisement
KU Advertising Club
First Meeting
- Average rates based on consecutive day insertions only
Everyone Welcome!
Free Refreshments
Panel Discussion on How to Get A Job
- classified display advertisements
- Classified display ads do not count towards this earned rate discount
- samples of all mail ad content may be submitted for writing
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct incidence of any advertisement
- No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Thurs., Sept. 13
7 p.m.
Jayhawk Room
Hawks Union
GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS
SUPPLEMENTAL COMPUTER SPECIALIST HALF
time graduate research assistance Successful
presentation of a survey to identify microcomputer
hardware for geographic information
technology in geography, planning, computer science
or related discipline required working in a
relevant field. Experience with microcomputer required
backtrack and or coursework in geography in a
related field. Experience in remote sensing Program Room
240 Nashville, 944-4755. Applications deadline is
September 18, 1984. Equal opportunity.
THE FAR SIDE
Get Streetwise! This workshop will focus on HPA Awareness, Education, and Self protection skills. 7:w.p.m. Tues., Sept. 18 Regional岛房, kan su Union.
Kansas Relays Student Committee is looking for
Kansas Pick-up application at the Tork
Office, 143 Allen Field House. Deadline is Sept.
19, 1984
PLYMOUTH THIRDST SHOP for clothing and housewares. Sat 9-12.30; Tue 9-4. Thur 9-12.30; 7-8.30 p.m. pvrs 945 Vermont
Rent.19" Color T V $28.96 a month Curtis Mathes 1447 W 2nd.842-5751 Open 9-30 - 9-00 M, F 9-30 - 9-00 Sat
rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. W47, W23d. 842-5751. 09 30 - 9:00.
M.F. 19 - 5:00. Sat
RESEARCH PAPERS* 306 page catalog, 15,278
tissues; Rush 2.09 RESEARCH 1122 iflahoe, 206
MB, Los Angeles 90025, 213; 477-8226
SENIOR YEARBOOK PORTFOLIO *Shooting is taking place now, in Student Organizations & Activities Office* 80 Kansas Union Call yearbook collection 12.5 S. J. B. Kruger University 844 7280
WELCOME TO OUR LATIN FIESTA Friday, Sept. 14
ALL YOU CAN DRINK!!!
FORRENT
University Studios' quality party pics. Call
Photography at 843-579
Sharla Bennett, best of Charme Beauty Salon, is now at Angles Beauty Salon, 840 Massachusetts. M.F. Call 841-460 for Sharla September Special Shampoo & Haircut - **B**
Truffle for the KU Variety men's and women's Bowling teams will be held throughout the week of Feb. 27-30 at the University of Iowa above averages are encouraged to try out. Contact Mike Fine at the Kansas Uintah Junction for more information.
Music Masters Music for dances and parties all
requests. Lighting included. Reasonable Rates
Lease 4-bedroom house $250/mo Off street parking Call 843-0570
By GARY LARSON
1984 Universal Press Syndicate
$89 plus gas and electricity. Call 842-1160
Large, furnished, one-bedroom w. AC/ ac-
tual Pardon Paid $213. Sep. FEBE. 11th & Kentucky
Call 842-5742. $5 p.m - 7 p.m.
BLOOM COUNTY
SAVE $300
Available now. Removed two bedrooms apartment at 1280 Inebra. One block north of Union Ceiling fan, new kitchen, large apartment space $450 plus gas and electricity. Call 831-1684.
Opportunity for roommates. one block from campus, 4 big bedrooms, living room, kitchen with dining area, kitchen with 2 vancouver back porch units, 180 sq ft bedroom, 160 sq ft per roommate for 4, also 3 bedroom unit like above for 125 per roommate for 3. See for all appreciate all duties Call 842 798-7914
No rent until October
2-3 bedroom apartment
1237 Ohio
Spacition 1 bedroom apartments available for Fall for i. or two people include fully equipped kit-car, carpeting, a ground-ice laundry facilities. On Kit-line, route, gas & water费. For more in-
Spring semester only. • Fully furnished.
3-bedroom, 2-bath House. Great neighborhood,
close to campus, complete with 2 child living
dock: 400/mi 814-466.
**WO STORY AU** Can has route 2.1 B/2, lH/2A.
A /C. fenced patio. W/ 50 foot. No children or pets
Prefer quiet, mature couple or in
sex partners. Plain utilities. Keep and a year.
842, 5156
'ry cooperative living' Sunflower House, 1008
'ennessie' 749-0871. Ask for Dawn. Inexpensive &
private rooms are available
PERSONAL
Sublease thru Dec 31 Available October
2-bedroom at Pepperlive Apts. Unlubrated,
on barrack 847171 evenings, 296-2506 days
BUSINESS PERS
AARON
PAST! STEVE!
SOMETHING IS
DOTEN IN
DENMARK!
*European online sale offers a variety of diebold clothes dishes prepared from scratch, on premium fabrics and in colors. See the #BONUS & HILARIO. Look for our coupon in the LAWRENCE section in the MAKETM.PE.COM and New Hampshire in the MAKETM.PE.COM.
AMY from Jenks, call Mark from Jenks at GP
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
early and advanced health quality
medical care, confidentiality assured
Kansas City area call for appointment
CALAMITY JANES
977 Mass Open M-10 S-16
841 5263 Sections 36-00 - Sun 15
DC AVE Aire
DC LAY Away
W.M. 36 inmate seeks a taste of freedom third
correspondence Serious inquiries only B.
jemons, B 2, Lansing, KS 6043
Barbs Vintage Rose
FORMAILS for Cotton Bail
Tuxedo Blouse
Rhinestone jewelry
9185 Mass. St. Brig 841-261
9185 Mass. St. Brig 841-261
CALAMITY JANES for beautiful Alternative Wedding dresses in cotton and silk. Specializing also in original
FIGHT SEXUAL ASSAULT Douglas County
Fire Department fights纵火案件 and assists
filings and investigations.
Catalamay Jones has the most exciting collection of sweaters and boots in Lawrence. Please come in
Have you read the "label" of ADDITIVES in your drinking water later?" Multipure your water 8427618
CALAMITY JANES
bv Berke Breathed
Student Special
927 Mass Open M.S. 10.18 MC Vce USA
481-5263 Traktor 3.18 DC LcAy LAcy
***
***
Highest quality dry transfer lettering
LETRASTAT at student price; $6.95 per sheet
list $8.95. Strong & Office Systems. 040 Vermont.
843-964
Waterbed Conditione
.48 a bottle
With K.U.L.D.
SATERBED WORKS
太阳
EUROPEAN
710 W.6th 842-1411
LOOK AND FEEL GREAT
STAEDTLER MAIRS Teeb, pen special 7 pen set
£3.10 per set £2.90 while supplies last. Strong's office systems. Vermont. Ubervault. 844-361-8700
FALL SALE
2 For 1
IN FACT, A CERTIFIED ONLINE CONSTANT APPLOVER TO HAVE A MORE SMALL WE SAY. PRO-NOUNCED HONEY THAN NATURE ORIGINALLY PROVENDED, BUT FAR BE IT FOR ME TO WORK AS VALGAR, TALKY, MY, MALICIOUS. RUMOR.
FREE DAY MEMBERSHIP*
2449 UWA & HOLIDAY EREA
Aerobics, Weight Room.
Environmental Hot Tub Room.
(OR 25% OFF SINGLE MEMBERSHIP)
GET NOTICED
GOOD!
NOW GET
"MISTER
RHOPE ISLAND
HAS STUFFED
HIS SUIT!!"
Inflation Fighter, 8 East 7th. For your needs in
vintage and party clothes, hats, gloves, ties,
dresses and men suits. In come & browse. Hours
10:00 to 5:30. Sat 10:00 to 6:30.
If you or someone you have has been a victim of sexual assault, Rape Victim Support Service can provide a 24-hour call at 815-494-3600 for referral, 24 hours a day, every day. United Student Fund Support agency
I want to sing for every occasion—Birthdays.
Parties, Weddings! John, operative tenor,
841-1674.
PROBLEMS $ ^{2}$ Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center listens. Free. 24 hr. 841 235, or new location. 119 Massachusetts.
THE ETC. SHOP
732 Mass. 843-0611
INDIANA
AUTHENTIC HATS
BY STETSON
NOW AVAILABLE
V V
THE FUN PLACE TO B.
RHINESTONES, GLOVES,
PARTIES, DRESSS. ETC.
The New Place, for a rich atmosphere at an affordable price. The New Place, a private club, 2406 Iowa 842-9593.
LOST AND FOUND
Wholesale Sound Rental P.A. Guitar and Bass amps, mikes, Graphic EQ, Disco systems. 841-699.
FOUND: 1 m old female golden Labrador on
ku campus. Tue evening. Evening yellow nylon
collar. Playful. Call Lawrence Humane Society at
843-695-8
FOUND. Cairn at the Heyery Shank playground at 23rd & Iowa. Call 822-9698 to identify
FOUND. Currency by Uxner building on 91-184
FOUND. Ticket to playground at 91-184
Call 894 4528 or come to 310 Wheeler to claim
Missing Yellow cat w/ silver & silver collars. Lost around 4th & Tennessee REWARD Call 894 4528
Announcing Troy Anderson, formerly of Command Performance, is billed as the hit At & H's 38ers Hall Design His opening Special. Harcourt will be presenting for that special at 9:14 p.m., 2198 12th Connecticut Street.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR" See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Storm Hall
TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer student impurities to you. Student Assistance Center.
D. Strigman
COMMUNER
S.Self serve Car, Pool Exchange
& Kwai Union
Pool Exchange - Main Lobby - Kansas Unior
COMMUTEIS - Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Mari Lobby, Kansas U 1ton
NEED A RIDE RIDER" Use the Serve Carrier
Mari Lobby, Kansas U 1ton
TUTORS/TUTEES Inquire at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall
Charm Beauty Salon is offering Haircuts for $2 and permals for $2 & up. Call or come for a professional cut or perm at a great price. Charm
Environmental campus photo studies - Modeling
Dance and Theatre portfolio or companies IM-PENSIONS call 842104 for information
Charme Beauty Salon Home of the $7 Haircut
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841-576
STADHUM BARBER SHOP, 1032 Massachusetts,
downtown All haircuts. $5. No appointment
needed.
STRIGHTM AHEAD. A self help group for people wanting independence from marijuana, is now forming. Call Headquarters for more info: 341-245.
Sunshine Arts Montreal Pre-school A.M. & M. P. Pre-School and kindergarten programs for children ages 3 to 12 year in serving KIU students and faculty, Visit with your child at 2141 Maple Fork O.K. HF 686
Voice Lessons - DMA voice candidate accepting non-credit singers Experience with all type courses 814.496
YAMAHA MUSIC SHOP, ages 4 s, beginners.
(Oiseau Piano and Organ. 842-0753).
with your child at 2141 Maple, Off E. 190h
842-2223
Ultimate Hair and Skin Care Center. Hairs:
$8.50 Hairstyne is from Europe and has worked
in France, Germany, Finland, Belgium and Tie.
Welcome to our salon. Welcome to my
14 East 9th R-749 9771
TEENAIS Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner Advanced Group Individual 842.5305
TYPING
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition
with disease
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing. Judy.
842-7945
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers Word Processing. Professional Results - resumes, papers, a specialty. Call 249-1198.
24 Four Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers Close to campus. Best
editing grammar, spring research, thesis dissertations, papers, letters, applications resumes Have M.S. Degree: 841 6254
Always try the best for professional service.
Term papers, theses, resumes, etc. Reasonable
642-3246
DEPENDABLE professional, experienced
JANETTE SHAYFER - Typing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also standard cassette tape
441-907
Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term
papers, dessertations, etc. IBM correcting select
records. 812.4734 or 843.2671 10:30 p.m
TIP TOP TYING. 120a Iowa. Professional typing, processing, editing. Resumes from start to finish, repetitive letters, edits, our specialties, formatting, proofing, our test and corrections. M.F., 913-847-3637.
Somersville & Assoc, Inc. Professional at Competitive Writes. Word Processing. Typing in APA format. *Lawrence*: 901 Kentucky. 811-9440. Torks 2002. Western 233-3016.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI.
CLIENT 841-3510
Professional TYPING, EDITING, GRAPHICS.
JBM Correcting Selective, Katy, 842-317 before 9 p.m.
Typing in my home. Have IBM Correcting Sense.
Ji, I’m偿用的 income. Call Juju at 843-8901.
1982 or 1983 HONDA URBAN EXPRESS wanted with low mileage and in good condition. Call Scott D. at 841 1772
ard person needed in East Lawrence house with
large yard & garden. Non-smoker. Bus route.
8125 plus 1/3 utilities. 942-4760
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all-morelaneous IBM Correcting Selective Elite or Pisa, and will correct spelling. Phone 8439534.
Mrs Wright
Experienced back massage needed. Prefer McCallum or Elwisburgh resident Call Scott at 640-660 after 6 a.m.
Female Roommate, non smoker, to share nice house, campus area $130 mo plus 1/2 utilities 443.800
Female Roommate to share 2 bedroom house
walking distance to campus. $162.50 plus 1/2
units (Call Monica 749-7214
Recommends to share new house basalt,
only rare salee and rent. Phone and Cabell TV
extra. Washer (dryer) Non smoker Call 841-2823
after 5 p.m.
Roommate must to share house with 3 guys $102 mo, 17% of utilities, own bedroom, near campus Call 841 8635. Despair
Graduate student needs roommate to share clean,
2 bed apartment on Tennessee; $150/mo plus 1/2
utilities. Sept. rest prorated. Call 843-6070.
Students wishing to lose 10-29 lbs, per month
Easy, economical vitamen herb method,
satisfaction guaranteed. Meg. 841.0474
We buy VW's, running or not. Call Metric Motors 841-6000
Looking for female roommate to share completely furnished, 2-bedroom Apt. Rent: $147.50 utilities must be paid Phone 729-649 049
Male Roommate, non-smoker. Separate bedroom &
study. Washer/Dryer. $125/mon. plus 1/2
unit. Call 749-810-0 or 1665-7732
Members to form Rock and Roll Band Phone 864-6411
Roommate Female grade or serious student,
no smoker, preferred, to share a nice,
2 bedroom Apt All utilities Paid Call 842 0881
Roommate to share nine, three-bedroom Apt
$150/mo. utilities paid Despaltar. 841-8184
HELP WANTED
Apply at Marzino's Pizza, 27th & Iowa. No ex-
pence needed, just hard work
vacation and advancement included. Apply at Mazzle's Pizza 27th & Iowa.
Business Sni. Dated wanted as soon as possible.
Message 531 Tutor Wanted as soon as possible Hourly rate. Please call 842-663
hourly rate Please call 621-9685
DAY CARE HELP 12:30 - 1:30 or 3:30 daily
Child development or education major Prefer experience.
Call 819.2223
Dependent female to assist disabled with care
No experience required. Mornings, weekend &
evening hours available Call between 15.
498-028
Experienced Drummer for Weekend Rock & Roll
Band 411 411. Professional memories only
Name: 641-4444 Phone number: (952) 873-5030
FRESHIMEN It's not too late to join NAVAL
ROTC Call 641-3161
STUDENT ASSISTANT
NEEDED
NEEDLE
The School of Pharmacy students received student accommodations with the accommodation process. Some other experience needed along with the fine-tuning of the work environment and communication. Contact Katherine Muster for an appointment.
Micro Computer Sales person. Full and part time.
Inside sales, some outside sales. Knowledge of
hardware and software required or bring
resume to ComparkUp, W1 T 201-74. Lauren
Non-smoking, married couple to care for horses and lawns and to perform general hauls on horseback. To qualify for on-site house near Clinton Dam is required. Seed at N.C. State University, 290 South St. N. Tampa, KS 96144
PIZZA AT STEPHANIE'S our drivers can earn $6 or more in one hour. Now hiring. Call 841-9010 or in goods at 2231 Yale Rd
Parttime Bartender and Cocktail waitresses
Must be 21 yrs of age. The New Place, 2406 Iowa,
847-9031
Part time Help at Day Care Home One cooked needed 11.1. Mon, Fri Afternoon Asst. needed 1.1 Call 843-4147
Part time teachers aide needed Monday thru Friday, weekdays, mornings or afternoons at $3.15 per hour. Study and or experience with children ages 14-16. Children's & Learning Center, 311 Main 2.
time from time to time, attend classes to
family time, $10 per hour Time to read and study
at working hours. Call 842 7508 8:30 - 9:30
p.m.
Part-time Pre-school Kindergarten teacher
Prefer experience and Montessori background
Call 842.2232 or 842.3137
Research Assistant must to observe in elementary school classrooms. Must be at 8:10 a.m. for $3.15 hr. 10 hours per week; 4-8 mrs. prefer mappings. Applications to Haworth Haverwalt.
University of Kansas Budget Office has an open position with possible full-time employment during the fall semester. Please visit www.unk.edu/careers/budget and account transfers for the University budget and will help with the technical assistance needed to perform this position will gain a good exposure to fund accounting and have an opportunity to work within the University financial environment. Experience in accounting, with written and oral communications skill required. $400-$800 per month for a half time appointment. Closing date: Sep 19, 2017. Email: clark.watson@unk.edu. Budget office: 804-3136
Office 491.31.0
Applications available in 219 Strong Hall EOE
MISCELLANEOUS
FUTTON Cotton Mattresses providing comfortable support for the spine. Easy portable 16% off fittings thru with 9% on this ad. Blue Heron Fultons. 811-9443.
Kitchen is open 6:15 a.m. for wings to go. Mon
thru Friday, through On the Wheel
day through Friday. Only at the ...
Refills and More At the Wheel on Thursday
FOR SALE
10 speed, lightweight competition bike bought in Europe $250. Also 10 speed Schwinn Varsity. $75 price neglected. Kit. 842-6885
1978 Ford Clubway window Van $2250
VANGUARD 479 Olympic class Sailboat $2900
8417025
1980 Honda Hawk Hawk 400 cc. Low miles, excellent condition. Helmet cover, 600 w/ 364-1116
common brunel cover 296, 480, 510
1981 Fender Stratocaster $375 Classical Guitar
$100 After 3:30 749-620
1981 Red Honda 70. Passport with baskets 1,000 miles and in good condition $385, negotiable Call 843 627 Dan
5-Piece living room set, couch, love seat, coffee table, end table, leather stuffed chair. #841.8484, after 6 p.m.
after 6 p.m.
79 HONDA CX-500, Flexi-fairing, new Dumplings
E.C. 6000 needleset 843 3600, evenings
E.C. $900 negotiable; 842 2860, evenings
8 (Channel) P.A. board with set of speakers $300
Shawn; 842 652
AUDI Fox, 1977a 4 dtr, auto, $1960; Electrovoice
speakers $120 ea. Pounder amplifier, $6W, $200.
Kenwood amplifier, $25W, $83. 04/1912
Almost new Seamless console stereo Excellent condition! includes & track, cassette, & phones 626 or best offer. Call 641-1045 or 843-8750, e-mail seamsless@videostore.com
THE GENERAL STOREL
Used furniture and
household misc.
Oak Park - 11 a.m.
1-5 p.m.
7th and New Hampton
Cannon AE1, like, great price, incl. basic acces-
sories. $200 - 799 - 4529
For furnishing for your living, we have what you need. Thrift Stores at 629 Montgomery and 16 E. 6th Garage sale Fri & Sat. Sept. 14 & 17 @ 8:03 Weed Nil 21b Need for headboard headboard, TV & stereo. 629 Montgomery
Electric X280 electric guitar, hardshell case,
"craat" amplifier, strap and acoustic pickup,
already new $25, Jeff. 841-8131
Housing Machine AMAREC 619, like new. $150
Marks 822 324
Apple IIe 64K, disk drive with controller $99.
Apple IIe 128K, ammeter monitor. Apple printer $99.
Apple IIe 128K, disk drive with controller $99.
IMM HC MJP 128K, drive IX70, IMM Portable 128K,
k-300k, drive IX90, Caller Monitor at 842-750-2700.
Comic books, used Science Fiction paperbacks,
Flipbooks, Pentagoners, etc. Max's Comics, open
10, 6, Tart. Sun 811 New Hampshire
Hewlett Packard. Printer plotter for use with
10" ID/CT/CX Mark B44 5116
Billfolds, briefcases, collections, folios, hand-
hacks, luggage, notebooks, and much more at
Secret Leather. 914 Massachusetts. 824 6040
COLUMBIA 3 speed girl's bike Like new condition, $842.7137
CS Students. make HAINS just a bad memory for: **Size:** AIDL Viewpoint computer terminal, modem, carry case interface any computer network, $225 - Jeff. 843-8153
KU STUDENTS AND FACULTY
We still have limited number of completely furnished apartments and townhouses. Some are perfect for three people; all close to campus! Call or stop by Hanover Place—14th and Mass.,
Mastercraft Management
841-5255, 841-1212,
749-2415, 842-4455.
Sundance—7th and Florida or
Tanglewood—10th and Arkansas.
Pentax 35mm Camera $290 For more info call
842-9677
Radar detector Escort 1984. 7 mos. old.
w/papers $200 or best offer. 841-0031
RALEIGH RECORD • Brand new men's 24
$150 8,643 640 evening
Gibson Sunburst 347 – orange table, $800 Guilt D.25, $800 With both cases Eyes 749-419 Misc Equipment
Western Civilization Notes; including New Supplement. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them. 1. As study guide. 2. For class preparation. 3. For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization Notes*. The Jayhawk Bookseller. and Oread Bookseller. Westchester St., SNH 1982 model R
Used Metal Office Chairs. Side chairs with & without arms $5 & $10. Stew Novel chair with custers $15. Exec. Sewel chair with custers $89, 822-234-5125 after 5 p.m.
Windsurfer Saidrider - SR1, 1982 model. Regatta sail, 12 ft. long, $400 or Best offer. 841 0633.
Zenth Z-10 Terminal and J- Cat modem. Communicates CP+P and Honeywell, $75 retail, Price negotiable. 814-894
Yard Sale: $18.00 - 11.00 - 8.50 - $3.90 1229 Amp
1 black E, jacket A; Ave off 41F; Two Woods
Basketball; Breakfast Bar; Antiques;
College Labels; mac
Yamaha receiver, Pioneer tape deck with 2
speakers 400, Drumming table & chair $120 Call
BA7241
COMPUTER TERMINAL Zenith ZT 11 Terminal with built-in Auto Dual Mode, auto login feature, parallel centric and RS2 portz. Zenith ZT M12 Bi Res monitor $460. 842,236
AUTO SALES
**Mustang 6-eyl.** 3-speed, very nice mpe
paintable, real hardy.乳品 411, 847, or 849-146
**12-28 Carnow, brown w blue interior 150**
M2 M2 Trans. CRG scanner 85, 841-309
1972 Plymouth Fury, great body and paint! Runs
well! $500 or best offer! 843-9012
1935 Ford Mustang, PS, PB, AC 31 Cleveland
engine, AM FGM fappetizer, snow tires large,
good. body rough $1000, negotiable 844-796
172 Malibu 50-21h. PS, PB AC, New starter,
alternator, water pump. PN, tires, extrac 1000
negotiable. Call 843-3361 after 7, ask for Paul Robbler
1975 Toyota Corolla; good condition; runs great
must sell, $800, 843-6156 or 842-8222
1975 Toyota Corolla, a dependable road warrior from the Land of the Rising Sun; $1000. Ask for Paul, 64-810 or 843-596.
1959 Olds 8D,4-room, very nice car, 30,000 miles,
automatic cruise, control飞, flat steering, interior好,
interior好, everything great, wages $195,
Prestom McKinley B4. 614-662. 1963 North 31 St.
1976 Volvo wagon, air automatic, cloth interior
84,000 miles $295, Preston McCall, 1983 N. trd.
841-6067
1978 Ford Fairmount, 55,000 miles. 3-door, blue
4-cyl. PS, PB, nice stereo. $196, negotiate
822 7738
1978 Mustang H 4 cyl. great on gas, new tires.
A good car for a student $250. 362-248.
good car for you 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
1978 Trans Am. #00, PS, PH, AC • Beautiful car!
Only Lease 15% less than the price.
1979 MGR, New Top excellent condition $1500; or
make an offer Call 842-5283
1960 Mercury Zephyr Z7, 2 door, 4 speed, 6 cyl.
30,000 miles, $296, Preston McCall, 1981 N. 3rd.
AUTO
1985 Silver Monte Carlo, V8, PS, PB, AC, excellent condition. 18,500 miles. Call 774.7365 evenings, weekends.
CAR for sale Great around town car "61 LeMans
Great interior. Price negotiable. Call after 5 p.m.
841-3438
personal personality & style. 1994 restored Chevy
Fleetline Dueler $2000, 1965 unrestored
Plymouth station deauke station $340, 830-7425.
Chemed use WV for sale. Metropolitan, 641-660
Clean used VW's for sale. Metric meters. Ads 6000.
FORD FIESTA. 1989. 4-up. floor wheel drive.
AM-FM great mpg, fun to drive. New tires, btet,
brakes, exhaust. £750, 841-716
MUST SELL IMMEDATELY 182nd. Ford Pickup
extra clean, easy interior, runs best. Great for
$75. by 12 morn., Monday. Feed. #431772
keep trying
Tired of pricing care that need lots of work? Extra clean 72 Cordoba, 79.00 miles 842.92 0200
clean 75MACHINE 79,000 miles 812,648 $26,999
Yamaha TENA TURBO XL30 7 A 400 miles
wastage fuel new batteries perfect condition
$220 HONDA K125 radial tires 1,000 $3,000
ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ 1970 Datsan
280 ZX, Full Power, $866 Prest McAll
411 667, 1983 North 3rd
The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
September 13, 1984 Page 16
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
Kelly's fifth-place finish paces women's golf team
Led by Maureen Kelly's fifth-place finished, the KU women's golf team finished 6 of 8 teams at the Susie Maxwell Classic in Oklahoma City, Okla. Monday through yesterday.
Kelly shot rounds of 79, 76 and 81 on the pa-47 course for a 54-hole score of 236. Robin Hood of Oklahoma State, last year's champion, led all golfers with a score of 70.
Oklahoma State won the team title with a score of 823. The Cowboys led each day of the tournament. They were followed by Oklahoma, 945; Michigan State, 946; Louisiana State, 952; Nebraska, 975; Kansas City, Missouri, 1,000; and Wichita, 954.
Finishing behind Kelly for KU were Tina Gnewch, with a score of 244, followed by Susan Pekar, 250; Marie Scheid, 256, and Ann Braymen, 258. Team scores were figured by taking a team's top four scores each day.
Cowboys' boss coach of week
Oklahoma State head football coach Pat Jones, whose team stunned 19thranked Arizona State with a 45-3 victory Saturday in Tempel, Ariz. was named the United Press International national coach of the week yesterday.
Jones was a member of the Oklahoma State coaching staff when he succeeded Jimmy Johnson as head coach in June. Johnson had resigned to the University coach's job.
Jones had served on the staffs of Frank Broyles, Ron Meyer and Jackie Sherrill before getting his head coaching break at the Big Eight school conference. His head coaching debat earned the Cowboys the 14. ranking in this week's UPI ratings
Jones inherited 16 starters from the 1983 team that beat 8-4, and defeated Baylor in a series of games.
He chose not to dwell on the Arizona State game this week and decided his team shouldn't either. He placed his players offimits to the press as they prepared for their home opener Saturday against Bowling Green.
Winslow agrees to contract
Perennial All-Pro tight end Kellen Winslow ended his brief retirement by agreeing to a new multi-year contract with the Philadelphia chargers, the team announced yesterday.
Winslow left the team Sept. 3, expressing dissatisfaction with the Chargers' trade deadline.
Winslow, 26, leads the National Football League in total receptions since 1979 with 344 catches.
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
Wolf loses to McEnroe in battle of future stars
By GREG DAMMAN
Sports Editor
KU tennis player Mike Wolf stepped onto the court in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium last night in front of more than 11,000 people, only to find that his opponent had started without him.
Not literally, but Wolf's nerveness at the beginning of his match — possibly the biggest of his career — was exploited by his opponent, Patrick McEnroe.
McEnroe, 18, is the younger brother of tennis great John McEnroe, and his head start was the result of more experience playing in front of large crowds.
"I WAS NERVOUS about it," Wolf said after the match. "It was kind of intimidating. He's had a lot more opportunity to do this kind of thung."
Consequently, McEnroe jumped out to an early three games to one lead in the eight game pro set, and coasted to an 8-4 victory over Woll, who had trouble subduing his nervousness.
The match, billed as the "Future Stars" portion of the Jones Store Co. Tennis Classic, was a warmup for the main event, a match between Björn Borg and John McEnroe. The event was part of the John McEnroe Tennis over America tour. Patrick McEnroe has traveled on the tour, playing the area's best player in the opening match at certain stops.
"I'm sure it was easier for me to play than it was for Mike." McEnroe said. "I used to by now, since I've done it for awhile."
KU tennis coach Scott Perelman, who was on caseaid said. "I looked at Pat and he
was relaxed. He just played at the (U.S.)
Open last week."
THE MATCH BEGAN with McEnroe taking the first two games, with identical 4-2 scores. In the second game, McEnroe, who doesn't display the same type of oncourt temperament as his brother, broke the tension in the arena. His rackets slipped out and after his serve so he rushed the net in an attempt to hit Wolf's return with his hand.
McEnroe's antic seemed to relax Wolf, who won the third game, but he lost the next two games and fell behind 3-1. Wolf then went on a three-game tear that thrilled the crowd.
He won the fifth game, 4-3, and then rolled off a stunning string of ten straight points. The outburst pulled Wolf into a 4-3 lead, and be seemed to be in control.
"When I was up 4:3 I had my serve going for me," Wolf said, "I started hitting a lot more solid toward the middle of the match."
MeEnrose said, "I got a little lazy in a couple of games. I knew I could get back in it. I just settled down a little. He broke me and I took part of shots I should not have missed."
BUT IT WAS MCENROE who took control for the rest of the match, winning the next five games and the match. Many of McEnroe's points came on mistakes by Wolf.
"I just kind of had a mental leddown." Wall said. "I wasn't seeing the ball well towards me, and I was not doing it at all."
It was the third time Mr.Enrobe, a freshman at Stanford University, had beaten Wolf. The two played each other twice before in junior tournaments. Both players said their opponent had improved his serve since the last time they met.
Big brother defeats Borg, 7-6, 7-5
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Three-time Wimbledon champion John McEnroe defeated retired tennis star Bjorn Borg 7-6, 7-5 last night in an exhibition match.
The match, in which McEroe captured a 7-5 tie-breaker, was part of McEroe's five-city exhibition tour, which he began after winning his fourth U.S. Open title on Sunday Tuesday night in Syracuse, N.Y. McEroe defeated Borg 7-6, 7-5.
Borg's appearance yesterday was his last on the "McEnroe Over America" tour, which will finish with McEnroe against Vitas Gerulatus.
McEnroe said he was pleased with any opportunity to face Borg, who has won five Wimbledon championships and six French Open titles.
Tennis rackets belonging to Borg and
McEnroe were auctioned before the match for charity. The two played a special doubles match to benefit the Midwest Ear Institute.
More sports Page 14
The event was played before a sellout
erode of about 9,500 at Municipal Audito-
ry.
C
Kansas City Royal centerfielder Willie Wilson crosses home plate on a fifth inning single by George Brett. Last night's game was a 3.2 victory over Minnesota.
United Press International
Royals pull back into tie
By United Press International
MINNEAPOLIS — Jorge Orta drove in the tie-breaking run with a nineinning sacrifice fly Wednesday night, giving the Minnesota 3-2 victory over the Minnesota TWo.
The victory pulled the Royals back into a tie with the Twins for first place in the playoffs.
Oinx Concepcion and Willie Wilson started the Royal ninth with singles of reliever Rick Lysander. 3.3. He was
believed by Ron Davis. Pat Sheridan then bunted the runners over to second and third. After an intentional walk to punch hitter Dane long, Otta lifted a fly to left, scoring Concepción
Royal starter Bad Black, 15-11, retired the first 17 battles he faced and allowed six hits in eight innings. Dan Quisenberry pitched the nine and earned the 40th save.
Trailing 2-0 entering the bottom of the seventh, the Twins tied it 2-2 on Tom Brunansky's 31st home run after Kent Hrbek singled with one out.
JERRY SCHWARTZMAN
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Lawrence, KS
842-2700
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1
1970
Family ties
The Claftins of Overland Park - David. Bradford and Kristen - aren't entirely certain why they've been picked as the 1984 Parents Day family or why they'll be
honored at tomorrow's KU-Florida State game. But the Claffin clan, descendants of a pair of 1907 Jayhawkers, is sure about one thing: They've never considered studying any place but KU. See story, page 3.
I
Cooler
High, 70s. Low, mid-50s Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 95, No.15 (USPS 650-640)
Friday, September 14, 1984
Computer throws book at the unsuspecting
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ Staff Reporter
Janita van der Walt had never entertained the idea of becoming an aircraft riveter, not even as a hobby.
But during the summer, van der Walt, Bloomfontein, South Africa, graduate student, received a notice from Watson Library that a book on the subject had been checked out in her name and was overdue.
"Of all things, aircraft riveting. I'm studying German. What has that to get to with me?" van der Walt said. "They believe that computer as if it were some little god sitting there."
The 'little god', that has become a devil for van der Walt and a handful of students and faculty members is the computer that the library system uses to keep track of books.
The computer has timed students and faculty members for books that they swear they have returned or never checked out
Jerry Crippen. Hill City graduate student is another student at odds with the library computer
"I GOT A NOTICE that a book was overdue, but I had returned the book a long time before," he said. "I didn't have any proof the book had been taken back."
Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics, recently paid $20 for a book she said she had returned.
"There was nothing to demonstrate that I had brought back that book. I had no recourse," she said. "The computer printout is the law."
is the law Complaints like these are common, said Mary Hawkins, assistant dean of public services for the library system.
Hawkins does not deny that the complaints may be valid. But she said that the library frequently had trouble determining whether complaining students and faculty members were telling the truth.
A student remembers returning a book
and our computer shows that they haven't." Hawkins said. "What should we do?"
STUDENTS AND FACULTY members can right back, Hawkins said, if they think that the library's computer is wrongly throwing the book at them.
They should tell the library that the book has been returned or was never checked out. The library then will conduct a search for the book - a process that usually takes several months. It the book still does not show up, it is declared lost and the borrower is fired.
"But a borrower can appeal a fine." Hawkins said.
The only problem is the Library Fines Appeal Board, which was formed in April 1982 has never met, she said.
Gary Samuelson, a clerk with the library fine office, said that about 15 appeals had been filed with the board in the last two years. As long as the appeal is filed, the fine is delayed and library privileges are not revoked until the board makes a decision, he said.
THE APPEALS JUST accumulate over the years. "Hawkins said. 'There are not that many, but we are extremely anxious for the board to meet. We would welcome a
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, issued a memo two years ago announcing the formation of the board.
Yesterday, he said he was not aware that the board had never met. He said he suspected that a step in the process of forming the board had been skipped.
"If it hasn't met, it is probably missing an enabling step of some kind." Cobb said. "I am pleasantly surprised by the low number of appeals. Perhaps the existence of the board has been enough to make it successful."
He said he would look into the matter and determine why the board was not reviewing appeals.
HAWKINS SAID THE problem of un warranted fines could be solved if the library gave borrowers receipts for returned books.
"Generating a receipt would be a massive operation," she said. "It would provide certain protection for both sides. But the extreme volume of paperwork would just be too much."
Borrowers sometimes create additional problems by trying to beat the system, she said.
"They sometimes want to show a librarian where the book is on the shelves to prove they returned it," she said. "But we don't know it we walked in and out it on the shelves."
In such cases, the circulation desk checks for two items. When the books are returned, they are stamped with a return date and are entered on the computer. If librarians find that either one of these steps has been completed, then the fine will be adjusted or nullified.
we try to be fair, but there are bound to be complaints. "Hawkins said 'We're not out to get anyone and we do not naturally assume the fault is with the borrower.'"
FREMONT
Members of the KU Crew skim across the Kaw River. Members working out sophomore; Stuart Jackson, Wichita senior; Aaron Pirner, Goddard sophomore yesterday morning were, from left to right, Peter Stocker, Golden, Colo. Jim Morris, Lawrence sophomore, and Gary Cukjati, Pittsburg senior.
Candidates seek endorsement from teachers
Bv SUZANNE BROWN
Staff Reporter
Seven candidates for the five Douglas County seats in the Kansas Legislature last night told a teachers' political action committee of their concern for education and sought to win endorsement from the group.
The candidates and a representative for another candidate spoke at the forum, sponsored by the Lawrence Education
Association. About 20 people attended the forum at Deerfield Elementary School, 101 N. Lawrence Ave.
The candidates appearing at the forum were state Sen. Wint Winter Jr., RLawrence, and his opponent, Lawrence Seaman Jr. state Rep. John Solbach, DLawrence, and his opponent, Martha
The LEA's representative assembly will endorse candidates Monday based on discussion at the forum and candidate interviews conducted last week.
Parker state Rep Betty Jo Charlton, D Lawrence, and her opponent, Jule Hack
the candidates spoke exclusively on education issues, especially those facing the Kansas Legislature in the 1985 session, which
ALSO AT THE forum were state Rep. Jesson Branson, D-Lawrence, who is unopposed for re-election, and a representative for Mike Schmidt. Democrat candidate for the 3rd House District Schmidt is running against state Rep. David Miller, R-Eudora
begins in January. All pledged their support for increased salaries for Kansas teachers, who ranked 36th on a national teachers salary scale.
Most of the candidates also supported binding arbitration in negotiations between teachers and local school boards. This resolution gives a neutral arbiter the authority to resolve contract disputes between teachers and school boards. Under
See FORUM, d. 5, col. 4
Diana decks coastal area goes inland
Storm's fury leaves thousands stranded without food, power
By United Press International
As darkness fell yesterday, 23,000 people haddled for their third night in storm shelters, and officials took precautions to protect homes and property ripped apart by the storm.
WILMINGTON, N.C. — Hurricane Diana ravaged North Carolina's coast for 18 relentless hours yesterday, turning beach towns into twisted shambles and leaving thousands without food, water and power and wondering about the fate of their homes.
National Guard troops joined local police patrols and Mayor Ben Thomas of Long Beach, which was hit hard by the storm, set an 8 p.m. to 7.30 a.m. curfew because "you always have the possibility of sightseers doing some looting."
At Yaupon Beach, firefighters and volunteers patrolled the streets, and fire Lt. Alan Essey said "if any body loots, we'll block the roads and search everybody who tries to come out."
COME ON AT LEAST 16,000 people were without power by nightfall. Streets were flooded and jammed with debris and, officials said at least 5,000 refugees in storm shelters had been without food for 24 hours
Property damage was massive — $20 million in the communities of Oak Island, Yaupon Beach and Long Beach. Gov. Jim Hunt asked President Reagan for federal and because "the storm is having a devastating effect on the state."
"We are hurt and we are hurt bad," said Police Chief Wilf Corning at Southport near
See DIANA, p. 5, col. 1
Author aims wit at KU in book about campuses
By JOHN EGAN Staff Reporter
In her humorous new book, Lisa Birnbach's College Book, Burnbach covers the country in her survey of 186 U.S. college campuses, taking the pulse of the American student body.
The author of the 1981 bestseller, Official Prepgy Handbook, has unleashed her infamous wit once again — and the University of Kansas is one of her targets.
In examining KU, Birnbach reveals tidbits to "Most Popular Majors"—business, journalism and political science—and the "Campus Cult Figure"—the Tan Man, a "very tan fellow who hangs out on campus year after year."
campus. We've also travelled from college to college through all 50 states for $2^{1/2}$ years to research the book, which recently appeared in Lawrence bookstores for $9.95
BIRNACH OFFERS GLIMPSES of noteworthy schools such as Yale University and Dartmouth College. But of the Big Eight universities, only Kansas State University is overlooked
In the 515 page paperback book, billed as "the first and only college guide to tell it like it is," about two pages of vital statistics are devoted to KU.
Henderson, who works as a sales clerk at Hatch Book Store, 2018 W. 23rd St., said about five copies of the book were on the store's shelves.
At least two students who have read the passage about KU, however, think that Birnbach doesn't tell everything "like it is."
George rottonman, Salina first year law student, who also has read the KU passage, said, "I thought they left out a lot of good things. I thought about things to do or places to go was Greek."
"I don't think she spent enough time here," said Timothy Henderson, Fratt senior "I thought the part about the Tan Man was fine."
"I THINK SHE did a fair job," Henderson said yesterday. "I think she had some inherent prejudices about Kansas."
For instance, Birnbach lists the "Most Popular Off Campus Hangout" as the Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W. 14th St., which doubles as the "biggest Greek bar in town."
But Debbie Schopper, Leawood senior, said
she thought the Wheel was no longer a hub for students.
student.
"It probably used to be, but not anymore. I don't think the Wheel is anything anymore," she said.
WHAT BIRNBACH HAD to say about sororites and fraternities was all Greek to the president of the Panhellenic Association. Under the category of "Greek Life," Birnbach writes "very big, pressure to push."
Chris Wells, the Panhellenic president, said. "It's a big part of life for a lot of people, but we're a minority on this campus."
mannbach says that the Greeks compose 15 percent of the student population, a figure she claims is on the rise.
According to Art Farmer, assistant director of the office of student organizations and activities, about 20 percent of the male population belongs to fraternities and about 13 percent of the female population pledges sororites.
And as for the pressure to participate in rush activities, Wells said, "That depends on each girl. There's not that much pressure on them."
BRINCH DOESN'T LIMIT her comments to the Greek minority. About the 'Gav
Situation *at KU*, she writes "fair amount of eats" on a scale of 1 to 10, 3.3"
Ruth Lichtwardt, president of the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said, "I don't know whether to be insulted or what.
"I'd say she was right about the fair amount of gays," she said. "I would say the quality of gay life in Lawrence is lower than in Kansas City, but higher than a 3. I am assuming that she has not personally said that therefore she knows not of what no speaks."
Even Student Senate doesn't escape Burrbach's caustic cuts.
Birmingham. "Students are pro-administration and they tend to let the Student Senate decide student issues. The bad thing about student government is that they are really a part of the administration," Birmingham写。
But Birnbaeh, quoting a KU source, lashes out most strongly at the department of human development and family life.
"As far as departmental weakness, TOP1, is a red joke," she writes. "Sherman, so, you know."
CARLA VOGEL, STUDENT body presi-
dent, said, "I have to agree with her. It's sad.
That's why needs to be changes."
At least two errors concerning KU cropped up in the book.
opinion.
The book lists the phone number for the office of admissions as 664-3911, but the number is actually 864-3911. And the "Least Popular Major" is listed as agriculture, yet KU does not offer a degree in that field.
In other swipes, Birnbach states that KU football "has seen better days" and that "religious culls are all at odds with one another."
carmaniposition of the department, said, "In my opinion, it's not a fair assessment."
DESPITE SOME OF the unkind words about Greeks, gays, football and other topics. Birnibach lauded other aspects of KU.
"The campus is pretty," she writes, "and not flat. Fans of the University maintain that part of their school's appeal is that it sits on ton, as sort of a beacon."
And dispelling the backward, Dorothy and Toto image of Kansas. Birnchab quotes a KU source as saying, "This is a pretty sophisticated campus."
Apparently Birnbach realizes there's no place like home for many students.
"People are extremely satisfied with Lawrence." she writes, "so much so that they say that they have difficulty leaving."
September 14, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
The University Daily KANSAN
Nine killed, 53 injured in Indonesian violence
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Police fired into angry mobs who rampaged through a northern Jakarta slum early yesterday, setting fires to shops, buildings and vehicles in the worst rioting in a decade. At least nine people were killed and 53 others injured.
The violence erupted late Wednesday when about 1,500 youths, many armed with long knives, crowbars and cans of gasoline, gathered at a local mosque in the sprawling shantytown of Priok to protest the arrest of a Muslim leader.
Pageant takes stand on photos
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Even if Penthouse magazine publishes nude pictures of the winner of this year's Miss America Pageant, she may be allowed to serve her reign, pageant chairman Albert Marks Jr., said yesterday.
But Marks challenged Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione to prove he has nude photographs of one of this year's contestants, which the magazine plans to print it.
Even if the photographs exist, however Marks said he would "not necessarily" be able to prove them.
Indian attack idea reported
WASHINGTON — The CIA told senators yesterday Indian President Indra Gandhi is being urged by her military advisers to launch an attack against a nuclear enrichment plant in neighboring Pakistan, ABC News reported.
India's military leaders fear the plant at Kihata, 35 miles from India's border, could be used to produce nuclear weapons. The Indian government U.S. intelligence authority as its source.
College suspends fraternities
SPRINGFIELD. Mass — American International College, where a freshman died of acute alcohol poisoning following a "spaghetti ritual" pledge dinner, yesterday suspended all campus fraternities and sororites.
The action was taken after the death of a 19-year old student on Feb. 23 in Zeta Chi traternity. At a spaghetti dinner, he ordered a bowl of spaghetti and drink wine, vomit and then continue吃
The 1,450 student private college with drew recognition of all 11 fraternities and sororities pending a study of their nature by campus trustees and administrators.
Compiled from United Press Interc
tional reports.
Candidates take campaign trail to the South
By United Press International
The South took center stage in the presidential election race yesterday.
prior to President Reagan campaigned in Tennessee, praising the U.S. spirit and country music; Walter Mondale in Mississippi accused Reagan of planning "mean-spirited" and "shameful" cuts in medical aid for the elderly.
The president and his Democratic challenger had the campaign trail to themselves as both Vice President George Bush and Rep. Geraldine Ferraro took the day off.
Speaking in Nashville, Reagan parlayed the promise of high-technology industry and the values represented by Grand Old Opry legend Roy Acupt to picture his opponents as frightened and uninspired people unable to grasp the nation's inherent go-getter spirit.
AND IN A CROSS-CENTURY linking of unlikely heroes, he ranked Acuff, "the King of Country Music," who is celebrating his 81st birthday tomorrow, with 19th century
On stage at the Opry House, Reagan called the music of Nashville "the first of all American art forms."
soldier and statemen Davy Crockett and Andrew Jackson.
"America has no mission of mediciarity. 'Reagan told an audience of businessmen seeking to promote high-technology industrial growth. 'We haven't come all this way just to wind up a second-best nation. Leave that tired vision for the faint-hearted souls."
Of his opponents, Reagan said. "They see America wringing her hands, we see America raising her hands. They see America divided by envy, each of us challenging our neighbors' success.
"WE SEE AMERICA inspired by opportunity, each of us challenging the best in ourselves. We believe in knowing when opportunity knocks. They seem determined to knock opportunity."
Mondale had a long day on the road,
stumping from Mississippi to Jackson,
Tenn., then to St. Louis for the night.
He told a forum at Tupelo, Miss., High School. "Reagan's program on Medicare is
nothing short of official cruelty.''
Mondale was heckled by a number of Reagan supporters, including several who carried anti abortion signs.
Noting that Reagan said this week he would ask Congress to approve budget cuts that it has rejected before. Mondale said, "Let's see what cuts he has in mind for you."
'He wanted to cut $30 billion more from Medicare. He was out to almost destroy the market.'
"OF ALL THE mean-spirited ways, of all the shatterful ways to cut money out that budget, is to go to a senior citizen who is retired now, sick and in the hospital, and say. We've figured out a way to save money, we're going to raise your hospital and your medical bills while you're on that hospital but sick ..."
"I'm not going to do it." Monday said, almost shouting as the audience cheered.
"He tried to cut $20 billion from Social
Security," Mondale said. "We stopped him the first time. Let's make sure he doesn't have a second chance."
Before he left Washington, Reagan told reporters that his record showed he had tried to stay out of the business.
"We've submitted four budgets, or three and one to go, and they contain all the things that we're trying to do to reduce government spending and to increase the growth of the economy which will increase revenues." Reagan said.
REAGAN SAID THAT Democrats have controlled the House for many years and "have been approving deficit spending with just a few exceptions."
"They can't remove themselves from the blame."
Supporters hope amendment for balanced budget survives
The president also responded to charges that he will cut Social Security benefits. "Social Security is secure as far as we can see into the next century," he said, and "we're not going to cut the benefits of people on Social Security."
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Senate supporters of a constitutional amendment to require a balanced budget scored a victory yesterday, but House backers missed their deadline for forcing action on the issue this year.
The Senate Judiciary Committee voted 11-4 early in the day for the bill that would require Congress to adopt a balanced budget resolution every year, except in time of war or if three-fifths of both the House and Senate voted to approve a deficit.
But by the close of business yesterday, only 190 House members had signed a discharge petition, 28 short of the number required to release the bill from the House Judiciary Committee, where it has been buried, and put to the House floor for immediate action.
YESTERDAY WAS THE last day for filing a discharge petition that could be acted on before Congress adjourns Oct. 5.
However, House backers of the balanced budget initiative did not give up hope.
they collected all 218 signatures before adjournment.
Greg Casey, aide to Rep. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, who headed the petition drive, said backers would continue to collect signatures and ask House Speaker Thomas O'Neill to waive the rules and bring the measure up if
However, O'Neill is an ardent foe of a balanced budget amendment.
Casey said they also hoped that President Reagan, an ardent supporter of the plan, would exercise his influence.
Supporters say it is the only way to get federal spending under control. Opponents argue the measure is a political ploy that would do nothing to reduce the huge federal deficits for the next several years and later would force mammoth spending cuts in crucial federal programs
Following the Senate committee's overwhelming endorsement, Sen. Orrin Hatch R-Uttah, the measure's sponsor, said Congress "has an ethical and moral obligation to meet this (issue) head on" by voting on it before the end of the session.
He told United Press International, how ever, there is "not a very good chance" of the outcome.
Hatch predicted that chances for Senate approval would improve if he could get the panel's senior Democrat, Sen Joseph Biden of Delaware, to endorse the measure.
BIDEN, WHO STRONGLY supports the concept of a balanced budget amendment, voted against it after his proposal to "put some teeth" in the resolution failed 14-2.
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September 14, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 3
The University Daily KANSAN
GOP candidates to speak at forum in Kansas Union
Republican candidates for state and local offices will speak at a College Republicans candidates' forum at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Alderson Auditorium of the University.
About 10 candidates in local and state-wide races have confirmed that they will attend, said Susan Sanjean, program chairman.
Also representatives of the Reagan-Bush campaign and Youth for Reagan-Bush are expected to attend, as well as spokesmen for Sen. Nancy Kasebaum, Rep. Jim Van Llander and State Sen. Jan Meyers, R-Overland Park. Meyers is a candidate in the 3rd District Kansas congressional race.
Andy Galyardt, Douglas County Republican Central Committee chairman, will introduce the candidates.
KC anchorman to speak here
Larry Moore, manager editing and news anchor of KMBC TV Channel 9 in Kansas City, Mo., will speak at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in 100 Stauffer Flint Hall.
Moore will speak on "The Real Role of a Journalist in 1984." A brief question and answer period will follow the speech.
The presentation is sponsored by the KU chapter of Women in Communications Inc. Membership applications for WICI will be available after Moore's speech.
Applications for Fulbright grants are available to teams of graduate students or postgraduate researchers who want to do research in foreign countries.
Grant applications available
The grants will provide monthly payments to cover travel and living expenses for two- and three-member research teams. The amount of each grant will be based on the cost of living in the foreign country.
Applications are available from Anta Herzeld, Fulbright program adviser. 203 Lippincott Hall.
Club to have picnic tomorrow
The International Club will sponsor a picnic at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow at Burcham Park, Second and Indiana streets.
The club will provide tree food and drinks, and club members will play volleyball, soccer and other games.
Course begins on TV Oct. 1
Rides to the picnic will leave at 4:30 p.m. from in front of McCollum Hall and the Kansas Union. For information call 864-4824.
Students who want to watch television and go to class at the same time can sign up for a course in the religious studies department that begins Oct. 1.
The course, Religious Studies 126,
"Introduction to Judaism," will be shown on tour public television stations across state. Students can watch the class on television and complete course requirements by mail.
Daniel Breslauer, associate professor of religious studies, will teach the course. It may be taken for credit or no credit
For more information, contact Barbara Watkins in Continuing Education at 864-1792.
Weather
Today will be cloudy and cool with a 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. The high will be in the mid 70s and winds of 10 to 20 mph will be from the northeast. Tonight will be cloudy and cool with a 30 percent chance of showers and a low in the mid 70s. Tomorrow will be cool with decreasing cloudiness and the high will be in the low 70s
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
Rock Chalk brought back by popular opinion
Because of a reporter's error, Steve Nave, Coffeyville sophomore and defensive lineman, was not included yesterday in a story about the football team. Nave, listed on the depth chart as a starter, is one of 10 players declared academically ineligible this season.
Correction
By JOHN HANNA and
DENEEN BROWN
Staff Remorters
Staff Reporters
Rock Chalk Revue is the new name and "Black Tie and Tales" is the new theme for a 45-year-old University tradition
Show organizers Wednesday selected the theme for the February variety show, which for the last two years was known as Enoree. The show includes song and dance acts performed by organized campus living groups.
Om 1982, the variety show was called Rock Chalk Reveal and was sponsored by KUY. That year, the tradition received a new sponsorship of Class Officers, and a brand name, Encore.
KU-Y, the student affiliate of the YMCA and YWCA, is no longer active.
Show organizers reverted to the traditional Rock Chalk name this year because of popular opinion, said Dave Smith, executive director of Rock Chalk Revue.
Mark Noller, a business manager for the show, said yesterday that this summer BOCO filed the necessary applications to trademark the show's name with the U.S. Department of Commerce and the Secretary of State's office in Topeka. Noller said they had not received answers from either.
The "Black Tie and Tales" theme was chosen, Noller said, because it is flexible. Nine fraternities and sororites were represented at Wednesday's meeting.
LIVING GROUPS MAY submit application notebooks for the show until Nov. 9. A notebook includes a script, music, choreography and set design. Noller said.
Smith said that although the former Rock Chalk Revue was marked with off-color humor, bad jokes and satire, he hoped the new Rock Chalk Revue would promote a better image and attract other non-Greek living organizations.
Iting of gumnemel With a new name, Smith said, he would like to get away from the Greek image the show had attained.
"SOME PEOPLE SAY it's Greeks competing against Greeks, and there is a stigma that it is an entire Greek show," he said. "We would like to see other living organizations submit scripts."
submit scripts.
Noller said the show's organizers had sent out letters to all residence halls and scholarship halls two weeks ago. He said they received one reply from a residence hall and three from scholarship halls
"It they're interested, we'll be more than happy to have them present a script," he said.
Smith said the new Rock Chalk Revue would be more efficient than the traditional one.
"With (the original) Rock Chalk Revue, I think after every year, business managers were accused of embezzling. Well, we have the checks and balances where there is no way embezzling can happen." he said.
LAST YEAR, ENCORE made more than $80,000 in revenue, including expenses, through ticket sales and advertising he had.
"In spring of 1982 there was obviously some need for some changes. The shows were becoming too expensive for other organized living groups to participate in them," he said. "It was costing each group over $100 to have a Greek Greek we were participating, so we decided to make it less expensive to put on the production."
Previously, revenue that was generated was going in many directions. Smith said. Encore's biggest change was that 50 percent of the revenue would go to the Lawrence United Fund so that the money made stayed in the community. Forty percent goes back to participating groups, which will help cut the cost, and 10 percent is kept in working funds for administrative costs the following years.
"Now that it's cheaper, we are hoping that more residence halls will submit scripts," Smith said. "Last year GSP submitted a script. It was very good and just missed getting in."
MATTHEW CROSS & JOHN SMITH
Chris Magerl/KANSAN
A fourth generation of Claftins is making its way through the David family. The Claftin students, from left to right, are University. The family will be honored as the 1984 Parents David, senior Kristen, freshman and Bradford, freshman
Family's four KU generations honored
By JULIE COMINE Staff Reporter
David Claflin isn't sure why his family was selected as the 1984 Parents Day family.
"It's a nice honor," the overland Park senior said. "but really, we're just your typically bizarre modern family."
Lynda Claffin Crow and her three children - David and freshman twins, Bradford and Kristen - will be honored tomorrow before the KU-Florida State University football game.
In August, a Parents Day committee and the University of Kansas Alumni Association selected the Claflins because of the family's long connection with KU, said Linda Thompson, director of admissions and a member of the committee.
"We chose this particular family because both sets of grandparents — all down the line — were KU graduates, not just alumni." Thompson said.
ALTHOUGH PARENTS DAY has been a tradition at KU for decades, the University didn't begin singling out a Parents Day event. But in January 2015, associate director of the Alumni Association
"There are so many students who are second, third, and fourth generation at KU!" Pattée said. "We thought it would add
to the Parents Day tradition to recognize a real life family."
r our generations of Clafkins have attended KU. The Clafkin students' grandparents, O Q Claflin and Louse Schmidt Claflin of Toakroft will appear to approve his ceremony in Memorial Stadium.
Before the ceremony, the family will eat brunch at the home of Chancellor Gene A.
SITTING ON A couch in the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house, where David and Bradford live, the three Claflin children joked about their family's award-winning status.
David said the family's roots in Johnson County probably played a part in the committee's decision. The three Claflin students graduated from Shawnee Mission South High School.
Kristen giggled Bradford shrugged his shoulders. And David talked about the possibility of KU Family of the Year T-shirts.
"No, seriously." David said with a grin. "I heard they're going to present us with a car.
"As I understand it," David said, "this is a way for the University to say thank you to everyone who has attended and supported KU."
None of the Claflin children said they would consider their family a model KU family. But they said they were flattered by the award.
factor - her husband's disappearance during the Vietnam War may have influenced the selection committee
Air Force Maj. Richard A. Claffin went down in a plane in North Vietnam in 1967. He has been listed as missing in action ever since.
Claffin's name will be included on the Vietnam War Memorial, planned to be erected on campus.
LYNDA CLAFLIN CROW said another
"I think the memorial definitely had something to do with the award." Crow said. "The idea of a memorial was unpopular for so long. For a long time it was just shoved under the carpet."
David agreed that his father's disappearance might have influenced the committee. He said that he and his brother and sister were too young to remember their
"REMEMBERING THE PAST is, one thing, and living is another — and that's what we're experts in," he said.
were exposed. Thompson said the main criterion for selecting the Claffins was the family's four generation tie to KU - not their father
"But I think it it's a nice touch to be able to
bown someone, in this way," she said.
The Claflins children said they remembered hearing KU stories as they were growing up.
growing up
Their great-grandparents, Dora Monahan
Claftin and O.Q. Claftin Jr., graduated from
KU in 1907
KU ready for visitors tomorrow
Reception, movies among activities scheduled for day
By the Kansan Staff
An all-University reception, open houses at most professional schools, a free dance concert and free movies are a few of the activities that await Parents Day visitors tomorrow.
a faculty and staff will sponsor a reception for parents and other guests from 10 to 11:30 a.m. in the main lobby of the Kansas Union Building, where students watch and receptions for residents' families
Most professional schools will have open houses and tours tomorrow morning.
The naval science awards ceremony and reception will be from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. in Swarthout Rectarial Hall in Murphy Hall. The Air Force ROTC aerospace studies department presents its awards from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the K.S. "Robins" Adams Alumni Center.
The weather forecast for the 1:30 kick off of the KU-Florida State game tomorrow afternoon calls for the sky to be partly cloudy and temperatures in the 70s. Students and their parents may sit together in the student section.
Also tomorrow, 86 high school bands from Kansas and Missouri are scheduled to participate in Band Day activities. At 9 a.m., the bands will march down Massachusetts Street from Seventh Street to South Park to perform all perform at halftime of the football game.
Student Union Activities will sponsor free movies, including "The Rink" starring Charlie Chaplin; "Bored of Education," starring the Lil' Rascal's; and four cartoons. The movies begin at 7 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium of the Union.
SUA also will sponsor a free dance and concert with Get Smart at 9 p.m. tomorrow in the Ballroom.
The Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art will present "Burroughs. The Movie." at 7:30 p.m. today and tomorrow and at 3 p.m. on Sunday. The film is a biography of author William Burroughs, a Lawrence resident. Admission is $2.50.
Admission is 6.00.
The museum will also display Geometric Patchwork Quilts in the Kress Gallery and Printable Prints in the White Gallery.
The museum will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
In the gallery on the main floor of the Art and Design Building, the works of six local photographers will be on display from 1 to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow and Sunday
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THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
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OPINION
September 14,1984
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kaanan UNPS 690 640 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuaffer FliH Hall. Lawen, Kanan 6045, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holiday and final periods Second class postage paid at Lawen, Kanan 6045 Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $1 a year in Richmond County. Mail should be addressed to PASTMER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kaanan 118 Stuaffer FliH Hall. Lawen, Kanan 6045
DON KNOX Editor
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JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Embarrassment
The problem is serious and embarrassing.
The problem is so great that An annotction Wednesday by the athletic department brought to 10 the number of football players who have been declared academically ineligible for the 1984 season.
decaled academically by the university. KU had about 80 players on scholarships this fall, and now 10 are ineligible; some Big Eight schools have more scholarship players, but none has lost more than two to academic ineligibility. Even with all the qualifiers anyone could muster, the figure is an embarrassment.
Behind the figure first lies the responsibility of the players, who agreed by accepting a football scholarship to play by the rules of the system of intercollegiate athletics, however flawed it may be. Whatever advisers or coaches or friends have told them, the primary responsibility to meet the academic requirements is theirs.
The athletic department and the University share their responsibility in a special way, because they profit from the talents of the players. Gate receipts are an important source of department income, and football is an important way for the department and the University to keep in touch with alumni who contribute to the Williams Fund and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Specialized academic services and advising are not too much to expect from the athletic department and University that gain from the players' success on the field.
Football players are generally strong people, but in the fall they toil under two full loads. The days are filled with classes, the afternoons and evenings with meetings, physical conditioning and practices. The strain is undeniable, and sometimes the result is overload.
Del Brinkman, faculty representative on the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation, said recently. "If you recruit athletes who are marginal students, then you have to step up the support services." Thus, student-athletes now have more academic services available, such as tutoring through Supportive Educational Services and special advising. But the KUAC board, in a report released Aug. 28, told the department that it hadn't been doing enough. "The present academic support program for student-athletes is perceived to be inadequate relative to need." In other words, the system is not working
And so it is that so many players slip through the system, their academic shortcomings not identified until they are into the season and primed to play. Other schools that have more established programs can perhaps afford to redshirt the marginal students and still field a winning team, but KU apparently decided to take a chance on its "marginal students."
For this season, for those 10 players, the chance didn't work out. For the rest of the season, for the next season, mere chance must be replaced by a commitment — from the athletic department, the academic support system and above all from the student-athletes — to make the grade.
NEW YORK — As the violence goes on in Central America and no sign of peace is in sight, something remarkable is taking place in Colombia, the country that connects South America to Central America.
Colombian effort shows way to peace
Colombia is more populous than all of Central America combined. It suffers from a multitude of social problems, and it has what may well be the most violent history in Latin America, especially during the past 40 years. Several guerrilla armies have operated there for years, and though they have never come close to seizing power, the Colombian armed forces have been unable to wipe them out in three decades of combat.
The armed forces are no closer than ever to a military victory. Yet the war seems to be ending. How has this happened?
The credit for ending the war goes to President Belisario Bettancur. Elected two years ago, Betancur immediately established a peace commission to negotiate a settlement, and he initiated a significant effort to improve the human rights situation.
That situation has been very bad.
Although Colombia is a democracy,
some regions of the country have
been militarized for years, and
abuses in them are very much like
those in El Salvador and Guatemala.
Extensive death-sequid activity
in the cities has been responsible
for hundreds of killings and disap-
pearances and considerable torture.
Such abuses have not been stopped, but they have been limited, thanks especially to the efforts of President Betanure a statutory general. Carlos Gomez, who inflicted 53 military personnel for deejay squall activity.
The indictments led to nothing because the attorney general lost a battle to bring the cases to civilian courts. The charges nevertheless placed the government firmly on record against such abuses and demonstrated its willingness to point the finer at those responsible.
When the indictments took place, the minister of defense, Gen. Fernand Landazalab Reyes, orderen to members of the armed forces to allocate a day's pay for the defense of the accused. Several months later, Betancur seized on another episode of public defiance by Landazal and
dismissed him. It was an important event in the assertion of civilian control over the armed forces.
ARYEH NEIER
New York Times Syndicate
Although Betancur's record on human rights is not perfect, the essential message he has conveyed is that his government stands for respect for law and for civilian control of the armed forces. Without
this, it seems inconceivable that he could have negotiated a peace settlement with Colombia's principal guerrilla forces.
treaty. The guerrillas are abandoning armed conflict to take part in the political process with no guarantee that they will escape violent reprisals by the armed forces. Their only protection is the military commitment to the rule of law and to civilian control of the armed forces.
The guerrillas have long contended that, if they put down their arms, the armed forces would simply execute them. That these fears have been well grounded was demonstrated on Aug. 10, when Carlos Toledo Plata, leader of the political wing of one of the guerrilla groups, the M19, was killed by several other M19 leaders were ambushed and wounded while they were on their way to sign a peace treaty.
That Betancur has been able to inspire confidence in that commitment is both a tribute to his leadership and an indication of what could be achieved if the nearby states were to demonstrate strong strate respect for human rights and civilian control over the armed forces.
Aryeh Neier is vice chairman of the Americas Watch and the Helsinki Watch, human rights organizations.
FRANKLY I'M
SKID AND TIRED OF
THIS STEADY DRUMBEAT
OF CRITICISM COMPARING
US TO THE TITANIC!
Despite these events, and some guerrilla violence that they inspired, a treaty was signed Aug. 24
Betancur did not agree to any power-sharing in exchange for the
Plans for how to use lottery winnings
(News item: A 28-year-old Chi
caper printer, Michael E. Wittkowski,
won $10 million in the Illinois lottery
Monday.)
When the winning lottery number was announced on television, there was moaning and swearing up and down the bar. But Herbert took it calmly. He shrugged and said, "Unlike these tools, I was absolutely certain I wasn't going to win."
Anybody with a ticket has a chance.
People like you?
"No, that isn't true. I don't know how it's done, but somehow things are ragged so that certain people can't win People like me."
"Well, let's start with Hawaii. I don't like Hawaii. I would never consider go there."
"We have certain characteristics. Such as"
"So this. About half the people who win a big lottery say the same thing; they're going to use some of their winnings for a vacation in Hawaii Never Paris or a villa near Rome. Why do people who suddenly get rich
want to fly thousands of miles to eat a pig cooked in a hole in the ground?
"Yes, and another reason I don't qualify is that I don't have a sister in California."
What does that have to do with it?
THE FOUNDING MEMBER
MIKE ROYKO Syndicated Columnist
The ones you don't go to usually say they are going to use
nier winnings to visit their sister in California. How's that for life in the fast track?"
I suppose it could be livelier.
"Yes, and I not going to buy any new furniture or a new TV set, which winners always say they're going to do. I would announce that I was going to burn down the dump."
Morn does a lot for you. She helps pay your way through college, she sends goodies in the mail, she complains when you hit her up for lunch and then goes to work. It's time to order morns for parent's weekend.
Just maybe the mum worn by mother is a symbol A symbol of another autumn and yet another year passing by A symbol of the beauty of motherhood, of never ending devation and love.
During the first week of classes, freshmen were treated to an evening to learn "how they could get a foot in the door" at this fine institution.
People don't rush to buy something when they can put it on until later. We are part of
Never has there been such a stampede of people as when the mum sellers come to your living organization.
Now I'm sure all the freshman think they know everything there is to know about life
But that stampede gives it away.
the "buy the ticket at the door" generation. Why spend the money now when you can spend a dollar more at the door in a few more days?
Ah, but Mom's mum. When they're taking the orders, something this side of guilt compels us to buy the mum that will make Mom's day.
DO dress the part for classes. Shorts and T shirts are OK, but not the T shirt with tiny
DON'T carry your books to class. Lugging a five-pound biology book on campus is the mark of a true freshman.
well, you're wrong, neophyte 'Hawks
After all, Mom has nurtured us from birth, spending all her energy to make us what we are before we cut the apron strings and dash off to college. A mum would be a small gesture that would say, "Thanks, Mom, for everything."
The following is some sage advice and collegiate tassus pas they may have neglected.
neses, this is the only time you can call Dad and say, "Hey, Dad, can you send money so I can buy Mom a mum for parent's weekend?"
Pot Shots
DON'T sign up for a tour of Watson Library. If you must, wear dark glasses and a camera, and maybe people will think you're a tourist. If you're a KU student, and you need Watson, you must be literate, which is all that is necessary to read the large print letters that identify everything in the building.
Rochelle McThur ...
DO wear jeans on "Wear blue jeans in you're gay day" Show some self confidence on this yearly occasion People should not wear jeans they must prove their heterosexuality
names of every member of your high school senior class
These are just a few, but if you catch an upperclassman snickering at you, don't say you weren't warned.
Senabbausuhbesmouhfuhbasbill.
Excuse me. My keyboard was full of chewing tobacco.
september is the best month for baseball.
Love baseball.
Even in Cleveland, where St. Jude is on deck with two out in the outh, God bless
I love baseball.
God bless baseball.
Definition of football. If Mike Norseth has a good year, we'll finish seventh in the Big Eight. If Mike Norseth doesn't have a good
Even in New York, where George Steinbrenner is negotiating with a free agent - St. Jude, the patron saint of lost causes
Pass the hot dogs
Bruce Forberson
"Why not? Why can't they be jes, one lottery winner who looks into the TV cameras and says, 'I am going to quit my job, dump my wife, shed my friends, and use my wealth to do all the unspeakable things most of you dream about, but are ashamed to admit.'"
year, we'll finish seventh in the Big Eight. Don't shake it
But you can't just spend your life as a playboy.
down a blowerweir! Bob is thankful.
My God, man, get those behemoths in pads
off the cow pasture! Happens every Sep-
tember, folks.
God bless all Chicago Cubs fans, every where.
"Believe me, the world is filled with loving people. They would probably love me so much they would be willing to do light housekeeping and my laundry, too."
know whether they would have succeeded in life on their own. Naturally, they'll fail on their own, but at least through failure they will come to know themselves."
Football is winterly and hard bitten and macho. Baseball is summery and sensitive and graceful. Baseball is physics and grace. Football is a bulldozer looking for something to destroy.
to destroy
God bless Mit Griff, Jim Beauchamp, Phil Gaghano, Julian Javier, Wally Bunker, Eddie Watt and every bullpen coach who ever lived. Hisses on whatever circumstances recently cost Kansas its only professional baseball team, the Wichita Aeros.
"Oh, that's no problem. I would simply go to the French Riviera and put up a sign on my yacht slaying. I have $40 million. Do you love me?"
But how can somebody live without friends and loved ones?
Because that would discredit the lottery. It isn't intended to shatter marriages and turn decent men into sinful idiots.
"You might be right. So if I ever win, I'll revise my plan. I'll stay with my wife."
"Yes - and I'll get six mistresses."
That's the way.
Your wife wouldn't like that
That's rather callous of you considering all those years she's given you.
That's probably true. So I would also announce that I was going to retain the best divorce lawyer in America."
But what would your friends think?
"Actually, it's generous of me. It's not like I was going to hire someone to bump her off, which I could well afford to do if I won the lottery."
But what would your friends think?
"As friends, I hope that they would understand how to write them letters, telling them how I was going to save our friendship.
How would you do that?
"That would be a terrible thing to do to my friends. It would make them dependent upon me, which would be wrong because they would never
But wouldn't you share some of your new wealth with them?
How would you feel that?
How could something further to do with any of them.
"Of course it is. Human nature, being what it is, if I won they would all become terrily envious. This would cause friction in our friend's ship to save us from an attack. I would tell them that I didn't want to see them again. And if they showed up, I'd have my bodyguards throw them out."
That's not very friendly
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Story's quote out of context
To the editor:
I would like to respond to an article in the Sept 12 Kansan ("Black unrest causes riots in S. Africa") in which I have been quoted out of context.
First, the reporter wrote that I had said the only way to resolve the unrest was to increase boycots, rots and international pressure and for leaders to meet and discuss the dismantling of an unjust system.
Despite the fact that this quote carries a heavy sentence in South Africa, it gives an impression that I advocate riot - in essence violence.
as the only solution to the problem
What I meant to say was that increased roots, boycotts and international pressure will ultimately force white South Africa to discuss the dismantling of apartheid with authentic black leaders. I can only hope that this happens before too much blood is shed.
Lastly, for me to refer to the South African government as "our government" is misleading to the KU reading public. How can I say "our government" when I don't have the right to vote?
Paul Mamabolo
Johannesburg, South Africa junior
Student support necessarv
10 in the outer
An open letter to the students;
To the editor
Congratulations to those of you who were at the game Saturday. To those of you who sat on the hill, "come down" for the Florida State game! To those of you who sat in the stands for the Wichita State game, your lack of support is embarrassing
You have an outstanding football coach and staff. Your student.
athletes have been working hard under difficult circumstances. They deserve and they need your support. You can create the excitement and enthusiasm this team needs. So get psyched, get crazy, get to Memorial Stadium and yell like hell!
See ya tomorrow
J. David Holt '67 Kansas City, Mo., alumnus
University Daily Kansan, September 14, 1984
Page 5
Diana
continued from p.1
Cape Fear, where the storm crashed ashore with 115 mph winds at 1:10 a.m. EDT yesterday.
Diana destroyed the water tower at Carolina Beach, leaving the town without drinking water. The Cape Fear River spilled over its banks during the storm, covering Wilmington's historic waterfront area with two feet of water.
TOM DITT OF THE North Carolina Division of Emergency Management said there was no accurate way to assess the damage because "if you can't get physically in there to survey, you can't get any figures."
Supplies were short at some storm shelters, and some food was useless without power to cook it.
"We need some food for our people who
haven't been fed in these shelters for 24 hours," Brunswick County Manager Billy Carter told Hunt, who promptly ordered Red Cross officials "to make it their top priority."
"These people are going to be out of their houses for a while." Hunt said, "and we're going to have to give them shelter and keep feeding them."
Trucks with sandwiches that had been made in prisons were sent to feed storm refugees, but some trucks couldn't reach shelters because roads were blocked.
There were no immediate reports of casulties due directly to the storm, but one man died of a heart attack securing his beach home, and another was killed in a car wreck while fleeing the storm.
"We expected a massive onslaught of injured," said Iris Smith of the New Hanover Memorial Hospital in Wilmington, "but there have been only a very few injuries and nothing serious."
State officials said many people who ignored warnings and returned to beach homes Wednesday were cut off when Diana slammed into the coast. Wrightsville Beach policeman Bruce Lassiter said the storm "sounded like 100,000 lions roaring."
RESCUE WORKERS WITH chainsaws and earth moving equipment worked through hurricane winds yesterday to reach isolated areas. Two Coast Guard helicopters were sent to Bald Head Island to rescue stranded construction workers.
current law, the school board has the final authority in negotiations.
Forum continued from p. 1
HACK DID NOT support the measure, which was favored by teachers. Hack served on the Lawrence Board of Education from 1971 to 1983 and was its president for four
Winter also said he would not endorse the measure now.
All candidates spoke adamantly about the need for higher teacher salaries. Solbach said that increases must be a priority for the next several years.
"It's going to require a long-term commitment of funds, and it's got to have a commitment that lasts beyond an election year," he said.
Winter agreed and said Kansas teachers
were being paid about $2 an hour to teach each student in their classrooms.
"That's just about what we're paying for babysitters," he said.
Winter said he favored a one-cent increase in the state general sales tax to be used for education financing.
ALL CANDIDATES SAID they felt sympathy for the teachers' plight.
Charlton countered a charge by Parker that Solbach and Charlton had voted to allot general funds for a highway fund when it could have been used for education.
Charlton said that such an accusation could be made whenever a legislator to use the general fund for anything but education.
TENNIS
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TOURNAMENT
Sunday Sept. 16
1 pm Robinson
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TENNIS
This Friday on campus: $1 Pitchers in the Hawk's Nest
SEPTEMBER
14
SEPTEMBER 14
From 2 to 5 this afternoon in the Kansas Union Hawk's Nest, you and friends can enjoy dollar pitchers and free popcorn along with live entertainment from Brett Hodges. Don't miss it!
This event is one of many activities planned for the week-long Kansas Union Open House, Sept. 11-15. For more information call 864.3477 or 864.4596
T
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THE KANSAS UNION OPEN HOUSE—SEPT. 11-15
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This Saturday on campus: Free bowling and billiards
SEPTEMBER 15 Tomorrow night, from 7 to 11 in the Jaybowl on level one of the Kansas Union, you and your friends can enjoy hours of continuous fun with free bowling and free billiards.
ma
for
This event is one of many activities planned for the week-long Kansas Union Open House, Sept. 11-15. For more information call 864-3477 or 864-4596.
THE KANSAS UNION OPEN HOUSE—SEPT. 11-15
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University Daily Kansan, September 14, 1984 Page6
CAMPUS AND AREA
Committee to sponsor S. Africa Week
By the Kansan Staff
A nation and its controversial system of apartheid will be the theme of several events next week sponsored by the Student Senate's Committee on South Africa.
The committee has declared Sept. 17-21 as South Africa Week. Dennis "Boog" Highberger, student body vice president and a member of the committee, said yesterday that the committee wanted to make students aware of apartheid, a form of racial segregation, in South Africa.
Events include:
The events will cost the committee about $500, he said, and the committee will ask for individual donations to cover expenses. Student Senate will not provide any funds.
- An hour-long radio talk show on KJHK-FM at 6 p.m. Monday. High伯者 and Carla Vogel, student body president, will take calls from radio listeners.
*Two free film documentaries,
"The Discarded People" and "Generations of Resistance," at 7:30 p.m.
Monday in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
- A rally on the lawn of Watson Library at noon Wednesday.
- A reading of works of South African poets by students and faculty members at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in 100 Smith Hall.
- A public forum at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in 100 Smith Hall.
- A free presentation by Creative Association, a Lawrence theater and dance group, at 12:30 p.m. behind Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
*A dance with reggae music by Common Ground, a Lawrence group, at 9 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Tickets are $3 at the door
Highberger also said information tables would be set up from to a m. to 2 p.m. all week in front of the Union, the Frank R. Burge Union and Wescoc Hall.
DOUBLE FEATURE
Rent VCR & Movies
Overnight £10
Caribbean
Call +321 480 5751
K. U.K.S.A.
The Korean Student Association Picnic
Where: Clinton Park
When: Sat. Sept. 15, 12 p.m.
For more information call Jong Soo Lee 842-7781
3 Days Only
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 14, 1984
Page 7
WTCS recruits volunteers
By the Kansan Staff
Women's Transitional Care Services, a support group for battered women, is looking for volunteers for its tall training sessions.
Cindy Butler, an advocate volunteer at WTCS, said the fall training $sessions were the organization's efforts to educate the student of KU $students who volunteered.
The next training session will be at 5 a.m. tomorrow at 2829 Missouri St. The training program, conducted by Barbara Smith, community facilitator, prepares the volunteer for dealing with battered women.
But she said that WTCS didn't get a lot of calls from students because students didn't realize that both married and single women could use the services. WTCS works with all races, creeds, colors, nationalities and sexual preferences, Butler said.
"We want KU students to volunteer, but also to call us for help. That's what we're here for." she said.
佛之像
一清心法學術丶
四時
"Battering doesn't just occur in marriage, but begins with dating, as early as junior high school." Butler argues that the most common Psychological battering is most common, but physical violence is seen all too frequently."
ZEN MEDITATION
Intensive Retreat September 13-16
Public Talk Saturday, September 15, 1:30 p.m.
Master Dharma Teacher George Bowman
Kansas Zen Center 1115 Ohio Street 842-8909
case inquire about regular classes and
Please inquire about regular classes and formal practice schedule.
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FRIDAY & SATURDAY
MIDNIGHT
"MASH' IS THE BEST
AMERICAN WAR
COMEDY SINCE
SOUND CAME
IN!"
MASH
Airing Foreign Publication
BOARD SUTHERLAND & ILLIOT COOLE TOM SKERRITT
WESTERN WESTERN STATE AUDIO MEDIA INC.
$2.00
SUNDAY
"A GREAT EPIC!"
Stanley Kunfer Time Magazine
SUNDAY
"A GREAT EPIC!"
Stefan Kaufer, Time Magazine
DUSTIN
HOFFMAN
"LITTLE BIG MAN"
$1.50
2 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium
Level 5, Kansas Union
GRAND
OPENING
SALE!
We're having a tremendous sale this week. It's our Grand Opening and we invite you to take advantage of our unbelievable prices now thru Saturday. Professional, knowledgeable salespeople and High Tech's lowest prices. That's what we're all about at Computer Outlet and that's why we're the fastest growing computer store in town.
Buy: Columbia 256K with keyboard, for $1000.00 off list.
**Get Free:** Open Access integrated software (as well as regular software package).
Buy: A Toshiba 1351 for $300 off list price (dot matrix speed with letter quality results!).
Get Free: Your choice of $100 in supplies (paper, disks, printer stand, ribbons) Save $400.
Buy: One box dual sided Memorex diskettes.
Get Free: 3 Generik diskettes.
Buy: A locking plastic 70 disk capacity storage box (Data Defender).
Get Free: 10 Generik diskettes.
Buy: Lotus 1-2-3, R-base or Wordstar ProPack at 20% off list.
Got Free: Flight Simulator or Friendly Arcade
Buy: APC.
Get Free: High quality amber monitor.
**Buy:** Any 1200 Hayes or Multimodem.
**Get Free:** Sidekick (the calculator-calendar program).
Buy: Any RGB color monitor.
**Buy:** Any RGB color monitor.
**Get Free:** Any game (up to $50 list price).
These are just a few of the many different products we have at special prices all this week. Remember, sale runs through this Saturday only.
COMPUTER OUTLET "High Tech's Lowest Prices."
804 New Hampshire Lawrence, Ks. 843-PLUG.
304 New Hampshire Lawrence, Rs. 843-PLDC.
Inc. Outlet Foresight Solutions, Inc. suppliers of IBM/PC to city governments IBM/PC is a trademark of International Business Machines
CAMPUS AND AREA
More attend Senate meeting
Page 8
Ten times more people attended yesterday's fall University Senate meeting than attended the spring meeting, the Senate chairman said yesterday.
By the Kansan Staff
"I think the attendance was related to the chancellor's presence at the meeting," said James Carothers, the chairman and associate professor of
Fifty-three people, not all Senate members, attended the meeting. But a quorum was not reached because one-fifth of the Senate, or 21 members, did not attend. University Senate is comprised of Student Senate, Faculty Senate and administrators.
University Senate has not reached a quorum since 1970-1971, Carothers said, and Chancellor Gene A. Budu had joined to the meeting to boost attendance.
University Daily Kansan, September 14, 1984
Budig, speaking from a prepared text, told the audience that the University of Kansas would pay attention to the legitimate needs of the KU athletic department. But he said the University would not sacrifice academic integrity for athletic excellence.
Back by popular demand! All The Tacos You Can Eat
Make Your Own For $1!
Friday 4:30-6:30
Make Your Own For $1!
Your choice of toppings—Hot & mild sauce
Friday 4:30-6:30
821 IOWA SERVING THE BEST MEALS IN TOWN!
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan
Recruitment with 235 clubs.
843-0540
--includes
OPEN
6 A.M. MON-FRI
24 HRS On WEEKENDS
Village Inn
Pancake House
Restaurant
Join our JAYHAWK DISCOUNT CLUB.
Bring in this ad and we'll give you a DISCOUNT CARD worth 10% OFF on your meals
JOIN NOW AND SAVE!
FIX
CHAINS
FAST
749-4333
"NOBODY QUITE STACKS UP TO VILLAGE INN"
Class Rings
Buy-Sell-Trade-Pawn
Gold Sword P coins
Watches-Annieqs
721 New Hampshire
Lake Winnipesaukee
913-842-8773
WE
Boyd's Coins-Antiques
Kizer Cummings
800 Mass
--includes
KWALITY COMICS
Comics & Science Fiction
107 W. 7th. 843-7239
Need a TV...
Rentacolor TV.
Student Discounts, Free Delivery, Free
Installation, & Free Service
Call Mike 1-764-8660
Drinking Myth of the Week
GIVE HIM BLACK COFFEE.
THAT LL SOBER HIM UP.
Sure, in about five hours. Cold showers don't work either. Only time can get the alcohol out of the system, as the liver metabolizes the alcohol. Slowly.
There's no way to hurry it.
The Student Assistance Center
PENNY ANNIES
Sweet Shoppe
السنة ١٤٩٥هـ / ٢٠٠٣م
إدارة مركز التعليم العالي
الجامعة بيروت
Give your parents a sweet treat after the Game!
2 FOR 1 Ice Cream Special
Buy 1 dip any flavor ice cream get another dip FREE!
Sat. only
730 Mass.
843-5544
Open Daily 10:30:5:30
Thursday till 8:30
PARENT'S DAY AT NABIL'S IS SPECIAL!
KU Fans:
We invite you to "Win & Dine" under the stars Saturday, 5-10 p.m.
PRIME RIB DINNER
After you enjoy the Jayhawk win . . .
Celebrate by dining with us outdoors under the stars.
- Prime Rib cooked to your
- specifications
- Baked Potato
- Dinner Salad
- Homemade Bread
PLEASE CALL 841-7226 FOR RESERVATIONS
Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa
841-7226
LOWEST PRICE THIS FALL!
The Absolute Ultimate In A Personal Class Ring
SPECIAL $6995*
Applications valid until August 10 & 14. Good Availability at higher prices.
• Elegant fashion design
• Offer expires OCTOBER 30th.
• Diamonds available
Jayhawk Bookstore
BS
BEST BASES
Nabil's
ONKYO
OKKEYO
COMPUTER MASTER SYSTEM
LUNAR MISSILES IN ACTION
ONKYO TA-2022 COMPUTER CONTROL STEREO CASSETTE DECK
- Dolby B and C Noise Reduction
- Computer-controlled silent tape transport mechanism
- Feather-touch tape transport controls
- Front panel headphones jack
- Hard Permalloy rec/pb head
- Front panel left/right mic jacks
- REC/OFF/PLAY timer switch
- LED tape selector and
Dolphin Indicators
* Full auto-stop
Dolphin Indicators
- Large left/right recording input level control knob
- Left/right channel LED peak level meters
Prices good through September 29,1984
$ 194^{40} $
"BEST BUY"
KIEF'S
GRAMOPHONE
shop
DISCOUNT STEREO
HOLIDAY PLAZA
KIEF'S
---
The
The Palace CARDS GIFTS
YOU'RE MISSING OUT
ON THE EXCITEMENT IF YOU HAVEN'T
BEEN TO THE PALACE!
WE ARE THE
TOTALLY IRRESISTABLE SHOP AT THE CORNER OF 8TH AND MASS. COME VISIT US SOON!
"REMEMBER, WE'RE THE ALTERNATIVE CARD SHOP WITH GIFTS FOR EVERY OCCASION!"
M-S 9:30-5:30 MASTER CHOO VISA 8th E Mass.
Thur. 9:30-8:30 843-1099
University Daily Kansan, September 14, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 9
Local officials review disaster plans
BY JOHN REIMRINGER
Staff Reporter
In an effort to prepare for disasters local officials yesterday discussed how their agencies would keep lines of communication open in an emergency.
City, county and state officials reviewed the Douglas County disaster plan with representatives of local radio stations, the American Red
Cross and the Lawrence Hum Radio Club at a meeting in the commission chambers of the Douglas County Courthouse.
"We don't have that many hands on exercises," he said. "We have more real incidents than we have exercises."
"The exercise was designed for the decision-making people," said Phil Leonard. Douglas County director of emergency preparedness.
and training of disaster relief workers were not discussed.
Most of the agencies train their disaster relief workers separately, Leonard said.
The exercise dealt only with organizational problems that the agencies might face during and after a disaster, he said. Field activities
The session began with a film of an actual disaster, a train derailment and chemical spill in Livingston, La.
The spill forced the evacuation of 3,000 people.
Leonard said the film was a good example because a train had detailed in Lawrence before. He said it was easy to imagine what would have happened had that train been carrying chemicals. Much of downtown would have had to be evacuated, he said.
"We would have been without a hospital, without a city hall," he said.
Steak For Two! For The Price Of One!
Order a steak to your size (6 oz. minimum) and **get the second steak** for your friend (same or lesser weight)
Includes salad, fries and muffin Expires 9/24/84
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan Recipient with over 235 clubs. 843-0540
Kawasaki
FUN CENTER
SPACE FOR RENT
- PARTS
- ACCESSORIES
- SERVICE
- NEW & USED CYCLES
SUNLITE
- THREE WHEELERS
1804 W. 6TH STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
- JET SKIS
Air Conditioning Smoke Filtered Atmosphere Ample Parking
PHONE:
913/842-1702 Sales
842-1703 Parts & Accessories
842-1708 Service
— Let The Good Times Roll —
For further information call 842-2699
tonight
SUA
Special Event Co
R.E.M.
WZR
106
DANCE
FLOOR!
DANCE
FLOOR!
WITH SPECIAL GUESTS: the dB's
THE CASTLE TEA ROOM
PRODUCED BY NEW WEST/CONTEMPORARY
BIA
Special
events
TICKETS at SUA BOX OFFICE; All Capital Automated Ticket Outlets including Full-Line Jones Stores, Caper's Corner Records, both 7th Heaven Stores, Crown Center Ticket Office and Love Records; Omni Electronics in Lawrence; Budget Tapes and Records in Topeka; and through Dial-A-Tic at 816/753-6617.
Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358.
THE SLEEPING BROOKS
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14th HOCH AUDITORIUM • 9 pm TICKETS $10/$9 ALL SEATS RESERVED $1 DISCOUNT AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTS W/KUID
PENNYLANE
SPECIALISTS IN RECORDED MUSIC RECORDS & TAPES
- Best selection & price!
- Preferred customer cards!
- Separate jazz & classical room with its own sound system!
This is just an example of the many reasons you owe it to yourself to check out the best record & tape store in Lawrence!
- Used LP selection!
- Jazz & classical 20% off every Sunday!
— Used LP selection!
817 Vermont Downtown Close to campus 749.4211
749-4211
PENNYLINE
SPECIALISTS IN RECORDED MUSIC
Mon - Sat 10-8
Sun 12-6
Saturday On Campus OREAD BOOKSHOP 15th Anniversary
SEPTEMBER
It's our 15th anniversary and
15
we want to celebrate. Join us Saturday night from 7 p.m.to 9 p.m.for free beer and soft drinks and receive 15% off any of your purchases. All our merchandise is included. Save on posters, greeting cards and our large selection of books while having
fun too!
This event is one of
activities planned for
week-long Kansas Union
House, Sept. 11-15. For more
formation call 864-3477 or 864-
OREAD BOOK SHOP
Level 3 Kansas Union
University Daily Kansan, September 14, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 10
New KU phone book to be ready in October
By the Kansan Staff
Copies of the 1984-85 KU telephone book should be available the third week of October, the production coordinator for the phone book said yesterday.
"That would actually be earlier than they usually come out," said Jane Heskinson, the coordinator
In other years, distribution of the phone book has been delayed by computer problems. Hoskinson said.
Copies of the book should be delivered to the University of Kansas about Oct. 11, Haskinson said. A few days later, copies will be distributed free to residence and scholarship departments, faculty and staff.
Computer tapes containing names for the directory were sent last week to NAPCO Inc., the Fairfax, Va., company printing the book, she said. NAPCO will print 14,000 copies of the directory.
ON CAMPUS
Copies will be sold for $1.50
THE KU BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
TODAY
THE INTERNATIONAL FOLK
DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30
p.m. at Potter Pavilion. Hungarian dances will be taught.
CLUB will sponsor a picnic at 4:30 p.m. in Burcham Park, Second and Indiana streets.
THE KU INTERNATIONAL
JAMES CAROTHERS, associate professor of English, will speak on "Pennant Fever. Baseball in Literature" at 9:30 a.m. in 203 Green Hall. To register, call 864/4790.
JACKIE DAVIS AND RON
WILLIAM will speak on "Behind the Scenes in Concert and Theater Planning" at 9 o'30 am, in Skilton Hall. To register, call 864-4790.
LONNY ROSE, assistant athletic director, will speak on "The Basketball Student Athletes" at 9:30 a.m. in the Parrott Athletic Center film
room. To register, call 864-4790
MONDAY
THE SUA STRATO-MATIC Baseball Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union.
STUDENT CREATIVE ANACHRONISTS will meet at 7.30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
NEW Place
4 DOWA
2406 IOWA
842-9593
BACK TO THE BOOKS
SALE
Handknit & Angora Sweaters, Wool, Twill and Corduroy Trousers; Buy 1 at regular price, Get the next at $2 price. All Winter Coats & Suits up to 1/3 OFF
--the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755
carouse
711 W. 23rd
Malls Shopping Center
New Fall Hall 10-8 30 Mon-Tues
10-6 10:40 Sat
Nightly
WE DELIVER!
PIZZA Shoppe
pub
PIZZA EATEN WITH 12 INCHES
Free Pitcher of beer or Pepsi with any Dine-in
Monday Night Football Special
(coupon)
$8.95 plus tax
6th and Kasold
Westridge
Shopping Center
Triple topping
King Size Pizza
and 32 oz. Pepsi
expires 12:31:84
DELIVERED!
Extra Mozzarella FREE
By Memorizing This Ad!
WE DELIVER!
PIZZA Shoppe
and pub
PIZZA EATEN WITH YE FINDERS
Free Pitcher of beer or Pepsi with any Dine-in
Monday Night Football Special (coupon)
$8.95 plus tax
Triple topping King Size Pizza and 32 oz. Pepsi expires 12-31-84
DELIVERED!
Extra Mozzarella FREE.
By Mentions This Ad!
842-0600
Discover Horizons
WE DELIVER!
PIZZA Shoppe
Free Pitcher of beer or Pepsi with any Dine-in
Monday Night Football Special (coupon)
$8.95 plus tax
Triple topping King Size Pizza and 32 oz. Pepsi expires 12-31-84
DELIVERED!
Extra Mozzarella FREE
By mentioning This Ad
842-0600
Discover Horizons
GO ON A SPREE
HONDA
Only $435
If you need to get around town on a limited budget, the Honda Spree was built for you. It's ideal for commuting to and from work or school. And because it's the lowest priced Honda scooter you can buy, it's ideal for your bank account, too. Plus, its peppy 49cc engine, low maintenance requirements and easy to use controls make it as easy to ride and maintain as it is to pay for.
1548 E. 23
843-3333
Mon. 12-6
Tues.-Fri. 10-6
Sat. 10-4
Discover Horizons
GO ON A SPREE
HONDA
Only
$435
If you need to get around town on a limited budget, the Honda Spree was built for you. It's ideal for commuting to and from work or school And because it's the lowest priced Honda scooter you can buy", it’s ideal for your bank account, too Plus, its peppy 49cc engine, low maintenance requirements and easy to use controls make it as easy to ride and maintain as it is to pay for.
1548 E. 23
843-3333
Mon. 12-6
Tues.-Fri. 10-6
Sat. 10-4
Honda
Spiro
GOOD TIME CLOTHES
Whether you're headed to the ball game or to whatever other good times you may have in mind...we've got the right clothing to help those good times roll. In this case, great looking sweaters from Pendleton & Braemar. Stop in and see these and all the rest...
WHITENIGHT'S
THE NEW YORKER NOW
The NEW YORKER NOW
Big 32 oz.
PEPSI
49¢ reg. 85¢
Expires 9/16/84 Bring in this coupon
NACHO CHIPS
and cheese
and jalepenos
69¢ reg. 96¢
Expires 9/16/84 Bring in this coupon
NEW YORKER
PIZZA
Bring Your Friends
VIDEO MADNESS
101 TOKENS
for
$7.00
(Bless than 7% per play)
BRING IN THIS COUPON
VIDEO
Bring your professors
Bring your housemates
Offer expires 9/16/84
Bring the family
1021 MASS.
PLAY THE VERY BEST GAMES!!!
NEW YORKER
PIZZA
Bring your Friends
VIDEO MADNESS
101 TOKENS
for
$7.00
(less than 7" per play)
BRING IN THIS COUPON
Bring your professors
Bring your house mother
Offer expires
9/16/84
Bring the family
1021 MASS.
1
University Daily Kansan, September 14, 1984
COUNTRY KITCHEN
1503 W. 23rd OPEN 24 HOURS
$ _{1/2} $ Price Suppers Sept. 17 thru 30 5 p.m. to 11 p.m.
wars now
Chopped Steak 4.50 2.25
Golden Shrimp Piedes 5.25 2.65
Ham Steak 4.35 2.20
Fried Chicken 4.25 2.15
Filet of Fish 4.65 2.35
Meat Loaf 3.95 2.00
Liver & Onions 4.25 2.15
Chicken Fried Steak 4.59 2.30
Mone Served With Choice of Potato, Tossed Salad, and a Piping Hot Biscuit
Spaghetti & Meatballs 3.95 2.00
Veal Parmigiana 4.35 2.20
Batter served with Tossed Salad & 1 Slice Garlic Toast
ONE WAY OR ANOTHER,
WE'RE GONNA GETCHA!!
MUSICIANS!
LAWRENCE'S OLDEST, MOST COMPLETE
FULL LINE MUSIC STORE!
* Pro Audio Equipment
* Guitars, Amps, Drums, Portable Keyboards
* Pianos, Organs, Music Lessons
* HUGE SELECTION-BUDGET TERMS *
PULLIAM'S MUSIC HOUSE
01 IOWA 843-30
OPEN EVENINGS
843-3007
OPEN EVENINGS
SATURDAY
SPORTS SPECTACULAR
Résumé Service
---
A Professional Resume Writing Service. Cover Letters and Word Processing.
5 East 7th
841-1286
PICKLEBALL TOURNAMENT Sept.15 10 pm Robinson Cen
A/C Service $15.95
Includes: freon, clean condensor, check belts and hoses, and check for leaks.
COOP
Automotive Center
23rd & Haskell 843-8094
NEW in Town!
Band Instruments For Rent $10 per Month
* Up to 50% OFF on Guitars * 25% OFF Keyboards
plus a free case
* 25% OFF Amplifiers * 30% OFF Drum Sets
* 30% OFF D.O.D. Effects Pedals * 25% OFF Cymbals
*except Casio
HAYES HOUSE OF MUSIC 944 MASS. 842-5183
NEW in Town!
We Are Making Great Pizza Affordable!
NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH!
We Start From Scratch when we are making the Best Pizza in town. Then we finish by giving you the Best Price in town.
Pizza At STEPHANIE'S
HILLCREST
120W.2
2214 YALE
harvard
15th
10W.2
Stratford
University
15th
WE'RE COMING AT YA!
PIZZA
Jellyfish
"When it comes to pizza
Stephanie's comes to you!"
We choose to use only quality
mozzarella cheese which is low in
butter fat. We make our own dough
fresh. And we throw the dough
by hand to keep it soft and to
develop the gluten. Our sauce contains
a selection of herbs and real Romano cheese which
gives our pizzas a special spiciness and flavor.
Our pepperoni is tops...our vegetables
are always fresh and cut large enough to taste.
All this adds up to quality you
wouldn't expect from a
delivered pizza.
Speedy delivery. All deliveries take
30 minutes or less.
Heavy boxes protect and
keep your pizza hot.
Tasty, hot and speedily-delivered
pizza. How can you resist?
you
or less.
Pizza M.
STEPHANIE'S
MAINTA DEAL!
Dizza M.
STEDHANIES
Pizza At Stephanie's
Pizza At Stephanie's
2 For 1
Order any Small Pizza
& get another of equal value
Starting Price
in store Pizza
$4.83 FREE!
841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
Price does not include sales tax
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN OUR SERVICE ZONE
Price does not include sales tax
FREE DELIVERY
ANDFORWHERE IN OUR SERVICE ZONE
Pizza At Stephanie's
2 For 1
Order any Large Pizza
& get another one of equal value
Starting Price
(lower Price)
$8.21 FREE!
841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
Price does not include sales tax
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN CUR SERVICE ZONE
---
NATION AND WORLD
Defiant Polish sailors meet Pope near Canada's shore
By United Press International
HALIFAX, Nova Scotia — Pope John Paul II, touring eastern Canada in a driving rainstorm, interrupted his schedule yesterday to meet sailors from his Polish homeland who defied their government to see him.
During a day of traveling that took him from St. John's Newfoundland to Moncton, New Brunswick and finally to Halifax on Canada's rugged North Atlantic coast, the pope also defended human rights and reiterated the Roman Catholic church ban on abortion.
was tied up to take on supplies.
The pope was being driven to St John's Airport in the morning for a flight to Moncton when he ordered his limousine to stop by the waterfront where the Polish schooner Gdania
Gdania Captain Woyeck Wiersbeck, who had sent word of the ship's presence to the Vatican entorage, said the pope's limousine pulled over to the curb, the window rolled down and John Paul smiled from the back seat and motioned him over.
"It was the dream of a lifetime. I still can't believe it happened," said the red-bearded Wiersbecki, who handed the pope a sweatshirt from the Yacht Club of Gdansk, its home port in northern Poland.
After Wiersbseck and his crewmen kissed the pope's ring, exchanged news about Poland and wishes for a good trip. John Paul's limousine and its motorcycle outriders rushed for the airport. 28 minutes behind schedule.
Super Sunday At The Sanctuary!
$1.75 Super Schooners
All Dav Long!
75¢ Pitchers From 1 to 5 p.m.
Paradise z. Finch
228 Main
MIDWEST BUSINESS SYSTEMS
* Blue Print Service
* Copy Center Magazines Coding
* Color Machine Mats & Supplies
812 Mass
B42-4134
* STUDIOS STARTING AY
* ONE BEDROOM $200
* TWO BEDROOM
* DUPLEX CUDDAY WOOD
APARTMENTS
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
Phone 843-1116
The Galleyery
7th & Michigan Recipient with over 235 clubs 843-0540
Page 12
$2 discount with KU ID
Silver Clipper
To please you is all pressure
The Sanctuary
MIDWEST BUSINESS SYSTEMS
University Daily Kansan, September 14, 1984
Paradise Amphitheatre
Palm trees D
Flair flamingos
Pancakes D
Pentimentos
And no more
hard times
120 West
4:30 - 7:00 10:00 - 11:00
5:00 - 7:00 10:00 - 11:00
Closed Monday
DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG
BASLIDE 68' Masthead, center screen
CENTER HOOK 210' Masthead, natural bar
CENTER HATCH
OLYMPUS
Pearlcorder S904
818 MASS.
842-4134
**Implementation**
* **programming language**: C, Java, Python, R, SQL
* **programmer tools**: Visual Studio, IntelliJ IDEA, Xcode, PyCharm
* **database management system**: MySQL, MongoDB, PostgreSQL
* **graphical user interface**: Windows, MacOS, Linux
---
**References**
1. Bassett, J. (2015). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
2. Huang, X. (2014). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
3. Koehler, P. (2016). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
4. Li, Y. (2018). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
5. Xu, Y. (2019). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
6. Zhang, Q. (2017). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
7. Zhao, J. (2016). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
8. Yan, Y. (2015). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
9. Zhang, Q. (2017). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
10. Zhao, J. (2016). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
11. Wang, H. (2015). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
12. Wu, X. (2016). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
13. Yu, Y. (2015). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
14. Wu, X. (2016). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
15. Wu, X. (2017). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
16. Wu, X. (2018). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
17. Wu, X. (2019). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
18. Wu, X. (2020). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
19. Wu, X. (2021). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
20. Wu, X. (2022). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
21. Wu, X. (2023). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
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23. Wu, X. (2025). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
24. Wu, X. (2026). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
25. Wu, X. (2027). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
26. Wu, X. (2028). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
27. Wu, X. (2029). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
28. Wu, X. (2030). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
29. Wu, X. (2031). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
30. Wu, X. (2032). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
31. Wu, X. (2033). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
32. Wu, X. (2034). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
33. Wu, X. (2035). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
34. Wu, X. (2036). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
35. Wu, X. (2037). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
36. Wu, X. (2038). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
37. Wu, X. (2039). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
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39. Wu, X. (2041). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
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52. Wu, X. (2054). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
53. Wu, X. (2055). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
54. Wu, X. (2056). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
55. Wu, X. (2057). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
56. Wu, X. (2058). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
57. Wu, X. (2059). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
58. Wu, X. (2060). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
59. Wu, X. (2061). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
60. Wu, X. (2062). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
61. Wu, X. (2063). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
62. Wu, X. (2064). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
63. Wu, X. (2065). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
64. Wu, X. (2066). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
65. Wu, X. (2067). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
66. Wu, X. (2068). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
67. Wu, X. (2069). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
68. Wu, X. (2070). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
69. Wu, X. (2071). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
70. Wu, X. (2072). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
71. Wu, X. (2073). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
72. Wu, X. (2074). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
73. Wu, X. (2075). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
74. Wu, X. (2076). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
75. Wu, X. (2077). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
76. Wu, X. (2078). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
77. Wu, X. (2079). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
78. Wu, X. (2080). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
79. Wu, X. (2081). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
80. Wu, X. (2082). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
81. Wu, X. (2083). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
82. Wu, X. (2084). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
83. Wu, X. (2085). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
84. Wu, X. (2086). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
85. Wu, X. (2087). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
86. Wu, X. (2088). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
87. Wu, X. (2089). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
88. Wu, X. (2090). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
89. Wu, X. (2091). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
90. Wu, X. (2092). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
91. Wu, X. (2093). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
92. Wu, X. (2094). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
93. Wu, X. (2095). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
94. Wu, X. (2096). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
95. Wu, X. (2097). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
96. Wu, X. (2098). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
97. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
98. Wu, X. (2000). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
99. Wu, X. (2001). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
100. Wu, X. (2002). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
101. Wu, X. (2003). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
102. Wu, X. (2004). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
103. Wu, X. (2005). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
104. Wu, X. (2006). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
105. Wu, X. (2007). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
106. Wu, X. (2008). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
107. Wu, X. (2009). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
108. Wu, X. (2010). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
109. Wu, X. (2011). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
110. Wu, X. (2012). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
111. Wu, X. (2013). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
112. Wu, X. (2014). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
113. Wu, X. (2015). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
114. Wu, X. (2016). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
115. Wu, X. (2017). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
116. Wu, X. (2018). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
117. Wu, X. (2019). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
118. Wu, X. (2020). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
119. Wu, X. (2021). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
120. Wu, X. (2022). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
121. Wu, X. (2023). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
122. Wu, X. (2024). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
123. Wu, X. (2025). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
124. Wu, X. (2026). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
125. Wu, X. (2027). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
126. Wu, X. (2028). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
127. Wu, X. (2029). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
128. Wu, X. (2030). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
129. Wu, X. (2031). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
130. Wu, X. (2032). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
131. Wu, X. (2033). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
132. Wu, X. (2034). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
133. Wu, X. (2035). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
134. Wu, X. (2036). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
135. Wu, X. (2037). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
136. Wu, X. (2038). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
137. Wu, X. (2039). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
138. Wu, X. (2040). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
139. Wu, X. (2041). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
140. Wu, X. (2042). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
141. Wu, X. (2043). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
142. Wu, X. (2044). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
143. Wu, X. (2045). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
144. Wu, X. (2046). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
145. Wu, X. (2047). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
146. Wu, X. (2048). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
147. Wu, X. (2049). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
148. Wu, X. (2050). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
149. Wu, X. (2051). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
150. Wu, X. (2052). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
151. Wu, X. (2053). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
152. Wu, X. (2054). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
153. Wu, X. (2055). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
154. Wu, X. (2056). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
155. Wu, X. (2057). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
156. Wu, X. (2058). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
157. Wu, X. (2059). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
158. Wu, X. (2060). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
159. Wu, X. (2061). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
160. Wu, X. (2062). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
161. Wu, X. (2063). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
162. Wu, X. (2064). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
163. Wu, X. (2065). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
164. Wu, X. (2066). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
165. Wu, X. (2067). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
166. Wu, X. (2068). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
167. Wu, X. (2069). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
168. Wu, X. (2070). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
169. Wu, X. (2071). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
170. Wu, X. (2072). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
171. Wu, X. (2073). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
172. Wu, X. (2074). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
173. Wu, X. (2075). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
174. Wu, X. (2076). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
175. Wu, X. (2077). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
176. Wu, X. (2078). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
177. Wu, X. (2079). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
178. Wu, X. (2080). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
179. Wu, X. (2081). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
180. Wu, X. (2082). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
181. Wu, X. (2083). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
182. Wu, X. (2084). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
183. Wu, X. (2085). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
184. Wu, X. (2086). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
185. Wu, X. (2087). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
186. Wu, X. (2088). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
187. Wu, X. (2089). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
188. Wu, X. (2090). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
189. Wu, X. (2091). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
190. Wu, X. (2092). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
191. Wu, X. (2093). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
192. Wu, X. (2094). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
193. Wu, X. (2095). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
194. Wu, X. (2096). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
195. Wu, X. (2097). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
196. Wu, X. (2098). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
197. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
198. Wu, X. (2000). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
199. Wu, X. (2001). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
200. Wu, X. (2002). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
201. Wu, X. (2003). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
202. Wu, X. (2004). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
203. Wu, X. (2005). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
204. Wu, X. (2006). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
205. Wu, X. (2007). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
206. Wu, X. (2008). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
207. Wu, X. (2009). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
208. Wu, X. (2010). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
209. Wu, X. (2011). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
210. Wu, X. (2012). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
211. Wu, X. (2013). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
212. Wu, X. (2014). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
213. Wu, X. (2015). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
214. Wu, X. (2016). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
215. Wu, X. (2017). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
216. Wu, X. (2018). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
217. Wu, X. (2019). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
218. Wu, X. (2020). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
219. Wu, X. (2021). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
220. Wu, X. (2022). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
221. Wu, X. (2023). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
222. Wu, X. (2024). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
223. Wu, X. (2025). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
224. Wu, X. (2026). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
225. Wu, X. (2027). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
226. Wu, X. (2028). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
227. Wu, X. (2029). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
228. Wu, X. (2030). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
229. Wu, X. (2031). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
230. Wu, X. (2032). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
231. Wu, X. (2033). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
232. Wu, X. (2034). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
233. Wu, X. (2035). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
234. Wu, X. (2036). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
235. Wu, X. (2037). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
236. Wu, X. (2038). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
237. Wu, X. (2039). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
238. Wu, X. (2040). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
239. Wu, X. (2041). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
240. Wu, X. (2042). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
241. Wu, X. (2043). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
242. Wu, X. (2044). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
243. Wu, X. (2045). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
244. Wu, X. (2046). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
245. Wu, X. (2047). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
246. Wu, X. (2048). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
247. Wu, X. (2049). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
248. Wu, X. (2050). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
249. Wu, X. (2051). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
250. Wu, X. (2052). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
251. Wu, X. (2053). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
252. Wu, X. (2054). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
253. Wu, X. (2055). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
254. Wu, X. (2056). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
255. Wu, X. (2057). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
256. Wu, X. (2058). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
257. Wu, X. (2059). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
258. Wu, X. (2060). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
259. Wu, X. (2061). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
260. Wu, X. (2062). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
261. Wu, X. (2063). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
262. Wu, X. (2064). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
263. Wu, X. (2065). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
264. Wu, X. (2066). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
265. Wu, X. (2067). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
266. Wu, X. (2068). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
267. Wu, X. (2069). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
268. Wu, X. (2070). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
269. Wu, X. (2071). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
270. Wu, X. (2072). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
271. Wu, X. (2073). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
272. Wu, X. (2074). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
273. Wu, X. (2075). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
274. Wu, X. (2076). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
275. Wu, X. (2077). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
276. Wu, X. (2078). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
277. Wu, X. (2079). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
278. Wu, X. (2080). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
279. Wu, X. (2081). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
280. Wu, X. (2082). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
281. Wu, X. (2083). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
282. Wu, X. (2084). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
283. Wu, X. (2085). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
284. Wu, X. (2086). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
285. Wu, X. (2087). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
286. Wu, X. (2088). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
287. Wu, X. (2089). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
288. Wu, X. (2090). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
289. Wu, X. (2091). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
290. Wu, X. (2092). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
291. Wu, X. (2093). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
292. Wu, X. (2094). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
293. Wu, X. (2095). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
294. Wu, X. (2096). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
295. Wu, X. (2097). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
296. Wu, X. (2098). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
297. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
298. Wu, X. (2000). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
299. Wu, X. (2001). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
300. Wu, X. (2002). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
301. Wu, X. (2003). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
302. Wu, X. (2004). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
303. Wu, X. (2005). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
304. Wu, X. (2006). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
305. Wu, X. (2007). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
306. Wu, X. (2008). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
307. Wu, X. (2009). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
308. Wu, X. (2010). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
309. Wu, X. (2011). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
310. Wu, X. (2012). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
311. Wu, X. (2013). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
312. Wu, X. (2014). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
313. Wu, X. (2015). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
314. Wu, X. (2016). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
315. Wu, X. (2017). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
316. Wu, X. (2018). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
317. Wu, X. (2019). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
318. Wu, X. (2020). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
319. Wu, X. (2021). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
320. Wu, X. (2022). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
321. Wu, X. (2023). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
322. Wu, X. (2024). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
323. Wu, X. (2025). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
324. Wu, X. (2026). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
325. Wu, X. (2027). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
326. Wu, X. (2028). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
327. Wu, X. (2029). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
328. Wu, X. (2030). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
329. Wu, X. (2031). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
330. Wu, X. (2032). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
331. Wu, X. (2033). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
332. Wu, X. (2034). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
333. Wu, X. (2035). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
334. Wu, X. (2036). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
335. Wu, X. (2037). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
336. Wu, X. (2038). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
337. Wu, X. (2039). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
338. Wu, X. (2040). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
339. Wu, X. (2041). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
340. Wu, X. (2042). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
341. Wu, X. (2043). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
342. Wu, X. (2044). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
343. Wu, X. (2045). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
344. Wu, X. (2046). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
345. Wu, X. (2047). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
346. Wu, X. (2048). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
347. Wu, X. (2049). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
348. Wu, X. (2050). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
349. Wu, X. (2051). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
350. Wu, X. (2052). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
351. Wu, X. (2053). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
352. Wu, X. (2054). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
353. Wu, X. (2055). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
354. Wu, X. (2056). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
355. Wu, X. (2057). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
356. Wu, X. (2058). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
357. Wu, X. (2059). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
358. Wu, X. (2060). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
359. Wu, X. (2061). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
360. Wu, X. (2062). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
361. Wu, X. (2063). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
362. Wu, X. (2064). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
363. Wu, X. (2065). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
364. Wu, X. (2066). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
365. Wu, X. (2067). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
366. Wu, X. (2068). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
367. Wu, X. (2069). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
368. Wu, X. (2070). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
369. Wu, X. (2071). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
370. Wu, X. (2072). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
371. Wu, X. (2073). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
372. Wu, X. (2074). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
373. Wu, X. (2075). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
374. Wu, X. (2076). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
375. Wu, X. (2077). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
376. Wu, X. (2078). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
377. Wu, X. (2079). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
378. Wu, X. (2080). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
379. Wu, X. (2081). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
380. Wu, X. (2082). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
381. Wu, X. (2083). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
382. Wu, X. (2084). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
383. Wu, X. (2085). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
384. Wu, X. (2086). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
385. Wu, X. (2087). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
386. Wu, X. (2088). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
387. Wu, X. (2089). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
388. Wu, X. (2090). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
389. Wu, X. (2091). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
390. Wu, X. (2092). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
391. Wu, X. (2093). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
392. Wu, X. (2094). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
393. Wu, X. (2095). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
394. Wu, X. (2096). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
395. Wu, X. (2097). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
396. Wu, X. (2098). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
397. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
398. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
399. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
400. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
401. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
402. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
403. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
404. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
405. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
406. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
407. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
408. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
409. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
410. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
411. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
412. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
413. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
414. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
415. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
416. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
417. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
418. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
419. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
420. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
421. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
422. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
423. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
424. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
425. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
426. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
427. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
428. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
429. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
430. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
431. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
432. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
433. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
434. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
435. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
436. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
437. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
438. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
439. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
440. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
441. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
442. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
443. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
444. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
445. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
446. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
447. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
448. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
449. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
450. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
451. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
452. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
453. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
454. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
455. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
456. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
457. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
458. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
459. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
460. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
461. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
462. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
463. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
464. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
465. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
466. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
467. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
468. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
469. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
470. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
471. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
472. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
473. Wu, X. (2099). Data Visualization for Software Engineers. Cambridge University Press.
474. Wu, X. (2099
---
Midwest BUSINESS SYSTEMS, INC.
$4995
Computerark
KNOWLEDGE SERVICE EDUCATION
Zephir Mazen Kayro
Zephir Mazen Kayro
Commodore
Tiffany & Co. 841-0094
Main Shopping Center
The S904 utilizes a wide line of Olympus accessories, including telephone pickup, phone and make and return control
Overland Park, KY 913-345-1405
POWERED BY SAMSUNG
RENT A PIANO
1234 ROAD OF TOWN
LAWRENCE PIANO RENTAL
2601 IOWA 843-3008
--opened by the experts. Auto revert
six roller release, press boss and
injection protection night
mation and more
Reg. $249.95
SALE
$1 999.5
Putt-Putt
3 Game Ticket . .
individuals best buy!
Buy 2 games and get 1 FREE!
3 GAMES 000
PATRON NAME
Nº DE PATRON
INFORMATION DATE
INFORMATION DATE
Permanent Post Golf Courses
Open late Fri. & Sat. nights!
1916 A 1916 B
80 Years of
Putt-Putt
Golf Courses
Forthefunofit!
31st & Iowa (across from KLZR)
HAVE YOU BEEN to the WHEEL LATELY?
HAVE YOU BEEN
to the
WHEEL LATELY?
Kawasaki
TUNNEL CENTER
"Let The Good Times Roll"
1904 W. Kell Street
Burton, Kansas 68044 842 708 Service
KANSAS CITY
TOWNSHIP
"Let The Good Times Roll"
PHONE
913-842-1702 SDSN
1854 & 61th Street
Lawrence, Kansas 60044 842-1708 TOWNSHIP
THERE IS A REASON!
UNSIGHTLY HAIR????
THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO
Permanent Hair Removal
See our coupon in the Lawrence Boo
2.72 2.89
KU ARMY
PUTC
AVERAGE SAT, GPA COMPARISONS
888 NATTL 1024 KU 1167 ARMY ROTC 2.72 KU 2.82 ARMY ROTC GRA
745 New Hampshire 841-5796
ARMY ROTC.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
TABLE SERVICE & FOOD SERVICE EMPLOYEES NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
SCHUMM FOODS
11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. and evening shifts open
— Some experience necessary
- Good starting salary
- 6 month raise
SAT. PRESTURE
IN THE NORTH
— Extra quarterly profit sharing
Apply at: Schumm Food Co. office 719 $ _{1/2} $ Mass.
"above the Smokehouse"
between 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
SGT. PRESTON'S AND "FALL'84"
Super Sports Weekend!
$2 PITCHER NOON TILL NINE
COORS SAT.-SUN. COORS LIGHT
FREE BUS RIDES TO AND FROM FOOTBALL GAMES WITH $1 Bloody Marys before game.
BUCK OFF SUNDAY NIGHTS
$1 OFF ALL DRINKS 9 p.m.-Mid.
843-7644
815 NEW HAMPSHIRE
West Coast
Saloon
2 For 1
Pitchers
with a K.U.
game or
season ticket
ALL day, all night
Saturday 9/15
2222 iowa 841-BREW
This unique college campus is limited to only 500 students...
宗學古
S.S. UNIV
accepted
Voyages.
Applications are being acce and Fall Voyages.
Study around the world, visiting Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, India, Egypt, Turkey, Greece and Spain
Choose from 60 voyage-related courses to earn 12.15 transferable hours of credit from the University of Pittsburgh
Develop an awareness of our relationship with other countries and a firsthand understanding of world issues
Semester at Sea admits students without regard to color race or creed.
SEMESTER AT SEA
For details, write or call:
(800) 854-0195
toll-free
Institute for Shipboard Education
University of Pittsburgh
2E Forbes Quadrangle • Pittsburgh, PA 15260
BACK-TO-SCHOOL, BAND DAY, PARENTS' DAY SPECIALS!
BLAUPUNKT
We really don't know what to call it, but these prices are HOT! Come on out and see for yourself!
BLAUPUNKT SEATTLE
The ultimate in auto sound fidelity chosen by the experts. Auto reverse roller release,冤假扯宝 back, automatic illumination, night illumination and more.
MONOON LABS X1 140
87.9
FM 87.9
AM 87.9
tuner, auto reverse, automatic music
select, Daisy 8 NRF, 12 station memory,
clock, tape tape FQ, leader and scan, 36
works and more.
$21995
Sale
$300.00
WESTPORT LABS WL-260 bv Concord
MECI CERTIBEM
B. 1970
Circle 24 cm
Reg. $99.95
MEI CX-118M
tape players were offered. Side load cassette
local district selector, locking fast forward
auto stop, balance and zone controls, radio
monitor with Smaller touch screen for car.
$7995
SALE
Priced $999.50
ME
JAMMING SUPPLY AM/FM
1974
ENTER CONTROL GUIDE
40 watt amplifier equivifier features 7 band EQ, LED indicators, index on all bypass selector, 200K Hr lifespan 12 db EQ range 5 Nr Aptimax SALE $5995
Reg. $99.95
MAJESTIC
MAJESTIC
THE MASTER
THE AMAZING
THE GREAT
THE HERO
75 MINUTES
2
MAJESTIC MA-15OHD
150 watts amplifier, 75 watts per channel
20-20kHz high, low level inputs
short circuit protection and mute
Reg $129.95
SALE $7995
Reg. $129.95
SPEAKER SYSTEMS STARTING AT $19.95
ALL ARLANE SYSTEMS STARTING AT $58.95
AMPLIFIERS STARTING AT $34.95
AMPLIFIERS STARTING AT $3.49
ALLSOP STAPE CLEANERS ... $4.95
- REPAIRS ON ALL MAKES AND MODES OF HOME AND CAR STEREO EQUIPMENT
* COMPLETE CUSTOM INSTALLATION
* LOWEST PRICE
Lawrence Custom Radio
The Finest In
Car Stereo Sa
Car Stereo Sales and Repair
914 W 23rd Street
Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 842-5511
University Daily Kansan, September 14, 1984 Page 13
NATION AND WORLD Protesters block Kissinger
By United Press International
BUENOS AMIRES, Argentina — More than 1,000 protesters shouting "Yankees are assassins" yesterday ripped former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger inside the government palace until police managed to clear a path to his car.
The protesters, most of them
members of the Peronist youth party, were restrained by lines of police when Kissinger arrived at the Casa Rosada palace for a meeting with President Raul Alfonsin.
But when he emerged from the session 40 minutes later, the former secretary of state found that the protesters, chanting "Yankees are assassins," had blocked his exit
PICAFLIC
Movie & Video Rental
Hundreds of titles to choose from
at
PICAFLIC
Jayhawk Video
1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Shopping Center 842
NATURALWAY NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING 820 MASS. 841-0100
Student Union Activities presents THE KANSAS UNION OPEN HOUSE WEEK
***************
Sept.14
Hawk's Nest $1 pitchers 2 to 5 p.m. Sept. 15.
Simultaneous Chess Tournament Kansas Union Lobby 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Get Smart Kansas Union Ballroom 9 p.m.
Free Concert "Get Smart"
Free Films Alderson Auditorium Level 4 KansasUnion 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Jaybowl—Free bowling and billiards 7 p.m. to 11 p.m.
**********
For Women who believe that dressing is half the fun
Spectator's
737 Massachusetts Street. 913-843-177
FURNITURE RENTAL
N
QUALITY FURNISHINGS at affordable prices
Silk Cotton Wool
Individual Items - Complete Groups GENEROUS PURCHASE OPTION
W
Monthly Leasing
No Deposits
Quick Delivery
PROUDLY SERVING
LAWRENCE
FOR
14 YEARS
MODERN-SECTIONAL-RATTAN
CONTEMPORARY-TRADITIONAL
Brand Name
Household
Furnishings
at will at
HON
OFFICE FURNITURE
LITTON
Microwave Cooking
RCA
Electronics
Thompson-Crawley
FURNITURE RENTAL
520 E. 22nd Terrace
841-521
Hillel presents a Lox & Bagels Brunch
tea
Sun., Sept. 16
12 Noon
Free for Members
(Join at the door!)
$3 for Non-Members
The Brothers of
ALPHA EPSILON PI FRATERNITY
Would like to congratulate the
ALPHA PLEDGE CLASS
We wish you a very successful semester
semester.
HOT NEWS
INTRODUCING
HOT NEW
SALAD BAR
ITEMS
FROM
SIRLOIN
STOCKADE
When you purchase any entire at Sirinib Stockade, you can enjoy our delicious 50 item salad bar plus "hot" new items like
• Breaded Zucchini, Okra or Squash
• Potato Skins
• Corn
• And many more of your favorite PLUS some delicious surprises
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
1015 IOWA
FREE CONE WITH EACH MEAL!
Many happy Returns
The Kansas Union Bookstores are currently paying 6% of total purchases from the Spring of '84 (Jan. 1, 1984 to June 30, 1984). These are period 75 receipts. They may be redeemed at the Customer Service Desk at the Kansas Union Bookstore or at the Burge Union Store, with your student ID. Period 75 receipts will be redeemed until Dec. 31, 1984.
K.U. BOOKSTORE
Period No. 75
24 17/10/81
25 MS MDS
30 MS MDS
38 MS MDS
2,30 MB
746
Many happy Returns
KU. BOOKSTORE
Period No. 75
12/20.10 10 12/16 17/14/14
2.90 MDS
3.80 MDS
TB MDS
2.30 MDS
7.40 T
The Kansas Union Bookstores are currently paying 6% of total purchases from the Spring of '84 (Jan. 1, 1984 to June 30, 1984). These are period 75 receipts. They may be redeemed at the Customer Service Desk at the Kansas Union Bookstore or at the Burge Union Store, with your student ID.
Period 75 receipts will be redeemed until Dec. 31, 1984.
Call Lieutenant Joe Johannes at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps (NROTC).
CHECK OUT THE ADVANTAGES OF NAVAL ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS
Paid Tuition, Spending Money, and a Job. That is Navy ROTC
STUDENTS
If you are a student at the University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Scholarship. The Navy Scholarship provides full tuition, all text books plus $100 a month spending money.
COULD THE NAVY INTEREST YOU IN PAID TUITION?
When you graduate,you will have a job in the fleet as a naval or marine officer. You will train in Nuclear Submarines. Surface Ships, Naval Aircraft or one of many other exciting fields.
KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
good as,
Gold.
from $20
Marks
JEWELERS
Marks JEWELERS
817 Massachusetts
843-4266
Page 14
NATION AND WORLD Israeli parties vote for unity
University Daily Kansan, September 14, 1984
By United Press International
JERUSLEM — Shimon Peres won overwhelming parliamentary approval today for a national unity government that includes his socialist Labor Party and the right-wing Likud bloc, ending Israel's longest political crisis.
The 89-18 vote with one abstention
came after more than nine hours of speeches by more than 20 hawkers late yesterday and early today. Peres was immediately sworn in as the new prime minister, with members of the bipartisan government also took their oaths of office.
What Would You Do In The Case Of An Accident
Earlier, asking for the vote of confidence, Peres immediately launched a new Middle East peace initiative.
First Aid Workshop Entry Deadline 5 pm 208 Robinson Fee $7
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
Wednesday, Sept. 19
FREE!
7:30 to 9 p.m.
Javhawk Room, Kansas Union
NOTE: This is the last foreign language program this semester.
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
THE STORM HILL
SCIENCE
A FAR LONG DAY
Back by popular demand
A flying airplane.
PYRAMID PETE
All you can eat Pyramid Pizza
$2.75 girls
$3.75 guys
5-8 Sun.
Get it this weekend "at the Wheel"
14th & Ohio
"Under the Wheel"
842-3232
open til 4 a.m. Fri-Sat
open at 11 for lunch
25th & Iowa
Holiday Plaza
841-1501
PYRAMID
West Coast Saloon
PYRAMID PIZZA
25c DRAWS
noon-6 p.m.
every Friday
NO COVER!!
A K.U. TGIF tradition!
2222 Iowa
KU
841-BREW
LIVE FOOTBALL BROADCAST SATURDAY
1 p.m. PRE-GAME SHOW
1:30 p.m. KU VS Florida
State
at Memorial
Stadium
WZR
106
Broadcast sponsored by
Whistle Stop Photo
Picatic
Laird Nolter Ford
KU Bookstores
Sunflower Cablevision
Douglas County Bank
Ford
RENTACOLOR TV
Student Discounts for You
Call Mike 1-764-8000
FREE Delivery, Installation,
& Service
Welcome Parents . . .
GQ
HAIRSTYLING
For Men of Honor
611 West 9th
843-2138
---
Enjoy French and Continental cuisine from our regular menu or enjoy our seafood buffet for only $10.95
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
5 p.m.-midnight
841-1268
— choose from:
Hot and Cold "peel your own" Boiled Shrimp
Frog Legs
Deep Fried Shrimp
Boiled Trout
Shrimp a la Mariniere
Complete Bountiful Salad Bar
(Seafood Buffet Friday, Sept. 14 Only)
Q
Shrimp a
Complete
(Seafood)
The Eldridge House
Restaurant & Club
7th & Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
(913) 749-0613
COMPLIMENTARY ROSE FOR MOM!
Public & Private Dining
Visit Our Daiquiri Bar! You choose the fruit we make the Daiquiri ANY COMBINATION
Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. Dinner 4-10 p.m.
*with over 100 reciprocals
*major credit cards welcome
Fuji.
Better than ever
That's the FUJI line for 1984 More bike for less money Don't settle for second best
QUALITY AUDIO - THE BEST PRICE!
ESPREE
• alloy frame
• alloy handbars
• Quick release wheels,
front and rear
• alloy rims
• Sunbour ARX
decklifts
$274.95
Bicycle
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
1930 MAIN ST. AWARFORD, NY 10475
WEDNESDAYS
7:30-11:00 p.m.
MENS NITE
2 for 1
Ronnie's
TUESDAYS
7:30-11:00 p.m.
LADIES NIGHT
Free Well Drinks And
Draft Beer For the Ladies
HAPPY HOURS
4-6 p.m.
Monday-Friday
1.00 Well Drinks
.50 Draft Beer
Old Time Rock & Roll
530 Wisconsin
Lawrence Ks.
749-3891
Ronnies Is A Private Club Memberships Available
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Rock'n Roll to the TOP
40's Sound of ...
"CORNERSTONE"
10 p.m. - 2 a.m.
Ronnies is A Private Club
GET KIEF'S LOW PRICE ON THESE GREAT NEW TITLES FROM CBS RECORDS & TAPES
OZ 39516
QUIET RIOT
CONDITION CRITICAL
including :
Mama Wee All Crazee Now
Stomp Your Hands, Clap Your Feet
Party All Night/Sign Of The Times
Condition Critical
Also available on cassette.
Kief's Sale Price
$5^{99}
Kief's Sale Price
$5^{99}
FC 39220
BANGLES
ALL OVER THE PLACE
including
Hero Take a Fall Game/Live
Going Down To Liverpool/Rastless
FC 39173
SCANDAL
FEATURING PATTY SMYTH
WARRIOR
including
The Warrior / Lands Tied
Only The Young / Beat Of A Heart
Also available on cassette
Kief's Sale Price
Kief's Sale Price
Also available on cassette.
$5^{99}
Kief's Sale Price
$599
Kief's Sale Price
$5^{99}
ELVIS COSTELLO AND
THE ATTRACTIONS
GOODBYE CRUEL WORLD
including
I Wanna Be Loved
The Only Frame in Town/ Peace in Our Time
Worthless's Thing/Sour Milk Cow Blues
Also available on cassette
FE 39473
MTUME
YOU, ME AND HE
including:
You, Me And He/Prime Time
You Are My Sunshine/Tie Me Up
I Simply Like
Also available on cassette
KIEF'S
GRAMOPHONE
DISCOUNT STEREO shop
HOLIDAY PLAZA
---
September 14,1984
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
20-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75
20-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80
21-25 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.85
For every 5 words add. 25c 50c 75c 1.05
POLICIES
AD DEADLINES
Resistized shell, adhesive membrane can be only one width wide and no more than one inch deep. Maximum depth is not inch thick. No accesses allowed to enter. Wear protective eyewear when handling the shell and all accesses allowed by shell design.
Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Saturday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Wednesday 5 p.m.
- Always rates based on current active day increments only.
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD FALE count as 3 words
* Deadlines same as Annual Advertisement
- No references to any collation of prepaid classified advertising
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one correct invention of any advertisement.
- All advertisers will be required to pay an annual until credit has been established
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
to The University Daily Karnataka
• All advertisers will be required to pay in advance
- **illust hints ais** - please add a $2 service charge
- **blocks small at company all of classified ads included**
notions can be admitted (141) as charge for a personal not exceeding three days. These calls can be placed
- Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Applications are now being accepted for Student Member's Members for the 1986 Kansas Berkeley Conference. Apply online at Allen Field House. Become a part of this great KU Engagement. Deadline for application: Sept 20
TRANSCEIDENTAL
MEDITATION PROGRAM
FREE INTRUCTORY LECUTEUR
WED. SEPT. 19 8:30 P.M.
OREAD MAM KANSAAN IS
FOR MORE INFO CALL 851-9166
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
Budget Stretcher coupons Thurs. evenings. Buy $1$ and receive $1$ coupon toward next purchase. Gross Reference: Malls Shopping Center
FORMER LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
TOPICS include overcoming mental
toughness in reading, speaking and listening
comprehension. Wednesday September 19,
8:40 AM - 10:30 AM. NOTE:
This is the last foreign language program this
week at the Center for Language Assistance,
121 Strong Hall, 841-604-6647
GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS SPECIALIST COMPUTER SPACE HALL Hall 204 West 79th Street New York, NY 10019 Applicant will be involved in design and implementation of a survey to identify microcomputer systems. Graduate student labs in geography planning, computer science or related discipline will participate in microcomputer programming in BASIC experience with microcomputers required Background and course requirements for the Kansas Amended Remote Sensing Program Room 240 Vollhall Hall 804 4775 Applicant should demonstrate an advanced opportunity at Intrusive Agent employer
Get Streeaker! This workshop will focus on Rape Awareness, Education, and Self protection skills.
s. p.m. Tues. 19. Sept. 18 Regionalist room kan
**members:** Belayi Student Committee is looking for
**members:** Pick up application at the Track
143 Allen Field House Deadline is Sept 21.
**ARCH PAPERS** 306 page catalog: 15,278
Rush $2.90 RESEARCH 11322 Idaho 169
Los Angeles $2.90 1213-778236
15' Color TV 820-96 a month. Curtis
1447 W. 23rd 842-5751 9am 9-10. 9-oo.
8:00 5:00 Sat
VIR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
1447 W. Width 142-3521 Open 9:30 9:00
9:30 8:00 Sat
THE FAR SIDE
SENIORS YEARBOOK POPITTAIR! Shooting is taking place now, in Student Organizations & Activities Office. 409 Kansas Union. Call yearbook department at 12.3.1.221 B.K. University 844.7326.874
Shirley Bennett, formerly of Charme Beauty Salon, is now at Angles Beauty Salon, 59 Massachusetts. M.F. Call 841 4304 for Shirley September Special Shamrock & Haircut -
WELCOME TO
OUR
LATIN FIESTA
Friday, Sept. 14
At McCollum Hall Tickets $2.50
ALL YOU CAN DRINK!!!
Tryouts for the KU Varsity men's and women's Bowling teams will be held throughout the week of Feb. 10-16, when above averages are encouraged to try out. Contact Mike Fire at the Kannapolis IvyJaywalk for more information.
University Studios' quality party pcs Call University Photography at 843-5279
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All requests. Lighting included. Reasonable Rates. References 249-121.
SERVICES OFFERED
Announcing Troy Anderson, formerly of Command Performance, has joined the staff at His & Hair Design. His opening Special Harcourt at his 381 West 45th Street for that special show 841-596-1258 Connecticut.
Charme Beauty Salon is now offering Harcurs for $1, and permits for $2 & up. Call or come in for a professional cut or perm at a great price. Charme Beauty Salon 101 Mace. 843-1008.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall
TUTORS List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall
Charme Beauty Salon Home of the $7 Haircut
By GARY LARSON
Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union
COMMUNITIES Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
1984 Universal Press Syndicate
&am Lobby, Kansas Union
UTORS/UTURES Inquire at the Student
CIVICITY CITIES" Regina "all the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall
Environmental campus photo studies - Modeling Dance, and Theatre portfolios or composites. IM PRESSIONS call 842-7284 for information.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts
downtown. All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-576
Voice Lessons - DMA voice candidate accepting non-credit singers. Experience with all type voices! 841-405
YAMAHA MUSIC SCHOOL, ages 4-6, beginners
O钢琴 and Organ. (842-0755)
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual 942 SMBS
STRAIGHT MEAD. A well help group for people wanting independence from marijuana, is now forming Call Headquarters for more info 841-2345.
Ulimate Hair and Skin Care Center, Hailux.
$: Hanna Claire is from Europe and has worked in France, Germany, England, Belgium and Tel Aviv. $: Wanda Gwak, Walk w/in Melbourne, E4 1RH 790 0791.
PERSONAL
A European style sale, offering a variety of delicate dresses prepared from scratch, on prom dresses and wedding gowns. Book our dinner look for our coupon in the Lawnward Book The HARVEY J. mth & New Hamptons Collection.
BUSINESS PERS.
Student Special
BLOOM COUNTY
When cliff divers belly flop
S W M. 36 inmate, seeks a taste of freedom through correspondence. Serious inquiries only. II Lemons 2 Ron Laughlin KS 6041
ATERBED WORKS
Waterbed Conditioner .48 a bottle With K.U.L.D.
Highest quality dry transfer lettering
LETRASET at student pricing, $6.95 per sheet
list $8.95. Strong & Office Systems 1040 Vermont
843-3644
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care, confidentiality assists Greatest area Call for appointment 913-450-1467
M
842-1411
710 W. 6th
THE FUN PLACE TO BE
RHINESTONES, GLOVES,
PARTY DRESSES, ETC.
THE ETC. SHOP
732 Mass, 843-0611
NOW NEW FOR ARGOS FOSE
AND PERSONALITY GATHER
NOW QUESTIONING, FIRST WE
MAKE MISS PLOOM COUNTY
THE FUN PLACE TO BE
INDIANAPOLIS
AUTHENTIC HATS
PLUS MANY OTHER HATS
Inflation Fighter, 8 East 7th. For your needs in
vintage and party clothes, hats, gloves, tresses,
dresses and men's suits. Come on & Browse! Hour:
10 to 5:30 Sat. 10 to 6:30 Sun.
I want to sing for every occasion. Birthdays
Parties. Weddings!! John, operative tenor
841 1674
PROBLEM$^a$ Headquarters Cross Counseling Center listens. Free 24 hr. 801-234, or new location 149 Massachusetts
All you can eat Pyramid Pizza 5-8 Sun.
$2.75 girls
Warm, careful people who like children ages 3-5 are needed as volunteers at Head Near (Harl for a minimum of 2 hours a day, one day per week between 8:00 am and 4:00 pm.) For more information call HN2515
Get it this weekend
"at the Wheel"
$3.75 guys
*Pollution on Tap* Multipurpose your water
8427618
The New Place for a rich atmosphere at an affordable price. The New Place, a private club, 248-lowa. 842-693.
PYRAMID
STAELELDIG MAJS Tech. per special 7 set art.
$35.30 kit 20 w/ supplies hardwired Strong's
Office Systems. $490 Vermont. $43.364
by Berke Breathed
14th & Ohio 25th & Iowa
"Under the Wheel"
Holiday Plaza
842.323 841.150
IF YOU WERE
ALONE ON
A DESTINY
ICANDI
WHAT WOU
I AWANT TO DEVIZE
MY LIFE TO PRACTICE
AND UNDERSTANDING
I LOVE PUPPY 5...
AND HOMOUS CHILD
HAVE NO POOR CITY
THIS
COUNTRY 5
POLKA
HALL 5.
IF YOU WERE ALONE ON MY LIFE TO PEACE AND UNDERSTANDING ISLAND! I WOULD HAVE HOMEVILLES HAVE NO PEACE IN THIS COUNTRY'S POLKA HALLS
THAT WASN'T VERRY GOOD WHAT IT? I'M A LITTLE NERVIOUS I HAVE BROCOLI FOR DINNER, GRAVE TAPE, HAKE TWO
THAT WASN'T VERY
GOOD WAR II? I AM
A LITTLE SERVICES
I HAVE BROKCOOL I GUARDIAN ERIC TAPE
HANDLE WAKE
NEXT IS MISTER UPHH
ON POOP!!
Wholesale Sound Rental P.A. Guitar and Bass
amps, mikes, Graphic EQ, Disco systems.
814 6495
MISCELLANEOUS
CUSTOM SEWING Dressmaking and alterations Call 842 3575. Reasonable prices.
day through Friday, only at the Wheel
PHOTO TYPE: Headliner; Friden
Photo Type: Headliner; Friden
Saturday breakfast special. Elegs, baron
haddam, brown, ham, brown, toast starts at
9 a.m.
LOST AND FOUND
Kitchen is open B-11 30 p.m. for wings to go. Mor
day through Friday. Only at the Wheel
FOUND 1 m old Female golden Labrador on
ku campus. Twice evening, Wearing yellow nykeo
collar playful Call Lawrence Humane Society at
843-6835.
FOUND Car Keys at the Henry Shank playground at 212 & illo. Call 894-2698 to identify.
FOUND Currency by Union building on 9-1184马 844 4520 or come to 311 Wremble to claim.
TYPING
TYING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations papers, letters, applications resume HAVE M.S. Degree 816254.
24-Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes,
dissertations papers Close to campus Best
quality and fastest service: 841-506
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing Judy,
842-7945
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers Word Processing. Professional Results - resumes, papers, a specialty. Call 749-118.
Always try the best for professional service
Term papers, thesis, resumes, etc. Reasonable
842 2340
Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting select II. 84274 or 843-2671. Noon 10:30 p.m.
DEPENABLE, professional experienced
TEAMEAN, TSHIRT- Typing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also standard cassette tape
14.877
Sumneries & Assoc, Inc. Professors at Competitive Words Processing Word. Processing Typing. Incompetence in APA Style. Lawrence. 901 Kentucky. 841-4846. Topkaka. 2055 Western. 131-3016.
Professional TYPING, EDITING, GRAPHICS
IBM Correcting Selectric. Kathy 842-3778 before 9 o p m
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI
CLIENT 841-350
TIP TOP TYPING 120i Isaac Professional typing, processing editing Hewes from start to end with the iMac. Microsoft Vero® Memory Manager with this storage, royal soft correcting, Mint. Fr., Nov. 5, 843.965.
The department of mathematics is hiring tutors for Math 101. All applicants must have completed a Mathematics B or equivalent, and be willing to test the Bill Kirkson 25 F Strong or 84 641-466. Applicants are available in the Math 101 room.
Typing in my home, have IBM Correcting Select
tion II. Reasonable prices. Call (843) 844-0901.
Bucky's Drive-in is now taking applications for part-time employment. Apply in person. 10-5
8) Bucky'S DRIVE-In 2120 W. 9th
HELP.WANTED
Dependable female to assist disabled with care.
No experience required. Mornings, weekend &
evening hours available. Call between 15.
749-0288
FRESHMEN - ICs not too late to join NAVAL
ROTC Call 844-3101
Fifth Avenue Models for 1905 calendar and poster, no. 220.
Production by Bill Harvey Photograph. No 220
to Bill Harvey.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,529 $50,533 year
New Hiring Your area Call 803-647-6000 Ext
R793
National company needs interested men & women to market their
experience needed
Full or Part Time: 2-4 Hrs Daily
Earn $50-$150 Per Day
For complete marketing information patient A
application agent B1 (customer A) number is:
B1-000-0000-0000
Executive Marketing
CDR Risk Manager Dept. 1
Not smoking, married couple to care for horses, lawn and gardens and to perform general hauling duties. Must have a bachelor's degree on-site. She near Clinton Dam is required. Resume in case at Z E Ship M.D. 290 South Street.
Micro Computer Sales person. Full part and time inside sales, some outside sales. Knowledge of hardware and software required being orienteed to Compustatrk, W. 10, B.W., Latterne RS
PART TIME, early evening hours, five days/wk
app. 15-20 hrs each week. Maxize waage,
performing cleanliness services in summer
months for interiors and for interior
apps, between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m.
PIZZA AT STEPHANIE'S Our drivers can earn 6 or more in one hour. Now hiring. Call 441-8010 or apply in person at 2214 Vale Yale Hd.
Parttime Help at Day Care Home - One cook needed. 1 ) Mon Fri Afternoon Ast needed 3 )
Call 841417
Parttime Bartender and Cocktail waitresses
Must be 2) yrs of age. The New Place: 2406 Iowa
842 5030
Parttime positions as female companions to faculty wife, $3.50 hour. Time to read and study during work hours. Call 842.0768 8:30 9:30 p.m.
Research Assistant needed to observe in elementary school classes. Must be a KU student or a graduate degree in education. Morning appointments. Appointments available in 221 Hawthorne, Deadline 9/14/14. WE are AAO Earner.
Parttime Pre-school Kindergarten teacher
Prefer experience and Montessori background
Call 829.3991 at 843.1311
University of Kansas Budget Office has an open position with full time employment during summer. The position will assist with the planning and execution of a budget position with possible full time employment during summer. The position will assist with the preparation of a budget position with help with the technical university budget and will help with the technical university budget. The position assumes this position will gain a good course of study in finance or another person assuming
pursuit to fund accounting and have an appointment
to work within the department. E. J. A. U. graduate program,
in accounting, and good written and oral communication skills required. $600-800 per month for a half-time appointment. Closed date. Sep. 1st
office: 843-1166. Call Jan Whitaker 843-1166.
Applications available in 319 Strong Hall EOE
WANTED
1982 or 1983 HONDA URBAN EXPRESS wanted
with low mileage and in good condition. Call Scott
D. at 433-7797
3rd person needed in East Lawrence house with large yard & garden Non-smoker Bus route 1025, plus 17 utilities, 842-429
Experienced typist. Term papers, these all-
momentous IHM selection. Selective Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843 9544.
Mrs Wright
We buy VW's, running or not. Call Metric Motors
841 6000
Female Roommate to share 2-bedroom house,
walking distance to campus, $162.50 plus 1/2
utilities (Call Monica) 749.2214
Female Roommate, non smoker, to share nice house, campus area $130/mo. plus 1/2 utilities.
843-2686
Members to form Rock and Roll Band Phone
604-6411
Experienced back-massenger needed. Prefer McColum or Elwisworth. Call Scott at 8a46-4009 by 6 p.m.
Graduate student needs roommate to share clean,
2 bed apartment: $100 per month plus 1/2
sept. Sept. rent prorated Call 843 6709
HELP: Need help to western Kansas, weekend
HELP! Need ride to western Nebraska, weekend of Sept. 21. Call Chirley K. 841-6556
Looking for female roommate to share completely
turnished, 2 bedroom Apt. Rent: $14.70
mandatory must be paid. Phone: 789.0449
Male Roommate to share 2 BR, Park 25 Apt. in Lawrence 1/2 utilities, 1/2 rent 1-642-4700 for Apt.
Roommate to share nice, three-bedroom Apt.
$150 mo., utilities paid. Desparate, 841-8184
Romanticms want to share new house flat, monthly rate utilities and rent. Phone and Cable TV, extra Washier dryer, Non-smoker Call 8412 282 after 5 p.m.
Roommate needed to share house with 3 guys $102 mo, 17% of utilities, own bedroom, near campus Call 843-659-0080. Demonstrate
Male Roommate, non smoker. Separate bedroom &
study. Washer/Dryer $125/mo plus 1/2 utilities. Call 249-8121 or 166-7732
Roommate Female grad or serious student non-smoker, preferred, to share a nice 2 bedroom Apt. All utilities Call 842-0881
Students wishing to lose 10-29 lbs. per month
Easy, economical vitamin herb method,
satisfaction guaranteed. Mg; 841 6474
FOR RENT
Available now. Removed two bedroom apartment at 1298 Ibeyo. One block north of Union Ceiling fan, new kitchen, large porch, fireplace $ plus gas and electricity. Call 842 1606
Lease: 4 bedroom house $350/mo. Off street parking Call 843-0570
Large, furnished. one-bedroom Apt w/ AC
unities Paid $215, Sept. FREE 11th & Kentucky
Call 842.5747, 5 p.m — 7 p.m.
Opportunity for roommates. One block from camp site, 4 big bedrooms, living room, kitchen with dining area, bathroom with 2 vavilions, back deck with 18-foot fire pit and $60 per roommate for 4, also 3 bedroom unit for above for $125 per roommate for 3. See to up for above call Phone: 842-7948, 842-4543
THE GENERAL STORE
*Ued* furniture and household misc.
Open 7 days 1-15 p.m.
7th and New Hampshire
(behind P. B. K. #834) 848-889
STUDIO APT All utilities paid $165 2 block
from K U, 749 1764 9 p.m - m
Spring semester only. Fully furnished
3 bedroom, 2nd floor. Great neighborhood
close to campus, complete with 2 child loving
dogs, 410 mo. B44-840.
TWO STORY APT On bus route. 2 BR, 1H 2 children.
A C Fitted bed. W D backpack. No children or pets please. Prefer quiet mature couple or indivi
sibility. 800 plus facilities. Dep and Year 4.
Spacious 2-bedroom apartments available for fall for 1 or 2 people. Include fully equipped kit cabin, carpeting, amenities and laundry facilities; central gas water and electric power. For more in, call 844-7233.
Try cooperative living Sunflower House, 1460 Tennessee 749-0871 Ask for Dawn Inexpensive & Private rooms are available
10-speed, lightweight competition bike, bought in Europe. $200. Also 10-speed Schwinn Varsity, $75. Price per wheel. Kill # 822 6885
1980* Honda Hawk 406 cc. Low miles, excellent condition, Helmet, cover $900, 864 1116
1800 Ford Pinto, economical, reliable best offer.
IBM electric typewriter, good, $60, 749-749, 3:30 p.m.
j. a. t. 12:30
Apple Ie 64K, disk drive with controller $299
Apple IIc 18K, amber monitor. Apple printer $399
Apple IIc 18K, black monitor. Apple printer $399
IBM MPic 12K, iDK drive $799 IBM Portable 16K,
kdrive 20K, call monitor at 442 535 7800
Billfolds, briefcases, collections, folios, hand-
bags, luggage, notebooks and much more at
Secrest Leather 914 Massachusetts. 842 6046
COLUMBIA 3-speed girl's bike. $50.7491764.9
p.m - 12 p.m
CSStudents. make-RAN sites just a bit memory!
For Star ADS Viewpoint computer terminal,
modem, carrying case, interfaces any computer
network interface, or security
Canon AE 1, like new, great price, incl basic ac
cssessories $200 749-4529
Comic books, used Science Fiction paperbacks,
Playthings, Penguins etc., Mack's Comics, open
10-6 Tues. Sun 011 New Hampshire
Electra X290 electric guitar, hardshell case,
"Crate" amplifier, strap plus acoustic pickup, all
new $25; "New 425"; burl. 843-8153
For furnishing for your living we have what you need. Thrift stores at 628 Vermont and 16 E. 6th. Garsage sale Fr. & Sat. Sept. 14 to 15, 0.81 West Ridge. Garsage sale Fr. & Sat. Sept. 14 to 15, 0.81 West Ridge. Garsage sale Fr. & Sat. Sept. 14 to 15, 0.81 West Ridge.
Gibson Sunburst 147 - orange table $800 Guild D.25, $300 Both with cases Eyes, 749-4197 Misc. Equipment
Hewlett-Packard. Printer plotter for use with HP 41C/CV/XM. Mark 843,516
honda Twin Cam - new R320ce motor, Kerax ekran, Dumpling, oil cooler, night lighting, much more. Must sell immediately. 824254. keep tyring
Zenth Z-19 Terminal and J-cat modem. Communicates CP6 and Honeywell, $750 price. Price negotiated: 841.8494
1981 Fender Stracteator, $75 Classical Guitar
$100 After 5.30, 740-6980
1981 Honda Moped runs, needs some work. $73
Software. (Fortran) for Kgrp II, never used $20
876-6611 (Ford)
1981 Red Honda 70. Passport with baskets, 100 miles and in good condition $36, negotiable. Call 843-6727. Dan
5 Piece living room set, couch, love seat, coffee table, end table, leather stuffed chair. 841-8484, after 6 p.m.
- 4 Channel P.A. board with set of speakers. $990
Shawn, 842-6023
Lin, Fox 1975, 4-7d, auto $1950. Electrovan-
speakers $1250. Pioneer amplifier $800. $200.
Kenwood amplifier $73W $130. 841-1912.
Almost new SunGarden console speaker Excellent combo include: 8-inch rack, camera & phone £20 or best offer (Call 641444) or 841376) evens.
KU STUDENTS AND FACULTY
We still have limited number of completely furnished apartments and townhouses. Some are perfect for three people; all close to campus! Call or stop by Hanover Place—14th and Mass.,
Offered by:
Sundance----7th and Florida or
Tanglewood—10th and Arkansas
841-5255, 841-1212,
749-2415, 842-4455.
Mastercraft Management
COMPUTER TERMINAL Zenith ZT 11 Terminal with built-in Auto Dial modem, auto log-on feature and parallel contenants / and RS232 ports ZENITH ZM 121 IBM monitor $649, 842, 624
Motorcycle: 73 Sarni GT 250, $225, or make of
fer 841 9213 of 841 1825. leave message
p.m.
Motorcycle 73 Smoke (T29 296, 825) or make of
Ford.
$130 radar 64140, crevices
Radar detector Escort 1984 7 mos onn
RALEIGH RECORD Brand new men's 24'
$150 643-640 evenings
Rowing Machine AMAREC 610 like new $150
Mark. 842.3354
Men's 10-speed bike $50 Call Mike. 749-2899. 2.6
p.m.
Snazy red 1984 Honda Scooter low mileage, great condition, $250 negotiable. Sale $449. Tailored for the New Yorker with no arms. Without arms $5 & $10. Stainless steel with arms $6. Enjoy. Scooter. Scooter with custons $8. Enjoy.
Western Civilization Notes, including New Analysis on Sale Makes it easier to use them
exam preparation 'New Analysis of Western Civilization'
exam preparation 'New Analysis of Western Civilization'
Jay Hawkstone and Oread Bookstore
8. Z 94 K, M. Kulantier; 8. Disk drives (12 mhz
HANDLE CRIT with CHIP graphics, comes with WORLD
STAR PACF, C. etc. $600 Call Gal after p at
m 141.763 or 840.254
Windsurfer Saitrider - SR 1. 1962 model Regatta sail, 12 ft long. $400 or best offer. 841 0033.
Yard Sale $p¢ 5Pm 13- 16, 18- 3: 30 p.m 12h
Alarm, 1 block B - Haskell Ave 12th 12h
Wood Stoves, Breakfast Bar, Antiques, Colle-
ties, music.
Y 28 Z8 Camaro, brown blue wb surface, 350
M-22 Trans. 50 s, crader SCS maps, 414 °F
AUTO SALES
1972 Plymouth Puffy great body and paint. Runs well.
$500 or best offer. 843-6102
1973 Ford Mustang, FS, PB, AC 835 Cleveland
engine AM FM cassette player, snow trees, trom
gray. Body, rough $1000, negotiable $44,500
167 Malbati (50-201) PS, PB, AC New starter,
alternator water pump, water tube, extender 1.000
negotiable Call 845-333 after 7 ask for Paul
Robbler
1975 Toyota Corolla, good condition, runs great
must sell. $500. 843-816-82 or 842-4622
1975 Toyota Corolla, a dependable road warrior from the Land of the Rising Sun, $1000. Ask for Paul, 864-810 or 843-596.
1978 Ford Farmarment, 55,000 miles. 2-hour blue
4-cyl. PS, PB, nice sleeper $196.000
847.781
1979 MGB. New Top, excellent condition. $500 or
make an offer. Call 842-5283
1983 Silver Monte Carlo VB, PS, PB, AC excellent condition 18:50 miles Call 774 7963 evenings weekends
CAR for sale. Great around town car. @ Le Mans
Great interior. Price negotiable. Call after 3 p.m.
841 8438
Cleaned WSRA for sale. Metra Matters, 814-6690
FORD FESTIA, 808-4-4d, front wheel drive
AM-FM, great tunic (up to drive). New tires, hot
tires, exhaust. BQR 820-3161 814-6691
MUST SELL IMEDIMETALLY. 1827. Ford Pintree extra clean, excellent interior,修大 best ofest. 需$725 by 12 noon, Monday. 供费: 843.1772 keep trying
Tariff of pricing needs that need of work. Extra clean. 21 Cordova, 29.00 miles. $136.50
Yamaha SEA Terra X800 XLN 140,000 miles,
wagmaster, lighter new battery, perfect condition, $230 HONDA TERRA 125R, takes 5 times, $1000
822 266.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Write ad here
Phone
Net a
Winner...
THE
CASSIEHEDS
1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
1-16 words $8.90 $3.15 $3.75 $8.75
For every
$2 word
on page 364 $60 $75 $1.05
Mail or deliver to 119 Stauffer - Flint Hall
Classified Display
1 col x 1 inch = $4.20
September 14, 1984
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
Cross country teams open with dual meet at home
The men's and women's cross country teams open their seasons tomorrow with a dual team against Southern Illinois. The team will play at in Rim Rock park outside of LaFayette, on at Rim Rock farm.
The men's team lost 31-24 to the Salukis in a dual meet last year. The women's team didn't face the Salukis in the regular season, but would place ahead of them in the district meet.
Competing for the men's team will be Brent Steiner, Greg Leibert, Kyle Roste, Gordon Way, Dan Searls, Torey Keller and Maurice Smith.
Steiner, who finished third at the Big Eight Conference meet last year, led last week's qualifying for the meet with a time of 24 minutes, 25 seconds over a course five miles long. Leibert finished second in a time of 25:05.
Competing for the women's team will be Paula Berquist, Caryne Finlay, Susan Glatter, Heather Sterbenz, Kelly Wood, Cindy Blakeley, Tracey Keith, Trish Alaire, Kael Audi and Trisha Mangen. Angela Helmer will compete unattached.
Seitz named to start for Tigers
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri head coach Warren Powers yesterday named junior Warren Seltz to start at quarterback in his home opener Saturday (8:00 p.m.) at ESPN's
Both Seitz and junior quarterback Marlon James will play against the defense. Powers
Seitz also started last Saturday. He and
Wang lost to 104-94 at Illinois.
"We are going to give Warren a little longer run at it this week," said Powers. "I have been asking for you."
A crowd of only 45,000 is expected at Faurot Field for the Tigers' televised game, which will begin at 11:34 a.m. last year. Missouri had an average attendance
"I'm disappointed, and the players are very disappointed," said Powers of the team.
Cubs ace may return next year
CHICAGO — Chicago Cubs pitcher Rick Sutliffe, who has compiled a 141 record since he was acquired from Cleveland in June, indicated yesterday that prospects are good that he will play with the Cubs next season.
"My first meeting with General Manager Dallas Green and President Jim Finks proved more satisfying than I had expected. The contract expires at the end of the season."
Sutcliffe, who had been scheduled to pitch against Monreal yesterday before the game was postponed because of rain, reportedly told some members of the team that he would up his mind about next season and also shopping around for a big contract.
"I was told by Green that he acquired me from Cleveland mainly because of my attitude, because he knew I had been struggling and had not been pitching well the last couple of seasons," Sutcliffe said. "After I sat down with him and my agent I suddenly began to look at things in an entirely different light."
State gymnastics meet saved
TOPEKA — Kansas High School Activities Association directors defeated yesterday a proposal to discontinue the state boys' high school gymnastics meet, said Nelson Hartman, KSSHA executive secretary.
Instead of eliminating the meet, the board voted at its semiannual meeting to hold a state championship event only if eight or more teams participated. Individual championships still will be held if there are less than eight full teams in the state.
"There was a lot of emotion and statewide interest in this proposal." Hurtman said. "We let gymnastics stand on its own merits and not do this for another sport. I think the Olympics might be an issue to do with the interest in this issue.
A controversial issue that passed, Hartman said, was a proposal to allow high school athletes to join another school's team if there are not enough students in a school interested in a sport to field a team.
Florida's Pell vows not to quit
GAINESVILLE. Fla. — Embattled Florida Coach Charley Pell said yesterday he wanted to finish the session despite 169 AAs charges against the Gator program.
"Ive worked with most all of these players two or more years — some for five years," Pell said in a story published by the Orlando Sentinel. "If I faced a tough situation and folded up and ran off that, I be against everything I taught them."
"They deserve the very best I've got. I never even considered leaving this football team."
The University of Florida received the list of allegations Tuesday from the SCAA after an almost two-year investigation. The school now must respond to the charges.
The NCAA accused Florida of giving money and gifts to players, spying on opponents practices and violating dozens of other rules.
rent announced before the season, as the NCAA investigation was winding down, that he would resign at the end of the season.
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
'Hawk defensive unit braced for FSU attack
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Associate Sports Editor
two years ago, a Florida State team on its way to a 9-3 season opened the season against an upstart Cincinnati team and barely escaped with a 38-31 victory.
"That guy's one of the best young coaches in America." Seminole Coach Bobby Bowden said of the Cincinnati coach after the game. "He's going places."
That Cincinnati coach did go places, to the University of Kansas, to be exact, and tomorrow Mike Gottfried will get another chance to sneak up on Bowden when his Jayhawks face Florida State. Game time is 1:30 p.m. at Memorial Stadium.
Both teams have had one starter injured in practice who will not start tomorrow. Florida State offensive tackle Jick Jim Thompson will be replaced by sophomore Parrish Barwick. KU fallback Mark Hewitt whose status is in the playoffs of a strained knee, will be replaced by Harvey Fields.
Fields is just returning from a knee injury, suffered in the Wichita State game, meaning that freshman Warren Shields might also see action at fullback, along with No 2 tailback Lymn William of Norseth, Norseth, a stomach muscle injury. this week is now healthy and will start.
Florida State, which has gone to bowl games four of the past five years, has another highly-regarded team this year. The Seminoles, 1-0, are ranked 18 by United
Allen, a 6-foot, 200-pound senior, gained 1,034 yards last year and was a first-team UPI All-American. He needs 43 yards tomorrow to become Florida State's all-time leading rusher. In Florida State's season-opening victory against East Carolina two weeks ago, Allen gained 113 yards on 17 carries.
Press International and feature a highpowered offense led by Heisman Trophy candidate Greg Allen.
"He's very quick and has good size and balance." Gottfried said. "He's got all the standard qualities you're looking for in a Heisman candidate, and it continually deserves to be a Heisman candidate."
Gottried said his team couldn't afford to concentrate too much on Allen, though
"You really can't because everybody else is so good," he said. "They have an excellent quarterback and he has some good receivers to throw to."
Eric Thomas came on strong as the Seminole quarterback in last year's 28-3 Peach Bowl victory over North Carolina and was named the game's most valuable player. He completed 12 of 19 passes for 177 yards and two touchdowns in Florida State's season-opening 48-17 victory over East Carolina two weeks ago.
Anchoring the Seminole offensive line.
KANSAS (1-0)
SE-Johnny Holloway, 5-11, 183 jr.
LT-Jim Davis, 6, 245 jr.
LG-Chip Schuler, 6, 260 jr.
C-Hennie Simecka, 6, 255 cr.
RG-Doug Conger, 6, 245 jr.
RT-Rob Pieper, 6, 255 ce.
TE-Jeff Long, 5-11, 180 jr.
QB-Mike Norseth, 6, 265 jr.
FB-Mark Henderson, 6, 215 jr.
TB-Robbert Mimbs, 6, 0, 190 jr.
FI-Skip Peete, 6, 0, 185 jr.
Offense
Defense
LT—Jeff Anderson, 6-3, 22 jr.
LG—Phil Porel, 6-3, 22 so.
RG—Pat Kelley, 6-1, 20 rr.
RT—Robert Tucker, 6-3, 210 rr.
RE—Guy Gamble, 6-3, 22 jr.
RL—Rich Breedson, 6-1, 154 rr.
UC—Din Bell, 5-9, 180 rr.
S—Wayne Ziegler, 6-2, 190 so.
RX—Mivin Walton, 6-0, 185 rr.
FLORIDA ST. (1-0)
Defense
BLI—Brian Williams, 6-0, 230 jr.
OLT—Isaac William, 6-1, 200 jr.
NG—Todd Stroud, 5-11, 225 jr.
RT—Gerald Nichols, 6-2, 250 no.
OLB—Garth Jax, 6-2, 210 jr.
ILB—Henry Taylor, 6-0, 230 jr.
HLB—Kevin Lowe, 6-2, 250
LCB—Eric Riley, 6-0, 170 str.
SS—Jerome McCoy, 6-0, 200 jr.
FS—Brian McCary, 5-11, 170 jr.
RCB—Eric William, 5-9, 175 jr.
Offense
Grenze
SE—Hassan Jones, 6,1-200 jr.
LD—Parrish Barwick, 0,270 so
LG—Dan Morris, 6,1-245 jr.
C—Gerald Riopelle, 6,1-250 jr.
RG—Jamie Dukes, 6,1-270 jr.
RT—John Altman, 6,3-270 jr.
RT—Pat Carter, 6,4-230 jr.
QB-Eric Thomas, 6,0-195 jr.
FB—Cletis Jones, 6,0-220 jr.
TB—Greg Allen, 6,0-200 sr.
FL—Jessie Hester, 6,0-170 sr.
KICKOFF : 1:30 p.m. at Memorial Stadium
SERIES STANDING: Tied 2-2. In the last meeting between the two teams, the Jawhaws defeated the Seminoles 40-9 in 1974 at Lawrence.
"They play pretty loose." Gottfried said.
"They may run a everse on you in a
which has an average size of 6.1, 270 pounds a player is All-American competition Jamie
short-yardage situation.
As loaded as Florida State's offense is, its defense is just as susceptible. Florida State allowed an average of 28 points a game last year.
Gottried, whose team ran the ball more than expected last week, said that wouldn't be worth it.
Schwartzburg kicking away after long wait
"The thing we've got to do is keep them honest," he said.
Associate Sports Editor
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Associate Sports Editor
Naturally, Dodge Schwartzburg hopes the Kansas Jayhawks can move the ball on Florida State tomorrow. As a place-kicker, the more the Jayhawks move the ball the more chances he has to kick field goals and extra points.
Scharwtzburg can wait, though. A fifth-year senior, he's acquired some patience while watching Berry Kallimyer set all his sights as KU's place keeper the past four years.
Schwartzburg walked on as a freshman in 1980. After redshirting in 1981, Schwartzburg showed his capabilities by kicking two 52-yard field goals in junior-varsity action the past two years.
Now Kallmeyer has moved on, and Schwartzburg won the kicking job over juco transfer Jeff Johnson this fall.
"I've had some questions from people saying I should go somewhere else, but I wanted to stick it out." Schwartzburg said. "like KU. It was tough, but now that I'm here it seems like the wait was not nothing at all. Now I'm a just fifth-year freshman."
Schwartzburg did his job last Saturday against Wichita State, converting all four of his extra point attempts and adding a 36 yard field goal. Tomorrow's game against the Seminoles has special significance for Schwartzburg, who's from Ocala, Fla.
"There's nothing I'd like better than to beat a Florida team," he said. "It's just like the USC game last year when we had all the California players on the team. All my friends go to Florida from central Florida, and there we either are a Florida Gator or a Seminole."
Amnough his hometown lies closer to the Florida State campus in Tallahassee, Flla than the University of Florida campus in Gainesville. Leaves no doubt where his sentiments lie
I'm a Gator fan all the way," he said. "All my family went to Florida."
Schwartzburg began kicking during his junior year at Forest High in Ocala.
"I was trying out for the junior varsity, and a bunch of us guys were kicking the ball around," he said. "I had played soccer in grade school and had a little better hang time and distance, so they said 'You're the kicker'."
He had offers from two small colleges coming out of high school, but chose to come to Lawrence, where he had spent summers with his father, an employee of Packer Plastic.
"You do a lot of stretching out, and there's a lot of mental practice because you're standing around a lot," he said. "People think we have it pretty easy, but you can't kick for two hours or else you won't have any leg left by Saturday."
The man who ran the camp, noted kicking expert Doc Story, lived in nearby Fort Lauderdale. Fla so Schwartzburg was able to watch and gain additional instruction his senior year.
Schwartzburg said he improved his kicking by going to a camp in River Falls, Wis., after that initial season. Johnson was at the same camp.
Johnson gave Schwartzburg quite a battle this fall. The starting place-kicker wasn't named until the week of the Wichita State game.
Schwartzburg said he kicks between 40 and 50 kicks in practice on his heavy kicking days. He said the ball was used to give him control.
100
Steven Purcell/KANSAN
Bryan McCaul, Leawood graduate student, grimaces as he serves during a quarter-final match of an intramural tennis tournament near Robinson Gymnasium. McCaul lost to his opponent, John Dean, Kansas City, Kan., senior.
Volleyballers at Rice Invitational
By CHRIS LAZZARINO
Sports Writer
The women's volleyball team showed up for class at Rice University in Houston today. But the队 won't be in any classroom. The team will have to court at the Rice University Institutional
"This is really going to be a good learning experience," Beth Vivian, senior setter, said. "It is really hard to say how we will do because it is really the beginning of the season for us and the other teams in the tournament."
Except for Vivian and senior setter Jain, Hunt the KU team is made up of freshmen
With Hunt and Vivian in Houston are
sophomores Susan Hunt. Julie Ester and
Linda Alfaro. Freshmen making the trip are Judy Desch, Eileen Schwartz, Tammy Hill, Michelle Klone and Kristi Conway.
Because the team is dominated by young players, head coach Bob Lockwood said he has had to make use of every spare minute of court time.
Although he planned for the team to leave for florist at 4:45 p.m. yesterday, the team still had a 2:45 p.m. Thursday practice.
"We need to practice every chance we get." Lockwood said. "This team gets better every day. Youth and talent are blending together on this team. It is exciting for coaches."
Because the team has so many newcomers this year, Hunt said she doesn't know exactly who will be.
"The freshmen don't play like freshmen," Hunt said.
Take your seats class. It's time for lesson No. 3, courtesy of Harvey Fields.
That will be all class. Study Harvey's example and do as he does
See Harvey. Watch Harvey run. Harvey runs fast. Harvey goes to football practice. Harvey goes to class.
Yes, fullback Harvey Fields has set an example, both on the field and off the field. And during a Kansas football season filled with academic ineligibilities, it's refreshing to be reminded that the majority of KU's football players do make grades
Fields is an excellent example of a student-athlete. Despite limited practice time this week because of a knee injury, he did well to start at backwell when Kansas plays Florida
105
GREG
DAMMAN
Sports Editor
State on Saturday in Memorial Stadium.
State on Saturday in Memorial Stadium
On the way to his starting assignment
Fields put in hours of hard work on the
practice field. But his work on the field has
gone hand in hand with his work in the
classroom.
"One thing I'm trying to stay on top of my grades." Fields said. "It's the most important thing. That's something my parents have stressed since high school."
After graduating from Arkansas City High School in Arkansas City, Kan. Fields came to KU to major in architecture at first. KU coaches were not sure Fields would have time for both football and the different architectural projects place on a student's time.
sometimes it's kind of hard when you have a project due and you have to stay up all night for two or three nights in the row, and go to football practice every day," he said. "You really have to be aware of your deadlines."
For the most part, Fields has met his deadlines and has succeeded with flying colors. He has a secret. But to any good student, it's no secret at all.
"You have to know how to budget your time," he said. "This semester is probably the best schedule I've ever had. I have 15 hours this semester. In the past I usually had about 17 or 18."
Ecus said that he had benefited the past three years from schedules that did not include late afternoon courses. However, this semester his luck ended, and he was forced to take a late afternoon class that he needs for his degree.
Much of the blame for KU's large number of academically ineligible players has been aimed toward the academic advising the university, which has own adviser. His name is Harvey Fields.
"I usually picked my classes myself
beautiful." From the start I was pretty much
holding.
Unfortunately, not all players are like Fields. A few of them have trouble budgeting their time, and deciding which classes are best for them
"The trouble is some guys let things slide.
Fields said. "Things get on top of them all at
a time."
Fields said that Coach Mike Gottified emphasized classwork to the players, but that Gottified was powerless to do much more than ask that they do the classwork.
"A lot of it is up to the individual." Fields said. "And that goes for the regular student as well as the student athlete."
1
图
Circus circuit
The ringmaster, the showgirl and the clown — without them, The Greatest Show on Earth would be just so much pachyderms and lion breath. When the granddaddy of
all circuses, the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey, came to Kansas City, Mo., last week, these three talked about life under the big top. See photos and story, page 10.
Sunny Day
Pleasant
High, 75. Low, 55 Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 95, No. 16 (USPS 650-640)
Mondav. September 17. 1984
Fiallos appointment draws professor's objection
By JOHN EGAN Staff Reporter
The appointment of the president of Nicaragua's Supreme Election Council to a professorship at the University of Kansas next semester already has spurred a protest.
Mariano Failles, the president, will be the boss Morgan Professor of political science in the U.S. to lead the study.
Art Thomas, Arthur Young Distinguished Professor of business, in a letter to the University Daily Kansan, said he had sent a letter Wednesday to Charles Stasser, American Studies objecting to Faillos appointment to the Rose Morgan Professorship.
"I just think it's inappropriate," Thomas said yesterday.
IN THE LETTER, which he said summed
up his feelings on the matter, Thomas wrote: "The appointment of Mariano Fiaclos . . . to the Rose Morgan Professorship involves our entire University community in complexity with the Center's behavior — it is roughly comparable to having appointed a member of the Nazi puppet government to a KU visiting professorship during the late 1920s."
Stansifer said yesterday he would not comment on the letter because he had not seen it.
The copy of the letter was received Friday in the Kansas office.
Also in the letter. Thomas requested that his name be removed from the Latin American Area Faculty and from any future publicity or grant requests of the center.
"I just decided I could not be associated with them any longer." Thomas said. "I've been troubled by the continued orientation of the group."
IN THE LETTER, Thomas wrote. "For some time I have been distressed by the Center's support of totalitarian Latin American regimes and would be regimes."
Fialios was appointed to the Rose Morgan Professorship in June. He attended KU from 1965 to 1972 and earned his political science doctorate in 1983. His daughter, Violeta, is a graduate of the University of Kansas. His youngest son, Rodrigo, attends Lawrence High School and plans to enter KU next fall.
In his role as director of Nicargua's elections, Fiiallos has been touring the United States, speaking to politically oriented groups and giving interviews to news reporters. To accept the position, Fiiallos had to take a leave of absence from his job as rector of the National Autonomous University of Nicargua in Managua.
"THIS TOUR HAS to do with trying to give information about the reality of the election
in Nicaragua that the Reagan administration has said will be a sham or a fraud," the 51-year-old Fialso said yesterday.
The tour brought him to Kansas City, Mo. on Friday and to Lawrence this weekend. Chicago, Washington, Boston and New York are on his itinerary for the next five days.
On Saturday, Fiallos will leave the United States for Nicaragua to prepare for Nov. 4 election — an event that will be a milestone for the Central American nation that has been constantly besieged by war.
Since Gen. Anastasio Somoza-Debayle lost power after a Sandinista takeover in 1979, Nicaragua has not held national elections. Before that, the country's two traditional political parties dominated elections, Fialos said.
"For the first time in Nicaragua, we'll have elections that will be free. open,
"THE ELECTIONS WERE arranged beforehand," he said. "Elections were not real elections, and many citizens did not vote."
Mondale to have talks with Soviet minister
Voter apathy seems to have disappeared as interest in the election mounts, he said of the eligible voters in Nicaragua. 93 percent have registered for the election, in which a president, vice president and 90-member parliament will be chosen, he said.
Fialios has helped train 40,000 people who will operate the country's 4,000 polling places. He also has worked to revamp the registration and election process and helped set up new election laws.
scrup new aficionados to the overhaul of the Nicaraguan political system has Fiallos enthusiastic as a government official and as a voter.
"I'm looking forward to voting for the first time in November," he said.
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Democratic presidential nominee Walter Mondale announced yesterday he would meet with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko sept. 27, one day before the Kremlin official will talk with President Reagan.
Mondale said his main aim during the meeting in New York would be to emphasize the importance of renewing negotiations to control nuclear weapons. He also said he was not trying to underline Reagan's session of September, planned for Sept. 28 at the White House.
AND WITH A pledge that if elected he would "not sign any agreement that fails to protect American security," Monday sought Mr. Bush's support as it be as tough an arms negotiator as Reagan.
"Vigorous debate on arms control will continue in this campaign." Mondale said in his weekly paid political radio address. "But whatever our differences, Mr. Reagan has my support on Sept. 28. My meeting with Mr. Gromyko will make that abundantly clear."
"This meeting will not be negotiations. Only the president negotiates with foreign powers. It will be a discussion," Mondale told reporters after his radio broadcast
MONDALE SAID HE had "no fears" that the Soviets might use him or play him off against Reagan "because I can't be used. I've been around the track."
While professing support for Reagan, however, Mondale set a high standard for
success, far beyond expectations expressed by White House aides. "Millions want the Reagan-Gromyko talks to produce concrete results," he said in the radio talk.
"Americans hope that meeting will produce an agreement on a U.S.-Soviet summit," he said. "They want U.S.-Soviet arms trade agreements. They want progress on human rights."
POLLS SHOW MONDALE trails Reagan by 15 to 30 points. His campaign strategists, grimly confronting those numbers as Nov. 6 draws closer, have been juggling staff members and sifting through issues in an effort to generate more excitement among voters.
Reagan announced last Monday that he had invited Gromyko to Washington and that the Soviet diplomat had accepted. Gromyko, who has been Moscow's top diplomat since 1857, will be in the United States to attend the United Nations General Assembly session.
Mondale, who has promised to seek a superpower summit within six months of taking office, repeatedly has pointed out that Reagan is the first president who has not sat down with the Kremlin leadership since Soviet relations were established in 1933.
MONDALE SAID HE HAD not consulted the White House or State Department before setting up the meeting because. "I know what I'm doing."
In his radio talk, Mondale noted the Reagan Gromyko meeting "comes barely five weeks before our presidential election"
See MONDALE, p. 5, col. 2
(AP)
Bern Ellenwood, Haskell Indian Junior College freshman from Lapawai, Idaho, looks into the crowd during the Band day ceremony at halftime of the KU/Florida State University
Larry Weaver/KANSAN
football game Ellenwood performed as a dancer on Saturday with the Haskell band. Band Day brought 65 bands to Lawrence for a parade through downtown.
Scholars add to KU image, officials say
By MARY CARTER
Staff Reporter
The recruitment of National Merit Scholars and other academically successful high school students is not an attempt to buy brains for the University of Kansas, the coordinator of the KU recruiting program says.
"Lately, many schools are in the business of attempting to recruit National Merit scholars, in a sort of 'brain buy,'" said Sally Church, the coordinator and an assistant to the dean of educational services.
The University of Kansas is interested in all scholars, Church said. But it's easier for KU officials to get the names of National Merit seminalists, finalists and students who do well on the American College Test, than other students' names.
University officials say that besides enhancing the image of the University the scholars also contribute to faculty morale and to class interaction.
Each year, the office of admissions receives a list of National Merit semifinalists who select KU as their first or second college choice.
Church said 143 National Merit semi-
finalists were enrolled this semester at KU. Of those, 100 are Kansas residents,
and 34 are from other states, Church said.
Besides the pampilhs and recruiting materials that other prospective students receive, National Merit finalists and semifinalists receive letters from the chancellor and information about their areas of academic interest.
Last year, KU ranked third among Big Eight Conference universities with 43 first-time National Merit scholarships. Iowa State University had 52 and the University of Nebraska had 47.
NATIONAL MERIT SCHOLARS are selected on the basis of scores on the Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test and the Scholastic Aptitude Test.
THEY'RE ALSO INVITED to compete for Watkins Berger and Summerfield scholarships, KU's most prestigious undergraduate scholarships. Church said
Robert Woodard, Sulpiur La., freshman and Merit scholar, said he came to KU because of family ties and the high
Doles campaign at Kansas State Fair
See SCHOLARS, p. 5, col. 1
By SUZANNE BROWN
Staff Reporter
HUTCHINSON — Sen. Robert Dole is not up for re-election and Elizabeth Dole was appointed to her post as secretary of transportation, but the two made an enthusiastic campaign stop Saturday at the Kansas State Fair.
The couple exchanged humor and handshakes with fair visitors, and Sen. Dole told one group of curious bystanders, "I'm not running for anything."
The senator is not up for re-election until 1986, but he took time out from Congress to visit Washington.
make state appear less unnatural
Secretary Dole joined her husband for one
THE COUPLE MUNCHED hot dogs, tourned parts of the fairgrounds and avoided political issues at a time of heavy campaigning for politicians seeking office this
of their few public appearances together
she was appointed to her post in
January 1908.
Though Sen. Dole said that a few voters had asked him about political issues on Saturday, he said that their questions usually were broad and undefined.
The appearance by the Doles, said to be one of the most powerful couples in
"Some are asking about Social Security, the economy, general questions," he said. "A lot of people are here just having a good time."
Washington, D.C. sparked remarks by visitors about a possible Dole election ticket
Sen. Dole deflected questions about the speculation.
"Oh, you know, there's a lot of stuff about 'im'." he said. "A lot of kidding around."
SEN, DOLE, THE chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, is one of the leading Republicans in the Senate. Secretary Dole, whom Dole married in 1975 when she was a member of the Federal Trade Commission, was appointed by President Reagan to succeed Drew Lewis as head of the Department of Transportation.
Though many at the fair pressed forward
See DOLE, p. 5, col. 2
AURH to discuss plan to raise housing rates
By JULIE COMINE
Staff Reporter
A proposed increase in housing contract rates for the 1983-86 school year that pushes the base cost of a residence hall room past $2,000 will be considered at tomorrow's meeting of the Association of University Residence Halls general assembly
The University of Kansas department of housing has recommended a $2,071 base house rate for 1985-86, up 4.7 percent, or $7, from last year$^a$ to $1,974 base figure.
At tomorrow's meeting, which starts at 7 p.m. in the lobby of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, the AURH general assembly will vote to support, modify or reject the $87 increase. The AURH general assembly consists of 24 voting members from KU's eight residence
THE BASE RATE is the starting point for figuring the cost of a double-room contract at all eight balls, said Curt Worden, chairman of the AURH Housing and Contracts Committee. Single rooms cost an extra $1,000 a year.
James Jeffrey, AURU1 president, encouraged hall residents and the public to attend a vigil for his late brother, James.
Worden wouldn't say whether increases in the special-service fees would be discussed
On top of the base rate, each hall charges residents for special services such as security, educational programs and social activities. Worden said.
'IT'S EXTREMELY IMPORTANT for the
Special service fees for the 1984-85 school year range from $15 at JHP and Templin and $20 at MNAC.
residents to attend." Jeffrey said. "It's their money we'll be talking about. It's vital for them to be informed and involved in the contract negotiation process."
AURH's recommendations for 1985-36 contract rates, along with those of the housing department, will be forwarded Wednesday to the Residential Programs Advisory Board, which considers contract proposals for all University housing.
The Advisory Board then will send its recommendations to David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, and Chancellor Gene A Budig. The Board of Regents must give final approval to the 1985-86 contract rates.
contract increases are based on food costs, utility rates and staff salaries, said J.J. Wilson, director of housing
WILSON SAID HE studied costs from past years, followed market trends in trade journals and received predictions from property housing rates for the upcoming year.
The base housing rate for this year, $1,974,
represented an $82 increase over the 1983-84
base rate, $1,892. The 1983-84 base rate
represented an increase over the 1982-83
base rate of $1,817
In March, Wilson recommended a $30 increase per contract for food, a $20 increase for utilities and a $30 increase for salaries — a total increase of $80.
Wilson updated his recommendation during the summer, asking for an additional $17
"Based on the happenings of various utilities, electricity, gas, water and
See AURH, p. 5, col. 2
September 17, 1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
KANSAN
General Motors and UAW work toward agreement
DETROIT — Bargaining for the United Auto Workers and General Motors Corp. worked into the evening yesterday amid indications a settlement was within reach that would avoid the full impact of the strike at a dozen GM plants nationwide.
The union announced that Local 645 at GM's Van Nuys, Calif. plant had reached agreement on a local contract covering workers and that the strike there would work.
The plant was one of 13 plants originally picked by the union in its selective strike strategy. Walkouts are continuing at the remaining 12 GM plants, the UAW said.
Three girls die in Bronx fire
NEW YORK — Fire raged through a Bronx apartment yesterday, killing three of four pre-school girls whose parents were out doing laundry.
Only a neigbourhouse rce usefthouse
Office里where schoolmntafftown
teachingschoolmntafftown
Neighbor Marcello Acosta, 16, smelled smoke and kicked down the apartment firefighters said. He found one of the girls locked in a hallway and rushed her from the building.
Police said Norman Johnston, 31, and Shirley Williams, 32, left their four daughters alone to take the family's clothes to a neighborhood laundry.
This queen hides no skeletons
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Sharelle Wells of Utah, who won the 1985 Miss America crown on national television Saturday night, said that she had never posed nude, had never had cosmetic surgery and did not believe in drinking, drugs or premarital sex.
Wells, a 20-year-old, strawberry blonde Storm from Salt Lake City, also said she was sick with Lyme disease.
that came as welcome news to pageant officials, who hoped the selection of a taint free queen would end the controversy. In 1944, a court ordered the execution of the 1944 winner, Varsanna Williams.
Solo balloonist mav set record
BEDFORD. Mass. — Balloonist Joe Kittinger, making record time, rode a fast-moving weather system over the ocean yesterday in his quest to complete the first solo trans-Atlantic balloon crossing.
Flight spokesman Jim Mitchell said at 8 p.m. the helium filled balloon was last reported 428 miles southwest of Shannon, Ireland, drifting at 66 mph at an altitude of 10,000 feet.
LONDON — The Prince of Wales waves as he leaves St. baby, who was born Saturday, is to be christened Henry Marry's hospital with the Princess and their new son. The Charles Albert David.
FILM
Britain's newest heir to be named Henry
By United Press International
LONDON — Prince Charles and Princess Diana will name their second son Prince Henry, but he'll be just plain Harry at home, Buckingham Palace officials announced yesterday less than 24 hours after the baby was born.
As Britain's newest prince made his first public appearance, the announcement of his name took the country by surprise — it is usually seven days before royal babies are born.
Many outside the hospital were not so wild about the name Harry, although it is hard to say.
“It’s a commoner’s name,” said one woman as Princess Diana and her blue-eyed
Harry went home just 22 hours after the birth.
The 6-pound, 18-ounce boy will be chris-
tened Henry Charles Albert David a
bishop of New York.
The name Henry was the choice of the parents, he said "They both like it and they'll call him Harry."
Prince Henry is third in line to the throne after Prince Charles and Prince William. He will probably be christened in Buckingham Palace.
Many people, including London book makers, thought the infant would be called George in memory of his great-grandfather Charles, one of Prince Charles' favorite monograms.
But the name Henry is written in royal tradition through centuries of British history
The first King Henry reigned in the 12th century and was the son of William the Conqueror Thomas Beckett was murdered in Canterbury Cathedral on the orders of Henry II, and Henry V was immortalized by William Shakespeare for his victory over the French at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415.
King Henry VIII, who broke with Catholicism in the 16th century, is probably the most famous monarch in British history.
Explaining the baby prince's other names, Buckingham Palace said Charles was selected because it is both a royal name and one connected with the Spencer family of Princess Diana Albert was the name of Queen Victoria's husband.
David was the name of Queen Mother Elizabeth's brother, the late David Bowes Lyon, the spokesman said.
Soviets hold U.S. vessel, officials say
By United Press International
JUNEAU. Alaska — While friends and relatives prayed yesterday for the well-being of five crewmen of an U.S. supply boat detained by Soviet authorities in remote Arctic waters, the State Department pressed Moscow for their return home.
The 120-foot motor vessel Freida K out of Homer, Alaska, was believed taken to a Russian port somewhere on the Chukotkis Peninsula. 50 miles across the Bering Strait from Alaska, U.S. officials said.
It was reported missing Friday and the State Department confirmed Saturday it had been detained by the Soviet Union in the middle of last week, although U.S. officials said no reason was given for the detainment.
Communist Party Central Committee adviser Stanslav Menshikov, interviewed yesterday on ABC's "This Week with David Brinkley," said he could not confirm the Soviets were holding the crew but added that his government had little interest in detaining him he called "fisherman."
He said the only reason they might be held was if they had fished too close to a military installation. The U.S. State Department also had little information.
Experts familiar with the routes in the area said that ships could get off track but that they seldom did.
U. S. officials, however, stressed it was not clear if the Freida K. had strayed into Soviet territory. The boat was apparently returning from a voyage supplying water and fuel to seismic research vessels doing oil exploration work in U.S. waters of the Chukchi
The five seamen are all from Homer, a seaport town 389 miles southeast of Nome.
Ken Halpin Jr., 23, whose brother Mark Halpin, 19, was one of the seamen missing, said. "We're getting a lot of calls, a lot of calls. Pretty much everybody in town knows these guys and they call to say they are praying for them and they are concerned."
Terry Thoms, the father of brothers Tab Thoms, the vessel's skipper, and Tate Thoms, a crewman, said yesterday. "My brother's upbeat. I always knew they were safe."
The Coast Guard identified a fourth crewman as Robert Miller, a deckhand, age unknown, and relatives disclosed the name of the fifth man as Charlie Burrall, 29, the cook
The Men of ZETA BETA TAU would like to welcome the Women of SIGMA DELTA TAU
to K.U. and congratulate them on their Founding Pledge Class.
Best Wishes Always!
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September 17,1984 Page3
4.
CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Preliminary hearing set for teen in murder case
A preliminary hearing will be held tomorrow for Donald E. Alexander, the Lawrence teen-ager charged with first-degree murder, rape and aggravated burglary in the death of an 80-year-old Lawrence woman.
The hearing will be at 1 p.m. in Douglas County District Court
Alexander, 18, of 303 W. 21st St., was arraigned Aug. 21 in connection with the Aug. 5 death of Marguerite L. Vinyard, who lived in her house at 2100 Tennessee St.
The coroner's report said that Vinyard had been beaten and sexually assaulted.
At a hearing on Sept. 7, Alexander was found competent to stand trial. The preliminary hearing, originally scheduled to follow the competency hearing, was postponed at the request of Alexander's lawyer.
Vogel appoints Senate secretary replacement
"Dress for Success," a fashion show for men and women sponsored by the University Placement Center, will be from August 11 to the Big Eight Room of the Kassas Union.
Fashion show to be Friday
Student models will model outfits for interviews and on the job situations. The models will show clothing for corporate events and are free for education and government workers.
After the fashion show. University Placement Center employees will answer questions about the fashion show.
Prof to speak about altruism
Dan Batson, professor' of psychology,
will discuss the question, "Does Altruistic
Motivation Exist?" in a University Forum
at 11:45 a.m. Wednesday at the Ecumenical
Christian Ministries Center, 1204
Oread Ave.
Batson, a social psychologist, completed his graduate work in psychology at Princeton University and has been conducting experimental research to determine why people help other people. He has written at the University of Kansas since 1972.
Four KU students won awards in a recent aircraft design competition sponsored by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
The forum, which includes lunch, costs
84 per person. For reservations, call
841-259-6070, or visit www.for-
servations.com.
J. Turner Hunt, Arlington, Va., graduate student, won first place in the portion of the competition co-sponsored by the AIAA and the United Technologies Corporation. He won a $1,000 prize and several potential job offers for his aircraft design
KU students have won first place in the contest for four consecutive years.
Gregory Krekeler, 1884 KU graduate,
Patrick Vitzum, Hays graduate student,
and John Hernandez, Topea senior, took
second place with their team effort design
in the portion of the competition
cosponsored by AIAA and Bendix.
hey will share a $500 prize
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy. The high will be in the mid 70s, and southerly winds will be from 10 to 15 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear with the low in the low to mid-50s. Tomorrow will be mostly clear with the high in the low 80s.
Where to call
Do you have an idea for a story or a photograph?
If so, call the Kansan at 864-4810. If your idea or news release deals with campus or area news, ask for Doug Cunningham, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, ask for Susan Wortman, campus editor. For news, ask for Greg Dammam, sports editor.
Photo suggestions should go to Dave Hornback, photo editor.
For other questions or complaints, ask or Don editor, or Paul Sevant, editor, keyboard editor.
The number of the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising, is 864-4810.
JOHN HANNA
Roff Reporter
A Fort Law student yesterday placed a Student Senate administrative
Staff Reporter
Carla Vogel, student body president, yesterday appointed Gil Gregory, a second-law law student, to replace Sandra Binyon, vichita senior, as administrative secretary.
Binyon is the third student-government official to resign in three weeks and the eight to resign since Vogel and Dennis are leaving. The body vice president, took office in March.
Binyon said yesterday that she had left her job after about five months because she wanted to prepare for the Law School Admissions Test, which she will take Sep. 29.
VOGEL SAID SHE had asked Gregory on Friday to take the job because he had applied for the job last spring, when Binyon was appointed. Gregory said he accepted the job after Vogel called him last night.
Gregory was a member of the Senate's
"I hope to be some sort of mediator between the factions that have come up in Student Senate," Gregory said. "It seems a little friction occurs from time to time."
temporary Ethics and Standards Committee this summer.
Binyon was one of three Student Senate administrative secretaries appointed by Vogel in April to replace Bonnie DeNoyelles, who had served as administrative secretary for service at Harvard, Lawrence and Pat McQueen, Lawrence senior, were the other replacements.
ROBERT WALKER, FORMER Student Senate Executive Committee chairman,
resigned Aug. 28 after five months in office.
Student of Northwest Missouri State University.
Chris Coffelt, a journalism senator, replaced Walker. Her appointment by Vogel and Highberger was approved by the Student Senate Wednesday.
Chris Edmonds, campus director of the Associated Students of Kansas, resigned the same week that Walker did after serving as ASK director since October. Edmonds also
cited personal reasons in his resignation letter to Vogel.
Scott Swenson, Topea junior and a former ASK campus director, replaced Edmonds.
Highberger said of the last three resigations. "It's just another stroke of incredible luck. It's hard to believe; none of them are connected."
BINYON IS THE KU coordinator for Task Force '84, the voter registration and education driver sponsored by ASK, a student loan holder. She said she would remain in that position.
“This is going to determine my path in the not-too-distant future.” Binyon said of the project. “It’s a big, complex thing.”
Higherberger said the duties of the administrative secretaries were not spelled out in the Senate rules. But he also said that the secretaries did the office's routine work, such as answering telephones, as well as helping other officers.
IN MARCH, FOUR student government officials resigned within a week of each other. They were Amy Bush, executive secretary; Mark Bossi, treasurer; Loren Gunzinger, student senator; and DeNoyelles, who took in position at DePaul University in Chicago.
David Friend, former StudEx chairman,
resigned in April.
Those resignations followed a request by the Black Student Union that Bossi, Bush, DeNoyelles and Friend resign because of their ties with past Student Senate administrations. The four had been appointed to their positions in November.
Higherberger yesterday attributed the resignations in part to a lack of communication in the Student Senate office. He also said those resignations had caused some disorder.
"It made things impossible," he said. "It was crazy. Carla and I were trying to run the office by ourselves."
But Binyon said yesterday, "it's settled down now, and relatively, it's much, much more calm. We were all kind of thrown into our jobs.
Slattery says big debts are voters' fault
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ
Staff Reporter
The federal government is giving voters exactly what they want, and the results are unharnessed deficit spending and climbing interest rates. Rep. ,im Slattery said last night.
Slattery, D-2nd District, spoke at the opening session of the Kansas Savings and Loan League Management Conference at the Lawrence Holidome, 200 W Turnippe Access Box in Washington, D.C., responded to the wishes of the voters as expressed to polsters
"The people say they want a strong defense, no cuts in Social Security benefits, no cuts in education spending and no cuts in Medicare." Slattery said. "But, ask them if they want their taxes increased to pay for all of this spending and the answer is a resounding 'No.'"
Slattery outlined five steps in addition to tax increases that he thought would be necessary to cut the deficit and bring interest rates under control.
First, a freeze should be put on all government spending for at least one year, he said.
"This is not a perfect solution, but it may be the only politically possible one," he said.
Next, Congress should be forced to follow a "pay as you go" budget after the freeze is lifted Under this program, Slattery said, Congress would be forced to either cut spending in some areas or raise taxes to finance any increase in government spending.
Slattery also called for the establishment of a trust fund to receive any new revenue raised through tax increases. This money would help pay off the national deficit.
As a fourth step, legislation should be passed to require the president to submit a balanced budget each fiscal year. Slattery said
Governor Carlin is required to submit a balanced budget every year," he said. "There is no such restriction made on the president."
Finally, Slattery proposed changes in government entitlement programs. These include mandatory spending programs such as Social Security and Medicare
"People who need more should get more," he said. "But people who don't shouldn't receive increases."
Slattery said the five steps were necessary moves
"We have to rise above this 'poll-watching' mentality in government," he said. "Somebody has to start talking common sense to the voters."
A
Matthew Witthers (left) and his sister, Katie, play on a School, 2704 Louisiana St. Katie and Matthew are the jungle gym at the park south of Broken Arrow Elementary children of David and Debbie Witthers, 1400 Prairie St.
Price WaddillUKANSAN
McMurry up for December parole
Staff Reporter
By JOHN REIMRINGER Staff Reporter
Steve McMurry, the former KU on Wheels director who was sentenced to prison last year for embezzling funds from the bus company, pleaded guilty in December. correctional officials said Friday
McMurry is being moved today from the El Dorado Honor Camp to the Topeka Pre-
"The parole board essentially approves these people in ad hoc court and Baruch, special assistant to the secretary of corrections
The pre-release program was established by the 1944 Kansas signator to imitate *transition back to society*, Barclay said.
Inmates attend the center for 90 days before their release and go through a series of courses designed to prepare them for release. he said Cources on getting and keeping jobs, dealing with drug addiction and financial finances are included in the program.
"What follows the program is a paper review." Barclay said. If the inmate has not had disciplinary problems, the inmate will be either paroled or put in a work release
McMurry probably will be paroled because he has had previous work experience, Barclay said.
On July 8, 1963, McMurry was sentenced to eight to 20 years in state prison on five counts of embezzling funds fro 'the KU bus system. He was ordered to pay the University of New York $750,000.
MCIUMRYR, 29, HAS been at the El Dorado Honor Camp since December 19, 1983, when he was transferred from the Kansas State Pententium at Lansing.
"He's been an outstanding person," said Gary Rayl, director of the camp "Td
KU officials filed a civil suit against McMurray on Sept. 7, asking for more than $10,000 in restitution and also for punitive damages.
"He took a very unorganized warehouse and set us up a good inventory system," Ravi said. "He's been very hardworking and very honest with us."
THE UNIVERSITY DECIDED to file suit to make sure that Mearcy repaid the money he owed, said Mary Prewitt, assistant general counsel for the University. Mearcy has not paid back any of the money because he has been in prison.
"There's case law that essentially says the judge can't order incarceration and restitution at the same time," Prewitt said.
Prewitt said she was not surprised that McMurry was up for parole.
navy, who must give permission for McMurry to be interviewed, said that McMurry had refused to talk to reporters.
Rayl said that McMurry had been in charge of the camp's warehouse under the supervision of a camp employee
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"The Real Role of the Journalist in 1984"
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September 17,1984
OPINION
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Day, Kannan. USPS 660 640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairfrant Flint Hall, Lawen. Kannan 660 640) daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawen. Kannan 660 434) Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 a year in Elgin County. Mail to USPS POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Day, Kannan 118 Stairfrant Flint Hall, Lawen. Kannan 660 640)
DON KNOX Edito.
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South Africa
The issue is one in which the odds are long, but the needs are great.
are great. Apartheid in the Republic of South Africa — a nation in which 4.5 million whites control economics and politics for a population of 30 million — is a way of life.
population of 30 million. Recent elections in that country gave Asians and people of mixed ancestry a role in government that they had not had before. Even that minor concession, however, was just one of including those two minorities in the rituals of government. They didn't acquire any power.
Meanwhile, the blacks, 22 million of them, still do not have the right to vote, are forced to live in designated areas of the country and face a life of segregation and discrimination.
The government of South Africa is a racist one.
Today begins a week of activity at KU intended to focus attention on the conditions of the people forced to live under this system.
As part of the activities, the Student Senate Ad Hoc Committee on South Africa, a sponsoring group, plans to examine the connections between the University of Kansas and South Africa.
The idea of South Africa Week, giving people the opportunity to learn in greater detail some of the specifics of the issues involved, is good.
However, a related issue, divestment of KU money in South Africa, requires much more thought and discussion before the idea, as it has been currently proposed, can be acted on.
U. S. direct investment in South Africa exceeds $2.6 billion, and more than 300 American firms do business in the country, the Christian Science Monitor reports.
The political clout of these companies with South Africa is significant in economic terms.
However, the solution is not as easy as the sale of all KU stocks that are invested in companies doing business in South Africa.
One factor that must be considered is exactly which companies are considered tainted for their business dealings
Then other questions follow: What about companies that supply fuel to such corporations or are subcontractors? Should only those companies with direct investments be targets in the quest for a South Africa-free portfolio?
Who will be able to trace the companies if their involvement is anything less than obvious?
Other universities, cities and states have made the decision to divest in South Africa, each one participating to a different degree.
The impact of their divestments versus the benefits of having American companies continue to operate in the country must also be considered.
Some of the U.S. companies there have made concerted efforts to implement the Sullivan principles, a set of voluntary guidelines on equal employment opportunity.
The issues involved are complicated ones. The United States, because of its own grappling with civil rights, has some understanding of what is involved.
A week is hardly sufficient time to understand the complexities of South Africa, with its internal divisions between rural and urban blacks, tribal and language groups, and whites and the rest of the country.
But South Africa Week should provide an opportunity to understand at least the basics of a situation that cries out for change.
Ma Bell's imagery
Despite newspaper, magazine and television coverage, despite commercials with Cliff Robertson and Andy Griffith trying to sweet-talk us, despite the monumental efforts of Madison Avenue and public relations people, some of us aren't convinced.
Down-home Andy and clean-cut, dependable Cliff have done their best to persuade us that we are no longer dealing with The Phone Company AT&T has owned the natural market and didn't give a damn what we thought, into our friendly neighborhood communication giant. Old reliable.
We keep hearing about how tough it is to be a phone company these days, about how things just aren't the way they used to be. But for Ma Bell's kind of children.
It hasn't worked
time was when they were the only kids on the block. They got all the toys, all the marbles, all the candy.
NOW WE'VE GOT
MOMENTUM
YANG LIN
And if "the more you hear, the better we sound" is true, that's only because AT&T has the volume turned up so land we're going deaf.
She shed no tears over Ma Bell's demise; at least one of her kids is doing fine without her.
MICHAEL ROBINSON Staff Columnist
And they never had to say "please" or "thank you," because they were the only place to go and they knew it and everyone else did; too.
But this is the same AT&T that does those next New Wave "Watson" commercials. You know, the ones in which they show all the wonderful new communications systems that AT&T now offers.
It's no wonder that Ma's kids became spoiled.
And we want to believe. We really do.
one phone company hasn't changed. It has just, like a politician with a new image, gotten smarter
But now the Federal Communications Commission breathes down their necks every time they need a few pennies to stay in business, or they want to tack on an itty bitty old access charge.
See, in return for giving up all its regional telephone companies, AT&T got permission to enter the lucrative and expanding telecommunications field. They're into stuff that makes the telephone look like a pair of Dixie cans with a string between them.
$ ^{14} $Only when AT&T is allowed to operate under the same rules as all competitors will customers realize the full value of this new competition in the industry . Morris whined
Just the other day, at the Texas-Oklahoma Telephone Association convention, poor Morris Tannenbaum, head of ATKT Communications, was decrying the state of what's left of Ma Bell's long-distance monopoly. It's hard to blame Morris for taking on such a plan. Morris is against antigreedy treatment ATKT was receiving at the hands of the Texas Public Utility Commission
Morris and ATKT would have us think that after all these years they are now eager for the customers to reap the benefits of competition
REAGAN
BUSH
JESUS
Stress Sakharovs' freedom
MARLBORO. Vt. The U.S. scientific community must ensure that the issue of freedom for Andrei Sakharov and his wife, Yelena Bonner, is high on the agenda when officials of the United States and the Soviet Union meet later this month.
(Secretary of State George Shultz will meet with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrey Gromyko sept 26 at the United Nations; President Reagan will see Gromyko Sept 28 at the White House)
The Sakharov's freedom depends upon our putting pressure on the Soviet Union in public forums and private channels.
The Kremlin is embassaried by the portrait of Soviet "justice" that is emerging as sporadic reports on the Sakharovs mental and physical health are leaked by friends to their tormented family in the United States. Soviet officials concern that the affair will concern scientific exchanges with the West and are making their concern known to their leaders.
So far, however, we have failed to capitalize on Soviet fears. In July, the United States renewed trade and cultural agreements with Moscow without a hint about a concession – no questions, no pressure.
Teen-age girl prepares for Soviet invasion
There is a lot of talk these days about renewed patriotism among young Americans; one of the big movie hits of the season is "Reed Dawn," a film about high school students in a small Colorado town who fight Soviet and Cuban troops that land in their area.
So it was interesting the other day to meet Margaret Hosty, 17, who lives in Chicago. While other girls her age are hanging out at shopping malls and watching music videos, Margaret has done something quite different. She has joined the Army National Guard.
"Everyone talks about nuclear war," Margaret told me, "but it war comes. I don't think it's going to be that bad." I will be seeing hand-to-hand combat
I truly hate communism. I think it's terrible, just awful. Some people say it's not so bad, but they don't really know about it."
She thinks that Soviet troops might someday launch a ground war in the U.S. Midwest, and she wants to be ready to defend her neighborhood
---
really believe in something, you can do it — and if I had to fight the Russians hand to hand, I would do it in a minute."
She said that 17-year-olds were allowed to join the National Guard if they had their parents' authorization
She has been going to monthly Guard weekend meetings at an armory in downtown Chicago, and soon she will leave for eight weeks of work.
margaret said that, although the U.S. military does not use women in combat roles, she thought the policy might change some day soon.
"My father said, 'Oh, congratulations, and did you bring the socks and handkerchiefs up' but now both of them said my father are thrilled about it."
tight change in my life.
"I don't consider myself all that tough a person," she said, "but if
"I'm really looking forward to that," she said. "I think boot camp will make me a lot tougher person; a
signatures. She was doing the laundry the day she informed her father that she wanted to join the Guard.
BOB
GREENE
Syndicated
Columnist
She said she was serious about her concerns that the United States could be the site of a Soviet landing: "The Soviets could be attacking my neighborhood, my friends, my school, the places where we had our high school dances. Those are the people and places I care for."
"If I ever found out that a
"What do I want to learn? Well, I want to learn how to use my rifle better. I want to learn how to use hand grenades; now right I'm terrible at even throwing snowballs! And I hope to learn how to drive a tank, though I don't have a driver's license yet."
let more aggressive. It will give me confidence and make me not be afraid.
"My friend and I rented a cassette of the movie 'Hair' to see what young people were like back then," she said. "I was really sickerened. It's like the whole generation was a pack of idots."
"They all said, 'it's against my religion to go to war.' Well, hey, it against everyone's religion to go to war, but if the Soviets start it, we'd better be ready to do something about it.
She said she had done some research into the anti-war generation of the '60s.
say, "I don't consider myself a violent person, but when you're a soldier, sometimes you have to be violent. And I'm proud that that's what I've decided to be. I am a soldier."
Margaret said that camouflage outfits were in style among girls her age right now. Once she made a negative remark when she saw some of her friends wearing them, they said to her, "At last I didn't join the Army."
Communist was living next door or on my block. I'd almost like like smuggling my M-16 rifle out of the armory and telling the people. 'Get out of this neighborhood.' And for the people who go around saying how much they hate it here — well. I wish they'd leave before someone like me takes the initiative to make them leave.
However, she said, she thinks that they respect her.
they respect "other girls my age might not be joining the National Guard," she said, "but I don't know anyone of my generation who thinks it's a bad idea to have a strong national defense.
to have a brave face.
"When I'm in my uniform, I feel like a different person. I feel like I'm invincible. I think about the possibility of war being very real, and I say to myself, 'This is not a movie.'"
We shouldn't forget that Western pressure won the free emigration of more than 100,000 Soviet Jews
The scientific community has the power to raise the issue and to put pressure on Moscow. In 1975, the president of the American National
JOSEPH MAZUR
New York Times Syndicate
Academy of Sciences sent a telegram to the Soviet Academy, saying that future scientific cooperation could be built. The report should happen to the Sakharovs.
that telegram helped frighten the Soviet authorities into granting an
Rome for badly needed eye surgery. Little on the agendas of U.S. scientific societies now suggests that cooperation is in jeopardy. Many U.S. scientists still meet with Soviet scientists, ask the embarrassing question and then get down to cooperation.
exit visa for Bonner to travel t Rome for badly needed eye surgery
It has been 4 $ _{1/2} $ years since Sakharov was detained, and four months since we have had any contact with him he is mentally and physically healthy.
We in the scientific community must not allow the lives of these promethean human beings to be suandered.
Joseph Mazur is professor mathematics at Marlboro College.
Rhyming on politics
The English clerhew, a verse form, can be easily adapted to the U.S. presidential campaign.
To quote Webster, a cleverer is "a light verse quattra in lines usually of varying length, rhyming AABB and making a statement usually concerning a person whose name typically supplies the initial rhyme.
Political debate seems especially suited to quatrains this year.
Some poetic analysts may find antecedents of America's Ogden Nash in the verifications favored by England's Edmund Clerkess Ben
Whatever emulations they might have inspired, the following selection from "The First Clerihews," published by Oxford University Press, appears more or less typical.
Rather against his will.
Cecil B. deMille.
Was persuaded to leave Mose Out of 'The War of the Roses
Although the significance of that quatrain may be lost on some of the younger movie goers, the clerk, as you can see, is no stranger to grand themes. That quality makes it all the more apt to be named the official verse form of the 1984 presidential campaign.
Let us begin making statements at the White House.
But the term 'Reagonomics' Relates to the comics
But the term 'Reaganomics
Ronald Reagan
Now, cutting across the political spectrum
Given a name like Walter
Among Republicans, however. Fritz
Ronda Reagan In the business section might strike liberal economics as pagan.
Is really the pits
This verse form is pliant enough to
be applied to the bottom half of the ticket as readily as to the top half.
For a running mate
Although Geraldine Ferraro May be straight as an arrow Communion loans
Campaign loans Sooner or later usually bring groans.
Or:
The next step up is up to fate
United Press International
DICK WEST
But Democrats are trying to give fate a push
By claiming one woman veep we worth two of Bush.
Clerknews can even be used to delineate current events
Is a missile with the capacity to perplex.
The latest basing mode disguise
From the Middle East comes inspiration for:
Yasser Arafat
Is usually photographed in the same old hat.
It might help if the PLO leader als
behind the camera.
trapped on its coat
In a towel from a Syrian Holiday
Inn
Although the final clewberry may not make a statement about the presidential campaign, the subject matter was pretty pastic in its
Thinks porn stars are dandy
Britain's Prince Andy
But to the Queen, it's increasingly plain.
They're a royal pain
University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1984
Page 5
Scholars
continued from d. 1
quality of the mechanical engineering program — not because he was recruited
"I got a lot of literature from here," he
said. "I have been telling me about
KU than saying come here."
The College Honors Program also plays a role in recruiting these high-profile
"IN ADDITION, A number come to visit," she said. "Some already know about the honors program and just show them how much they are appreciated." The admissions office sends others over.
Randa Dulbokn, assistant director of the College Honors Program, said that National Merit semifinalists and finalists admitted to the College Honors Program.
Dubnick said the University didn't recruit Merit Scholars solely for the prestige of having more than other schools.
"It's nice for the University to say, 'we have these scholars,' she said. "But it's much more a benefit. The presence of these students does a lot for the University."
"It's very exciting for faculty to work with them. They are incredible morale boosters for the faculty. But these students challenge each other, too. Having one academically talented student is not very satisfactory. You need a group."
"We care about them much more than
number. It is more prestige We respond.
"I THINK WE do a good job. As far as that goes, if we do a good job, these students get excited. And if they get excited, we become the best recruiting team we have."
The Honors Program also sponsors a Summer Honors Institute each year to give outstanding high school students a chance to experience university life and acquaint themselves with the honors program. But the program is strictly as a recruiting tool, Dubnick said.
"It's important that any academic program be able to stand on its own merit."
But he said the Soviets should not mistake "the heat of our political contests" to mean "we are divided on all things.
Mondale continued from p. 1
"We are united in our commitment to strong defenses," said Mondale. "We agree on the urgency of avoiding war. We refuse to allow such a real possibility of this or any other political campaign."
- "America has only one president at a time" and Reagan "speaks for all Americans."
Mondale said he would tell Gromyko three things:
- *Moscow* “has nothing to gain” from delaying arms tnks. “If I am elected president, I will drive a tough bargain.”
- "World survival demands true progress on arms control. We must set aside rancor and blame. We must launch serious, businesslike negotiations."
Dole continued from p. 1
"Who's that with him?" asked one woman, pointing to Secretary Dole.
eagerly to meet the Doles, some hung back, unsure of the couple's identity. Many stared at the senator and the secretary as they hastily past T-shirt stands and exhibit buildings.
The possibility of a Dole ticket in the next presidential election has prompted many to make jokes about which Dole will run for president and which for vice president.
"NOBODY WANTS TO meet me." Sen. Dole complained as fair officials came forward to greet Secretary Dole at a reception given for the couple.
The secretary further pleased fair representatives when she agreed to board an amusement park ride that resembled a cross between a terris wheel and a roller coaster.
"I have to think about the deficit," he said.
"If I get up there, I might forget how high it is."
As head of the finance committee, Dole has worked since 1981 for compromise legislation to trim the administration's proposed tax
cuts and reduce the government's soaring deficit.
Federal debt was the target of Sen. Dole's wit later at the fair, when he accepted a business card from Lei Hajian, the head of a Chinese delegation exhibiting tapestries, carvings and other products at the fair. Dole peered at the Chinese characters on the card.
HE ADVISED THE delegation from the Henan Province to "buy lots of wheat."
One man told Secretary Dole that he was grateful for this year's federal legislation cutting highway funds to any state that did not raise its legal drinking age to 21 by Sept. 30.
Though the Doles maintained an air of
tevity at the fair, at least one woman
reported that she was more nervous.
"We're working on it hard," she said.
"Oh, no, not me," she laughed, as Sen Dole came toward her. "I'm a Democrat."
continued from p.1
Michael Stripe, lead singer of R.E.M., performed on stage in Hoch Auditorium Friday night. The band, out of Athens, Ga., is touring after the release of its album, "Reckoning."
sanitation — we projected the $17 increase." he said.
Chris Magert/KANSAN
SINCE MARCH, AURIR'S Housing and Contracts Committee has been studying the proposed increase in next year's contracts. Worlds said.
justified.
"Basically, we're looking at whether there's a real basis for these increases." Worden said "We're looking at the Concepts and Trends that we expect at trends in utility costs and food costs."
The function of the Housing and Contracts committee. Worden said, is to raise questions about contract rates for the 4,700 students living in residence halls.
Boyd's Coins-Antiques
Worden said his committee and the AURH Contract Coordinating and Review subcommittee were investigating several items to see whether the proposed increased were
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Universitv Dailv Kansan. September 17, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
Budig swaps hats to play prof's role
By HOLLIE B. MARKLAND Staff Reporter
A university chancellor is not the sum of his pipistripe suits and accumulated commencement addresses.
Cancellor Gene A. Budig, who has taught a course at the University of Kansas every semester since becoming chancellor three years ago, instructs his students that a challenge disabilities extend beyond the office.
Holly Hill-Brown, a Lebanon, Mo., graduate student, has taken one of Budig's classes: "Today's chancelor must assume new functions," she
"FIFTEEN YEARS AGO, fundraising was not a function of the chancellor, but now it is part of his job."
Although few chancellors teach courses at their universities, Budig has extended his role as chancellor to include the ib of professor.
Like all professors, Budig established office hours when he could consult with students, Hill-Brown said.
"It may be very early in the morning or very late in the afternoon." Budig said, "but I always make time for my students."
Budig teaches a course on the organization and administration of higher education each fall. The course profiles the positions of university chancellor or president, dean and department chairman.
Hill.Brown said that the fall course consisted mainly of KU administrators who explained their roles.
DURING THE SPRING semester.
Budig instructs a class on trends in higher education.
Both classes are graduate-level seminar courses taken most often by students working toward doctorates, Budig said.
Jane Tuttle, a lawrence graduate student who has taken both of BUDg's classes, said the chancellor's advice had his students an insider's view.
"The chancellor attended a meeting of the American Association of Universities," Tuttle said, "a group of administrators from the top 50 schools in the nation. He came back and told us about the concerns these people had about the future of higher education.
"That kind of experience can be matched by only 49 other people."
Hill-Brown and Tuttle said the chancellor did not focus only on the
"WE TRIED TO look at trends, not so much at KU." said Hill-Brown. "Budig tried not to inflict his own opinions on the class. He gave us a variety of perspectives because we may be in an administrative position ourselves some day. We may have to make our own decisions."
Hill-Brown said she liked the idea of the charceller going back to the
"If you're the head of an institution, you need to keep in touch with the classroom." she said.
SOME COLLEGE COURSES ARE MORE EXCITING THAN OTHERS.
How many colleges in New York City have a degree program in Computer Science or a field like IT?
Or maybe not at all, but what kind of student is attending these colleges?
At least 10 colleges in New York City have a degree program in Computer Science or a field like IT.
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REMEMBERING THE DEAD
from the south and Phantangists from east 2nd, pass through Israeli junction assemble south of the airport.
ISRAELI ARMY OBSERVATION POST
CAMILLE CHAMCOUN AVENUE
MASSA GRAVE
SABRA CAMP
SHATILA CAMP
ISRAELI TANKS
LEBANESE ARMY POST
ENTRANCE TO CAMPS
1. Wednesday, Sept. 15: Israeli tanks arrived Sabra and Shatila camps, and parrots move from house to house on the perimeter. Fighting breaks out in the northern sectors, where left-wing militiamen, and possibly Palestinian guerrillas, resist the Israelis.
2. Thursday, Sept. 16: The camps are several and civilians who had fled the previous day return. Israeli tanks and troops are withdrawn. During the day, Chamoun forces, made up of the south and Phalangite from east Beirut, pass through larsel lines and assemble south of the airport.
3. CHRISTIAN MALTIA POST
4. KUWAIT EMBASSY
5. ISRAELI ARMY OBSERVATION POST
6. SABRA CAMP
7. ISRAELI TANKS
8. LEBANESE ARMY POST
9. SHATILA CAMP
10. ENTRANCE TO CAMPS
11. COMBINE FORCES OF CHRISTIAN MALTIA POST
12. Heddad militia from the south
13. BURJA AL BARJAHEN PHALANGITE FROM BEIRUT
14. BEIRUT INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
15. AKKA HOSPITAL
Mediterranean Sea
West BEIRUT
East BEIRUT
RABAT OUE DE L'AL-MAH
SABAQ
SHATILA
Combined forces of Chad militants
BURJAL BARRAINE
Phalande in Beirut
Haddad militants from the south!
BEIRUT INTERNATIONAL PORT
BEIRUT INTERNATIONAL PORT
CHRISTIAN MASTEA POST 3 KUWAITI EMBASSY 6 AKKA HOSPITAL
From the airport staging area they move north and establish a command post next to an airline observation post overlooking the camps.
4. With Israel flares lightning the area, some 600 Christian militiamen enter the camps. Gunfire and explosions are heard throughout the night
Friday, Sept. 17
Out and out of the camps, campers troops look on and occasionally talk with the Christians but do not interfere. The children graves and cemetery bodies away from the area.
On Friday, Christian militan meniten Akkaa Hospital and kill doctors and nurses. On Saturday, 18. militan clear Gaza on Monday. 19. militan refugees and mach-ch them off at gunpoint.
"Hundreds and hundreds (of Israeli soldiers) did not feel strong enough to complain to their superiors (about the massacre). This is because we have come to disregard the Palestinians as people."
Uri Avneri, former Kenesset member
"...They (Israeli soldiers) had stood by as the murderers dug a 50 square yard mass grave and dumped Palestinian bodies into it—all within the direct line of sight of the Israeli observation post . . ."
"...(he) counted 70 corpses in one small area of about 100 square yards." Ray Wilkinson, Newsweek journalist
Newsweek, Oct. 4,1982
The Organization of Arab Students and the General Union of Palestinian Students wish to commemorate the massacre of Sabra and Shatila, two years after the tragedy. More than 800 Palestinians and Lebanese were murdered on Sept.16 and 17 of 1982. We attempt to illustrate the horror of human brutality hoping it to be a deterant for future inhumane treatment of all humans, a classification that includes the Palestinian people.
P
1940
Nador lost her family to the massacre in which she was injured. She, now, has a hospital for a home and the medical staff for a family.
The General Union of Palestinian Students (Palestinian Students Association) at KU will organize a SILENT MARCH today at 11:30 a.m. in front of the Kansas Union. Please join in.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1984
Page 7
'Huck,' near 100, draws debate
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As surely as the Mississippi River flows, controversy and attention continue to follow "The Adventures of Robert Finn" as it nears its centennial
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"It's as close as anything to a universally read American novel," said Michael Butler, associate professor of English. "Until recently it was the one book you could assume every student had read."
BUTLER SAID HE IHAD placed the book on the reading list for his English 05 course this semester.
1234567890
But school authorities in some U.S. cities have faced challenges to the use of "The Adventures of Huckleberry Fim" on grounds of racism Most recently, school officials in Waukee, III. last month removed the cover of a book breaking because of arguments about its offensiveness to blacks.
Three new editions of "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" are scheduled for release in February from the University of California
"For a long time the idea seemed to be that great literature made us better," he said. "I simply don't believe it. Literature at its best widens our sense of what is in the world."
In April, the University of Missouri will hold a conference on "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn."
"Twain spent a lot of time playing bad boy to the literary establishment," he said.
The Waukean case is one of at least eight challenges to the novel in American public schools since 1976, according to an American Library Association pamphlet on banned books.
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Vic Fischer, co-author for the Mark Twain Project at UC-Berkley. the original illustrations and omniscience would be included in the new editions.
BUTLER SAID TWAIN bucked literary conventions of his day by using dialect and unwholesome characters.
Some complain that the book is used as early as eighth grade in some schools. Others call for banning it. There are other reasons, few. Few, if any, bans have lasted.
Butler said such objections depended on a questionable view that literature should uplift readers morally.
THE ROOM
When "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" appeared in 1885, it was banned in Concord, Mass., as "trash food." The movie's title, according to the AMA pamphlet,
In one passage, for instance, Huck listens to a mistaken woman describe Huck's own death at Jim's hands: "The nigger run off the very night Huck Finn was killed. So there's a dollar for him — three hundred dollars."
THOSE WHO SEE racism in the book point to the frequent use of the term "nigger" and the kinds of
Some information for this story was provided by United Press International.
characters in the book, especially the simple-minded slave. Jim.
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Crafton-Prever Theater/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale at the Moody's Hall of Fame Office A10 students received Pupil Books $8 & instructional materials for students in grades 1-3 (B200) and 4-6 (B300).
Partially funded by the All Student Action Fund, National Library and the All Endowment Association.
Breeze relieves musicians during 'terrific' Band Day
By the Kansan Staff
The 37th annual KU Band Day marched along smoothly Saturday, and a cool breeze was a welcome relief to the musicians from 65 Kansas high school bands, who sometimes have swelled in warmer weather.
An estimated 5,000 musicians marched in a parade down Massachusetts Street and performed together at halftime of the University of Kansas-Florida State University game. Robert Foster, director of KU bands, said yesterday.
Foster said the event was terrific.
The high school bands marched on the field at halftime, covering it like a patchwork quilt with the school colors of each band. Mem-
pers of the KU band formed a "KU" in the middle of the field.
Flag corps and twirlers accompanied the bands and performed at halftime to "Over the Rainbow" and "Untainted Girl."
As in past years, the halftime show closed with the performance of "Battle Hymn of the Republic," arranged and directed by Foster.
"We never could have done it without them." Foster said. "They are the behind-the-scenes people who make it all work."
One of the reasons the event went smoothly, Foster said, was the help his band and staff received from the Douglas County Sheriff's Department, the Lawrence Police Department, the Highway Patrol and the University of Kansas Police Department.
The bands, twirlers and flag corps performed before 38,600.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1984
Page 8
No free sodas for recruits
NCAA rules affect boosters
By BRENDA STOCKMAN Staff Reporter
College athletic boosters who take a prospective recruit out for lunch on a soda may think they are helping the athletics. But the NCAA is not relating NCAA rules on recruiting.
Anyone can become a booster by trying to convince student athletes to attend a certain college, Lonny Rose, of the sports doctor, told 17 TU supporters Saturday.
Rose is a professor of law, who has served as the athletic director for the University of Kansas for a year. He led a seminar Saturday morning on "Alumni, Recruiting and the Student Athlete."
THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE Athletic Association regulates all contact between boosters and student athletes. Rose said. A booster could be an alumna, a faculty member, a coach, or someone unconnected to the school.
A NCAA rule could be violated, Rose said, if a booster bought a beverage or a meal for a prospective student athlete.
Several members of the audience were surprised that the NCAA recruiting rules were so strict.
Oliver Samuel, Emporia, said, "I thought as alumni we had more latitude than we do."
Samuel said that he and his wife had attended KU football games and had supported the Williams Fund, which accepts donations to support intercollegiate athletics, for more than 30 years.
ROSE SAID THAT boosters cannot, according to NCAA rules, encourage a high school student to attend a particular college before the graduation.
And if a booster does talk to a senior, the student becomes a prospective student athlete, and both the student and booster must follow NCAA rules.
Those rules limit a university to six face-to-face conversations with each prospective student athlete during his senior year, Rose said.
A student becomes a prospective student athlete when a member of the athletic staff or a booster calls a student, visits with a student's family, provides transportation to the campus, or provides entertainment to a student or his family. Rose said.
Entertainment does not include complementary tickets to three sporting events. Rose said, which are within NCAA limits.
IF A BOOSTER TALKS to the prospective student athlete, the conversation counts as one of the six, which means that the coach will have one less opportunity to convince the student to attend that college.
This means a booster's actions can identify a high school student as a prospective student athlete without university's awareness, Rose said.
No conversations of any kind between a booster and the prospective student athlete may be held during a high school student's freshman, sophomore or junior accept during the summer. Rose said.
But according to NCAA rules, the university is responsible if the booster violates any rules, said Rose
The NCAA seldom investigates minor violations by boosters, Rose said, but a series of such offenses has been reported. NCAA violations and draw an investigation.
BOOSTERS ARE OBLIGED to follow the same rules that athletic department officials must follow, Rose said.
all off-campus recruiting must be done by athletic department staff, boosters should not be afraid to mention their alma matrs to high school students, Rose said.
Although under a new NCAA rule
Rose said that the rule allows family and friends to visit with high school student athletes, as long as the friend or family member is not recruiting, and the athletic department has not encouraged the conversation.
The new rule was intended to stop the abuse of recruiting regulations by boosters. Rose said.
The rule only stops the off-campus recruiting by boosters, it does not stop the on-campus recruiting. Rose was held on-campus associations should be held on-campus as off campus.
RECruitment VIOLATIONS BY boosters at some schools have included offering jobs or special treatment for the athlete by the
"So this rule does not stop the evil the NCAA wanted to stop," said Rose. "It just stops the means."
Because NCAA rules limit conversations between coaches and athletes so much, Rose said the KU athletic department offers coached coaches to offer summer camps.
"Camps have become the biggest recruiting tool for schools." Rose said.
Coaches, athletic department staff and boosters can have unlimited numbers of conversations with high school students who are not classified as seniors during the summer. Rose said.
Camps also give the student the chance to examine the campus, Rose said. He said that he thought that campus visits helped recruit student athletes because they are allowed to see the facilities and the beauty of the University.
Man dies in police standoff
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Police stormed into a rented house where a Colorado drug dealer and escaped convict had held authorities at bay for almost 17 hours yesterday and found the suspect dead.
A police tactical unit entered the house through the basement about 8:30 p.m. and discovered the body of James Quaintana, known as the 'godfather of the Denver heroin in the hallway near the bedroom.
The suspect had been dead about three to four hours, but the cause of his death was not immediately determined, said police spokesman David Burns.
Police said they confiscated numerous weapons in the house, but declined to identify them.
Fifty to 60 armed police officers had surrounded the house in the quiet residential neighborhood north of the Missouri River since about 4 am yesterday, when he was arrested on the suspect. Burns said.
Quintana, who was considered armed and dangerous, had told police by telephone that they knew him and in get him," authorities said
Three people, two men and one woman, left the house and were taken into custody by federal authorities. Quintana called Sgt. Peter Edulph, a police negotiator, and said he was concerned about their safety.
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University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
State gets $17 million in extra road funding
By United Press International
WICHITA — Kansas has qualified for more than $17 million in additional highway funding (for the next two years to help repair its interstate highways, Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole said Saturday.
The funding comes with the stipulation that Kansas agree to make certain portions of the interstate highway's bonded indebentness is retired.
Dole made the announcement at
the Wichita Club.
ON THE RECORD
The Federal Highway Administration has approved an agreement between the Kansas Department of Transportation and the Kansas Turnpike Authority that will allow interstate repair funds to be applied to 178 miles of the turnpike, Dole said.
The 178 miles of interstate toll roads will not be eligible for the money without the agreement, she said.
A RADAR DETECTOR valued at $200 was stolen from a KU student's car parked in the 1000 block of Emery Road between 10:30 p.m. Thursday and 9:30 a.m. Friday. Police have no suspects.
Kansas is eligible for an extra $8.1 million for fiscal 1985.
TWO BICYCLES, valued at $300 and $289, were stolen from a front porch in the 1000 block of Learnard Avenue. The storefront steal the locked bicycles between "
a. m. and 6 p.m. Friday. Police have no suspects.
A SHOTGUN AND shells valued at $135 were stolen from a locked car in a garage in the 2400 block of University Drive between 9:30 p.m. friday and 5:50 a.m. Saturday. Police have no suspects.
A COLOR TELEVISION valued at $300 was stolen from a house in the 2800 block of Ridge Court.
Escapee arrested on I-70
Bv United Press International
TOPEKA — An elderly bank robber aided by two juveniles surrendered to police Saturday on Interstate 70 after allegedly taking an undetermined amount of money from a teller at a Topeka bank.
Samuel Wood, an escape from a Fort Worth, Texas, federal penitentiary, surrendered after police ran the car he was in off the road. A 15-year-old boy was driving the car.
The 15-year-old is the son of Wood's former prison cellmate, police said. A 17-year-old also arrested at the time was wanted in Texas on auto theft charges along with the 15-year-old.
No charges had been filed in connection with the case, and all three remained in jail, a jail spokesman said yesterday.
THE SUA STRATO-MATIC Base
Ball Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor
C of the Kansas University
TODAY
"THE DISLOCATED PEOPLE" and "Generations of Resistance" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium of the Union. The films are being shown in conjunction with South Africa Week
ON CAMPUS
THE STUDENT CREATIVE Anachronists will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Union
TOMORROW
SMALL WORLD will meet at 9:15
PRESBYSTHERIAN
Church, 243 West, w2d Sq.
THE PUBLIC RELATIONS Student Society of America will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union
GET STREETWISE, a workshop focusing on rape awareness, education and prevention, will begin at 7 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union. The workshop is sponsored by the highly Taylor Women's Resource Center
THE SUA STRATEGY Games
The SUA team 7 p.m. in the Trail
Region of Orange, FL
THE KU SWORD and Shield Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union
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Ham Steak 4.35 2.20
Fried Chicken 4.25 2.15
Filet of Fish 4.65 2.35
Meat Loaf 3.95 2.00
Liver & Onions 4.25 2.15
Chicken Fried Steak 4.59 2.30
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Spaghetti & Meatballs 3.95 2.00
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University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1984
Page 10
THE
GREATEST
SHOW
ON
EARTH
THE
GREATEST
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ON
EARTH
52680
THE
GREATEST
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ON
EARTH
Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus proudly presents:
STANLEY KUBRICK
RIO DE JANEIRO - AMAZING FEATHERHEAD AT THE CARNIVAL.
5
The Ringmaster
The spotlight blinds, and the center ring rings. Alone, standing in the middle of the ring, a blond statuesque figure, clad in a mail of colored sequins, utters the words that only one person may.
"Ladies and gentlemen, children of all ages. The Greatest Show on Earth are about to begin." says Dinny McGuire. He is ringmaster for the Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus and has been for three years.
"I say the same words every time, and in turn, that's the challenge of the job — doing the same thing about 1,200 times in a row and remembering that it is the first time the audience has seen it." McGure said in an interview with backstage. The 13th edition of The Greatest Show on Earth came last week to Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
ALEXander WILLIAMS
McGuire, who is from Oakland, Calif., has been acting in front of live audiences since high school. He said that running out in the center ring during the blackout and having the
The Showgirl
spotlight flash on him was an unprecedented thrill.
"It's an amazing head rush that I get paid for," he said.
The ringmaster's job is to act as a conduit for the performers' energy, McGuire said.
"My job is not to be remembered by the audience. My jobs to funnel the energy of the act to the audience, he said. He insisted on each act and divided each act the energetic introduction that it deserves is the real challenge.
"To do it best," he said, "to be completely at the disposal of the
Her sparkling, plumed headaddress never tipples — it never even slips. She can belt out a song, dance or high-steped jig and still look as though she just stepped out of the dressing room.
Alice Lynn, a showgirl and the first female vocalist in the Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus 113-year history, never saw a live circus until 1980. Lynn's sister persuaded her to go while the show was in Oakland, Calif., Lynn's hometown.
The Clown
"From the very first whistle I was knocked out," she said. "It was so incredibly theatrical."
Just auditioning for the circus was a great privilege, Lynn said. "I could have walked home and lived happily the rest of my life just having that opportunity."
But in 1981, after Lynn tried out for the circus, she didn't have to walk home consolled just with the opportunity to audition. She was offered a role at the New York City break tradition and be the first female vocalist in circus history.
After three years of performing in The Greatest Show on Earth, the excitement of each show has begun to fade, she said.
Lynn said she would never grow tired of the circus as long as her job would vary. "I would like to just sing and sing more," she said. "I would like to be ringmaster, but they're not ready for that."
"I don't get butterflies anymore because it's so routine," she said. "Sometimes you have to kind of wake yourself and up tell yourself, 'That's the millionth person sitting out there, the millionth person of the season.'"
His image instantly brings the circus to mind. People of all ages are like children, laughing at his sometimes absurd and always comical antics. He is the glue that holds all elements of the circus together.
He is the clown.
Wayne Sidley, who has been a circus clown for eight years, said he wanted to be a clown from the moment he saw his first circus at age
"Everything in my life just seemed to evolve and turn around and point to the profession that I've chosen as a clown," said Sadley, who is in charge of the circus' 26-member unit of clowns.
Whether dousing his fellow clowns with whipped cream in the centerering or waving to a child from an obscure corner of the stage, the white-faced clown is doing what he was destined to do.
A
"Clowns are not made, but they are born," he said. "Everybody is funny, but not everybody is a circus clown. Everybody's got a funny bone, but the funny bone is not always for the circus."
Stories by Erika Blacksher
Sidley, who used to be a Western Auto salesman in his hometown of Orlando. Fla., said people needed to experience the sensation and thrill of
Daring acts, splendid costumes and nonsensical clowns give people the freedom to release themselves without violence or anger. Sidley
"If they never see the circus, then just a little part of their life is missing." he said.
The world needs the circus, and the circus needs the clown. Silly said "P T. Barnum once said that clowns are the pegs on which the circus is hung."
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University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1984 Page 11
NATION AND WORLD
Japan plans to dump barrels of low-level waste in ocean
By United Press International
TOKYO - While Europe worries about a cargo of some 300 tons of uranium hexaflouride that sank off Belgium's coast, Japan is considering sinking about 1,000 times that much radioactive material in the western Pacific.
The plan to dump hundreds of thousands of barrels of low level radioactive waste at sea some 560 miles southeast of Tokyo and about half a mile southwest of the wealth of the Northern Mariana islands makes many people nervous.
At present, Japan's 27 nuclear power plants produce just more than 20 percent of the country's electric power needs. The Japanese hope to nearly double the number of plants — a move that would on atomic energy — by the year 2000.
THE REASON FOR the strategy is clear: Japan's precarious dependence on imported oil, which accounts
for 62 percent of its energy needs.
But the dangers also are clear. The nation's current stock of 520,000 drums of low level waste — disregarding for the moment a smaller quantity of high level waste — is built in size by the turn of the century.
"We have so far been intent on exploiting the merits of nuclear power," Arisawa said, "and from now on we will have to face up to its demerits — such as the treatment and disposal of waste.
Japan Atomic Industrial Forum Chairman Hiromi Arisawa expressed the fears of the nation's in an address in Tokyo last spring.
"To perfect an integrated (nuclear fuel) cycle which will also make for the disposal of high level waste is a task that must be solved by all means if national and international confidence is to be won."
uets that result from mopping the floor, laundering the clothes, filtering the air or changing parts in and out of a system of reactors = is chiefly one of volume.
"Our first object is to reduce the volume and put the waste into stable form for long term management," said Kanane Ikeda, a senior officer at the Science and Technology Agency's Atomic Energy Bureau.
"The new technology is to burn them to reduce volume before solidifying," Ikeda said. "Finally the liquid is used, either in the ocean or in the land."
BUT THE ISSUE has been complicated by vocal opposition from islanders and growing international concern over ocean dumping. Ikeda said.
He said he hoped groups opposed to the project would reconsider after a "hopefully favorable" multinational report on ocean dumping was released in September 1985.
Top students favor school prayer
By United Press International
And 63 percent of the honor students said they would vote for President Reagan. Twenty eight students backed Walter Mondale for president.
NEW YORK - A majority of top high school students favor school prayer and support a constitutional ban on abortion, a survey report showed yesterday.
The publishers of "Who's Who Among American High School Students" sent questionnaires to 5,000 of the 375,000 students listed in the
directory; 2,300 students filled out the questionnaires
Fifty-seven percent of the students said they supported a constitutional amendment either banning all abor-geration or allowing them except in specified circumstances.
The report is based on data collected in the survey. "15th Annual Survey of High Air Quality Views on Air Quality, Social Issues, Religion", last take spring
On drugs, 86 percent said they had never tried marijuana; 84 percent had not tried cocaine or other drugs. Three percent said they had never consumed enough alcohol to get drunk
Seventy-nine percent believe prayer should either be allowed or required in public schools. Half did not think prayer in public schools violates separation of church and
state.
Most opposed nuclear war and favored draft registration.
Other highlights from the report:
Other highlights from the report.
• Fifty-one percent said school was the major source of information about sex, birth control and VD.
• Fifty-eight percent believe the parents of unwed female males and pregnant females should be notified before abortions were performed.
Israel sets austerity measures
By United Press International
JERUSALEM — Israel's new unity Cabinet, meeting for the first time and under pressure from Washington to curb inflation and a soaring foreign debt, announced yesterday a $1 billion budget cut and a 9 percent devaluation of the shkel
Yitzhak Modai, the new finance minister, said Prime Minister Shimon Peres would present an Israeli austerity plan to President Reagan during a trip to the United States in the next few weeks. The plan involves all ministries cutting their budgets.
The government, in an announcement on state-owned television, said it was devaluing the Israeli shekel immediately by 9 percent, a move aimed at preventing a run on the dollar by Israeli nervous over reports of an impending devaluation.
At the same time, the government announced that the price of gasoline would rise by 9 percent and food stuffs would increase soon.
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Computer Football
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THE GAME. 3 teams are invited to a game
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TEAM 1. This game contains the most evaluative
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COLLEGE SURVIVAL THERE'S GOT TO BE A BETTER WAY!
Increase Your Reading Speed Up To 100% On-The-Spot
THE DECLINE AND
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HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE
NOTES
Cliff KA:BLOOT
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Seating Is Limited Please Arrive Early
There is. One free Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics lesson will prove it to you. Today take the free Reading Dynamics lesson and you can dramatically increase your reading speed in that one less lesson.
Why let the responsibilities that college demands deprive you of enjoying the college life? With Reading Dynamics you can handle both—
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Today you can increase your reading speed, dramatically at the free Reading Dynamics lesson. You've got nothing to lose but a lot of cramming and sleepless nights. Reading Dynamics. Now you know there is a better way. Take the free lesson and kiss your "NoSnooze" goodbye.
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CHOOSE THE DAY AND THE TIME MOST CONVENIENT FOR YOU. RESERVATIONS ARE NOT NECESSARY FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL (800) 447-READ
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
One killed in Muslim battle
By United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — A gun battle between rival Muslim militiamen erupted in the center of Lebanon's northern port city of Tripoli yesterday, leaving at least one civilian dead and 10 others wounded, security sources said.
In the Bekaa Valley, Israeli warplanes broke the sound barrier over the town of Baalbeck where a luncheon was being held for the visiting Syrian defense minister, the Christian Voice of Lebanon radio said.
Muslim militiamen fired at the aircraft with machine guns and anti-aircraft weapons but the barrage was not returned and there were no casualties reported, the radio said.
Israeli troops also were fired on in the south yesterday, where guerrillas attacked Israeli comvys twice with rocket-propelled grenades. Druse Muslim Voice of the Mountain radio said. No casualties were reported.
Security sources in Tripoli said the sudden outburst of sniping, which brought an abrupt end to the cease-fire, sent scores of civilians running for shelter and turned
motorists away from a city intersection where the early evening shooting was the most fierce.
Muslim Mourabitoun radio said five children were wounded when snipers opened fire on pedestrians and traffic. But Christian Voice of Lebanon radio said the children were wounded when a hand grenade they were playing with exploded.
There was no immediate independent confirmation of either radio report about the wounded children in Turpi, 42 miles north of Beirut.
Trippot, 42 miles north of Belfast.
The security sources said the sniping died down later in the evening.
Soviet paper attacks Reagan, Kohl
By United Press International
MOSCOW — A Soviet newspaper yesterday accused President Reagan and West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl of seeking to redraw the map of Europe to recover German territory lost by Adolf Hitler during World War II.
Sovietskaya Rossiya, in one of the sharpest in a recent series of attacks on West Germany, said the two leaders were repeating mistakes of the past by trying to reunite Germany and restore the boundaries that existed before
World War II
The Soviet article was the latest in the Kremlin's campaign against what it sees as a plan to reunify the two post-war German states and, at the territorial expense of the Soviet Union, redraw boundaries that were established at the Yalta Conference after the war.
In Bonn, the West German government rejected as polemical and unobjective the attack of the Soviet newspaper on West German policy.
It said in a statement issued by its press office that such attacks would not deter the government
from seeking dialogue and cooperation with the Soviet bloc.
The Soviet article said American officials attempted 15 years ago to turn West Germany into a warhead aimed at the Soviet Union, giving Bonn officials "the illusion that this U.S. warned them to fly to renegotiation, to the Reich with the borders it had in 1937."
Now, Sovietskaya Rossiya said, We were kolem and busily building up the arms race and "openly encouraging revanchists who demand that the post-war map be carved up in their favor"
Duarte urged to look into deaths
By United Press International
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — The leader of the country's Catholic church urged the government of President Jose Napoléon Duarte on Sunday to investigate a reported
army attack that he said killed 50 civilians. ...
At the same time, leftist guerrillas charged that the Salvadoran air force wounded four civilians Thursday in a bombing strike on a densely populated zone, violating a presidential order limiting attacks on non-
military targets.
Archbishop Arturo Rivera y Damas said that Legal Aid, a Roman Catholic human-rights agency, had investigated an alleged mass killing that took place Aug 30 near the village of Nueva Trimidad, 39 miles northeast of San Salvador.
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16 OZ.
PKG.
97¢
ALL AD PRICES EFFECTIVE WE ACCEPT GOVT. FOOD STAMPS THRU SUNDAY, SEPT. 23, 1984 AND WIC ORDERS STORE HOURS — 8 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon. thru Sat 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday
SPORTS
University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1984
Seminole afternoon
Seminole afternoon
Steven Purcell/KANSAN
Running back Greg Allen rushed for 133 yards on 16 carries Saturday. purpose yardage for FSU and is the school's leading career rusher breaking three Florida State school records. Alen has the most all- and scorer
12
Joe Wilkins III:KANSAN
Joe Wilkins III RIKANSAN
Nickie Andrews, Florida State defensive coordinator, pats Seminoles' cornerback Martin Mayhew on the helmet as Haynes runs off the field.
The Florida State Seminoles
led by All American tailback
Greg Alen, whipped Kansas
Saturday afternoon, 42-16,
in front of a Band Day crowd of
38,000 in Memorial Stadium.
Allen, a candidate for the Heisman Trophy, set school career records for rushing, all-purpose yardage and scoring in the game. The Jayhawks, despite loss, had a star of their own.
6
Quarterback Mike Norseth passed for 255 yards. Split end Johnny Holloway caught six passes for 141 yards, and wide receiver Skip Peele had seven receptions for 57 yards. Tailback Robert Mimbs had 80 yards rushing on 16 carries.
Jackie Keil/KANSAN Gloom hangs over the KU bench as players look onto the field.
SANDY
Kansas coach Mike Gottfried said that even though his team didn't win, it did everything he asked of it.
Steven Purcell/KANSAN
"When they play hard and give everything they've got you'd like to see them have some success." "That's why it hurts to lose."
KU running back Robert Mimbs is forced down by Florida State linebacker Paul McGowan at the line of scrimmage. Mimbs was held to 80 yards on 16 carries.
---
PEETE
42
I am a big fan of this movie. It is so funny and I love it. I will watch it again and see if I can get it on the screen.
Steven Purcell/KANSAN
Kawasaki
BUILDER
"Let The Good Times Roll"
PHONE:
(612) 735-4000
TEL. (612) 735-4000
1014 W. North St.
San Francisco, CA 94108
Gateways, Marine Park, 612-888-2177
Wenner Purcell KANANEK
KU wide receiver Skip Peete pulls down a pass for a 10-7 victory in fourth quarter. Peete ended the game with seven catches for 57 yards.
Paradise
Aran
Palm trees &
Pink flowers
Pancakes &
Pentimentos
And no more
lard times
Paradise in Punch
DOUBLE FEATURE
Rent VCR & Movies
Overnight $15
Cullinan
386-420-9711
www.cullinan.com
*STUDIO'S*
TWO BEDROOM
TWO BEDROOM
$200
CREATIVITY FW OOOD
CREATIVITY FW OOOD
2411 Cedarwood Ave
Phone 683-116
SAMSUNG PHONE & CUSTOMER
$2 discount with KU ID
Silver Clipper
To please you is all pleasure.
HAVE YOU BEEN to the WHEEL LATELY?
ARE YOU PREPARED FOR AN EMERGENCY??
Come To A
First Aid Workshop
Sept. 17, 6-10 pm
Room 202 Robinson
SADHANA IN HINDU TRADITION
FIVI ISLAND
A Palm Tree
FLACE Holdemore in Lawrence, Kansas on the 20th
Engineering Placement Office on the 21st
TIME 8:45AM
Enjoy excellent benefits and starting pay plus 30 days of vacation with pay each year
FORCE A great way of life
The Air Force now has openings for Pilots Navigators, Engineers and Technical Officers
To find out more about a rewarding career as an Air Force Pilot, Navigator, Engineer or Technical Officer, see the special officer recruiting team on
PILOT, NAVIGATOR, ENGINEER AND TECHNICAL OFFICER OPENINGS NOW AVAILABLE
on call collect
913-437-7935
Your college degree will be the first step in
following for these challenging positions.
DATE Sept 20th and 21st
M/F 10/8 Sat 10/5
B C
---
For the best selection of
Hallmark Cards & Gifts
shop at
ARBUTHNOT'S
Southwest Plaza 237, Iowa
(641) 2800
Hours:
M-F 10:00, SAT 10:50
KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
KU STUDENTS
Are you aware that you have a
Union that will pay you?
Credit Union that will pay you?
7% daily interest on checking with no minimum balance, no monthly service charge and no limit on order of checks written
All students eligible for membership and all service
864-3291
13% on IRA accounts that could possibly make you a millionaire
603 W. 9th
(9th & Louisiana)
Main Office 9-5 Mon-Fri
Drive-Up Window 7-8 Mon-Fri
Free money orders and VISA Travelers Checks to members
---
AT DIET CENTER
YOU CAN
LOSE WEIGHT
QUICKLY
& SAFELY
LOSE WEIGHT & FEEL GREAT!
AND OUR PROGRAM
COSTS LESS THAN HALF
THE PRICE OF
COMPETITIVE PROGRAMS!
CALL TODAY!
841-DIET
IT COULD CHANGE YOUR LIFE
YOUNG WILLIS
935 iowa/Hillcrest Medical Bldg
7 a.m.-6 p.m. M-F.
10 a.m.-noon Sat.
Cathy Kessinger
DIET CENTER COUNSELOR
DIET CENTER
1982
DIET CENTER
1982
Diet Center
1982
University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1984
Page 14
Prices Effective Thru Sept. 30,1984
The Saving Place $ ^{\circ} $
ULTRA-LASH MASCARA
Miyocollme ULTRR9-19S4U
0. 10-FI.Oz.
1.49 Per Pkg.
Sale Price
Maybelleine $ ^{\circ}$ Ultra-Lash $ ^{\circ}$ Mascara Value Water-proof, smear-proof, and long-lasting mascara. Fragrance-free. Shop now and save more.
GREAT-LASH
THE COLLAGEN
PROTEIN
KERNEL
E = -e / mohr
C = compton
Be = besselian
1 = 1 / mohr
2 = 2 / mohr
3 = 3 / mohr
4 = 4 / mohr
5 = 5 / mohr
6 = 6 / mohr
7 = 7 / mohr
8 = 8 / mohr
9 = 9 / mohr
0. 43-F1.Oz
1.99 Per Pkg.
Sale Price
Savings On Maybelline® Great-Lash®
Hypo-allergenic and dermatologist-tested. The
Savings On Maybelline Great-Lash Hypo-allergenic and dermatologist-tested. The Collagen Protein mascara that conditions lashes.
ULTRA-BIG ULTRA-LASH MASCARA
Lengthens
without
fibers'
langer long
longer
Long and
lasting too
Waterproof
Silicone保
防水Free
0. 41-F1.Oz.
2.09 Per Pkg.
Sale Price
Maybelline® Ultra-Big Ultra-Lash®
Lengthens lashes without fibers! Water-proof
smear-proof, long-lasting, and fragrance-free
Maybelline®
0. 37-FI.Oz
DIAL
-A-
LASH
MASK BRILLIUM
MASCARA
Design,
engineering,
gift and
shipping.
Production by
the Maybelline
company.
E-Dial a Lash
From the Dial
of the Maybelline
company.
2 For $5 Per Pkg. Sale Price
Dial-A-Lash™ Water-Proof Mascara Turn the dial for light, medium, or heavy application. Helps to prevent annoying globs and clumps
RICH
'N
GENTLE
LAST THE REMIND
MASCARA
WITH ELECTROPE
NAIL CONTROL
SYSTEM
Hypo
Allegroline
Lazy to
Hermes
With Heat
of Clay
Water
turn
the dial
to the thick
the key in
the key
against the
lawn
0. 41·Fl.Oz.
2 For $5 Per Pkg.
Sale Price
Save Today On Rich 'N Gentle® Mascara Lash thickening mascara with Dial Control® Removes easily with soap & water. Hypo-allergenic
SPORTS ALMANAC
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
| City | W. L. Petit, GB |
| :--- | :--- |
| Portrout | 50 | 54 | 636 |
| Denton | 83 | 66 | 152 |
| Baltimore | 80 | 67 | 144 |
| New York | 79 | 69 | 134 |
| New York | 78 | 70 | 153 |
| Cleveland | 69 | 81 | 606 |
| Akronwake | 62 | 86 | 419 |
| West | 62 | 77 | 32 |
Armstrong | 62 | 77 | 32 |
Detroit 8, Toronto 5
Boston 5, New York 7
Baltimore 11, Milwaukee 8
California 4, Chicago 2
Minnesota 76 72 514 —
Kansas City 76 72 514 —
California 75 72 510 —
Oakland 60 82 453 9
Colorado 65 82 453 9
Wisconsin 65 82 442 10
Battle 3 62 84 440 11
Minnesota 2, Texas 0
Kansas City 4, Seattle 2
Cleveland 8, Oakland 4
Boston (Ojeda) 11:11 at Toronto
Alexander 14:55, 6:38 p.m.
(Alexander 14-3), 6:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Haas 9-10) at Detroit
York Nikeco 16-8) , 7 p.m.
Chicago (Hoyt 12-16) at Minnesota
Baltimore (Swaggergy 3-2) at New York (Nekro 16.8), 7 p.m.
Petry 17 or Mason 0-1), 6.35 p.m.
Baltimore (Swaggery 3-2) at New
Chicago (Hoyt) 12-16) at Minnesota (Butcher 12-8), 7.35 p.m.
(u)oRFB 12-4(7), J. 5:3 HM
Kansas Yankees (Y) Black 15-11) at California
Washington
University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1984 Page 15
(Kison 4-4) 9:30 p.m.
Texas (Mason 9-12) at Oakland (Young 8-4).
Cleveland (Blyleen 17-6) at Seattle (Young 4-8). 9:35 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West
San Diego 82 66 354
Atlanta 74 65 194
Houston 74 75 80
Los Angeles 72 77 483
Cincinnati 61 86 421
Memphis 62 66 180
W I. Pct. GR
Chicago 90 .59 604 -
New York 82 .68 547 B'
crutaldephia 79 71 527 111
St. Louis 79 71 523 121
Montreal 73 75 463 181
Portland 65 85 403 169
Houston 3 San Diego 2
Chicago 5 New York 4
Los Angeles 5 Coral Coast 1
Alaska 4 Atlanta 2
AMC 4 San Francisco 1
Montreal 8. Philadelphia 4
Miami 7. San Francisco 5
Chicago 6. Los Angeles 7
Los Angeles 7. Cincinnati 5. 10 innings
St Louis 8. Pittsburgh 5. 10 innings
American Conference East
Monday & Fridays
New York (Gooden 168) at Phila delphia Rawley 94-1, 6:35 p.m.
Los Angeles, Welch 11-13 at Atlanta | Perez
12:6, 6:40 p.m.
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Josepha Rawley 94.9; 6'15" p.m.
San Diego (Whitman 13.8) at Cinecimati
851-870-2020
Houston 10. San Diego 9
W L T J Pct PP PA
Marin 2 0 0 0 67 54 24
NJ lays 2 1 0 0 67 60 24
New England 2 1 0 66 66 68
Kansas 2 1 0 67 60 24
Baltic 2 1 0 67 60 24
Pittsburgh 2 1 0 667 74 68
Cleveland 0 2 0 0 17 53
Cincinnati 0 3 0 000 62 90
Houston 0 3 0 000 62 90
West 0
LA Raiders 3 0 1000 74 41
Seattle 2 1 067 64 51
San Diego 2 1 067 60 58
Denver 2 1 067 58 58
City 2 1 067 50 20
National Conference East
| | W | L | T | Pct | PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| St Louis | 2 | 1 | 0 | 667 | 54 | 60 |
| NY Giants | 2 | 1 | 0 | 667 | 50 | 60 |
| Dallas | 2 | 1 | 0 | 667 | 50 | 60 |
| Philadelphia | 2 | 1 | 0 | 333 | 50 | 60 |
| Washington | 2 | 1 | 0 | 333 | 50 | 60 |
West
San Francisco 1 0 0 1 000 97 78
Atlanta 1 0 2 0 100 98
LA Rams 1 2 0 333 47 61
New Orleans 1 2 0 333 65 79
Minneapolis 27, Atlanta 20
Chicago 9, Green Bay 7
N.Y. Jets 41, Cincinnati 21
San Antonio 36, Chicago 21
St. Louis 14, Indiana 24
New England 38, Seattle 23
Tampa Bay 21, Detroit 17
Colorado Springs 17, Pittsburgh 24, L.A. Rams 14
San Francisco 39, New Orleans 28
Washington 7, Gaint 15
Baltimore 9, Denver 17
Denver at Cleveland night
Houston at Atlanta, noon
L.A. Rams at Cincinnati, noon
Miami at Buffalo, 8 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 23
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75
16-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80
21-25 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.85
for every 5 words add 25c 50c 75c 1.05
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
POLICIES
partition tables
On identical display area move one partition wide and more than one in deep deep. Maximum depth is six inches. No movement allowed! A partition is moved by moving it from one partition to another. No movement allows on identical display areas.
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
- Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words.
Classified Display ... $4.20
www.cleanuproads.com
- Deadlines same as Display Advertisement 2
* working days prior to publication
- Allusive rates based on comparable day increments
- Rates are discounted for new customers more often
No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement.
• No refunds on cancellation of prepaid classified advertisements.
**Instructions**
• Blink hot ads—phase add a $2 service charge.
• Check must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University of Delaware.
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
Teachers are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
until credit has been established
* Teachings are not provided for classified or
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Initial items can be added or deleted (IEE) of charge for a person not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed on any other site except http://www.414.info/414.
- Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount
- Samples of all mail order items must be submitted according to publication advertisements
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Applications are now being accepted for Student Committee members for the 1985 Kansas Relays. The student committee includes Jon Field House. Become a part of this great KU tradition! Deadline for application: Sept 20
Subject Stretcher coupons Thurs. evening at Mall Storehouse
Reference: Malls Shopping Center
TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION PROGRAM
FOR SCHOOL KIDS
WED. SEPT 18: 9:30 M
BREAD FM KANSAUN BON
NORTH CAMBRIA
BREAD FM KANSAS UNION
FOR MORE INFO CALL 843-9100
**DESARCH PAPERS** 906 page catalog 15.278
**OPTS** Rush & RESEARCH 11221 Mauzer, 366
**MLS** Los Angeles 90251 131 - 472 826
**Kansas Redskins** Student Committee is looking for a
coordinator for **14** Allen Yard House. Dunninism is September 23
The weekly seminar: Gospel of John for today,
an exploration of the message of the gospel by
Gregory P. Hines, March 25 at 9:30 a.m.
September 25, 2-4 p.m at Christ Church
Ministry 1214 bread come by or call 843-8033.
THE FAR SIDE
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PRO
breaks, preparing for exams and improving skills in reading, writing, speaking and listening coursework. Please visit www.kawaii.edu or 9:30 p.m., Jawahra Room, Kansas University NOTE This is the last foreign language program this year. Please visit www.kawaii.edu Assistance Center, 121 High St, 644-404
GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS SPECIALIST.COMPUTER SPECIALIST Half time graduate research assistance Successful applicant will be involved in design and im-
paper hardware are software for geographic information systems processing (graduate student in geography) or related discipline required; working knowledge of application programming in HMSC; background and coursework in geographic information systems or a contact. Contact the Kansas Angus Nicholls Hall, 864-4775. Applications deadline is April 1. Equal opportunity. Artificial Argument employs.
Interested in joining a small Christian group for caring, sharing action and prayer that meets weekly? Groups now forming at Ecumenical Church of Christ Center Bowl or call by 843-943 for information.
SENHIS YEARBOOK PORTRAITS: Shooting at place now, in student Organization & Activities Office 404 Kaukauna Union. Call yearbook office 12-8-12. Bk. Kaukauna University 844-7328
By GARY LARSON
9-17
© 1984 Universal Press Syndicate
"No doubt about it. Elington—we've mathematically expressed the purpose of the universe. God, how I love the thrill of scientific discovery!"
BLOOM COUNTY
Lassen
Bent-19" Color T.V. $28.00 a month Curtis
Mathes 147 W.23rd 842-7571 Open 9:30 - 9:00
M.F. 3:30 - 5:00 Sat
Rent VCH with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes 144 W 270 842 5737 09:30 - 9:50 p.m.
Saturday
Trailridge Athletic Club
Open to all KU Students and Faculty
Douglas County Open Racquet Ball and Handball Tournament
YAWN
"CLICK!"
LAST NIGHT IN ATLANTIC
LET'S A JURULANT STEPHEN
DALLA BOY WHO DOWNED
THE NEW MISTER
AMERICA."
Dates: Sept. 22,23 entry deadline Sept. 19
Get Streetwise! This workshop will focus on Rape Awareness, Education, and Self-protection skills.
7 - 9 p.m. Tuesday, Sept 11 Regional Room; kan-sa Union
841-7230 2500 W.6th Street
Shirley Bennett formerly of Charmine Beauty Salon is now at Angles Beauty Salon 940 Massachusetts M.H.Call (414) 645-8000 for Shirley Bennett. Ms. Bennett will be Trumaine for the KI Varsity men's and women's Bowling teams will be held throughout the week of Sept 17 - 21. Men with 100 and women with 130 or above averages are encouraged to try out. Conferences are free at the Kansas University for details.
FOR RENT
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All requests. Lighting included. Reasonable Rates. References: 749-1123
Large, furnished, one-bedroom. Apt w/ AC
utilities Paid $215, Sept. FREE, 11th & Kentucky.
Call 842-374-726 p.m. 2 p.m.
Available now. Remodeled two bedroom apartment at 129 Oread. One block of north on Union Cenning tan, new kitchen, large floor, fireplace $10 plus gas and electricity. Call 821-6106
Lease: 4-bedroom house $150 mo. Off street
parking. Call 843-6720
No need to live in a studios apartment. Haunt is available nearby for rent or lease. Come and see how this home could living situation provides private bedroom. 2.1/2 bath, modern kitchen, entertainment space, separate guest room. Fun study, organized租金; $135/mo, plus taxes. Call 860-479-4048.
KU STUDENTS AND FACULTY
We still have limited number of completely furnished apartments and townhomes. Some are perfect for three people; all close to campus! Call or stop by Hanover Place—14th and Mass
The University Daily KANSAN
841-5255, 841-1212,
749-2415, 842-4455.
Sundance—7th and Florida or
Opportunity for roommates. One block from campus, a big bedroom, living room, kitchen with full bath, three dining rooms, overlooking stationary library, put remodeled $10 per roommate for a 2 bed room unit like above for $12 per roommate for 3. See map to all attaches. Call 842-582-498, 842-582-494.
Tanglewood—10th and Arkansas.
Townhouse with finished basement available on only one side, good for 4 people $480. SUNISEE PLACE 841 126
Try cooperative living! Sandflower House, 1469
Tennessee 740-848) Ask for Dawn. Inexpensive &
Private rooms are available
by Berke Breathed
THIS MORNING, AMERICA'S NEW STANDING OF MINIMALNESS BEGAN THE FIRST DAY OF HIS REVENGE WITH THE TRAPITIONAL BREAKFAST IN BED.
STUDIO APT. All utilities paid. $163, 2 blocks from KU. KU 749. 1744 p. 12 p.m.
Spacious 1 bedroom apartments available for Fall for two. Included people fully equipped kit cabin, carpeting, central are, indoor facilities, laundry room, fridge, freezer. Picture for call: 847 3233.
Offered by:
Mastercraft Management
HOW DO YOU
FEEL THIS
MORNING?
YOUR MAJESTY ?
ABSOLUTELY
GREAT!!
Subjective 12 Dec 2014 from tenant Available Oct
Can lease longer from landlord after it, if desired.
2 bedroom in Alpeperiere Apartment. Unfri-
ed. On bursage 847571 evening.
Spring semester only... Fully furnished.
34bedroom, 21bath House. Great neighborhood.
close to camps, complete with 2 child-living dogs. 4100 mcq 34146.
*TWO STORY AP* On bus route 2, HI-12 1/12H
*A. received jacket, W. hoodie* No children on pet dogs. Prefer quiter, matte couple or in-
pair. Plus amenities. Dep, and 1 year
842, 535 IH
FOR SALE
1980 Ford Pinto, economical, reliable, best offer IBM electric typewriter, good, $60 749 7487. 5:30 p.m. l. 12:30
1981 Florida Moped runs, needs some work, $75
Software, Fortran for Kpro II, never used, $20
876-661) after a life of 69 months
1981 Red Banda 70 Passport with baskets 100 miles and in good condition $395, negotiable Call 847-627 Dan
8 Channel P.A. board with set of speakers $900
Shawn, 842-6021
AUDI Fox, 1977, 4 dr. auto $1950. Electrowater speakers $120 ea. Pioneer speaker 30W, $200. Kewaud speaker 73W, 841-1912
Almost any Soundconsole console星级 Excellent condition. includes & track, cassette, & phone $20 or best offer Call 841-0455 or 841-0760.
Apple iPad 4/16G, disk drive with controller $799
Apple iPhone 5/16G, another monitor Apple printer
$299
BMR iPad 3/128G, drive $199
BMR iPad 10/128G, drive $199
BMR iPad Portable 2.0
k-100 driver, Call Monitor at 842/757 or
k-200 driver, Call Monitor at 842/757
Canon AEI, like new, great price! basic ac-
censures, $75, 28-43 UV.
COLUMBIA 3 speed girl's take $50, 749-1764. 9
p.m 12 p.m
Buffalo briefcases, collections, foil hand bags, luggage notesbook and much more at Serenely Leather 911 Massachusetts 842-6046
Comic books, used Science Fiction paperbacks,
Playbooks, Penthouses, etc. Max's Open, com
10. 6 Tues. Sun 811 New Hampshire
DRAFTING MACHINE Sturdy Bruning
machine with scales, works great $150;
negligible $249.606
EVERYTHING GOES. Car, 760 Voucher, fuel
power, furniture, bedroom set, dining room set,
2 cubs, ornamental rugs, TV and much more. Call
499-4000.
For furnishings for your living, we have what you need. Shift stores at 618 Vermont and 16 Fitzsimmons Sunnister St. (orange table 800) Gold Guild Bath with coffins. Eyes 249-4195; Misc. Lionsgate 800 with coffins. Eyes 249-4195.
Hewlett Packard Printer plotter for use with HP-14C, CV-CX, Mark B43, M16.
Motorcycle 7.1 Sazaki GT 290, 225, or make of —
n235 of 841, 1822. leave message
Kadar detector Escort 1984 7 mos old.
141. 611. 8250 or 611. 8251 Have message
RALEIGH RECORD Brand new men's 24'
$150 844-6436 evenings
Rainbow Press LCS 1968 2 hours 7 minutes w/papers $300 or best offer 841 0021
Housecore AMATEUR 610 like new $150
Rolling Machine AMREC 610, like new. $150
Mark, 822 3244
Radar detector, Excerpt, 1964. 7 mos, old,
w naperx $300 or best deal 814 0013
Squeezed red 1984 Honda Sprees low mileage, great condition $775, callable. Call Santa; 740-739-1294
Mark, 842-3554
Sprayed red 1984 Honda Spree loss mileage, great
Suzuki GT-115 300 iire tree, sprockets, tank
back and back rest. Must sell. 841-6629
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplement on Now: Make some use to them. The supplement will help you prepare for exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization: acknowledge now at Town Creek University.
Used-Metal Office Chairs. Side chairs with &
without arms $15 & $10. Snoevel chair with
carshes $13. Exe. Snoevel chair with carshes $20
$40,322 after 5 m.
K2 K. M乌师军 I 4 Disk drives (1.2 mb)
Hardware GRT with Graphics, combo with WORD
STOR, PAXC, C. cfe, $900 Call GI after 8 p.m.
at 841720 or 844254
Windbreaker Sailortr. SLR, 1802 model Regat?
Makes sense to use them. 1. As study guide. 2.
For class preparation. 3. For exam preparation.
COMPILER TERMINAL ZevnZT II (Terminal with built in Auto Dial Modem, auto login feature, parallel centronics) and RS232 ports. ZevnZT M12 11h has monitor #481 842 286.
Zenith Z-19 Terminal and J-cat modern. Communicates CP 6 and Honeywell, $70 retail. Price昂贵. 841-4949
New Analysis of Western Civilization available now at Train Creek, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and Oread Bookstore.
Wunderbar Sailor - Sft 1, 082 model. Regatta
salit, 12 fll. 400g / $490 and 841-0033
www.wunderbar.com
AUTOSALES
1971 Malibu 30-2611) PR. PA. New charter,
water pump, water pump, fuel exhaust $500
nepotable. Call 841324 after 7. ask for Paul
Robbler
1973 Ford Mustang, PS, PR AC, 153 Cleveland engine AM/FM Cassette player snow tires Run large, body rough $100, repireable 841-7590
1963 Toyota Corolla, a dependable road warrior from the Land of the Rising Sun $1000. Ask for Paula 840-410 or 843-509.
1974 Valve Wagon, Speed 1195, 1845-2634 or
740-1646 (leave message)
1972 Plymouth Fury, great body and paint. Runs
1978 Ford Fairmont, 55,000 miles; 2-door, blue,
4-cyl. PS. PB. new stereo $195, negotiable
842-7378
197. Toyota Corolla, good condition, runs great,
must sell $860, 843-8156 or 842-8222
1979 MCG, New Top, excellent condition $350, or
make an offer. Call 842-3203
CAR for sale. Great around from car. 62 LeMain
Great interior. Price negotiable. Call after 5 p.m.
841 8438
Ocean Wash MK 5 for sale at MetLife Moda, 804 N. Broadway, FORESTA, 1904. 4:00 p.m. floor wheel drive. AM FM, great fun to drive. New tires, hat. Inventory #: 87036. 841-353-6276.
VM-PM. great img! fun to drive. New tires, hatry,
brakes, exhaust] baked 879-841-361
MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY. 1622 Ford Puma extra clean, perfect interior, great. Best of rest for KGS by 12 moun. Monday. Fred. 843.1722 keep firming
Must sell 1973 Plymouth Duster for $25 or best of
for Sharad saxe engine's speed new clutch, AM/FM
siren. Call 246-1212 for more info
Dependable female to assist with disabled calls.
No experience required. Mornings, weekends
morning hours available. Call between 14:
2948088
Tired of parking cars that need lots of work? Extra clean 72. Cordoba, 79.00 miles. 185.842, 820.982
Backy's Drive-in is now taking applications for part time employment. Apply in person, 10-5 BUCKY'S DRIVE IN 2120 W. 9th
HELP WANTED
Dependable female to assist disabled with care.
No experience required. Morning, weekend &
evening hours available. Call between 1:
240-0288
FRESHMEN- It's not too late to join NAVAL
ROTC. Call 644-3161
Female Models for 1983 Calendar and posters, and phone number necessary. Send photo and phone number to Bill Hoeber Photography, Box 201 Paula Kaiwa, 66071
Assistant Managers needed Day or Evening TACO VIA 700 W.23rd 84H-4848
PART TIME, early evening hours five days/wk,
15-20 am or 12-15 pm each week. Above wkage, wavering performance cleaning services in common rooms and for interiors; for intérieur view, between a 10 and a 5 m².
Non smoking, married couple to care for horses, lawns and gardens and to perform general human activities. In house on site, house near Clinton Dam is required. Sewn resume in case. E-Z Shop, ZP 209 Southwest Ave, Fort Wayne, IN 46801.
PIZZA AT STEPHANIE'S Our drivers can earn $6 or more in one hour. Now hiring. Call 841-8000 or apply in person at 213 Yale Rd.
PROGRAM ADVISOR, GRADUATE ASSISTANT. Half time for 9-12 months. Person serves as advisor to Student Union Activities Board, SUA; Programming in Division K, MU Student Union; Programming in Division L, MU Student Union; planned events, working some evening, weekends. Double hours. Requires Barbara a Bachelor's degree in computer science or programming as student leader in programming and or campus activities. ability to promote academic growth. Prefer strong background as student leader in programming and or campus activities. ability to promote academic growth. Prove program quality, implement and evaluate SUA programs. Begin 01 or as count toward SUA programs. Submit resume and three letters of reference to Kansas University Office (123) Road Avenue KSU. Interviews will be conducted on September 27, EOF. Part-time Bartender and Cocktail waitresses.
Parttime Bartender and Cooktail waitresses
Must be 21 yrs. of age. The New Place, 2406 Iowa,
842-9093
University of Kansas Budget Office has an open position for a continuous half-time graduate assistant in the Summer program. The position will assist with the process of budget and accounting transfers for the four University of Kansas programs; preparation of the four University Budget. The person assists in the planning, execution, and coordination and have an opportunity to work within the University financial environment in accounting, and good written and oral communications skill required. $400 - $80 per month for 15 hours a week. **For more information call Ann Whitekearn.** **For more information call Ann Whitekearn.**
*Part-time positions as female companies to
tutelize女 $1.50 hour. Time to read and study
during hours call. Hour 8424568. 8:30 9:30
o.m.
Applications available in 319 Strong EHO. EOE
ACU QO 1700 W.23rd. New Hiring. 841-4868
Kitchen is open 8:11, 30 p.m. for wings to go. Money
through Friday. Only at the Wheel
MISCELLANEOUS
Luncheon Specials. Hamburger steak chicken fried steak, fried cheese, french dip, and is different (only at the Wheel) PHOTO TYPESETTER (headliner). Friden
PHOTO TYPESETTER headmaster Friden
38 types 20 cups 伯, best, cour. Send Call 841-707-9
PERSONAL
S.W.M. 36 inmate, seeks a taste of freedom thru correspondence Serious inquiries only B
B1120200421508970
BUSINESS.PERS.
COMPRESHENEVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
early and advanced outpatient, quality
medical care confidence, assured Greater
Kansas City area. Call for appointment
EPA requires tests on just 12 synthetic chemicals, there are hundreds. Multipure your water. 842/7618
M M
732 Mass. 843-0611
INDIAN JONE
Vintage, formal wear.
I want to sing for every occasion—Birthdays,
Parties, Weddings!" John, operative tenor,
841.1674
Inflation Fighter, 4-East 7th. For your needs in
culture and party clothes, hats, gloves, ties,
dresses and men's suits. Come in & Browse Hours:
10:00 to 5:30, Sat. 10:00 to 6:30
PROBLEMS $ ^{1}$ Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center listens. Free 24 hr. 841.2345, or new location. 149 Massachusetts.
Community Mercantile
Lawrence's Natural Food Grocery
700 Main St. Lawrence, Nanaimo 65554
STRAIGHT AHEAD. A well help group for people wanting independence from marijuana, is now forming. Call Headquarters for more info 841-2945.
7 pen set
$13.50 $4 pen set $22.50 while special last. Strong's office systems, 104 Vermont; 843 3644
CUSTOM SEMINING Dressmaking and alterations Call 842-5375 Reasonable prices
RESUME要求. Let us assist you with that first good impression. Professionally written resumes and coverletters, word processing and quality papers. 5 East 7th, 841-226
Warm, caring people who like children ages 3-5 are needed as volunteers at Head Start for a month. Volunteers ages 3-5 may join m to 17 p.m. on Monday through Friday. For more information call 842-945.
The New Place, for a rich atmosphere at an affor-
dable price. The New Place, a private club, 2400
lowa. 942-9091
Whole Sale Sound Rental P.A. Guitar and Bass
amps, mikes, Graphic EQ, Disco systems.
814 6495
Turn a PANTON marker into an Air Brush?
Leetrapt Air Markers in stock Strong's Office Systems, 1940 Vermont, 843-3644
SERVICES OFFERED
Announcing, Troy Anderson, University of North
Carolina Performance, has joined the staff at His &
Hers Performance as special Assistant Harlan
54. Peninsula. Come see Troy for that special
64. 849. 520. 121 Connecticut
Charme Beauty Salon is now offering Haircuts for $7, and permits for $2& up. Call or come for an professional cut or perm at a great price! Charme Beauty Salon, 513 East Mass., 843-2200.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, (803) Massachusetts,
downtown All haircuts; $5. No appointment
necessary
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841.3716.
**Charmin Beauty Salon** - Home of the Sf Harur Environment campus photos studio - Modeling, Dance and Theatre portfolios or composites IMPRESSIONS - call 843-7194 for information
TEENN: Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner Advanced Group Individual 842 5385
Voice Lessons - DMA voice candidate accepting non-credit singers Experience with all type voices! 841-4965
YAMABA MUSIC SCHOOL, 4-6 yrs. beginners.
Obsen Piano and Organ. 845-975
TYPING
24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes.
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and latest service. 841-5066
TYPING PLUS assistance with competition
editing, grammar spelling, research themes,
dissertation papers, letters, applications.
james Have JM Dive 341624
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy
842 7945
Always try the best for professional service.
Term papers, resumes, etc. Reasonable
842.3246
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers Word Processing. Professional Results - resumes, papers, a specialty. Call 749-1118
Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, term
papers, documentations, e IBM correcting serves
the II. 842.473 or II. 842.617. Nossen to p. m.
DEPENDABLE professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAPPER - Typing Service
JEANETTE SHAPER also standard case tape
842.807
ON TIME PAPERS TYPED FAST & EFFI
BUR 841-2300
Professional TYPING, EDITING GRAPHICS,
IBM Correcting Selectric. Kathy. 842.3378 before 9 p.m.
Someerite & Assoc. Inc., Professionals at Comfirmative Rates Word Processing, Typing in APA Style *Lawrence* 901 Kentucky 841-3440 805-3231 805-3236
TIP TOP TYPING 120 rows *Professional typing*
processing, editing Resumes from start to finish, repetitive letters, editing, our specialties
of research, and more. Self-sell certifying s
The department of mathematics is hiring tutors for Math 101. All applicants must have completed a math course and be able to perform Bill King Room 25 F Room 96. We are 8:40 a.m. Applications are available in the Math 101 room.
Typing in my home. Have IHM Correcting Seize TIJ. Reasonable prices, Call Judy at 843-0886.
WANTED
**or** 1983 HONDA URBAN EXPRESS wanted with low mileage and in good condition. Call Scott D. at 843 1772
3rd person needed in East Lawrence house with large yard & garden. Non-smoker Bus route:
$125, plus 1.5 abilities. 842-729.
Experienced typist. Term, papers, thesis, all museaminales, IBM Dorem selective, Eite on Pica, and will rewrite spelling. Phone 841-9544. Mc Wright.
Experienced back massage needed. Prefer McColum or Elfworth resident. Call Scott at 844-6502 by 6 p.m.
HELP' Need ride to western Nebraska weekend of Sept. 21. Call Christy K. 840-6336.
Female Roommate to share 2 bedroom house,
walking distance to campus $16250 plus 1/2
utilities Call Monica 749-7213
Looking for female roommate to share completely
turnished, 2 bedroom Apt. Rent $147.00
must be paid. Phone: 239-049
Male Roommate to share 2 BR, Park 25 Apt. in
Lawrence 1/2 utilities. 1/2 rent. 1642-450 for
Appl.
Male Roommate non-smoker Separate bedroom & study Washer Dryer $125 mo plus 1/2 utilities Call 749-2812 or 1-665 7732
roommate. Female grad or serious student
not smoker, preferred, to share a nice
bedroom. All adults must fill full席位
Rommates wanted to share two hotel man, flat that rate utilities and rent. Phone and Cable TV, extra. Washer dryer. Non-smoker. Call 414-2822 after 5 p.m.
Roommate to share nine three-bedroom Apt.
$156 mo. utilities paid. Deposit: 841.9344
Dormate needed to share house with 3 guys $102/mo, 15% of utilities, own bedroom; near campus Call 641-8681 Desperate
Students wishing to lose 20 lbs per month
Easy, economical vitamin herb method
satisfaction guaranteed. Mag. 414-674
We buy VW's, running or not. Call Metric Motors
841 6000
LOST AND FOUND
Cash.
And carry.
when all appropriate information is available.
maintain floor and furniture arrangement.
maintain electrical and lighting equipment.
every day keep area clean and tidy.
take advantage of quality construction.
avail all possible written, verbal and visual information.
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
September 17, 1984 Page 16
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
4-2 victory over Mariners keeps Royals tied for first
SEATTLE - Two-run doubles by Frank White and Steve Baldoni led the Kansas City Royals to a 4-2 victory yesterday over the Seattle Mariners.
With the victory, the Royals remain tied with Minnesota for first place in the playoffs.
Baltoni's double broke a 2:2 tie in the sixth inning. Darryl Murrey drew a walk off Salome Baroas, 9,6 and was replaced by pinch runner Lynn Jones. Jorge Orta forced Jones at second and White singled to center. Baltoni then drilled a ball off center fielder Phil Bradley's glove, scoring both runners.
Charlie Leibrandt, 10-7, allowed five hits and walked two batters over the first six innings and picked up the victory. Joe Beckwith gave up just two hits over the final three innings, earning him his second save.
Kansas City jumped out to a 2-1 lead in the first inning on White's two-run double. But it was his third inning, and the
Seattle got a run back in the second on Dave Henderson's 14th home run, a solo shot to right.
Cross country teams win
The men's and women's cross country teams were victorious Saturday against Southern Illinois at the Jayhawk's home course at Rim Rock farm.
The men defeated Southern Illinois 19-33 (low score wins), taking four of the top six places. The top finisher was Brent Steiner with a time of 25 minutes, 12.2 seconds. Second was SIU's SIX Bunyan in 25-26 KU'S Greig Leibert finished third with a time of 26.0.
Rounding out the top six were Joe Manuel IV, 26-29.6; Wayne Gauk, III, 28-25.7; and Drew McKenzie, 30-29.4.
The women swept the six top six places, detaining Southern Illinois, 15-45.
The top finishers for KU were Susan Glatter with a time of 18:33.37, followed by Cindy Blakeley, 18:51.51, Caryne Finlay, 18:56.62, Tracee Keith, 19:08.54, Paula Berquist, 19:12.8, and Trisha Mangen, 19:17.1.
Head coach Cliff Rovello said the women had a good team effort, which will be needed to do well in the conference, but that the times were slower than he expected.
Gnewuch leads golfers
The women's golf team was 14th in a field of 14 teams yesterday after the first round of the Cowgirl Invitational in Stithville, Kansas (imflashed the day at a score of .269).
The first place teams are Oklahoma State and Texas A&M with scores of 310.
The individual scores for the Jayhawks are Tana Gnewich, 84; Maureen Kelly, 86; Brenda Sanders, 95; Tom Shocky, 95 and Jane Hellegger, 98. The tournament leader is Audrey Bendick from Oklahoma with a 72?
The tournament will continue today and tomorrow.
Trailing Oklahoma State and Texas A&M in the team standings are Tulsa, 315; Houston Baptist, 316; Southern Methodist, 317; Lamar, 318; Oklahoma, 322; Texas Christian, 323; Nebraska, 329; Missouri, 329; Wichita State, 341; Michigan, 340; Kansas, 340; Arkansas, 340.
Bahr's field goal downs Chiefs
The Raiders remain undefeated. Kansas City fell to 2-1
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Chris Bahr kicked a 19-yard field goal with one minute left in the game, giving the defending Super Bowl champion Los Angeles Raiders a 22-20 victory yesterday over the Kansas City Chiefs.
The Chiefs, who blew a 13-3 halftime advantage, took a 20-19 lead on a 5-yard run by rookie Herman Heard with 4:46 remaining. Six plays before Lloyd Burrell had intercepted the ball, pass, pass. The Titans' possession for the go-ahead drive at the Los Angeles 45.
But Plunkett shoo off that interception, his fourth of the game, and drove the Raiders 73 yards in the closing minutes for running field goal. Bahr's third of the game.
Kansas City mounted its halftime lead with a pair of field goals by Nick Lowery and a 71-yard interception return for a touchdown by rookie Kevin Ross.
Los Angeles railed from a 13-3 halftime deficit and took a 19-13 lead on a 3-yard touchdown pass from Plinkett to Christensen, a 1-yard touchdown run by Frank Hawkins and a 43-yard goal by Bair, the latter coming with 8.07 left in the
unree stabbed at match
VERONA, Italy — At least three people were injured, one of them critically, during fighting between Verona and Napoli fans wielding knives before the start of yesterday's first division soccer match, police said.
Officers identified the critically injured fan as Gianni Gallio, 18, of San Giovanni Ibarone in Verona province Gallio was wounded at Verona's Leontro hospital.
Two other Verona fans, Nicola Dell
Acqua 28, and Gabriela Noto 21, were
wounded in the attack.
Verona defeated Napoli, 3-1, in the opening match of the season in which Diego Muradana of Argentina, the world's top defender, was making his league debut for Napoli.
More Sports on pages 13,15
KANSAS 7
14
Joe Wilking III/KANSAN
KANSAS 27
Florida State defensive tackle Isaac Williams puts pressure on Kansas quarterback Mike Norseth during the fourth quarter of the KU-FSU game. Norseth was eventually sacked for a loss of 10 yards on the play by Seminole defensive lineman Gerald Nichols. Norseth passed for 255 yards in the game, but Florida State won, 42-16.
Holloway's identity no longer a mysterv
By GREG DAMMAN
Sports Editor
In Kansas' season opener against Wichita State, No. 29 for the Jayhawks, a split end, caught three passes for 42 yards and one touchdown
Who was he? His name wasn't on his jersey, and he wasn't on the team last year.
"It was just a simple 16yard curl pattern," he said. "When I was in the air catching the ball I anticipated a hit by the time I reached the ground. But I didn't get hit, so I hesitated and the two defensive backs collided.
KU fans found out about No 29 — Johnny Holloway — in the Jayhawks 42-16 loss to Florida State Saturday. However, having his name freshly stitched onto his jersey had less to do with it than his performance on the field.
His touchdown catch allowed Kansas to go into the locker room at halftime trailing the nationally ranked Seminoles by just 10. Holloway described the play in detail.
Holloway caught a 70 yard touchdown pass and finished with 141 yards receiving on six catches. His receiving vardage was second highest in his single game total in KU history.
Fast indeed Florida State defenders were closing fast when Holloway caught the ball but he outraced them to the end of the field. This led to a grasp of one defender at the 10-vard line
"ITURNED AND saw daylight, so I ran
Fast."
Holloway's touchdown came just before halftime, and caused the Florida State defenders to cover him more tightly in the second half.
"He has great speed and great moves," Kansas quarterback Mike Norseth said. "He got us into the end zone."
"The second half they double-teamed me a couple of times, and they brought their corners (cornerbacks) up," he said. "A lot of times they called a pass to me."
but I couldn't run it because their defensive backs would read me."
He beat out Richard Estell, who was listed No. 1 on the spring depth chart, for the startling split end spit. Holloway said that the offense was confident going into the game.
Florida State coach Bobby Bowden said he impressed with the Kansas receivers
we did not have any doubt in our minds we could move the ball against them," he said. "It built up our confidence a great deal. I'm not taking anything away from Florida State, but we hurt ourselves in a lot of cases."
Holloway played at Northwestern University as a freshman, and at Butler County Community College as a sophomore. In August, he turned down offers from Tulane and Missouri and came to KU!
"THEY HAVE SOME great receivers who seem to catch anything that comes close to them," he said.
Holloway said that KU's inability to score touchdowns on its first two possessions was important, but not the determining factor in the game.
"It would have made a big difference." Holloway said. "It would have changed the momentum, but I wouldn't say it would have turned the whole game around."
He also mentioned KU penalties as a crucial part of the game.
"There's no doubt they hurt us," he said. "Wed get a first down, and then they'd bring it back with a penalty — and it kept happening again and again. That hurts a young team like us." JANHARK NOTE
JAYHAWK NOTES
Linebacker Wille Pless led Kansas in tackles with 11, eight unassisted. Lineman Phil Forte was next with seven tackles, six unassisted
The Jayhawks travel to Nashville, Teen, this weekend for a game against Vanderbilt. They will play against North Carolina at Chapel Hill, N.C. the following week. Kansas will not play at home until the Iowa state Game Oct. 6.
Coach Mike Gottfried knew exactly what his team needed to do to beat Florida State Saturday. He knew that his team would have to make the same effort up with the Seminoles, high-powered opponents.
Sports Editor
'Hawks get yardage but FSU gets points
By GREG DAMMAN
Even though the Jayhawks had trouble scoring, KU ended the day with 462 yards of total offense Florida State, with All-America tailback Grainy Allen gained 133 rushing yards on 16 attempts, finished with 468 total yards. At halftime the 17th-ranked Seminoles were leading by a slim, four-point margin of 14-10.
As it turned out, putting' the ball in the end zone was the only thing his offense had trouble doing, as the Jayhawks lost to the Seminoles. 42-16.
"It was an offensive game where we'd move the ball and move the ball and couldn't score," Gottfried said. "Then they'd move the ball and score. That was the kind of game it was going to be. You have to match points, and we didn't match points."
THE KANSAS OFFENSE took the opening kickoff and drove to the Florida State six-yard line, capping the drive with a 31-yard field goal by Dodge Schwartzburg.
The Jayhawks also reached the Florida State 26-yard line and 11-yard line on their next two possessions. An interception and a goal, respectively, stopped the two drives.
"I'd like more points than I would yards." Gatfried said. "I'd like to get on the map."
Florida State capitalized on the interception with a 15-yard touchdown pass from Eric Thomas to Hassan Jones, and took the lead, 7-3. The Seminoles also scored after the missed field goal, benefiting from a 40-yard run by fullback Cletis Jones, and led 14-3.
"Once we got inside the 30-yard line we couldn't get it out," Gatfield said. "You can go down one time and throw an interception, and then go down another time and miss a catch."
Quarterback Mike Norseth said, "We did a good job offensively at first. We got the ball down in scoring position, but we just couldn't reach it." The referees were on that and do that a little better job next week."
Norseth completed 18 of 32 passes for 255 yards and one interception. He was also able to scramble for 50 yards rushing on 11 attempts. His scrambling was more effective in the first half, when he had 5t yards on five attempts.
"There were a couple of times when some holes were there and I was able to scramble and pick up some yardage." Norsseth said, "I had to carry it out until you, what you just want to do that when you have to..."
'I probably ran a little too much today coming out of the pocket. They'd rather have me in there.'
Just before halftime, Kansas defender
David Smith forced a Florida State fumble on the KU four-yard line. The Jayhawks moved to the KU 30-yard line before Norseman scored a touchdown for a thrilling 70-yard touchdown pass.
"IT WAS JUST a simple 16-yard curf
pattern." Holloway said. "They played us
awful loose the first half. I guess they were
afraid of the deep ball."
Florida State coach Boby Bowden said he was impressed with KU's passing offense
The score remained at 14-10 until 3:58
remained in the third quarter when Cleitis
Jones scored on a one-yard run, making the
score 21-10.
Gottried was more upset with KU penalties on Florida State's first drive after
On KU's next possession, punter Tom Becker fumbled a snap and was tacked on the Florida State 15-yard line. The Serrinoles scored a touchdown, and then blocked Becker's on KU's next possession and carried it in for another touchdown.
"That happened real quick, and all it did was blow it open," Gottried said. "We couldn't stop them, so I didn't know if it was as big of a thing as us just not stopping
"The one drive we were just down 11 and we get two 15-yard penalties," he said. "Not being able to stop them, and then moving closer yourself is not the best thing to do."
FULLBACK LYNN WILLIAMS scored on a 14-yard foot with 9:30 left in the game. Norseth's pass attempt for a two-point conversion was incomplete, leaving the score at 35-16.
we were moving the ball well, but we swear ourselves, or worse said. They didn't believe us.
Florida State's final touchdown came on a yard run by Allen, making the score 74-6.
"He's good," Gottfried said. "They have several different backs that are good. Allen is good. When you have a guy like Allen, it opens things up for the other backs."
KANSAS' NEXT GAME will be Sept 22 against Vanderbilt at Nashville, Tenn.
Norseth said, "We haven't looked at them yet. We'll have to see what they do. We know they're a good team, but we're a good team too, so it should be a good game."
"We have to look at things now and just piece together what is good and what was bad and get ready for the next team." Gottfried said.
Defensive lineman Phil Forte said that he
had improved since the Wichita State state.
I feel we're a better team this week than we were last week," he said. "We're not as bad as some people think we are."
Mistakes costly for defense
Associate Sports Editor
Rv PHIL ELLENBECKER
Saturday's 42-16 whipping at the hands of nationally ranked Florida State left members of KU's young, undermanned defense somewhat bewildered and disappointed, but encouraged at the same time.
"This game gave us some confidence," linebacker Willie Pleas, who led the KU defense with 11 tackles, said after the game. "It made us a better ball team."
Defensive guard Phil Forte said, "You look at the score, 42-16, and it just doesn't seem that we got beat that bad. We just had some crucial mistakes in the second half that hurt us."
The Jayhawks played the Seminoles virtually even in the first half, and went in at halftime training 14-10. But Florida State touchdowns on a bench were not enough to win, so SKU keeling to defeat
"At the beginning of the game, we were just approaching them as another team, but it seemed like, when we fell behind in the second half, the team started doubting itself," defensive tackle Jeff Anderson said.
KU GAVE THE Seminoles two touchdowns in the second half. Punter Tom Becker fumbled a snap from center on one kick and Florida State recovered on the KU 15-yard line. He had his next kick blocked and returned for a touchdown.
he may have been nervous, but he'll bounce back." Anderson said. "He's a good punter. It just like when you fall off a horse. You've got to bounce right up and get on
KU's defense had problems containing Florida State's running attack, which was led by tailback and Heisman Trophy candidate Greg Allen. He broke Florida School record in rushing, all purpose yardage and scoring on his way to a 133-yard rushing day after being held to 47 yards in the first half.
KU players said the Seminole offensive scheme helped Allen and tullback Cletas Jones, who had a career high 114 yards, spring loose for vardage.
"Their whole offensive scheme was to have Allen line up as deep as possible in the backfield and let him pick his spots," linebacker Rick Bredesen said. "If we were overpursuing, he was very good at cutting back."
Pless said, "You've got to give some credit to Florida State. They had a great offensive line. They did a good job of hiring out on us, but it wasn't that bad, we would cut back off the offensive line's blocks."
Forte said. "When you have a good back like they do, you must let him pick his hole."
Sometimes the Jayhawks were able to foil that strategy. Six of Allen's 16 carries were for two yards or less, but five of them went for 10 or more yards.
"WE MISSED A lot of tackles." Forte said. "I know myself, I missed a few. We were in position and hustling. We were running to the ball — we weren't getting blown off. It's something we'll have to work on. We'll get better. We will not quit."
Bredesen agreed with Forte, and said,
"For the defense as a whole, this game was a good experience for us. We can't give up.
We'll bounce back from this."
Softball team tops, ties Wildcats
By CHRIS LAZZARINO Sports Wear
Sports Writer
The women's softball team struggled on offense and had some costly defensive errors, but still came out of a tripleheader game. The Coyotes defeated the Sports Complex with two ties and a victory.
The teams played three five inning games. The first game was a 3-3 tie, the second was a 0-0 tie and the third was won by the Javihawks, 2-0.
Tracy Bunge pitched all 15 innings for the Jayhawks because Kim Tisdale is still out with a strained knee Head Coach Bob Stancliff said Tisdale could be back for tomorrow's double-header at Johnson County Community College.
Bunge shut out the Wildcats in the last two games.
"This is the most innings she has thrown this fall." Stanciff said "The big difference from when we started this fall is that she is just as strong and threw probably even better the last five innings than she did the first five innings."
Hunge finished the day using an off speed drop ball that she didn't use in the first two games.
"It is a new pitch for her and it makes all the other pitches a little more effective." Stanchiff said.
Stancliff said that he was pleased with the defensive play of the team, except for a series of errors in the first game that resulted in three unearned runs for the Wildcats.
PASADENA, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 27, 1968 - A large group of students from the University of California at Pasadena listen to a speech by President Gerald R. Ford in Pasadena.
A record 9,706 people became U.S. citizens yesterday in Miami's Orange Bowl in what was billed as the country's largest naturalization ceremony. Among them was
Citizen skein
23-year-old Amparo Carrera, the daughter of Cuban emigres; "I don't know why I waited so long. I have always thought I was an American." See story, page 2.
WILLIAMS
Mostly sunny
High, mid-80s. Low. 60s.
Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 95, No. 17 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, September 18, 1984
City to review Naismith development plan
BV CHRIS BARBER
Staff Reporter
An area of green space in south Lawrence may fall to the blades of builders, and neighbors fear that the proposed developments may worsen flooding problems.
The Lawrence City Commission tonight will consider the final plat of the Naismith West Subdivision. a 24-45-acre parcel along Naismith Creek, south of 24th Street between Oustahl Road and Naismith Drive.
The plat, which shows easements and rights of way in map form, contains 350-380 units on 16 lots.
But homeowners in the area say that any further development will only increase flooding on their property, which they say has been a continuing problem.
"You can have all the ordinances you want, but the simple fact is that water runs downhill, and it does so faster off of concrete than grass." said Marshall Crowther, 1230 W. 29th Court, who will speak for the Indian Hills Neighborhood Association at tonight's meeting. The association is a group of area homeowners.
CROWTHER SAID THAT any significant rainfall caused flooding on his property.
"We often have a swift current 30 feet up into our vard." he said.
Crowther said residents in the area had three main fears that he intended to present to the commission tonight.
one concern is that the cars of the residents of 350 more living units would jam the streets with extra traffic, he said.
the streets we will use.
A solution that has been proposed by the planning staff and commission for handling increased traffic flow is to extend Naismith Drive from 23rd Street to 24th Street, said Dean Palos, city county planner.
residents also object to developing the wooded area because it is one of few remaining natural areas in the Lawrence city limits, said Joyce Wolf, president of the Jayhawk Audobon Society.
"This development is typical of the whole picture," she said. "Lawrence is gradually losing its green spaces. Development and maintaining green space do not have to be mutually exclusive. Of course, ideally we would like to see as much of the area remain as it is now."
WOLF SAID THE area was home for many species of birds and other small animals, including beaver.
However, the biggest concern of area residents is that replacing trees and grass
including on a land
"We would like to see as much of the area
maintained as possible." Wolt said. "Each time a habitat is destroyed, it's permanent."
with roads, buildings and parking lots will send more water downstream into their homes and yards during heavy rains.
"It doesn't make sense to build in an area where water moves so fast." Wolf said.
BUT ED COLLISTER, the attorney representing the developers, Western Home Builders Inc and Four Seasons Inc, said he had considered possible flooding problems.
"We have had studies done that say that the development won't negatively affect flooding," Collister said.
Record is set as balloonist crosses coast
See NAISMITH, p. 6, col. 1
By United Press International
BORDEAUX, France — American aviator Joe Kittering, cruising smoothly in his Balloon of Peace, reached the French coast yesterday to complete the first solo Atlantic balloon crossing in half the time it took three men to make the same trip six years ago.
Kittinger kept floating and didn't plan to land his 10-story balloon until early this morning.
The 56-year-old former Air Force test pilot and Vietnam POW crossed the French coast at 3:30 p.m. CDT, according to trackers in Massachusetts. He skirted the Spanish border for several hours but had no plans to after dark at 1 a.m. CDT today, after sunrise in France.
"He's floating along the northern border of Spain between France and Spain, but it doesn't appear that he's going to cross into Spain," said Jim Mitchell, directing the project from the Bedford, Mass., tracking post.
"It WON'T BE daylight until approximately 2 a.m. EDT" and we assume that sometime thereafter he'll find a safe spot and put the balloon down there and land," he said.
Mitchell said late yesterday that Kittinger was considering landing the balloon in the Mediterranean near Marseilles.
Kittinger left Maine Friday night. He crossed the Atlantic in 68 hours — less than half the time it took the Double Eagle II to make the same trip in August 1978. That balloon, plotted by three businessmen from Albuquerque, N.M., was the first Atlantic balloon crossing in history.
No one had ever successfully made the trip since, or alone, Mitchell said.
The longest balloon flight on record is a trans Pacific crossing by Ben Abruzzo, Ron Clark and Larry Newman of Albuquerque, N.M. and Rocky Aoki, of Key Biscayne, Fla. They took off from Nagashima, Japan, on Nov 10, 1981, and landed North of San Francisco Nov 12, having floated 6,000 miles
THE DOUBLE EAGLE H trip, by a crew of three led by the late Maxie Anderson, took 137 hours and landed in Misery, France, about 60 miles northwest of Paris Mitchell said the trip was the best of his career, picking a wind pattern that could float him along at a higher speed.
There have been five previous solo balloon attempts to cross the Atlantic, but all failed.
The Bailoon of Peace also is slight
smaller than the Double Eagle II, he said.
Controllers in Brest, in France's northwestern province of Brittany, said Kittinger had made only indirect contact with them. The device was not used to increase the battery on his transmitter was weak.
Robert Waddill/KANSAN
MCMC
Pam Malmowski, Kansas City, Kan., senior, concentrates Jawahra practiced yesterday afternoon on the field west of on reading her music as she plays trombone. The Marching Oliver Hall.
Money to determine fate of nuclear reactor
Rv JOHN HANNA
Staff Reporter
More than 20 years ago, the University of Kansas dedicated a reactor that would help it build a nuclear engineering program.
But nuclear engineering is no longer offered, and the reactor, on 15th Street across from Green Hall, is used infrequently. Some officials would 't mind if it were shut down.
The Student Senate University Affairs Committee tonight will debate a proposed resolution asking the Kansas Legislature and the Board of Regents to include in the University's fiscal year 1986 budget the necessary to shut down the nuclear reactor.
"I'd like to see it be decommissioned whether it is being used or not," Highberger said yesterday. "If it's used more, it's more dangerous."
Dennis "Boog" Highberger, student body vice president, is the author of the non binding resolution.
THE NUCLEAR REACTOR Center began operation in 1961, and the University used it for research for a master's degree program
in nuclear engineering. But the University dropped the program 16 years ago because of a back of interest.
Radiation biophysics classes use the reactor to irradiate molecules, said Rosson, who also is the Nuclear Reactor Center's acting supervisor. The University also gives tours of the building
Harold Rosson, chairman of the department of chemical and petroleum engineering, estimated that the reactor was used less than four hours a week.
BOB BEARSE, ASSOCIATE vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, said a temporary University committee about two years ago recommended to the administration that the reactor be shut down. Bearse served on that committee.
"We rarely run over 10 kilowatts," he said.
"One kilowatt is the power that you would pump into a toaster."
"There's nobody tightening to keep this thing open," he said. "If it didn't cost anything, sure we'd like to see it shut down."
He said the reactor was a small one
But money is a problem. Bearse and
Reygen said.
the reactor with the permission of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission by either tearing down the entire building or by filling in the reactor unit.
Bearse said the University could shut down
In both cases, the fuel in the reactor — less than three kilograms of high-grade uranium 235 — would have to be removed. The reactor is encased in a 20-foot blue concrete structure and is protected by about 610,000 pounds of concrete and about 6,500 gallons of water.
water
LAST SPRING, THE NRC tried to encourage the University and other universities with reactors to switch to a lower-grade fuel. Rosson said he wouldn't mind if the government took the high-grade fuel back without giving the University the low-grade fuel.
would cost ROSSON SAID DISMANTLING the entire building would cost between $600,000 and $1 million. In both cases, the University would pay for the shutdown with money allocated by the Kansas Legislature.
Shutting down the reactor could take two or three weeks, Rosson said.
Bearse said the University could till up the reactor unit with gravel and seal it off. That would cost between $50,000 and $100,000.
Senate panel must check list of names
If signatures verified next step could be vote on GLSOK funds
By JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter
Signatures on a controversial petition concerning the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will be verified within the next week by members of the Student Senate Elections Committee.
The petition, submitted in April by Steve Imber, Lawrence senator, calls for the Senate to allow students to decide in a campus election whether GLSOR will receive Senate votes.
Members of the committee now will check the signatures on the petition against computer enrollment lists for last semester to determine whether the petition is valid.
THE MOTION SAID. "A valid petition, if not acted upon in the semester in which it is presented, will then still be valid for the following semester."
The Elections Committee took no specific action on the petition last night at its first meeting of the semester, but it voted 10-4 in favor of an oral motion concerning students' petitions to hold elections.
Thom Davidson, chairman of the Elections Committee, said last night that the motion would have to be put into bill form and presented to the Student Senate Rights Committee for passage. The Elections Department subcommittee of the Rights Committee.
Davidson said the motion would be an amendment of current Student Senate rules. He said he would try to have the bill ready for the Right's Committee meeting tonight.
Senate rules now do not say whether the signatures on a petition circulated in the spring can force the Senate to call an election in the fall.
BEFORE THE VOTE Davidson said,
"This is going to be a hard decision because
we have no precedent to follow. What we will
be doing is setting precedent."
He said committee members would be finished checking the signatures by the end of the year.
committees or on the petition are valid.
Davidson said, the Elections Committee can decide whether it must automatically hold an election or whether it can debate the content of the petition.
Under Student Senate rules, 10 percent of a semester's enrollment must sign a petition
Davidson said that the required number for the spring semester was about 2,100. Imber said last night that he had collected more than 2,500 signatures.
Surge in language enrollment crowds classrooms
By JOHN EGAN
Staff Reporter
A dramatic rise in enrollment for the three primary foreign languages at the University of Kansas has created crowded classrooms, department chairmen said recently.
Increased enrollment in the three foreign languages with the largest number of students. Spanish, French and German are taught but not of this magnitude, the email says.
chain their sales.
"I don't think anyone anticipated it," said Robert Spires, chairman of the department of Spanish and Portuguese.
1. Michael Young, associate dean of the
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that because of limited resources, additional sections could not be opened.
"The extent of the demand was more than I expected," he said.
Young attributed the increased foreign language enrollment to a renewed interest in studying foreign languages among high school students.
EVENT TAKING INTO account the expected number of students who will drop their foreign language courses. Young said, this semester's foreign language enrollment still will be above last fall's.
"I think it reflects a broad, nationwide trend," Young said.
By comparing initial class rosters from
this semester with those from fall 1983, the department chairman said enrollment for freshman and sophomore courses had jumped by as much as 26 percent.
This semester's enrollment in the four beginning Spanish courses rose by 14 percent from fall 1883. Spires said. This fall, 1,287 students are enrolled in beginning Spanish courses, he said. Last fall, the number was 1,125.
THE MOST SIGNIFICANT increase, he said, was in Elementary Spanish II. In fall 1983, 226 students were enrolled in the course on the first day of classes. On the first day of classes this semester, 305 students were enrolled in that class, which represents an increase of about 35 percent from last year.
"By a conservative estimate, we turned away 75 to 100 students who couldn't enroll," he said.
This fall, Elementary Spanish I and II were closed within the first hour of enrollment. Soures said.
Even with the addition of two sections of Elementary Spanish I based on summer enrollment, bringing the total to 21, classes remain overcrowded, he said.
With classes that big, Spires said, the learning process suffers
emerging process sources.
"WE CAN STILL teach the language, and
Most classes average 29 students each, he said. Some classes have as many as 32 students. But ideally, each class should have 40. Scores said.
The class was not overcrowded, she said, but a smaller class would improve communication between the professor and students
students are still learning, but something is sacrificed," he said.
john Williams, chairman of the department of French and Italian, said enrollment in the four freshman and sophomore level French courses had increased by 26 percent this semester over fall 1983.
See LANGUAGE, p. 5, col. 1.
IH
September 18, 1984
Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily 2
KANSAN
Reagan, Mondale to meet in debate at Kansas City
WASHINGTON — President Reagan and Walter Mondale will debate twice before the November election, and their running mates will face off once, the League of Women Voters said yesterday. The Mondale conceded "that's all we could get."
Reagan and Mondale will debate Oct. 7 in Louisville, Ky., and Oct. 21 in Kansas City. Mo. George Bush and Geraldine Ferraro will debate Oct. 11 in Philadelphia.
The dates and locations of the 1984 presidential campaign debates had leaked during the weekend and were confirmed at Women President Dorothy Ridings.
The debates will be 90 minutes each, and the candidates will be questioned by a panel consisting of a moderator and four panelists, probably well-known members of the news media. The first debate will be devoted to the economy and other domestic issues, and the second will concern defense and foreign policy.
Canadian Mulroney sworn in
OTTAWA — Conservative Brian Mulroney was sworn in yesterday as Canada's 18th prime minister. Mulroney earned one of the largest majorities in the nation's modern history and has a mandate to improve relations with the United States.
Muloney, 45, a millworker's son from rural Quebec, took the oath of office administered by Governor General and gave in a nationally televised ceremony
Murtonley led the Conservatives to a landslide victory in Canada's Sept. 4 election.
NEW YORK — Employees of United Press International agreed yesterday to accept contract concessions aimed at restoring the wire service's profitability.
UPI workers accept pay cuts
The concessions, including a 25 percent pay cut for the next three months, are designed to lead to a small operating profit in the last quarter of 1984 and, next year, to the company's first annual profit in 20 years.
The pay cuts will diminish gradually to 5 percent, and wages for UPI's 2,000 worldwide employees will return to current levels by October 1985.
In exchange for the concessions, employees will get 6.5 percent of the stock of Media News Corp., the holding company that owns the 77-year old wire service
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
Compiled from United Press International reports
yesterday's ceremony in the Orange Bowl, which was the largest naturalization event in American history.
MIAMI — Thousands, most of them Hispanic, take the oath to become U.S. citizens. Vice President George Bush spoke at
Naturalization record broken by six
9,706 new citizens take pledge
By United Press International
MIAMI — Nearly 10,000 people, most of them Hispanics, became U.S. citizens yesterday at the Orange Bowl stadium in the country's largest naturalization ceremony with an outpouring of patriotism, Republicanism and Reaganism.
Immigration officials said 9,766 people — six more than the record — took the oath to become citizens in a ceremony attended by Vice President George Bush.
"Bienvenidos a su país: Welcome to your country." Bush told the multinational audience of about 20,000. "This is your land."
"I should have done this a long time ago," said Ampara Carrera, 23, who has lived in the United States since her left cuba when she was 3. "I don't know why I waited
so long. I have always thought I was an American. I'm just making it legal."
Jose Lobo born in Cuba became a U.S. citizen 18 years ago. He knew no one who was sworn in at yesterday's ceremony, but said he wanted to "like it to sing." The Star-Spangled Banner.
"This is the land of the free and the home of the brave." Lobo exclaimed.
Bush's speech was interrupted several times with thunderous applause. Although he described the event as a "non-partisan mission", many of the new citizens spared him and a sign hung from a nearby apartment building proclaimed "Viva Reagan."
Waving miniature American flags and clutching cameras, the new citizens swarmed outside the stadium where Dade County elections officials had set up rows of voter
registration tables under the lime trees
Nearly three-fourths of the immigrants are of Cuban descent and were expected to register as Republicans, said Dade County election worker Ivy Korman.
"I've been at the tables all morning and I don't think I've seen a Democrat," said Carlos Manrique, president of the Young American Republicans of Dade County.
"our goal is to get people to become citizens, then to get them to register, then to get them to vote Republican," said Manrique. "We hope to give a Republican majority in office as well as re-elect President Reagan."
Manrique's group had worked since February helping immigration officers process citizenship applications, he said.
GM workers go on strike at 12 plants
20-hour negotiations break off; bargaining set to resume today
By United Press International
DETROIT — Striking auto workers yesterday halted production at 12 General Motors Corp. assembly plants nationwide at a cost to them of $8 billion a day, with talks ended until April.
Weary negotiators for GM and the United Auto Workers broke off contract talks at 2:30 a.m. yesterday following a 20-hour session and set bargaining to resume today
The first striker hits the picket lines at 6 a.m. local time. They will get $85 a week in strike pay plus medical coverage from the union's $750 million strike fund.
"They don't really want a strike, but they want restored what was taken from them." said spokesman J M. Comiskey for local 504 in Pontiac, Mich. He said to do it this way would only be payable.
The just-expired contract contained $3 billion in concessions made in 1982.
Analysts estimate the walkouts by nearly 59,000 hourly workers will cost GM $125 million a week, or about $18 million a day. They are expected an early squeeze on inventories.
"Most Cadillac dealers are all cleaned out of '84 models and none of us has any inventory of '85 models," said Everett Ahlgrim, owner of Alhgrim Cadillac in Hammond, Ind. "A strike will have a big effect on our business."
The union authorized local issue strikes at 13 plants after bargainers failed to reach agreement by midnight Friday. Workers at selected plants officially went on strike but only a Flint, Mich., plant with 13,100 workers had weekend work scheduled.
One of the 13. Local 644 at Van Nuys, Calif.
reached agreement night on a local
contract covering about 4,000 workers and
most workers returned to work yesterday
Sources said bargainers were hung up on job security, the union's top priority.
GM refused to make an economic offer during the 20-hour bargaining session, insisting that the job security portion of the agreement should be before wages and benefits were discussed.
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He laughed when I pulled up in my Daytona Turbo Z...But when the light turned green...
SHELBY
Daytona Turbo 2
My friend John is a nice guy
But when it comes to cars he's an egotist. He just got himself a Porsche 944. He's so proud of his high-priced German-made sports car it's unbelievable.
John is pretty insecure. He needs a "name" to be somebody. Not me
I knew there was a car out there for me. The kind of car that would fit my lifestyle. Fast Fun loving. Unpretentious. Economical I found it, at my Dodge dealer.
THE DISCOVERY
THE DISCOVERY
I knew right away that the Dodge Daytona Turbo Z was my kind of car! The minute I saw the aerodynamic lines and the understated elegance of this new American road machine I tell in love. And when I read the sticker price I was pleasantly surprised. Here was the world's first high-performance front wheel drive Turbo sports car for half the cost of John's Porsche 9441
THE TEST.
decision first. Those people at Dodge really care about us car-buyers. So I drove it. Awesome!
A test drive wasn't necessary
I wanted to buy it right on the spot.
But my Dodge dealer insisted that I take the Daytona Turbo Z for a ride. He wanted me to be absolutely sure of my
The contoured seat sport fit my body like a glove. All the controls were logically placed and easy to reach. My dealer calls it Ergonomics. I call it common sense.
FASTER?
So there I was, sitting in the cockpit of my dream machine. My dealer looked at me. He told me to go for it. I did! Incredible!
The advanced technology of the potent turbocharger under the hood propelled my dealer and me from zero to 60 miles-per-hour in eight and a half seconds! That's faster than John's Posche 9441! I was thoroughly convinced.
AGILE?
I was ready to sign on the dotted line! My dealer told me to take a few corners first. So I did! Unbelievable!
The high-tech Euro-sport suspension system and the gas-filled shocks allowed me to shoot through those corners with the power and sure-footedness of a panther! My dreams had come true. Here was the power and performance
BUY AMERICAN
I was looking for. And at half the sticker price of the Porsche 944!
As we pulled into the lot I asked my dealer how long I'd have to wait to get one of these dream cars. He said, "You don't have to wait, they're American made." Perfect!
BYE-BYE JOHNNY.
So there I was, in my new Dodge Daytona Turbo Z. sitting next to John and his high-priced German-made sports car. He looked at me and laughed. But when the light turned green, John couldn't even get close enough to see what I was driving! I just waved goodbye in my rear-view mirror.
Now I have my American dream car. And you can too! Just see your nearest Dodge dealer. And if you happen to see my friend John, finally getting a close look at the Dodge Daytona Turbo Z, tell him I'll be at the first stoplight along the corner.
Dodge
BEST BUILT**
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**INTERMEDIATE COMMUNICATION ASSISTANT (TCM)**
warranted employment by the United States Air Force and through education and preparation dedicated apply to a Bachelor's degree in Health Sciences, B.S. or E.M.E. (Equiv.) or a Master's degree in Health Sciences, B.S. or E.M.E. (Equiv.) or a Master's degree in Health Sciences, B.S. or E.M.E. (Equiv.)
**DEPARTMENT OF HOSPITALITY TRANSFER**
Travel authority Awareness of benefits of my AmericanCare program for 97 and 100 designed and developed by the AmericanCare Foundation.
The Dodge Division of The New Chrysler Corporation is very proud to present the award-winning work of the First Place Campus Winner, Nobbie Kim, University of Kansas, in the 1984 College Newspaper Creative Advertising Competition. A blue-nibbon panel of Judges representing the College Media Advisors and advertising professionals selected this entry from among those submitted by students. The Judges are pleased to honor the outstanding originality, creativity, and presentation of this effort.
September 18, 1984
Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Friday is last day to add or change class sections
Friday will be the last day to add a course or change class sections.
Sept. 28 will be the last day to drop a course without receiving a grade of "W" on this examination.
AURH to vote on rate increase
Students may add or drop classes from 8:30 to 11:50 a.m. and from 14:30 p.m. through Friday at the Enrollment Center, 111 Strong Hall.
A proposed increase in housing contract rates for the 1985-96 school year that would push the base cost of a residence hall room past $2,000 will be considered at tonight's meeting of the Association of University Residence Halls general assembly.
The meeting starts at 7 p.m. in the lobby of Joseph R. Pearlson Hall.
The department of housing has recommended a $2,071 base housing rate for 1985-36, up 4.7 percent, or $97, from last year's $1,974 figure.
At tonight's meeting, the AURH general assembly will vote to support, modify or reject the $97 increase. Its recommendations for next year's contract, along with those of the housing department, will be presented at the Residential Programs Advisory Board.
The advisory board, which considers contract proposals for all University bousing, will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 208 Strong Hall.
Panel to discuss education
A panel of education officials will discuss trends and issues in education at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union
"Current Trends in Education: What are the Issues?" is the program title. The panels will be Harold Blackburn, Kansas commissioner of education, Dan Neuenswander, superintendent of Unified School District 497 (Lawrence); and Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education.
Tom Erb, associate professor of curricu-
ulum and instruction, will be the moder-
ator.
AAUP leader to speak at KU
The new president of the American Association of University Professors will speak at the University of Kansas at 10 a.m. Saturday in the main auditorium of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
Paul H. L, Walter AAUp president, will speak about "The AUAP" the Profession and Education Institute.
Walter will be honored at a reception sponsored by the KU chapter of the AAPU at 4 p.m. Friday in the K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center, 126 Oread Ave.
Walter, who was elected last spring, is chairman of the chemistry and physics department at Skidmore College Saratoga. He also debartered degree in chemistry from KU
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny and warmer. The high will be in the mid 90s and winds will be from the south at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear. The low will be in the upper 50s to low 60s. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny and the high will be in the mid- to upper 80s.
Where to call
Do you have an idea for a story or a photograph?
If so, call the Kansan at 864-4810. If your idea or news release deals with campus or area news, ask for Doug Cunningham, campus editor. For entertainment on! Campus items, ask for Susan Wortman, campus editor. For news, ask for Greg Daimman, sports editor
*Photo suggestions should go to Dave Hornback photo editor.
For other questions or complaints, ask for Don Knox, editor, or Paul Sevart, managing editor.
The number of the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising, is
2 Compiled from staff and United Press
international reports.
ISRAEL OUT OF LEBANESE
ISRAEL OUT OF
STOP SLAUGHTERING PALESTINIANS AND LEBANESE
Alaidin Elajazo, Ajman, Jordan, freshman, and Mahemmed Elsherbiny, Cairo, Egypt, freshman, a march up Jayhawk Boulevard to protest the deaths of Palestinian and Lebanese refugees at the Sabra and Shattila camps in
Lebanon on Sept. 16 and 17, 1982. About 40 people attended yesterday's march, which started at the Kansas Union and proceeded to Strong Hall. Protesters passed out leaflets at Strong Hall.
Agreement useful, roommates say
By CHRISSY CLEARY
Staff Reporter
Getting to know the pet peeves of a roommate before the semester is long under way has helped reduce friction, according to some students living in residence halls.
"It helped me get to know him," Lon Weatherton, Overland Park freshman, said about his roommate at Templin Hall. "Like you want him to mess with your stuff and when to have people over. It helped because I wasn't sure what he thought."
In a policy change this semester, students living in residence halls were encouraged to complete a roommate agreement that allows students to decide whether guests are allowed in their rooms and when they can visit. The agreement also specifies each roommate's pet peeves and what they are willing to share.
Resident assistants at the University's eight residence halls reported that most students didn't turn their contracts in to RAs, but many talked about the agreement
"We DIDN'T FILL out the contract," said Shannon Stube, Leavenson freshman and Hashinger Hall resident. "We talked through it. It gave us an idea of what to discuss."
Chris Followell, RA for the third floor at Hashinger, said that the agreement brought up questions about situations freshmen may not have considered.
Still, some residents didn't think the agreements were necessary.
Gay Herich, Waukegan, III., freshman and Hashinger resident, said she and her roommate didn't think an agreement was necessary because they had talked about sharing a room and already had discussed problems they might have.
The new residence hall policy also changed the guest registration procedure, which now requires residents and their guests to show photo IDs if the guest comes in after 11 p.m. Both the resident and the guest must pick up their IDs together when the guest leaves.
THE NEW SECURITY policy, affecting six of the eight residence halls, is a compromised version of a policy proposed last spring by the University administration that would have prohibited overnight guests of the opposite sex in residence halls.
Some students think the updated visitation policy could be improved to ensure that all guests are registered.
Gelaine Bailey, Kansas City, Kan. senor, and a resident at the all female Lewis Hall, said that registering guests only after 11 p.m. left the possibility that residents would not
"I think the reasoning behind the policy is good," Bailey said, "but I don't think the problem is solved. Residents just bring people right before 11 p.m. to spend the
The policy is a good idea, but if they're going to do that, then they should check IDs
Fred McElheene, director of residential programs, said that a 24-hour security program would be possible if students were willing to pay for it.
"A 24 hour security system would be very expensive," McElhene said. "I hope for the good will of the students that they check their guests in. We're trying to maintain some semblance of security. We're not checking up on them."
STEPHANIE MICHOLS, CHANUTE
tremanshar and a Lewis Hall resident, agreed
Krista Roberts, Wichita freshman and a GSP resident, said. "You feel a lot sater. You know the people in here belong in here." And once you get to it, it's no big deal.
1LSA MILLER, SHAWNEE senior and a desk assistant at Lewis Hall, said, "People were having overnight guests that roommates didn't want. Now, even if women are staying over, they both have to leave IDs and pick them up together in the morning. Everyone seems pretty agreeable."
Men can visit the women at Gertrude Sellars Pearson and Corbin halls only at certain times. Some women complain, but most think checking IDs is a good idea.
Michael Osterbuhr, resident director at Templin, said that even though the men were not required to register guests, the residents and staff of the library offer to ask them for residence hall IDs.
KU looking for different gas pipeline
By BRENDA STOCKMAN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Owners of the natural gas pipeline now serving the University of Kansas again turned down an opportunity to continue transporting KU's gas
KU officials earlier asked Northwest central to provide more information about the possibility of leasing the pipeline, and the company's answer responded to the request.
Northwest Central Pipeline Corp., which owns the pipeline, said yesterday it was not now interested in transporting natural gas from Oklahoma to Illinois. The Rodger Orekale, director of support services.
"They've said things are changing, and the company don't want to transport gas for us. Don't mind."
Kansas Public Service, the local utility, has the current KU gas contract and a
Officials from Northwest Central could not be reached for comment.
THE UNIVERSITY WILL evaluate Northwest Central's response and the alternatives available to determine the next steen within a couple of days, Oroke said.
For the first time, the University accepted bids during the summer from gas suppliers. A 1983 law allows schools and hospitals to bid for gas supplies in a market rather than from only the hotel chain.
KPS did not submit a bid before the July 6 deadline.
Bob Salome, KPS president, said that the utility did not submit a bid because of its difficulty.
KU already buys natural gas from KPAs at an incentive, or discounted rate. Salome
OHOTE SAID IN August that the incentive rate was higher than the three bids submitted
Petro D. Corp, Tulsa, Okla , was the low bidder at $2.93 per mcf.
KPS now charges KU $3.71 per mcf, or a thousand cubic feet of gas.
Bogina Petroleum Engineers, Lonexa, and Specified Energy Services Ltd. Bonner Springs, also submitted bids and are withdrawn from university for a possible natural gas contract.
Oroke said most of the discussions so far had dealt with the transportation of gas. He said some smaller gas companies were trucking gas because the large pipelines didn't want to transport gas without selling it.
Tracking might not be the most attractive alternative for KU because of the volume of storage.
THE UNIVERSITY WILL have to build a pipeline unless it leases the line from Northwest Central or moves the gas by truck. Building a pipeline would cost about $250,000.
The University could pay for the line with expected savings of $400,000 from the lower gas rate but would have difficulty building a pipeline before the current contract ends.
Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said that he and other KU officials weren't concerned about ending the KPS contract without having a new agreement
Students compete to be last survivor in assassin game
Staff Reporter
BY ERIKA BLACKSHER
Slunking up the hullway, backs pressed to the wall; they dash to the showers, take unexpected routes to the caterain and hide in big crowds to dodge their dreaded assassins
The lurking assassins could be anywhere — in the hall, on campus or watching television in the lobby. Only the exposure of them $1.99 dart guns would give them away.
Assassin is the name of the game that 35
kids students have chosen to play. And it does
not require any special skills.
Each participant randomly picks a victim. Each player and his designated victim's name are kept on a lock labeled away in the backpack. If the victim is alone, a sole survivor is left to take his place.
At midnight Sunday, the game began John Idoux, Overland Park sophomore, started the game with a meeting for fifthfloor Ellsworth Hall residents.
SHOOTING THE VICTIM with a lethal dart in the bathroom or in a room on the fifth floor is forbidden, Idoux said. The assassins also cannot shoot anyone in the back
"Even assassins have morals," he said. A successful killing requires at least one weapon, and he is not one of them.
help me shoot mine," said Donna Reid
Manhattan, Kan., junior.
From her conspirator's room, Real called the room across the hall from her intended victim's room. To answer the phone call, the conspirator needed to enter the territory — and then cross back to his room.
Reid intended to blast her victim as he made his way back to safe ground. But he was too quick for her, and she missed, hitting the wall with her lethal dart.
"I teamed up with another guy, and I said I would help him shoot his person if he would
CONSPIRACY AND OTHER OBR strat. strata as long as the assonan follows all of the stratas
season" This dangerous condition leaves the assassin with a dart gun for 24 hours
If the assassin shoots his victim without following the rules, he is considered "open
When a killing is made within all of the regulations, one witness, the assassin and the victim must sign a piece of paper and turn it in to the head assassin.
When the game is reduced to a single assassin, the sole survivor will become the head assassin, and the game will begin again.
Scott Focke, Atwood sophomore, said he enjoyed the game because it broke the routine of residence hall living
"There are a lot of people that you usually don't see," he said. "But if you draw their attention to the camera, they will notice."
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September 18, 1984
OPINION
Page 4
KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kaman, UNSP 620-640 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffart Flint Hall. Lancaster, Kan. 620-640 daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage帖受力。Kan. 6044 Subscriptions mail are $15 for six months or $18 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 and $2 a month. Mailers and addresses change to t
DON KNOX
Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE HESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
DOUG CUNNINGHAM Campus Editor
DAVE WANAMAKER Business Manager
LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
SUSANNE SHAW
General Manager and News Adviser
JILL GOLDBLATT Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Have it your way
Despite the events of last week, the issue of fast food in the Kansas Union is still on the grill - and waiting for special orders.
The Student Senate last week failed to override a veto by the student body president and vice president of a petition requesting a corporate-owned franchise in the Union.
The Kansas Union Memorial Board, however, has been studying the proposal for several months, and is expecting to receive within a month results of an independent study of potential profits and the effects of a franchise on the Union's other food services.
The board already has determined that profits could decrease bookstore prices and that legal questions about the Union's tax status have acceptable answers.
The study will be considered by a board committee, which will make a recommendation to the entire board for a vote.
Both the Senate and the board know what percentages of sales are paid by franchises on other campuses, but no franchise, and understandably so, will give a specific figure until the board begins contract negotiations.
Moreover, although it would be helpful if the board solicited bids from corporations, an ethical, if not legal, question arises from accepting bids without knowing whether one will be chosen.
Under those conditions, corporations may be hesitant to offer bids.
The decision will depend on what will bring more business to the Union, a restaurant that is owned by the Union or an independently owned franchise. Statistics from other universities, however, cannot determine how people would respond to a McDonald's or a Burger King on this campus.
Among the factors that the board will have to weigh in its decision will be what the students and faculty want and what they will patronize.
The board's decision may be a close one. Student opinion could provide the edge, but students must voice that opinion. Hold the franchise?
Ferraro's finances
Like a persistent cold, the financial difficulties following vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro seem, at times, to linger beyond all reason or proportion.
After finally disclosing her husband's finances and subjecting herself to a 90-minute press conference devoted only to that topic, many said that candidate Ferraro had finally gotten the pesky bug out of her system and would be back on her feet in no time.
Now the House Ethics Committee has decided to take up the matter of whether Ferraro violated campaign laws when she said in disclosure statements that she did not benefit from, expect to benefit from, contribute to or know about her husband's business dealings.
To some, this seems like overkill; to others, too little, too late. The committee has acted slowly — perhaps too slowly — in seeking the truth, and any report before the election is unlikely.
However, Ferraro's detractors and supporters alike should welcome the committee's inquiry, because win or lose in November, it gives the candidate the opportunity to set the record permanently, officially straight.
Despite the disclosures to date, questions remain. Questions about the campaign loans she received from her husband, about how separate their finances really are and even about the sensibility of the disclosure laws themselves.
Two considerations rise above all others in this controversy. First, as a candidate for vice president, Ferraro voluntarily subjected herself to examination. As with all politicians, a measure of ambition is mixed with her desire to serve the public. Nothing's wrong with that, but public scrutiny, sometimes embarrassing, comes with the territory.
The second consideration is that no one should be allowed to sidestep the law, for whatever reason. Whether inadvertent or willful, any violations of the law need to be brought to light and thoroughly aired. Whatever honor and credibility our government officials possess demand nothing less.
LETTERS POLICY
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten and 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 hometown, or faculty or staff. The Kansan also invites individuals and groups to submit guest columns. Columns and letters can be brought or brought to the Kansan office. 111 Stauner-Flint Hall. The Kansen reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
All of us who were born American or were drawn to this country from elsewhere share a common love of freedom. Freedom and justice for all may not be uniquely American concepts, but in this country we enshrine these values as central to our way of life.
Passive support of apartheid wrong
Our forefathers held it to be self-evident that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Americans have always thought it to be their special duty to defend these values wherever they are threatened, be it in our own backyard or halfway around the world. When ever freedom has demanded protection, Americans have been ready to answer the call. We have done so by protecting anyone's freedom is threatened. America's freedom is also threatened.
In today's world, freedom and justice are threatened routinely. Be it in Iran, South America or the Soviet Union, human rights are being under the boots of repressive regimes under which consider these values worth defending.
Nowhere are simple human rights more grossly violated, however, than in the Republic of South Africa. In that country, the constitution calls for racial segregation and discrimination apartheid (pronounced a part hate).
Under this system, blacks are not allowed to vote, are allowed in the white areas of the country only at the pleasure of the white minority government, and are considered nothing units of labor. The South Africa name for it is apartheid. in America we call such a system slavery
In this country we repudiated slavery more than 100 years ago. Kansas can be proud of her free state heritage; slavery was never condoned here. And it is the ongoing policy of this country and this state to
ensure equal rights and equal opportunity for all
Is it not common sense for us to insist that our foreign policy reflect these values?
It may be common sense, but it is
PETER BRUNOZI
CHRIS BUNKER
Guest Columnist
not common practice. The U.S. government supports the apartheid regime. U.S. companies are allowed to operate in South Africa and to profit by the suffering of its enslaved majority; the companies do this.
because black South African labor is cheap and white South Africans are wealthy.
Yet resistance to apartheid does exist, and is growing stronger. In this country and in this state, it is a grass-roots effort flowing from the strong moral core of our people. Individuals, not governments, are taking the lead in demanding that America adhere to its traditional values and withdraw support for apartheid.
Here at the University of Kansas,
this movement is actively working to
encourage the Student Senate to
require that its money - your money
companies that do business in South Africa, and they are requesting that each student boycott these companies.
not be spent with companies doing business in South Africa. Supporters of this movement are encouraging the Kansas University Endowment Association to sell its holdings in
We may not end apartheid, or even U.S. involvement, but we will be sending a clear signal to the world that KU supports traditional US values and that we are outraged disgusted when basic human rights are violated.
I have never met a person who consciously and actively supported apartheid. Let us resolve not to promote what we will not promote actively.
Chris Bunker, first-year law student, is chairman of the Student Senate Md Hoc Committee on South Africa. The committee and other organizations are sponsoring South Africa Week, which runs through Friday.
"The University would like to dispose of it" Allen Wiechert, director of facility planning, said.
THESE ARE HARD TIMES. WE ALLHAVE TO MAKE SACRIFICES.
BUSINESS
KU administrators have said the reactor was not needed
"It outlived its uselessness," said Harold Rosson, chairman of the chemical and petroleum engineering firm in New York, the department responsible for the reactor.
KU reactor has outlived usefulness
During its early years of operation, the KU reactor was used to teach students nuclear engineering and to produce radioisotopes for laboratory
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe proclaimed to a crowd of 200 that the reactor center represented "the beginning of a new era of collaboration in research among state and industry, industry and higher education."
Today, however the fanfare is gone, and KU administrators are busy burying their heads in the sand, trying to ignore the reactor and its financial time bomb costs of contamination and decontamination.
With the Student Senate University Affairs Committee considering a resolution to seek funds for the decommissioning of the KU nuclear reactor at its meeting tonight, now is an appropriate time to review the KU reactor.
A U.S. assistant surgeon general, a U.S. senator and prominent businessman came to the University of Colorado for ceremonies for the KU reaction
experiments. But in 1968, the state decided to consolidate nuclear engineering programs at the Kansas University and use of the KU reactor diminished
Now, only 10 or 11 radioisotope samples are irradiated in it each year.
The reactor has outlived its usefulness. KU administrators have
---
CHARLES
BARNES
Staff Columnist
said, but the problem is that KU has no money to dismantle it.
What a surprise!
KU administrators have never formally asked state legislators for decommissioning funds and they never made decommissioning a priority.
Too busy building high technology centers for the future, they have forgotten to decontaminate an aerial tank, and a previous high technology boom
Wake up, KU administrators!
Design a substantive decommissioning plan, ask for the funds and clean the thing in.
Perhaps they think that the funds will fall, miraculously, from the sky.
"Plans are vague at this point." Weichert said. "We have no money to do anything, but I think funds will come along."
Cost for decommissioning the
reactor have been estimated at $458,000 in 1979 dollars, according to a statement that KU reactor officials submitted in 1980 to the U.S. Nuclear Security Commission is support of a renewal of the reactor's operating license.
The inexpensive part of the process will occur within the first year of shutdown, when the reactor's 18 nuclear fuel rods will be removed and transported to a radioactive waste site for an estimated $38,000.
The rest of the cost will be incurred five years after fuel removal, once the irradiated interiors of the reactor have been given a chance to cool down
Reactor internals, irradiated reactor pool walls and 365 tons of concrete shielding that encapsulate the reactor then will have to be removed and buried at a radioactive waste site.
From start to finish, reactor decommissioning will take about five years. So if fuel were removed this time, the cost of expenses would be incurred in 1989
The 1980 KU statement said the costs at $43,000 in 1979 dollars; a more accurate assessment would be to project costs in 1989 dollars.
Rosson, however, said he doubts the reliability of the 1980 statement.
United Nuclear Industries, a company that specializes in decommissioning visited the reactor Resson. The decommissioning was done on the back on an envelope.
"We really have no concrete figure," he said "It was a pie in the skyl guess."
One thing is certain; the longer we wait, the more it will cost.
Who cares how much it costs $458,000 in 1979 dollars or, say, $1 million in 1989 dollars?
The taxpayers of Kansas are going to foot the bill for decommissioning costs, anyway. Moreover, they are going to pick up the tab for the taxpayer of the infliction because of indecision and on the part of KU administrators.
Let's ignore it, the administrators say, and pass the back to a future generation. The administrators need to use common sense.
They have seen that four years of public pressure at University of California at Los Angeles resulted in a decision by the University of California regions this summer to reauthorize the UCLA receiver's operating license Decommissioning of the UCLA receiver can now begin.
The only people who have taken a responsible stand on reactor cleanup are the Student Senate leadership and Dennis Boog 'Highberger
Higherberg introduced the resolution that will be considered by the Student Senate University Affairs Committee; the resolution calls on the board of Regents and the state legislature to provide money for decommissioning
The committee members should do their part to ensure that decommissioning funds are made available to protect Kansas taxpayers. By doing so, the committee will help future KU students of how to accept responsibility and take initiative
Low salaries imperil quality of education
Education, one of the most essential elements of our society, is in danger of losing the qualities that are important to the progress of our nation.
Education continues to feel the effects of the nation's unstable economy. Although it provides the knowledge that brings about the advancements of the nation, it is also the one profession that continually fails to offer what professors and teachers need to survive — money
The continuation of education is sadly determined by the value society places on it. Although most of us do not deny the importance of education, the dollar value placed on it does not reflect this notion.
national poverty-level income for a family of four
Teachers and professors make less money than almost every other professional in the business world. Their salaries continue to fall below those of union and blue-collar workers who have completed only high school.
Last week, the Kansas City Times reported that the base pay for beginning teachers in both Missouri and Kansas ranged from $13,989 to $6,000. Teachers are earning only $3,000 to $6,000 more than the
By the time they have been at the same job for 20 years and hold a doctorate in education, they can then look forward to $43,000.
The Times also reported that
Staff Columnist
ROBIN
PALMER
one-half of the nation's teachers left their jobs for better pay within five years. Eighty percent left for the same reason after 10 years.
In addition to departure problems, both Missouri and Kansas salary levels are below the national average of $29.31, according to the *Times* article. Missouri's salary level ranks nationally, and Kansas ranks 35th.
All of these factors combined have caused the purchasing power of teachers to drop.
Teachers, no matter how dedicated or how well educated, simply cannot
Again, this is hard to achieve, because society has not given teachers a salary equivalent to the importance of the job they perform.
afford to continue with their jobs or even remain in the education field.
Many educators support a merit pay program that would provide the incentive for teachers to excel in their particular area of expertise.
Teachers perform an essential task for society, they try to provide children and adults with the knowledge they will need to succeed in life.
Education is a great service one that only a select few can perfect. educators deserve much more than they receive.
defined, the solutions are harder to come by.
Although the problems are clearly
Despite the obvious importance of their jobs, society fails to pay them adequate salaries.
The field is left with teachers who either truly love teaching or just cannot make it through the currencies hum of a different field. And even of that, but remain, some take on other jobs to supplement their low income.
Teachers must complete four years of college, five years at the University of Kansas, and are technically considered professionals. Still, they lack the salary that will make them to stay in this profession.
Tax increases are another possibility, yet proposals to allocate funds to educational systems continue to tail in local and state elections.
So what happens to the students whose schools do not pay enough to keep the quality teachers around, and what happens to the teachers who leave the education field in search of higher wages?
The results are that education suffers from the mistakes society makes and that people face greater difficulty in learning.
These problems are recent ones. The education field still has many qualified teachers, yet I wonder how long the teachers from whom I have learned the most will stand by while the profession stumbles around with low salaries and less qualified teachers.
The education system and teachers themselves cannot continue this vital service if society fails to place a fair trust on an institution that serves us all.
University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1984
Page 5
Language continued from p. 1
students in them, he said about the French courses. "The enrollment is much heavier."
HOWEVER, JAMES HARDER, Topeka senior, said his Elementary French I class was not overcrowded. He said the class had about 20 students in it.
"It seems about normal." Harder said. "It would be great if there were only eight or 10 people in it, but that's pretty unrealistic."
About 30 students were enrolled in the class at the beginning of this semester. Harder
ENROLLMENT IN FOREIGN LANGUAGE
said, but students have changed sections or dropped.
An additional $23,500 allowed the department to add four sections to cope with the extra class load, Williams said. Still, the classes for beginning French courses are averaging 30 students at. At the most, 24 students should be in each class, he said.
No additional instructors were hired to meet the increased enrollment, he said.
"We do have heavier enrollment than we planned on, and the money is short." Williams said.
STUDENTS ENROLLING IN beginning German courses this semester represented a 15 percent increase from last fall, said Donald Watkins, chairman of the department of Germanic languages and literatures.
Language Fall 83 Fall 84 Increase
Spanish 1,125 1,287 14%
French 760 958 26%
German 410 471 15%
Source: KU foreign language department
This fall, 471 students enrolled in freshman and sophomore level German courses, Watkins said. In fall 1983, 410 students were enrolled in the same courses.
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University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
Naismith
continued from p.1
"The ground is zoned to accommodate those units," he said. "We're doing everything our studies say we need to prevent increased flooding."
Palas said that the plat was the result of years of work since the area was zoned for high-density, multi-family units 16 years ago.
"Where we are now is a good measure of the efforts of a lot of people to come to a workable solution." Palas said.
Although area residents have fought development since its consideration, he said that the neighborhood association's efforts over the past eight years at getting the development resulted in compromises from the developers.
"The efforts of the neighborhood have not been in vain," Palas said. "The developers have been generously supported, what they've succeeded in getting."
What the area residents are getting, Palos said, is a reduction in the number of units to be built in the subdivision. Originally, 700 units were planned for the area. This number was reduced to 356-380 in 1982 in response to neighborhood opposition.
Palos also said that the developers
could not build residential units in the flood plain area to the west of the creek.
Parts of the proposed development extend into what is called the flood fringe. Palas told. The flood fringe is an area where any residential building must be built two feet above the flood elevation level.
He said that because of the zoning of the area, the developers could build only parking lots in the area.
The most important concession from the developers, Palos said, is the donation to the city of "Tract A," a five-acre tract they have agreed not to develop. This land would be used as open space or kept natural.
"Tract A is a good example of how the developer has compromised," Palos said.
Having Tract A donated to the city would give the city complete control over both sides of the creek within city limits. Palos said.
Crowther she was unsure what the neighborhood association's plans would be if the commission accepted the plat tonight.
"We may seek legal counsel," he said. "Maybe what is needed is a change in the method of accepting
Palas said that although he thought the residents had legitimate concerns, the plattage stage of development was supposed to deal only with unfortunate aspects of the property. He said that the plat met subdivision regulations.
construction. But I believe the commission will be fair."
"The residents are interested in what they are going to put in there," he said. "They can have much more control over that at the site-planning stage. The site review process is entirely public."
Lawrence Mayor Ernest Angino agreed and said that he would limit public comments to the commission's policy of five minutes.
"We'll listen to comments, Angino said, 'but I think that the majority of people don't understand that all the city commission can do at this stage is accept easements and rights-of-way.
"Once a plat has been accepted by the planning commission, state law says that it's final."
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission unanimously approved the plat at its Aug. 22 meeting.
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Freshman Class Officer Elections Oct.10th,11th,1984
Pick up filing application in BOCO Office; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
9/18/84-9/27/84
Filing Deadline: Sept.27,1984 Thurs. 4 p.m. BOCO Office 110 B Kansas Union 864-4556
Use Kansan Classified.
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February 26th is the first day of early fall regular school season & Wednesday is the last day during summer basketball.
Excluding Halloween, June, July & final periods,
&
19. Staffer-Plant-del. University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, Douglas County 46047
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| 2. NO COURSES (MAKER TRADING DEALERS AND CARRIERS STREET ENTRIES AND OUTSTATIONS) | 13,786 | 13,786 |
| 3. MAIL SUBSCRIPTION | 784 | 784 |
| 4. NO PRODISSION (Run of IBM and IBM) | 14,570 | 14,570 |
| 5. NO PRODISSION (Run of IBM and IBM) | 140 | 180 |
| 6. TOTAL DISTRIBUTION (Run of 3 rows) | 14,750 | 14,750 |
| 7. OTHER DISTRIBUTIONS (RUN OF 3 ROWS) | 250 | 250 |
| 8. OTHER DISTRIBUTIONS (RUN OF 3 ROWS) | 250 | 250 |
| 9. RETURN FROM NEWS EDITOR | 0 | 0 |
| **Total number of pages:** | 15,000 | 15,000 |
1. certify that the statements made by me above are correct and complete
Susanne Shaw, General Manager
TURKEY
REPRESENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS AS A STUDENT AMBASSADOR
Deadline Tues., Sept. 18, 1984
For more information contact:
—The Office of Admissions, 126 Strong Hall
—Student Senate, B105 Kansas Union
—Your Organized Living Group President
K.U. GIFT ITEMS
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CHIPPENDALE ITEMS
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Switch from highlighting to jotting notes without changing pens. Textar comes in six bright fluorescent colors, each with a blue ballpoint pen.
Available now at your college store.
COSTUMES & MASKS
JACK DANIELS GIFTS
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sive technological journey began over les age at Hughes Aircraft Company more than 90 diverse technologies sub-micron electronics to large scale find Hughes people forging new futures.
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Or contact Hughes Corporate College Relations
Dept. NC, Bldg C2/B178, P.O. Box 1042, EI
Segundo, CA 90245.Equal Opportunity
Employer Proof of U.S. Citizenship Required
HUGHES
Hughes representatives will be on campus October 2 (See your placement office for an appointment)
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University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 7
KU grad found alive after plane crash
By HOLLIE MARKLAND Staff Reporter
Robert L. "Pete" Pierson Jr., a 37-year-old KU graduate, was found alive Sunday, four days after his plane crashed in the backwards of KU.
Pierson, the pilot of the plane, suffered two broken legs and a scrape shoulder, his mother, Theda Pierson, said yesterday. A woman flying with Pierson suffered a crane injury during the plane's ride. The nose had been sewn mute.
before a hunting trip, his mother said from her Lawrence home.
She said that an air rescue officer had told her and her husband, Robert L. Pierson Sr., Sunday morning that their son had been missing in Alaska since Thursday.
ONE OF PIERSON'S friends found him and the woman Sunday morning near Marshall Pass, about 20 minutes out of Valdez, Alaska.
Pierson's parents found out that their son was alive Sunday evening
Theda Pierson said that the airplane was demolished in the crash
"I told him that as soon as he buys another plane, I want to go for a ride with him," she said.
out that her son would not give up flying.
An air rescue officer took Piper to a Valdez hospital. He was later transferred to Providence Hospital in Anchorage.
Pierson's mother said that her son had sheltered the woman and himself with a pup tent from the airplane. She told me that but they were too ill to eat, she said.
For drinking water, Pierson crawled to a pool of water 100 yards
PIERSON LETTERED in gymnasies at KU for four years, said Bob Lockwood, instructor in health. He taught at Fordham and Porsson a gymnastics coach.
from the crash site, she said.
"If anyone can get through this, Pete can." Lockwood said. "Pain didn't stop him."
"I heard about the heroism that occurred in those backwoods," he said, "but gymnastics didn't do that to the man. It was the man who was like that in athletics."
ON THE RECORD
COMPUTER COMPONENTS
VALUED at $500 were stolen from
a physics department classroom in
Maloft Hall between 2 p.m. Friday
and 11 a.m. Saturday.
THEIVES STOLE 16 CAMERAS, camera bags, lenses and $20 in cash from Zercher Photo. 1107 Massachusetts St., between 8 p.m. Saturday and 6:15 p.m. Sunday. The loss totaled $5,036. The building was entered through a hole prized in the roof.
A BICYCLE VALUED at $250 was stolen between 8 p.m. Saturday and 6:15 p.m. Sunday from an apartment porch in the 1300 block of Massachusetts Street.
A 10-YEAR-OLD LAWRENCE MAN was arrested Friday night on charges of aggravated assault and drunken driving after he was involved in an accident at Ninth and Vermont streets. Police said the occupants of the other car had reported that the man, Robert L. Wilson, pointed a gun at them after the accident. Wilson remained in jail yesterday morning in lieu of $5,000 bond.
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The Sanctuary
WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS INC.
PRESENTS
LARRY MOORE
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ALFRED SCHNEIDER
"The Real Role of the Journalist in 1984".
7:30 p.m. Wed., Sept. 19 Rm. 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall
ADC
Home
KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
KU STUDENTS
Are you aware that you have a Credit Union that will pay you?
Are you aware that you have a Credit Union that will pay you?
7% interest on checking with no minimum balance, no monthly service charge and no limit on number of check written
13% on IRA accounts that could possibly make you a millionaire
Free money orders and VISA Travelers Checks to members
All students eligible for membership and all services
603 W. 9th
(9th & Louisiana)
Main Office 8 & Mon-Fri
Drive Up Window 8 & Mo-Fri
864-3291
Branch Office
10 Canham O'Leary
5 Mo-Fri
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST N FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center
INTRODUCING
2—10" Pizzas with 2 Toppings & 2 Pepsis
TUESDAY TWO FERS
$9.50 Value for only $8.00
---
Delivered Free No Coupon necessary.
HOURS
Mon - Thurs - 11 a.m - 2 a.m
Fri & Sat - 11 a.m - 3 a.m
Sunday - 11 a.m - 1 a.m
We Deliver During Lunch
Calendar Books Wine Glass Glasses
'Count on us when you need a Favor'
J & M Favørs
Best Quality 841-4349
- imprinted specialties*
Now at a New Location
2201C W. 25th (Behind Gibsons)
Best Prices
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Notarization of legal documents
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee
ANOTHER GROUP FALLS BEFORE THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Paid Advertisement
Those of us who lack initiative and thus are among the "private-enterprise" system's unemployed, still occasionally experience moments of discomfort. One such instance occurred recently when we discovered, via the September 7th Kansas City Times, that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce acknowledged having sent, in the words of House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman John D. Dingell, a "hit list of long-term career (government) employees" to the White House personnel director.
Although, according to the Washington Post, "Many of those whose names appeared on the list said . . . they did not know . . . they had been singled out by the chamber, one of the nation's most influential business lobbying groups," the list named "Carter Administration holdovers whom the business community (felt were) unsympathetic" to President Reagan's programs.
Due to a vigorously held desire to remain unworthy of Chamber attention while sniping from our vantage point on the societal periphery, we marginalia are frantically trying to modify a few noisily issued opinions that eventually might catch the Chamber's eye.
We now concede that video dens, those Chamber-approved havens of free enterprise which house inherently worthless video games, might not be a blatant waste of resources. Because at least a few Lawrencians will use it every year, perhaps the improved airport is, as the Chamber claims, an addition to Lawrence's transportation system. Although the current downtown developer gained this designation by ignoring both the competitive procedure devised to select the appropriate developer and the information acquired to guide the downtown developmental effort, maybe we can smilingly accept, as has the Chamber, the flawed results in the name of progress.
We reluctantly admit this considerable fear of incurring the Chamber's disapproval now unexpectedly leaves us hoping that, like so many other group presentations, our previous pronouncements about the Chamber and some of its positions have been relegated to the spacious Chamber wastebasket.
William Dann
2702 West 24th St. Terrace
Paid Advertisement
University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1984
Page 8
CAMPUS AND AREA
Sports pavilion lights checked for longevity
By BRENDA STOCKMAN Staff Reporter
The Fred B. Anschutz Sports Pavilion isn't open for athletes to use, but the lights are burning day and night.
Flovd Temple, assistant athletic director, said yesterday that the lights were kept on all night to check their lifespan. If the lights are turned on and off, the electricity flow varies too much to yield an accurate test of the lights and the system.
Another reason for lighting the building night and day is for the security of the building and the workers, Temple said.
James Denney, director of police,
said keeping lights on in buildings
was a standard crime-prevention
measure.
Mike Fowler, a workman who is helping lay the football turf, said he and the other turtl layers had been working 12 to 14 hours a day throughout the past week and during the weekend to complete the project on time. The workmen are employed by SuperTurf of Garland, Texas
TEMPIRE SAID THAT the turf for the football field should be laid late this afternoon and that the pavilion would be completed by Oct. 15.
surface once the football field is complete, he said.
The pavilion will be used as an indoor practice field for the football team and other sports, including track practice and meets. The facility will have batting cages for the baseball practice during inclement weather.
The golf teams will be able to prepare for the season before the weather warms up for outside practice with the new golf ball cages. Temple said.
The pavilion will be open for recreational sports activities by fall of 1983. Temple said. He said the athletic department wanted to work out the scheduling of the various intercollegiate sports before the department opened the pavilion for general recreational use.
Workmen will begin on the track
THE PAVILION WILL be the first facility of its kind in the Big Eight Conference, Temple said.
The pavilion is different, he said, because it will be usable by so many different sports, and the construction only eight months to complete.
The pavilion is named after Freed B. Anschutz of Denver, a KU student from 1929 to 1930 who gave the University of Kansas almost half of the $3 million dollars that was needed to complete the project.
Van Slyke points finger at opponent Slattery aide defends mail privilege
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ Staff Reporter
James Van Slyke, Republican candidate for 2nd District representative, charged yesterday that incumbent Rep. Jim Slattery abused his congressional mailing privileges.
Van Slyke said yesterday afternoon that Slattery had stayed within the law in franking mailings in August but had used them to further his campaign. Earlier in the day, Van Slyke held a press conference in Topeka on the issue.
Taxpayers finance franking privileges, which allow congressman free use of the postal system for official mailings.
"The law states he can frank mailings up until 60 days before an election," Van Slyke said. "So he used the 'window of opportunity' between the primary and a few days ago to mail a bunch of stuff that was obviously politically motivated."
VAN SLYKE SAID one mailing went out to everyone in the district, and several mailings were targeted to specific interest groups such as businessmen, lawyers and retired federal employees.
"I saw about a half dozen such mailers, and I said there were at least a dozen," Van Slyke said. "That cost at least $100,000 for
production, printing and mailing of these materials.
"It is clear to me that this was a political move."
Ken Peterson, Slattery's press secretary, yesterday afternoon denied Van Slyke's accusations and said that the mailings were routine informational letters sent to constituents.
"This is a charge a lot of incumbents face." Peterson said. "Slattery said he intended to communicate with the people back in the early 1980s. Many of these mailings were sent a response to letters we received."
"This was the newest update on what the legislature has been doing," he said. "The specific mailings dealt with legislation that affected specific groups of people."
THE MAILINGS WERE sent in August because Congress was
nearing the end of the legislative session, Peterson said.
However, Van Slyke said he didn't believe such an explanation.
"That is a convenient answer," he said, "but I don't buy it."
Van Slyke said the lack of mass mailings in the last year had led him to question Slattery's use of them now.
“If he had a history of sending targeted mailings, I might not have wondered,” he said.
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
THE PUBLIC RELATIONS Student Society of America will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
GET STREETWISE, a workshop focusing on rapa awareness, education and prevention, will start at 7 p.m. in the Regionist Room of the Theworkshop is sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS
ACADEMIC SKILL
Covering:
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
Attend the
THE COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium of the University.
THE SUA STRATEGY and Games Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
THE COLLEGE YOUNG DEMOCRATS will meet at 9 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union. Merle Rothwell, candidate for Douglas County sheriff, will speak.
Time Management
Textbook Reading
Listening and Notetaking
Thursday, September 20 6:30 to 9 p.m.
300 Strong Hall
FREE!
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
SAL
ST. JOHN'S UNIVERSITY
CHAPEL
DIME DRAWS!
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Walk-ins are welcome
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KIEF'S CRAMOPHONE DISCOUNT STEREO shop
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NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH!
We Start From Scratch when we are making the Best Pizza in town. Then we finish by giving you the Best Price in town.
Pizza At STEPHANIE'S
3rd
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University
15th
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WE'RE COMING AT YA!
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minutes or less
"When it comes to pizza
Stephanie's comes to you!"
We choose to use only quality
mozzarella cheese which is low in
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by hand to keep it soft and to
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Our pepperoni is tops...our vegetables
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All this adds up to quality you
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Speedy delivery. All deliveries take
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"When it comes to pizza
Stephanie's comes to you!"
We choose to use only quality
mozzarella cheese which is low in
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fresh. And we throw the dough
by hand to keep it soft and to
develop the gluten. Our sauce contains
a selection of herbs and real Romano cheese which
gives our pizzas a special spiciness and flavor.
Our pepperoni is tops...our vegetables
are always fresh and cut large enough to taste.
All this adds up to quality you
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Speedy delivery. All deliveries take
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Heavy boxes protect and
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2214 Yale Rd.
Dine-In Only!
Expires September 28, 1984
Pizza At Stephanie's
2 For 1
Order any Small Pizza
& get another of equal value
Starting Price ($none Pizza)
$4.83 FREE!
841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
Price does not include sales tax
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN YOUR SERVICE ZONE
Pizza At Stephanie's
2 For 1
Order any Large Pizza
& get another one of equal value
Starting Price ($none Pizza)
$8.21 FREE!
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2214 Yale Rd.
Price does not include sales tax
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN YOUR SERVICE ZONE
Pizza Mt.
STEPHANIE'S
Pizza At Stephanie's
2 For 1
Order any Small Pizza
& get another of equal value
Starting Price
($close Pizza)
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2214 Yale Rd.
Price does not include sales tax
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ANYWHERE IN OUR SERVICE ZONE
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841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
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---
1
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1984
Crew denies Soviets' claim
Page 9
By United Press International
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Crew members of a U.S. vessel apprehended by the Soviets in the Bering
Sea, have balked at signing statements saying they purposely entered Soviet territory. Sen Ted Stevens' office said yesterday.
23, of Homer, Alaska, who along with his four-man crew has been held in Siberia since last Wednesday.
Stevens, R Alaskan, said he was able to put a 15-minute telephone call through to Cab. Tab Thoms.
Stevens assured Thoms that efforts were under way to gain the crew's release.
Soviets boycott U.S. plane contest
By United Press International
CHICOPEE, Mass. — Model airplane buffs from 24 countries tested their wings yesterday in preparation for the opening of a world competition being boycotted
by one of the toughest teams the Soviets.
"We were hoping they would be here, but they're not, so 'c'est la vie.'" said Geoffrey Styles, spokesman for the 93,000-member Academy of Model Aeronautics which is host of the Control Line World Championships.
More than 250 competitors registered for the five-day competition, scheduled to open today at Westover Air Force Base.
Amateur pilots fly wood, fiberglass or Styrofoam replicas of full sized planes, each weighing an average of 1 pounds with average wing spans of up to 40 inches.
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75
16-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.00
21-25 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.85
For every 5 words add 25c 50c 75c 1.05
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5:10 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5:10 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5:10 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5:10 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5:10 p.m.
POLICIES
- Words set in ALL ABS counts as 2 words
* Words set in HOLD ABS counts as 4 words
per column inch
Immature display, advertisements cannot be displayed on the screen. Display dimensions must remain in inches only. No images allowed in the display. Display sizes must be larger than 15 inches.
- More taxes based on current day incomes
only
- Bind box office, airline and NAV services range.
• Must be an company all are affiliated authorized to the University. Daily Consulty. All advertisers will be invited to pay in advance.
• Advertisements must be submitted to the Schools that are not provided but have accredited in airline and naval entertainment.
• Declared disease.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement.
* Nor thanks on cancellation of prepaid classified ads.
- • Assist in hospital and on-campus tour and monitor timely care due to the
* samples of all medical items must be submitted upon completion of a visit.
Bank cards can be accepted 10% of charge for payment not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed
would be calling the bank business off at 404-4358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
119 Stauffer Flint Hall 864-4358
PRESENT LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
TOPICS include overcoming mental blocks, preparing for exams and improving skills in reading, writing, speaking and listening comprehension. Wednesday, September 19, 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.
This is the last foreign language program this semester FREE. Presented by the Student Assistance Center, 132 Stall High, 841-644-0617
Applications are now being accepted for Student Committee Member Applications through the Track Office, 1431 Allen Fitch House, Incase of part of this great KIU Tradition, deadline for application. Sept. 20
Hadsted Street搭桥 Thurs evening. Close to Westfield Mall. Send Reference Mails shopping Center
TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION PROGRAM
FOR HIGHER LEVELS
WED SEP 17 8:30 PM
OHAD SEPTIHU KANSAS UNION
WWW.KANSASUNION.COM
40. Streetview This workshop will focus on Raphael
Education, Education and self-protection skills.
= Ipm, Tue, Sept. 18 Regional Room, kan,
Union
*TERMINATED IN BRIDGE" Game to SUA*
Strategy Games clubs. Every Tues. 7-11, Trail
Barns, Kansas Union
THE FAR SIDE
413-4933 for information
GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Specialist COMPUTER SPECIALIST HALL 197
time graduate research associate, successful internship in a position that requires the implementation of a survey to identify microcomputer hardware software for geographic information. Status in geography planning, computer science or related discipline required working experience in geography planning, experience with microcomputers required Background and or coursework in geographic information system as a graduate degree Program Room 249 Nichols Hall, 864-4753. Applications deadline is pm. September 19, 1984. Equal opportunity.
Interested in joining a small Christian group for caring, sharing action and prayer that meets weekly. Group new, forming at Ecumenical Church Ministries (Lord of Creation) or call us at 718-493-2045.
The week's seminar: "Gospel of John for today"
an exploration of the message of the gospel of
Jesus Christ at St. Paul's Church, Sept.
25, 4:30 p.m at Episcopal Christian
Minstery, 1594 Broadway. Come by a call at
810-769-2656.
RESEARCH PAPERS/ 300 page cataloging, 15,278
topics' Rush $2.90 RESEARCH 11,222 Infobox, 200
MR Los Angeles, 282 (213) 477,876
Kansas Relays Student Committee is looking for new members. Pick up application at the Truck Office: 141 Allen Field House. Deadline is Sept. 21.
SENIORS YEARBOOK POINTS! Shooting at taking place now, in Student Organizations & Activities Office, 400 Kansas Union Call your office for appointment (12.5 12.5) B, Kansas
By GARY LARSON
© 1984 Universal Press Syndicate
OK, one more time and it is off to bed for the bath of you. Hey, Bey. Think there are any bears in your bed?
Rent'19 Gulr TV T.V. $20.90 a month Curtis
Mathes. 144 W.23rd 842,573) Open 9:30 - 9:00
M.F. 9:30 - 5:00, Sat
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. 1447 W 23rd 842-5731 Open 9:30 - 9:00
M.F. 3:00 - 3:00 Sat
Trailridge Athletic Club
Douglas County Open Racquet Ball and Handball Tournament
LESSON 14 THE QUEST SHOT FOR
THE A TEAM FROM THE SCRAP.
THE ACME JOURNAL ENDPOINT
MENT SHOTS
FRIDAY
UN.
KRING!
BLOOM COUNTY
Dates: Sept. 22,23
Shirley Bauer formerly of Charme Beauty Salon, is now at Angles Beauty Salon '90. Massachusetts M.A.C. call us with for Shirley Bauer's classics. Call 877-235-6400. Trykins for the KU Varsity men's and women's Breaking teams will be held throughout the week of Sept. (7) - 21. Men with 100 and women with 150 or above are encouraged to try out. Contact Mike E. at the Kansas Train Daybook for information.
Open to all KU Students and Faculty
entry deadline Sept. 19
IT'S MOLD AND NOT HOW WE'VE STILL KNOWS TO MAKE THE GAME AT HOME. THEY WANT TO SAVE DONG APPLICATIONS
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All requests. Lighting included. Reasonable Rates. References: 129-142.
841-7230 2500 W. 6th Street
FOR RENT
Available man Removed two bedroom apartment at 1290 street. One black north of Northampton and one red east of Bristol. $340 plus gas and electricity. Call 821 660. Lumber house home $530/mo. Off street
KU STUDENTS AND FACULTY
We still have limited number of completely furnished apartments and townhomes. Some are perfect for three people; all close to campus! Call or stop by Hanover Place—14th
Sundance----7th and Florida or
Tanglewood—10th and Arkansas.
The University Daily KANSAN
841-5255, 841-1212,
749-2415, 842-4455.
Opportunity for roommates. One free from campuses, 4 big bedrooms, living room, kitchen with dining area, barroom with 2 winters, back porch with fireplace, laundry closet, $105 per roommate for 4, also, 3 bedroom unit like above for $125 per roommate for 3. See to app all utilities paid. Call Gail 842-749-7144, 832-614-5431.
Offered bv
by Berke Breathed
No need to live in a student flat. Room available now in renovated, energy efficient 2-bedroom apartment with bedroom 1, 2-1/2 bath, modern kitchen, storage room, laundry room. Fun apartment oriented group ($500 plus). Fun apartment oriented group ($500 plus).
Subjective 10 Dec. from tenant. Available Oct.
Can lose letter from landlord after 12,
desired = 21-dollars at Applegate Apts. Unl
to 36,000 on Bureau # 81727, evenings
9:50-12 noon.
Mastercraft Management
Spring semester only. Fully furnished
13 bedroom, 2 bath house Great neighborhood.
close to campus, complete with 2 child living
dogs. $150/mo 841-446.
STUDIO APT All utilities paid $165 2 blocks from K U 19. 8 p.m. i.p. m.
FOR SALE
Townhouse with finished basement available, only one left, good for 4 people $400 SUNRISE PLACE 841-236
Try cooperative living* Sunflower House, 186
Tennessee 729 0671 Ask for Dawn Inexpensive &
Private rooms are available
1980 Ford Pinto economical, reliable best offer.
IBM electronic typewriter, good. $60 749 7487 5:30 p.m.
jit 12:30
IT'S YOUR HOUR. ARGUILLED? NOT
MEET LIKE YOU GOND AND JONES
TO COMM BLOING. HEY - I'M A
CN HID COMMAND. CLASS ACT
UNO TORR OF
CONVERT QUERILLA
GROUND!
BUT THE WOULD
DO THE LOVE
POINT TO WEAK
ARE THEY
I'M BONKY
NO AMERICA
AWAY! DO
NEAR AUGUST
1981 Honda Moped, runs, needs some work, $75
Software. (Fortran) for Kpro II, never used, $20
887 6631 (local) after 6 p.m.
AUDI Fox, 1977, 4 dr. auto, $1950; Electrovoceor
speakers $120 ea. Pioneer amplifier 80W, $200;
Kenwood amplifier 72W, $340, $191, $192
8 Channel P.A. board with set of speakers $500
Shawn, 842-0523
1981 Kawasaki KZ 550 14,360 miles (mostly highway), $200, 224 W. 9th, Apt. 1, see behind 840 Kentucky
Almost new Soundtrack console stereo. Excellent condition. Includes 8 monitor, cassette, & phone $250 or best offer Call 841 0940 or 843 0750 evenness.
Ibera Heap Ii 64k, disk drive with controller $799
Ibera IIx 128k, amber monitor, Apple printer $599
Ibera IIIx 128k, amber monitor, Apple printer $599
Ibera PC10/PC18 (ISC), 1drive $799, Drive IPH
Portable 2, $699
Ibera HP 369, drive $199, Call员 Memher 825/375
HP 369, drive $199
Bicycle, 26" Tires, Men's, Dual rear wire grocery baskets. New seats and pedals. More!" $44
843-900
Bullfids, briquethes, collections, follows手表,
ugage, baguette notebooks and much more at
M44 Massachusetts 826-6946
COLLIA M is speed girl's hobe 749-1744
"P.J." P.J.
CS Students. For a Low Price, you can own your on-term terminal ZT 1-A with monitor built in modem, adjustable partly books up to KU and other main frames, & More Call Us! 894-6409 Comic books, use Scientifix Former paperbacks, etc. Courses offered open seven days a week, open in ks, Towson U11 841 New Hampshire
DRAFTING MACHINE Sturdy Heating
works scales, works great $150
appreciable $298-$398
Complete Quarenze water with heater Kc,
calcium condition, $980; Call 843-8952, between 5:30
am and 6:15 pm.
EVERYTHING GOES Car. 79 Grand Prix fuel power furniture. bedroom set. dining room set. 2 cris, ornamental rugs, TV and much more. Call 490-4900. availm
Finch. with Bamboo cage. Food & accessories in
ef. 842-6617
For furnishings for your living, we have what you need. Thirst stores at 82 Vermont and E. 9th. Gilbon Sunshine 347 - orange table $900 Goldman Roth with both cases. Exps. 1749. Misc. Mepup
Motorcycle 7 Suriak GT 290, $25, or make of:
for; 841.3215 of 841.125, leave message
for 84.3215 of 84.1625, leave message
RALEIGH EBANK - Brand new men's 24
$150,000 MOBILE CARRYING
Holding Machine AMAREC 610 like new $150
Sturdy zerzy 1984 Honda Spree, low mileage, most condition, $75, navigator Callable Naira 749-1789
Suzuki GT-185 new tree chain, sprockets, tank brakes, hood head, rear windshield, #32600
Used Singer Sewing Machine with cabinet in excellent condition $125, all accessories incl. Call 841 0511
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplement. Now on Sale. Make some use to these notes in your own classroom preparation or exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available at Town Creek. The
Windwater Sailrider - SR 1. 1982 model Regatta sail, 12' long, A400 or best offer, A41-0031
Zenith Z-19 Terminal and J-eat modem Communicates (PC 6 and Honeywell $750 retail, Price negotiable 841 8494
COMPLEX-TERMINAL Zenith ZT11 Terminal with built-in Auto Digital auto login for feature, parallel centrals and RS232 ports. Zenith ZT121 Mibex monitor 840, 842, 829
AUTO SALES
1973 Ford Mustang, PS, PB AC, 33 Cleveland engine, AMF cassette player, shows tires. Runs great. Body, rough $1000, negotiate 843-5790
1947 Malibu 350-201, PB JA, New starter,
alternator, water pump pumps, exhaust $900
negotiate. Call 843-538 after 7, ask for Paul
Rolander
1974 Volvo Wagon, 4-speed, $1195, 1-845-2043 or
294-1640 (leave message)
1975 Toyota Corolla, a dependable road warrior from the Land of the Rising Sun $1000. Ask for Paula, 864 4810 or 843 5996.
1975 Toyota Corolla, good condition, runs great,
must sell. $600, 843 8156 or 842 822
1975 Toyota Corolla, a dependable road warrior
1979 MGB, New Tup. excellent condition $1500, or
make an offer. Call 842 5283
1978 Ford Fairmont 35,000 miles. 2-door, blue
4-cyl., PS, PB, new stereo $196, negotiable
423-7781
Cleaned WB x for sale at Motrice Motors, 841-6600
FOREST FIESTA, 1980 - 4p, wheel front drive, AM-FM, great mpg, fun to drive, New tires, hat, bray, brakes, exhaust 2009 - 841-3610
CAR for sale Great around town car 67 LeMans
Great interior. Price negotiable Call latter 5 p.m.
841-9438
Must sell 1971 Plymouth huster for $25 or best of
fer. Slant six engine, 3 speed, new clutch, AM FM stereo. Call 749-1212 for more info
LOST AND FOUND
HELP WANTED
FOUND at 23rd floor. Call 442 9966 to identify
FOUND Domestic Bird — West Hills, Apt
Walkway area. Describe to clanm. 442 996,
or 844 948.
FOUND: Car Keys at the Henry Shenk playing at 23rd and Ivail. Call 842.9860 to identify
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193.1-193.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
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195.1-195.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
196.1-196.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
197.1-197.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
198.1-198.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
199.1-199.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
200.1-200.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
201.1-201.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
202.1-202.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
203.1-203.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
204.1-204.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
205.1-205.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
206.1-206.7月 timegraduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
207.1-207.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
208.1-208.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
209.1-209.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
210.1-210.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
211.1-211.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
212.1-212.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
213.1-213.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
214.1-214.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
215.1-215.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
216.1-216.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
217.1-217.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
218.1-218.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
219.1-219.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
220.1-220.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
221.1-221.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
222.1-222.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
223.1-223.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
224.1-224.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
225.1-225.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
226.1-226.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
227.1-227.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
228.1-228.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
229.1-229.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
230.1-230.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
231.1-231.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
232.1-232.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
233.1-233.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
234.1-234.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
235.1-235.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
236.1-236.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
237.1-237.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
238.1-238.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
239.1-239.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
240.1-240.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
241.1-241.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
242.1-242.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
243.1-243.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
244.1-244.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
245.1-245.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
246.1-246.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
247.1-247.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
248.1-248.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
249.1-249.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
250.1-250.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
251.1-251.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
252.1-252.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
253.1-253.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
254.1-254.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
255.1-255.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
256.1-256.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
257.1-257.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
258.1-258.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
259.1-259.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
260.1-260.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
261.1-261.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
262.1-262.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
263.1-263.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
264.1-264.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
265.1-265.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
266.1-266.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
267.1-267.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
268.1-268.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
269.1-269.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
270.1-270.7月 time Graduate Research Assistant $13.30 per hour 10.18 to 10.18 to 16.45 hours
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part time positions as female companions to
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Assistant Managers needed Day or Evening
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to communicate well, initiative and desire to improve program quality, implement and evaluate changes in the job environment as possible at $12.90 mo. No fringe benefits. Submit resume and three letters of reference to Kansas Union Personnel Office, 312 Broad Avenue, Kansas City, KS 66115. Job interviews will be conducted on July 7, FOE.
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The department of mathematics is hiring tutors for Math 101. All applicants must have completed the following: (a) Bach degree or full Balkan diploma; (b) Full Balkan diploma in 2:5 Formal or 8:4:4 Hiking; Applications are available in the Math office (208) 763-9920.
University of Kansas Budget Office has an open for a continual time graduate assistant position with possible full time employment during summer. The position will assist with the process of managing and preparing the budget. University budget and will help with the technical preparation of the four University Budgets. The manager will provide training to ensure to fund accounting and have an opportunity to work within the University financial environment. Acceptance in a K.U. graduate program is required. Training requirements must be completed. munitions still required. $400-$800 per month for a half time appointment. Closing date, Sep 21. Fully information call: Jane Wakater. Budget 2601
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4 week class card is $20
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1
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
September 18, 1984 Page 10
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
Madsen's 69 leads golfers after tourney's first round
Steve Madsen shot a 69 yesterday in the first round of the All College Golf Classic in Oklahoma City, leading the Kansas men's golf team to a three-way tie for fourth place.
Mother's score placed him in a three-
way tie for fifth place in the individual
In team scoring, Oral Roberts University was in first place, with a score of 279. Oklahoma was second, at 280, and Nebraska was third, at 281. Oklahoma City University and Missouri were tied with Kansas for fourth at 283.
Other Kansas individual scores for the par-70 course included Tim Johnson, 70; Brian McGreey, 71; Tod Zimich, 72; Kevin Gustafson, 4 and Jim Phillips, 76.
Other team scores included Iowa State, 296; Wichita State, 280; Centenary, 290; North Texas State, 292; Central State, 293; Cameron, 294; and Tulsa, 298.
'Hawks get set for Vanderbilt
The Kansas football team spent yesterday preparing for Saturday's game at Vanderbilt by going over the scouting report on the Compo's attacking yawks at 10 a.m. in dark.
Vanderbilt is 2-0 this season, after victories over Kansas State and Maryland. The Commodores are led by quarterback Trace McCoy and seventh in the nation in passing efficiency
"It will be a tough hall game," coach Mike Gottfred said. "They're on a roll. They're doing well."
Gottried said fullback Mark Henderson, who sat on the Florida State game with a knee injury, and defensive end Guy Gamble, who injured his knee in the Florida State game, could possibly return to action against Vanderbilt.
Split end Johnny Holloway missed
reaction yesterday because of class.
Earlier in the day, the junior varsity conducted a two-and-one-half hour scrimage, which Gottfried said went well.
Women golfers in last place
After 36 holes, the women's golf team stands last among the 14 teams at the Cowgirl Invitational in Stillwater, Okla. The tournament will end tomorrow.
Tulsa leads the field with a team score of 612. Trailing Tulsa are Oklahoma State, 625. Texas A&M M/62. Southern Methodist, 625. Lamar, 634. Houston Baptist, 638. Oklahoma, 645. Texas Christian, 652. Nebraska, 654. Missouri, 668. Texas Tech, 677. North Texas State, 689. Wichita State, 701. and KU, 705.
The leading golfer for the Jayhawks is Maureen Kelly with a score of 168 Following her on the KU scoring list are Tina Gnewch, 171; Jane Helleberg, 185; Toni Shockley, 184; and Brenda Sanders, 190.
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Associate Sports Editor
Schedule announced after delays
Four national television appearances and fifteen home games are included in this year's KU basketball schedule announced by athletic director Monte Johnson yesterday
Announcement of the schedule was delayed until negotiations with CBS and NBC for national television games were completed, assistant athletic director Lonnie Rose said.
CBS will teleceive the Jan. 19 game against Oklahoma at Norman, the Jan. 27 game against Michigan at Ann Arbor and the Feb. 9 home game against Memphis State. ABC will teleceive the Feb. 24 home game against Kansas City and two nationally televised games last season.
The Oklahoma games will pit last year's Big Eight Conference regular-season champion, Oklahoma, against last year's Big Eight Post-Season Tournament champion, KU.
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
07 Mass phone: 843-115
KATZ Anheuser Busch will regionally televisive five conference games and a nonconference home game against Houston. Five conference games will be shown regionally on the Sportstune cable network.
After a Nov 15 exhibition game against the Chinese national team, KU begins its season. Nov 23-25 at the Great Alaska Shootout at
Anchorage. This prestigious pre-season tournament annually marks the start of the college basketball season.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
KU drew Maryland as a first-round opponent. Other teams at the tournament include Tennessee, Alabama-Birmingham, Illinois, Idaho State, Oregon and Alaska-Anchorage, Maryland, Illinois and Alabama-Birmingham appeared in last year's NCAA tournament.
Highlighting the non-conference portion of the schedule are games against Kentucky, a perennial NCAA tournament team, and cross-state rival Wichita State. The Kentucky game is Dec. 31 in Louisville, and the Wichita State game is Jan. 5 at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
"I think this is a fine schedule," Johnson said. "We play some very good teams both at home and on the road and we certainly feel that Kansas should play this type of schedule. With Coach Brown and the team that he has put together, Kansas will certainly be very representative and will be able to compete with anyone in the country."
Here is the complete schedule:
a KATZ Amehser-Busch regional telecast
b Sporttime regional telecast
c CBS-TV national telecast
d NBC-TV national telecast
Nov. 15 China (Exhibition) at Lawrence
Nov. 23-25 Great Alaska Shootout at Anchor
alaska, Lake
Dec. 1 Detroit at Lawrence
Dec 4 South Dakota State at Lawrence
Dec 8 Abilene Christian at Lawrence
Dec 10 South Carolina State at Lawrence
Dec 15 Houston at Lawrence
Dec 27 George Washington
Dec. 22 George Washington at Washington D.C.
Dec. 31 Kentucky at Louisville
Jan. 3 Texas Southern at Lawrence
Jan. 5 Wichita State at Kansas City, Mo
Jan. 7 Western Carolina at Lawrence
Jan. 11 South Alabama at Mobile
b-Jan. 17 Iowa State at Lawrence
c-Jan. 19 Oklahoma at Norman
b-Jan. 22 Missouri at Lawrence
a-Jan. 26 Colorado at Boulder
c-Jan. 27 Michigan at Ann Arbor
a-Jan. 30 Kansas State at Manhattan
b-Feb. 2 Nebraska at Lincoln
Feb. 4 Colorado at Lawrence
Feb. 6 Oklahoma State at Lawrence
d-Feb. 8 Missouri at Lawrence
a-Feb. 12 Missouri at Columbia
a-Feb. 16 Iowa State at Ames
a-Feb. 20 Kansas State at Lawrence
d-Feb. 24 Oklahoma at Lawrence
b-Feb. 28 Nebraska at Lawrence
b-Mar. 2 Oklahoma at Stillwater
Mar. 8-9 Big Eight Tournament at Kansas City, Mo.
Mar. 5 Big Eight Tournament at campus sites
Miami holds off Bills' late rally in 21-17 victory
Bv United Press International
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Dan Marino three touchdown passes and the Miami Dolphins held off a late Buffalo rally last night in posting a 21-17 victory over the Bills.
Marino, a second-year pro who made his first start last season against Buffalo, threw a 1-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Julius Throne and third quarter to give the Dolphins a 21-3 lead.
Buffalo cut into Miami's lead with less than four minutes left in the third quarter. The Bills, on their first sustained drive of the game, went 80 yards in 13 plays with rookie running back Speedy Neal diving over from one yard to side the Dolphins' 'lead' to 21-10.
Buffalo, 0.3, had a scoring opportunity with just over five minutes left in the game, but wide receiver Byron Frankin fumbled after catching a Ferguson pass at the Miami 37. The loose ball was recovered by Dolphins defensive back Don McNeal.
28
Marino completed 26-of-35 passes for 296 yards.
Buffalo Bills running back Greg Bell looks for an opening in the Miami Dolphins defense. Miami defeated the Bills, 21-17, behind the passing of quarterback Dan Marino. Marino completed 26 of 35 passes for 296 yards.
United Press International
After 3 defeats volleyball team to travel to NU
By CHRIS LAZZARINO Sports Writer
Sports Writer
He took an inexperienced team to Houston and returned with players that had been hardened by tough competition, ready to battle Nebraska tomorrow.
Although the women's volleyball team was defeated in three straight matches last weekend at the Rice Invitational in Houston, head coach Bob Lockwyn is far
"We came out of the tournament with enthusiasm and ready to play more." Lockwood said. "The girls rebounded from losing. Now they know what they need to improve on as individuals and as a team."
The Jayhawks lost their first match to Rice, 8-15, 7-15, 5-15. They were defeated in their second match by Iowa, 0-15, 5-15, 6-15. Their third match went the distance, but they were defeated by Tulane, 14-16, 15-12, 13-15, 13-15, 9-15.
Lockwood said the team had trouble returning serve against Iowa, but improved against Tulane. Lockwood also said that attacks, which are spikes at the net, and kills, hits that directly cause a point or side-out, were also improved in the Tulane match.
FRESHMAN JUDY DESCH led the team against Tulane with 15 kills. Senior Beth Vivian led the team in ace serves and used good play selection as the setter. Lockwood said.
"Before the tournament, we really didn't know how the girls would react under fire," Lockwood said. "Now we do" KU travels to Lincoln for a dual match tomorrow against the perennial Big-Eight power Cornmuskens. Lockwood said the dayhawks had never been Nebraska, so they meant a victory must some eventually.
"The number one priority is to go to Lincoln, walk in that gym and play with enthusiasm and hustle." Lockwood said "KU has never beaten a Nebraska team, but that won't last forever. We are going to try and get the win. We know any team can be beaten."
THE TEAM BLOCKING in Houston was the best it had ever been that early in the season and the team is improving daily. Lockwood said, which gives him hope for the match tomorrow.
Lockwood said that the practices before the match would concentrate on improving one-on-one blocking, reading offenses, returning serve and controlling hitting.
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KU
KU Bookstores
Kansas Union Burge Union
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
SNC LYD
Wednesday, Sept. 19
FREE!
7:30 to 9 p.m.
Javhawk Room, Kansas Union
NOTE: This is the last foreign language program this semester.
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
Many happy Returns
are currently paying 6%
of total purchases from
the Spring of '84
(Jan. 1, 1984 to
June 30, 1984). These
are period 75 receipts. They
may be redeemed at the Customer
Service Desk at the Kansas Union
Bookstore or at the Burge Union
Store. with your student ID.
Period 75 receipts will be redeemed
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The boys of fall
No, it isn't really spring. And yes, it's more than training. But the KU baseball team will warm up to the fall "spring training" season on Saturday at Quigley Field against
Johnson County Community College. Those games will begin a weekend of play that should give Coach Marty Pattin a good look at his players for this year. See page 16.
海豹在海滩上玩耍
Sunny High, 83. Low, 53 Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 95. No. 18 (USPS 650-640)
Wednesdav. September 19. 1984
AURH votes to drop a breakfast, raise base rates
By JULIE COMINE Staff Reporter
An $80 increase in the base housing rate and the discontinuance of Saturday breakfast were two proposals endorsed last night by the general assembly of the Association of University Residence Halls.
About 70 hall residents, staff members and AURH representatives debated for nearly four hours in the cafeteria of Joseph R Pearson Hall before approving five AURH recommendations for the 1983-86 housing contract.
The recommendations, along with those of the University of Kansas department of housing and other KU housing units, will be presented at the Residential Program Advisory Board
The Advisory Board develops policy recommendations for all KU housing units: residence hall, scholarship halls, Jay
hawker Towers, Stouffer Place and Sunflower apartments
THE AURH GENERAL assembly recommended that the following items be included in the 1985-86 housing contracts:
- An $80 increase in the base housing rate
- $17 less than the base rate proposed last week by the housing department.
The housing department recommended that this year's base rate of $1,974 be increased by 4.7 percent, or $97, to $2,071. The base rate is the starting point for figuring the costs of a double-room contract at the eight halls. Single rooms cost an extra $1,000 a month.
The $97 increase proposed by the housing department included per-contract increases of $30 for food, $30 for salaries and $37 for utilities.
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY voted to cut the increase for utilities to $20, citing recent decreases in the consumer price index for fuels and utilities.
- Discontinuance of Saturday breakfast at all halls.
Curt Worden, Housing and Contracts Committee chairman, said Saturday breakfast was an "unnecessary meal" and should be replaced with a Saturday brunch to reduce
*Last year at JIRP, only 20 to 30 residents out of 400 showed up for Saturday breakfast.*
Instead of a regular breakfast, residents will be able to sign up for a continental breakfast.
- Creation of a task force to review hall visitation policies and guest-registration systems.
- "The SYSTEM NEEDS to be revised by a group of people on the inside — residents, hall directors, security monitors," said Andy Gutteriez, chairman of the Contract Recommendations and Coordinating Subcommittee.
- The general assembly also voted to hire
owing desk assistants to monitor security next year in JKP and Templin from 11 p.m. to 3 a.m. seven days a week. The extra desk would be hired on a one-year trial basis.
Mike Hark, a resident assistant at Tremplin,
said the roving desk assistant would be more effective and less costly than installing more elaborate security systems at the two halls.
Both all male halls currently have no security monitors
"We don't need the security that bad." Bart said. "To set up a high security fence, we have to spend more than $10 billion to upgrade it."
- Reclassification of McCollim Hall to house all classes of students instead of only upper class and graduate students
AURH recommended the reclassification to accommodate the approximately 100 freshman who are assigned to McCollum each year on a temporary basis because of overcrowding at other halls.
For the next five weeks, the Advisory Board will review contract proposals from all University housing units. It will make its final decision on contracts on Oct. 24.
His decision then will be forwarded to David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, and Chancellor Gene A. Budig.
The Board of Regents must give final approval to the 1965-86 contract.
James Jeffley, AURH president, said AURH's Housing and Contracts Committee each year submitted recommendations to the Advisory Board, and then tried to hammer out the terms of the next year's housing contract.
"The purpose of this process is to solicit the views of students, Jeffrey said. "I don't want that to happen."
"If they are going to disregard all these recommendations, what's the purpose? You might as well appoint some Supreme Authority of Housing."
Senate panel approves election-rule reforms
By JOHN HANNA Staff Renorter
Staff Reporter
The vote followed a five-hour meeting in which committee members hammered out a compromise.
A package of reforms in Student Senate election rules aimed at preventing the problems that plagued last November's election was passed. Last Student Senate elections last night.
The reforms, approved by acclamation,
will be considered at today's Student Senate
Executive Committee meeting, Jeff Polack,
chairman of the Rights Committee, said
yesterday. He said ShuadX would place the
committee on the rolls of the Senate's next meet-
ing on Sept. 26.
Polack said the reforms that the Rights Committee would send to the Senate would not represent a dramatic change in current rules. Most of the reforms, he said, resulted from additions to rules that were not specific.
The reforms include:
- Requiring students to write a “reasonable representation” of a candidate’s name on the ballot. Coalition names and stamped-on names will not be allowed.
- Requiring write-in candidates to notify the Elections Committee chairman of their resignation.
- Requiring candidates to be in "good academic standing" at the University of Kansas and to be enrolled in at least one class.
- Allowing candidates to remove themselves from coalitions after they have filed with the coalition.
- Requiring an audit of a candidate's or coalition campaign expenses the day before
- You can obtain an audit from the Election Commission.
- Allowing independent candidates for office to form a coalition with other independent candidates within five days
See RIGHTS. p. 5, col. 1
Reagan starts farm relief denies steel-import limit
By United Press International
President Reagan acted yesterday on two key campaign issues — steel industries and depressed farming – while Democratic leaders rallied away at the administration's foreign policy
Reagan met with Cabinet advisers at the White House and decided to reject domestic industry requests to restrict steel imports. Instead, he opted to ask other nations voluntarily to control "surges" in their steel exports to the United States.
"The president clearly determined that protectionism is not in the national interest," William Brock, U.S. trade representative, said yesterday in his announcement of the plan. "It costs jobs and raises prices and undermines our ability to compete at home and abroad."
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS have advised Reagan to force foreign producers to cut back imports to about 19 percent of the U.S. market from an average 24 percent in recent years. They said steel imports were flooding U.S. markets and depressing domestic production.
Reagan also announced a four-point relief program for farmers beset by staggering debts, including $630 million in federal loan guarantees.
"Our approach to the farm economy and the problem of farm credit is based on the belief that the future will be better than the past." Reagan said.
The transitional program will help farmers move from high inflation, high interest and economic disasters of the previous administration to a more stable inflation and lower interest rates, he said.
Mondale met with supporters yesterday morning before appearing at a rally at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, where he blasted Reagan's foreign policy. He also stopped in Fresno and Stockton.
IN AN INTERVIEW published yesterday in the New York Times, Montale said he would attempt to quarantine Nicaragua if it rejected vaccination required to remain in Central America.
Today, Reagan returns to the campaign trail with a trip to Connecticut and New Jersey. He stumps tomorrow in Iowa and Michigan
REAGAN OPPOSES MONDALE'S call for a moratorium on foreclosures of mortgages
Students fooled by pop-tab hoax
But first, he said, he would establish clear U.S. objectives in Nicaragua and make a good faith effort to settle differences amicably with the Sandinistas.
FEED ME POP TABS!
KIDNEY SA...
SIDNEY KIDNEY SA...
SAVE YOUR POP
TABS!! FOR EACH
Alison Sheafer, Topeka sophomore, displays pop tabs, which she collected for a month to pay for a boy's dialysis treatment. She discovered yesterday that the story about the boy was false, and that she had been the victim of a hoax.
...
Steven Purcell/KANSAN
By CHRISSY CLEARY Staff Renorter
Alison Sheafor and other residents at Hashinger Hall started collecting pop tabs from soda and beer cans one month ago. They thought each pop tab would pay for one minute of kidney dialysis for a boy in the Kansas City area
But Shearer, Topkea sophonore, and her friends learned yesterday that no such boy existed, and the pop-tab collection was a hoax.
The students were fooled by a common trick, said Carolelee Scott, an administrative assistant at the National Kidney Foundation in Kansas City. Mo
"WE GET CALLS ALL the time from people who are collecting pop tabs or cigarette wrappers or whatever and think they can purchase time on a dialysis machine." Scott said. "But it just isn't sanctioned by the Kidney Foundation. I don't know where these things get started."
Shearer first heard about the pop-fab collection in Topaeka at a picnic for the group.
"A lady told my dad and my brother about it, and they started collecting the tabs." Sheafor said. "I started collecting to help people."
The woman at the picnic told the Sheafors that each pop tab bought one minute of dialysis time. However, Medicare pays for 80 percent of the cost of dialysis, so raising money to offset the cost is not needed. Scott said
ALSO, BECAUSE THE Kidney Foundation won't accept the pop tabs, the only way to receive money for them would be to recycle the tabs, said Sharon Slusher, dialysis nurse at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
"Dialysis costs roughly between 50 cents and $1 a minute." Slusher said. "Even if they recycled the aluminum tabs, it still cost a lot more than one minute, one minute of dialysis. It's unrealistic."
Sheafor她 father had been picking up her collection of pop tabs on weekends and dropping them off at a Topeka grocery store.
A woman who also had been dropping off pop tabs at a grocery store called the Kidney Foundation recently to ask about the program. Scott said
Even though the pop-tab collection didn't work out for Sheafer and other Hashinger residents, Sheafer said she would participate in another cause if her need was met.
"I would help, and I'd get my friends to help too," she said. "Even though it was a book, it was a great idea. It made people here do something good, and that's neat."
Spirit of debate violated, College Young Democrats say
By SUZANNE BROWN
Staff Reporter
The KU College Republicans are violating the spirit of a coming campus debate between their group and the College Young Democrats by choosing a debater who is not a KU student, the president of the College Young Democrats said yesterday.
The president of the Democratic group, Kristin Burtterbaugh Myers, said the selection of Deever was an attempt by the Republican group to dissuade her from being secretary of the Republican group denied
Kay Deever, president of the College Republicans of Kansas and a student at Kansas State University, will participate for the College Republicans in the Oct. 4 debate.
Myers's the Republicans' action was left without regard for KU student publicity.
"That's not even the point of the whole debate." Myers said.
"This is not a war. This is not to see who can use the biggest words."
Susan Sanjean, secretary of KU College Republicans, said yesterday that the group
Sanjan said Deever had been chosen because she was a qualified debater, not because the Republican group keenly hoped for a victory.
had chosen Deever and Chris Edmonds, former campus director of Associated Students of Kansas, as the two Republican debaters in the event, sponsored by Oliver Hall.
"I'm sure the Democrats have qualified debaters on their side, and I would certainly want to be."
Sanjean said that Myers' charge was prompted by fear of Deever's ability.
Patty Sullivan, director of Oliver Hall, said the selection of Deever was not in violation of debate rules
"They're afraid she'll put them under the table," she said.
Sullivan said only informal guidelines for the debate had been set up, and according to those rules, anyone who was a member of the state Republican or Democratic group could participate in the debate.
The College Young Democrats have not selected their debaters yet. Myers said the group would choose two students from
among 10 College Young Democrat members who wanted to debate
Sanpean said the College Republicans would not replace Deever with a KU student so long as her participation did not violate debate rules.
She said the Republican group might have been willing to work more closely with the Democratic group to lay down debate guidelines and to discuss other issues. But the College Young Democrats were uncooperative, she said.
"They're so bitter about everything we can't work with them," she said.
September 19, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
The University Daily KANSAN
Balloonist breaks ankle, sets his sights on Pacific
MONTENOTte DI CAIRO. Italy — Joe Kittinger ended the first solo trans-Atlantic balloon flight in a clump of trees on the Italian Rivera yesterday and was whisked to a hospital with a broken ankle in Miami — “Why not the Pacific Ocean now?”
Court upholds Abscam ruling
"Hello baby, we did it," the balloonist from Orlando, Fla., told his girlfriend, Sherry Reed, moments later he was doused with champagne by his flight crew and loaded into a helicopter to be flown to a hospital in Nice, France.
WASHINGTON — A federal appeals court yesterday upheld the Abscams conviction of former Rep. John Jennette, D.S.C., for taking a $50,000 bribe from FBI agents posing as Arabs seeking special favors.
The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, voting 30; said Jenrette "exhibited a willingness to commit illegal acts," and rejected arguments that he was entrapped into taking the bribe from bogus Arabs.
The court also rejected Jennette's claim that the FHI undercover Absam operation was so outrageous that his conviction made the money should be overturned.
United Press International
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — A grand jury will investigate the alcohol poisoning death of an American International College freshman after a fraternity "spaghetti ritual" pledge dinner, officials said yesterday.
Assistant Hampden County District Attorney William W. Tehan Jr. said he expected the case would be presented to a Hampden County grand jury next month.
James F Lenaghan Jr., 19, of Waterton, died Feb. 23 in the Zeta Chi fraternity house after participating in a "spaghetti ritual," during which students drink wine and eat large amounts of spaghetti, vomit and continue eating.
Man plays courier to the dead
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — A terminally ill cancer patient says he has been deluged with calls from people responding to his offer to deliver messages to the dead for $20.
"The response I'm getting — well, I'm way over my head," says the patient. Ken McAvoy, who is suffering from a malignant brain tumor that his doctor says will probably kill him the end of the year
McAvey said he was guaranteeing in writing that he would locate deceased loved ones after his own death and "spiritually deliver" the messages
Compiled from United Press Interna-
tional retros.
UNION OF KOREA
NEW YORK — Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko arrived at Kennedy International Airport to begin a visit that
will include meetings with President Reagan and Walter Mondale. Gromyko yesterday was to address the United Nations General Assembly.
Gromyko arrives in U.S. for talks
By United Press International
NEW YORK — Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromykov arrived in New York yesterday under heavy security for a visit that will include an address to the U.N. General Assembly and meetings with President Reagan and Walter Mondale.
Gromyko arrived on a special Aeroflot flight from Moscow at Kennedy International Airport Anatoly Dobrynin, the Soviet ambassador to the United States, and Oleg Trovanovsky, the Soviet ambassador to the United Nations, boarded the plane to greet
A 10-car motorcade then whisked Gromov to the Soviet UN mission in Manhasset.
The foreign minister made no comment at the airport
candidate, and George Shultz, secretary of state, before traveling to Washington for talks with Reagan the next day.
Gromyko will meet Sept. 27 in New York with Mondale, Democratic presidential
Mondale pledged to be tough in his talks with Gromyko and vowed not to attempt to conduct foreign policy on behalf of the president.
"I want that meeting to be successful, as do all Americans." Monday said yesterday.
Gromyko was expected to visit the United Nations in time for the assembly's general debate. The debate is scheduled to follow an interview with Reagan to the 30th session on Monday.
Gromyko was to address the General Assembly yesterday as head of the Soviet delegation to the three-month political session. He has spoken to the assembly almost every year since he assumed his post in 1967
Diplomatic sources think Gromyko will focus on the U.S-Soviet relationship and will seek to strengthen ties.
has done in the past without fail.
Gromyko's return to New York was marked by effort from both Washington and Moscow to revive U.S.-Soviet relations, which dropped to a low since the Soviets walked out of the intermediate nuclear weapons talks in Geneva last year.
Mondale said that it was pretty pathetic that Reagan was not meeting with his Soviet counterpart, Konstantin Chernenko, but the president well in his talks with Gromykov.
Reagan said yesterday that he had invited the Soviet official to the White House to ease suspicion and hostility and secure a safer environment by controlling nuclear weapons proliferation.
In an address Monday, Mondale said, "I cannot help but think of the needless baggage Mr Reagan brings to that meeting — a bag full of names calling name calling to hair raising joke telling.
Crew seized by U.S.S.R. may be freed
By United Press International
MOSCOW — The skipper of an American supply ship seized by Soviet authorities a week ago said yesterday he and his four crewmen would be freed soon, even though he refused to sign a paper saying he deliberately entered Soviet waters.
"They've told us we're going home in the next couple days and we believe we are," Tab Thoms told United Press International. "We're still here in town where the Americans were being held."
A State Department spokesman in Washington said a Coast Guard cutter had been dispatched to rendezvous with a Soviet ship and pick up the five men. He said the U.S. ship should reach the rendezvous point sometime today.
Though the ship was seized last Wednesday, U.S. officials were not advised until Friday. The State Department probed Navy officials for forming Washington of the men's detention
Thoms, 25, said the conditions at the building where he and his colleagues were being held were bad but that the men were basically "okay."
"We are all Christians and we believe God sent us for a reason, possibly to learn," he said.
Thoms denied that his ship, the Frieda K. was in Soviet water when it was boarded last Wednesday by Soviet soldiers armed with guns and knives.
The Frieda K. was boarded after it pulled up to another ship in the Bering Strait to inquire how to avoid reefs that surround the ship. The ship turned out to be a Soviet warship. The ship turned out to be a Soviet warship.
"I checked out my navigation equipment, which showed I was in U.S. waters, but they the Soviets) wanted me to sign a paper saying I was here and not here," he said. "But we've been taught never to sign anything we don't understand."
He said he has resisted pressure to sign the paper — written in Russian and presented to him for his signature. The five seamen, from Homer, Alaska, and their vessel were seized by Soviet authorities in the Bering Strait which separates Alaska from the United States. He is also said to deliver fuel, water and other supplies to Point Lay, above the Arctic Circle.
The boat was returning to Nome where it was last heard from "well within American waters in the Chukchi Sea." U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Mike Hiley said in
The crewmen are the captain's brother, Tate Thoms, Mark Halpin, Robert Miller and Charlie Burrall.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
September 19, 1984
The University Daily KANSAN
Meeting on internships scheduled for tomorrow
Students interested in spring-semester internships in Washington, D.C., and Topea should meet a meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Nunemaker Center.
About 20 students will earn 12 credit hours as interns in Washington, D.C, said Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science. The program is sponsored by the political science department and the College Honors program.
The internships — many of which are for the U.S. government — are open to all KU undergrads.
BOCO filing deadline Sept. 27
Topoka internships are open to political science majors only. Topoka interns also will earn 12 credit hours. They will work with the department and state executive branch officials.
Sept 27 is the filing deadline for
technical support in running for Board of
Officers.
Freshmen may file for the Oct. 10 and 11 elections by filling out applications available in the BOCO office, on the third floor of the Kansas Union.
BOCO consists of the president, vice president, treasurer and secretary of each class. BOCO plans some homecoming activities. Rock Chalk Revue and class parties.
The influence of archaeology on the works of English novelist Thomas Hardy will be the topic of a lecture and discussion at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 401 Wescoe.
Harold Orel, university distinguished professor of English, will lecture on "Thomas Hardy and the Developing Science of Archaeology."
Orel will discuss Hardy's friendship with one of the first scientific archaeologists, and the influence it had on classic works like "The Mourning Villies" and "The Mover of Castorbridge."
Kansas' water to be discussed
Water conservation and management will be the subject of a speech at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the recreation center in South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets.
Joseph Harkins, director of the Kansas Water Office, will speak on "Water Issues in Kansas." He will summarize the status of the state's water plan and discuss future water policies.
About 200 historians from 19 states, Canada and India will attend the Sixth Mid-America Conference on History on Friday and Saturday in Lawrence.
The historians will discuss topics ranging from Afro-American women in Kansas to peace movements in India's history, said Donald McCoy, conference coordinator and distinguished professor of history at KU.
Most conference sessions will be in the Kansas Union and some will be at the All
To register for the conference, contact Karl Kappelman in the division of communications.
All of the conference lectures are free and open to the public. The conference luncheon and dinner are open only to registered conference participants.
Money is raised for the aging
Theta Chi fraternity and Gamma Phi
Beta sorority last month raised $500 for the
Douglas County Council on Aging.
Representatives of the two groups presented a $00 check to council officials yesterday during a ceremony at the council office. Eighth and Vermont
The fraternity and sorority raised the money by sponsoring a campus-wide party and a raft race last month.
Weather
Today will be sunny with a high in the low to mid 80s. Winds of 5 to 15 mph will be from the south. Tonight will be clear and the low will be in the low to mid 50s. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with a high between 85 and 90.
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
Educators praise state public schools
By DAN HOWELL Staff Reporter
Kansas public schools are not in the miserable condition some educational critics have portrayed, three education leaders said last night.
Staff Reporter
Kansas schools are in better shape than those in many states, and steps to improve them are being taken, said Harold Blackburn, state commissioner of education.
'I, for one, don't propose to sit by and let who are all informed take our educational goals.'
Blackburn participated in a panel discussion with Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, and Dam Neuenwasser, assistant institution of Unified School District IV, in LEWISKY.
ONE POSSIBLE SIGN of the improving condition of public schools was the increase
in Scholastic Aptitude Test scores for 1984, which rose 4 points, officials in the U.S. Office of Education and education sources said yesterday.
The officials said, however, that the increase was not enough to indicate a change in the trend.
Before last night's discussion, Blackburn said only about 6 percent of Kansas high school students took the SAT, but the tigers reflected an improving condition in the state.
"In Kansas, the indicators are pretty room for improvement."
THE PANEL DISCUSSION, which was in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union, centered on current trends and issues in education. The discussion was sponsored by Phi Delta Kappa, a professional honorary society.
Educators need to improve the image of
"We have to convince the public that we are policing our ranks, that we are doing something about weeding out the incompetent," Scannell said.
the public schools, the panelists said.
Public perception is a crucial factor in winning legislative support for schools, he
Blackburn said education's image had shifted after the April 1983 publication of "A Nation at Risk," a report commissioned by the U.S. Department of Education.
SCANNELL SAID THE adoption of tougher standards for teacher certification was a major concern.
"If they get through all that, they then toughen up over a year job," he said of the tougher a team member has.
Salaries must be increased from their present levels, he said, to attract more and more students.
program for education students was one indication of steps taken to help assure competency in teachers. Now, he said, steps that would make teaching an attractive career choice.
instructors to teach
Scannell said the University's five-year
"I wonder what the state's response will be when there are not enough teachers to fill the chair."
A recent Rand Corp. report predicts shortages of teachers as early as 1985, he said, and the shortages could become worse for several years after that.
The panelists said tougher requirements for high school graduation could prevent students from finishing their course of study - a situation that needs thought.
a situation that needs thought.
Scannell said, "I think as a society we have to ask if we want to encourage students to drop out."
Dave Horbach/KANSAN
Some information for this story was supplied by United Press International.
Phi Gamma Delta pledges return to their fraternity house Sellards Pearson and Corbin halls. The pledges painted their after delivering party invitations to sororities and Gertrude bodies and delivered the invitations in coconuts yesterday.
Commission delays plat decision
Staff Reporter
By CHRIS BARBER
The Lawrence City Commission, after an hour and a half of sometimes heated discussion, last night deferred action on the Naismith West Subdivision for two weeks.
Neighbors fear that the subdivision, south of 24th Street between Ousdahl Road and Naismith Drive, will increase the flooding and drainage problems that already plague
The proposal is for a 16-lot subdivision with 350-390 living units.
LAWRENCE MAYOR ERNEST Angino several times attempted to outline the commission's responsibilities, which he discussed from striving to other topics.
"Once the planning commission accepts a plat, we have nothing to say about that." Angino said last night. "All we can do is rights-of-way on the plat."
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission at its Aug. 22 meeting unanimously approved the plat, which is a map showing legal boundaries on a piece of property, and recommended acceptance of the easements and rights of way.
Commissioner Howard Hill said, "My question is why didn't the planning commission listen to the comments of these neighbors who came tonight?"
A key point of controversy last night centered on the planning commission's decision not to allow public comments at the August meeting.
Hill's comments were greeted with a round of applause from about 30 residents of the area.
BUT PLANNING DIRECTOR Price Banks met a chorus of boos when he explained that the planning commission had tried to listen to the public's comments.
Angino said that by state law, approval of a plat by a planning commission was final. Lawrence and Douglas County have a planning commission by choice and delegates to them the power to make that decision, he said.
"This issue has been going on for years, and it was the planning commission's position that we had heard all of the discussion before," Banks said after the meeting. "The planning commission's records are full of public comments."
ALTOHUAY NGANO HAD said before the meeting that he would accept public comments only if they were confined to easements and rights-of-way, his policy fell apart as first area homeowners and then missioners began discussing other items.
"State statutes say that the City Commission has no role in regulations of plats." Angino said. "That's pretty straightforward. I don't see how you can dance around it.
"There's no sense beating our gums over something we have no control over."
Marshall Crowther, 1230 W. 29th Court, spoke for the Indian Hills Neighborhood Association, which comprises residents in the Naismith area.
Crowther said area homeowners were concerned about drainage during heavy rains and bout the elimination of green space within the city limits.
Crowther was followed by Joyce Wolf, president of the Jahawk and Bondon Society, who said the society would like to see the environment developed with a concern for the environment
ANGINO AGAIN REMINDED everyone
that commissions as concerned only with
their own commissions.
Commissioner Nancy Shontz said she opposed accepting the plat because she was uncertain about what the commission was allowed to do.
Commissioner David Longhurst told Shontz that the city commission's responsibilities already had been defined clearly but it was "stupid" to discuss other matters.
"A lot of friends of mine here tonight have very serious concerns, but these concerns are not the issue before us tonight," Longhurst said.
Shoutz, however, did not see things as clearly as Loudburst
"I think we should get together with the city attorney for a study session." Shontz said. "This is getting absurd. We should defer the whole item."
Carlin fills empty seat on board
Wichita executive appointed to serve on Board of Regents
By MARY CARTER Staff Reporter
Lawrence Jones, a Wichita businessman, yesterday was appointed by Gov. John Carlin to fill a vacant seat on the Kansas Board of Regents.
Jones will complete the term of Jordon Haines of Wichita. Haines resigned in June to devote more time to his business obligations. The term expires Dec. 31, 1985.
The Regents oversee Kansas' six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina. Nine board members who are appointed to four-year terms by the governor
Jones, who is president of the Coleman Co. based in Wichita, and former head of the business administration department at the company, couldn't be reached yesterday afternoon.
He also is a member of the board of directors of the Cessna Corp., the Fourth Financial Center, the Fleming Companies and MTV cable television network.
Jones will attend his first Regents meeting as a member of the board tomorrow in
At the meeting, the Regents will hear reviews of agriculture, area and ethnic studies, foreign languages, home economies and trade and industrial programs at Regents universities, said Martine Hammond, Regents director of academic affairs.
The reviews are part of a five-year plan to examine all programs at Regents schools and to recommend eliminating, merging or keeping programs.
On Friday, the Regents will hear results of an outside review of education programs at the State Board of Education.
The review was conducted by outside consultants because of increasing interest in them.
The Regents also are expected to approve the lease by the University of Kansas of 150 acres in Jefferson County. The land is owned by the Kansas University Endowment Association and is adjacent to the Nelson Institute, which is used for field experiments by KU biologists.
Jones received his undergraduate degree in business from the University of Wichita, now SU, in 1953. He earned a master of business administration degree in 1955 and a doctorate in business administration in 1960 from the Harvard School of Business.
He served in the business administration department and in other capacities at WSU until 1964, when he became corporate vice president. He became president of the company in 1971.
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September 19, 1984
OPINION
Page 4.
BREACH
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University, Daily Kannan, USP$ 60,640 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart Fliell Hall. Lawn, Kanze $60,640; daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods. Second class postage paid at Lawn, Kanze $60,644; Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $21 in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $24 a year outside the county. Student postage paid at Lawn, Kanze $75. In addition, address changes to the University Daily Kannan, 118 Stuart Fliell Hall. Lawn, Kanze $60,640.
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Gromyko visit
The political football again took a Reagan bounce last weekend after a flurry of polls showed the incumbent president far ahead of Walter Mondale.
But Mondale's immediate response — a scheduled meeting next week with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko — is a desperation toss that is more likely to hurt his own campaign than help it.
Mondale, professing to emphasize the importance of renewed negotiations, arranged to meet Gromyko one day before President Reagan is to meet with the longtime Soviet envoy. But Mondale says his visit is merely a discussion—and in no way an attempt to meddle in the president's affair.
Still, any Mondale-Gromyko visit might be perceived as meddling for two reasons:
First, the fact that Soviet and U.S. leaders now are determined to talk suggest that the Kremlin views Reagan as the likely winner. Many view Gromyko's visit with Reagan as a welcome attempt by both sides to revive U.S.-Soviet relations, which chilled last year when the Soviets walked out of talks in Geneva on intermediate nuclear weapons.
Second. Mondale's meeting calls to mind Jesse Jackson's foray this year to Syria on behalf of the parents of a captured American pilot. The two situations aren't entirely analogous, but they violate the same principle; the country's foreign policy is the responsibility of the presidential candidate now in office.
Mondale's decision to risk facing the wrath of the president to gain the country's attention might be considered wise, considering his position in the polls. Yet the odds might not be so great had he chosen to stay away from Gromyko in favor of criticizing what little is expected to come from Reagan's meeting.
National security is traditionally defined as the freedom from fear of attack and privation. Although our national leaders give verbal support to this conservative ideal, federal energy policies that favor conveniences energy systems are undermining the basis for sustainable security.
U.S. energy policies threaten security
U. S. dependency on Middle East oil has jumped to percent above 1983 levels for the first half of 1984. Instead of pursuing the least-cost strategy of attaining national energy autonomy through an increase in military spending, it allows pumps into the hands of the Pentagon, which has threatened the use of nuclear weapons should Soviet tanks invade the oil fields.
George Shultz, secretary of state,
and Caspar Weinberger, secretary of
defense, have vested interests in
nuclear developments because they
were the respective president and
vice president of the Bechtel Group
Inc., the free world's foremost
nuclear-power construction firm.
As the two most powerful men in the Cabinet, it is not surprising that the executive branch refuses to recognize the link between nuclear power and nuclear arms proliferation.
Despite a host of exorbitant federal subsidies for nuclear electric utilities, every reactor ordered since 1974 has been canceled. The cost has been staggering; in 1982, nuclear construction consumed three times what the United States invested in the auto industry.
Reagan served the industry in April by arranging the sale of two canceled U.S. reactors to the Chinese Taxpayers have already been ordered to sell through the Export Import Bank to sell other uncompetitive reactors.
Terrorists have not yet used nuclear weaponry, but the use of conventional sabotage is on the rise.
By forcing the public to underwrite the financing of these two plants; Reagan continues a policy that pads the accounts of administration associates and threatens to bankrupt the nation by increasing the federal deficit. Furthermore, the policy increases the international transport of fissionable materials, thus inviting the clandestine proliferation of nuclear weapons with which terrorists could assault our nation.
The United States is one of 50 nations that have recently experienced atacks on centralized power stations. The Department of Energy has responded with the establishment of
PHILIP WHITE
Guest Columnist
a departmental Training Academy, in which 900 personnel will graduate annually with "degrees" in such areas as "Arrest and Use of Deadly Force," "Officer Survival" and "Exploit Device (Ordinance)" to ensure that we maintain the remarkable our increasingly centralized energy systems are becoming.
Another form of power-plant vulnerability results from the effects of an electromagnetic pulse, or EMP, that would emanate from the detonation of a nuclear device at an altitude of 390 miles. A single hydrogen bomb could blast the entire lower 48 states and permanently damage all unprotected integrated circuits. All conventional electricity, oil and natural gas distribution and civilian communications systems hadaid. Results of the Pentagon's 1982 accident on an EMP might cause the simultaneous core meltdowns of 200 nuclear plants have been classified, yet the scientists involved in the study are very concerned.
St. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer Press Dispatch
Characteristic of a leadership that has intensified the most massive arms race in human history, the administration envisions a $28 billion armada of anti-ballistic missile satellites to quell EMP vulnerability among US forces. The U.S.-Soviet agreements and would not provide EMP protection.
Defense systems featuring nuclear-fueled laser weapons, if they were not incapacitated by easily built countermeasures, would destroy 90 percent of incoming missiles at best. The remaining 10 percent could cause national paralysis from EMP
Given Latin America's often violent contrasts and divisions, it is not entirely surprising that advocates of liberation theology have come to talk in the absolute terms of class struggle. Nevertheless, the Vatican's rejection of wrong ways of righting Latin American wrongs is acute.
These mindless policies result from the power of financial interests to exploit politicians. They waste revenues on unnecessary centralized energy systems and waste more money trying to protect those systems from attack.[11]
The fact that Marxists have failed to keep their liberating vow everywhere they have intruded is not enough to deter disciples. The fact that an unfortunate portion of church people, particularly in Latin America, have contorted Roman Catholic theology to accommodate Marxist theory has rightly prompted the Vatican to denounce what, at root, is an absurd melding.
A true free market in energy would not subsidize fossil and synthetic fuels or centralized electric power, including nuclear reactors. This would reduce the federal deficit and create a more diversified market that would increase the compartmental strategies to resilient technologies, storage, fuel compensation, wind power, biomass, solar thermal and photovoltaics.
Faith and politics
Stable security is not lostered through the draining of money into vulnerable energy systems and unfeasible weapons systems. As we pull deeper into the nuclear vortex that threatens not only the existence of this nation but the existence of countless unborn generations of the human family, we need the ability to sort illusion from truth.
It is contradictory, but not rare, for those who are hungry and not free, as well as those who agonize over the desperation of others, to take simultaneous hope in the calls of both religion and Marxism.
Philip White, Dodge City senior, i majoring in mechanical engineering
THANK HEAVEN DEAGAN HAD THE GOOD
SENSE TO GIVE YOU PENTAGON FELLOWS A BUDGET
INCREASE. NOTHINGS MORE IMPORTANT THAN OUR
NATIONAL DEFENSE. LET'S SEE: TWO PLASTIC CHAIR
CAPS, TREE WASHERS AND A
SCREWDRIVER. THAT WILL BE
$455,000.16
Hidden dangers of comparable worth
A bill that was passed by an overwhelming majority in the House and now is in the hands of the Senate could add a new twist to the existing law that requires equal pay for equal work
The bill potentially a gender gap issue in the presidential election, would require pay scales to be adjusted so that jobs demanding similar skills with similar working conditions would pay the same salary.
Police dispatchers, then, who are traditionally female, might be paid the same salary as fire dispatchers, who are traditionally male and earn a higher salary as secretaries. A police officer is equal to an electrician, which now earns more
comparable-worth but won't get
Pandora's Box filled with subjective
judgments, big money litigation and
Catch: 225.
Now, I'm for uncovering discrepancies in the equal-pay-for-equal
I'll just transcribe the text as it appears.
JENNIFER FINE
Staff Columnist
work law just as much, or maybe more, than the next soapbox feminist. But this latest idea goes beyond the previous law to equal pay for comparable work.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
South Africa deals with unique conditions
To the editor:
During this week designed to highlight the Republic of South Africa and the policy of apartheid, it is important for the readers to be exposed to a rational description of the events facing the people of that country. The content of the social issue is often shrouded in emotional journalism
The problems facing this country are unique, and no parallel, with respect to the political situation, can be found elsewhere in the world. It is pertinent to consider Zimbabwe, a country north of South Africa, which underwent a political transition four years ago from a white-minority government to its present black-maintenance government.
This step was hailed by the world as the only means of improving the quality of life in that country. However, the capacity of this country to compete now in the world marketplace has diminished, its economy is rapidly declining and it is to become a one-party Marxist state.
White South Africans are considered outcasts of the world community. It is rather ironic that the Republic of South Africa was expelled from the United Nations, of which she was a founding member country. Her athletes are barred from the Olympics and often from the international arena. South Africa now faces oil and arms embargoes
Black-based democracy is a system still to be proven successful in an African milieu.
The main criticism of South Africa is the policy of apartheid (separate development) and the governing of the country by the white minority. Unfortunately, the world at large does not understand the basis for this policy and as such does not appreciate the basis for its implementation.
placed against her by the countries she supported during both world wars, as well as the Korean war
The rationale for this separate development is based on the large cultural differences found among the peoples of South Africa. The white Africans of European descent have the traditional values of the Western world and most of their black counterparts have differing values. The main problems facing the peoples of South Africa today stem from the differing cultural values held by her different peoples.
These hardships placed on the people will not change the present situation, but only aggravate it and inhibit future progress.
In "America: A Minority Viewpoint," Walter E. Williams writes, "Blacks who live in South Africa are better housed, better paid, better educated, have a longer life expectancy and have better personal security than blacks in nearly every other African country."
This does not imply that the black South Africans are not faced with problems, nor are their white counterparts. Changes are in progress in the country at this very moment; given time, some compassion from
the world community, and less interference, these problems will be solved for the good of all South Africans.
The unquestioned usage of the term "principle" in Charles Himmelberg's column (Sept. 10, "Students can back financial aid cuts") leads me to wonder whether those "cool" conservatives have a realistic view of U.S. society in its present state.
Lawrence graduate student
Student aid facts
D. G. Muller
To the editor:
Himmelberg determines that students must be willing to impede their pursuit of a higher education in order to contribute to their country and themselves by becoming fiscally austerne and adhering to "principle."
In light of what the government of the past four years has done to the defect, it is only in our best interest to accept ects in financial aid. These actions should be restored and should be restored when the deficit has been brought under rein.
Usage of the term 'principle' however, is erroneous. Every individual has a guarded privilege to pursue an education if he so chooses. Our technologically burgeoning society requires that many so choose.
For the many who don't count among their possessions obese bank accounts, an education is but a
tenuous reality built upon save, pennies. For these people, losses of Pell Grants and federal student loans would only yield the privation of their opportunity to achieve a post-secondary education.
At a time when a high-school education offers an individual few opportunities for employment in a society firmly entrenched in the computer age, the statement that a higher education is a private enrichment and of little good to society is anachronistic.
Many students who have received necessary funding are making important contributions to society, and if we turn away the equally dispossessed students further even our friends, the principled few (or better, the conservatives).
Therefore, the percentage of my neighbor's tax dollars spent on higher education is well spent, because our highly mechanized society would come to a stop if it didn't educate its highly educated fodder.
Although financial aid might not be a right in the strictest sense of the word — for it is only a social program and is cowering under the conservatives' ax, as are its brethren — it must certainly be a public good. When one understands the position of the taxpayer, you can poorer students, one must admit that the taxpayer has and will receive his money's worth.
Michael O'Rourke Smith Center senior
Although it appears to be a step forward in the uphill climb to equality, a requirement of equal pay could still be the push for equal opportunity by encouraging women to stay in traditionally female occupations, thereby reinforcing existing stereotypes.
Moreover, for equal pay, men may be encouraged to try some of the traditionally female jobs, and the slightest remander of the "weaker sex" attitude could force women out of jobs.
Assessments would determine what jobs were comparable.
A point system could never determine how many years of schooling would equal the physical labor and training involved in some equipment operation jobs.
Another problem would arise when people decided that their occupation was at the end of the workday.
Worth is not something easily measured Teachers, journalists, even telephone operators are worth more to me than any professional baseball player, why should baseball players be paid so much more?
That, of course, is my opinion. Others are probably glad that the value of journalists and baseball
Economists are estimating that the measure would cost the economy more than $ 100 million.
every ultimately is determined by our choices in the marketplace, and not by someone's opinion.
Women who think that they are discriminated against could join together to air grievances and bargain with their employers. That after all, led to organizations formed specifically for dealing with disputes with employers — that wonderful concept of labor unions.
or maybe females should consider learning to drive a truck, be an electrician or operate heavy equipment
If the government wants to jump on the wage-gap issue, it should do so by developing better methods of enforcing the equal pay law.
Million dollar lawsuits already have resulted from the concept of comparable worth. Consider the ruling, which will probably be appealed, by a Washington state judge, the ruling demanded that $500 million, give or take a few million, be paid in back wages to female state officials and they were not being paid fairly because of sex discrimination.
WASHINGTON — Sen Bob Dole, R Kan., was right on the mark when he looked at Walter Mondale's defect-cutting plan last week and said he would be a presidential candidate "going after the middle-income taxpayer."
Fight for middle class
As a fiscal program, the Mondale proposal may or may not be the ticket to reduce mounting federal deficits, as a political document, it has to be one of the most artificially crafted efforts to seize the initiative that has been built since Dwight Eisenhower's 1952 declaration: "I will go to Korea."
In the decades immediately after the Great Depression, people in the lower reaches of the middle class (renters, savers, hourly wage work people) were disillusioned with the poor than with the rich. And generally them Democrats.
than poverty. In 1880, that delivered them to the Republicans.
It is designed to drive a wedge between President Reagan and the great mass of Americans whose incomes place them above poverty.
After the social upheavals of the 1980s and the economic increases of the 1970s, the lower middle class (now owners, buyers, salaried employees) began to regard itself as more closely related to affluence
To break what increasingly is looking like a Reagan lock on the 1984 election, Mondale needs to bring the lower middle class back to the center of society, and that it he can convince individuals and families who have incomes
ARNOLD
SAWISLAK
United Press International
roughly between $20,000 and $40,000 that those with incomes of $30,000 to $100,000 are not paying their fair share of taxes.
The Demerals have been trying for three years to sell the idea that the Roigan economic policies were bad. The rich benefit from the rich at the expense of the poor.
Mondale is going at it in a somewhat different way. He is arguing that (1) the $200 billion plus federal deficits must be reduced; (2) no matter who wins the election, they should not increase; (3) the burden of the increase should be heaviest on the people with incomes of, say, $30,000 and above.
University Daily Kansan, September 19. 1984
continued from p. 1
Rights
Page 5
after the filing deadline for Senate races.
- Making the chairman of the Elections Committee a non-voting member of the Elections Review Board instead of a voting member.
- Allowing coitions or candidates to file a complaint about a voting member of the Elections Review Board on the day of the filing deadline for senator races.
- Setting the number of members on the Elections Committee at no less than 13 and no more than 17 and its quorum at half that, unless the committee is unavailable, the package originated
The reforms in the package originated
from recommendations by the Ethics and Standards Committee, a temporary committee that met during the summer. Carla Vogel, student body president, Dennis "Boo" Highberger, student body vice president, and Robert Walker, then StudEx chairman, created the committee in the spring semester to suggest election reforms.
Polack said before the meeting that most of the recommendations from the Ethics and Standards Committee were in response to problems in the November student body presidential and vice presidential election.
invalidated last year's elections on the recommendation of the University Judicial Board.
In January, Chancellor Gene A. Budig
In the election, the top three coalitions, Priority, Momentum and the Costume Party, finished within 50 votes of one another, and the Priority Coalition candidates were declared winners.
After an official re-count, Priority again was declared the winner by two votes over the Costume Party. The total number of votes for the three coalitions for the first count was 3,089, compared with 3,144 for the second count.
ON THE RECORD
A 34-YEAR-OLD man was arrested
on an aggrigated robbery charge
in connection with a robbery in which $511
was taken from the KOA Campgrounds
of Lawrence. Gregory Lee Murphy remained
in Douglas County jail yesterday morning
in life, but not dead, after being used in the robbery, which took place between 12: 12 and 12: 30 a.m. Monday.
A 20-YEAR-OLD KU student was treated and released at Watkins Hospital after being struck by a hit-and-run driver in the 900 block of Emery Road, police
said. The student, who had been riding his bicycle, received injuries to his head and right arm. He reported that he was struck by a light blue, mid-sized car.
A 29-YEAR-OLD Lawrence man was in satisfactory condition at Lawrence Memorial Hospital yesterday with a lacerated foot after a car driven by a KU student turned in front of the motorcycle the man drove. He is now at p.m. Monday near the intersection of 31st and Iowa streets. The student was cited for inattentive driving, police said.
GQ HARLEY LOENGE
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University Daily Kansan, September 19. 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
Students can help, GOP says
As aorum sponsored by the KU College Republicans, 10 candidates and representatives of three other candidates spoke to about 150 people in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Republican candidates for state, local and national offices last night called upon KU students to help them in their fall campaigns and at the polls Nov. 6.
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ Staff Renorter
STATE SEN. WINT WINTER Jr., R. Lawrence, said students made a difference in local political campaign by their influence would increase
"If students would just get out and vote, there is no limit to the impact they would have nationwide," said James Van Slyke, candidate for the 2nd Congressional District.
"Young voters could be the most powerful voting block in the country."
"Take a town like Lawrence," he said, "the University is the heart of this community. You cannot separate the two.
"Students should be interested in local politics because this is where they spend a great deal of time." Winter said.
"When I look at who I represent, about half of my constituency is students. I have to be able to answer to those people."
Winter and Van Slyke encouraged students to register to vote this fall in Douglas County.
County Clerk Patty Jaimes running for re-election, asked for volunteers, as did Nancy Welsh candidate for county treasurer.
Jaule Hack, candidate for state representative, spoke about the abundance of students living in the 40th District.
"I have eight scholarship halls, 11 fraternities, two sororites and four dorms in my district," she said. "I definitely need student
OTHERS AT THE forum were: Jim Flory, candidate for county district attorney. County Commissioner Bob Neis; Warrens Rhodes, candidate for 3rd District county candidate for District 45 state representative; and Sheriff Rex Johnson.
Also at the meeting were representatives for Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, the Reagan Bush campaign, and State Sen. Jan Roverer Park, who is a candidate for the 2nd congressional District.
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Lonia E. Alexander, left, enters the courtroom for his preliminary hearing as his father, Lloyd D. Alexander, looks on. The hearing was yesterday in Douglas County District Court.
Teen-ager's tentative trial date set
By JOHN REIMRINGER
Staff Reporter
A tentative trial date of Nov. 26 was set yesterday for a Lawrence teenager charged with aggravated robbery, felony murder and rape in connection with the death of an 80-year-old Lawrence woman
The teen-ager, Donald E. Alexander, 30 W. 21st St., will be arraigned at 11 a.m. tomorrow in Douglas County District Court. A definite trial date will be set at the arraignment.
Norwood also objected several times during the hearing to testimony concerning oral and written confessions Alexander made on Aug. 22.
Mike Malone, associate Douglas County District Court judge, set the
detective, Ron Blum, Kansas Bureau of Investigation special agent; Mike McCaffrey, Lawrence police detective; Price Daniels County corpus
arrangement and court dates after evidence that authorities say links Alexander with the death of Marguerite L. Vinyard, 210 Tennessee St., was presented at a preliminary hearing yesterday afternoon.
Norwood said the confessions were made under duress because Alexander had been in the presence of officers and had not eaten from 10 a.m. Aug 22 until after he confessed at 6:15 p.m.
DURING A 15-MINUTE recess it the hearing. Wesley Norwood, Alex ander's lawyer, asked that the hearing be closed to the public following the recess. Malone denied the request.
Six witnesses were called to testify at the hearing. They were Sgt. Ron Dalquest, Lawrence police officer; Alan Sanders, deputy coroner with the Douglas County Coroner's Office; David Reavis, Lawrence police
Malone overruled the objections.
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Working together with people in a different culture is something you will never forget. It is a learning experience everyone can benefit from.
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PEACE CORPS
If you're graduating this year, look into a unique opportunity to put your degree to work where it can do a world of good. Look into Peace Corps.
Cape Corps Reprs. Coming to K.U.
Thurs., & Fri, Oct. 4 & 5
Placement Office, Carrash O'Leary
to keep up with applications
on an application wall
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For the time of your life in college, come to one of our free One Hour Evelyn Wood Seminars.
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1
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan. September 19. 1984
Page 7
TV series helps teach history
By MARY CARTER Staff Reporter
Imagine hearing weekly lectures from a famous Israeli statesman in such places as the Dead Sea, the amphitheater at Delphi and the Roman forum — all without leaving Kansas.
Beginning Oct. 1, KU students will have the opportunity to do to just that by enrolling in "Civilization: History and the Jews," a course offered through independent study in the division of continuing education.
The course traces more than 3,000 years of Jewish history, thought and culture. It corresponds to Religious Studies 126, Introduction to Religion, taught by Benedict Roldalander associate professor of religious studies.
'EVER SINCE HE'S been here,
Dain Breslauer has taught 'introduction to judaism, said Bar-
Bunny Hershkovitz. He taught curriculum and projects for the
independent study center of the continuing education division.
"We happened to have this material that we thought would be a marvellous accompaniment to the course."
The series in nine parts was produced by WNET-TV in New York City. It is the most ambitious of public television, Watkins said.
"Herritage," was filmed over four years on four continents and in 19 nations. Abba Ehan, an political leader, is the narrator
"The series is beautifully made."
Bresslaer said. "Abba Ebena is a very articulate individual who is very powerful and very moving."
THE COURSE WILL BE SHOWed on four public television stations across the state. In Lawrence, it may be seen on KCPT-TV, Channel 19 in Kansas City, Mo., and KTUW-TV, Channel 11 in Topeka.
Course requirements may be completed by mail. Students in
Lawrence, Topeka and the Kansas City area will meet with Breslauer at the beginning and end of the semester.
Walkins said the University of Kansas had sporadically offered public television courses in the past.
"We hope in the future to have several classes accompanied by television series each semester." She will just depend on what is offered
"The pattern varies, depending on the licensing agreements for the individual shows, which can get pretty complicated."
The most popular public television show at KU has been "Cosmos," narrated by astronomer Carl Sagan and used to complement an introductory astronomy course.
Enrollment in the TV courses has been satisfactory, she said.
"We've had good response," she said. "They are becoming more popular I definitely think it's a trend."
By HOLLIE MARKLAND Staff Reporter
Groups work for support of U.N.
Lack of interest in the United Nations has paralyzed a U.N. support group in Douglas County by reducing its membership, a professor of political science said Monday. Washington
"Most of the members are old enough to have been of voting age when the United Nations was given birth," Ketzel said. "After the United Nations was born, a lot was promised. The United Nations was oversold to the public."
Membership in the Douglas County United Nations Association Chapter, a group dedicated to generating interest in the United Nations, has 123 members to 12-13 members in two years, said Clifford Ketzel, the professor.
He said the United Nations was doing what it could within the limits of its charter. He said that even though the United Nations had little leverage in world decision making, it was an organization vital to international relations.
if we didn't have it,we would have to invent it,"he said.
Ketzel said the United Nations gave all member countries the opportunity to exchange views, barbs and compliments. It gave small state leaders a chance to engage in international councils and experience in international diplomacy
"We ought to keep it alive until there is a realization by member states that the United Nations needs to have more authority," he said.
The support group, which evolved from a Lawrence UNESCO chapter, has no formal ties to the United Nations, he said.
The Douglas County organization has three leaders because no one wanted to be solely in charge, he said.
"No one else was interested in the job," Ketzel said, "but we were afraid the organization was going to leave us, we all agreed to share the blame."
The United Nations is a thing that
Ketzel shares the top office with Clark Coan, director of the office of foreign student services and assistant dean of student life, and Glenn Kappelman, a Lawrence businessman.
But campus interest in international political organizations is not dead
Mike Pautler, Crewe Coeur, Mo. junior, is trying to revive interest in the KU Model U.N. organization, a group that simulates discussion among countries belonging to the United Nations.
Pautler said he was secretary general of his high school Model U.N. organization. The KU Model U.N. organization was inactive during his tenure, as theophore, years, he said, so this fall he decided to begin his own group.
Paulter said he planned to recruit participants for the mock U.N. organization next semester.
The interest of one student in a world government model does not spell the renewal of steady support for internationalism, however.
Ketzel, adviser for the KU Model U.N. organization, said that in the past, the KU group had grown and died according to student interest.
"High school students are usually interested and carry that interest to college," he said. "The group lasts a length of time student are here."
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NOTE: This is the last foreign language program this semester.
Wednesday, Sept. 19 FREEL! 7:30 to 9 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1984
HERE'S TO YOU K.U.!
Lawrence's 3 hottest drinking establishments.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1984
Page 9
Panel requests funds to close reactor
By MICHELLE TYRENE
JOHNSON
Staff Reporter
The Student Senate University Affairs Committee last night voted unanimously to ask the Board of Regents and the Kansas Legislature to appropriate money to decommission KU's nuclear reactor.
The resolution will go before the Student Senate on Sept. 26. Dennis "BooG" Higbberger, student body vice president and writer of the resolution, said the resolution had committee with unexpected ease.
"I was pleased by the committee's vote," Highberger said. HE SAID HE ANTICIPATED more resistance passing the resolution in the Senate, but said he had confidence that it would pass.
The estimated cost of filling the reactor with gravel and sealing it off are between $50,000 and $100,000. Dismantling the building would cost between $500,000 and $1 million.
"Every day they put it off, the more money it's going to cost." Highberger said as he presented his argument.
The Nuclear Reactor Center, on 15th Street across from Green Hall, began operating in 1961. KU's
School of Engineering offered a graduate degree in nuclear engineering, and the nuclear reactor was used for research. But the degree was discontinued in the 1960s.
"It will save the taxpayers of Kansas a lot of money the sooner we do it," Higbberger said.
Safety is the issue, Higherbeger said. He cited studies showing that even low levels of radiation are harmful over time.
Harassment suit names 7 anthropology profs
Two KU graduate students have filed a multimillion dollar lawsuit against three anthropology professionals for assistant anthropology professor.
The students, Nancy Sempolski and Elizabeth Murray, fitted the suit last week in U.S. District Court in
Topeka They said they were harbored after they filed complaints in January 1977 against Michael Crawford, professor of anthropology.
The students are seeking at least $1.35 million each in actual damages and at least $5.85 million each in punitive damages.
Named in the suit were Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor of research and graduate studies; William Argersinger, professor of chemistry; Jeffrey Bentley, chancellor; and Scott McNall, chairman of the department of sociology.
By the Kansan Staff
Sempelski and Murray's initial complaint, filed in 1977 with the KU Advisory Committee on Human Experimentation, stated that Crawford had misused federal grant money
County feud persists; memo causes dispute
Murray suit are Crawford; Anta Monet White, professor of anthropology and former chairman of the department; Dale Nicklas, former assistant professor of anthropology and attorney for Crawford; Robert Squier, chairman of the anthropology department; David Kernig, associate professor of anthropology; and John Janzen, Donald Stull and Felix Moss, all professors of anthropology.
Others named in the Sempolski-
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
Douglas County Commissioner Bob Neis said yesterday that another county commissioner was trying to prevent his re-election in November.
Neis, who will face David Hopper, Democrat, in the nov. 6 general election, said Commissioner Nancy wanted to see Hopper elected.
"If she can make me controversial," he said, "then she thinks people will vote for him instead of her." He did not know he'd be trying to get really dirty about it.
Hiebert, who is a Democrat, is not up for re-election this year.
Neis' remarks were in response to a statement and a memo Hiebert presented yesterday at a news conference. Hiebert's remarks at the conference were the latest in a mounting fued between her and Neis.
handed out a memo bearing Nets' signature. The memo described methods for "termination of surplus stock" and the memos denote sexual sling and sexual acts.
Hiebert said the memo was "ostensibly a joke," but was "vulgar, sexist and anything but funny."
Neis denied any connection with the memo. He said the signature must have come from the rubber bottle and the signature stored in the county offices.
At the news conference. Hiebert
"Anyone could get in there, especially around noon." Neis said.
He said he had an idea about who wrote the memo, but would not say anything else.
"I got a letter in the mail three weeks ago, and the memo was in it," Neis said. "But I don't know who sent it.
Neis and Hiebert often have disagreed in the past. On Aug. 27, Hiebert issued a statement questioning the actions of the two other county commissioners, Neis and Beverly Bradley.
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SPOONED BY THE EMILY TAYLOR
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WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
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THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
SENIOR YEARBOOK PORTAITS Shooting is taking place now
12-8 Mon. & Thurs.
9-6 Tues., Wed., & Fri.
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University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1984
Page 10
CAMPUS AND AREA
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
UNIVERSITY FORUM will meet at 11:45 at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Avenue. Dan Batson, professor of psychology, will speak about "Does Atristic Motivation Exist?"
A RICE AND BEAN DINNER,
sponsored by the Latin American
Solidarity, will begin at 6 p.m. at
Ecumenical Christian Ministries.
A RMLY will take place in conjunction with South Africa Week at noon in front of Watson library.
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A BROWN BAG LUNCH, sponsored by the Center for Latin American Studies, will be at noon in 109 Lippincott Hall. Larry Day, professor of journalism, will discuss "The Role of the Press in the Falkland Islands' Conflict," in Spanish.
THE FRENCH CLUB will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the French lounge, 2055 Wesco Hall. Mary Ryan, assistant director of the study abroad program, will speak about studying in France.
DAVID BUSS, Fulbright exchange professor, will speak at 4 p.m. in room 315 of the Art and Design
THE KU AMATEUR Radio Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Frank R. Burge Union lobby
building about "Art and Design Education in Britain."
THE KU PRE/LAW CLUB will have an informational meeting at 7 p.m. at the Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W. 14th Street.
HAIR STYLING FOR ME & WOMEN
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THE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES DUNGEONS and Dragons Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Kansas University.
INTERVIEWING!?!
FIRST IMPRESSIONS ARE IMPORTANT
LARRY MOORE, managing editor and news anchor for KMBC/TV, will speak at 7:30 p.m. in 100 Staats Hall in 100 West of the Journalism Building 1984. The lecture is sponsored by Women in Communications Inc.
HAMBONE &
HILLIE PG.
7:30 9:30 10:15 SAT & SUN
POETRY READINGS from South Africa writers will be at 7:30 p.m. in 100 Smith Hall.
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THE STUDENT Senate Finance Committee will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union
Balfour
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Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
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Thursday, September 27th. Interviewing at the Business Placement Center.
Thursday, September 20th at the Career Fair
Please stop by our booth at the career fair and schedule an interview appointment to explore opportunities with the May Department Stores Company.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
KU
Our diverse operating companies touch all types of retailing operations, including speciality and quality discount stores, represented by Volume Shoe Corporation and Venture Stores, our two fastest growing divisions. The career opportunities available to top ranking graduates are equally diverse. Our executive development program provides a fast track opportunity with immediate management responsibility for qualified candidates. We offer top salaries that are competitive with all major industries, coupled with a comprehensive benefits package.
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University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1984
Page 11
NATION AND WORLD
Oklahomans kill liquor ban
By United Press International
Booted by majorities in the state's urban centers, Oklahomaans yesterday划 narrow passed a county-option town on base on the sale of liquor the drink.
Oklahoma County gave the proposal a 27,000 surplus, and Tulsa County gave it a 42,000 surplus to negatively vote from rural areas.
However, neither the turnout nor the opposition in rural areas matched results from two earlier tries in the last 12 years.
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The lower turnout in rural areas kept the ballots cast lower than 1 million, which was predicted by state election officials.
With 2,280 of 2,353 precincts counted, the "yes" vote lead with 51 percent — 399,957 to 382,393.
The proposal trailed through most of the evening, until the Tulsa County vote began coming in.
The "yes" vote took the lead for the first time with three-fourths of the vote counted
In Massachusetts primaries, a major political upset occurred yesterday when New Right conservative Ray Shamie came from behind to
trounce former U.S. Attorney General Elliot Richardson for the Republican Senate nomination.
With just more than 30.5 percent of the vote counted, Shamie had 62 percent to Richardson's 38 percent.
In the 10th District race with 32.9 percent of the vote counted. Democratic Rep. Gerry Studds — seeking a seventh term under the cloud of last year's House of Representatives.
Republican Jimmy Carter — page — won with 62.2 percent of the vote to Plymouth County Sheriff Peter Flynn's 33.6 percent
Need a TV...
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Woman put on probation for neglecting grandchild
By United Press International
DANVILLE, Va. — An 80-year-old woman was fined and placed on probation yesterday for keeping her grandmother locked in a windless attic and a dirt basement for seven years.
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Essie Farmer Jones, 80, of Danville will find $500 and placed on strict probation for one year on a charge of neglect. Circuit Judge
The granddaughter, Carol Jones, was 18 when she was rescued by welfare workers last year. At that time she had the weight of a 12-year-old and the height of a 10-year-old and was mildly retarded due to lack of contact with the outside world.
James Ingram said a jail term would serve no purpose.
Today, social workers and teachers say she is maturing physically and is eagerly pursuing her neglected education.
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Limited to prescriptions no higher than (plus) or (minus) 4.50 diopters. Additional charges for photochromatics, etc. For Bifocals of any prescription, take $25 off the regular price. We can fill your doctor's prescription. This ad cannot be used in conjunction with any other optical promotion. Use your Visa or Mastercard.
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Call for appointment.
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On W. 6th across from Sunset Drive-in.
The University of Kansas
Business Career Fair
SUNDAY
JOBS
Thursday,
September 20,1984
Allen Field House 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
JOBS
- talk with company representatives
- explore opportunities in business
- match career goals with available jobs
- learn about salaries, benefits,
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- view company displays
Students from all schools and levels interested in business careers are welcome and encouraged to attend.
AT&T Communications
American Hospital Supply Corporation
Arthur Andersen & Company
Carlton Young & Company
George K. Baum & Company
Becker CPA Review
Burger King Corporation
Butler Manufacturing Company
Camelot Music
Cencor
Colgate Palmolive
Commerce Banshanes, Incorporated
Comptroller of the Currency
Concox (Houston)
Consolidated Grain & Barge Company
Consolidated N.Y., United
DST, Incorporated
Deloitte, Haskins & Sells
Deluxe Check Printers, Incorporated
Duracell Company
El Chico Corporation
Ernst & Whitney
Farmers Insurance Group
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
First City Bank Dallas
First National Bank of Wichita
First National Bank of Kansas City
First of Texas
AT&T Communications
Fourth National Bank & Trust Company GTE
General Motors Corporation
SIM Communications
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company
Volleyball State
George Hormel & Company
George Hormel & Company Hyatt Regency Hotel
Information Industries Incorporated
Interest Bank-Dallas
Interest Bank Dallas
S.C. Johnson & Company, Incorporated
Koch Industries, Incorporated
Mark Twain Bancshares, Incorporated
Mayer Hoffman McCann
McNeil Consumer Products Company
Mize, Houser, Mehlinger & Kimes
Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company
Mutual of Omaha
National Standard Company
North Supply Company
Owens Corning Fiberglas
Incumbent Company
Payless Cashways Incorporated
Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Company
Pizza Hut, Incorporated
Price Waterhouse
Procter & Gamble Manufacturing
---
University Daily Kansan, September 19. 1984
Page 12
NATION AND WORLD
Diplomatic sources report Soviet atrocity in Afghanistan
By United Press International
NEW DELHI, India — Soviet troops in Afghanistan dragged several women and young girls into a helicopter, stripped them, then pitched the naked captives out from high above the city of Ghanzi, diplomats said.yesterday.
Dipolamats also reported that Soviet helicopter gunners corroded Afghan guerrillas in the strategic area. After fighting of Kabul, killing 200 to 300 of them
"An eyewitness said several Afghan girls and women were taken aboard a Soviet helicopter" that landed Sept. 9 in Ghanza after a battle near the city, 70 miles southeast of
Kabul, the diplomats said. They asked that their names be withheld.
"As the helicopter lifted off, the Soviet soldiers stripped the women and girls, and then, from a great fortune, they out over the city," a witness said.
In what a diplomat said was "partial retaliation," for the alleged atrocy rebel forces in the area
killed 15 government soldiers Satur day.
The Soviet attack on the Panjah rebels was described as "another attempt to capture Massoud," the leader of about 8,000 guerrillas.
A diplomat said 200 to 300 resistance fighters were killed in the attack by Soviet and Afghan government troops Sept. 5.
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, September 19. 1984
Page 13
Soviet blames spies for defection
United Press International
MOSCOW A Soviet journalist who detected in the West a year ago, changed his story yesterday and accused British spies of kidnapping Russian hostages in a rival, then using drugs and torture to force him to denounce his homeland.
He denied he was a traitor and said his yearlong detection was organized by British intelligence.
Oleg Bibov, the journalist, surfaced a p Moscow news conference with its accusations more than a month after vanishing without a trace from London, where he had been granted asylum.
The British Home Office termed the charges as absurd.
Bittow left $51,000 in his London bank account, but he told the news conference, "You cannot, perhaps, understand how I could leave behind such a sum of money. But the homeland is dearer."
Bitov, former foreign cultural editor of McCormack's丽声 Gazette, said he was knocked unconscious last September after returning to his hotel room in Venice. He was covering the Venice Film Festival.
After being shattled from apartment to apartment for several days, he was put aboard an Alitala jet to
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Western friends in Britain also were skeptical about Bitov's new story. They described him as moody and unhappy without his wife, Ludmilla and daughter, Xenia, who are still in the Soviet Union.
However, to win the confidence of his captors, he said he played along, accepting political asylum, giving reviews and promising to write a book.
In a statement given after receiving asylum, Bitov said the Soviet downing of Korean Air Lines Flight 007 with the loss of 269 lives and the suppression of intellectuals in Russia handed him to renounce his home land.
The acceptance coincided with the second day of meetings between Lebanon's bickering Cabinet ministers in a new bid to dissuades over political and security issues and end nine years of civil war.
Bitlow claimed his abductors were bitterly disappointed when they found he was not a high-level KGB agent
Panthers " militiamen who wear raspberry-colored Warsaw pact camouflage uniforms.
all heavy and medium weapons,
removing gunnery from the streets
and removing mutila checkpoints
in bringing on beiges in bringing
onto Tripoli
The agreement was announced in Damascus, where pro- and anti-Syrian militia representatives worked out the agreement in Cairo. Vice President Abdel Halim Khadem and other government officials
Christian Phalange radio said one person was killed in the fighting in Tripoli Monday and six others were wounded.
The Damascus announcement followed months of fighting that left more than 500 people dead and many others wounded.
BEIRATU. Lebanon — Rival Muslim militiamen, who battled in the streets of Tripoli for two days with grenades propelled by rockets and automatic weapons, bowed to pressure yesterday and accepted a peace plan drawn up by Syria for northern Lebanon.
"They may well succeed," a military source said. "The Syrians are very keen to stop the Tripoli fighting and have both the political and military muscle to get things they want done."
843-739
He also claimed, according to one report, that he was an agent with the Soviet secret police
The key parts of the seven-point peace pact call for the collection of
704 MASS
The plan would try to end the almost daily clashes in Tripoli between Tawedhe gunmen and the Arab Democratic Party's "Pink
WINTER AND SPRING BREAK
The pace of Syrian shuttle diplomacy in Lebanon also intensified yesterday with a visiting military delegation meeting with Lebanese army officers and representatives of Christian and Muslim militias.
Steamboat from '174'
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VACATIONS
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图示为挖掘机作业场景。
Page 14
University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1984
KROGER MEANS
kroger
BETTER MEAT
DOUBLE COUPONS!
Everyday. Up to and Including 50'. No Limit on Quantity. Details Posted In Store.
OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY-1015 WEST 23rd
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Sold in 6 lb, pkg. or larger
**ITEM POLICY:** Each of these additional items are required to be readily available for sale in each kinger box except as specifically noted in this ad. If we do not out of an offer, we will offer your choice of a comparable brand reflective the same savings or a discount, which will entitle you to advertise the purchased item at the advertised price within 10 days.
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excluding cig. & beer.
Prices effective thru Tuesday, Sept. 25, 1984
Always Save
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pkg.
68¢
Limit one per family with $10 or
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excluding cig. & beer.
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SPARE RIBS
lb. $129
U.S.D.A. Choice
GRAIN FED TOP
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$249
lb.
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R. B. RICE
$159
lb.
CONT. CUTTER SPECIAL
Pie Filling
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99¢
21 oz.
fruit filling
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T.V. DINNERS...11 oz. 68¢
Center Cut
PORK CHOPS ... lb. $179
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Armour
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Vlassic
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Sliced
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fruit filling
The Kroger Garden
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24 oz. 99¢
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ICE CREAM BARS 6 Ct. pkg. 68¢
24 oz. 99¢
Bulk $189
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Apples
RED or GOLD
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bag 99¢
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bag
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bag
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Large, Crisp 49¢
CELERY (e.g.)
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CABBAGE (lb)
FORT CUTTER
WILLY
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Regular or Diet
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Fresh Baked
ITALIAN BREAD
lb. loaf 89¢
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Beautiful
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Deli-Bakery
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FRESH BAKED
ITALIAN BREAD
lb. loaf 89¢
Fresh Baked KAISER ROLLS
6 79¢ for
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lb.
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KAISER
ROLLS
6 79¢
for
Peter Pan
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BUTTER
$128
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Fresh Baked
KAISER
ROLLS
6 79¢
for
Shaved
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lb.
Kraft
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qt. 99¢
Kroger
LEMON JUICE ... 16 oz. **84¢**
Cost Cutter
CAKE MIX ... 16 oz. **53¢**
Decaffeinated
BRIM
COFFEE
$288
13 oz.
Cost Cutter
SWEET PEAS ...17 oz. $29¢
Spotlight
BEAN COFFEE ...lb. $188
Cost Cutter
CRACKERS lb. 45¢
G.M.
CHEERIOS 15 oz. $169
Betty Crocker
CAKE
MIX
78¢
18 oz
KRAFT
VELVEETA
$259
2 lb.
Box
Flour
GOLD
MEDAL
5
lb.
78¢
HUNTS KETCHUP 86¢
32 oz.
WESSON
OIL
$238
48
oz.
Gerber
BABY FOOD 4¾ oz. $20¢
Conv. Pack
LUVS DIAPERS ea. $849
Purina
PUPPY
CHOW
$252
5 lb.
Purina
PUPPY
CHOW
$252
5 lb.
Soft'n Pretty
BATHROOM
TISSUE
4 Roll
99¢
Purina
PUPPY
CHOW
$252
5 lb.
Soft'n Pretty
BATHROOM
TISSUE
4 Roll 99¢
Cost Cutter
BATHROOM TISSUE ... 4 Roll 59¢
Cost Cutter
ORANGE
JUICE
12 oz 88¢
Cost Cutter
POT
PIES
8 oz 29¢
Soft n Pretty
BATHROOM
TISSUE
4
Roll
99¢
Cost Cutter
ORANGE
JUICE
12 oz.
88¢
Cost Cutter
POT
PIES
8 oz.
29¢
2
University Daliy Kansan, September 19, 1984
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 964-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
10-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75
16-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.00
12-25 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.65
For every 5 words add: 25c 50c 75c 1.05
e every 5 words add
AD DEADLINES
Wednesday Friday Sunday 上午
Wednesday Friday Satur
Classified Display 100% $2.20
per column 100%
Classified advertising displays are only available wide and not in smaller sizes. They are only for large displays and are not for smaller sizes.
Display sizes for larger displays for larger prices.
POLICIES
working days prior to publication
• Always based on current stay insertions
- Merge tables based on certain values after insertion only.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
to the University of Kansas
* All attributions to pay in advance are based on evidence established.
in the University Daily News
- All advertisements will be terminated to pay in advance
- No responsibility is assumed but more than one in one current situation of any accident treatment
- Hired box adverts - please add $2 service charge
* If box & insured as a company, less classified ads marked to The University of Kaskan, Canada
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
- Words set in BOLD LETTER count as 1 word.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 119 Stauffer Flint Hall 864-4358
- Classified display cards not count towards monthly earned rate discount.
- Samples of all mail order items must be submitted.
andtns can be advertised 100% of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These adnns can be placed on emails, calls or by the business officer (www.443.458).
- No remuneration or compensation of prepaid classified advertising
total credit has been established.
* Teachers are not presumed to be identified or
eligible.
Dates: Sept. 22,23
entry deadline Sept. 19
Applications are now being accepted for Student Committee Members for the 1986 Kansas Relay. Application Committee Member House. Become a part of this great KIU Tradition. Deadline for application - Sept 20
Bodget Stercher coupon Thurs evenings. Hours: 7:30am-7:50am. Mail Reference, Malls shopping Center
Trailridge Athletic Club
Eightweight Special: 20% of Songbooks in stock
8 p.m. Thursday Cross Reference. The Malls
Shopping Center
correct insertion of any advertement
* No premium on cancellation of previous classified
Douglas County Open Racquet Ball and Handball Tournament
Open to all KU Students and Faculty
841-7230 2500 W. 6th Street
LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PRO
BLEM Tapes include overcoming mental
difficulties, speaking and listening com-
pared to reading, speaking and listening com-
pared to writing. 10 mins of each.
2 p.m. Jawahar Kumar Kansas UNOTE,
3 p.m. Jayhawk Kumar Kansas UNOTE,
4 p.m. Jaishank Kumar Kansas UNOTE,
quester FREE Presented by the Student
Master Center [2 Stright Hall 84-994]
LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PRO
THE FAR SIDE
Interested in joining a small Christian group for caring, sharing action and prayer that meets weekly? Groups now forming at Emerald Church (812-695-2400) come by or call 843-945 for information.
The weekly seminar "Gospel of John for today"
an exploration of the message of the gospel of
John to Jesus, September 29, 2015 p. at Episcopalian
Minsteries, 124nd Incumbent. Tom by call 843-843-843
Kansas Relays Student Committee is looking for new members. Pick up application at the Truck Office, 143 Allen Field House. Deadline is Sept. 21, 2014.
RESEARCH PAPERS' 306 page catalog, 15,278 cases
*tush* R$2.50 *RESEARCH* 11322 Idaho, 296
*MR. LOG* Angles 9005) / 211 477-826
Rent 19* Color T V $29.90 a month Curtis Mathes 147 W 23rd 842 5751 Open 9-30 - 9-00 M.F. 9-30 - 9-00 Sat.
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes 147 W. 23rd 842-5751 Open 9:30 - 9:00
M-F. 9:30 - 10:00
TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION PROGRAM
MEDITATION PROGRAM
FREE INTRODUCTORY LECTURE
WED SEP 19 8:30 AM
SHOWING WORKS ON
FOR MORE INFORMATION
SENIORS YEARBOOK PROTRATIS & Sports is taking place now, in Student Organization & Activities Office. 40 Kansas Union. Call your office for appointment. 12, 5-11. B. Katz
FOR RENT
Shirley Bennett, Internship of Charm Beauty Salon, is not only at Angela Beauty Salon, 940 W. 71st St., M.F. F-81 800-840 for Shirts, Special Shirts & Haircuts & $1
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All requests. Lighting included. Reasonable Rates. References 7491121
Trains for the KU Varsity men's and women's Bowl teams will be held throughout the week of 17-2-12. Men with Iliada will be try-out on Saturday but try-out at Micke Face Mine of the Kunsu University for skipping.
2 Brm. Apt $325/mo. All Utilities paid 918 Miss
5-Brm. Apt. 106 Miss. $200 plus Utilities Call
831.490 831.497
Bv GARY LARSON
Larson
© 1984 Universal Press Syndicate
9/19
"Watch ... Thaq says he make gravel angel!"
Available now. Removed two bedroom apartment at 129 800 Rocky. One block north of Union Celling (in new kitchen, large porch, fireplace, refrigerator and electric). 842-182-600
needed to live in a student slum. Room available now, in renovated, energy efficient Victorian house with 2/1/2 baths, modern kitchen, storage room, laundry room. Fun, stylish, staged group. $30/mo plus fees.
Lease 1+ bedroom house $350/mo. Off street pati
kint Park (414) 0570
Designed for a group of four students, Classy,
busy and energetic "835 9427"
KU STUDENTS AND FACULTY
Townhouse with finished basement available, only one left, good for 4 people. $490 RHOSSE PLACE. 841 1267
We still have limited number of completely furnished apartments and townhomes. Some are perfect for three people; all close to campus! Call or stop by Hanover Place—14th and Mass
841-5255, 841-1212,
749-2415, 842-4455
Sundance—7th and Florida or
Tanglewood—10th and Arkansas.
Offered by:
personal for roommates. One black from campus,
4 big bedrooms, living room, kitchen with dishwasher, bedroom with 3 cabinets, bunk房 with three beds, dining area with 200 sq ft per roommate for 4. above, 3 bedroom unit like upstairs for $12) per roommate for 3. See to prepare all air conditioners (call 448 826-789, 789-114).
and Mass..
Sublease to 12 Dec. from rental. Available At
Can house longer from landlord after Dec.
if desired. 2 bedroom at Perperevere Apartment. Unf
available on Burberry 841779 (10) evenings.
986-252-6534
STUDIO APT All utilities paid $165 2 blocks from K U K 1749 1544 m 12 pm
spring semester only - Fully furnished.
1-bedroom, 2-lodge house. Great neighborhood,
close to campus, complete with 2 child loving
dogs $410 per month 441-465
Try cooperative living! Sunflower House, 1406
Tennessee 749-8771, Ask for Dawn Inexpensive &
Private rooms are available
FOR SALE
BLOOM COUNTY
Mastercraft Management
1980 Ford Ponto economical best offer
1980 Ford Ponto typewriter good, 600-749 km/l
1980 Ford Ponto road car good, 735-819 km/l
1981 Kawasaki KZ7 130 1,420 miles mostly highway. 1900, 234 W. 9th, Apt. 1, see behind 840 Kentucky
AUDI-Fox, 1977, 4dr, auto, $1960, Electovoice speakers $120 ea. Pioneer amplifier 80W, $200. Kenwood amplifier 70W, $340, 841/192
Almost all Soundscene computer suite Excellent
condition! includes i track, cassette & phone
$250 or best offer Call 843-1045 or 843-8756
www.soundscene.com
Ice Heater 64k, disk drive with controller $799
Apple IIe 128k, another monitor Apple printer
$799
Apple IIe 32k, third monitor IBM MP
IBM HP 10k, drive $799 IBM Portable 256k,
K30k硬盘, Caller手机 8437或8757
RIGHT, NOW I - STEVE.
BREAK THE SLOWLY! IN...
OUT. IN. OUT. NOVEL!
YOUR TWIRLING
YOUR HEAD ON THE
FLOOR? GET A
GIRP ON
YOURSELF!
Bicycle: 26 Tires Men's Dual rear wire grocery
hackers; New seats and pedals More' $44
$43.80
Billions of tracies, collections, loins, hand bags, lingerie notes, much more at a
COLLEMHIA's speed girl's bike $50 749 1764 9
p.m — 12 p.m
N Stipules. For a firm foundation, use an on-terminal ZT A (l with monitor, built-in modem, adjustable parity, hooks up to KU and other main computers, & More! Call Bd. 8414690
Complete Queenshire Waterfront with heater. Exc
cellent condition. $000. Call 845-9675, between 1:30
and 3:00 p.m.
EVERYTHING GOS Car 79 Grand Prix — fuel-powered furniture, bedroom set, dining room set, 2 crib, ornament rugs, TV, and much more. Call 79-400-6999.
Finish, with hamburger case. Food & accessories incl.
842 661
more than frames & more. Carrie Macdonald.
Comic books, used Science Fiction paperbacks,
Plucky, Penthouses, etc. Mia Gomes, open
10, 6 Tues., Sun 811 New Hampshire
DRAFTING MACHINE Sturdy Brining machine with scales, works great $150
needed; 746-9080
Gibson Sunburst 147 - orange table $800 Guild
D 25, $300 Both with cases Eyes 749-4197 Misc.
Kevin
For furnishing for your living, we have what you need. We have 100+ bedrooms in the MAFSAC SALF - Suite # 8 and 50+ Books, Wks and MMS & Knots, Stats, Accounting, Dishens, Furniture Carbon Stories, 1023 Mediracath, etc.
SPEEK? IT'S MUILD. LISTEN
TO ME. A MAGAZINE HAD
JUST PUBLISHED SOME
OLD PHOTOS OF YOU
NUDE!
Yamaha Herever. Pioneer Tape deck with 2 speakers. $30 Drafting table & chair. $100 Call 854-2341
Samsung GT 185. New tire, chrome snorkels, tank
back rack back. Mint, cellul 843-6294
STEVE? IT'S MUILD. LISTEN TO ME. A MAGAZINE HAS JUST PUBLISHED SOME OLD PHOTOS OF YOU NUDE!
RIGHT, NOW I STAVE... BREATH SIGNAL! IN... OUT, IN, OUT, WORLD YOU STOP BANNING YOUR HEAD ON THE FLOOR! GET A HAND ON YOURSELF!
WHAT? UH NO, THE MAGAZINE ISN'T VENTHOUSE...
DOG WORLD
Arf!
He's
Nude!
Used Singer Sewing Machine, with cadmium in excellent condition, $125, all accessories incl. Call 841-0511
**new civilization Notes:** including New Sup
presence on Sun on Sat make us seem to use
them in our own time. Explore the new
exam preparation. **New Analysis of Western
Civilization** available now at Town Creek.
The
Windsurfer Sailrider SH1, 1982 model Regatta sail, 12 ft long, $490 or best offer. 841 0033
Z/00 64 K Multifunction *8" Disk drives 1.2 mb);
Mabrite CIRIT with Graphics, comes with WORD
STAK Pascal, C etc. $250. Call Gil after 8 p.m.
Roaring Machine, AMAREC 610, like new $150
Mature, 842 5334
by Berke Breathed
TENNIS EMULET Head Graphite Edge
December 2013 415 668
WHAT?
UN NO. THE
MAGAZINE ISN'T
PENTHOUSE...
DOG WORLD
Art!
He's
Nude!
172 Malibu 300-911-281, PB. AC, New starter,
alternator, water pump, tires, exhaust, $900
negotiate. Call 843-333 after 7, ask for Paul
Rubler
AUTOSALES
1974 Volo Wagen, 4-speed, $1195. i 845-2834 or
249-1640 (leave message.)
1923 Ford Mustang, PS, PB, AC 311 Cleveland
AM/FM game console. snow tires. Snow runs.
Big body, rough $100, negotiate 843-5798
1924 Ford Pontiac, good condition, some rust.
1975 Toyota Corolla, a dependable road warrior from the Land of the Rising Sun. $1000 Ask for Paul. 840-410 or 843-596.
1975 Toyota Corolla, good condition, runs great,
must sell, $300, 843-8156 or 842-4822
974 Ford Pinto, good condition, some rust,
vegetable. Call 749-5494, after 6
CAR for sale. Great around town car. 97 LeMans.
Great interior. Price negotiable. Call after 5 p.m.
841-843-7662
Clean used VW's for sale. Meteor Motors, 841 6600
FORD FIESTA, 1934, 4-pound wheel drive,
AM-FM, great mpg, fun to drive. New tires,
hatter, freaks, exhaust. $200, 841 3161
Must sell 1973 Plymouth Duster for $25 or best offer. Slant six engine, 3-speed, new clutch, AM/FM stereo. Call 749-1212 for more info.
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND: Domestic Bird—West Hills Apt.
Walkway area. Describe to claim. 843-4996 or
064-4986
Must sell, 1823 Nissan Sentra Station Wagon,
doors. Reige, AM/FM Stereo, clock A, C唤
Rustproof, 16,500 miles local run Call 749-9360
Walkway area Describe to claim 843-4966
864-4948
864-4948
FOUND: Two Credit Cards and Student I.D. in parking lot behind Union, Call 841-3560 to claim
HELP WANTED
parking for entire Church. Car 508-508-1000
LOST: A pair of brown framed glasses, in 4019 Warehouse. If please call 841 5800
14 time GRADIATE ASSISTANT PROGRAM COORDINATOR in the Student Assistance Center Development related to applied application deadline 9-24. Call come by 864-0641, 121 Strong [mailto:gradeartist@hawaii.edu](mailto:gradeartist@hawaii.edu) High School Graduate Research assistant $350 per semester; faculty committee in library research, on the architectural buildings, compile bibliographies, and use knowledge of architecture; art history and building applications please call 864-2780, building application calls call Kaitlyn Bailey Brown at 864-3210 for an interview appointment
Bucky's Drive in is now taking applications for part time employment. Apply in person, 10-5
BUCKY'S DRIVE IN, 2120 W 9th
Assistant Managers needed Day or Evening
AUTOC VIA 1700 W 23rd. 841-4848
Dependable female to assist disabled with care.
No experience required. Mornings, weekend and
evening hours available. Call between 15.
17:40am
Dependable female to assist disabled with care
No experience required. Morning, weekend
& evening hours available. Call between 1.5-
194.088
Domenico's Pizza World's fastest grooming pizza chain. Now hiring Dermal personnel. Part-time position requires at least 2 years of experience between $40.00-$60.00. Mr. must be 18 have valid insurance and driving license. Please apply in person (342) 572-3922.
FRESHMEN—It's not too late to join NAVAL.
BOTT C: 864 3161
Format Models for 1865 Calendar and posters, no experience necessary. Send phone and phone number to Bill Hexer Photography, Box 203, Pakistan 69071
GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS SPECIALIST/COMPANY SPECIALIST Half-time graduate research assistantship. Successful applicants will be invited to identify microcomputer hardware/software for geographic information systems programming, planning, computer science or related discipline required. working knowledge of application of geographic information systems microcomputers, required background and or coursework in geographic information systems a place. Contact the Kauai College Office of Engineering at 249 Nichols Hall. 804-6755. Applications deadline is September 19, 1988. Equal opportunity AI.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,599 $50,333 year
Now Hiring Your area Call 86-827-6000 Ext.
89783
samen and gamen tishnam to perform general han-dym and household duties. Living in a on-site house near Citizen Dam is required. Send resume to 290 Southwest St, Nippon, T594. SK6614
Jerry's Restaurant needs two experienced cashers for Saturday and Sunday shift and one week night. Apply in person, 1117 W. 6th
PIZZA AT STEPHANIE'S car driver can earn $6 or more in one hour. Now hiring. Call 841-8010 or apply in person at 2134 Yale Rd
The department of mathematics is hiring tutors for the Math ii. all applicants must have completed two years of college coursework (or call Blll King, room 25 & F strong, or call 944-456-4814) Applicants are available in the Math office.
University of Kansas Budget Office has an opening for a continuous half-time graduate assistant position in the summer. The position will assist with the process of budget and accounting transfers for the four University Budget Offices, preparation of the four University Budgets. The person assuming this position will gain a good experience working in the financial environment to work within the University financial environmental, accounting, and written oral communication skills required (40-80 per month for a full-time position). For information call Janice Wintaker, Budget Office.
Applications available in 319 Strong Hall, EOE
TACO VIA 1790 W. 21rd. Now Hiring 841-4848
MISCELLANEOUS
FOLK MUSIC - Lawrence String Band Project!
Thursdays! Lawrence Arts Center! 7 — 8 p.m.
842-406 or 842-2773
The University Daily KANSAN
Kitchen is open 8:11 30 pm. for wangs to go. Monday through Friday. Only at the Wheel
LADIES ON FIRE 7.9 25 cent Dresses Gowns at 9
LADIES ONLY 7 9. 25 cent Draws. Guys at 9 Only at the Wheel
PHOTO TYPESETTER (headline): Frater
typ 38 fonts, old but good, $50 Cali 841 927
PHOTO TYPESETTER (headline): Frater
typ 38 fonts, old but good, $50 Cali 841 927
BUSINESS PERS
Heels, Desks, Tents, Window shades. Everything But Jeans, Sib & Vermont.
COMPRESIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE,
and advanced outpatient quality
medical care, confidently assured Greatest
area (city) call for appointment
Inflation Fighter, E. 7th Eight. For your needs in
vintage and party clothes, hats, gloves, ties,
dresses and men suits *Growse in & browse* Hours
10:00 to 5:30 Sat. 10:00 to 5:30
M M
THE ETC. SHOP
732 Mass. 843-6011
INDiana.com
Hats
Vintage formal wear
Lawrence's Natural Food Grocery
Pure tap water - No longer a safe assumption
Multivour your water 842.7618
RESUME SERVICE. Let us assist you with that first good impression. Professionally written resumes and coverletters, word processing and native speakers. 5 Eighth, 7th B1-1286
I want to sing for every occasion - Birthdays Parties, Weddings!' John, operative tenor 841.074
PROBLEMS? Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center listens. Free 24 hr 841 234, or new location. 149 Massachusetts.
VIRGINIA AIMED. A selfish group for people wanting independence from marijuana, is now forming. Call Headquarters for more info 911.234.
Community Mercantile
Warm, caring people who like children ages 3-5 are needed as volunteers at Head Start for a minimum of 2 hours a day, one day per week. They can be sent to 4812515. For more information call 842 5151
Barb Willett
Fall Merchandise
Walt Gurneier
Natural & Fake Fur Coats
918th St. B41-2451
Macy's
FITTING
COFFEE
BREAD
PINEAPPLE
APPLE
Ginger
MILK
Barbs Vintage Rose
cure a PANTONE tool into an Air Brush®
system, join workers in stock "Brush's Office"
systems, or work with custom brushes.
LOOK AND FEEL GREAT
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING, HOT TUB &
HEALTH CLUB
249 HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
OFFERING
Aerobics Classes Now Starting!
Also includes:
* SUNTANING Option
* Weight Room/
Hot Tub/Whirlpool
25% off single membership
GET NOTICED
CUSTOM SEWING. Dressmaking and alterations. Call 842-357-9212. Reasonable prices. Wholesale Sound Rental P.A. Guitar and Bass amps. Graphite Mats. Eq. Sources
SERVICESOFFERED
Announcing, Troy Anderson, formerly of Command Performance, has joined the staff at his Hers Hair Design. His opening Special Harcourt show is scheduled for that special show, 6:41 p.m., 541-599, 121 Connecticut.
Selling something? Call 864-4358.
Charme Beauty Salon is now offering Haircuts for $7, and permits for $2 & up. Call or come in for a professional cut or perm at a great price! Charme Beauty Salon, 1035 Mass. 843-3600
*Charm Beauty Salon* Home of the $1 Flair
**HIRALIFE** distillator consultant. Weight:
less skin & hair care, much more, income opportunity.
841 0974
Low Weight Now. Improve your health and your wealth, 100% natural, 100% guaranteed, 842-6671 Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-5716
STADIUM BARBER SBOP_103 Massachusetts,
downst. All haircuts. $5 No appointment
necessary
Voice Lessons—DMA voice candidate accepting non credit singers Experience with all type voices 841-450
YAMAII MUSIC SCHOOL, ages 4-6, beginners
Olson piano and organ (842 0735)
BIRTHRIGHT Free Pregnancy Testing - Conferential Counseling BIRTHRIGHT 842 0421
Laurence Aelobics
by Cathe Thompson*
Classes offered M at 6:15 p.m.
St. John's School Gym
1299 Vermont
Call Cathe at 841-4158 for more info
Best Workout in Town!
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual 842 752
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing. Judy
842-7945
TYPING
Ultimate Hair and Skin Care Center. Haircuts
$8. Banna Cause is from Europe and has worked
in France, Germany, England, Belgium and Toul
eans. Grow up, Walk on knees, Walk in shoes,
14 EAST 78 740 9761
Absolutely Fast, Affordable Clean Typing and Word Processing IBM 106.Same day service available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinois. 841668.
Always try the best for professional service
Term papers, thesis, resumes, etc. Reasonable
842 3246
Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting select works. AMA 9247.051.10: 8:30 p.m.
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers Word Processing, Professional Results - resumes, papers a speciality. Call 749-1181
Professional TYPING, EDITING, GRAPHICS
IBM Correcting Selective Kathy. 842.3378 before 9 p.m.
CONVAINLE, professional, experienced
JENETTE SHAFFER — Typing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard cassette tape
841-9877
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI
CLIENT 841-3510
Somerville & Assoc, the Professors at Competitive Rates Word Processing. Typing. Processing in APA NILC. Lawrence. 901 Kentucky 811-8440. Topkis. 3023. Western. 323-3016.
TIP TOP TYPING, 120a Isova. Professional typing, processing, editing Resumes from start to finish, repetitive letters, editing our applications, Norxokin Memory, digital filing, legal repair. PSI: p. 5.43.8.67
TYING: PLUS assistance with composition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, these;
disseminations papers, letters, applications.
覆盖 May 25, Deerley 412 624
THE WORLD TOORS Why pay for typing when you can have word processing" 843-3147
Tsping in my home. Have IBm Correcting Select
tire! I should. Call Judy at 843-6891.
WANTED
HELP! Need ride to western Bendon, weekend of Sept 11. (Call) KY341-6536
Female Roommate to share 2-bedroom house,
walking distance to campus) $16250 plus 1:2
utilities. Call Monica 749-7214
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all
millebilancean IBM Selectric Selective Eteric or
Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9554
Mrs Wright
Female, Christian Roommate, to share spaces.
2 bedroom Apt. Close to campus $78.50 plus utilities. Call 749-4432
Looking for Female Roommate to share
completely furnished, 2-bedroom Apt. A rent: $147.30.
ultra shared. Phone: 499-8494 or 841-7617
Male Roommate to share 2 BR, Park 25 Apt. in Lawrence 1/2 utilities, 1/2 rent, 1424-630 for Appt.
Male Roommate non-smoker Separate bedroom & study Washer/Dryer $125 pm plus 1/2 utilities Call 749-812 or 166-7732
**Rommatee** Female grad or serious student,
non-smoker preferred, to share a nice
2-bedroom Apartment. All utilities Paid Call 842-9861
$30/mo. utilities paid. Desirable. 841.8194
Room needed to share house with 5 boys.
$32/mo. 17% of utilities, own bedroom, near
house. Desirable.
Roommates - to share New House, West side of
Town, non-smoker. 841-2282
Students wishing to lose to 29 lbs per month.
Easy, economical vitamin/herb method
indication available. Mail 841 6474
We buy VW's, running or not. Call Metric Motors.
841-6600
DRUMMER. imminentiae. in Musica.
& Roll-court. Chuck 497-6741. Justin 812-9299.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Classified
Heading
Write ad here
Net a
Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Name ___
Address ___
Dates to run
1 Week 1 Day 2 3 Days 4 5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
10 weeks $2.60 $9.75 $9.75 $9.75
For every week add
254 $99 $75 $1.05
Mail or deliver to 119 Stauffer - Flint Hall
Classified Display
1col x 1tch = $4.20
September 19, 1984 Page 16
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
'Hawks hurt by injuries, but none are too serious
Fullback Mark Henderson and defensive end Guy Gamble did not practice yesterday because of knee injuries, but Coach Mike Gottfried said that both could possibly see action Saturday against Vanderbilt.
Gottried said that if those two could not play, Lynn Williams would start at fullback and freshman Marvin Mattox would start at defensive end.
Adding to the Jayhawks' injury problems were linebacker Willie Pless and offensive lineman Jim Davis. Pless suffered a hip injury, but is not expected to miss much action. Davies became ill during practice and left early, but also was not arrested.
expect The Jayhawks continued preparing for Vanderbilt, a team that Gottried said was similar to Kansas.
"We're a lot alike," he said. "Except they have eight seniors on offense. They've had a lot of chances to work together, while we we've really only had two, the Florida State game and the Wichita State game."
Women's golfers finish 15th
After sitting in last place for two days, the women's golf team moved up a notch during yesterday's final round of the tournament. The Jayhawks finished 15th of 16 teams.
Tulsa won the 54 hole tournament with a score of 921. The Hurricanes were followed by Oklahoma State and Texas A&M, 943; Lamar, 950; Southern Methodist, 956; Houston Baptist, 964; Texas Christian, 971; Oklahoma, 972; Nebraska, 974; Illinois, 971; Texas College, 1011; North Texas State, 1032; KU, 1062; Wichita State, 1074.
Maureen Kelly led the Jayhawks with a total score of 258 off rounds of 86, 82 and 90. She was followed by Tina Gnewchuck, 260; Jane Helleberg, 270; Brenda Sanders, 283; and Toni T shockley, 286.
After two days of competition, the men's golf team is in fifth place at the All College Classic at Oklahoma City. Okla The 44-hole tournament ends today.
Men's golfers in fifth place
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Oklahoma leads all teams with a score of 555. Trailing the Sooners are Oklahoma City, 558; Missouri, 560; Nebraska, 566; Kansas, 571; Oral Roberts, 573; Cameron, 574; Oklahoma, 576; San Diego, 581; Centenary, 584; Wichita State, 586; Central States, 587; and Tulsa, 602
Tim Johnson leads KU and is fifth overall with a score of 140 off two rounds of 70 on the par-72 course. Steve Madsen is in eighth place with a score of 141.
Compiled from staff reports.
A
Paul Henry and Rod Steiner, freshmen on the KU baseball team, wait to shug balls during batting practice at Quigley Field. They were preparing yesterday for the Jayhawks fall season opener on Saturday against Johnson County Community College at Quigley Field.
Fall baseball begins
By CHRIS LAZZARINO
Sports Writer
As the major league baseball season goes into its last phase, the KU baseball team begins "spring training" Saturday against Johnson County Community College at 11 a.m. at Quigley Field. Northeast Oklahoma will come to Quigley Sunday.
Head Coach Marty Pattin said that the fall collegiate season was comparable to spring training in the pros. He said the coach staffing at Michigan could get a lot of players on the team.
Pattin and the Jayhawks were going to play as many games as they could this
"Since we are playing quite a few games, it is going to give some of our pitchers an opportunity to really extend themselves and go five or six innings."
Pattin said that returnees Charlie Buzard and John Heeney would probably get the first two starts. Other pitchers are returnees John Quinn, Bret Morris and Jon Steiner, and newcomers Paul Henry and Scott LaRue.
Patten listed the pre-season line-up as follows:
- Catcher — Rob Thomson, the leading hitter last year and a member of the Canadian Olympic team, will start Rob Thomson on Kevin Catese provide back up support.
- First base - Phil Doherty and Dan Christie platooned here last season.
- Second base - Chuck Christenson will start after playing third base most of last season. Peters, Hugh Stantfield, the red Rod Steiner could also action here
- Third base — John Glenn is back after sitting out last season because of academic ineligibility. Pattin said Glenn should bring good power to the plate.
- Shortstop — Kansas City Kansas Community College recruit Gary Lang is most likely to succeed Joe Heeney, now in the New York Yankee farm system. Scott Jones, who Pattin said has one of the best arms on the field, will also contend
Outfield — Mike Ingram, Stanfield,
Todd Schweigert and John Hart returned
after starting some games
Women's assistant resigns
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Associate Sports Editor
Murray Knox confirmed yesterday that he was resigning as assistant woman's basket
Lynette Woodard, previously a volunteer coach and part-time academic counselor for the women's team, has been moved to a full-time paid assistant, but head coach Marian Washington said yesterday that she will be going on a nationwide search for someone to replace Knox.
She said she would fill the vacancy "as soon as possible." She will be looking for someone with proven success as a recruiter. You can be a coach all the coaching staff's recruiting activities.
"I think we'll have a good response." Washington said. "The timing is not the greatest, but I think the opportunity to come proven program will attract some people."
Knox, who has been an assistant women's basketball coach the past three years, said he was resigning because his wife had taken a job as a personnel administrative assistant with a pharmaceutical supply company in Boston. He said it was a "family decision."
"It's a super opportunity for her," Knox said. "I'm behind her 100 percent. anytime you are involved in business or coaching and you're in a family situation, if an opportunity comes up and it's not going to benefit the whole family, it's not worth it."
Knox said he had talked with people on the East Coast about the possibility of him doing administrative and promotional work for
athletic teams, but nothing had been confirmed vet
"Hopefully, I'm not leaving that big of a burden on Marian," Knox said. He said he had arranged visits with prospective recruits through Oct. 10. His wife's job starts Oct. 17. He said he thought it would be better to learn the course, most of the course.
A lifelong Kansan and a native of Piedmont, Knox was a part-time assistant for two years with the men's team before joining the women's program. Before coming to KU, he coached at Garnett High School for five years. He graduated from Emporia State University in 1974 with a BS in physical education.
Krox had glowing words for Washington, the athletic program and the University.
“This is a great place to work,” he said. “I would take the time to talk to anybody about Marian. I’ve learned a lot more from her. She does a super job of handling individuals.”
Knox said he thought the current athletic administration was much more supportive of women's athletics than past administrations had been.
"The athletic program is on the way up now, and its interests are in the best interests of the students," he said. "In the past, its interests were best interests of the athletic department."
If he had any regrets about his stay at KU, Knox said, they were that the team didn't get enough practice.
Royals beat Angels, 10-0 go up by two in division
"If I had to, I'd drag people in here to watch women's basketball," he said. "It's just like anything, you like to be appreciated for your efforts."
By United Press International
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Bret Saberhagen and two relievers combined on a four-hitter last night, solidifying the Kansas City Royals' hold on first place in the American League West with a 10-0 blitz of the California Angels.
Kansas City's fourth straight triumph, coupled with Minnesota's loss to Chicago, put the Royals two games ahead of the Twins and 2-1 games ahead of the Angels.
Picking up where they left off in Monday night s 10-1 out of the Angels, the Royals got early home runs from Dane long and Steve Mills. The Rays hit Jim Saton, 7.8, in the first three innings.
Pat Sheridan's two singles accounted for the next three Kansas City runs. Buddy biancaLana delivered a pichh hit home run for the Royals' final two runs in the ninth.
lorg's homer came in the second and was his fifth of the season. Balioni capped a four-run third with a two-run shot, his 20th homer of the season.
The 20 year old Saberhagen, pitching in only his second professional season, yielded four singles and struck out three batters over seven innings. Dan Wagner and Dan Kearse each hurried one ring.
After Saberhagen, 9.10, walk the bases loaded in the first inning, the Royals defense got him out of trouble by turning over the first of five double plays.
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Fly ball
Two weeks ago, starting safety Wayne Ziegler grabbed two errant passes in KU's game against Wichita State. Now the former quarterback from Nickerson, who calls the
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The University Daily
KANSAN
Thursday, September 20, 1984
Vol. 95, No. 19 (USPS 650-640)
Buddy Mangine/KANSAN
VOTE
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Pam Lesis, a former KU student, stresses her point during a segregation. Dennis "Boog" Highberger, student body vice rally, against apartheid. South Africa's system of racial president, stands in the background.
Apartheid rally draws crowd
By JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter
The juggler with the painted blue lips and white face tossed three lighted torches furiously for the large crowd gathered in front of Watson Library yesterday afternoon.
As he jumped from the stage in front of the library, the crowd responded with applause and cheers. Behind him, a long, red banner with black letters fluttered in the breeze.
"Rally against apartheid," it read. "I've always thought that theater was the best way to tell people about things." Frank Krug, the jugger, said after his 15-minute performance. "We need more jugglers against apartheid."
KRUG, A 1981 KI graduate, was a participant in a two-hour rally designed to focus attention on the Republic of South Africa. He was part of an apprehension of apprehension of racial segregation.
About 200 people attended the rally, part of this week's South Africa Week activities sponsored by the the Student Senate's temporary Committee on South Africa
Speakers at the rally included members of the KU College Young Democrats, Praxis, the Socialist Workers Party and the Anti-Angriff groups, a formation of eight groups in the Kansas City area.
Members of "Common Ground," a Law
rence reggae band, began the rally with percussion music.
Six speakers criticized the South African government's policy of aparthand and called for the Kansas University Enforcement Department to stop enforcement in companies that do business in South Africa.
STEVE MENAGH, DIRECTOR of public relations for the Endowment Association, said yesterday that only Todd Seymour, Endowment Association president, could answer questions about the Endowment Association's possible ties to companies that do business in South Africa.
Seymour was on vacation and could not be reached yesterday.
Amenghai said the Endowment Association offered donors the option of not having their money invested in companies that do business in South Africa.
Dennis "Booq" Highlighter, student body vice president and South Africa Committee member, said that he and Carla Vogel, student body president, would meet with Seymour on Wednesday to discuss South Africa and the Endowment Association's possible divestment in companies doing business in South Africa.
HIGHBERGER ALSO SAID he would introduce a resolution at the Sept. 26 Senate meeting calling for the Endowment Association to gnd its investments in companies doing business in South Africa.
Highberger was at the rally to introduce speakers yesterday afternoon.
"We can change the world and have a good time doing it," he told the crowd.
A few in the audience carried homemade signs, and the audience clapped and cheered after each speaker finished.
Norma Hill, president of the Kansas City, Mo. chapter of the Black Social Workers, a group in the Anti-Apartheid Network, told the crowd that under apartheid, blacks in South Africa could not vote and were separated from white society.
SHE ALSO URGED the University of Kansas to join the Anti Apartheid Network
"Apartheid means separation," she said.
"South Africa has taken the word and taken
Pete Wickland, a member of the College Young Democrats, said in a prepared speech that he and his organization supported an end to apartheid in South Africa.
"Yes, mainstream America is behind the activists," he said. "And yes, students here at KU will work toward the end of aparthood."
Wicklund also criticized the Republican Party because, he said, it did not actively call for an end to apartheid in its platform for the November election.
That criticism was echoed by Wells Todd, a
See PROTEST, p. 5, col. 4
By United Press International
ST. LAWRENCE ISLAND, Alaska — Five American seamen detained for a week by Soviet authorities in Siberia returned to the U.S. early today aboard their own supply ship with a Coast Guard escort.
Looking rested and calm, the men were greeted in a light drizzle on the gravel beach of the remote Alaskan island by about 175 km. The Kaktovik isimo inhabits of the village of Gambell
THEIR ARRIVAL MARKED the end of an ordeal that began boarded their supply ship, the Freida K., and accused them of intentionally straying into Soviet waters. That night they were taken to a military installation on the Siberian coast and quartered in a hench
Tab Thoms, skiipper of the Freida K. told reporters after the Freida K. landed that the Soviets tried to pressure him into confessing that he had violated their territorial waters. But, he said, "I signed nothing from the time I got there to the time I left."
All five seamen said they felt no hostility toward their captors.
charlie Burrall, 29 the Frienda K cook admitted the experience was trying
dramatically the experience.
"I was never frightened for my own life but I was afraid I might not be coming back to the United States."
THE MEN, ALL active Christians, complained that the Soviets confessed their
bibles. "They told us their country believes there is no God." Thoms said.
The seamen arrived at St. Lawrence Island several hours after a rendezvous with the Coast Guard cutter Sherman, with the Frored K. accompanied from Siberia by a Russian ship.
Asked if he would continue to sail his supply ship in the Bering Strait where the incident occurred, Thoms said "Yes. More carefully. Yes."
While on the way to the island, Thomas said in a ship-to-shore linkup with the ABC Nightlife program that he and his crew were treated fairly during their detention except that Soviet officials put psychological pressure on them, unsuccessfully, to sign papers admitting they purposely entered Russian waters.
"At no time were we physically mis-treated. 'Thoms said.' "They did no physical damage to us at all."
BUT HE SAID. "They used every way possible that I could possibly see it to get us to sign." At first they called us detainees and detained us from all our personal possessions and communications with the outside world.
"They split up the crew into two separate groups and we were not able to talk or communicate."
The incident started Sept. 12 when the Frieda K pulled up next to what turned out to be a Soviet warship
Year in Scotland inspires student's golden designs
Staff Reporter
By ERIKA BLACKSHER
Andrew Dankwerth, a fourth-year architecture student, went to Scotland expecting to learn more about architecture and to experience the culture
He didn't expect to be the first exchange student to win a prestigious medal awarded by the Heriot Watt University in Edinburgh, Scotland.
"It was a great honor," he said. "I wouldn't expect them to give it to someone who was just visiting their program."
The University of Kansas and the Scottish university began an exchange program in 1973. Two architecture students from each university study at the other school each year
THE AWARD — called the Third Year Gold Medal — was given to the student who showed an overall sensitivity to design and incorporated the different components of architecture into his design, said Dankwerth,
who studied in Edinburgh during the 1983-84 academic year.
Growing up in the United States and being confined to American architecture limits one's architectural perspective. Dankwerth said
"By going over there you start to see things in a different light." he said. "It starts to increase your architectural vocabulary from simple areas, as in doors and windows, to the connection of structural components.
"I feel that going over there has widened my scope as a designer and increased my capacity to accept new ideas and use them or synthesize them into my designs."
DANKWERTH'S FINAL project at the Scottish university was a crematorium design. He said he chose to do the design because of the complexity of combining two distinct functions
"You had to be very sympathetic to the mourner, yet it had to be an efficient design because it is a mechanical process," he said.
See AWARD, p. 5, col. 4
Nicaraguan's appointment left intact despite protest
By JOHN EGAN Staff Renorter
In response to a KU business professor's protest last week, two KU administrators yesterday supported the appointment of a Nicaraguan government official to a visiting professorship.
Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said she would not revoke the appointment of Mariano Fuilles, president of Nicaragua's Supreme Election Council, to the Rose Morgan Professorship of political science in the center for Latin American Studies.
IN A SEPT. 12 LETTER to Charles Stansister, director of the center, Arthur Thomas. Arthur Young Distinguished Professor of Business, said Failos' appointment was "roughly comparable to having appointed a member of a Nazi puppet government to a KU visiting professorship during the late 1830s."
Stansifer said yesterday that he had received Thomas' letter and had responded to it in writing. But Stansifer said he would not comment further on the matter until Thomas had responded to the letter.
'My opinion is that he will contribute to the diversity of ideas at the University.' she
Tacha said Fiallo was highly respected in academic circles.
NOMINATIONS FOR the Rose Morgan
"Those who know about such matters consider him to be one of the most distinguished educators in the Americas," he said.
Professorship may be accepted from all KU schools and departments A committee considers the nominations.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor for academic affairs, also defended Fiallos.
Tacha said she had ultimate responsibility for approval of the professorship.
IN NOVEMBER, NICMAGUACS Sandiista government will hold its first national election since Gen. Anastasio Somoza Dhavleh lost power in 1979
Fiahols, whose daughter is a KU senior,
graduated from the University of Kansas in
1974.
As director of Nicaragua's elections, Fiallo has been touring the United States, explaining the Central American country's electoral process.
Besides Fiasola, another Rose Morgan Professor will come to KU next semester, said Cairn Prentice, administrative assistant at the School of Architecture. The professor will teach in the School of Architecture.
Fiallos took leave of absence from his job as an administrator at the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua in Managua to direct Nicaragua's elections.
Learning to stem the mess of stress
A Rose Morgan Professor will also teach next fall in the department of systematics and ecology, she said.
By JULIE COMINE
Staff Reporting
Staff Reporter
The person.
The landlord wants the rent check. The roommate wants to know why the apartment looks so messy.
The pressure piles up.
The alarm doesn't go off for that 8:30 a.m. class. These two papers due Monday still aren't finished
All 24,000 students at the University of Kansas will feel the stress of the college routine sometime this semester, health officials say.
LON
"We all experience stress," said Dean Kerkman, a psychologist at Watkins Hospital "Some of us, however, have learned madeible ways of coping with
STRESS CAN BE CAUSED by a myriad of factors. Kerkman said.
Family conflicts, fights with friends, financial troubles and on the job pressures can make anyone depressed and crabby.
crudely.
Add to those the responsibilities of college, Kerkman said, and a student's life can become a mess.
"The pressures of academia tend to induce erratic hours," Kerkman said. "When students aren't sleeping or eating regularly, and when they're propping themselves up in chairs, snubs, caution and cigarettes, the odds are it's come to catch up with them."
students stay up all night typing term papers, pumping their bodies with coffee or Cokes
But every semester, countless KU
In Cakes And every semester, some students try to escape from stress. They nap all afternoon instead of going to biology lab, or slam a few beers instead of studying for the next day's psychology exam.
IF STUDENTS DONT learn to cope
Kerkman said, they can "stress them themselves sick."
Pal Walker, a physician at Watkins,
estimated that 10 percent of the patients he
treated died.
Tests have shown that stress can lead to depression, irritability, exhaustion, insomnia.
See STRESS, p. 5, col. 1
September 20,1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily KANSAN
Peres seeks more U.S. aid for ailing Israeli economy
JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Shimon Peres will ask President Reagan for up to $950 million in additional U.S. aid as part of a recovery plan for Israel's ailing economy, government sources said yesterday.
Peres will travel to Washington next month for a "working visit," meeting with Reagan on Oct. 9, four weeks before the American election.
Congress is completing action now on an ad package it increased to $2.6 billion, all in grants, from the $2.2 billion in both loans. Reynolds Reagan submitted for approval in February.
The reception that Peres' request for an additional $750 million to $900 million will get may depend on what steps Israel takes home to bring its economy under control.
Man arrested at Mondale rally
SAN FRANCISCO - A man with a knife strapped to his leg who was acting mentally deranged was arrested within hours of the incident, a Sierra Club vetted at a crowded Sierra Club rally.
The man with the knife was identified as Paul Fuentes, 28, of San Francisco by a city jail spokeswoman. He was charged with the murder of a concealed weapon and resisting arrest.
Fiantes was arrested when Secret Service agents spotted a leather sheath under his pants leg that they believed to be a gun holster. After discovering it contained a knife, Fiantes was taken into custody. He later received Richard McDrew. No one was injured.
"The man was carrying on vocally as though he was mentally deranged so agents stayed with him," McDrew said.
Suspect drops pants in court
MONTREAL — American Thomas Brigham danked down his pants in court yesterday and proclaimed that his underwear proves him innocent of a bombing that killed three people and injured 41 others in Montreal's main railway station. Brigham, a 65-year-old native of
Brigham, a 65-year-old native of
Oklahoma, demanded the right to
flick a statement.
"I want to present my evidence," Brigham said, pulling down his trousers and pointing to his exposed undershorts.
"I was doing my laundry," he yelled.
In the hell could I plant a bromomew
in there?
Brigham was ordered to undergo psychiatric exams prior to a hearing to determine whether he is fit to stand trial on the charges.
United Press International
Compiled from United Press International reports
1
OTTAWA — Pope John Paul II rides in the "Pope Boat," a from Vancouver. About 500,000 people lined the canale yeste
40-foot bulletproof barre, on the Rideau Canal after arriving day to watch him pass.
Reagan may lose steelworker vote
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — United Steelworkers President Lynn Williams criticized President Reagan's steel import decision yesterday and predicted that steelworkers would vote against him.
"This plan is comprehensible and en forceful." he said.
But Williams said, "The president had an opportunity to develop a comprehensive, enforceable, effective program to restore jobs of American steelworkers and strengthen a crippled industry. He has rejected this opportunity."
"I think the future of the steel industry remains in jeopardy," Williams said at a news conference. "I can deeply disappoint you if you don't import relief to the domestic steel industry."
ASKED ABOUT REAGAN'S re-election prospects. Williams said, "I don't think he can carry the steel industry states, and I don't think he can carry the country."
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Williams said the United States, unlike other major world powers, seemed willing "to let the most basic industry of an industrial nation slip into oblivion."
Williams said the union had received 200,000 petitions asking House Speaker Thomas O'Neill of Massachusetts to push for passage of the Fair Trade and Steel Act, which would limit steel imports to 15 percent of the U.S. market.
The House Steel Caucus, meanwhile, voted unanimously for a resolution calling for immediate action on the union-supported legislation that has languished in committee for months.
REAGAN WAS ASKED about the union opposition while campaigning in New Jersey, and commented, "They don't have the details. When they do, they will approve it."
REAGAN ON TUESDAY refused to grant import protection sought by American steel makers but promised to seek voluntary agreements with exporting nations to prevent "surges" of steel into the United States. He rejected a proposal backed by the steelworkers union that would have shuttled steel imports to 15 percent of output. Chairman David
Vice President George Bush, campaigning in central Ohio about 150 miles from steel mills, said the position is that if you go for high protection, you throw a couple of neighbors out of work.
The statement from the union came on the fifth day after the expiration of the old contract.
The UAW ordered four new strikes by 28,444 workers early yesterday after GM rejected the union's latest offer on wages, benefits and job security.
THE LATEST STRIKES authorized by the UAW included 13,700 workers at the massive Oldsmobile complex in Lansing, Mich.; 6,100 workers at Cadillac in Detroit, 5,790 at Truck and Bus in Flint, Mich.; and 2,854 at the Indianapolis Truck and Bus stamping plant. A total of 91,516 workers are now on strike at 17 plants.
In Pittsburgh, U.S. Steel Chairman David Roderick described the president's plan as the steel industry's best hope for survival.
GM SAMID IT IAD lost production of 26,300 cars and 6,100 trucks in the three days of the劫
One industry analyst said the walkout at 17 plants producing GM's most popular and profitable models, plus lay off at 19 plants, was costing the automaker $175 million a week.
Auto strikes at standstill talks persist
DETROIT — Talks between the United Auto Workers and General Motors Corp. appeared at an impasse yesterday as about 30,000 workers at four more plants walked off the job, bringing the number of union members on strike against the giant automaker to nearly 92,000.
Indications are increasing that the strike, which has affected nearly one-third of GM's work force, would become nationwide by the end of the weekend.
The union said in a statement yesterday that little progress had been made in the day's bargaining, UAW President Owen Bieber and Vice President Donald Ephlin met with top union officers to brief them on the talks.
IT WAS THE first time either side had admitted the negotiations had reached a standstill. There has been no comment from GM officials since Sept. 10.
A union spokesman said there had been no meetings between the top UAW and GM officials
By United Press International
The announcement of the new strikes came after GM's response to an offer made at a hotel in London.
Sources said the company was offering workers a 2.25 percent wage increase in the first year of a new three-year contract or $493 a year for workers making a base wage of $21,000 a year. The union is seeking a 3 percent increase, or $657 in the first year.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Nominations are opened for KU teaching award
Nominations for the 1924 Chancellors Club Career Teaching Award will be accepted until Oct. 12 in the office of Academic Affairs, 127 Strong Hall.
The $5,000 award is presented annually to a faculty member who has been at the University of Kansas for at least 15 years teaching ability and commitment to the Faculty.
Students, faculty, staff and alumni are invited to submit nominations. Where appropriate, nominations should be accompanied by curriculum vitae, departmental and school endorsements and supporting comments.
The winner will be announced Oct 27 at the KU University of Oklahoma football game 640.
The award is financed through donations from members of the Chancellors Club.
Director to analyze water plan
The director of the Kansas Water Office will discuss a proposed water plan for the state at 7:30 p.m. Monday in building 21 at Kansas County Fairgrounds, 2110 Harper St.
Joseph F. Harkins, the director, will analyze the plan's impact on local agriculture and residential and industrial water use.
The Kansas Legislature will consider the plan during its 1985 session, which begins in January.
The plan is designed to identify water resources and insure that those resources are used effectively, said Gary Tochben, executive vice president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
Car workshop set for Saturday
The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department will sponsor a workshop on car care from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday in the auto shop at Lawrence High School,
Local mechanics will answer questions about warranties, repairs and preparing equipment.
To register for the workshop, call 841-7738.
Fraternity wins chapter honor
The Phi Gamma Delta chapter, 1540 Louisiana St. won the Cheney Cup for the best chapter in the nation at a Phi Gamma Basketball convention in New Orleans last month.
Chicago art professor to speak
The award is given annually to the Phi Gamma Delta chapter that best exemplifies the ideals of the fraternity. Chapters are named, led and housed, community and campus affairs.
A former director of the KU art museum will deliver the second speech in the 1984/85 Humanities Lecture Series at & Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union
He also will lead a gallery tour of Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art at 11 a.m. Tuesday
Edward A. Maser, professor of art history at the University of Chicago, will speak on "The Humanist in Old Age: The Late Works of Franz Anton Maubertscht."
Weather
Today will be sunny, and the high will be around 90. Winds will be from the south at about 10 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear. The low will be around 60. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy, and temperatures will again be in the 90s.
Corrections
Because of a reporter's error, Ron Helms' title was incorrectly reported in a Sept. 4 news story and a Sept. 12 editorial. Helms is professor and program director of architectural engineering
Because of a reporter's error, a story in yesterday's Kansas incorrectly reported the name of a course offered through the division of continuing education. The name of the course is "Heritage Civilization and the Jews". Students who wish to enroll in the class should call Barbara Watkins at the division of continuing education, 864-4792.
KENNEDY LEE
Mike Hart, Poola junior, practiced rock-climbing yesterday on the side of Malott Hart. Hart said he often practiced his technique on campus buildings
Committee will study AURH housing rates; panel reviews contract
By CHRISSY CLEARY
Staff Reporter
The visitation policy for overnight guests at residence halls will be reviewed by a committee to be appointed for that purpose, the Residential Programs Advisory Board decided yesterday afternoon.
The decision to appoint a committee was among several items acted on by the board, which met yesterday to discuss recommendations made Tuesday evening by the general assembly of the Association of University Residence Halls.
The recommendations and decisions now will be considered by David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, and by Chancellor Gene A. Budig. Final authority on contract rates — which also were discussed by the groups — and on other items in housing contracts rests with the Board of Regents.
THE ADVISORY BOARD will review the AURH proposals during the next month and ROBIN proposal in October.
The general assembly of AUR recommended after its Tuesday meeting that the current visitation policy — which regulates when guests can visit hall residents — be revised to alleviate confusion and to ensure that students' opinions were considered.
"It doesn't need to come to a vote," said Caryl Dean, saint of student life and chairman of the board. "I will appoint a committee to take care of it."
James Jeffrey, president of AURH, and Curt Worden, chairman of the AURH Housing and Contracts Committee, were the first committee members appointed
OTHER PROPOSALS PASSED by AURH Tuesday night, which will be reviewed in the next five weeks by the advisory board. include an $80 increase in the base housing rate for residence hall rooms, discontinuance of Saturday morning breakfast at all hall's, a reclassification of all allee halls and a reclassification of McColum halls and to allow freshman.
Jim Schmaleske. St Paul, Minn., graduate student who worked in the McLennan school.
for two years, said the proposal should be approved by the hall government as well as AUHR because more residents than anticipated took advantage of the breakfasts.
J. J. WILSON, director of housing, agreed.
WILSON, director of noticing, agreed.
"The amount of classes, the amount of work, plus football games and finals, indicates a considerable amount of activity on Saturday morning," Wilson said. "There's a much higher count than talked about here."
He said that it would be inappropriate to apply Sunday's meal schedule, at which only a brunch is offered, to Saturday.
However, Worden said that the wishes of the residents had been considered in recommending the elimination of Saturday breakfasts.
"Yes, they've been taken into consideration." Worden said. "There would be no cook on duty, but they would be able to get a cold breakfast and a sack lunch.
"When the committee voted on the changes Tuesday night, all the halls were present and they approved the proposal to eliminate Saturday breakfast. They implicitly said the benefits outweighed the cost."
AURIS GENERAL ASSEMBLY also proposed that the utility rate, as included in housing contracts, be increased by $20, rather than by the Housing department's suggested increase of $37. Worden said that although the AURH proposal might be lower than the suggested increase for utilities, AURH was asking the housing department to justify the $37 increase.
"There is housing department surplus money left over from the years 1961, 82 and 83." Worden said. "We are asking if there is enough surplus money to offset the difference between the $20 increase and what the difference will be.
"By justifying their utility rate increase, the housing department will increase their accountability with the residents and that's important because they are paying the bills."
Wilson said the housing department would review the figures and report to the advisory board next week. He said, however, that a $20 increase to pay for increased utility costs would not be sufficient, and that the $37 increase was needed
KU offers government internships in D.C.
Staff Reporter
The nation's capital often has been portrayed as a city of ruthless politicians battling within a bureaucratic maze
By JOHN EGAN
But last semester, 19 KU students traded the comfortable confines of Lawrence for the hectic pace of Washington, D.C., where they worked as government interns
The internships, sponsored by the College Honors Program and the political science department, allow KU students to earn 12 hours of credit while in the federal government. All KU undergraduates are eligible for the program.
THE POLITICAL SCIENCE department also offers a Topeka internship program Topeka interns, who must be political science
maples, earn 12 hours of credit while working for state legislators and officials in the city.
Information about both internship programs will be available at a meeting at 8 p.m. today in Nuneman Center
Since the late 1950s, the University of Kansas has been sending interns to Washington, said Clifford Ketzel, professor of computer science and director of the Washington internship program.
Working in Washington gave two of last季s interns a new perspective on their work.
Tim Mauvery, Overland Park senior, said,
"Consider it my most important semester."
COLLEEN ECK, WICHTA senior, said,
I made me appreciate what I was doing
together.
Maury worked in the office of Rep. Jim
Slattery, who represents the 2nd Congressional District. Eck was an intern in the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative
Maury, a journalism major, said the semester in Washington was a maturing experience. He said that living on his own would mean paying more money and function in the working world.
He said his internship helped prepare him for a possible career in law, and being in Washington allowed him to visit several law schools on the East Coast.
City life, he said, was a culture shock
city life, in fact, has a history.
"You learn not to look anybody in the eyes because you don't know them," he said. "You become city smart."
BUT ONCE SPRING came and Washing
with cherry blossoms appeared Maurya's
turtles
"It was just beautiful." he said
While the weather was nice outside, Mauery kept busy on Capitol Hill as Slattery's only Washington intern.
He said he made phone calls, wrote letters,
compiled information for 2nd District mailings
and visited with constituents on the job.
He also did some "dirty work," such as
running errands, he said.
"My days were very full," he said. "I never had enough time."
Maury and Eek worked from 9 a.m to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday for about four weeks.
Eck, who is majoring in economics and political science, said her internship gave her a prime vantage point for observing the governmental process.
"I HAVE NO BURNING desire to be a senator," she said. "I'm not a politico. But it's interesting to see how things work."
Committee cuts Nigerian students' request
By the Kansan Staff
A request by the Nigerian Students Association for financing from the Student Senate was axed by $390 last night by the Senate's Finance Committee.
The committee recommended by a vote of 24-5 that the full Senate give the group $240. The Nigerian students originally had requested $630.
The association was denied money for guest speakers because the members failed to gain the proper authorization for the speakers. The committee also recommended that the full Senate give the group no money for rent.
The Nigerian Students Association had requested the money to pay for advertising, supplies and expenses, rent and guest speakers.
The committee postponed debate on a bill to create and finance a student credit union, which was to have been considered
Lace Jellinek, a Milan, Italy, junior and member of the Finance Committee, said, "I think it was important to fund this organization because it is a supportive group that helps foreign students who are thrust into a new culture. It helps them when they are homesick or just want to speak their own language."
The money for the association, if the request is approved by the full Senate, will come from the Senate's unallocated account. The $5,000 account is used to finance
functions of student organizations, including newsletters and meetings
The Finance Committee considered the request last night because the association had submitted its request for money three
days after the spring deadline for budget hearings.
The president of the Nigerian Students Association, Polycarp J. Afandige, said he requested supplemental funds to pay for an independence day celebration on Oct. 1 and to promote a better understanding of Nigerian cultures.
The bill proposing a student credit union was postponed, said Jon Gilchrist, chairman of the committee, because the sponsors of the bill, Mark "Gilligan" Sump and Dennis "Boog" Highberger, needed more time to work out the details.
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September 20,1984 Page 4
OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daly Kansan, UNSP 660-640 is published at the University of Kansas, I18 Stuifter Fint Hall, Lawen, Kanze 66045, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawen, Kanze 66043 Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or a year outside the county. Student postage paid at Lawen, Kanze 66043 Address changes to the University Daly Kansan, I18 Stuifter Fint Hall, Lawen, Kanze 66043
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Freedom
The right to learn from people of a variety of political orientations is fundamental to a society that claims academic freedom, and any university that chooses its faculty on politics and doesn't consider the potential for learning is wrong. So it was heartening that the University had the courage to appoint to a professorship an official of a communist government the United States is actively trying to depose.
That official is Mariano Fiallo, president of Nicaragua's Supreme Election Council, who has been appointed Rose Morgan professor of political science in the Center for Latin American Studies. Given today's political climate and the controversy over the election planned for Nicaragua in November, here is a man from whom we can learn much.
Or so it seems. Arthur Thomas, Arthur Young distinguished professor of business, indicated in a letter last week to the Kansan and to Charles Stansifer, director of the center, that he would have the University put on political blinders.
Contrary to what Thomas wrote in his letter, the appointment of Fialios does not constitute "the center's support for totalitarian Latin American regimes and would be regimes," about which he is so concerned. Would he have us turn down a semester with Andrei Gromyko or Fidel Castro, because their governments don't get along with ours?
Perhaps Thomas thinks the students should be protected from Fiallos, that they will somehow be poisoned by his rhetoric. Students are not so naive. If they have hard questions to ask of him, they should get their chance. Those members of the University community who want to exercise their academic freedom should also have a few questions for Thomas and others who would deny this opportunity.
Huck Finn at 100
Ernest Hemingway once said, "All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called 'Huckleberry Finn.'"
This year marks the 100th anniversary of the publication of the adventures of Huckleberry Finn, a poor boy, and Tom, a runaway slave.
One of the few giants in U.S. literature, Twain penetrated the human soul through the eyes of innocents, children who could see what adults could not. Huck's "unformed" conscience realized that Jim was not a piece of property, but a human being and a friend.
Twain's literary works are now causing controversy because they are said to contain language offensive to blacks. Such arguments are hard to swallow, yet a public school in Waukegan, Ill., has removed "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" from the school's required reading list.
Tragic is the only way to describe such events. In the face of such narrowmindedness, the important place Twain occupies in U.S. literature must be kept in mind.
Thomas Werge, a professor of English at the University of Notre Dame, writes;
"Mark Twain recognized America's central place in the moral drama of modern history. He castigated his country out of hope and love for what it should be, and anguish for its failure to fulfill its promise."
As the centennial of "Huckleberry Finn" approaches, do yourself a favor; pick up Twin's classic and read it.
REAGAN ... GROMYKO ...
REAGAN...
GROMYKO...
GA96A MEDIA NEWS
Zzzzzz
Zzzzzz
DADI
I'll take it all.
Z Z Z Z
'Save the Kleenex for the alumni'
Guess what! KU has more academically ineligible football players than any other Big Eight school!
So what? Life goes on
No tears, please.
Hotshot architects, journalists and pre-meds come to school Hotshot architects, pre-meds and journalists hire a title in college It happens everywhere.
That is why I'm not going to er for football players. Save the Kleenex on
I'm certainly not going to cry for any athlete anywhere who attends a large university on a full scholarship, eats training table food, gets paid more in a year — at some schools — for playing than I'll ever see in one place in my lifetime and still can't pull a 1.6 GPA.
For four years, I've eaten pressed turkey, barely cooked spaghetti; soggy green beans and badly baked chicken slung at me by residence hall cooks and my own culinary talents. I've worked 30 hours a week at various jobs for the duration to feed many of the students, many as 17 hours and worked 60 hours a week one semester as a Kansan reporter.
And I have the beginnings of an ulcer, but that's another story.
MY grade point average is 2.62. It isn't pretty, but I'm practically assured of getting my degree, which
is more than I can say for 10 KU football players right now.
the taxpayers of Kansas didn't build Cis University as a memorial
BRUCE F.
HONOMICHI
Staff Columnist
to dumb pampered jocks. No university was founded as a memorial to any dumb jock
College athletes should be attending class to get their degrees because most of them have no future in professional athletics. And because the future is so bleak in professional athletics, most of their athletic careers should be no more than extracurricular activity.
And that puts them in the same boat as the rest of us wimps who beat our brains out collecting baseball cards, playing Dungeons and Drags.
Truth: Most high school football players, if they are lucky enough to find their way into the uniform of a team, will never be trapped by a tackler to find their way into a game.
ons and bowling. Not too many of us are going to make a living on the pro bowlers' tour, no matter how much we practice.
And that brings us back to why we, and they, go to college. We go to college not only to get our degrees, but to grow up. Growing up means to pay the bills on time and learning to take care of one's own affairs.
And growing up means discipline. Thousands of us who work as hard and sometimes twice as hard and put in as many hours at our work as the average college athlete are practicing that discipline without being led off a training table, without a nightly bed check, without being within earshot of a guiding whistle 24 hours a day.
Sadly, most big college programs deny their athletes the opportunity to experience college life, the burned oatmeal, the accidentally bleached laundry, the all night study sessions.
Many, or most, of them will have to wait until they reach the real world to eat that burned oatmeal. I can say from first-hand experience that it tastes a lot more burnt in the real world than it does in college.
Hey, journalists and engineers and geologists have to eat their own burnt out meal. And if a football player can't get to bed on time, he can't get to bed on time on his own
and can't get to class on his own time,
he doesn't have any business in
the city.
The KU Ten — more than half of whom are juniors and seniors — are just another flock of academically drowning students to me. I'm not going to shed any tears. Monte and Mike can share the crying towel.
AND NOW FOR some unfinished business
Several people, including a Christian friend very dear to me, have expressed confusion, disagreement, and displeasure over a passage that appeared in my last column. The passage was a one-sentence paragraph that said: "God made us to be beautiful."
Even columnists who choose their words carefully sometimes sleepy edit their columns
The literal meaning of that sentence was not what I intended to say. If I had polished the column properly, that sentence would have said something like "Every man, even under God's gudging hand, is sinful."
I did NOT mean that God put us on earth to sin. I neither meant that nugel believe that I believe that God put us on earth for perfection everything we do. ≦
I take full responsibility for the error.
He also made us to be humble.
Pass the etymological sum.
General Motors janitor offers advice
As automakers make contract negotiations with management, the prevailing slogan among the more vociferous rank-and-file members is: "Restore and more in 84." Those who take up this call are union officers, the union-appointed lackeys, the shirkers and the complainers. I know, because I work alongside them.
Earlier this year, after the Big Three companies earned record profits, top managers awarded themselves extraordinary, multimillion dollar bonuses. Seeing that, auto workers vowed to get their fair share of the bonanza - a result of restrictions on Japanese imports
Do autoworkers deserve a large raise this year? I think not.
My wages (for 1984 are uncon-
flicted) are $27,500 per year,
of General Motors. I will earn more
in the next contract. But
companies are often
salaries are diagonal. The question is
John F. McCarthy
than $30,000 this year if I am not laid off or hit by a bus. My annual base wage is more than $24,000 I am truly ashamed to tell friends and relatives that, even though I sweep floors for a living, I hold an American Express Gold Card while they do not. The job requires neither skill nor education. And, despite a college degree and business experience, I am regarded
General Motors employee
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Reactor rebuttal
I cannot understand the reasoning of Charles Barnes' column concerning the decommissioning of the KU reactor. It is true that the reactor has outlived its usefulness, but so what does it inherit the cost of its decommissioning?
- in the short term or long term
Barnes' approach is that the reactor is somehow costing the taxpayers of Kansas too much money.
Nowhere in his column does he mention any health threat to KU students or other residents in the KU area. He knows that there are not any
To the editor
Clearly, the cost of decommissioning quoted by Barnes could easily pay for the continued maintenance of the facility with the interest such an expense could generate. Twenty thousand dollars, the cost of "baby sitting" the reactor, is only two percent of the one million dollars quoted by Barnes and a little less than four percent of the amount of the 1980 KU assessment
I, for one, do not need the protection that Barnes would have for me by spending Kansas funds for putting a little feather in the cap of the anti-nuclear movement by the removal of this "financial one bone."
Come on, 'Boog'
Paul Longabach Lawrence senior
Re: the veto by Carla Vogel student body president, and Dennis "Boog" Highbender, student body vice president (Sept. 13, "Sense nips beer boycott," ends burger debate). Well, "Boog" said it this time
To the editor:
There is only one thing that remains unclear. If he is against capitalism, how is he above it by how? Not why let us the students, decide.
Well, "Boog" sure did it this time protecting us from capitalism.
Does he think we are his subjects and he is the king? Why doesn't he put it up for a vote by the students? Or does he feel it is fair to have it his
way? Is he not doing the opposite by burying the question in red tape, using loopholes and making the students pay for his concerns?
Well, "Boog" can do to us what he will, but I am not going to sit here and let him bad mouth the United States. I will go get it my way.
Is this not a criticism of our
colleges all over the country and
everywhere?
come on. "Bog," haven't you and
Carla ever had a big Mac or gone for
a burger?
Neither are my fellow workers. A "skilled trade" person was called to our department last week for a small job. He showed up four hours later, explaining that the delay was caused by his politicking for union office. He also remarked that the plant was a great place to work, since "All you have to do is show and hold out the door and they pay you." Then he had the temerity to ask for a wrench. He is not typical of the people with whom I work, yet there are many like him who hardly work at all.
Thomas O. Mangold
Overland Park senior
Look both ways
as well fitted to the position I work hard. But in my present capacity, I'm not worth 30 grand a year.
To the editor:
After reading the Kansan article about bicycles, autos and pedestrians (Sept. 5, "Bicyclists may receive fines for violating state statutes"), I decided to be especially cautious on my bike ride to campus.
I obeyed the frequently ignored stop sign on Crescent Drive I rode cautiously through the intersection in
front of the Jayhawk Book Store, and peddled carefully around the Chi Omega fountain onto campus.
At last, there were fewer cars and less traffic; safer riding was mine. Suddenly, a pedestrian, without looking, walked into the road. There was no crosswalk or warning signs, so we rolled over bike crickets, and steered to avoid the walker. I flew over the handbells, and swan dived onto the pavement.
The pedestrian continued his jay walk across the street oblivious to the accident. I picked up my bike, disguised as a dog and drove. Suffering only scraps, and finding no bike damage, I remounted my two wheeler.
Paul Barter
1. too, walk on campus, but I check before I cross a street. With 22,000 students on campus, special caution should be taken by everyone. Luckily, no one was hurt in my attack. I'm wearing a steel带耳鞋 walkers. Just a re minder to everyone: Look both ways before you cross the street.
Paul Barker
Shawnee sophomore
A year ago, at a convention in Texas, a right-to-work state, the United Automobile Workers chose Owen Bieber as its president. He is plodding, unimaginative and convinced that the rank-and-tile are being ripped off by Roger B. Smith, chairman of General Motors, Philip Caldwell, chairman of Ford, and their ilk.
are not heir to the same fate as their parents — could not care less about what a chairman of the board earns. That is a specious, political argument.
The man or woman on the line who has bills to pay, a family to feed and children to educate — so that they
Bieber's constituents are indolent, ignorant and those who would be personally aggrandized by a hard line union position in the coming talks: U.A.W. officials themselves. It is these people who complain about management bonuses.
The mission of Biober and his negotiating team should be to gain modest increase in pay, to 10 to 12 percent in a three-year contract, in conjunction with more liberal profit-sharing benefits. Paid personal holidays, business travel throughout the year in the 1978 contract, were unpopular. It neither cut absenteeism nor created jobs, as we had hoped.
What workers really need and want is a firm, long-term commitment to job security, less "outsourcing" (such as placing plants in foreign countries) and more training in the plants to help workers advance and grow professionally.
Auto workers have about as much interest in the contract negotiations, as in the Iranian war; they are interested, but for all they care the two sides can blow each other up, as long as the job and the paycheck are
Auto workers want a little more money, but they aren't willing to strike for an egregious raise. Many of us feel, to borrow a phrase from Winston Churchill, that seldom have so many done so little for so much.
John F. McCarthy has worked for General Motors since 1977. $\frac{2}{3}$
LETTERS POLICY
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten and 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 hometown, or faculty or staff position. The Kansan also invites inquiries and comes to submit five columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office. 11) Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
Car smk duo new
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University Daily Kansan, September 20, 1984 Page 5
Stress continued from p. 1.
mnia and high blood pressure. Walker said
When students run themselves down, their immune systems are lowered; causing them to be more susceptible to colds and infections. Walker said
For freshmen, adjusting to college life can be particularly stressful. Weller said.
Stress can also trigger such physical ailments as tension headaches, abdominal cramps, irritable bowel syndrome and nausea after eating, he said.
"YOU TAKE A KID, take him away from his normal environment, and he's going to be more apt to get that stomachache that wouldn't bother him at home," Walker said.
Marlene Currie, Omaha, Neb., freshman, agreed that adjusting to Lawrence and
"I have a 7:30 class on Mondays,
Weddings and Fridays," she said. She was drinking a cup of hot tea in Wescoe
out of bed some morning to get out of bed some morning.
Currie said she was tired. She has two tests and two papers due next week. And like most freshmen, she's a little home-sick.
"It 'worse if I go home, because when I get back I think of all the fun I had." she
said. "But I think I'm doing OK so far. No major catastrophes."
ONCE FRESHIMEN BECOME acclimated to college, the academic crunch hits.
The pressure to choose a career and to graduate in four years often forces students to take "irrational course loads," said James Lichtenberg, an associate professor of counseling who works at the University Counseling Center in Bailey.
"But a large number of students — I'd guess most — don't graduate in four years. Lichtenberg said, "A lot of students are trying to jungle too much at once."
Joe Humerickhouse, Osage City senior,
is taking 20 hours and working three
days a week.
Humerickhouse waits tables at Alvamar Country Club, works as a security monitor until 5 a.m., twice a week at Ellsworth Hall and spends one week each month working at a state rehabilitation home in Osage City.
SQUEEZING TIME TO study in between going to class, working and catching up on sleep hasn't been easy. Humerickhouse said.
"I'm definitely pressed for time," he
Humerickhouse said he drank several Cokes each day and occasionally took a Vivarin to help him stay awake during his security shifts.
said. "Sometimes I feel lethargic and tired. But other times I'll be really nervous and fidgety — just bouncing off the walls."
"but I don't think it has a negative effect on me," he said. "I can drink two or three cups a day."
To help students learn to cope with stress, Kerkman recommended a program of what he called "behavioral medicine."
KERKMAN ADVISED STUDENTS to establish a regular sleeping schedule, eat balanced meals and exercise at least twice a week.
But the key, Kerkman said, is teaching students to identify what causes them stress.
Once the stress is identified, students can learn several "relaxation responses," such as biofeedback and progressive muscle relaxation.
"The trick, though, is to incorporate this relaxation into the daily routine." Kerkman said "You can't do it for a day or a week. You can make it go to make it part of your lifestyle."
member of the Socialist Workers Party in Kansas City, Mo. Todd also called for political action.
Protest continued from p. 1
"ORGANIZE, MORBIZIE, demonstrate and discuss this stuff politically," he told the crowd.
But Highbierger urged the speakers and
gatherers to "join us to unite
regressors and their political beliefs."
"We can work together," he said. "We can build, and we will build a world where a building is made."
Alex Bovard, Arden, Del, senior, stopped at the rally on her way to class. She said the rally raised issues that had remained at her mind and had provided her with information.
"It's probably one sided," she said, "but it gives me a feel for what's on."
Steve Hughes, St Louis freshman, was walking on campus when the rally drew his attention.
"I think it's pretty cool that people can get to speak out on what they believe in," he said. "That's important."
continued from p.1
"You're talking about combining a church almost with a clinic."
Dankwerth, whose trip to Scotland was financed by an Ewart scholarship, also received a traveling scholarship of $140.
He used the money to pay for travels around Europe, during which he made the trip.
"To actually stand in a cathedral and hear the organ playing, and to feel and smell the old stone, is amazing," he said. "It's like living history."
THE KU ARCHITECTURAL history classes do a good job of preparing the student for experiencing a wide variety of architecture, unlike the history classes at Heriot-Watt University, Dankwerk said.
At Heriot-Watt University, the emphasis on feedback and criticism of students' projects and the attitude toward the amount of work required for each project are considerably different from KU, he said.
The KU architectural program provides a significant amount of feedback from professors and peers about students' designs. "It is very important to give student professor relationships," he said.
The working environment at the Scottish university was more like a 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. job, Dankwerth said.
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College life can have an unsettling effect on your state of mind. From sitting in strange classes to living with even stranger people.
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Well, you know what they say about people who talk to themselves. So call an old friend instead.
Even if your friends are far away, they still know you and care about you. And they won't judge you by your choice of major or the condition of your laundry.
Calling a friend is the best therapy for the money too. Call after 11 PM weeknights or between 11 PM Friday and 5 PM Sunday when rates are the lowest.
So call a friend or two, and tell them just how crazy it's been. You'll be surprised how sane it can make you feel.
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8
September 20, 1984 Page 6
ENTERTAINMENT
The University Daily KANSAN
Directors trying to hook youths on K.C. classics
Pallidorum multo legno
A
in evening at the opera for some, well, ... for many, brings to mind gray-haired men and trumpet women peering through tiny binoculars at a distant stage of performers singing in language, a rather stuffy experience.
Companies associated with the classic arts in Kansas City — the Lyric Opera of Kansas City, the Kansas City Symphony and the Kansas City Ballet are making an appeal to younger audiences.
The Opera
"Candide," which will open the Lyric Opera's 27th season at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Lyric Theatre, is a good example of the more upbeat and light operas that are being performed by the company, said Brian Langham, associate general director of the Lyric Theatre.
"A lot of people think of the opera as an activity for snobs, as a detached and removed art," he said. But many scores lie between traditional opera and Broadway musicals, he said.
During the past three years, much of the music has been reworked and the dialogue has been tightened up to make the line of music more connected, Lingham said. Instead of the opera being chunks of dialogue mixed with music, it is more of a coherent whole.
The Kansas City Ballist is seeking a younger and more diverse audience.
"This way, it makes musical sense as well as dramatic sense," he said. All of the company's operas are performed here and they more understandable, he said.
The Ballet
When the company was restructured in 1980, a new artistic director, Todd Bolender, an internationally known choreographer, was brought to the company.
Since Bolender has been with the company, each year's scheduling has included classical, funny and contemporary pieces, said Madelyn Voigts, general manager of the company.
"Concert in F," named after and set to the score written by George Gershwin, is one of three ballets that will be performed in the company's opening season performance Nov. 1-4 at the Lyric Theatre.
The Kansas City Symphony, which formed in 1982 after the Kansas City Philharmonic folded, is under contract by both the opera and the ballet.
"George Gershwin is certainly an all-American musician," she said. "You don't think of Gershwin and you don't think of Gershwin and unbeat music."
"Concert in F" exemplifies the kind of performances that the company is doing to appeal to younger people, said Andrea Catalano, public relations director for the company.
The two other ballets in the opening performance are "Con Amore," a comedy with a wide array of characters, and a more classical piece. "Afternoon of a Faun." Catanzaro said.
Susan Fernando: operations man-
cantes for the symphony, save the
symphony of La Bohème.
"Ballet is not just done with a tute and classical music," she said. "You don't have to be silent and reverent, you can enjoy yourself."
The Symphony
intent of attracting a more diverse audience.
"We wanted enjoyable, upbeat,
good quality music that was availa-
ble at the show."
Last year, the symphony performed a jeans concert at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. The conductor wore jean tuxedo tails, and admission was free if the tuxedo-goer was wearing jeans, she said.
The diversity of music offered within each series also attracts younger audiences, said Davina Hill, public relations for the symphony.
The subscription series lends itself to the person who knows and enjoys classical music, she said. The pop series is lighter entertainment that includes Broadway and bluegrass music. Last year, the pop series also toured the new music "It was such fun to see cowboy hats in the audience." Hill said.
The symphony also offers a composers series, which emphasizes folk and jazz music. The family series offers short, classical pieces such as the "William Tell Overture" and "Flight of the Bumblebee," Hill said.
But while the symphony, ballet and opera are incorporating more contemporary work in their programs, music has not forgotten their classical origins.
Lingham, Voigtis and Fernano all agreed that Kansas Citians have a revived enthusiasm in the classic arts.
Fernando, whose husband played with the Kansas City Philharmonic and now plays with the Kansas City Symphony, said, "I think it's like a lot of things in life — we don't realize its precious to us until we almost lose it.
MARÍA DEL MIGRO
Ballet
THE CONCERT HOUSE
Three members of the Kansas City Ballet, top, dance "A La Francais" while on tour last year. The ballet company will open its 1984-85 season Nov. 1. The Kansas City Symphony, above, performs one of its formal concerts at the Lyric Theatre. Its subscription begins Nov. 9. Left, Jeff Noelle, Ty Richardson, Jan Curtis, Thomas Garrison and Jim Forbis rehearse a scene for the opening of "Candide" Saturday night. It will run through Oct. 3.
Story by Erika Blacksher
100
Jeff Nolte, Fulton, Mo., graduate student its opening production of "Candide." debtereens with the Lyric Opera for
Student singing with Lyric Opera
By DAVID LASSITER
Staff Reporter
While most other KU students write papers, conjugate verbs and read books, Jef Holte sticks himself in a room for seven hours and sings. Most of that time, he spends those seven hours at the Lyric Theatre, practicing for his Kansas City debut.
Nolte, Fulton, Mo., graduate student, is working in the work of "Candide," which is the season teacher for the Lyric Opera in Kansas City. Mo It will run on Sept. 23, 24.
"The seven hour rehearsals really take it out of you," said Nolette
LAST CHRISTMAS, he began his professional career in St. Louis with a minor role in the opera "Die Fledermaus."
Nolte likes this production of "Candide" because, he said, it is not a typical opera. Even if people do not care for opera, they might like this production, he said.
"The characters are lovable and the voices are charming." Noelle said "This musical allows you to act and have fun on stage."
The sets are unparalleled to any of those at
the Lyric Theatre before, Nolte said. A part of the stage juts out and over the audience.
And the stage direction is not the typical opera style, either. There are no blackouts or curtain pulls between scenes. Instead, the costumes and set changes take place right in front of the stage.
"THE SCENES JUMP into one another." Nolte said. "I think the audience will become so caught up in the show that when they wend their arms they won't believe 45 minutes has gone by.
Although he is a member of the ensemble, Nolte also has a few speaking lines. These few, small speaking lines are the first steps in order to a professional opera career; he said
BUT TOMORROW, none of the color will be around the Lyric stage
The company began dress rehearsals Tuesday night.
"The setting is timeless," said Nolt. "We were told to use our imaginations for our costumes. We have some stuff from the Third Reich and some from medieval times."
"It's a good way to get started." Nolle said. "This way we get experience having parts in shows, and the theatre doesn't have to call in and pay other performers."
Tomorrow is "Dark Day" at the theater. Nothing happens in the opera house on Dark Day. The singers, conductors and orchestra members try not to get close to the theatre. Nolle said it created a feeling of freshness for the production the next night and allowed the cast and crew a chance to rest.
The opera has not been the only thing keeping Nolte busy the past few weeks Besides practicing for the Lyric, he is taking six hours of graduate classes and teaching 20 vocal students.
"The reason that I stayed at KU was because the curriculum here allows students to put their foot in the door of the professional field as well as keeping the other in the classroom."
Later this semester, after he gets "Can dude" underway, he will begin work on the University's production of "1776" in which he will play John Adams.
He will also be involved in the production of "Hansel and Gretel" in his opera workshop at KU.
Nolte has played characters such as Eisenstein in "Die Fiedermaus" and Papa Geno in the "Magic Flute" in past KU productions.
-
V
The car sims can now
excite zoo animals
or
or
ENTERTAINMENT
University Daily Kansan, September 20, 1984
Calendar
20
Koke Taylor, jazz singer: 9:30 p.m., The Jazzhaus, $261_{2}$ Massachusetts St. Billy Spears, country-swing musician
21
"Sugar Babies," 8 p.m., Midland Theatre for the Performing Arts. Performances through Sept. 23.
Eton John. 8 p.m., Kemper Arena, Kansas City, Mo.
COMMON GROUND, reggae band. p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom.
Bon Toni Soul; accordion band 9:30 p.m.
The Jazzhouse, $ 926_{1}$ $ ^2 $ Massachusetts ST.
Also performing on Sept. 22
Charlie Robie, ballad singer. Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. 2nd St.
San Francisco Ballet, 8 p.m., Kansas City
City Music Hall. Performance also on Sept.
22. For more information call (816)
276/2704.
22
Mutt and the Millionaires, rock 'n' roll Johnny's Tavern, 401 N, 2nd St,
"Candide." 8 p.m., Lyric Theatre, Kan
sas City, Mo. Opera also performed Sept.
24
23
Master's Recital: Tijuana Julian trumpet, and Steve Parsons, trombone 3:30 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall. Admission is free.
Peter, Paul and Mary, 5 p.m., Starlight Theatre, Kansas City, Mo.
24
25
Scartaglia, Celtic band The Jazzhouse
920' Massachusetts St.
"The Humanist in Old Age: The Late Works of Franz Anton Maubertsch" 8 p.m. Helen Foresman Spencer Art Museum auditorium. Lecture presented by Edward A Maser, professor of art history and founder and former director of the University of Chicago David and Alfred Smart Gallery.
Cook is still queen of Castle Tea Room
By DAVID LASSITER
Outside, the rain slapped against the Castle's stone face as it had done off and on for nearly a hundred years. The walls stood up in the air, holding the drops striking its darkened surface.
Staff Reporter
But inside, the walnut hardwood floors and carefully carved woodwork created a feeling of warmth and safety from the damp.
The weather outside didn't seem to bother Libuse Kriz-Frioito - Libby to her friends. She owns the Castle Tea Room at 13th and Massachusetts streets.
She is a small woman and the high ceilings and large rooms of her Castle make her seem even smaller. She wears her Castle like an old housecoat, moving comfortably from room to room, complaining about needing to throw things away. The odds and ends have piled up over the years, Kriz-Fiorito said.
"It's hard to keep things like that in stock." Kriz-Fiorito says smiling. "Things like that are so perishable, and you never know what business is going to be like.
ALTHOUGH IT WAS RAINING outside, she made plans to go out in the afternoon. She had eight customers for dinner the night she needed to get a chicken and some flour.
But, she said, the trip to the store could wait.
News clippings and letters to her from
customers interested in the Castle are piled in the middle of the long banquet table. As Kriz-Fiorio sifts through the papers, squinting to read the old handwriting, she tells stories about the Castle's history and her own.
She and her husband bought the Castle in 1947 from J. J. Simmons, who had plans to convert the building into a church — the Assembly of God Congregation. Kriz Flierito and her husband then converted the house into a tea room which occupied the entire three stories of the house.
Old Lawrence
BECAUSE OF THE DECLINE in business,
Kriz-Fiorito now uses only the lower floor of the house as a restaurant. In the four rooms and the entry hall which compose the first floor, she can entertain from eight people to an entire wedding reception.
The wood carving in the Castle is fine and detailed. The ornately-carved staircases and built-in bookcases are carved birch, cherry, walnut and other woods.
John Roberts, who was a general in the Civil War, built the castle for his family in
1893 and commissioned Sidney Endacott to do the carving of the woodwork. Endacott later became well known for his water color paintings of U.S. homes.
THE WALKING HALL OF THE MUSEUM
Joel Jackson/KANSAN
The Castle Tea Room, 1307 Massachusetts St.
FROM BEHIND THE large pile of yellowed clippings. Kriz-Fiorito talks as though she is bored by her surroundings.
"Eh, I suppose it's beautiful," she said. "But I used to have to dust this kind of stuff when I was a girl."
"I go to auctions, and I see a lot of people buying that antique stuff — you know, with a lot of cash," she said.
legs," she said. "And I can remember every Saturday, my mother making me get under the table and dusting in between the grooves of those claws."
Kriz-Fiorito has worked hard in her life and still does, she says. She all the cooking for the restaurant, but she says she is getting old now and has to slow down.
"Sometimes I have some of the high school girls come in and help me if I know that I am going to be busy," she said.
THE CASTLE Tea Room, the oldest restaurant in Lawrence, is open for lunch if Kriz-Fiorito knows ahead of time that she will have eight or more customers.
"It's just not worth it to open if there's not going to be more than eight people coming in."
She serves dinner to her guests each night between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. Kriz-Fiorio likes people to make reservations, but because she serves readily available items she said that she doesn't mind people just dropping in for dinner
When she and her husband opened the Tea Room, they decided that because Lawrence was a college town they should keep the prices and food items within a student's budget. She still holds to that philosophy. Today, her prices range from $6 to $11, and the menu includes entrees such as lobster, filet mignon and beef stroganoff.
"I cook what I have on hand," she said.
"Sometimes I make soup, sometimes I don't
it depends on the mood in m'"
Stage shortage leads to lack of live entertainment
By P.M. LEWIS Staff Reporter
Street musicians are back.
Some local musicians have taken to the streets, or rather the parks, in an effort to find a place to play their music. Many of the musicians in the city's local clubs have left them in the cold.
However, Lawrence bands have discovered that with a little perseverance and ingenuity they can find places to play their music.
About two weeks ago, 150 people gathered in Burcham Park, 2nd & Indiana streets, to hear three bands play amid the cottonwood lining the Kansas River. The impressive setting was not chosen for its beauty
DUANE. DINHAM, music director for KJHK, agrees
"We're doing it here because we want to play, and there's no place else," said Chuck Mead, lead singer and guitarist for The Pagan Idols. Mead and Doug Snodgrass, organizers of the event called "Dave and Gale Present: Old Washed Up Rock Stars." cited a lack of places for live bands to perform in Lawrence as the main reason for the outdoor show.
"If the Opera house die there won't be many places left," he said. However, the potential exists for more live entertainment, especially progressive rock, he said.
The Student Union Activities office works to provide live entertainment on campus. Last week, R.E.M. and Get Smart played on campus.
"Students are demanding a lot more live music than what's available," said Fran Macferran, SUA special events director. However, bands have to wade through a myriad of complications before they can perform at KU.
Lawrence's proximity to Kansas City both helps and hurts the live music scene. He is an avid player, and draws from the town's City area, he said. However, the town loses bands to the larger
THE SPECIAL EVENTS board must juggle open concert dates with available dates on campus as well as insure that projects can be financially supported.
crowds and the increased exposure of Kansas City.
Elliot Brand, co-owner of Redline Productions and a Prairie Village sophomore, is trying to increase Lawrence's exposure to bands while exposing bands to Lawrence. Brand started Redline Productions six months ago in an effort to bring at least two bands to Lawrence every month.
REDLINE RENTS the Lawrence Opera House and uses the door receipts to pay the band and rental fee. The cost of the band usually determines the ticket price. Brand
The Jazzbaus, 926 **i** Massachusetts St,
has presented some of the top n Jazz in jaz-
bass. The Jazzbaus are the only jazz pro-
ducer in New York.
Rick McNeely, owner of The Jazzhaz,
said he was inspired to start a club when live
music was dying in town. McNeely said the
scene was no better now, perhaps
even worse.
However, the Jazzhaus usually presents four shows every week. Wednesday through Saturday. McNeely said the audience was the determining factor in having bands.
"If they don't support live music, we won't have it," he said. Although not every show is a sell-out, McNeely said that support had
been strong and he had no plans to change his course of offering jazz and blues to his patrons.
SGT PRESTONS of the North, 815 New Hampshire St. , has been presenting live entertainment in their courtyard for three years.
Manager Steve Stephenson said the clubs to cater to all musical preferences. The entertainment, which is presented every weekend, includes brass band in reignage and rock n' roll to easy listening.
Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. 2nd St, has a five-year tradition of presenting live music. Every Thursday and most weekends a live band will perform. Johnny's or Up And Under, 403 N. 2nd St,
Doug Hassig, co-owner of both bars, said that while bands help bring in people, he didn't think they were as popular as they once were.
Doug Compton, owner of Cogburrs, 757 New Hampshire St., said he booked bands to cater to his customers. The bands, which usually play Top 40 music, appear every other Friday. Compton said he tried to rotate bands so that the same band would not be more than a few different. The variety of bands also draws crowds, he said.
ATTENTION KU, K-STATE, & WICHITA-STATE CANOERS!
THE LAST STOP
Don't Forget to Stop at
THE LAST STOP
—Pop —Beer
—Ice —Chips
—Complete line
of Picnic Supplies
Located at the APCO sign, 800 feet north of the Kansas River in WAMEGO
Paid Advertisement A FEW THOUGHTS ABOUT THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE'S EVOLUTION
The Republican Party and Chamber of Commerce seem to believe that because there are millions of unemployed persons in this country the successful are forced to undergo periodic recessions in the otherwise carefully articulated "private-enterprise" system. Although every study about which I have read in the last two decades concedes that prolonged unemployment can undermine an individual's confidence and thus fundamentally alter his personality, it is said we obstreperous indolentists on retaining our pariahdom in order to impede progress.
However, upon discovering in the September 7 Kansas City Times that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is not above targeting and besting its perceived adversaries, we peripheral people had decided to create for ourselves a more productive environment (one which would increase our powers of adaption) by asking the local Chamber to acquire for us a television set whose dynamic offerings would be available to every park negativist when one wag mentioned the Chamber's metamorphosis. This outcast was, of course, referring to the new responsibilities the Chamber tacitly assumed when it accepted tax dollars from the City Commission, County Commission and City Commissioner Longhurst.
During the celebration which resulted from our discerning the Chamber's evolution from an organization promoting the commercial interests of a select few to a governmental organ working for the people, some of us wondered which public need this revitalized body would deal with first. Would it begin its new existence by calling for more day care facilities, orderly and informative schools, a public transportation system or nursing home reform? Those malcontents who predict these public needs will remain unmet obviously don't realize that the Chamber is unacquainted with failure.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terrace
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not a piano learn at all,
but a single musical instrument..."
The New York Times
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Chapman Museum Presents
The Arden Trio
Suzanne Ornstein, violin
Clay Ruede, cello
Thomas Schmidt, piano
3:30 p.m. Sunday, September 30, 1984
Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Office B2 Office A1 seats reserved. Public $ 8 & special discounts for students and faculty. Public $ 380. See www.murphy.edu/events.
Partly funded by the KK Student Activity Fund, Swain School and the KK Endowed Association
Come On Down To The Sanctuary
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9 p.m. to Midnight
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University Daily Kansan, September 20, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 8
KU Democrats may help with debates
By SUZANNE BROWN Staff Reporter
Members of KU College Young Democrats may run errands and help Mondale-Ferraro campaign officials next month at the debate between Walter Mondale and President Reagan in Kansas City, Mo., a spokeswoman for the Mondale-Ferraro campaign said yesterday.
Melissa Nachbor, Kansas coordinator for Americans for Mondale-Ferraro, said the campaign would need volunteers to work at the KU College of KU College Young Democrats would be likely candidates for the job.
'I KNOW THAT they're extremely
happy, and we'll plug them in
wherever it is.
The debate will start at 8 p.m. at
Nachor said the Monday Ferrer-Ranational campaign office had not made a final decision about the number of volunteers needed at the debate. She said the decision would be made with the League of Women Voters.
the municipal Auditorium Music Hall in downtown Kansas City, Mo. It will be the second of two presidential debates sponsored by the League of Women Voters. The first, on Oct. 7, will be in Louisville, Ky.
Lisa Wing, president of Kansas College Young Democrats, will select the volunteers from various state Young Democrat groups. Nachlor
Young Democrat members could be chosen to drive reporters or Mondale staff members to the debate, to help with security or to run errands, Nachbor said.
WING SAID THE KU College Young Democrats had come to the attention of state and national Mondale-Ferraro campaign officials earlier this month after they helped coordinate vice-presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro's visit to Kansas City, Mo.
About 40 KU College Young Democrats drove cars, assisted with luggage and helped direct news reporters when Ferraro appeared on campus in independence. Mo., and at the Hilton Plaza Inn in Kansas City, Mo.
Wing said she would try to choose members from several state College Young Democrat groups if many volunteers were needed. But relied on the number, she said the KU group most likely would be first on her list.
"They get first consideration prob
ably for volunteers," she said.
THE KU COLLEGE Young Democrats also were working to obtain tickets to the debate, said Kristin Butterliffe, president of the 100th Anniversary of the 20th Century Music Hall, the League of Women Voters will give 1,100 tickets to guests.
Barbara Dietrich, a press aide for the Mondale-Ferraro campaign in Kansas City, Mo., said that neither the Republican nor the Democratic campaign had any say in the selection of those 1,100 guests.
"Neither campaign has any clutch with the League of Women Voters in that respect," she said. "They are people who decide."
MYERS SAD THAT THE KU College Young Democrats were especially excited about the debates they thought Monday would win.
Business leaders in Kansas will pay for the opportunity to convince out-of-state companies to move here.
By BARBARA ETZEL Staff Reporter
Members of the Kansas Cavalry, a group of business leaders from around the state who travel to other parts of the country, try to convince their companies — and the additional jobs and tax revenue — to the state
Membership of the group, state officials say, includes as many as 300 business leaders who are invited by Gov. John Carlin to join the Cavalry. Members pay both dues and their travel expenses.
"OUR BASIC PURPOSE is to try to convince people that Kansas as a whole is where they should be." said Stephen Frayer, assistant director for the development division of the Kansas Department of Economic Development.
Cavalry's marks are businesses
Local businessmen and representatives say the effectiveness of the Kansas Cavaliers lies with the person who is talking — a Kansas business owner who says the state is a good place for their business and explains the benefits.
After the trip, contact is maintained with the businesses by the KDED, which administers the Cavalry program.
In 1983, three companies located in Kansas as a result of the Cavalier's逸动
Toobben will join other Cavalry members in recruiting aircraft to assist the Desert.
ABOUT 85 OF ABRASIVE Engineering's employees were hired in Kansas. Howard Grivna, president of the division, said that the state's favorable business climate was a key factor in the decision to move.
They are: Mid-Continent Cabinetry Inc., Newton, which employs about 290 people; AJM Packaging, Kansas City, Kan., which employs about 22 full-time people and other part-time help during peak periods; and Abrasive Engineering and Manufacturing, a division of Acrometal Inc., Olathe, which employs about 100 people.
On Sept 23, 16 members of the Kansas Cavalry will depart for a two-day trip to eight New England states. They will meet with business leaders in Iowa to convince them that Kansas is a good place for relocation or expansion.
Members of the group make five or six trips a year, and last year were responsible for bringing three companies and several hundred jobs to the state, figures from the department show.
"Right-to-work was a top criterion in our search for a new location," said Grivna. Key employees also agreed to move to Kansas instead of other states, another factor that persuaded the company to relocate
"The minute Kansas found out we were moving they contacted us," he said.
The state's efforts to make Kansas attractive to business also has spillover benefits to Lawrence, said Pete Whitenight, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
The KDED was aggressive in selling Kansas, Grivina said.
"Lawrence is one of Kansas's strong products," Whitenight said.
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
Kansas' consistent ranking as a favorable state in the country for business, its right-to-work climate, the central location for distribution, the Midwestern work ethnic and tax incentives are just some of the points the KDED stresses about Kansas, Eravers said.
"RAFFEESTUNDE MIT KAF-
FEEL!", the German Club, will
meet at 4 p.m in 4067 Wesco Hall
THE SUA CHAMPIONS will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union
MARANTHA CHRISTIAN
MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m.
in room 301 of the Frank R. Burge
Union.
AN OPEN FORUM to discuss
A MEETING to discuss student internships in Washington, D.C., and Topeka in the spring semester will be at 8 p.m. in Nunenaker
"Apartheid and Divestment" will be at :3p.m in 100 Smith Hall. The forum is in conjunction with South Africa week.
CREATIVE ASSOCIATION will
TOMORROW
INTERNATIONAL FOLK
DANCING will take place at 7:30
pm at Potter Pavilion Hungarian dances will be taught
PENNY ANNIES
Sweet Shoppe
730 Mass. Open Daily 10:30:5:30
843-5544 Thursday till 8:30
THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
perform a theater ritual at 12:30 p.m. in the grove behind the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
Delta
. . It'S Coming Your Way,
Don't Let It Fly By!
“LITE BEER IS A LOT LIKE QUARTERBACKS. I CAN’T WAIT TO GRAB HOLD OF ONE.”
BERT JONES
EX-QUARTERBACK
L.C. GREENWOOD
EX-DEFENSIVE END
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS.
© 1984 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, WI
lite
A FINE PIT SHER
BEER
© 1984 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, WI
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Students evaluate business practices
By DAN HOWELL
By DAN HOWELI Staff Reporter
Staff Reporte
Students in the School of Business told a company not to open a new product line. Company officials listened and later decided that the advice had saved them $50,000.
Another business owner heard from students that his business would not improve and that he should close it.
The students, who are enrolled in marketing and management courses, bring classroom learning to businesses as part of the Small Business Institute, a program sponsored by the school and the Small Business Administration.
JOYCE CLATERBOS, the program's director, said yesterday that about 200 businesses had been clients of the program's nine years. Some
businesses in operation or in planning stages, have severe problems, she said, but not all of them.
"A lot of people get the wrong impression that just because a business is getting help, it's in trouble," she said. "Sometimes that's the furthest thing from the truth."
"Sometimes they're having so much success they need help handling."
After the students offer a businessman their advice, he is then asked to evaluate the program and the students' work. Claterbos said that almost all clients evaluated the program positively, even when the students reached conclusions opposite the clients' hopes.
The program requires strict confidentiality between students and business owners, she said, to maintain the businesses' image and
ONE BUSINESSMAN, who asked to remain anonymous, said that his store had been successful since its inception and he would find out how to stay successful.
competitiveness.
"I wanted some kind of yardstick to say whether or not my ideas were right the business must b
University Daily Kansan, September 20, 1984
He joined the program and met with a student team throughout a semester, he said. At his request, the students surveyed the area's market and the competition. They then helped to define the company's goals.
Semiu Alii, Lagos, Nigeria, graduate student, worked on a consultation team as part of his Small Business Management course. He said that the businesses presented challenges not found in any classroom.
You have to try to make sense of
all the little bits of information," he said.
HE SAID THE program had improved his ability to run a business, something he hoped to do in a few years.
Page 9
Sometimes a business can benefit from an outside perspective, Claterbos said.
Claterbos said the administration considered a business to be a small one if it had fewer than 100 employ-ers or 100 if the business is a manufacturer.
The students, who are almost all seniors or graduate students, gain more than practical experience in computer science and also gain a sense of professionalism.
"They have gone through a professional education," she said. "They should know how to give advice."
Efforts to revitalize downtown Lawrence may have been helped by a downtown improvement conference in Salina earlier this week, said a city official who returned from the conference yesterday.
On Tuesday, the first day of the conference, Zacharias said that he and the other representatives were shown examples of good downtown developments in Kansas. Development of downtown Lawrence
Hannes Zacharias, city management analyst, was one of about 100 representatives from Kansas communities who attended the two-day conference." presented by the Kansas Department of Economic Development
"It is supposed to help a city's downtown revitalize itself," he said. Part of the idea is to get downtownrants together on a voluntary basis.
The Main Street Program suggests that each community hire an official
"LAWRENCE WAS VERY highly touted," he said. "We were shown as an example of a downtown development that had worked. Our downtown was well-designed for pedestrians, and the majority of merchants here take a pride in downtown."
Staff Reporter
The development of Main Street Programs in communities across Kansas was the focus of the conference, Zacharias said. The program coordinates downtown development efforts, he said.
The program suggested that each community form an organizational group outside of the local government and chamber of commerce. This group would handle only downtown promotion, Zacharias said.
By CHRIS BARBER
SHAFF REPORTER
to work full-time on downtown problems.
Zacharias said many Kansas towns and cities already had such an official, but Kansas was one of a few states without a specialist to handle downtown problems and implement procedures for the state.
Conference focuses on development plans
ZACHARLIS SAM THE Main Street Program had four areas of focus: organization, promotion, design and economic restructuring.
The Kansas Downtown Development Organization, which coordinates downtown development across the state, also has pushed for the Main Street Program, he said.
On the second day of the conference, Zacharias and other community representatives participated in a national video conference, shown via satellite from Washington, D.C. The presentation featured representative speakers who Trust for Historic Preservation speaking on the Main Street Program
THE VIDEO CONFERENCE was shown simultaneously to states that were conducting similar conferences yesterday. Zacharias said. After the presentation, community representatives at each state conference could call Washington to ask questions.
The video conference was produced by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the National Endowment for the Arts and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Zacharias said.
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A MOPED VALUED at $275 was stolen from the Watson Library bike rack between 1:45 and 4:45 p.m. on Tuesday. KU police said they had no suspects.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Dancing combines life, war
The Creative Association, a local dance group, will perform a theater ritual at 12:30 p.m. that incorporates dance, music, politics and poetry.
By KAREN MASSMAN Staff Reporter
The theater ritual was first performed by the group last year in response to the movie "The Day After." The group's initial impulse was to look at nuclear war and how it would affect their lives, said Marsha Paludan, founder of Creative Association. The group's members then examined how they dealt with conflict.
The mundane details of daily life will crash into such concerns as war and peace tomorrow in the grove behind the Helen Forsman Spencer Museum of Art.
THE RITUAL WAS developed in six months using vocal and movement composition. Although the ritual is choreographed, it was developed through improvisation to maintain an air of spontaneity, Paludan said.
Carla Vogel, student body president, invited the group to perform in the grove. She said that she thought the ritual would correspond with the activities of South Africa week.
"They tell it like it is," Vogel said. "It's another way of communicating these issues."
Mike Rundle, a member of the group, said, "These social concerns have a lot in common
"When I got involved in the group we had no idea this is what we'd be doing," said Rundle, who has been with the group since it formed a year and a half ago. "By coincidence 'The Day After' came right at our agreed performance time."
HE SAID THAT group members often discussed their feelings about nuclear war and personal conflict while working on the piece.
"The cycle, the repetition," Paladan said. "That's how we relate and pray for hope that it continues."
picture
The theater ritual looks at the motions of daily living - working, eating, sleeping
At one point in the piece the group sings a song about water while constructing a boat out of sticks. Paladian said, to convey the theme that everyone is in the same boat. When someone makes a wrong move conflict occurs. One person withdraws and says stop
"That courageous act sounds simple, but it is very hard to do," she said.
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University Daily Kansan, September 20, 1984
KU considers filing complaint
By BRENDA STOCKMAN Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas is considering filing a complaint with Federal Energy Regulatory Commission against northwest Central Pipeline Corp., the director of support services said yesterday.
Northwest Central, an Oklahoma-based pipeline company, earlier this week turned down the University's request for a contract to transport natural gas to KU, said Rodger Orok, director of support services.
Northeast now owns the only pipeline serving KU. The firm sells gas to Kansas Public Service, the local utility, which has a contract to supply the University with gas. KPS did not bid to continue supplying KU with natural gas.
UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS think that the pipeline company is not following the energy commission's
Jack L. Finch, vice president of marketing and sales for Northwest Central, said that to accept KU's offer under their current energy commission tariff would increase prices for its other customers and violate the commission's regulations
order 319, which encourages schools to buy natural gas on the open market and encourages pipeline firms to be cooperative, Oroke said.
If Northwest Central transported gas not supplied by KPS, the firm would be taking on a new category of customer. Finch said. Indirectly, that would cause Northwest's gas prices to rise, which would be detrimental to Northwest's other customers, he said.
OROKE SAID THAT he expected Northwest Pipeline to avoid making an agreement because anything the pipeline firm can do to delay the process keeps KU burning Northwest's gas.
If the energy commission has contradicting regulations as Northwest Central says, Orok said, then KU should file the complaint to bring any contradiction to the attention of the federal officials.
the federal office. Finch said that his firm had sent a letter to KU earlier this week saying that the pipeline company was not interested in transporting gas to KU under the company's current tariff, but that the firm was willing to discuss other alternatives.
Oroke said that the University was evaluating the letter, and that filing a complaint with the energy commission was one option.
slowly said,
"IT'S CERTAINLY one of the avenues that others have chosen."
Orike said.
Finch said, "If KU could contract at the well-head cheap enough and still pay the full transportation costs, and pay KPS its margin, then Northwest would consider transporting the gas."
Defense for faculty remains open
By the Kansan Staff
Eleven past and present faculty members have not yet asked the Kansas Attorney General's office to help defend them in a lawsuit charging that they harassed two graduate students.
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The two graduate students claim in their suit that they were forced from the department after filing a formal complaint against Michael Crawford, professor of anthropology, in January 1977.
Because the defendants are or were state employees, they are entitled to legal representation by the attorney general's office under the Tort Claims Act, said Rose Marino.
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Marino said, "the lawsuit did not name the University as a defendant."
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NATION AND WORLD
Missing guard surfaces to taunt police
By United Press International
HARTFORD, Conn. — Wells Fargo guard Victor Gerena, who along with $7 million has been missing for the past year, may have surfaced again to taunt investigators.
Gerena has eluded capture since the Sept. 12, 1983, heist of a Wells Fargo Terminal in West Hartford
He has a $500,000 price on his head and is a member of the FBI's Most Wanted club.
The Hartford Courant reported yesterday that it received a post card from New York City last week signed by Victor Manuel Gerena Ortiz and promising to reveal details of the case.
The post card also said both right and wrong details were given about the heist, the second biggest
cash robbery in U.S. history
cast roosters.
A handwriting expert hired by the Courant said the signature on the post card matched Gerena's handwriting, but investigators were withholding comment until the post card was examined at FBI laboratories in Washington, D.C.
"I don't think there's any doubt the handwriting on the post card is by the same person as on the wanted poster," said William C.
Potter, a certified graphoanalyst of Northbridge, Mass.
"Nobody could duplicate something that closely," he said. "They're almost exactly the same."
Police said Gerena, 25, a security guard with Wells Fargo, tied up two guards and made off with nearly a ton of cash. Police believe he may have had one or more accomplices.
University Daily Kansan, September 20, 1984 Page 1
Candidates agree to wait on Western polls
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan and Democratic challenger Walter Mondale have agreed not to comment on the results of the November presidential election until the polls close on the West Coast, an Oregon congressman said yesterday.
Rep. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said he received a letter from White House chief of staff James Baker pledging
"The president strongly believes there is a clear public interest in encouraging all citizens to vote, and that we should discourage anything we have the effect of keeping people away from the voting booths." Baker wrote.
that Reagan would not say anything about the outcome of the election until after 11 p.m. Nov. 6.
Pacific time zone. Party leaders said that concession may have changed results in other races. Voters may have stayed away from the polls because they felt their votes were useless.
In 1980, President Jimmy Carter conceded defeat to Reagan hours before voting was complete in the
Wyden used Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale previously agreed not to discuss the budget with Mr. Obama and the West Coast voting was complete.
"With a simple pledge to hold off on any election night announcements
until the polls close in the West both major candidates for president have made it clear that every single vote is important.' Wyden said in a news
"I hope the networks get the message that there is tremendous bipartisan concern that the importance of voting not be demisexual."
In testimony on Capitol Hill earlier this year, television network representatives said projecting election results was important.
NAACP chapter calls off national boycott of Coors
By United Press International
LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles chapter of the NAACP has called off a nationwide boycott of Coors beer with a new agreement calling for the brewery to finance black-owned businesses and hire more blacks.
The five-year agreement calls for the company to spend 10 percent of its budget on black-owned businesses, bring more blacks into management positions and increase company contributions to black community projects.
"We think this is a giant step forward for a corporation that doesn't have a particularly pro-ressive history, said NAACP research director James O'Neill. "We extremely pleased. We got 85 percent of what we wanted."
He refused to estimate the cost of the package to the company, but said it would probably exceed a $252 million offer the NAACP rejected last May.
forward to the betterment of the company and the community."
Coors spokesman Bill Pauli said the agreement was a "coming together which will move us all
Implementation of the plan, worked out in several months of negotiations, will begin immediately, with $4 million to be spend this year on black vendors, $3 million deposited in black-owned banks, $8.8 million spent on advertising in black-owned media and advertising companies and hiring a full-time minority business developer.
Coors will later help blacks get financing to purchase beer distributorships, channel at least 8 percent of its $5-million pension fund through black-owned industry companies. At least 8 percent of its $2.2-million insurance budget with black-owned firms.
Economic slowdown worsened
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - A sharp drop in housing construction and almost no gains in consumer spending in August indicated an abrupt economic slowdown worsened by a spreading auto strike, the government said yesterday.
Housing construction last month plunged 12.8 percent, personal income rose 0.5 percent, and spending showed only a 0.1 percent increase. the same as July, the Commerce Department reported.
THE DECLINE, TO an annual seasonally adjusted rate of 1.537 million new house starts, followed a 6.1 percent drop in July.
Builders started construction on 112.8 percent fewer houses in August than the month before. According to Commerce data, the number of South African homeowners dropped the most.
It was the fourth month-to-month decline this year
Still, builders started 1,223 million houses in the first eight months of the year, a 5% percent more than during the previous year. End up the year no worse than 1983.
The Midwest reported a 10.2 percent drop, the Northeast a 5.9 percent decline and the West a 2 percent drop in new house construction
The worst construction setback was in the South. The falloff there was 19.7 percent, to an annual rate of 43,000 new houses.
Single-family house construction dropped 9.7 percent while multifamily house construction fell 16.9 percent in August.
BUILDING PERMITS SLIPPED a 13.7 percent after dropping a revised 114.7 percent in July a sign that construction is not ready to collate.
on the basis of a steady diet of weak third quarter economic reports, analysts in and out of government began to revise drastically their forecasts on the eve of publication of the government's "flash" projection of the gross national product.
Instead of seeing a weaker but still above-average 4 percent growth rate, "under 3 percent is not impossible," said Commerce Department Chief Economist Robert Ortner.
The third quarter includes two months of declining retail sales, an August in which factory production improved very little, a July which produced the worst trade deficit on record, two months before the destruction and almost no increases in consumer spending. Now an auto strike is spreading.
The fact that the auto strike is widening, with four additional General Motors plants idled yesterday, would by itself lower the estimate substantially, cutting several hundreds of millions of dollars worth of production out of September.
"THE THIRD QUARTER number could very well come in below the consensus of 4 percent to 5 percent." Orter said. But, he said. "If it were under 2 percent that would be very surprising to a lot of people."
Analysts say a reading of surprisingly slow growth could jeopardize the towering strength of the dollar for the same reason it could provoke a surge of bond market buying, by suggesting interest rates must come down.
It would also suggest the unemployment rate, at 7.5 percent for the last three months, will remained stalled
TREASURY SECRETARY Donald Regan had yesterday he was not ready to concede any slower growth than the 4.5 percent the administration already has forecast for the third quarter. "I'll stick by that," he told reporters.
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NATION AND WORLD
Series, dramas in spotlight
University Daily Kansan, September 20, 1984 Page 12
Rivals compete for Emmys
From Staff and Wire Reports
"The Day After," a searling tale of life after nuclear holocaust, and "A Streetcar Named Desire," a remake of the steamy saga about a troubled Southern household, will rival the much-honored series "Hill Street Blues" for acclaim at the Emmys Awards on Sunday night.
NBC, still trailing the other networks in the ratings, again leads the list of nominees with 98, followed by 87, ABC with 12 and PBS with 30.
THE CLASS AWARD of the 36th annual Academy of Television Arts & Sciences ceremonies could be the outstanding drama or comedy special.
The outstanding drama nominees are "The Day After" and "A Streetcar Named Desire," which won 12 and 11 nominations apiece; the much-publicized "Adam," which sparked nationwide interest in the plight of missing children; "Somewhat About Amelia," about father-daughter incest; and "The Dollmaker," starring Jane Fonda as an Appalachian woman trying to adjust to life in the big city.
"The Day After." which was partially filmed in Lawrences and in
the Kansas City area and depicted the nuclear destruction of the two cities, provoked worldwide controversy.
More than 1,000 people gathered on Campanile Hill for a candlelight vigil in support of nuclear disarmament the day before. The wreath was shown on ANC last November.
About 100 million people watched the movie in the United States. "The Day After" was also shown in England, Holland, Belgium, France, Greece, Australia, Italy, Portugal and Japan.
"Hill Street Blues" received the most nominations of any series for the fourth straight year with a total of 18 — including outstanding drama series, Daniel J. Travanti and Veronica Hamlin as lead actor and six of 10 nominations for supporting actress and actress in a drama series.
picked up 11 nominations, and "Magnum, P.I." whose star, Tornellick, will be the host of the ceremonies to be telecast on CBS from the Pasadena Civic Auditorium.
"NT. ELSEWHERE," WHICH takes the same gritty "Hill Street Blues" style from a police precinct to a hospital, is the other major drama nominee, with 11 nominations including best series and both William Daniels and Ed Flanders as best lead actor.
Their rivals for best drama series are the revived "Cagney and Lacey," the syndicated "Fame," which also
"Cheers," the bittersweet situation comedy set in a Boston saloon, captured 12 nominations including best comedy series and Ted Danson and Shelley Long as lead actor and actress. Its rivals for best comedy series are "Buffalo Bill," "Family Ties," "Kate & Allie" and "Newbart."
NOMINATED FOR BEST actor in a limited series or special were Danson and Travanti, for their out-of-series-character roles in "Something About Amelia" and "Adam," Mickey Rooney for "Bill On His Own," Louis Gossett Jr. as "Sadat" and Laurence Olivier as "King Lear."
Fonda is competing for best actress in the limited series or special category against Ann-Margret as Blanche Dubois in "A Streetcar Named Desire." Jane Alexander as "Calamity Jane." Glenn Close in "Something About Amelia" and JoBeth Williams in "Adam."
T
SAN FRANCISCO - Lightning split the sky over San Francisco yesterday.
United Press International
Word play highlights campaign
By United Press International
President Reagan and Democratic challenger Walter Mondale campaigned coasts apart yesterday, attacking each other with puns and alliteration in their guests for votes.
Campaigning against Jimmy Carter and, by inference, his vice president, Reagan asked a crowd in Waterbury, Conn. "Do we want to go back to the old days of misery, misfortune and malaise? Do we want to return to that time of taxes and timidity, that reign of error?"
Mondale's contribution to the catch-phrase derby was less elaborate. In Stockton, Calif., he criticized Reagan's Lebanon policies as "a tog of confusion," the net result of which was "heartache and humiliation" for the United States.
DEMOCRATIC VICE PRESIDENT candidate Geraldine Ferraro was in Chicago, mocking Republican claims of a resurgent economy "Ronald Reagan says we have a glorious recovery." But, she said, Reagan's policy was "when it comes to cutting the budget, elderly women and children should be sacrificed first."
Vice President George Bush ripped into the Democrats for waging mudsliding "kamikaze attacks" against President Reagan that signal the desperation of a campaign mailing during a speech in Columbus, Ohio.
Reagan, welcomed by cheerleaders, school bands and a crowd waving thousands of American flags and chanting "Four more years," appeared before about 15,000 people in New York City. The crowd of 30,000 gathered to hear John Kennedy near the end of his presidential campaign in 1960.
THE REAGAN CAMPAGN worked hard to revive the Kennedy spirit of 24 years ago in the president's appearance.
president he knew, but Sen. Edward Kennedy, D.Mass, had a tart response yesterday to President Reagan's use of his assassinated brother's image in his Republican campaign.
Reagan had urged Democratic voters to reconsider their loyalties, since the party leaders were "abandoning the good and decent Democrats of the JFK and FDR and Harry Truman tradition."
Kennedy issued a terse statement from Washington saying, "Only in 1984 could anyone who was part of Democrats for Nixon in 1960 go around parading himself as the new JFK."
But yesterday, it was Reagan who held the center stage. Schools were closed for the day, the campaign ran paid radio advertisements encouraging listeners to go to the rally and "Hail to the Chief" was played in the background.
THE SPECIFIC OBJECT of Reagan's oratorial scorn was Mondale's tax increase and deficit cutting plan, which the president said would "put up a giant stop sign and stop the economy dead in its tracks.
"Their wonderful idea is to raise your taxes, again, again and again," Reagan said. "The other side is so upset at the good health of the economy that they've decided to give us a dose of the medicine that made us sick."
Mondale criticized Reagan's policy in Lebanon before several hundred students at Delta Community College in Stockton. "What we had was a grandrose policy in Lebanon with no hope of succeeding," he said.
MOVING SALE
We're moving to a new space:
one door East of Leman's Fun Center.
- All remaining ball gloves and aluminum bats 50% OFF
- All remaining soccer balls 30% OFF
- Stop watches 35% OFF
- All-Sport bags 40% OFF
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NATION AND WORLD
3 million sign budget petitions
University Daily Kansan, September 20, 1984
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — A tax lobbying group yesterday delivered 3 million petitions to the Capitol on a flat bed truck, asking Congress to approve a constitutional amendment requiring a balanced federal budget.
| The petitions, which were mailed individually to the National Tax Limitation Committee from around the country, were stuffed in red, white and blue mail sacks. Each required a 13-cent stamp.
The Senate Judiciary Committee has approved the balanced budget amendment and sent it to the floor. But the issue is bottled up in the House Judiciary Committee, and a drive to collect 218 signatures to force House Speaker Thomas O'Neill to bring the bill to the floor is still 26 short.
A PARALLEL DRIVE to get 34 states to demand action from Congress on the proposed amendment is still two states short.
HAVE YOU BEEN to the WHEEL LATELY?
"The country demands a balanced budget, Republicans in the Senate demand a balanced budget, common sense demands a balanced budget." Senate GOP leader Howard Baker told a few spectators gathered on the Capitol steps.
"But the speaker and the majority in the House don't demand a balanced budget, and we've got to change that," said Baker.
The petitions are supposed to go to O'Neill, who ignored the gathering on the steps
The proposed amendment figures prominently in the presidential election. President Reagan favors it; Walter Mondale does not.
DEMOCRATS COUNTER that
Reagan should send a balanced budget to Congress if he truly wants one. His first fiscal 1985 proposed budget was nearly $200 billion in the red.
Also yesterday, a national policy study group, likening the current federal budget deficit to "fiscal child abuse," urged elimination of tax breaks and deep military spending cuts to balance the federal budget by 189.
THE ROOSEVELT CENTER for American Policy studies suggested tax hikes that would hit the wealthy and eliminate many deductions.
The non-profit, non-partisan institute — based in Washington and Chicago — also recommended that high-income Americans receive less from Social Security and pay more for Medicare, both politically touchy issues.
Girls' scores boost SAT averages
By United Press International
YORK - Higher math scores by girls helped increase the Scholastic Aptitude Test scores for boys for four points, a College Board grant.
The higher scores were the first significant improvement in 21 years.
The tests, which predict a student's chances of doing college work, were taken by 464,381 boys and 499,804 girls in the high school class of 1984, many of whom started college this month.
EDUCATION SECRETARY Terrel Bell, who helped spark a campaign in 1983 to upgrade America's schools, said in Washington that he was encouraged by the results but that he would like to see the score return to the high level mark of 1963.
MIDWEST BUSINESS SYSTEMS
"We can say that it is encouraging, an encouraging earlier sign of academic recovery." Bell said. "Will it become more significant in 1965 is the big question, and will it be academic recovery be sustained?"
Girls' math scores went up four points over 1983 to 449 and the boys' scores rose just two points to 495
George H. Hantford, College Board president, gave the boys credit for the increase of one point in the verbal category, saying their score increased three points while the girls' score stayed the same.
elongated decline that worried educators and parents.
Improved math performance, by the girls in particular, helped boost the scores, the first big win, and a few girls have slumped since then in an
"THIS IS THE SECOND year in a row that female students played a major role in the math score increase, paralleling increases in the amount of math and science they are taking in high school," said Robert G. Cameron, executive director of research and development for the College Board.
The national verbal average rose to 426 from 425; math, to 471 from 486. Since 1963, when the verbal was 478 and the math score 502, the combined SAT score total went down 83 points.
DR. PAUL G. LIMBERG
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When it decides for or against prohibition,
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J
Democracy can legislate right and justice. We separate church and state, because the church's power is persuasion, not legislation
A church without a state is nonsense. A state without a church can be immoral. Don't live with one without the other.
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SPORTS
KU defeated in volleyball by 'Huskers
Nebraska proved to be too much for the volleyball team yesterday in Lincoln, as the fifth-ranked Cornell and the Jayhawks in three straight games.
The Jayhawks were led by Judy Desch, who was successful on 8 of 21 attempted kills. Coach Bob Lock pleased with how his team played
By the Kansan Staff
"I felt that we played real well as a team," Lockwood said. "We had much better court movement."
All of the players on the Kansas team played in the match.
University Daily Kansan, September 20, 1984
Student football ticket sales have turned around and are 10 percent higher now than last year's total sales.
Susan Wachter, athletic department business director, said yesterday that about 6,000 student football tickets have been sold so far. That is 600 more than the total sold last year.
The 6.000 tickets include all sports, reserved and open seating student tickets. So far, more than 5.000 are all sports tickets.
Monte Johnson, athletic director,
said that the increase in student
ticket sales was a response to the
recent football and basketball
team's last year.
Terry Johnson, ticket manager,
said that more students may be
buying the all sports ticket package
this year because that is the only way
a student can guarantee he has a
ticket for basketball season.
By BRENDA STOCKMAN Staff Reporter
Monte Johnson said. "The idea was not to leverage anybody — the idea was to have an independent voice."
If all 7,000 available all sport ticket packages are sold, no student season basketball tickets will be sold, Terry Johnson said. However, he said that it was unlikely that no student basketball tickets will be sold.
Terry Johnson said that 5,166 all-sport tickets that had been sold for $40 million in the summer
He said that warning students that they may not be able to buy student basketball tickets was not a threat, but simply a statement of fact.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Wachter said that ticket sales for non-student seating have been similar to previous years.
Football season tickets will be available until Oct 27.
The ticket office will continue to sell the all-sports ticket package, which includes season tickets to football, basketball and the Kansas Relays, until 7.000 are sold or until Oct. 6. Wachter said.
Tickets to only the last two games, the homecoming game Oct. 27 between KU and Oklahoma and the KU-Nebraska game on Nov. 10, cost a total of $23. A season ticket costs $23.
Wachter said that it was rare for the all-sports tickets to be available so late in the football season. She said the department would continue to sell the all-sports and season tickets because the package tickets are cheaper than buying individual tickets for the last three games.
"We were right on target with that this year," she said. "We should be right at 5,000 once the outlet figures come in."
lar to prince
About 5,000 single reserved tickets
for last week's Parents Day
game between KU and Florida State
University. Wachter said. She said
that was the average number sold for
Parents Day games in the past.
Coffey said he bought all an sports ticket last year, but after attending a few football games he "decided it was time to play" and joined a season basketball ticket if he can.
SPORTS ALMANAC
He said the department made the urgent mailing to reach more students.
Monte Johnson said that the athletic department mailed letters this summer to students encouraging them to sign up for a ticket package before the fall semester.
In 1963, 6,300 reserved single tickets were sold to the Parents Day game between KU and Oklahoma State University
"We were also thinking that if the students are working in the summer it might be easier for them to purchase tickets than at the beginning of school." Monte Johnson said.
San Diego 81 66 590
Houston 76 23 509
Washington 75 23 495
Los Angeles 23 78 403
Cincinnati 64 00 421
San Francisco 64 00 421
W 12 F 16 G 0
Chicago 81 54 76 60
New York 81 54 76 22
Philadelphia 81 54 76 22
Slain 71 72 38 11
Montreal 71 72 38 11
Thursday's Game!
Kevin Coffey, Manchester, Mo. junior, said that he did not think that all sports tickets were a fair way to sell the tickets because some students prefer basketball to football. But students can't be sure that they own a basketball ticket without paying $49 for an all sports ticket package.
Pittsburgh [1] Chicago [1]
Philadelphia [1], New York 5
Sacramento [1]
St Louis [1], Monroeville
[1]
San Francisco at San Diego night
San Francisco at San Diego night
Pittsburgh 迪尔森 6:13 at Chicago
Ruthven 5:10 1:20 p.m.
San Francisco 凯撒沃 10:11 at San Diego
Los Angeles 洛杉矶 1:40
Los Angeles 哈斯堡 14:08 at Houston
Ryan 12:20 6:40 p.m.
Kansas City 12:2 at Atlanta
Campbell 7:40 6:40 p.m.
Ticket sales for football up this year
Camp 7.6, 6, 40 p.m.
Muraler College, St. Louis, MO
Carpenter, b. 6 a.p. p.109
Montreal, Gulickelson (1.7) at St. Louis
Montreal at New York, night
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, night
Cincinnati at Houston, night
Los Angeles at San Francisco,
Los Angeles at San Francisco, math
W 1.0 Pct GRE
x Decatur 59 54 643
Toronto 62 64 708
New York 62 69 341 [30]
Baltimore 62 69 341 [30]
Boise 60 21 350 [37]
Dewey Beach 60 21 350 [37]
Milwaukee 60 41 411 [37]
Kansas City
California
Miami
Oklahoma
Oakland
Oregon
Seattle
Washington
78 23 517
76 14 392
71 82 464
71 82 464
71 82 464
69 45 153
69 45 153
WESTBROOK AVENUE
Oakland
Boston to Toronto 4
New York to Manhattan 6
New York. 6, Baltimore 5
London 4
California. 1, Kansas City 3 (11 mm).
clinched division title
Wednesday's Results
Chicago 14:10 at Minnesota
Visa (17:22) 12:15 pm at
Toronto
Stoch (14:12) 6:30 pm at
Toronto
Boston 16:55 at Baltimore
Florida (12:13) 6:30 pm at
Toronto
California (11:27) 9:00 pm at
San Francisco
Friday's Games:
Oakland at Karlsruhe City, night
Seattle at Oakland, night
New York at Detroit, night
Milwaukee at Toronto, night
Baltimore at Baltimore, night
Oceanside at Minnesota, night
Texas at California, night
Intramural Football Results
Women's Trophy League
Sunday, Sept. 16
Intramural Football Results
Chi Omega over Lewis 16.0 Infault
Kappa Kappa Gamma 12. Alpha Delta Pi 0
Alpha Delta Pi 0. Alpha Delta Pro Pi
Gamma Pi Delta 6. Alpha Delta Pi
Delta Gamma 6. Alpha Delta Theta
Alpha Gamma Delta 7. Pi Delta Pi 0
Alpha Gamma Delta 8. Pi Delta Pi 0
Iacasci 21.1, 21.4
Volkamp 21.3, 21.5
Vreverges 21.8
Wolkamp 28. Guates
James Gang 27. Foods
Sigma Alpha Kappa 20, PiKappa Alpha 2
Alpha KappaLambda 18, Delta A 13
Flii 14, Flii 20, Econ Scholarship 1
Flii 18, Econ Scholarship 1
PiKappa Alpha Chi 0
Alpha Sigma Alpha 20, Alpha Tau Omega 7
Alpha Sigma Alpha 20, Alpha Tau Omega 7
Delta Tau Alpha 20, Delta Tau Alpha 20
Delta Tau Alpha 20, Delta Tau Alpha 20
Delta Upsilon 15, PiKappa Alpha 3
Bull over McColm Independent by default
Bull over McColm Independent by default
Oliver 3th Floor, 9th Floor
Men's Intramural Tee A League
Monday, Sept. 17
Worked hard. Genie's Football Machine 6
W捧锦针 19, W捧锦针 19
The Ruzer 14, The Ruzers 14
Seed Spiders 6, Ls Lawrence 2
Seed Spiders 6, Ls Lawrence 2
Fount Jousters 13, T Pheta Tho 2
Fount Jousters 13, T Pheta Tho 2
Four Fourers 13, T Petites 4
Stevens Trophy League
Hardnose Fans 14, Temple Hall All Stars 12
U.C. Ferguson All-College Golf
*STUDIOS* STARTING AT
ONE BEDROOM
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DURABLES
AMENDAY MARKETUUS
2411 Cedarwood Ave. Phone 843-1116
Oklahoma - B31
Missouri - B3B
Oklahoma City - B47
Nebraska - B52
Tim Johnson ... 76-70-219-108
Tim McGrewey ... 71-72-214-121
Jim Phillips ... 76-72-231-108
Jim Phillips ... 76-72-231-108
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Indiana State 865
Cincinnati State 872
Cenatary State 874
North Texas State 875
Central State 874
Central State 874
Sports Transactions
HAVE YOU FOUND IT?
$2 discount with KU ID
Silver Clipper
To please you is all pleasure
American League Suspended New York
american League Dennis Rasmussen and Toronto
Baltimore - Purchased minor league reliever
Nate Smell from Charlotte of the Southern
League
Commissioner's Office - Announced Oakland can retain pitcher Tim McIlroy as free agent compensation and awarded a draft choice to the New York Yankees.
Oakland Signed interim manager Jackie Moore to a leagues contract as manager.
Moore to a year-end contract as manager
Seattle. Named Hill Knotchsen vice president
For the best selection of
Sun Bowl. Named Domine Duncan executive director of the Sun Bowl Association.
shop at
Hours
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ARBUTHNOT'S
Kristen vice president of sales and marketing
College
Southwest Plaza 23rd & Iowa
841-2660
BESTHINDS wallmark
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS
Attend the
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
Covering:
Time Management
Listening and Notetaking
Thursday, September 20
300 Strong Hall
FREE!
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
BROADWAY HILL
1240 W. 3RD ST.
LAKESIDE, CA 90211
COMING SOON TO THEATRES NEAR YOU
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Thief OF HEARTS
FIRST BORN
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FROM PARAMOUNT PICTURES
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NEW YORK, NY
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FROM PARAM
CUNT PICTURES
Copyright © MCM, 1970 by Pandemonium Pictures. Corporation All Rights Reserved.
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The
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September 20,1984
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
The University Daily
CLASSIFIED RATES
The University Daily KANSAN
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words
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2-3 Days
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10 Days or 2 Weeks
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2.60
3.15
3.75
6.75
16-20
2.83
3.65
4.50
7.80
21-25
3.10
4.15
5.25
8.85
For every 5 words add.
25c
50c
75c
1.05
AD DEADLINES
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Applications are now being accepted for Student Committee Members for the 1965-Kansas Relays. Submit your application to Allen Field House. Become a part of this great KI Tradition! Download for application - Sept 20.
Bunged Stretcher comps Thurs evening. Bus
& receive $1 coupon toward next purchase.
Bus & receive $5 coupon toward next purchase.
Candlestick Special: 20% of Sund Books in stock
1-9 p.m. Thursday Cross Reference: The Mall
Shopping Center
Interested in joining a small Christian group for vaping, sharing action and prayer that meets weekly? Groups now form at Ecumenical Church of the Holy Spirit, Come here or call 483-493 for information.
The weekly seminar: Gospel of John for today,
an exploration of the message of the gospel of
Joseph, Sept. 29, 4:30 p.m. at Excelsior Christian
Ministry, 159rd Street, by call or email
(718) 296-4242.
Kansas State Student Committee is looking for a
assistant counselor in the Student Committee (1)
already filled. Alison Foster, Director of
Science (13) after Foster, Director of Science (14).
HDS-MSCP PAPERS 364 page catalogs, 6.720
book pages 612-648 HDS-MSCP 1122 base pages
6.720 book pages
Road Post COLOR TV $20.45 a month
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SEENING YEARHOOD POSTHATS: Shooting is taking place now, in Student Organizations & Academic Office, 40 Kansas Union, Call your bookkeeper 123-678-9010, L. A. 12 B. Kawai, University, 964, 723
Frymont for the KU Varsity men's and women's Rowing teams will be held throughout the week of April 21-23 at Lake Norman and above. Average are encouraged to try out. Ask Mike Fine at the Kauai Iman from Jayboro for details.
Barry Dermott (generally) of Charity Beach, FL will be the 2016 State Champion in the Male II Call it for Surrey! Barry Dermott is a member of the Surrey Golf Club.
FOR RENT
Music Masters Music for dancers and parties. All
requests Lighting included Reasonable Rates
References 224-129
Bim Apt $25/mo All Utilities paid 918 Miss
00-777
THE FAR SIDE
1218-Brn, Apt. 103, Miss. $800 plus Utilities, Call 842-1490 or 843-0397
Available now. Remodeled two bedroom apartment at 1290 W. 78th St. North of Union Station in New York City. $349 plus gas and electricity. Call 842-1696 plus design for a group of four students. Class ID #0520636.
KU STUDENTS AND FACULTY
We still have limited number of completely
furnished apartments and townhomes. Some are perfect for three
people; all close to
campus! Call or stop by Hanover Place—14th
and Mass..
Offered bv
Sundance----7th and Florida or
Tanglewood-10th and Arkansas.
841-5255, 841-1212,
749-2415 842-4455
Mastercraft Management
Lease 4 bedroom house $500 per month Off street
Call: 641-6572
Deparate en Campaigne, 2 hm. ne depasse Sept 19.
Departure en Campeigne, 2 hm. ne depasse Sept 19.
Must see 784-438 after 5 p.m.
Needed to live in a student slum. From available
location. This couch situation provides private
room for living and sleeping. Located on the
fireplace and sandbox. Lazed on Kauai.
Fun, study oriented groups. $360 per month.
Older 2ndfloor House New furniture Close to K U town No dwg $275 plus unities 204 W Uth. 842 966
By GARY LARSON
Golden Lion Press Syndicate
4.20
"Oh! Wait! Wait! My mistake! That's him down there!"
Opportunity for roommates. One back from camp, 4 big bedrooms, living room, kitchen with dining area, bathroom with 2 walls and a balcony. Two baths. All rooms are remodeled $105 per roommate for also, 3 bedroom unit like above for $125 per roommate for 3. See to app all vacancies at www.courier.com, 418 882 798-7134.
Spring semester only. Fully furnished
1 bedroom, 2 bath house. Great neighborhood,
close to campus, complete with 2 child living
dogs. $400 mo. $84.46
Townhouse with finished basement available, only one left, good for 4 people $490. SUNRISE
PLACE #841 1287
STUHO APT 11 All militaries paid $165 .2 blocks from K.U. KR 1794 159. 12 p.m.
The Oaks Apts. 2 bedroom $15 mo. We pay heating/cooling Last Apt. Available! 237 Ridge Ct Call 812-4461
Try cooperative living! Sunflower House 1406
Tennessee 740 6875 Ask for Dawn Inexpensive
& Private rooms are available
FOR SALE
1980 Ford Pinto, economical, reliable best offer
IHW electric, good spec, power好, 400/245, 750
1980 Ford Escort, economical, reliable best offer
IHW electric, good spec, power好, 300/245, 750
10 Speed Bike, French, Motobecane Super
Wheelchair, 4WD, 950 LPH
[1] Kawasaki KZ 250 14,500 miles rarely
highway (90%), 224 W Jkm, April 1, behind 800
miles.
AUTH Fox, 1977, 4dr, auto $160. Electronic speakers ($2) ca. Pioneer player $6W, $200. Kennamud amplifier $7W, $30, $14, $102
Apple IIe H4i 65k disk drive with controller $999
Apple IIe 85k amber monitor Apple printer driver $199
Apple IIe 105k hard drive MP3 HD MP3 v2
IPC k-29i 15k drive IPC drive $199 MP3 Portable 256k
IPC k-29i 15k drive IPC caller @ 82527 or
IPC k-29i 15k drive IPC caller @ 82527 or
Bicycle: 36 Tires, Dual rear wheel grocery
baskets, new sofa and petals. More 844
p.m. MIMA 3-speed girl's bike $50 749-1764 9
p.m. 12 pm
Buffalo, briefcases, collections, fold hand
bags, luggage, notebooks and much more at
CS Students. For a Low Price you can own your terminal zTN. Z T A with mount built in modular adjustable partly looks up to KU and other main frames. & More - Call Dan 834 40076
Commodore 64 and Disk Drive. Like new. $350 or
best offer. 842.3072
Complete Queensize Waterbed with heater. Excellent condition. $300. Call 847-9975, between 5:30 and 9:30 p.m.
Comic books cool Science Fiction paperbacks,
Playsets, Comics etc. May covers open.
Postage paid at checkout.
DRAFTING MACHINE Sturdy Bruning machine with scales, works great $150,
negotiable 749-3080
EVERYTHING GOLD. TV. 72 Grand Prix food. DVDs, music. MORE! 10-hour rugged rope, TV, and much more.
Funch, with bamboo cage. Food & accessories in:
142 6671
For furnishings for your living, we have what you need. Thirst stores at all Vermont and all B.C. 9th & 10th Avenue, West End and Chelsea, City and MIA Eko Sta. States, Dishes, Furniture, Closets, Store, 126 Mediain Circle, New York, NY 10017.
Gibbon Sunset 47, orange juice 800 Gold
Dawn 3200 Bath with cases. Eyes 290, 419
HMP JP, WIRELESS KEYBOARD 1. DSK
DRIVE, 128K MEMORY, 841.152
RK MA 950
Sporty GTF Tire (trefoil) charm spokes, tank
back and kick rest. Must w/ 814.6298
Used Singer Sewing Machine with cabinet in ex-
cellent condition. All accessories and calli-
nets included.
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplement. New on sale. Makes use of them. Test preparation. New in the book. Exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization*, available at town Court. The
Yamaha Motor
Residential Power Tape deck with 2
speakers. 160D Drafting chair & 148C Call
machine.
TENNIS RAQUET Head Graphite Edge
AUTO SALES
1923 Third white leather interior AT PS 195,
PS 197, Tilt & power outlet same rust $760
$880
1954 Volvo Wagon, 3 speed, $119, 1047-2841 or
489-2842 (leave message)
Ford Mustang PS PB AC 35) Cleveland
engine AM/FM radio with true Tone
Radio
1974 Ford Pinto, good condition, some rust.
Negotiable. Call 739-4584, after 6.
BLOOM COUNTY
LOST AND FOUND
Cleaned WS' for x sale at Motors Metros, 841-6000
FORD FIESTA, 1989. 4 ipd. front wheel drive
AM FM great map; fun to drive. New tires, bat
exhausts. exwired (280-641-363)
FOUND Domestic Bird West Hills Apf
area. Describe in claim, 841-4960,
or 841-696
FOUND 4 mo old kitten, gray & white wearing
collar in 100% black of henry B (434 169-784)
FOR USE WITH ADJUSTABLE WIDTHS.
Must sell! 0825 Nasan Sentra Station Wagon in
Beijing, Beijing AM PJ Mister Clutch, A.C. Huddle
and more. (212) 648-7394.
I HAVE CALLLED THIS
NEW CONFERENCE TO
INVOCATION THAT I WILL
NOT BE DELINQUENT MY CROWN
Must sell 1050 Porcine in Convected Excellent body, perfect interior, unimpaired only $999. Call *347-286-2121*.
COME GRADATE ASSISTANT PROGRAM
GROUPS INDIVIDUALS in the Student Assistance
GRADUATION in the Student Assistance
department especially those related to alcohol Application
vice 6-24 Call center (954) 864-1212, 123 Ring
Number
HELP WANTED
14 time graduate Research Assistant $20 per month. Appointment 10.10.14 to 5.16.08. Assist with architectural holdings compile bibliographies, shell listing, pre-defined queries;网格建模; grid visualization; building applications close Sept 24. Send resume to Barry Newton 211 Marine Galli Kahn Road Boston MA 02117.
FOXCAR, Two Town Cards and Student ID in parking lot inside Johnson. Call 841-580 to claim.
LUST A pair of brown framed glasses in .403
A YOUNG MAN CAN DO MANY
A SILLY THING IN HIS IDENTITY
FINANCIED DAYS. I BELIEV
THE WORLD WILL FORGE ME
THRICE AND I'M NOT ABRETTABLE
PHOTOS.
bv Berke Breathed
WHAT HASIT
THOSE OTHER
FORS DOEN!
WHERE?
NATIONAL
GEOGRAPHIC
THE STORY OF THE HISTORY OF
FRANCE LONG BEFORE GERMANY, JUNE
MATTERS MASTERED MANY RULES
A. AUCTION DAY
KILLER FLORE 241
Dominic's Pizza, World's fastest growing pizzain now Chiring delivery personnel Part time employment. Please call 516-289-3000 between 8:30 & 9:00, 50 & 60, hr Must be 18, have valid insurance and Drivers license. Apply in person 145
Dependable female to assist disabled with care.
No experience required. Mornings, weekend
& evening hours available. Call between 15,
249-028
Bucky's Drive in is now taking applications for part time employment. Apply in person. 10-5 BUCKY'S DRIVE IN, 2120 W. W4h
Dependable female to assist with disabled care.
No experience required. Mnarnings, weekend &
evening hours available. Call between 15.
490 028
Female Models for 1063 Calendarss and posters, no experience necessary. Send phone and number to Hillberger Photography, Box 203 Paula, Kansas 66071
FRESHMEN - It's not too late to join NAVAL
ROTC Call 644-316)
GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS
SpecialIST COMPUTER SPECIALIST Half-time graduate research association. Successful experience in the development and implementation of a servers to identify microcomputer hardware/software for geographic information system status in geography, planning, computer science or related discipline required working in geography. Required experience with microcomputers, required Background and or coursework in geography in this field. Required Remoted Mentoring Program Room 240 Nicholas Hall, 804 4775 Applications deface 5 Telephone (012) 956-3330 Opportunity Alternative Employer
Henry's Restaurant needs two experienced cashiers for Saturday and Sunday night shift and one week night. Apply in person. 1112 W. 6th
NEEDED IMEDATELY Half time Computer
Programmer Contact University Counseling
Center for further information and application
161 Bailey H04 964 1931
The department of mathematics is hiring tutors for Math 101. All applicants must have completed the Math 911 prerequisite fact Bill King, room 25 at Rough. call 644-8154. Applications are available in the Math Office.
Pizza Shuttle is looking for Delivery people. You must be 18, have a car with insurance, and a good driving record. If you are working to work at Pizza Shuttle, 101 W.23rd in the Southern Hills Mall.
University of Kansas Budget Office has an opening for a continuous half time graduate assistant position in the summer. The position will assist with the process of budget and account transfers for the four University of Kansas Budget Offices, as well as preparation of the four University Budgets. The person assuming this position will gain a good exposure to fund accounting and have an opportunity to learn about best practices. Acceptance in a KU graduate program? Yes, in accounting, and good written and oral communication skills. Please apply by a half time appointment. Separate date Sep 19th.
ment. Acceptance in a KU graduates program, 7 weeks in accounting, and good written and oral skills must be demonstrated for a half-time appointment. Closing date. Sep 19th 2014. For information call Anna Whitaker. Telefax (866) 531-3890.
Applications available in 319 Strong Hall EOE
MISCELLANEOUS
FOLK MUSIC Lawrence String Band Project?
Thursday's Lawrence Arts Center' 2. - 8 p.m.
842 4095 or 842-2773
Kitchen is open 8. 11: 30 p.m. for wings to go. Mon day through Friday. Only at the Wheel?
EPISCOPALIANS
join us in our welcome of the BISHOP of KANSAS
CANTERBURY HOUSE
Holy Eucharist and Supper
BUSINESS PERS.
PHOTO TYPETENTER headlady - Freden
Tyreo in front of him, but good luck (Call 612) 805-4730
British and More At the Wheel on Thursday
Beds, Desks, Tents, Window shades. Everything
Hot for 4th & 6th Term.
Bible Trivia is 13! The game where trivia is not trivial. Malls Shopping Center, Lawrence
SOMERVILLE &
ASSOCIATES, INC
SPECIAL RESUME PACKAGE
$15.00
- Input in Word processor
- Choice of Three Paper Colors
COLLEGE SWATSHIRTS Harvard, Laurel
UNIVERSITY SWATSHIRTS Harvard, Laurel
UCLA STANFORD Notre Dame and others
each possessed Many codes for 30 day delivery
of products. CALL (443) 571-8900. Russell Swatshirts
CALL (443) 571-8900. Russell Swatshirts
- Matching Stationery Envelopes
* Interview Questions
Best Hair Cut In Town For The Best Price.
$7.50 Haircut
Debbie's Beauty Salon 9271/2 Mass.
842-1752
John sings for all occasions: Birthdays, parties,
weddings. Operations 841-7824.肌力 841-7824.
PHOTO: Headquarters Crisis Counseling
Institute 841-7824, or new loca-
tion, 149 Massachusetts.
COMPETENCE SENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATE
early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality
medical care confidentiality assured Greater
area area call for appointment
911-343-1000
Jayhawks Fly with
Don't drink the Water "a sign of the times"
Multipure your water. 842 7618
Round Trip Fares From Kansas City To:
us . . .
**Inflation Eighter**, & Baz 237. For your needs in inflation, this is the best choice. It provides more and more space to Visit or browse Internet.
KC-Dallas $118
KC-San Francisco $217
KC-Los Angeles $260
KC-Miami $218
KC-Washington DC $254
KC-New York $254
KC-Sydney $320
KC-Phoenix $160
KC-Albuquerque $200
Restrictions Apply Call For Details 841-8100
2449 Iowa Street Holiday Plaza-Suite N Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Holiday Travel
HOT AIR BALLOONS
RESUME skill. Let us ask you, on with that first good impression. Professionally written resumes and coverletters, word processing and quality papers. 5 East Ft. 841-129.
LOOK AND FEEL GREAT
SUNTANNING, HOT TUB,
& HEALTH CLUB
& HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
Aerobics, Weight Room
Environmental Hot Tub Room
Aerobics Classes Now Starting!
Also includes:
* Suntaining Option
* Weight Room/
Hot Tub Wash/Pool
GET NOTICED
TURN A PAPSTONE marker into an Air Brush " strong office systems (e.g. Vernorst 841-9644
Fall Merchandise
Wool, Cashmere,
Natural & Fake Fur Coats
[Millcrest] Mass. S. 841-2851
Barbs Vintage Rose
Warm, caring people who like children ages 3.5 are needed as volunteers at Head Start for a minimum of two hours a day one per week between 8:00 am and 4:00 pm. For more information call 842.5155.
THE ETC SHOP
VV
INDIANA SONES
Hats
Vintage, formal wear
variety of colors and patterns
Wholesale Sound Rental P.A. Guitar and Bass
amps, mikes, Graphic EQ, Disco systems,
414-690.
CUSTOM SEWING. Dressmaking and altera-
tions. Call 842 5175. Reasonable prices.
SERVICES OFFERED
Ammonsing, Troy Anderson, formerly of Com-
mande Performance has joined his staff at His &
Her Bios design. His opening special Harc-
rette will be based on the design for that special
business. 814-569-1211 Connecticut.
SAVE AT
Ralph's AUTO REPAIR
707 N. Second 841-1205
Charity Beauty Salon is now offering Haircuts for $7, and佣金 for $2 & up or Call us or come for a professional cut or perm at a great price. Charity Beauty Salon. 1031 Mass. 847-1500
Charme Beauty Salon Home of the $7 Haircut
HERBALIFE distributor consultant Weight loss, skin & hair care, much more, income opportunity. 841-0474
Load Weight Now. Improve your health and your weight 100% natural 100% guaranteed 842-6671 Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Louisiana 842-7716
--by Cathe Thompson
Lawrence Aebbins
1229 Vermont
4 week class card is $20
Classes offered M.F. at 6:15 p.
St. John's School Gym
Call Cathe at 841-4158 for more info
YAMAILA MUSIC SCHOOL, ages 4, 6, beginners.
Olson piano and organ. 842-675.
BIRTHRIGHT Free Pregnancy Testing Confidential Counseling 841-4821
KANSAN
Vice Lessons. DMA voice candidate accepting non-credit, finger experience with all type of speakers.
TENNIS Take lessons from experienced instructor
Beginner Advanced Group-Individual
421/585
Special on Sculptured Nails. 20% Off. Available with unbreakable tip. Thin a Duration. Polish hair. Nail care. Tattoo kit. Trained. export applications. Manures also done. Call Trust, at Gene's Beauty House. 442-829-6800.
Ultimate Hair and Skin Care Center. Haircuts $5. Hanna Casey is from Europe and has worked in France, Germany, England, Belgium and Tel Aviv. Ask for Hanna Garcia Walk-ins welcome.
24Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes,
dissertation papers Close to campus Best
feedback
Absolutely. Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing and
Punctuation. Perfect for Beginners. Stuff
Students always welcome! 844-325-1096.
Alphamega Computer Services offers Word Processing, Professional Resumes, resumes, papers, vspersonal. Call 749-1118
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing. Judy
842-7945
Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, term papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting secretr f IU 824314 841367 9.367 - 10:30 p.m
Always try the best for professional service.
Term papers, thesis, resumes, etc. Reasonable
****2246**
DEPENDABLE professional, experienced
JEANPENA TEAMSHIP - Typeing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard cassette tape
4104677
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED EAST & EFFI
CLIENT 841-530
TIP TOP TYPING 230 Iowa Professional typing processing editing Resumes from start to end
Susanella & Assoc, Inc., Professionals at Competitive Rates. Word Processing. Taping. Imaging in APA Style. Lawrence 90 Kennett 811 640 8440. Western 200 331 306.
Professional TYPING EDITING GRAPHICS
IBM Correcting Elective Kathy. 842.3778 before 6.
n.m.
FYMPING PLUS assistance with composition
editing, grammar spelling research, theses,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
Have M.A. Degree 814242
TYP OP TYPING 1200 lbs. Professional typing,
processing editing, assisting lessons from start to finish, repetitive letters, editing applications, and more.
Self-motivated. Fax, e-mail, self-correction. Correct
self-motivation
The WORD DOCTORS Why pay for typing when you can have word processing . . . 843,1447
Taping in my home. Have IBM Correcting Selector II. Reasonable prices. Call auditor at 841-9091
WANTED
Female Christian Roommate to share spaces
2bedroom Apt. Close to campus $78.50 plus
Utilities Call 749-4422
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. HBM Correcting Selective Eite on Pica or will correct spelling. Phone (641) 6544. Mrs. Wright
Female Roommate to share 2 bedroom housewalking distance to campus $6250 plus 1/2 utilities *Call Monica* 749-7211
HELP! Need ride to western Nebraska weekend
of Sept. 21. Call Cherrity K. *843-64546*
Looking for female roommate to share complete
furnished, 2bedroom Apt. Rent $147.50
shared utilities. Phone 749-0449
Looking for Female Roommate to share complete furnished, 2 Bedroom Apt Rent $147.50 utilities shared Phone 749 649 or 841 767
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Male Moehouse to share 2 Birk, Park 25. Apr.
in Lawrence 1.2 lattes 1.2 lattes 1.462 401
1.462 401
Male formmate, non-smoker. Separate bedroom.
Male formmate, Study Days (120 m²) plus/2
m². Formmates and students must stay in room.
Rommatee Female grade or serious student
nm smokeer, preferred to share a nice
2 bedroom Apk Allilities Food Call 842-3001
Rommatee Female grade or serious student
nm smokeer, preferred to share a nice
2 bedroom Apk Allilities Food Call 842-3001
2008-09-15 patricia p. depee 930-742-6144
Brownmatter to share New House West side of
Town, non smoker 741/292
Students wishing to lose 10-25 lbs. per month
Easy, economical vitamin herb method
uses Niacin and Vitamin B-12. More info
We buy VW's running or not. Call Metric Motors
841 6000
Classified Heading
**Bowlers** - Opening for foul play players and bowlers on the 1 p.m. Monday night in University Mixed League and the 3 p.m. Tuesday night in McKinley League for 844-744 for move into
Write ad here
DRUM MEMBER Immediately for: working kicker
& Rollman. Chuck 749 607. Justin 841 9298
10 Days or 2 Weeks
$6.75
$7.95
Net a Winner...
THE CLASSIFIEDS
---
Mail or deliver to 119 Stauffer - Flint Hall
1
Classified Display
1col x 1inch = $4.20
Car sme obo new
The exc zoo inch SK
or 6
11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 8
September 20,1984 Page 16
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
12
Safety Wayne Ziegler
Secondary to be tested by VU, Page
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Associate Sports Editor
Wayne Ziegler is the air traffic controller of the KU defense. He'll have plenty of traffic to control Saturday against Vanderbilt.
"They pretty much have a wide-open offense." Ziegler said. "They use four wide receivers a lot of the time and have a good short (passing) game. They don't run that much, although they can run."
As the starting safety, Ziegler said he's responsible for calling what type of pass coverage the secondary will be in. He makes two calls in the huddle. The one used depends on the formation the opposing team lines up to.
Ziegler said the Jayhawks would be trying to come up with some big defensive plays Saturday against the peritrich's ball-control passing came
"Anytime you have a short game like Vanderbilt's, the defense needs to try to make big plays," Ziegler said. "Whether it would be an encounter for a fumble, to try devis defenses to come up with the big play."
Defensive coordinator Vince Hoch said, "That's something we always try to work on. But the first thing we do is scrape and digging the big play from the offense."
Vanderbilt quarterback Kurt Page, the nation's seventh-ranked passer in NCAA Division I, tied a Southeastern Conference record with interceptions last year. He'd had six tackles on two games this year, however.
ZIEGLER INTERCEPTED TWO passes against Wichita State two weeks ago and is tied for second in the state, with tenth in the nation in that category.
A 6-foot 2, 190-pound red shirti
sophomore. Ziegler was sidelined by
knee problems most of 1982 and 1983.
"The first injury was too terri
"The first injury wasn't too serious, but then about eight months later I completely tore the ligaments on the same knee, and it took about five months to rehabilitate it," he said. "I tested it out this August, and it was strong as my other knee I don't have any problems with it now, just a little soreness now and then, but nothing too serious."
JAYHAWK NOTES — Wide receivers Skip Peete and Johnny Holloway were added to the list of walking wounded at practice yesterday
Peete strained a knee and Holloway aggravated an ankle injury suffered in the Florida State game. Head Coach Mike Gottfried said he
didn't know the extent of their injuries.
Gottfred said fullback Mark Henderson, who missed last week's game with Florida State because of a thigh bruise, still had not recovered and would not make the trip to Vanderbilt.
Defensive end Guy Gamble, who had been sidelined with a strained knee, practiced for the first time this season and is just status for the game is questionable.
Linebacker Wille Pless and offensive tackle Jim Davis missed part of Tuesday's practice, but were back at practice yesterday. Pless had a hip bruise and Davis was ill.
Players face new drug tests
By BRENDA STOCKMAN Staff Reporter
Physical examinations for football players included one more test this year than in past years.
The University of Kansas has joined more than 20 schools across the nation who screen their athletes for traces of drugs. Erie Zemper, a college coordinator for the National Collegiate Athletic Association, said this week.
During their physical examinations at the start of the season, members of the KU football team gave urine samples that were screened for traces of 12 amphetamines, cocaine and tetrahydrocannabinol - the active ingredient in marijuana. Lonny Rose, assistant athletic director, said.
The athletic department gave all coaches the option to use the tests, if the tests were paid for from each team's budget. Rose said.
He said the program was started because. "It is good to know the status of your athletes." Only the coach has access to the test results.
At KU, Mike Gottfried, head football coach, was the only coach who decided to use the urine tests. Gottfried said that he preferred Rose answer any questions about the tests. Bea said, "Coach Gottfried tell it."
Rose said, "Coach Gottfried felt it was important, because he controls the sport with the most athletes and that receives the most publicity."
Rose said that other coaches
thought the tests could be helpful, but that the tests were too expensive. Coaches who want to use the tests do not do so if they budget for the expense.
Each initial test costs $15. Rose said, if the test result is positive, a second test is made to verify the results of the experiment, used a gas chromatography, costs $50.
The tests are used, Rose said, to identify players that have trouble with legal or illegal substance use. Once the athlete is identified, then coach and the department can help overcome his problem, Rose said.
Rose, who is also a professor of law, said that the well-being of the athletes must be a concern, in addition to the legal concerns.
"I am more concerned about what kids are doing to their bodies, than about legality," Rose said.
The University adopted the screening process because of problems in professional sports and at KU, so it did not in response to problems at KU.
Zemper, the NCAA's research coordinator, said that because over the past year schools had begun to inquire about screening programs, the NCAA had developed guidelines for such programs.
A year and a half ago, no schools were testing their athletes, he said. Now, KU has joined about 25 schools that are making now or are making plans to do so.
At the University of Nebraska, Tim Simons, assistant sports information
director, said that this is the first year Nebraska tested football players for drug use
Carl Cramer, athletic trainer for Kansas State University, said that K-State is testing all athletes this year. K-State started the program in March.
The University of Kansas has not had a problem with athletes using and abusing drugs, because the university funded students who use drugs. Ree said.
Also, most athletes pay close attention to their bodies. Rose said, "The usage of drugs or the abuse of drugs, is probably at a much lower incidence rate for athletes than for non-athletes."
The athletic department plans an educational effort, Rose said, to warn athletes of the dangers of substance abuse in the players' orientation program.
The testing program does not screen for all substances. Rose said. For example, athletes at KU are not screened for steroid use now. Rose said, because of the cost
The NCAA now is working to develop a national drug testing program. The program, which is designed to screen for performance-heightening drugs such as steroids, cocaine and amphetamines, will be voted on at the 1985 NCAA convention.
Each test for steroid use costs $100.
No athletes at the University are suspected of using steroids. Hose said that many cases is concerned about steroid use.
Royals lose to Angels in 11th, 4-3
By United Press International
ANAHEIM Calif — Bobby Grich hit a bad hip single over third baseman Greg Pryor's glove with one out in the bottom of the 11th inning last night, scoring pinch runner Rick Barbelson with the winners run and lifting the California 35-24 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Doug DeCinces led off the inning with a single off Royals' reliever Joe Beckwith. Rick Burleson ran for him and moved to second on Brian Downing's sacrifice fly. Reggie Jackson was then walked intentionally. Grich, who was 0-for-9 after collecting eight straight hits against the White Sox last weekend, then collected his hit off Pryor, who had replaced George Brett in the 11th inning after pitch running for him.
The victory moved the Angels into second place in the American League West, one and one half games behind the Royals Minnesota, a loser to Chicago, fell into third place, two games behind Kansas City.
The Angels tied it 1-3 with two out in the seventh inning when Rod Carew used sparingly in the last month due to a neck injury, delivered by reliever Dan Quinceberry, driving in Darrell Miller from second
Donn Aase pitched two hitless innings to improve his record to 4-2 after Doug Corbett had pitched three and one-third innings in relief of starter Geoff Zahn.
The Royals took a 3-2 lead in the sixth Zahn got the first two batters out in the innning, but then Hai McRae and Frank White singled before Steve Baldoni walked to load the bases. Third baseman DeCines then fielded Darryl Motley's grounder wide of the bag, but lost the grip on the ball trying to make a play at second as McRae scored. It was ruled a hit.
Steak For Two! For The Price Of One!
Order a steak to your size (6 oz. minimum) and get the second steak for your friend (same or lesser weight)
FREE! Must present coupon at time of ordering.
Expires 9/29/84
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan Recipient with over 253 clubs 843-0540
fields
the apartment store
712 massachusetts 842-7187
Basket
All styles of cuts $6.00
HAIR APOLLO SYSTEMS
Bob Brandt Ken Ford Joe Lesch Randy Seivers
Malls Barber Shop
Malls Shopping Center 842-1547
Bob Brandt Ken Ford Joe Lesch Randy Selvers
VIRGINIA B. BURTON
START THE
SEMESTER IN
TOP STYLE
KU I.D. and coupon required
Let our stylists help create a total look for you.
FREE: curling iron
brush iron
or 4 oz. shampoo
with our perms
—PERM SPECIAL—
(offer good Sept. 17 thru Oct. 13 with Poggy or Nancy
Joda & Friends
Full Service Skin & Hair Care
841-0337 • 745 New Hampshire
--members All students eligible for membership and all services
Free money orders and VISA Travelers Checks to members
13% on IRA accounts that could possibly make you a millionaire
7% interest on checking with no minimum balance. no monthly service charge and no limit on number of checks written
- printer ribbons
Are you aware that you have a Credit Union that will pay you?
M-Thurs. 10-7
Fri. & Sat. 10-4
Express W/17
Not valid with any other offer
[ ]
23rd & Louisiana
Malls Shopping Center
841-0094
- disk storage cases
KU STUDENTS
20% Off all Maxell and Dysan disks.
ADC
H
KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
- dust covers
- computer paper
H O -
Computerark
Also select from our wide assortment of supplies to fulfill your computer needs.
Disk Days!
603 W. 9th
8th St & Central Ave.
Main Office @ 5 Mon-Fri:
864-3291
Branch Office
for Carmy Garcia
of Orange County
Sunday Evening...
Followed by supper ($1)
WORSHIP
5:30 pm
+ + +
ECM STUDENT CHRISTIAN CENTER
1204 Oread
(One block North of the Kansas Union)
ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES:
The United "methodist Church"
The Presbiterian Church (USA)
The United Church of Christ
The Church of the Brethren
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MILANO
Network
Beth Vivian and Jan Hunt, the only seniors in the starting rotation for the KU volleyball team, have their work out out for them this year. "Their leadership is very important."
says Coach Bob Lockwood. As setters, they help control the play of a team dominated by youth, and as seniors, they are looked to for advice and support. See story, page 14.
AIR
Breezy
The University Daily
High, 87. Low, 62.
Details on page 3.
KANSAN
Vol. 95, No. 20 (USPS 650-640)
Friday, September 21, 1984
U.S. officials condemn embassy bombing
THE FACTS ARE NOT TO BE LISTENED TO.
AOURAR, Lebanon — A U.S. Marine and Lebanese army soldiers stand near one of several wrecked U.S. Embassy
vehicles outside the U.S. Embassy Annex. A truck-bomb exploded outside the embassy yesterday and killed 23 people.
By United Press International
President Reagan, branding the deadly bombardment at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut part of a worldwide terrorist plot, declared yesterday that America cannot "crawl in a hole someplace" and forsake the quest for peace.
Reagan, keeping mum about possible retaliation, said the best way to combat such violence would be to infiltrate terrorist groups.
groups
Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale said in a statement during a Seattle campaign stop. "If the perpetrators of this deed can be identified, I want President Reagan to know that he has my full support for appropriate countermeasures."
worldwide BOMBING BY TWO pro-Iranian terrorists set off a huge explosion that killed 23 people, including two American servicemen.
to popp up. Beginning was awakened at 5:50 a.m.
yesterday and informed of the attack. He called the bombing a "painful reminder" of a worldwide terrorist network.
men.
Three other American servicemen were wounded and hospitalized but their injuries were not life-threatening, the Pentagon said.
Police set the overall toll at 23 dead and 71 injured in the attack - the third against an American installation in Beirut in 17 months. At least 20 other people were reported missing, rescue officials said and State-run Beirut radio said the death toll could rise to 40. Rescuers are still searching through the rubble.
U. S. Ambassador Reginald Bartholomew, 48, was among 25 Americans injured. He was pinned under rubble in his 4th floor office and extricated by British Ambassador David Miers, who was visiting him, witnesses said.
Bartholomew's injuries were' described as minor.
THE PENTAGON SAID the two service-men killed were Army Chief Warrant Officer Kenneth W. Welch, 33, of Grand Rapids, Mich., and Petty Officer 1st Class Michael Ray Wagner, 30, of Zebulon, N.C. They were both assigned to the embassy's defense attache office.
Yesterday's biast came at a new U.S. Embassy opened just seven weeks ago to replace its destroyed in a similar attack on 28, 1983, that killed at least 63 people, including 17 Americans. An Oct. 23, 1983, truck-bombing at the headquarters of the U.S. Marine peace-keeping force killed 241 American servicemen.
Secretary of State George Shultz, who helped formulate a policy calling for pre-emptive strikes against terrorists when they can be found, said the United States would "continue to take every measure we can" to stop terrorism.
YESTERDAY'S TRUCK-BOMB attack did not interrupt a planned Reagan campaign trip to the Midwest.
"You are president wherever you are." Reagan said while touring a soybean farm at Norway, Iowa.
Norway, Washington, Sen. Paula Hawkins,
R.Fla., a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committees, demanded that the United States retaliate.
"We should strike back against the terrorists in any way possible and show them that we mean business," she said.
that we defend. We defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said. There are always options for retaliation but I cannot discuss any specifics right now."
See LEBANON, p. 10, col. 4
Attack will be forgotten by public, professors say
By SUZANNE BROWN Staff Reporter
foreign policy.
"People will pay attention and wring their hands and say, 'Oh my God, what are we going to do?' " Ronald Francisco, associate professor of political science, said yesterday. "But nothing changes."
The public outsey over the latest terrorist bombing in Beirut will soon pass, and civil strife will continue in Lebanon much as it has before, local U.S. and foreign policy professors predict.
said yesterday. But notcheng jiang,
Francisco said the bombing, which
killed 23 people and injured 71, was perceived as an isolated event to Americans, who hear of Lebanon's turmoil only occasionally.
Americans don't pay attention to the violent struggles that occur among Lebanese and other Middle Eastern factions daily, he said.
"PEOPLE WILL FORGET that Lebanon is there for weeks," he said. "Nobody reads the story about Lebanon on page 12 of the New York Times."
See BOMBING, p. 5, col. 1
Meese cleared after investigation
By United Press International
09 WASHINGTON — A special prosecutor yesterday found no criminal wrongdoing in the investigation of Edwin Meese, and President Reagan said if elected to another term he will renominate Meese to be attorney general.
general
Special prosecutor Jacob Stein, in a message prosecute to a report court, said an exhaustive five-month investigation of the White House counselor concluded there was "no basis" to prosecute Meese for any of the 11 allegations against him.
13 alleged student. Reagain issued a written statement and Meese appeared in the White House.
"The experience has been a difficult one," Meese said. "But it was essential for it cleared the air and affirmed my family and I have always known: that we have lived honorable lives, that we have paid our debts with our own money, and that we have never taken advantage of official position to obtain private gain."
REAGAN TOLD REPORTERS. "It's always gratifying when the honor of a just man is vindicated and that's exactly what has happened with the report of the independent counsel on Ed Meese."
press room to say "it's been a long ordeal over several months."
See MEESE, p. 5, col. 3
Politicians favor new liquor law
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Five state legislative candidates would support a proposal to change Kansas liquor laws to allow liquor by the drink statewide, the candidates said yesterday.
the candidates.
State Sen Wint Winter Jr. and his opponent, Lawrence Seaman Jr. State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton and her opponent, Julie Hack, and State Rep Jessie Branson said they would vote in favor of putting liquor by the drink on the ballot if the proposal came up in the spring session.
"We've just about been promised this will be an issue next session," said Charlton, D.Lawrence.
D. 12W88 That promise came when Gov. John Carlin came in support of liquor by the drink at his weekly press conference last Friday. Carlin told reporters that Kansas had an image problem that had hurt economic development in the state.
Swenson said, "The vote in Oklahoma was significant. We're down to three states in the whole country now, and Kansas is one of them.
the rest of the country.
Tuesday, Oklahoma narrowly approved authorizing counties to approve liquor by the drink. Before this vote, Kansas and Oklahoma were often compared because of their strict drinking laws.
development in the state "THE GOVERNOR STRONGLY believes that Kansas is lagging behind," said Mike Swenson, Carlin's press secretary. "The state needs to move into the 20th century with the rest of the country."
surface of drinking water
Besides Kansas, only Utah and West Virginia still have laws that don't allow liquor by the drink.
"The governor really believes that should happen."
Hack said she thought it was time for liquor by the drink to be dealt with seriously
05. "We might as well bring it to a head and solve it," she said.
... said
A CHANGE IN THE 106-year-old constitutional prohibition would have to be proposed in the Legislature. It then must receive two-thirds approval in both the House and Senate to be placed on the ballot.
Solute to be passed If the amendment were approved in an election, liquor by the drink would become a constitutional amendment
constitutional/McMahon.
Branson, D.Dawrence, said that she agreed with Carlin and that it was time for a change.
to it.
"I hope it has a better chance of passing this year, than in the past."
change
"The Governor's rationale is quite sound," she said. "It's a fact that Kansas has needed to improve its image. It will be a benefit to economic growth for the state and for tourism."
THE LAST TIME Kansans voted on the issue was in 1970. The amendment was defeated by 11,000 votes. Since then, liquor by the drink has come up several times, but it has not been moved out of the Legislature to be put before the voters.
be purposed." said, "If this were put on the patrol in 1886, there would be almost an entire generation of voters between the ages of 18 and 34 who have never voted on the issue.
and 34 who have never voted.
Winter, R.Lawrence, said a liquor by the
drink proposal would have a good chance if it
reached the voters.
"The problem is getting a two-thirds agreement from both houses," he said. "In the Senate, that means 27 votes, and it's hard to get 27 senators to agree that the sun sets in."
the west, much less pass an amendment
Iwerksian. B. Lawrence could not be John Solbach, D. Lawrence could not be president. His opponent, Martha Parker, said she would wait to hear all sides of the issue before making a stand.
"I have no doubt that it will be a controversial issue."
OPPOSITION TO THE PROSIS is spread statewide, and several groups have denounced Carlin for endorsing the amendment proposal.
Lonnie Hephner, Wichita, is the chairman of the board for one opposition group. Kansans for Life at Its Best!, which has condemned Carlin's endorsement.
confirmed Carlin with what Mr. Carlin has done is that it is quite obvious it is just a political move," Hephner said. "Now that he's not up for re-election, he's trying to set up his next campaign for Congress or Senate or whatever. He wants that segment of the population behind him."
Hephner said his organization didn't believe Carlin was concerned only with the wav们eys view Kansas
"Carlin is trying to make this an image issue, saying it will improve Kansas," he said. "That's not true. He has to think we are terribly stupid to buy that."
this stub to buy that.
"IT'S A MATTER of consumption and making more of the drug liquor available and creating more problems."
Hepher accused Carlin of being two-sided in his views on drinking
in his views on business.
"He is being a true politician rather than a statesman. Hehner said, 'On one hand, he says we have to get tougher with drunk driving and have stricter enforcement. But then he wants to provide more outlets for
See LIQUOR, p. 5, col.1
Bricker to bring his magic to new post
By JOHN EGAN Staff Reporter
Clark Bricker, a retired chemistry profesor or known for mixing magic tricks with his lectures, has returned to KU.
lectures, has returned,
But this time around Bricker, a four-time winner of the HOPE teaching award, won't be dealing with heakers or lectures.
"The Great Brieko" hopes to perform some more magic at the University of Kansas.
working with Brickert to taught at KU for 20 years before retiring last year, has joined the team of Liberal Arts and Sciences as an acting associate dean
acting
as a volunteer my services for this," he
said yesterday.
AFTER A ONE-YEAR visiting professorship at Davidson College in North Carolina, Bricker decided to accept Line-berry's offer.
said yesterday.
He was appointed to the unpaid position about two weeks ago by Robert Lineberry, dean of the college.
"I may be in this for three or four years or the next three or four months," he said with a hearty laugh. "Or maybe three or four weeks.
Coming back to Mount Oread has allowed him to work on journal articles about chemistry and to conduct a few experiments, he said.
"We're just delighted to have him back," Lineberry said. "It just took a little bit of arm twisting."
In two decades, Bricker taught chemistry to about 14,000 students, many of whom he photographed to become familiar with their faces.
"I have told the dean I will do this as long as I feel I'm making some headway."
'Gee, I've had some awfully good students
students who are very, very successful and who are becoming successful," he said.
ONE OF HIS students, who took Bricker's chemistry course in 1963, recently was named one of the 100 most outstanding scientists in the United States, he said.
studs in the Briker has missed the interaction with students, he said he wouldn't miss grazing mountains of papers in his new plazen.
position.
As the acting associate dean, operating out of an office on the third floor of Malot Hall, he said he would strive to develop programs that might strengthen the relationship between KU and Kansas high schools.
Bricker said one of his responsibilities would be to attract academically talented students to the University and to have those students placed in courses that would challenge them.
nallenge. VERY CONCERNED that good students at KU center along." Bricker said.
These teachers have an awful lot to say about where their students go to college. Bricker said.
To counteract that, he said he would attempt to strengthen the relationship between the University and high school teachers.
By meeting with the teachers and conducting summer workshops and mini courses for them, the teachers could play a bigger role in their students' education. Bricker said.
"We're really only getting started," he said. "The wheels are starting to move. I'm like the manager of the baseball team. I play this one game at a time."
said.
O'FAR, BUILDING the ties with Kansas high schools has been a slow process. A faculty committee has been formed to deal with the issue, he said. And Brickler will meet Monday with area high school administrators to discuss how to improve relations
Clerk Bricker
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September 21, 1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily KANSAN
Search for Eskimo village took U.S. seamen astray
ST LAWRENCE ISLAND, Alaska — The five American merchant seam captured and held for a week in Siberia accidentally strayed into Soviet waters as they were looking for a remote Bering Sea Eskimo village, the Coast Guard said yesterday.
"Just like a tourist, we wanted to see something new," said skibbi Tapper.
The seamen from the 120-foot supply vessel Frieda K. — all looking fit and healthy despite detention at a Siberian military outpost where they were freed in April, 1986, on international waters Wednesday about 30 miles northwest of St. Lawrence Island.
TOKYO — A fire apparently broke out in missile fuel aboard a diesel-powered Soviet submarine, disabling the vessel and leaving it adrift this morning in the Sea of Japan, the Japanese Defense Agency reported late yesterday.
Soviet sub disabled by fire
United Press International
The agency identified the vessel as a 3.000-ton Golf II class submarine, which is designed to carry nuclear missiles.
It said the submarine was first spotted yesterday morning by a P2C Orion anti-submarine plane of the Maritime Self-Defense Force, about 56 miles south of Oki Island off western Japan.
MONDALE
FERRARO
LAKELAND, Fla. — Workers uprooted thousands of seedlings and burned them yesterday, and agriculture experts checked millions of others for signs of the citrus canker disease they fear could cripple Florida's citrus industry.
Authorities said they would use volunteers from local jails to help in the destruction of seedlings exposed to the disease.
Diseased citrus trees burned
Wayne Baggett, U.S. Department of Agriculture spokesman, said the treeburning could go on for months and the search for canker-infected plants might last more than a year.
Candidates again set up soap boxes
Cartoon squirrel called racist
LONDON - Left wing politicians in the London district of Lambeth have a new deal with Mr. Browne.
ARLINGTON, Texas — Democratic vice presidential nominee Geraldine Ferraro addresses students at the University of Texas at Arlington. Ferraro's remarks yesterday were interrupted several times by hecklers.
For 23 years Tufty and his friends, Willie Weasel, Mrs. Brown Rabbit, Policeman Badger, Mrs. Wise Owl and Minnie Mole, have been appearing in road safety cartoons for children.
Now the campaign has been attacked as "full of sexist and racist stereotyping" and "unaware of the multicultural and multiracial nature of society," in a Lambeth borough council subcommittee report. But the conservative opposition leader, Peter Davis, dismissed the whole thing as "nuts."
Hecklers confront Democrats; Reagan appeals to farmers
By United Press International
GRAND RAPIDS. Mich. — President Reagan, keeping in touch with the situation in Lebanon while campaigning in America's farm belt, said yesterday "nothing could be quite so revolting" as Walter Mondale's tax increase plan.
increase in
reuse. We wound up a long day on the
campaign trail with a speech in front of the
Gerald Ford Library, where he was introduced by the former president.
duced by the other president. Ford praised the president for bringing the nation back from the "catastrophe, the disaster," left by the Carter administration.
dissaster. "It was a bad time in the history of our country," Ford said of the administration that ousted him from office in 1976. "The truth is Carter and Mondale blew it in four years. Now, after four years of Ronald Reagan and George Bush, the country is moving again."
IN SEATLE, WALTER Mondale, claiming federal deficits are "undermining the American dream," charged yesterday that Reagan's policies have plunged the nation into a "full international economic rout."
Contending that the nation had a commercial trade surplus in 1980, Mondale said then "the deficits went into effect, and everything produced by an American worker or farmer became more expensive than it should and everything produced in competition with us was cheaper than it should be."
"Since that time we have been in full international economic rout," he said. "It is defeating America internationally. It is defeating the future of our children. It is undermining the American dream."
Reagan considered, but rejected, canceling the political swing through Iowa and Michigan when he learned the U.S. embassy in Beirut had been bombed. But he concluded "you are president wherever you go" and that he could do his job on the road.
HE MENTIONED THE BOMBING in all of his appearances, calling it "a cowardly call of terrorism," and declaring, "Our commitment to peace throughout the world is firm."
During his three-stop swing through Iowa, Reagan said Monday wanted to knock out farmers with a "one-two punch" — higher taxes and a trade policy that would hurt agricultural imports.
Mondale, speaking to 1.800 delegates at a convention of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, won the union's endorsement by acclamation, with a fire siren blaring in the hall.
After the speech he wrapped up a three-day West Coast campaign swing and departed for Washington where he addressed 1,000 people at the black tie Congressional Hispanic Caucus annual dinner.
In Seattle, a few hecklers were present outside the hall where he spoke, but inside the audience was solidly on his side.
ASKED IF HE believes the persistent hecking he and his running mate Geraldine Ferraro have received recently is being done on Reagan's behalf, he said. "I do not know, but I do know that every place we go we are receiving this now."
But a key official in Mondale's California campaign sought a formal apology yesterday from the Reagan Bush campaign for what he called its "orchestrated beckoning" of Mondale during a rally Tuesday at the University of Southern California
"We aren't opposed to heckling, to people expressing their opposition to Walter Mondale." State Sen. Art Torres said, "but we are opposed to dirty tricks, like orchestrated
Reagan was asked if his supporters are organizing the heckling, and he replied: "Good Lord, no. I wish people wouldn't do it. Just guess, if the speaker has the right
WHITE HOUSE DEPUTY press secretary Larry Speakes told reporters "hecklers are a fact of life in politics."
to be heard, they have a right to be heard. It is rade and it shouldn't be done."
"We've had them. We've had them in strong numbers," he said. "There's nothing I can do about people who go to Mondale rallies."
Mondale also announced yesterday he appointed New Mexico Gov. Toney Anaya as national co-chairman of the Mondale-Ferraro campaign.
Mondale, however, said if any of his people did the same thing to Reagan, "I'd stop them."
In Arlington, Texas, Geraldine Ferraro stood up to hecklers yesterday — one who shouted "Go back to the kitchen" — when she tried to lambasthe Reagan at a rally at the University of Texas at Arlington.
The heckling took place two days after Mondale received the worst taunting of his campaign at the University of Southern California.
AT THE UNIVERSITY of Texas, as she tried to give a speech attacking Reagan, Ferrari was repeatedly interrupted by loud chants of "Four more years" and "Reagan," from large groups scattered in the crowd of more than 4,000 students.
One young man, who later declined to give his name, shouted. "Go back to the kitchen
UAW, GM agree on contract
By United Press International
The agreement was announced just after 1 a.m. today, following a 15-hour bargaining session. The union made new proposals to the company late last night.
DETROIT - The United Auto Workers union announced early today that it had reached a tentative agreement with General Motors Corp. on a new national contract covering 350,000 hourly workers.
company have most hires.
The old contract between GM and the UAW expired a week ago. Since then, about 91,300 workers walked picket lines at 17 of GM's 29 U.S. assembly plants in strikes sanctioned by the union. At 23 GM parts plants, 18,845 workers were laid off because of the walkouts.
The union has called a meeting for Wednesday in St. Louis of the 300-member GM Council of local leaders and shop chairmen. The council will consider the new contract before it is presented to workers for ratification.
NO DETAILS WERE immediately available.
UAW President Owen Bieber termed the agreement "an excellent settlement that makes more secure than ever in history the jobs of our UAW-GM workers, while providing much-deserved economic improvements immediately and in the years ahead."
Bieber said the contract included a job security program that would protect workers against the loss of jobs due to the practice of shipping work to non-company sources — called "outsource."
Jobs also will be protected against the introduction of new technology, plant consolidations and other GM actions. The automaker also promised to maintain production and create new jobs in the United States.
Bieber said the contract called for added wages, which most likely will be lump-sum payments that are not folded into the base hourly rate. Also included are improvements in pension plans. The current profit sharing plan includes workers' $40 apiece in 1983, will be continued
BIEBER SAID THE contract was approved by the national negotiating committee made up of 11 members from around the country.
He had said yesterday afternoon there still were "major sticking points" on wages and benefits and job security — the two issues that have snagged talks throughout
Bieber said striking workers should return to their jobs as soon as possible.
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September 21, 1984 Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Today is last day to add classes or change sections
Today is the last day to add a course or change class sections.
Sept. 28 will be the last day to drop a course without receiving a grade of "W" (withdrawal) or "F" (fail).
Press club to sponsor debate
Students may add or drop classes from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. and from 1 to 4:30 p.m. at the Enrollment Center, 111 Strong Hall.
Candidates for Douglas County district attorney will debate during the Lawrence Press Club meeting 6:30 p.m. Monday at the Eldridge House, Seventh and Massachusetts streets.
Burge Union closed tomorrow
Jim Flory, Republican candidate on leave from the Kansas attorney general's office, and Mike Glover, Democratic candidate and city prosecutor, will speak on how they would deal with the local media if elected.
The Frank R. Burge Union will be closed tomorrow while a new electrical transformer is installed. The Burge Union, which will be without electricity during the installation, will reopen at 7 a.m. Monday. It is not open on Sundays.
Haskell exhibit rescheduled
An exhibit titled "The First Americans: Celebrating 100 Years of Haskell" has been rescheduled for Oct. 19 at the Spencer Research Library. The exhibit and an accompanying panel discussion were originally scheduled for today.
Workshop to examine careers
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor a career workshop from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.
Research awards to be given
The purpose of the workshop, "Career Exploration for Women," will be to examine values, philosophies and lifestyles as they affect career choices
Barbara W. Ballard, associate dean of student life and coordinator of the Women's Resource Center, will conduct the workshop.
For more information, call 664-3532 or stop by the Women's Resource Center at 218 Strong Hall.
High school students and students and faculty at the University of Kansas College of Health Sciences will be recognized at the third annual Research Day on Oct. 5 at Battentfield Auditorium on the University of Kansas Medical Center campus
Three professors from the College of Health Sciences will receive faculty research awards.
They are Kurt E. Ebner, professor and chairman of the department of biochemistry; Joe R. Kimmel, associate chief of staff for research and development at the Veteran's Administration Medical Center; and Frederick Samson Jr., director of the Ralph L. Smith Center for Mental Retardation and Human Development.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy and the high will be in the mid. to upper 80s. Winds of 15 to 20 mph will be from the south. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a low in the lower 60s and a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy with a chance for showers and thundershowers and a high in the mid-80s.
Do you have an idea for a story or a photograph?
Where to call
philology appl
If so, call the Kansan at 864-4310. If your idea or news release deals with campus or area news, ask for Doug Cunningham, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, ask for Susan Wortman, entertainment editor. For sports news, ask for Greg Damman, sports editor
Photo suggestions should go to Dave Hornback, photo editor.
Hornback, photo editor.
For other questions or complaints, ask for Don Knox, editor, or Paul Sevart, managing editor.
imaging editor The number of the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising, is 364.4810.
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
By JULIE COMINE Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The leaves on the trees are still green, and students are still wearing their best Bermuda shorts.
shorts.
Although fall officially arrives at 3:33 p.m.
tomorrow, it was nowhere to be seen on
campus yesterday.
campus masters soaked students to their knees in the 89-degree afternoon, and a half-dozen sunbathers lounged by the swimming pool at Jayhawker Towers apartments.
12
A crowd decked out in Hawaiian shorts, sleeveless T-shirts and sunglasses packed Wescoe beach.
Wesco beach.
Sun-lovers, take heart. The unofficial arrival of fall, forecasters say, won't be for two to three weeks.
two to three weeks.
"What most people think of as autumn lags behind the astronomical definition of the season," Barbara Anthony- Twarog, assistant professor of physics and astronomy, said yesterday.
10.25.2024
yesterday.
THAT DEFINITION IS the equinox, when the sun will cross the equator. All parts of the globe will receive approximately equal amounts of sunlight — 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of darkness.
John Boyce, Prairie Village senior and late-night disc jockey with KJHK, took advantage of the nice weather yesterday afternoon to take a nap on the bridge by Potter Lake.
"People will begin to notice changes in a week or two," she said. "The days will get shorter the sun will set earlier."
So don't drag out the electric blanket just vet.
And leave that rake in the garage. The leaves are still preparing for their yearly costume change to red, orange and gold
The forecast for the first day of autumn, according to Kevin Stevens of the KU Weather Service, is for mostly cloudy skies and a high of 88 degrees.
BOB BRUNKER, BURBANK, III., junior,
spent the noon hour yesterday on Wescoe
Beach, sitting in the sunshine with friends.
"It's sure not going to be very fall-like." Stevens said.
"Fall! It will 80 degrees out. Brunker took Brunker and he thought of fall as "just a transition" between summer and winter, his two favorite seasons.
"Fall is depressing and boring," he said.
"I'm waiting for that first thin layer of snow on the ground."
on the ground.
Laura Reid, Mission freshman, said her favorite childhood memories of fall were of jumping into piles of multicolored leaves.
The leaves on the campus trees should start changing colors about the first week of October, said Craig Martin, assistant professor of botany.
"But when you're older, and you have to rake those leaves, it's not so fun," she said.
sor of binary.
DEPENDING ON THE species, leaves will turn colors based on shifts in temperature and shifts in day length, Martin said.
Elm trees will turn bright gold, while maples, oaks and sumacs will turn a variety of reds, he said.
Martin said he had mixed feelings about the first day of autumn.
From a researcher's standpoint, "Martin said, 'it's a time when things begin to go dormant, which means I have to do all my studies indoors
so cool. "But from an aesthetic standpoint, it's lovely. It's really invigorating to walk outside in weather that's not so oppressively hot."
IN BALDWIN, JUST 12 miles south of Lawrence, Blanch Wise and her co-workers are gearing up for the city's 27th annual Maple Leaf Festival on Oct. 29 and 21.
Jim Mathes, assistant director of land.
The leaf raking season for facilities operations begins in November and can continue until January — depending on the amount of snowfall, Mathes said.
scape maintenance for facilities operations, said this was the peak lawn moving season for campus crews
Mathes said autumn was 'nice weather to work in, but it's a awful tough to figure out how to dress for. You'll wear a coat in the morning, work up a sweat and take it off after about 1 oclock
after about 10 minutes.
"But by quitting time, the sun's going down, and you wish you had that coat with you."
Committee suggests cut in programs
By MARY CARTER Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The bachelor of general studies programs in East Asian, Slavic, French and Italian languages at the University of Kansas should be discontinued, the Academic Affairs Committee of the Board of Regents recommended yesterday.
academic artworks. The committee also suggested that KU's East Asian Studies program be re-classified as Asiatic Languages.
The degrees were considered no longer in use by a Regents program review team, said Martine Hammond, Regents director of academic affairs.
The full Board will review the recommendations today.
The proposed changes at KU and similar changes at other Regents schools are part of a five-year cycle of program reviews launched last year by the Regents.
Also at today's meeting, the board will hear a review by an independent team that has examined education programs at Regents schools.
gents schools.
Stanley Koplik. Regents executive director, said that the changes would affect a minimum of students.
"I can't say how many in numbers," he said, "but it's probably fair to say that fewer than 20 will be affected."
than 20 will be directed.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said that students would still be able to obtain bachelors degrees in the four specified languages. Only the bachelor of general studies degrees would be eliminated.
Regent Patricia W. Caruthers, Kansas City, Kan., said "In my opinion, a bachelor of general studies is no preparation to go out into the world of work. It worthless. We went along with it in the '60s and '70s to keep everybody happy."
The committee also suggested that KU drop its program for a graduate certificate of proficiency in Russian and Slavic Studies.
proactivity in this research.
"That program no longer is meaningful. It is no longer encouraged by the faculty," said Hammond.
Hammond Sandra McMullen, Academic Affairs Committee chairman, said, "We are not in any way trying to downgrade foreign languages. It is just the opposite. We are trying to make the existing programs better."
If the Regents approve the recommendations then no new students will be allowed to enroll. Students who are enrolled in the programs will be allowed to finish.
The committee also recommended that KU's African Studies program submit a status report to the Regents each year for the next two years, and that the University extend its efforts to strengthen the program by using faculty with complementary interests in African Studies.
KU faculty, staff like higher wages in budget proposal
Staff Reporter
By HOLLIE B. MARKLAND
The University of Kansas' proposed fiscal year 1986 budget, which would provide a 10.9 percent increase over present financing, met with approval yesterday from administrators, faculty and staff.
The faculty is generally supportive of the proposed budget, the KU president of the American Association of University Professors said yesterday.
"It's tough for the individual to weigh the pros and cons of putting together a budget," said Sidney Shapiro, the president and a professor of law, "but we believe the University sets high goals for faculty salaries."
salaries.
The proposed $178,831,755 budget for fiscal year 1966 asks for a 7 percent salary increase for classified and unclassified employees and a 1 percent increase in retirement benefits for unclassified staff.
budget is the most optimistic of three proposals submitted to the state.
Shapiro said many faculty members had been wondering whether the Kansas Legislature would continue generous financing of the University.
ADMINISTRATORS SUBMITTED THE budget to operate, maintain and improve KU to the state budget office this week. The
"It's a pivotal year," Shapiro said. "The faculty is looking toward Topeka and asking what's their intention."
Joe Collins, president of Classified Senate,
said. "If it is 7 percent, it's wonderful. It's a real shot in the arm for classified staff and faculty."
faculty. In 1982-83, classified staff members received a 2 percent raise, and in 1983-84, a 4 percent increase. Collins said.
graduate.
Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs, said that with the base salary increases, the University was trying to attain the average salary of teaching assistants at schools comparable to KU.
(p)
GRADUATE TEACHING ASSISTANTS would receive a 19.9 percent salary increase and a 75 percent fee waiver in the 1985-86 school year under the proposed budget. The budget also would create 10.5 part-time graduate teaching assistants.
The budget also provides for 35 more student hourly wage jobs on campus.
Tam Houston, coordinator of student employment and assistant director of financial aid, said the on-campus jobs were very much needed.
This year, she said, only 22 student jobs were created, and some students still may be without jobs.
many on-campus jobs require clerical skills like typing that many students don't have," she said.
SHE SAID THAT she would like for students to be paid according to the responsibility of the job, but that departments often did not have enough money to pay student employees adequately.
The proposed budget also includes a 15 percent increase for utilities, and a 7 percent increase for other operating expenses, including departmental supplies. An additional $430,156 is requested to hook up utilities in the Haworth Hall addition, the Fred B. Anschutz Pavilion and a botany lab on west campus.
The budget also asks for $315,000 for min-
m and micro-computers in several departments and $100,000 to expand the central University computer system
University Computer To establish a new bachelor of science program in computer engineering, the budget asks for four faculty positions and $110,000 for equipment, at a total cost of $266,990. The program would teach the design and development of computer systems. Nitcher said.
THE BUDGET PROCESS began in June, Notcher said, when administrators from the Regents schools submitted budgets to the Board of Regents. The board uses the budget proposals to determine base increases for the schools.
Although administrators favor the $178 million budget, they submitted two alternatives to the state budget office.
One proposal, the most stringent of the three, is based on $169.036.256 for the total budget. If that budget were implemented, supplies, library acquisitions and equipment would have to be drastically reduced, Nitcher said.
The second proposal is based on $171,989,893.
TALLY HO, DEE GEES...
Ships ahoy and blow me down The D.G. ships are party bound To a treasure hunt we're wayward bound That pirates hid in Lawrence town.
So
An
For
Is w
So, drag up your anchors And pull in the plank For the first place you'll dock Is where a D.G. might bank.
THE BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS PRESENTS:
T. G.I.F.
COGBURNS Fri., Sept. 21 2-5 pm
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FREE For All Class Card Holders $3 For Non-Class Card Holders —Cards Available At The Door Senior T-Shirts Also Available
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- 6 month raise
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Apply at: Schumm Food Co. office 7191/2 Mass.
"above the Smokehouse"
between 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
September 21, 1984
Page 4
OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kansas (USPK 626-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuaffer Fint Hall, Lawen, Kansas 6045, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawen, Kansas 6044. Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student addresses should be addressed to Stuaffer Fint Hall, Lawen, Kansas 6045. Address changes to the University Daily Kansas (USPK 626-640) are
DON KNOX
Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE HESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
DAVE WANAMAKER Business Manager
DOUG CUNNINGHAM Campus Editor
SUSANNE SHAW
General Manager and News Adviser
LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager
JILL GOLDBLATT Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
To sleep or not
Sleep easily wins out over breakfast on Saturday mornings for many students. The chairman of the Association of University Residence Halls Housing and Contracts committee said that out of 400 residents in his hall, only 20 to 30 showed up for breakfast on Sundays.
The recommendation of the AURH general assembly to discontinue the meal in an effort to reduce rising housing costs was a reasonable one in the search for cost-cutting measures.
Residents who do want to eat at what seems to many an unreasonable hour of the morning will find continental breakfasts or sack lunches available.
The change was one of several recommendations approved Tuesday by the AURH assembly after four hours of debate.
The Saturday breakfast recommendation seems to be one that should need little discussion before adoption. Such changes are the kind that are most useful. Costs can be cut and only a few people face minor inconveniences.
Although housing rates will still probably increase for the 1985-86 school year, changes can help keep rate increases to a minimum.
A wise move now is to examine closely all operations within the halls and see whether other money-saving changes can be made.
Election reform
Article Six of the Student Senate Rules and Regulations concerns that most important of Senate happenings: the election of the student senators and officers. But Article Six took a beating after the November election last year when complaints were filed, ballots were recounted and the election was finally thrown out.
Now it seems that something good may finally come of it all. Earlier this week, the Student Senate Rights Committee approved a package of amendments that add to and clarify the existing election rules.
The amendments include candidate eligibility requirements; guidelines for election oversight; rules governing coalition, independent and write-in candidates; mandatory campaign audits and penalties for election violations.
The amendments don't cover all of the issues faced during the fall election, such as the problems with the ballot system. Those questions need to be pursued.
This package, however, is a big step in the right direction, and the Senate should endorse these reforms.
Whitewashing
An error appeared in the "Huck Finn at 100" editorial yesterday. The editorial mentioned "Huckleberry Finn, a poor boy, and Tom, a runaway slave." Jim was the slave; Tom was Tom Sawyer. The negligent editor will follow his own advice and read the book.
Change occurs, in spite of resistance
I have an old photo of my parents as KU students, taken during the 1947-48 school year. It serves as a reminder that life in can play a major role in change, do change.
The photo shows my mom and dad as college sweethearts. They are sitting among close fraternity and sorority friends at a table in their favorite nightclub. The group is celebrating the fact that my dad had just given his fraternity pin to my mom. Everyone is smiling.
Today, the Dynamite is just a memory along the fast-food wasteland that is 23rd Street. My mom's sorority house is now a KU office. My dad's fraternity house burned down several years ago. The store where I lived was my pen is now a tavern. My parents have been divorced for 11 years.
In time comes change.
Change, however, can be frightening. It is human nature to resist change, but that is silly because change is so much a part of our everyday lives.
I doubt that, at the moment the photo was taken, my folks suspected that their little world would change so much in the future. I keep the picture so that I will recognize the inevitability of change in my life.
There are changes in the weather, changes of heart and changes of seasons.
JOHN
SIMONSON
Staff Columnist
Change can take place swiftly
the dermine of a snowman on a warm
day. Change can be very gradual
the altering of the face of the Grand
The point is that change is inherent in life. We are born, we grow old, we die.
You can change your mind, change partners or change your socks.
Still, people resist change in some things. Change in a way of life is unsettling. There is comfort in living when life remains the same. There is confusion in unfamiliarity.
The problem is that as people live their lives, they bring about change in the world. As the world changes, the way we interact with change the way life increases.
"Change means the unknown," Eleanor Roosevelt said. "It means too many people cry insecurity. Nonsense! No one from the beginning of time has had security."
The great lady was right. But before the 20th Century, people did not have to deal with change as rapidly as they have during the last 100 years. The technological advancements made in this century have enhanced the necessity for changes in day-to-day living.
We Americans, however, continue to resist change as much as we can. We live in an age of toxic waste that threatens our environment, of world hunger that could kill millions, of nuclear weapons that could destroy
the earth. We are faced with a future of more of the same.
Yet we elect leaders who appeal to our reluctance to change. They tell us there is no danger, that everything will be all right. No need to worry about the 1990s; let's live as we did in the 1950s.
So we make our money and we buy our toys and we live the good life. We keep our women in the kitchens and bedrooms and our minorities in the slums. We pound the Bible and chastise society's sinners. And we talk touch to the rest of the world because America still knows best.
When will we realize that we are just a small part of a huge world? When will we decide to address the people? When will we face the future? When will we face the future?
We need to loosen our grip on our past. We should not let go entirely; continuity is important. But foresight is more vital than tradition.
A famous social critic, Henry George, wrote. "There is danger in reckless change, but greater danger in blind conservatism."
We need a change.
Trip dispels teen's Soviet stereotypes
The column about Margaret Hosti, the 17-year-old girl from Chicago who joined the Army National Guard, provoked a lot of response. Margaret said she had joined the Guard because she feared an eventual ground war with Soviet troops on U.S. soil; she said she wanted to be prepared to defend her neighborhood.
Some people reacted to the column by backing Margaret; some thought she was going way overboard. The most interesting response, however, was from Michelle Goldberg, 18, of Wheeling, Ill.
"I'm almost the same age as that girl you talked to." Michelle wrote, "but I couldn't disagree with her more. And I think I know what I'm talking about — I just got back from a trip to the Soviet Union."
want to invade our country, that's just not the feeling I got over there at all. I know this sounds like a cliche to say — but they're just people like we are. There are good ones and bad ones and medium ones.
She said that she had visited the Soviet Union with a group of about 20 other young people. Now that she was in the United States by the attitude of young Americans.
"I get this real feeling of 'bomb the Russians' from people my own age," she said. "The sentiment I'm picking up is that people are thinking, 'Get the Russians off the Earth.' It's as if they believe that the Russians are all walking around with guns, just getting ready to attack us."
She said that she was far from pro-Soviet, or anti-American: "Look, I'm not a communist. God bless America. I love capitalism."
business America. "I hope you
"But if that girl you wrote about is
under the impression that the RUS-
sian people hate all Americans and
"We went to the circus in Lening-
grad, and all of us in our group sat in
A. S. BROTHERTON
BOB
GREENE
Syndicated
Columnist
one row. There were a couple of seats at the end of the row, and these two Russian girls sat there. As soon as they found out we were Americans, they became so friendly much friendlier than strangers in the United States are. They were giving us pins to wear on our shirts, and they were asking us all kinds of questions about America."
She told about a time when she and her group were walking along the street. "This guy came up to us. We were wearing Nikes and jeans, and the guy said, 'Oh, man, are you Americans?' He was a musician; believe it or not, he was wearing an IPhone. Then he got it. We were talking about what Americans and Russians think of each other, and he said he didn't want to blow anyone up. he was just interested in American music."
She said that in the resort town of Sochi, her group talked to some teen-agers on the street. When the conversation had ended, the Russian teen-agers were approached by men who asked them official officials, who escorted away.
"I feel so sorry for them, living in a country where something like that is a way of life." Michelle said. "Obviously, they could get into trouble for something as simple as talking to Americans. I get the impression that the people there feel totally helpless to contradict the government in any way. I feel that they're trapped; visiting the Soviet Union made me feel much more patriotic toward America
"In Leningrad there was this school behind our hotel. We played soccer with the Russian students there every day, and we talked and we laughed together ... they said that there was no way that they wanted to invade our country.
"I was really sad to leave those people, because they had become my friends. And when I hear people my age talking about 'killing the Russians', I guess I think about it a little differently." The other person in the Russians, I think in terms of them killing those kids I was playing soccer with."
Michelle said, "I guess once you know people, it's hard to stereotype them quite so quickly."
I ♥ THE
EVIL
EMPIRE
Apartheid is day-to-day reality for manv
It is a pleasant, sunny Wednesday afternoon in Lawrence. Earlier today, a few hundred people gathered here on the lawn in front of Watson Library. They engaged in protest, speeches, consciousness raising
Most students walked by without paying much attention. Just another protest. Boring
But in a place far away from here,
It is dark and late almost midnight.
And life is not so boring for
the more than 20 million blacks who make up 72 percent of South Africa's population. They live under a system that is literally killing them.
This week is South Africa Week, so designated to encourage people to learn more about apartheid, the system of institutionalized discrimination that is a way of life in South Africa.
For years, a group of students has been trying to convince the Kansas University Endowment Association
To the Editor
As a Nicaraguan citizen, I would like to respond to Art Thomas' objections to the appointment of Mariano Fiallos to the Rose Morgan professorship of political science
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Fiallos' background justifies appointment
pictures. I am proud to have someone with the background of Fiallo as president of my country's Supreme Election Council. He earned his doctorate in political science at the University of Kansas in 1968. He also studied in Paris, and in countries in the Western Hemisphere.
To the editor:
in Nicaragua
Thanks to people like Fiallo,
Nicaragua enjoys, to some extent,
political freedom. Maybe Thomas
would like to confirm what I say
by reading recent editions of the
independent Nicaraguan newspaper La
Prensa in Watson Library. In this
paper it is easy to find articles oper-
ticizing the Sandinista regime.
the West Bank.
It is a relief to know that the architect of our electoral process was not educated in the Eastern bloc. Maybe Thomas is questioning the political science department at KU
Fialios is a moderate in the Nicaraguan government. His position is difficult and delicate. He struggles every day to keep Nicaragua from becoming a totalitarian teetifist country. He defends freedom of speech and fights for a free press in Nicaragua.
appointment with that of "a member of a Nazi puppet government" is absurd. It would be interesting to find out how much open criticism and freedom of expression the Nazi government tolerated. Thomas might also be interested in finding out who really installs and supports despotic rightist dictatorships in Latin America, such as the Somoza and Pinoctet regimes, and would be regimes that do resemble Nazi puppet governments.
By accepting his appointment to KU, Fiaulos is showing an interest for our alma mater and its educational system. Otherwise, he would probably have gone to an Eastern blocation.
Thomas' comparison of Fiallos
Leonel Aguilar
Political reform
Leon, Nicaragua, senior
We build authority on morality, and so, too, morality has its foundation. This foundation of morality is the respect towards and recognition of ultimate order river, who has the authority to establish right and wrong.
As we listen daily to the persuasion of our candidates, we do well to remember that government, civil society and others have their foundations in morality.
To the editor:
We must resist looking for scapegoats. Corrupt institutions are simply made up of individuals like ourselves. Genuine reform needs to begin in individuals. We can reform if we are reformed. The sovereign government or self-reformation. Read the first five chapters of the Gospel of John.
Morality, then, is shaped by the respect and recognition of God, who, if ignored, leads us to ignorant morality, and finally to incompetent government. Incompetent government ultimately leads a nation to decline
Chuck Vanasse '84 Lawrence alumnus
Campus planning
to stop putting its money in companies that invest there, but a lot of people disagree.
To the editor:
Of course, the statistics are no secret:
It was好去 to see that you printed Doug McKay's gentle rebuke to the athletic department (Sept. 12 letter). Most of the readers would not realize the background to some of the concerns that McKay identifies.
- Average monthly pay for a black in the mining industry is $250, for a white. $1,395.
As 1 understand the situation, a car park has been constructed with 75 spaces on the southwest corner of 11th and Maine streets. The area designated for parking north from the area designated in the proposed parking development
plan (Campus Plan, 2.3.0.6, revised December 1977), and I, estimate, intrudes 180 feet north into the area designated "to be preserved" (Campus Plan, Open Space Plan, 2.2.0.8, revised December 1974).
This original, that is, 1974, decision obviously has not been superseded as can be seen through an examination of the two maps.
I wish to make two points. First, our University should be bound by its own published guidelines on matters of campus planning, and not the special needs of a few. In this case, the need for overflow parking that will be used, at most, eight or times a year should be the general neighbors, students, faculty and visitors. The missions of the 1974 Open Spaces Proposal recognize the landscape importance of this space as similar to the intentional gaps left between buildings on Jayhawk Boulevard.
- Blacks earn 29.7 percent of total wages, whites, 38.7 percent.
The second point is that there does not appear to be adequate public notice about proposals of this magnitude so that the larger community can be certain that the published plans are being followed and the sensible intentions with regard to open spaces are being properly implemented.
Assistant professor of architecture & urban design
MICHAEL
ROBINSON
Staff Columnist
A. S.
- Per capita spending on education is $170 for blacks, $1,115 for whites; pupil-teacher ratio 39 to 1 for blacks. 18 to 1 for whites.
- Infant mortality is 90 deaths for every 1,000 births for blacks. 13 for every 1,000 for whites
- The list goes on and on, but opponents of divestiture counter with a list of their own.
- Blacks have no voting privileges, and after age 16 must be fingerprinted and carry pass book identification cards.
But those companies are fighting a
They point to the good things that U.S. companies are doing there to the equal employment opportunity follow in their South African factories.
bill in Congress that would require all U.S. firms to follow these guidelines. The truth is that South African investment is very profitable — too profitable to go very far out on a limb.
U. S. investors and policy makers say that economic boycotts and sanctions would at best be unproductive, and would at worst underline South Africa and drive it into the Soviet camp.
But that didn't stop America from boycotting Cuba, Poland and Nicaragua when we disapproved of those countries' actions. And we used the military in those years our eventual detriment is in places like Iran and Nicaragua.
The final argument of the antic
divestment forces is that we
shouldn't pick on poor South Africa
when there are major human rights
violators like the Soviet Union
around.
But this point of view simply defies logic. It's like saying we shouldn't taste our time arresting rapist and still have a few still murderer running around.
Now, it is getting dark in
Lawrence, too. The crowd that was in
front of Watson has left, the students
have gone home.
But in that far place, they will be facing in a few hours to go to work, if aren’t unpleased with their area or in jail for being a union organizer or protestor.
They can't walk away from apart- heid.
LETTERS POLICY
---
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten and 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 hometown, or faculty or staff position. The Kansan also includes members 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.
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University Daily Kansan, September 21 1984
Page 5
Liquor continued from p.1
liquor to create more problems."
Swenson denied Hephner's charges
"We deal in a political system," he said.
"When you deal with an issue as controversial as this, people are bound to accuse you of making political moves."
Charlton also commented on Hephner's organization, but she referred to the head of the group, the Rev. Richard Taylor, who was not available for comment.
"THE REV. TAYLOR would tell you that a vote to put the issue on the ballot is a vote in support of liquor by the drink," she said. "I don't buy that. A vote to let the people vote is the right thing."
the right thing.
Liquor laws never should have been in the state constitution in the first place, Charlton said.
one constitution is not a place for morality," she said. "It's supposed to set up our state government and protect civil rights, that's all."
Ace Johnson, owner of The Sanctuary, 1401 W. 7th St., and a member of the board of directors for the Kansas Association for
Topkita on change. "The system is complicated and it's ridiculous," he said. "I think the change has a good chance of passing this time around."
Private Clubs, said he frequently lobbied in Topeka to change Kansas liquor laws.
MANY KANSANS ARGUE that with the present lqwr laws, which allow clubs to reciprocate, the state already has liquor by the drink to a certain extent.
the drink for a certain cause.
Although The Sanctuary reciprocates with about 250 clubs, Johnson said the laws made reciprocating difficult.
"What we have now is a sham," she said. "We actually have liquor by the drink now, but just not very honestly."
Branson said the reciprocating club law made Kansas lour laws hypocritical.
reciprocating different "In order to reciprocate, clubs must do at least 50 percent of their business in food," he said. "It's not that easy. If we didn't do so much catering, it'd be hard for me to make the 50 percent mark."
Swenson said that perception nau caused other states to criticize Kansas laws.
Francisco, who teaches courses in international politics, said that the attack probably would increase the U.S. administration's resolve to combat terrorism. But he said U.S. officials could do little to prevent well-planned attacks by fanatical groups.
"Governments have not figured out a way to stop it," he said.
Bombing continued from p. i
Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science, agreed that there was no way to stop a terrorist group bent on violent action.
BECAUSE GOVERNMENTS CAN do little to halt terrorism, Ketel said he doubted that Americans would blame Reagan or his foreign policy for the tragedy.
"If somebody wants to do this, they're going to do it." he said.
Ketzel, who specializes in U.S. foreign policy, said he didn't think any officials would demand the return of the U.S. Embassy staff, one of the few retaliatory measures open to the president.
Ketzel said that the United States could decrease its staff at the embassy but that a
"I can't imagine anyone who wants to bring some sort of peace there pulling out," he said. "This administration or any administration is not going to want to imply that it's being intimidated."
major cutback would undermine the purpose of the embassy's presence
ALLAN CIGLER, PROFESSOR of political science, said that Democratic officials probably would not use the bombing to attack Reagan's foreign policy unless it were determined that U.S. security around the embassy, which opened in the eastern Christian sector of the city Aug. 2, was lax.
sector of the enemy truck bombing killed 241 After a terrorist truck bombing killed 241 U.S. servicemen at Marine headquarters in Beirut in October 1983, a Pentagon investigation revealed that security measures around the base had been inadequate
case yesterday.
Cigler, who will teach a course on the 1984 elections later this fall, said presidential candidate Walter Mondale had no choice but to proclaim his support of the president's efforts to find the criminals.
Cigler said he was sure that was not the case yesterday.
for it to find the answer. "It would almost be a violation of unwritten rules to use a tragedy for partisan advantage." he said.
ISlamic JIHAD, a mysterious terrorist group loyal to the Iranian leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, claimed responsibility for the bombing.
Charlie Harris (right) and Bud Vantul, sheet metal workers for Huxtable & Associate Inc. of Lawrence, work inside the new skywalk that connects the Haworth Hall addition with Malott Hall. Allen Wiechert, KU director of facilities planning, said yesterday that the skywalk would be finished by January.
Meese continued from p. 1
Reagan said Meese "is one of the most decent and honorable men I ever known so I'm not surprised by the outcome. . . I imitate if I am re-elected, to resubmit his nomination as soon as Congress convenes in January."
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., has postponed the confirmation hearings until next year because of the political overtones.
because on the phone.
Stein found no criminal wrongdoing in Meese's activities — including his failure to report on his financial disclosure statement a $15,000 loan from a personal friend. Edwin Thomas, who later gave a White House post
THE REPORT DISCLOSED that Thomas, on his second interview with investigators, acknowledged that he had told Meese in February 1981, when they were preparing their financial statements, "not to forget" the loan to Meese's wife. It said Meese did not recall the reminder.
propriety of Meese's activities or his fitness to serve as attorney general, and in evaluating Meese's failure to disclose the loan, he noted the Justice Department prosecutes such a lapse only in the "most egregious cases."
egregiofs cases.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D.Mass., who fought the Meees nomination in committee, said, "In all fairness, the questions examined and resolved should no longer be part of the confirmation process," but added he still has "real doubts" about Meese's sensitivity to civil rights and civil liberties issues.
Stein stressed in the report that it was not his job, to draw conclusions about the
SEN, HOWARD METZERBAUM, D-Ohio, who spearheaded the effort to block Meese's nomination, said the Stein report is "replete with contradictory statements" and added there appear to be "numerous cases" where testimony given to Stein was at variance with that given to the Judiciary Committee.
that Mr. Meese should not be confirmed to be attorney general."
at the five-month investigation included questioning 200 witnesses as well as grand jury testimony by Meese and his wife, Ursula.
Stein said there was no evidence that Meese intentionally concealed the $15,000 loan or helped Thomas land a federal job. The report also said there was no favoritism involved when Thomas' wife, Gretchen, and son Tad, got government jobs.
THE REPORT SAD there was no evidence Meese and his wife were involved in inside trading when they used the $15,000 to purchase stock in Biotech, a company owned by a friend.
a friend.
The special prosecutor also found no impropriety in connection with a $60,000 loan Meese got from his accountant, John McKeean, who later was appointed to the U.S. Postal Service Board of Governors. The report said there was no connection between the loan and McKeean's appointment
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8
University Daily Kansan, September 21, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
Board asked to route bus to West Campus
By AMBER ANKERHOLZ Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas Transportation Board last night asked the Lawrence Bus Co to provide more information on costs and riders before making a decision about a proposed West Camps bus route.
Duane Ogle, president of the Lawrence Bus Co., which provides the KU on Wheels bus service, said last night that he would provide more than 100 buses and the cost of the new routes at the board's next meeting in two weeks.
Ogle submitted ideas for two new routes that would serve West Bend.
The first proposal involved ex-
Providing the 30-minute service from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. would cost about $34,737 a year, according to calculations by Nancy Anderson, coordinator of the Transportation Board.
In other action, Anderson told the board that she had advised Rob Hunter, chairman of the Transportation Board, to submit his resignation to Carla Vogel, student body president, because of his continued absences from the meetings.
Judge enters not-guilty plea in arraignment of teen-ager
A not-guilty plea was entered yesterday for a Lawrence teen-ager charged with felony murder, rape and aggravated robbery in connection with the death last month of an 80-year-old Lawrence woman.
Mike Malone, associate Douglas County District Court judge, entered the plea as Donald E. Alexander, 18, of New York, who stood mute on all three charges.
Constitutional law requires a judge to enter a not-guilty plea when a defendant stands mute.
By the Kansan Staff
Malone set Alexander's trial for 9
a. m. Nov. 26. The pre-trial will be at 3:30 p.m. Nov. 2. All motions must be made by Oct. 22 and responses to motions must be made by Oct. 29.
After the arrangement, Alexander was returned to the Douglas County school district.
At a preliminary hearing Monday, David Reavis and Mike McCaffrey, Lawrence police detectives, and Ron Blum, Kansas Bureau of Investigation special agent, testified about the shooting that Alexandria made on Aug. 22.
Alexander is charged in connection with the death of Marguerite L. Vinyard, whose body was discovered Aug. 5 in her home at 2100 Tennessee.
COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
SAN DIEGO COUNTY UNIVERSITY
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R Lawrence, left, and Lawrence Seaman Hall. The men, who debated yesterday, are running for the 2nd Jr. talk over political matters during an informal debate in Green District Senate seat.
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
School funds crucial,candidates sav
By SUZANNE BROWN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Kansas needs to increase financing for education, both state Senate candidates for the 2nd District said yesterday.
yesterday.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-
Lawrence, and his Democratic oponent,
Lawrence Seaman Jr., agreed on the need for higher teacher salaries at a noon forum sponsored by the Student Bar Association yesterday.
quality of our educational system,' Winter said.
winter suggested a possible one cent sales tax increase, coupled with an elimination of the state food tax, to provide funds for education. Seaman suggested a possible increase in state sales taxes.
"Our future has got to be in the
Winter said last week that the tax plan, which he first proposed in 1983, would raise $80 to $90 million for public schools each year.
He said he didn't know yet whether he would introduce the proposal in the 1985 legislative session if he was re-elected.
THE CANDIDATES, BOTH alumni of KU's School of Law, said education financing would be a key issue in the 1985 state legislative session, which begins in January. Winter said Kansas' stature among other states would be determined by its public schools.
"We're in a competition with other states," he said. "We can't sell Kansas for its geographical beauty."
Kansas schools have the potential to become one of the best state school systems in the country, but a lack of money has been a challenge. Winter said, 'Scores for Kansas
residents on last year's American College Testigation examination, a college entrance examination taken by the nation, ranked 10th in the nation, he said.
HOWEY, HE, SAID, Kansas primary and secondary schools ranked 48th nationally in the amount of state funds received.
Seanman said Kansas teachers had a morale and salary problem. To combat the feeling among teachers that their work is not appreciated. Seanman said he would favor a ranking of teachers salaries to reward superior teachers.
Profs say KU needs to review own programs
ON THE RECORD
A CAR STEREO EQUALIZER and seven cassette tapes were stolen from a 20-year-old KU student's car between 7 p.m. Tuesday and 8 a.m. Wednesday, Lawrence police said. The equalizer and tapes were valued at $267 50.
A CAR STEREO EQUALIZER,
four speakers and 10 cassette tapes
valued at $159.70, were stolen from a
38-year-old Lawrence woman's car
in the 1700 block of Maple Lane between 10 p.m. Tuesday and 1 p.m. Wednesday, Lawrence police said.
A 10-YEAR-OLD LAWRENCE girl was treated and released by Lawrence Memorial Hospital Wednesday after she strach a KU student's car while riding a bicycle at the intersection of Iowa and Harvard streets. The student was cited for failing to yield to a bicyclist in a crosswalk.
"That ought to be determined more by the faculty," said Arno Knapper,
By JOHN EGAN Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas should develop an internal procedure for reviewing and discontinuing undergraduate academic programs rather than giving the Board of Regents that power, members of the University Senate Executive Committee said yesterday.
chairman of SenEx. "The Board of Regents meetings and the committee meetings are really kind of perfor tency things."
Knapper said the Regents made such decisions without sufficient knowledge about the programs.
"I'd sure rather see us be a leader of the Board of Regents than the Board of Regents leading us in requirements," Knapper said.
Knapper's comments were in reaction to yesterday's Regents
meeting in Topeka. The Regents Academic Affairs Committee, after reviewing various programs at Regents schools, recommended the discontinuance of bachelor of general studies degrees for East Asian, Slavic, French and Italian languages.
Knapper, who attended the Regents meeting, said, "I just felt nervous over there when they were saying they felt good about their program reviews."
At a Regents meeting today, the board will vote on discontinuing those programs
Norman Yetman, a SeenEx member and a professor of American studies and sociology, said that in discontinuing programs, the Regents placed too much weight on how many jobs were generated by each program.
Knapper said. "That seems totally against my notion of what education should be about."
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 7
University Daily Kansan, September 21. 1984
Panel lauds reports on downtown
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
Two reports about downtown Lawrence from city officials received favorable reactions yesterday at a meeting of the Downtown Improvement Committee.
Dean Palos, city-county planner,
and Hannes Zacharias, city
management analyst, gave separate
presentations of information they
recently have compiled about down-
town Lawrence.
ratios, who is a graduate student at the School of Architecture and Urban Design, completed a study of downtown Lawrence with four other architecture graduate students. He said yesterday that the study
He said yesterday that the study
would help future downtown developers recognize the environment in which they were building.
"In the study, we attempted to find patterns in the buildings downtown." Palos said. "We didn't want to dictate design to anybody. We just wanted to try to sustain what's there."
DIC MEMBERS SAID they were pleased with the report, presented by Palos and Paul Caviness, Lawrence graduate student.
"This is a super report," said Hank Gwinshaw, BDI president. "But if we don't get the majority of downtown merchants to see this, it won't help."
Palos agreed and said that was why he and Caviness had produced a poster with the Downtown Lawrence
Association illustrating the study's findings. In Lauren's
The poster is on sale in Lawrence. Zucharias returned Wednesday from the "Kansas Main Street Conference" in Salina and gave a 30-minute presentation of his findings to the DIC yesterday.
owens.
"The Main Street Program shows downtown how to help themselves."
Zacharias said.
HE SAID THE focus of the two-day conference was to show about 100 representatives from Kansas communities how to revitalize downtowns.
One suggestion of the program, he said, was that communities form an organizational board outside of city government and chamber of commerce connections.
By CHRISSY CLEARY Staff Reporter
A record number of students flocked to Allen Field House yesterday for the third annual business career fair, according to the placement director at the School of Business.
Fair gives students, firms chance to chat
The business career fair acquaints students with companies that interview at the University of Kansas.
"We estimate between 800 and 1,000 students showed up this year compared with 700 last year." Fred Madaua, the director, said yesterday. "We had the normal number of students in the morning, but we also had a large
number in the afternoon too.
The reason for the increase in students could have stemmed from better advertising, Madaus said.
"We advertised more this year in Greek houses, dorms and newspapers and radio stations, plus we encouraged students from all levels interested in business careers to come to the fair," he said.
sato.
Students chatted with executives and hiring personnel from 67 companies, many of these companies will interview students this fall and spring.
One student has attended the business fair for two years and said the informal setting with potential employers was a good
way to become acquainted.
"There's no pressure of the interview," said Linda Barber, Leawood senior. "Plus, it's a good way to get background information on the businesses."
Sheryl White, an employee of the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, said the life fair also gave employers the opportunity to visit casually with students.
"When someone goes into an interview, he's very prepared." White said. "Here we can see students acting more naturally."
Dave Watson, a 1984 KU graduate now working for Western Paper, said the career fairs he had attended as a student helped open doors and provided information on all types of careers.
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TRIAD 1984
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Page 8
CAMPUS AND AREA
Apartheid may end with unity, two say
By CHRISSY CLEARY Staff Reporter
Students can help halt the Republic of South Africa's controversial practice of apartheid if they put pressure on their governments, an Indian woman and an African political refugee said last night.
"Young people of the world must unite and really redo some time and within five years something is going to happen." Anima Bose, author of a book about Mahatma Gandhi and an alumna of KU, who became a KuTU told a small group gathered at Smith Auditorium last night.
"How close are youth groups here to those around the world? It begins as just a little nucleus, just a few people, but very big commitment," she said.
Bose and Ngoni A. Kamatuka, the African political refugee, were guest speakers at the discussion in November 2014. Senate Committee on South Africa
Bose and Kamataka said students should write to their congressmen and the governor to protest apartheid.
University Daily Kansan, September 21, 1984
BOSE ADVOCATES NON-VIOLENCE and cooperation in bringing attention to South Africa's practice of apartheid, a form of segregation. She said she thought that Americans should not do business with South Africa.
"India does not do business with
South Africa," she said. "It's very simple. The government of South Africa has insulted humanity outright. I will not cut their heads off, but I will not do business with them."
Bose said she found it difficult to believe that apartheid was going on South Africa in 1984, and that the rest of the world only looked on.
"A cause must be taken up." Bose said. "Who is going take up the cause? I imagine the youth will stand up and say 'We are trying to.'"
KAMATUKA, WHO FLED his homeland of Namibia 10 years ago, told the group that the South African government had planned the weak education system to suppress black South Africans.
"The curriculum emphasis is on the white developments, not black culture," said Kamatuka, who is working on his doctorate in higher education. "Africans were distrustful of English-speaking whites, and the blacks were educated, they would drive the whites out to sea. Steps were taken so the best education goes to the white man."
Kamataka said that the primary school he attended in Nambia had 600 students and five teachers — three qualified, and three who were not.
He also said that only 11 percent of more than 70,000 black South Africans passed the college placement exam.
More sex less enjoyable, speaker says
By DAVID LASSITER Staff Reporter
The more sex a couple has, the less likely they are to enjoy it, said Dick Purnell, a guest speaker in the Dynamic Relationship Series sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ.
Sex is just like anything else, the more you do it the less satisfaction it gives you, Purnell said. That is, unless you really love the person you are with.
Purnell closed his three lecture series last night to an audience of nearly 300 in the Kansas Union Ballroom with a speech titled "Sex and the Search for Intimacy."
Too often people confuse sex and
intimacy, he said. Having sex with another person is physical intimacy.
"Each person is a star. That is they are made up of five points: the physical, emotional, social, mental and the spiritual," Purnell said. "When the other four points of the star are not shared and touched, the person becomes frustrated, angry and confused."
ACCORDING TO A recent survey of readers of PSYCHOLOGY TODAY, 73 percent of the college age readers felt lonely. Purnell said.
"That's because at that time they are very aware of the opposite sex." Purnell said. "We feel lonely because we are self-centered.
"We've all been hurt in relationships, and sometimes we put up walls
so that we don't get hurt again. The only problem is that when we put up that wall it keeps you shut in as well as keeping people out."
"People want intimacy,but they don't want to get hurt."
"There is no such thing as painless love," Purnell said. "The more you love, the closer you are to being hurt or rejected."
The University of Kansas was the last stop in a two week tour for Purnell, who has been lecturing at universities, high schools, single adult groups and civic groups for seven years.
SINGLE UNTIL THE age of 42, Purnell has had the opportunity to experience many relationships, he said. He uses those experiences to
make points about the stages of male sexual activity.
"It starts with the guy putting his arm around the girl." Purnell said. "The oldest trick in the book — the old vault trick."
"Girls, you'll never know the feeling in a man's arm after about ten minutes around your shoulder." Purnell said.
"It it starts about here at the shoulder. Then it moves down the arm until you can't feel your fingers any more."
Purnell has been working with college students for the past 25 years.
"My main goal is to help them in their lives with people and God in particular," Purnell said before the lecture.
Med Center will provide services to Ottawa hospital
Bv the Kansan Staff
After weeks of planning, a program linking state agencies and rural hospitals is under way.
University of Kansas officials and hospital administrators in Ottawa signed an agreement last Friday that will provide health care support and expanded services at Ransom Memorial Hospital in Ottawa.
"We'll be backup for them," said David Waxman, director of health care resources at the University of Kansas Medical Center, who helped organize the program. "There are
Waxman said Med Center specialists would answer questions and interpret new laws for Ransom Memorial when hospital officials needed assistance. Waxman also said the Med Center would provide additional training for Ransom Memorial personnel.
certain things we can do here that they can't do at their hospital."
“It’s like being in a family” Waxman says, “they them us and we like to be and we like to be”
Waxman said the Med Center also had similar agreements with Pratt Regional Medical Center and some military hospitals in Kansas.
Bodies of Kansas couple devoured by pack of dogs
By United Press International
SILVER LAKE — Authorities have ruled out foul play in the deaths of an elderly couple whose bodies were eaten by a pack of dogs after the couple died at their northeastern Kansas home.
Shawne County sheriff's deputies found the remains of Gene and Evelyn Shaw on Wednesday after neighbors reported an odd smell from the couple's home near Silver Lake, authorities said yesterday.
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NATION AND WORLD
Increase in benefits sought
University Daily Kansan, September 21, 1984 Page 9
WASHINGTON — Administration officials yesterday urged the U.S. House of Representatives to approve a cost-of-living increase for Social Security recipients, even though inflation is likely to rise by less than the amount needed to trigger the increase.
Under current law, if the inflation rate between the third quarter of 1983 and the third quarter of 1984 reaches less than 3 percent, Social Security recipients will not get an inflation adjustment in their benefit. In the Current rate it mounts project the inflation rate at just below 3 percent.
Charles Baker, unders secretary of Health and Human Services, praised the economic recovery and the current low inflation rate
in calling for the benefit increase.
'IT WOULD BE ironic and unfair if the 36 million Social Security beneficiaries — who were called upon last year to accept a delay in their 1983 COLA as part of the historic bipartisan solution to Social Security's financing crisis
- were denied a COLA in 1984, Baker told the House Ways and Means Committee.
The GOP-led Senate in July approved legislation for a one-time exception that would provide for the January cost-of-living increases even if the inflation rate did not reach 3 percent.
the bill also would increase the wage base for those paying Social Security payroll taxes from $37,800 to about $33,300, according to the administration.
Granting the cost-of-living increase would cost about $5 billion overall.
overn.
THE WAYS AND Means Committee is expected to act next week. The measure could come to the floor as an attachment to the bill needed to lift the federal debt ceiling, which must be done before Congress adjourns Oct. 4.
Congress has with the cost of living increase, single Social Security beneficiaries would see their checks rise by $12 a month to an average of $454 and couples would get an additional $20 a month to an average of $720, according to Sen. Daniel Moynihan, D.N.Y., who sponsored the Senate bill.
Social Security recipients are paid benefits based on how long they worked and how much they earned. The computations are supposed to be updated annually.
Union strikes for less, returns after wage cut
By United Press International
The strike Wednesday by the 400-member Local 32 of the International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Associate Associations, an agreement agreed to a union demand for substantially less in wages and fringe benefits.
NEWARK, N.J. — An insulators union returned to work today after a one-day strike that protested a contract offer that contained "too much money," a union official said yesterday.
The strike, aimed at preserving current employment levels, ended with union members ratifying a pact Wednesday.
"We turned down the original offer because they were trying to offer us
too much money," said James Grogan, business manager for Local 32 and president of the state Building and Construction Trades Council
and Conclusion. Praise the
"It was irresponsible. It would
have just about priced us out of the
market." Grogan said.
George Kelly, spokesman for the Heat and Cold Insulators Contractors of New Jersey, called the situation "very unusual and very beneficial to the industry."
Grogan said the job action was in line with efforts to cut costs.
Management negotiators offered a $2.50 increase over two years to bring the total package of the final contract to $26.57 an hour.
At the recommendation of the Local 32 leaders, the union rejected the offer and demanded a 90-cent raise over two years.
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Please Register To Vote!
—Notice of Voter Registration—
Sept. 10 thru Sept. 14 8:30 a.m.to 3:30 p.m in front of Wescoe Hall
The Douglas County Republican Party encourages you to register to vote, so that on November 6 you may cast your ballot for our outstanding Republican candidates dedicated to serving the citizens of Douglas County. Political Advertisement paid for by Douglas County Republican Central Committee.
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NATION AND WORLD
Bombers foil security measures
Page 10
BEIRUT. Lebanon — The deadly truck-bomb attack on the U.S. Embassy compound in Christian East Beirut yesterday circumvented security precautions aimed at preventing suicide missions.
Police said the truck packed with explosives, bearing forged diplomatic license plates, stopped at the embassy's security checkpoint. The driver first argued with guards, police said, then gunned the engine, roared through the checkpoint and raced down the driveway leading to the embassy.
Guards opened fire at the speeding truck but failed to stop it. The truck exploded about 20 yards away from the five-story embassy building, killing 23 people, including at least two Americans, and wounding 71 others
The explosion blew a hole in the ground 12 feet wide and 7 feet deep.
THERE WERE NO physical barriers along the 100-yard-long drive between the checkpoint and the embassy compound.
cheekpoint and the embankment. The attack, like two previous attacks on U.S. installations in the past 17 months, was carried out by a suicide driver.
received a briefing on the attack from a State Department official. Sen Larry Pressler, R.S.D., said he had been told the building's gate was open, which allowed the bombers to drive through after a shootout with gate guards.
And, as in the two other attacks, the Islamic Jihad organization, an underground movement bent on pushing "the last American out of Lebanon," claimed responsibility. The Muslim group claims allegiance to Iran's Aatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
to Irian's Ayatran.
"The American will conduct a security operation, the ones after the previous truck-bomb attacks but what could they do against people who are ready to die . . . How do they stop suicide drivers?" a Lebanese police investigator asked.
IN VISION INVESTIGATOR ASSISTANT
IN WASHINGTON, CONGRESSMEN
University Daily Kansan, September 21, 1984
"It's almost impossible to have a perfect" system, he said.
SYSMCH
Last October, a Muslim terrorist drove a truck loaded with dynamite into a Marine headquarters building at Beirut International Airport, killing 241 Americans and wounding 80 servicemen.
On April 18, 1983, a bomb concealed in a truck shattered the U.S. Embassy — then in West Beirut.
AFTER THE 1983 attacks and the departure of the U.S. Marine peacekeeping contingent earlier this year, it was decided to move the U.S. embassy from Muslim west Beirut to the Christian east sector.
Beirut outposts are prime targets
By United Press International
American outposts in Beirut have been a prime target of terrorists since the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, and more than 280 Americans have been killed in the violence.
Yesterday's bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut was the third attack on a major U.S. installation in 17 months
The Islamic lihad, a shadowy terrorist group that professes loyalty to Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, has boasted that it is responsible for all of the attacks.
headquarters building at Beirut International Airport, killing himself and 241 Americans and wounding 80 servicemen
American rescue run at the A simultaneous suicide run at the headquarters of the French peace-keeping force across town killed 58 soldiers.
Other American deaths include 13 Marines killed in combat or at the hands of terrorists. Also, three American civilians kidnapped in Beirut have never been found.
It was the April 1983 attack, which killed 63 people, that forced the construction of a new American embassy and prompted the decision to place it in a relatively peaceful suburb of Christian east Beirut with a number of built-in security measures.
darker of brown in the center.
The new compound opened Aug. 2 -
U. S. Marines came ashore in Lebanon as part of a multinational peace-keeping force on Sept. 29, 1982 — more than three months after the Israeli invasion.
precisely seven weeks before another Jihad terror drove a truck full of explosives through a hail of bullets from guards in the latest attack.
The peace-keeping force was withdrawn in February and the last U.S. combat troops — a contingent of about 100 Marines that had been guarding the temporary U.S. mission housed in the British Embassy — pulled out July 31, just before the new U.S. Embassy opened.
Security at the new embassy had been left to a contingent of 15 Marines and a special Lebanese security force.
Attack on U.S.
Embassy
Annex
4 Truck races 100 yards to the annex
5 More guards open fire on truck from building area and manage to stop it 20 feet from annex
6 Truck explodes
3 Driver maneuvers through barricades as guards return fire
2 After arguing with guards, driver opens fire and roars through checkpoint
1 Truck-bomb tries to slip through checkpoint using forged diplomatic plates
"Dragon's Teeth" barricades each made up of four large concrete cubes
Parking Embassy Annex
TRUCK Lot
100 yds Checkpoint
Awker Road
Antillas Road
Beirut-Tripoli Highway
United Press International
Lebanon continued from p.1
The Islamic Jihad organization, a proIranian underground movement bent on pushing "the last American out of Lebanon," claimed responsibility for the explosion in a telephone call to a Western news agency
TWO WEEKS AGO, a person identifying himself as a spokesman for the Islamic Jihad warned of an attack on U.S. installation
The estimated 330 pounds of TNT in the truck detonated just 20 feet short of the six-story embassy building, near a crowd gathered at the visa section. The explosion ripped off the building's facade and gouged a crater 9-feet deep and 24-feet wide.
The blast sent girders tumbling out of the building, damaged dozens of cars and shattered windows.
Lebanese military officials said the driver was shot and killed and the other man was presumed to have died in the attack
The dummy apparently threw all vaporized," a security officer said. "We have found no trace of him and only bits of the engine of the truck we were told he was in. The only thing we have is the crater."
State Department spokesman John Hughes said U.S. diplomatic posts around the world were put on heightened alert because of the attack.
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The University of Kansas and the Lawrence community together have a large, vital gay community. Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas has been serving that community for 15 years.
In order to develop a broader understanding of our organization, the following consists of Articles I, II, and III of the GLSOR constitution. This advertisement is to symbolize our dedication to the community and to reaffirm our commitment to the ideals stated in our constitution.
CONSTITUTION
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas is dedicated to the belief that gay and lesbians are human beings. It is unfortunate that we find ourselves defending homosexuality by printing out our humanity. Because we are human beings, we should be afforded the same rights and responsibilities under the law as other American citizens.
We observe that many gays and lesbians face special and unique problems because of sexual or affectional preference. Most of these are a product of the society of which we are a part. We strongly believe that, by taking responsibility for the part of society which we comprise, these problems can be understood and, eventually, put to rest.
1. Educating both heterosexual and homosexuals about the homosexual and his/her lifestyle. This includes dismissing the common stereotypes, myths, and falsehoods believed by society, and demonstrating that gays and lesbians are individual human beings with individual quality.
2. Exploring the relationship between homosexuals and lesbians to help bring out their qualities and lea
2. Providing services to the homosexual community in order to help gay and lesbian cope with their individual problems or circumstances
II STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
5. Making public affairs and educational activities available through the monies received from social functions
3. Providing a friendly, accepting, and hospitable atmosphere in the GLSOR office for all people.
4. Encourage an understanding and acceptance of collective and individual differences between gay men and lesbians.
It is the purpose of GLOSK to make our organization obsolete by accomplishing the following.
6. Accomplishing all of the above in a positive manner, and resolving not to discriminate against others as we have been discriminated against.
1. Providing a friendly, accepting, and hospitable atmosphere in the GLSOR office for all people
III. PARTICIPATION:
The rights and privileges in GLSOK are to be extended to all interested persons.
QLOSK offers peer counseling, support groups, legal and medical referrals, a library, speakers, bureaus, and social functions for all interested parties. Contact the GLOSK office at 864.3091 or visit our office on level three of the Kansas Union between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
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NATION AND WORLD
GNP grows at moderate rate
Page 11
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - The gross national product is growing at a moderate 3.6 percent annual rate this quarter, only half as strong as the previous three-month period, but enough to improve the unemployment rate, the government said yesterday.
The "flash" projection by government economists did not include the effects of the United Auto Workers strike against General Motors, which could reduce growth to 3.3 percent if it lasts until Sept. 30.
The unemployment rate has remained at 7.5 percent for three of the past four months, the same rate as when President Reagan took office.
University Daily Kansan, September 21. 1984
But Commerce Department chief economist Robert Ortner said the pace was still strong enough to ease the economic rate downward in the months ahead.
THE DEPARTMENT'S REPORT on the value of all the country's goods and services said that the economy was going through one of its slowest periods of the recovery but remains better than the average of the past two years.
w years.
In the eight quarters since the GNP
stopped shrinking, only two have had lower growth rates.
The vigorous April-June quarter grew at a revised rate of 7.1 percent, slightly less than the 7.6 percent last reported, and the first quarter surged at a spectacular 10.1 percent rate.
White House spokesman Larry Speakes, speaking from Air Force One as President Reagan flew to a campaign stop in Iowa, called the report "good news" and said the latest figures indicate "the economy is settling into sustainable growth."
The slowdown in July and August is being blamed on high interest rates and the fact that consumers may have finally caught up on the purchases delayed through two recent recessions.
"THE FASTEST PART of the recovery is over," said economist Larry Chimerine, head of the Chase Econometrics analysis firm.
"The only question is whether this is the beginning of an even sharper slowdown" or a continuing moderate growth pattern, he said.
The indicated slowdown was less drastic than many Wall Street analysis anticipated as they revised their economic outlooks downward this week. So the effect on trading
was muted, even though slower growth encourages investors to think that interest rates may come down.
for the economy as a whole, the weaker growth path suggests a slowdown in the creation of new jobs.
The report said inflation throughout the economy, not just for consumers, was expected to run at a 2.9 percent rate in the third quarter
THE 3.6 PERCENT increase in the GNP is after adjustment for inflation. In 1972 dollars, that would take the value of all goods and services to an annual rate of $1,653 trillion in the third quarter.
In 1984 dollars, the economy would grow 6.4 percent in the third quarter, to $3704 trillion, if the department's projections are realized
The administration assumes that the GNP will grow 4.5 percent in the third quarter and 4.2 percent in the fourth. The projection will be followed by the first formal measurement of the third quarter GNP on Oct.19, two weeks before the election.
The business statistics since June have been unusually weak. The forward-looking index of leading indicators dropped in both June and July.
Homosexuality linked to hormones
WASHINGTON — A pioneering experiment in hormone response suggests there may be a biological reason for homosexuality in men, scientists reported yesterday.
By United Press International
The research at the State University of New York and the South Beach Psychiatric Center in New York City adds a new dimension to the question of how much behavior is affected by genetics and how much it is affected by environment.
The scientists went beyond the standard measurements of hormone concentrations in the blood and studied how the brain responds to hormonal changes — in this case the addition of the female hormone
estrogen to the blood stream.
"It's how they process the hor mone, estrogen, that seems to be different," said Brian Gladue, a physician who now is at North Dakota State University. "It's not just what's in the system that counts, but it's how your system handles the hormones."
GLADLEA AND HIS ASSOCIATES injected Premarin, the estrogen, into heterosexual men and women and into men who reported a lifelong pattern of homosexual behavior and fantasies involving male partners.
"The heterosexual and homosexual men as a group showed a strikingly different response to Premarin," said the scientists' research report published in the Sept. 28 issue of Science magazine.
A sudden increase of estrogen in the blood stream causes a specific response in the body's secretion of mating hormone, a chemical that plays a key role in the menstrual cycle of women and triggers production of the male hormone testosterone in men.
HOWEVER, IN THE men, the levels of luteinizing hormone were higher in nine of 14 homosexuals tested than in all 17 heterosexuals tested.
The researchers found a clear sex difference in the response of luteinizing hormone to estrogen. Luteinizing hormone increased earlier in the blood of women and reached much higher levels than in all the men.
DETROIT — Navy veteran George Madas, 96, gives a salute outside a local Navy recruiting office here. The U.S. Navy Reserve mailed a recruiting flier to several apartment buildings in the Detroit area, not knowing one of them was mainly for senior citizens. Madas and 20 other seniors crowded the recruiting office, which said it only took recruits ages 17 to 34.
N
Pope John Paul II ends journey to Canada
By United Press International
leave Canada and to say goodbye to you," the pope said in an airport ceremony "I do so not without regret, having had the opportunity to visit so many men and women and do many varied and interesting places in your vast country.
John Paul's Air Canada L-1011 departed Canadian Forces Base-Ottawa for Rome at 7:44 p.m., ending his longest of 23 trips outside Italy since he rose to the papacy six years ago.
OTTAWA - Pope John Paul II flew home yesterday "filled with joy" that he shared "moments of grace" with the millions of people who reached out to him during his 12-day, coast-to-coast Canadian pilgrimage.
"Nevertheless, I am filled with joy,
for I feel that we lived together
moments of grace."
education, the preparation of young people for marriage and support for family life should be top priorities."
His 8,600-mile Canadian journey took him to eight of 10 provinces and the Northwest Territories.
moments of glory. During his last day in Canada, as he has done throughout his tour, John Paul spoke forcefully for peace and against a society that accepted sexual permissiveness, divorce, abortion, wars of aggression and stockpiles of nuclear weapons.
John Paul's 18 page address to the Canadian Catholic hierarchy was the longest of the nearly three dozen speeches, homilies and discourses he delivered during his first visit to Canada as pope.
During the tour that began Sept. 9 in Quebec, the pope celebrated a Mass before 500,000 people in Toronto; had a tearful meeting with a small group of Polish sailors in Newfoundland; and met twice with Canada's Indians and Inuit, though bad weather forced him to cancel a meeting with Indians in Fort Simpson in the Northwest Territories.
Northwest Territories
The time has come for me to
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He told 105 of Canada's 127 bishops, archbishops and cardinals that "sex
ADC
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★ 864-3291 ★
Boyd 4 Lions-Anthiotes
Buy-Sell-Trade-Pawn
Buy-Sell-Trade-Pawn
Watches-Anthiotes
731 New Hampshire
802 New York
913-842-8777
731 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Ks 66044 913842-8773
WE
FIX
RINGS!
Kizer Cummings
800 Mass.
749-4333
UNSIGHTLY HAIR????
THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO
Permanent Hair Removal
See our coupon in the Lawrence Book
745 New Hampshire 841-5796
Rentacolor TV.
Student Discounts, Free Delivery, Free Installation & Free Service
Call Mike 1-764-8660
Congrats L & L Your sisters
KWALITY COMICS
Comics & Science Fiction
107 W 7th 843-7239
107 W. 7th. 843-7239
Hey AΔ∏ Neophytes:
Get psyched for tonight is the night.
True sisters we will all be and strong in number of 103!
NIGERIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION The University of Kansas, KU Box 2099 Lawrence, Kansas 66045
MEMO. All Members
RE: General/Elections Meeting
Saturday September 22, 1984
5:30 p.m. Council Room, Kansas Union Blog
GQ HAIRSTYLE
For Men of all ages
611 West 91st
843-2138
so please refrain from asking questions.
Mme Gouze be reminded of our general audience meeting scheduled as indicated above. Please endeavour to attend. One or two guest speakers might be present.
The agenda include but are not limited to the following
The巨人
Opening Welcome remarks to the new students
Welcoming the minutes of the last meeting
1. OpeningWelcome reminder.
2. Reading of the minutes of the last meeting
3 Standing Issues
a) Annual Report b) Faculty Advisor
(c) Association's Registration
(d) Annual Budget
e) Independence Day
4. General
5 Elections
6 Closing Remarks
6. Closing Remarks
unusually count on your
I sincerely count on your undeniable cooperation.
Earmillly
Polycarp J. Alingide
for the secretary
Drinking Myth of the Week
SFC
W 645-702-8040
PEOPLE ARE FRIENDLIER WHEN THEY RE DRUNK.
Mothly. But they're also more hostile, more danger
ous, more criminal, more horrific and more suicidal. Half of all murders are alcohol-related. And one third of all suicides
The Student Assistance Center
Alpha Phi CAR WASH
Only $2!!
Sat., Sept. 22, 1984 12-5 p.m. Kroger Parking Lot on 23rd
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
SENIOR YEARBOOK PORTRAITS
Shooting is taking place now
12-8 Mon. & Thurs.
9-6 Tues., Wed., & Fri.
in Student Organizations & Activities Office
403 Kansas Union
MAKE
YOUR
APPOINTMENT
YOUR APPOINTMENT.
Stop by 121B Kansas
Call 864-3728
Union 12-5 or
now
$3.00 sitting fee paid when you purchase a 1984 Jayhawker
HOT NEWS
INTRODUCING
HOT NEW
SALAD BAR
ITEMS
FROM
SIRLOIN
STOCKADE
When you purchase any entree at Sirion Stockade, you can enjoy our delicious 50-item salad bar plus "hot" new items like
* Breaded Zucchini, Okra or Squash
* Potato Skins
* Corn
* And many more of your favorites PLUS some delicious surprises
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
1015 IOWA
FREE CONE WITH EACH MEAL!
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SPORTS ALMANAC
American League
W L. W. Pet. GB
x-Detroit 98 54 64
Toronto 83 66 56 134
New York 83 66 56 134
Baltimore 81 70 53 162
Beoston 80 72 528 18
Milwaukee 60 92 414 19
Michigan 60 92 40 16
Kansas City 78 74 513
California 78 74 513
Miami 77 75 1001
Oakland 71 82 604
Chicago 71 82 604
Seattle 69 84 431
Tampa 69 84 431
**nordway's Results**
Minnesota Chicago 4 (13 innings)
Turkey 6. Baltimore 15. Boston
California Kansas City 0
Missouri 0
Frida's Games
Milwaukee (Satron) 13:12 at Toronto
Lamp (8:57) 6:11
New York (Montevideo) 3:31 at Detroit
Washington (7:49) 6:11
Boston (Darwin) 11:40 at Baltimore
(Davis) 7:65 p.m.
Seattle (Boston) 11:15 at Chicago
(Hutcher) 11:44 p.m.
Cleveland (Schulz) 3:31 at Minnesota
(Hutcher) 12:9 p.m.
Oakland (Kansas City) 7:35 p.m.
Lake Michigan) 7:35 p.m.
Texas (Darwin) 8:11 at California
Texas (Darwin 8:11) at California
Bopponq 11:12) 9:30 p.m.
Texas
Romanick 11:12), 9:30 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W 9 L Pct GB
Chicago 90 62 592
New York 83 70 429
Philadelphia 80 72 329 * 9
St. Louis 80 72 536 10
Montreal 74 77 490 15
Pittsburgh 68 85 140 21
x-clinched division title
Big Eight Football Standings
Thursday's Results
WEEK
x San Diego
Milton
Houston
Inglewood
Los Angeles
San Francisco
Thursday's Results
Pittsburgh 5, San Diego 9, San Francisco 4
Los Angeles 6, Houston 2
St Louis 1, Miami 2
St Louis 3, Montreal 2
Philadelphia (Koosman 14-13) at Pittsburgh (Hodson 13-9) at 6:35 p.m. in New York (Fernandez 46-7) at 7:06 p.m. in Chicago (Sanderson 84) at St Louis (Rasmussen 8-7) at Cincinnati (Sato 15-7) at Houston (Nekroi 15-13) at 7:30 p.m. in San Diego (Theronde 13-7) at 9:00 p.m. in Francisco (Umeruela 21-5) at San Francisco (Lakeley 18-3) at 10:05 p.m.
W 1 L T Pts OP¹
Netherlands 8 0 9 14
Oklaimata 2 0 0 61
Oklala 2 0 0 76 17
Iowa St 1 1 4 2 76
Kansas 1 1 4 1 70
Kanati 1 1 4 70
Colorado 0 2 0 41 54
Missouri 0 2 0 56 62
IS WEEK'S GAMES (UPI ratings in parentheses)
1) Nebraska at 30) UCLA. Baylor at 28)
Oklaonia. San Diego State at 1) Oklahoma
Atlanta. Kansas State at 1) Vanderbilt.
Kansas State at 1) Texas
Christian University. James
State at 1) Missouri
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Sunday, Sep. 23
Chicago, Seattle, Oakland, 3 p.m.
Miami, Atlanta, 3 p.m.
Green Bay at Dallas, noon
Houston at Miami, noon
Houston at Denver, 1 p.m.
L.A. Rams at Cincinnati, noon
New York Jets at Buffalo, noon
Pittsburgh at Cleveland, noon
St Louis at Kansas City, noon
Tampa Bay at Philadelphia, noon
Tampa Bay at NY, Giants, 3 p.m.
Washington, D.C., noon
Sunday, Sep. 24
Sunday, Sept. 23
Monday, Sept. 24
San Diego at L.A. Raiders, 5 p.m.
Order a steak to your size (6 oz. minimum) and **get the second steak** for your friend (same or lesser weight).
University Daily Kansan, September 21, 1984
Order a steak to your friend (a person you know or lesser weight)
second steak for your friend at time of ordering
Steak For Two! For The Price Of One!
Includes salad, fries and muffin
Expires 9/30/84
NATURALWAY
NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING
820 MASS. 841-0100
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan Reciprocal with over 235 clubs. 843-0540
Silk Cotton Wool
THIRD ANNUAL JAYHAWK TRIATHALON
Sun. Sept. 23rd
8 am Robinson Center
KU
LIVE FOOTBALL BROADCAST SATURDAY
6:30 p.m. PRE-GAME SHOW
7 p.m. KU VS Vanderbilt
in Nashville
KLZR
106
California 2, Kansas City 0
**KANSAS CITY**
ab rb b1
ibr b1
Sheidert 40 4 1 00 Brenquer jb 3 1 2 0
Bret lt 4 1 00 Carew ib 3 1 0 0
Orta ib 4 1 00 Yum jb 0 0 0
Balli 3 0 0 0 DeCenes jb 4 0 0
Ballon i 3 0 0 Downing f 4 1 1
White bb 3 0 0 Jackson d 3 1 0
Concepcin je 3 0 0 Grich ch 2 1 0
Schoolied ss 2 0 1
Totals 30 0 3 Totals 27 2 8 2
**Kansas City**
California
000 000 000 -0 -
001 001 000 -2 -
**Game-winning BRL** – Llynn (10).
E-Grine LOB - Peterson J, California
LOB - Loban K, California
2-B-Benquete HR - Downing (2) SH – R-Jackson (7) S-Schoefer F
H H H RU BSU
**Kansas City**
Galena (10, 11)
5 2 3 6 2 2 3 0
2 1 3 6 2 4 0
California
Witt (14 11)
0 3 0 0 0 7
A-32,772
Thursday's Major League Results
(13 innings)
Chicago 100 101 000 100 -4 6 0
Minneapolis 100 101 000 1 -5 10 0
Hill R. Sheed (11) Robert L. (18) Skinner and Skinrille H. Hill (2) Christmas (12) Johana Hodge (12)
W. Davis (7) Terry L. L- Roberget (3.3)
HIIs-HC Chicago (3) Miskin, Fisk (20)
American League
Pittsburgh (02) 002 120 - 71 22
Chicago (02) 004 120 - 61 06
DeLouis, Bieleck (5), Habibson (6)
Kelvine, Schulte (5), Robinson (6)
W. Tekluk (9), Dion and Davis
W. Tekluk (9), L. Smith (97), HH-Pitt-
burg, Morrison (9)
National League
**Coconut**
Atlanta 000 000 120 3-7 1
Miami 004 041 890 - 9-18
San Diego 000 000 120 3-7 1
McGaffigan (8) and Golden, Bilarlee (6)
Camp. Dedman (8) and Trevino W. Camp.
L. R. Husson (6-18) HRs. Atlanta,
Perry (6) Johnson (6-18) Cincinnati,
Milwaukee 900 201 061 - 4.9 1
Toronto 100 620 30 - 6.5 1
Gibson, Kern (7) and Schreuder, Key, Stey
(4) and Whitt, W.-Sieb (17). L.-Gibson (14).
San Francisco 002 100 001 — 4 0 6
San Diego 050 000 001 — 5 7 1
Krukow, Lorech (6) Lacey,
Nicolaia, Lorech (6) Dearney (7)
Kenna, Lorech (11) Willey (12) L - Krukow
(12) HIRS-San Diego, Lollar (3); San Francisco, Rabb (3)
Montreal 190 000 010 - 27.1
St. Louis 100 000 060 - 20.000 060
Haskell, Henkel (Clera La
Point, Sutter (8) and Porter W. La-Port
(8) and Lester W. La-Port
Van Lykke Van Lykke (Wildflower
L5)
Los Angeles
Houston
Oklahoma City
Anderson and Sequoia
California
(C) Calgan (D) Diflun (D) Smith (S) Ambuto
(A) Andhay, W. Hershner (B) L. Ryan
011 000 040 - 6.80
011 000 041 - 7.50
011 000 042 - 8.00
FLY DELTA
PLEDGE ACTIVE '84
QUALITY FURNISHINGS at affordable prices
Individual Items - Complete Groups GENEROUS PURCHASE OPTION
FURNITURE RENTAL
Furniture
Monthly Leasing
No Deposits
Quick Delivery
PROBLEM
NERVING
LAWRENCE
C FOR
14 YEARS
MODERN-SECTIONAL-RATTAN
CONTEMPORARY-TRADITIONAL
HON
Household Furnishings as well as
Electronics
LITTON
RCA
Thompson-Crawley
KVM
520 E. 22nd Terrace
FURNITURE RENTAL
841-5212
KVM
Homefinders
we do the work for you!
Kaw Valley
Management, Inc.
911 Kaw Valley St. 205
913-841-6080
Palm trees &
Pink flamingos
Pancakes &
Pentements
And no more
hard times
Perduree
e Parvach
728 Main
MAINTENANCE FORMATION & WORKSHOP
$2 discount with KU ID
Silver Clipper
To please you is all pleasure
WE FIX WINDOWS!
$13 plus parts
mobile glass
1042 E. 23rd.
842-2726
OPEN TIL 9 PM
EVERY NIGHT
THE GRANDER MAN
WE
DELIVER!
704 MASS
843-7398
West Coast Saloon 25c DRAWS
noon-6 p.m.
every Friday
NO COVER!!
A K.U. TGIF tradition!
2222 Iowa
841-BREW
ALEXIS GRANT
$25 COUPON
Present this coupon for big savings on any full pair of prescription eyeglasses (frame and lenses) of $44.95 or more.
Invisible bifocals, ultra-thin cataract lenses, prescription sun lenses designer frames and plastic lightweight lenses . thats just a sampling of our selection.
This coupon cannot be used in conjunction with any other optical promotion. Use your Visa or Mastercard.
This Special does not include Boutique Frames. Some restrictions do apply.
This offer, valid September 17, 1984 through September 22, 1984
HUTTON
HUTTON 842-5208
OPTICAL CO.
742-641
Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6
Thurs. 10-8
Sat. 10-2
x∞
Band Instruments For Rent $10 per Month.
NEW in Town!
plus a free case
- Up to 50% OFF on Guitars * 25% OFF Keyboards
- 25% OFF Amplifiers
30% OFF Drum Sets
- 30% OFF D.O.D. Effects Pedals * 25% OFF Cymbals
NEW in Town!
HAYES HOUSE OF MUSIC 944MASS. 842-5183
*except Casio
(
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Page 13
1
University Daily Kansan, September 21. 1984
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily
CLASSIFIED RATES
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1- Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75
16-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80
21-25 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.85
For every 5 words add: 25c 50c 75c 1.05
The University Daily KANSAN
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5.9 pm
Tuesday Friday 5.9 pm
Wednesday Monday 5.9 pm
Thursday Friday 5.9 pm
Friday Wednesday 5.9 pm
POLICIES
Classified Display
por column title
Classified Display advertisements can be only one
column tall.
Maximum height can be 12. Newspapers allowed in
Classified Display advertisements, except for logos.
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words
- only.
* No responsibility is assumed for more than one incident of an advertisement.
- Health and work days prior to publication
* More rules based on consecutive day insertions
- *Consider display and use in retail environments only carried tale discount*
- *Sample of all mail order items must be submitted by authorization of advertiser*
until credit incurred
* Teens are not provided for classified or
unlicensed advertising investments.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- Always rates based on consecutive day insertions
- An occupation is assigned for more than one in
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
No charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement.
- No refund on cancellation of pre-paid classified
- classified display advertisements,
• Classified display ads do not count towards more
- All Advertisers will be required to pay in advance any credit has been established.
Some names may be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These advances in person or simply by calling the Kansas Bank office 809-4558
- Bind host ads - please add a $2 service charge.
- Holds must accept all classified ads marketed
correct insertion of any advertisement
No refunces on cancellation of prepaid classified advertising
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Budget Streeter congratulates you on moving toward next purchase Cross Reference: Malls Shopping Center CAREER EXPLORATION FOR WOMEN value phrases, philosophy as they apply Cross Reference: September 26, 1984 7:30 - 1 p.m. Walmart Room, Union Street Sponsor by the Emily Taytul, Women's Resource Center
The Bear Essentials for a perfect Triad.
SYRACUSE TRIAD Sept. 21, 1984
Great dance music,
a fun-loving guy,
a cold brew, and a
FUSCHIA sweatshirt
Alpha Phi's are ready for the best Triad ever!
See y'all at Shirk's— Gamma Phi's and Alpha Gap's!
CAR WASH! only $2.99, Sept 25-11 4 p.m. in front of Kroger's
...
Interested in joining a small Christian group for earing, sharing action and prayer that meets & weeks? Groups now forming at Ecumenical Church are called Come. You can or call 813-4933 for information.
THE FAR SIDE
RESEARCH PAPERS! 306-page catalog - 15,278
tops! Rush $2.00 RESEARCH 11322 Ibbao, 106
MR. Los Angeles 94025 (213) 477-8268
Rent $19 'Color' TV $28.00 a month *Uurtus*
$36.00 a month *Uurtus* 842.573 $39.00 9-10 p.m.
9:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. Saturdays
9:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. Saturdays
Rent VCK with 2 movies, moves over $15. Carr士馬 Matles 149, *Mates* 842, 8375) Open 9:30 - 9:60 PM
**WEDNESDAY**
VKC on 9:00 - 9:15 PM
*COLLEGE CENTER*
842, 8375)
SENIORS YEARBOOK PORTFIELTS Shooting is taking place now, in Student Organizations & Activities Office, 401 Kansas Union *Call your bookkeeper* Accounts 12, 8 *B Kansas University* 864.7328
Shurley Bennett, formerly of Charme Beauty Salon is now at Angles Beauty Salon, 940 Massachusetts, M.F. Call 843-4670 for Shurley September Shampoo & Haircut - 88
Travails for the KU Varsity men's and women's Bowling teams will be held throughout the week of October 8-10 at KU. These above averages are encouraged to try out. Contact Mike Fine at the Kansas Union Jayhawk for details.
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All requests. Lighting included. Rehearsal Rates.
FOR RENT
2 Brm Apt. $325/mo. All Utilities paid. 918 Miss.
749-5378
3-Brm. App. 100 Miss. $300 Plus Utilities Call
840) 140 or 843.8187
Available now. Remodeled two bedroom apart
room with ceiling fan, kitchen, large kitchen, fireplace, ceiling Fan, new
Designed for a group of four students. Classy
pack, and energy efficient! 843-927
Disparate: On Campus, 2 berm, no deposit. Sept
10-31. See www.monaca.edu/psst. Must see:
744-4268 after 5 p.m.
Lease 4 bedroom house $300/mo. Off street
parking Call 843-0570
Lawrence: complete with all kitchen appliances
Perfect for 2 or 3 students $400/mo Call
(855) 667-9920
By GARY LARSON
1-2
One remark led to another, and the bar suddenly polarized into two angry confrontational factions who were invading the virtues and deeds super camel on the one side, single humpers on the other.
No need to live in a student slum. Room available in renovated, energy efficient Victorian bedroom. This coed living situation provides private bedroom. 2/1/2 baths, modern kitchen space, fireplace and sunken. Located on Kenucke turtle park. Enclosed group $150 plus utilities. 749-3825.
BLOOM COUNTY
KU STUDENTS AND FACULTY
Olive Bedroom, New furnace Close to KU, tucson. No dot $275 plus. Wide 18'b to 46'b. 20'x30'.
DO I THINK THESE PHOTOS
DAMAGE THE AMERICAN
VESTIGIAL VISION SAINT "
MYTH SURROUNDING OCCASION
WINNERS"
WELL...UK...
We still have limited number of completely furnished apartments and townhomes. Some are perfect for three people; all close to campus! Call or stop by Hanover Place—14th
Sundance----7th and Florida or
Tanglewood----10th and Arkansas.
841-5255, 841-1212,
749-2415, 842-4455.
mastercraft Management
Opportunity for roommates. One block from campus, 4 big rooms, living room, kitchen with dining area, bathroom with two bedrooms. All rooms are remodeled $10 per roommate for 4, also 3 bedroom unit like above for $12 per roommate for 3. See to appreciate. All utilities paid. Call 842-7690, 749-114
Offered by:
PER LOCATION: Huge haleen bay perch overlooking Memorial Stadium, large kitchen with eating area, living room, large double-vanity unit, dining room, large kitchen, 420 per month. All utilities need to see up to $185/month.
bags away.
Fish can be delayed. Dec 31 from tenant. Available at
can lose tender from landlord after Dec.
If decured? 2 bedroom at Appertiere Apts. Unfurnished,
quoted, on Bursaure B47/199. (218) 843-5060.
preco
Spring semester only - Fully furnished
2 bath house Great neighborhood
close to campus, complete with 2 child living
dogs $410 per mo. 841-345
The Oke Apts 2 bedroom KISs no. We pay bearing (cooling Last Apt Available' 2537 Bridge C) Call 842 4681
Townhouse with a finished basement available only one inch deep for 4 people. #463 SUNRISE
To quiet. sensitive woman commuter nice fur-
ner room in private home in West 42nd after
1922 and 1923; after 5 to quiet. sensitive woman large furnished room in private home in 600 West Washington $125.
Treo cooperative living / Sunflower House 1864
Tennessee; Ask for Dixie, Inexperienced
roommate.
YES, MAY I CONSIDER. THE SHEM
THE DREAMS. WE JUST THEM.
WHAT HERE. WHEN YOU AND THE
OTHER PROGRAM.
HONOURABLE WEAEN
THANME. NO?
I SEE, WHAT'S
THAT, MAMM..
FOR SALE
18 Speed Bike. French. Motobecane Super
Murate with extras. CHEAP! 844-7614
in Speed Ladies. Schematic Bicycle, light yellow,
just tuned and in excellent condition. Call 841-8472.
1901 Kawasaki K25, 1500 14,900 miles (mostly)
height: 5000 24 W9th. A wrist: 1 behind arm
73.5
AUDI F01, 1977, 4'd auto, $160. FireWire-
speakers $150, audio amplifier, $80 W
speaker, $120 W amplifier
Appie IIe (60K, disk drive with controller) $299
Appie III (138k, arm receiver, Appie printer)
Appie IV (147k, arm receiver, Appie printer)
IBM PC/128 i drive $799 IBM Portable 266K
IBM PC/128 i drive at 852 or 1827 (dies 1341-1944)
Bicycle: 20. Tires, Dual rear are grocery baskets. New seats and pedals. More $44
BOOK CASES, many sizes, starting at $49. The Furniture BARN 1811 W, 60h, 824-296
Used furniture and household misc.
EVERYTHING GOES Car. 79 Bedroom pux- fuel
Furniture. Bedroom set, dining room set,
2 cubs, orental rugs, T V, and much more. Call
749-4600, anytime.
US Students. For a Low Price, you can own your own terminal ZT I A with mounted, built in modern, adjustable party books up to KL and other main frames. & More 'Call Dan'. Cheap seat that can be beat Directors chairs—only $14.95. At the Furniture Barn 181 W. 4th
For furnishings for your living, we have what you need. Need stores at kernwood and KE 16th. HA GIAGE SALE • Sat & Sun. $599.00. GIAGE SALE • Mon & Tue. $899.00. Accounting Dining Furniture, Clothes, 320 Madison Circle, 1201 Woodside, 1202 Madison Circle.
DRAFTING MACHINE Sturdy Brining machine with scissors works value $150
MACHINE WITH GRINDER value $260
Open Daily 11.5 p.m. closed Sun
7th and New Hampshire
(behind P.R.Hermans) 843-8382
stumblies, briefcases, collections, follow hand
hugs, luggage networks and bags. 824 969
www.mit.edu/mit.edu
Commode 64 and Disc Drive. Like new, $350 or best offer: 842-3072
GARAGE SALE 2013; barker Sat, Sept 29, 9-4
Clothing, clothing, much mise
Comic books, used Science Fiction paperbacks,
Playbooks, Penfriends, etc. Max's Open, open
borders.
Hewlett-Packard HP-10C/HP-CV Printer $59.99, HP-
Desktop $249.99, Application packs and software-$299.
Application packs and software are sold by HP.
Gleaney Sunburst 347 - orange label $;000
D2. 259 with both cases. Eyewear 784-4196
99-779-5267
Glass door Stero cabinets, starting at $9. The Furniture Barn 181. W 5th, 842-2069
by Berke Breathed
Ronda CB 1255. Must sell $290 1538 Tenn.
anytime
In your apartment too dark in which to study?
Lamp is at $80. The Furniture Barn 1951
762-348-1880. fax 762-348-1880.
ZING!
REUNION THEY
GO, HOMEFACE.
I QUIT
WOOOH!
WOOOH!
WOOOH!
Used and Collector Records bought and sold,
Rock, RNB, Jazz, Country, Classical, Standards
and Big Sands. Bat & Sun, 10 a.m - 5 p.m Quantrill's, B11 New Hampton.
Used Singer Sewing Machine, with cabinet in ex-
cellent condition. $125, all accessories incl.
B41 0511.
New Linear 300 Watt Car Amplifier, $750 Retail,
will sell for $600 or best offer. 843-944-96
IBM PC JR 'WIRELESS KEYHOARD. 1 DISK
DRIVE, 128 KB MEMORY 843-152 16
Suzuki GT-185. New tire, chain, prockets, tank
Racel and back must. Rest must. 843-6629
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplement. New on Sale. Makes sense to use them in conjunction with the exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization avail.* New Bookstore. The Oxford Bookstore and Oread Bookstore.
garc and back rest. Must see 847-6629
Trek 311, blue 12-speed Bike 24 1/2 lbs., 22" , toe
back link, 1.1" roller 847-8253
Yamaha Receiver, Pioneer Tape deck with 2 speakers: $350 Drafting table & chair: $100 Call: 843-2341
Z. 80 w. 4 K. Multiserion, 8" Disk drives (1.2 mb) HART-绘画 HCR with Graphic cams, with WOOD STAR PACA, C. etc., $250 Call Gil after 8 p.m at MUH-832 or 824/252
AUTOSALES
TENNIS_RAQUET Head Graphite Edge
Peaceable: 924-558.
1970 Fury III. A/C plus screws. Fine cruising condition. $75
Neighboring Car 144-2843 overtier
1974 Volvo Wagon, 4-speed $1195. 1-845-2843 or
749-1640 (leave message.)
1974 Ford Pinto, good condition, some rust.
Nevitable Call 749-2548, after 6.
Must sell. 1825 Nissan Sentra Station Wagon 5 door sedan, 40-inch rear window, AC, A/C system, 16.00 miles range. Must sell. 1707 Porsche 914 Convertible Excellent body, perfect interior, run wolly only $1996. Call
Clean used VW's for sale. Metric Motors 841-6004
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September 21,1984 Page 14
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
KU to face high-flying Vanderbilt
By PHIL. ELLENBECKER Associate Sports Editor
Fans attending tomorrow night's Kansas Vanderbilt game at Nashville, Tenn., better not have any late-night activities planned.
Kickoff time is 7 p.m. CDT at Vanderbilt Stadium.
"The game may last 10 hours the way we both throw the ball," said Vanderbilt head coach George MacIntyre.
The two teams are practically mirror images of each other on offense. Both have averaged around 30 passes a game in two games this season, both have shown they can run after being primarily passing teams last year.
KU'S AIR SHOW MAY BE grounded somewhat tomorrow if wide receiver Skip Peeet has recovered from a knee bruise. He'll make the trip to Nashville, but may not play. Holloway will play an ankle injury Wednesday, practiced yesterday and will start tomorrow.
Fullback Mark Henderson will miss his second straight game because of a thigh bruise. He'll be replaced by Lynn Williams and Harvey Fields. Defensive end Guy Gamble, sidelineled much of the week with a knee bruise, will start tomorrow.
"They remind me a lot of our offense," defensive coordinator Vince Hoch said of Vanderbilt. "It was a good experience for our defense to work against our offenses in the spring and in pre-season drills. That gave us a feel for the kind of offense we'll see from Vanderbilt."
Hoch also be familiar with the Commodore offense as Memphis State's secondary coach last year, when the Tigers beat Vanderbilt 247-
Kansas (1-1)
Offense
SE—Johny Holloway, 5-11, 183 jr
LT—Jim Davis, 6-2, 145 jr
LG—Chip Schuler, 6-1, 260 jr
C—Bonnie Simecka, 6-5, 265 sr
RG—Dong Certain, 6-4, 265 jr
RT—Rob Pieper, 6-5, 265 so.
TE—Jeff Long, 5-11, 180 jr
FL—Skip Peete, 6-0, 185 jr
QB—Mike Norris, 6-3, 205 jr
FB—Lynn Williams, 6-2, 200 jr
TB—Robert Mimbs, 6-0, 190 jr
Defence
Defense
LE—Arnold Fields, 6-1, 190 jr.
LT—Jeff Anderson, 6-3, 252 jr.
LG—Phil Forte, 6-3, 220 so.
RG—Pat Kelley, 6-1, 240 sr.
RT—Robert Tucker, 6-3, 240 jr.
RE—Guy Gamble, 6-3, 225 jr.
LB—Willie Pleas, 6-0, 215 jr.
LB—Rick Bredesen, 6-1, 210 jr.
LCB—Dino Bell, 5-9, 180 jr.
S—Wayne Ziegler, 6-2, 190 so.
RCB—Alvin Wigelton, 6-0, 185 jr.
Vanderbilt (2-0) Defense
LE- David Wurm, 6-3, 225 fr.
LT- Steve Wade, 6-3, 228 fr.
RT-Karl Jordan, 6-1, 246 sr.
RE-John Windham, 6-4, 240 sr.
OLB—Jeff Cartwright, 6-3, 226 sr.
MLB- Steve McCoy, 6-1, 218 sr.
OLB—Jef Holt, 6-1, 200 rb.
CB-Kermit Sykes, 6-2, 191 rb.
SS-Tim Johnson, 5-11, 184 so.
FM-Manuel Young, 5-11, 184 sr.
CB-Thanh Anderson, 5-11, 174 so.
Vanderbilt finished the season 2-9.
Offense
sr—Joe Kelly, 6,0, 175 br.
LT—Rob Monaco, 6,3, 270 br.
LG—Will Wolfford, 6,4, 275 br.
JG—Dill Irma, 6,3, 264 br.
RG—Mark Herrmann, 6,1, 263 br.
RT—Darrell Denson, 6,6, 292 br.
TE—Jim Popp, 6,4, 292 br.
QB—Kurt Page, 6,2, 292 br.
KB—Keith Edwards, 6,0, 292 br.
TB—Carl Wood, 6,0, 200 so.
"WE HAD A LOT OF success against them, but the problem now is that they have a better running attack," he said.
Commodore tailback Carl Woods has gained 210 yards this season, including 116 in a 26-14 victory over Kansas State.
KU counters with Robert Mimbs, the second-leading rusher in the Big Eight Conference with 234 yards. He also has 53 pass receiving yards and 133 yards on kickoff returns, giving him an average of 226 all-purpose total ranks second in the conference and fourth in NCAA Division I.
While KU's and Vanderbilt's offenses are very similar, they differ in one important respect. Vanderbilt
starts seven seniors on offense. KU starts one.
501
"WE'VE REALLY ONLY HAD two chances to work together, the Wichita State and the Florida State game, while they were together all last year," said head coach Mike Gottfred.
Maeintyre said, "We have four senior receivers, and that really helps Kurt (quarterback Kurt Page) out a lot. They know how to read the pass coverage and adjust their routes."
Leading the pack of senior receivers is Chuck Scott. He was a Sporting News All-American at tight end last year and was moved to flanker this fall. He has 12 receptions this year, including 10 for 162 yards in a 23-14 victory over Maryland last week
Fullback Keith Edwards, more an extra receiver than a running back, led Division I receivers with 97 receptions last year. He's caught five passes this season.
THE MAN AT THE CONTROLS,
Page, has completed 40 of 58 passes
for 512 yards and three touchdowns
and has thrown only one interception.
He's the fourth-ranked passer in
Division I.
Vanderbilt has an additional weapon, place-kicker and punter Ricky Anderson. He's made all five of his field goals attempt this year and has averaged 50.3 yards a punt.
"I feel very fortunate that every time we get down around the 30 we don't have to worry about scoring because of Ricky." MacIntyre said. "Kurt knows not to take any chances on third down in that territory, to throw it into the stands if he has to."
Macintyre is very confident of his offense. He's not so confident of his defense.
"WE'RE NOT VERY BIG and we're very young." MacIntyre said of his defense. "It was a real question mark for us coming in. We've only played 13 players on defense in our first two games, and we're not going to get by playing just 13 players."
to get fired. Gottfried said he was generally pleased with KU's defense in last week's 42-16 loss to Florida State.
"Our third-down consistency was bad, other than that the progress from week one to week two was good." he said.
Gottrried, who's in the middle of a rebuilding year, said he admired the way McIntyre, in his fifth year at Vanderbilt, has reshuffled the Commodore program. The Commodores went 3-8 in 1982 before undergoing a hard-luck season last year. They're off to their best start since 1975 this year.
500 are expected here for cross-country meet
By CHRIS LAZZARINO Sports Writer
The guest list for tomorrow's Jayhawk Invitational cross-country meet is huge, with more than 500 athletes scheduled to compete.
Fourteen women's and 15 men's teams, including both KU squads, will compete in the collegiate division of the meet at Rim Rock farm. In addition, 12 high school girl's teams and 14 high school boys' teams, varsity and junior varsity, will compete.
High school competition begins at 9:30 a.m. The collegians start at 11 a.m. with the women's 5,000 meter race. The men's 10,000 meter race starts at 11:30 a.m.
"There will be a lot of good competition at the meet," said Cliff Rovello, coach of the team. "We will definitely run faster this week than last. We are ready; no one is hurt."
Rovello said the top women's teams at the meet would be Minnesota, Kansas State and Kansas.
"Minnesota finished tenth at the NCAA meet last year. They are
outstanding." Rovello said. "K-State was ranked 12th in the nation at the end of last year and Nebraska is pretty good. After us and those three, the competition really drops off."
Other women's teams will include Barton County Community College, Butler County Community College, Colby County Community College, Emporia State, Fort Hays State, Haskell Ind Jr. College, Kansas City College, Ole Miss College, Park College, Park College and William Jewell.
The same schools, except for Minnesota, will compete in the men's division Maryland College and Pittsburgh State will also
The junior colleges will run in the same races as the colleges and universities, but will be scored separately. Rovello said.
The KU men's team also defeated SIU last weekend, 19-33 Brent Stiemer finished first with a five-mile time of 25 minutes, 12 seconds. Timmates Greg Joe Johnson Marissa Waylin finished on the top six.
Men's coach Bob Timmons said that Leibert had been bothered by an achilles' tendon problem, but should be ready to run Saturday.
Timmors said the men would also face better competition this weekend and that the team to beat should be K-State
The meet should be good for the high school teams. Timmons said, because they don't often run on a natural area like Rim Rock farm.
"It is not like a golf course", Timmons said. "It is more rustic more challenging"
These are the ghosts of KU punters past
Believe it or not, late one might last fall. I happened to be walking past Memorial Stadium when a steady thump, trump, thump caught my ear.
I decided to check things out, and upon entering the stadium, I saw the faint outline of two football players on the field. Obviously the ghosts of football seasons past.
After moving closer, I was able to read the names on the back of their jerseys. Hubach and Scribner.
They were getting in some extra punting practice, and for ghosts, they
GREG
DAMMAN
Sports Editor
were sure getting off some boomers.
Time after time their pants sailed 50,
60, and 70 yards. Just like the good old days.
"We sure did a number on that Clint Colburn guy, didn't we Mike." Bucky said. "He looked like a pony league partner compared to us."
After littering the field with football, they stopped for a chat.
"Yep. Mike said, 'I wonder who we'll get to run out of town this
year
"I don't know," Bucky said. "But the pressure will sure be on that poor fellow."
The two ghosts faded, and their conversation was forgotten — until last Saturday.
That poor fellow has turned out to be freshman Tom Becker. And even though he struggled in last week's game against Florida State, he's a long way from being run out of town by the ghosts of former KU punters Bucky Scribner and Mike Hubach.
Becker is listed as the No. 1 hunter
for tomorrow's game against Vanderbilt Coach Mike Gottfried is showing his confidence in Becker by leaving him in the No. 1 spot, which is something a punter definitely needs.
Handling a snap and getting off a punt before a charging linenman arrives is enough to worry about without wondering whether a bad punt will cause the coach to bench you.
Fortunately for Becker, Colburn's performance as punter last year mellowed Kansas fans somewhat. Now they'll settle for "just" an above average punter.
Tennis season begins
Making matters worse for Becker are KU fans who, until last year, were blessed with the Big Eight's leading punter for four straight years. There's no doubt about it, Hubach and Scribner are hard acts to follow.
Becker is averaging 39 yards a punt on eight pumps this year. Colburn averaged 37.3 yards a punt last year. If you ask most Jayhawk fans, they'll say that Becker is a better punter than Colburn.
That is probably because of Becker's consistency. He has been able to stay away from the 20-yard shank punts that Colburn came up with in several crucial situations last year. His only hurdle now is being able to handle the snap and get the punt off in time.
Coach Mike Gottried said during the week that freshman John Brehm was also punting well. Add the fact that Becker will be playing his first road game, measure he is better worse. But Becker is ready for this week's game.
If practice makes perfect, Becker will have no problem clearing those hurdles. This week the punt team put in overtime on the practice field.
"We went over it a lot." Becker said. "Now we're sure everyone knows exactly what their doing."
The men's and women's tennis teams begin their fall seasons tomorrow, and head coach Scott Pere尔man says their competition should give him a good idea of how KU stacks up right away.
"I'm looking forward to it after last week's game," he said. "I have to come back and do my job."
By PHIL ELLENBECKER
The men's team, 14-8 and third in the Big Eight Conference last spring, will host the 2nd Annual Kansas Invitational at the Robinson tennis courts. Play begins at 9 a.m. tomorrow and will continue through Sunday Tulsa, Kansas State, Northwestern Illinois and Nebraska provide the competition.
Associate Sports Editor
Sophomore Mike Wolf, junior Michael Center, senior Charles Stearns, freshman Larry Pascal, freshman Dave Brody and sopho
The women's team, 9-7 last spring and also third in the Big Eight conference, will travel to Wichita tomorrow to take on three teams. They playamas at 9 a.m., 0:35 at 1:30 p.m. and Wichita State at 2:00 p.m.
Freshman Tracy Treps, sophomore Barbara Imran, senior Laura Runnels, junior Christine Parr, sophomore Cindy Bregin and freshman Marie Hibbard will make up the singles lineup.
more Tim Mahaffey will comprise the singles lineup.
Wolf and Mahaffey will team up for No. 1 doubles, Center and Mahaffey will play No. 2 doubles, and Stearns and freshman Greg Brown will make up the No. 3 team.
In doubles, Treps and Farr will play No. 1, Inman and Rumnels will play No. 2, and Bregin and freshman Janiele Bolen will play No. 3
Glenview High School
Jon Hunt (right) and Beth Vivian are the only seniors on a very young volleyball team. Both are setters and are depended upon by their younger teammates to keep control of the action.
Senior setters take on responsibilities
By CHRIS LAZZARINO Sports Writer
Sports Writer
This year's volleyball team is dominated by youth.
Dominated by you. Dominated, but not controlled.
Dominated, but not contested. The two most important controlling factors on the team are setters Beth Vivian and Jan Hunt, the only seniors on the team. They are the only players in the starting rotation that are not freshmen or sophomores.
"I feel that I have added responsibility to exemplify what Coach Lockwood wants from his players." Vivian said. "They look to me as a player who has played for him before and I am a good indicator of what he expects."
Both agree they have a certain amount of responsibility to assume. They also agree that any success the team has must come through a team effort.
Vivian, the important thing is that it has talent.
The team may be young, but for
"This team has a real broad base of talent." Vivian said. "In the past, I think the players teamed on one really good player. Now, teamwork is at a higher level."
Hunt echoed Vivian's emphasis on teamwork.
"It is going to be a team effort this year," Hunt said. "How we do will depend on team unity."
Individually, Vivian sees improvement in her serve, her play selection as setter and her ability to set up the hitters.
Vivian came to KU from Omaha Westside High School, and was an important member of the team from the start.
"I have a lot of experience because I have played a lot of positions." Vivian said. "There were a lot of injuries on the team when I was a freshman, so I got to play quite a bit. Now, I don't even start, technically, because of the rotation system we
use."
Hunt graduated from Hickman Mills High School. She went to Johnson County Community College and played two years before coming to KU.
Although KU hasn't won many matches this year. Hunt is convinced the record book doesn't tell the whole story.
"I see improvement every game." Hunt said. "We didn't play in Nebraska the way the score makes us look like we did. We played excellently. If we play like that, we are going to win."
Hunt said the Jayhawks weren't at a disadvantage in the Big Eight conference, because most of the other teams were also young.
Coach Bob Lockwood told his seniors that their last year would only be what they made of it. So far he has been pleased with their efforts.
They are spreading around with the new players, instead of sticking.
together all of the time like seniors might do." Lockwood said. "They are very good and patient with the young players. Their leadership is very important."
Lockwood said the setting done by Vivian and Hunt in their last match at Nebraska, which the Jayhawks lost 15-6, 15-6 and 15-3, was the best he had ever seen.
"They came into the season in good shape." Lockwood said. "They use good play selection, read defenses well and have eliminated many of their mental errors. They are much improved over last year. They are good veterans."
JAYHAWK NOTES. The Jayhawks travel to Ames, Iowa today to take on Iowa State Lockwood said the Cyclones have been a close rival in the past Tomorrow's scheduled match with Drake in Des Moines, Iowa has been canceled because of scheduling problems.
Angels down Royals, 2-0; both teams protest game
By United Press International
ANMEH, Cali. - Mike Witt
blanked Kansas City on three singles
and Brian Downing hit his 218 herd
last night, carrying the California
Angels to a 2-0 victory over the
Rovals
The game was protested by both clubs over the use of illegal bats The Angels' second straight victory against a half score
clubs over the use of high seats. The Angels' second straight victory moved them just a half-game.
pennd first place Kansas City in the
AL West race. Minnesota, which beat
Chicago earlier, is one game behind.
Reinhardt lingers in coma
Collegiate Wittruck out seven and walked Wittruck to improve his record to 14-11 in completing his eight game of the season, the 23 year old right-hander set down the first 12 batters before designated hitter Jorge Ortea lined a single to left to open the fifth. One out later, Steve Bailoni bounced an infield single off the glove of third baseman Dou G'Inces.
EUGENE, Ore — Colorado tight end Ed Reinhardt打入 in a coma for a sixth day yesterday, still in critical condition from a severe head injury suffered in last Saturday's game against Oregon.
By United Press International
"His condition is unchanged — he's still in critical condition and unconscious," said a spokeswoman at Sacred Heart General Hospital.
The 19-year-old sophomore was injured when tackled by two Oregon players after catching a pass in the final quarter of the game, won be
Oregon 27.20. He got up slowly and was helped off the field, and collapsed on the sidelines a few moments later.
Surgeons later Saturday removed a blood clot from the left side of Reinhardt's brain
Experts' said the injury could not have been prevented by any equipment or gear now available or on the drawing board.
(
Although Reinhardt complained of headaches to teammates both during the game Saturday and earlier in the season, Colorado team doctors said they were not told of this.
T10
φ20
lm.
011
Hilltop harrier
The locals know the hills at KU's Rim Rock Farm so well that they've given them names. For many a cross country runner they are inhospitable peaks, but for Brett
Steiner, who won Saturday's Jayhawk Invitational. they promote mental toughness as well as a welcome opportunity to slip out of the pack. See story, page 10.
SUNSHINE
Breezy
The University Daily
High, 90. Low, mid-60s.
Details on page 3.
KANSAN
Monday, September 24, 1984
AURH may alter contract rate recommendations
Staff Reporter
By BRENDA STOCKMAN
The Association of University Residence Hails may adjust its recommendations for 1985-86 contract rates because they may have been based on inaccurate information, an AURH committee chairman said this weekend.
weekend.
Curt Worden, the chairman of the AURH Housing and Contracts Committee, said that some of the figures AURH based its rate recommendations on were "subject to error."
Last week, at the Residential Programs Advisory Board meeting, AURH recommended that utility rates be raised $20 in the 1985-86 contracts. The housing department recommended a $37 increase for utilities.
RECOMMENDED AS A $10.00 TUITION
THE UTILITY FEE is among several
items included in the base rate students pay
to live in residence halls. Also included in the
contract are such items as food, maintenance
and social fees.
and social ties. The advisory board reviews recommenda
tions about housing contracts for residence halls, scholarship halls and Stouffer Place. The board will make a final review on Oct. 24 and then submit its recommendation to David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs.
attairs.
One reason the AURH recommendation was lower than the housing department recommendation was AURH's assumption that the department had acquired a surplus of money for the past three years, Worden said. However, the surpluses are now in question.
J. J. WILSON, DIRECTOR of the housing department, said that the surpises actually were operating balances. The figures used by AURH were for the entire housing department and not just for the residence halls.
Worden said, "We took the total cash balance and technically that's not a good picture of residence halls because the residence halls are just a part of housing."
resource-handlers.
The point is not that the AURH figures are incorrect. Worden said, but that they were all AURH had to work with and that the housing
department did not explain the accounting procedure to the AURH committee.
procedure to the AURH used figures provided by Although AURH used figures provided by the housing department for part of its proposals, Worden said that AURH's attempt to examine housing records "was an attempt to get housing to explain itself."
to "IF THEY CAN EXPLAIN themselves to us in a manner that we can understand and can accept, then we may adjust our figures." Worden said. He said the final decision about changing the recommendation would be made by James Jeffley, president of AURH and AURH representative to the advisory board.
Wilson said that Steve Keel, Wilson's assistant, would meet with Worden later this week to explain the department's accounting process.
process. Wilson said that he was concerned when recommendations were based on novices' opinions.
opinions.
Worden said that he was concerned that Wilson was focusing on AURH's mistake and not offering an explanation
"Our numbers are a justification to prove
that we're wrong." Worden said. "It's an attempt to say we don't understand
HOUSING DEPARTMENT RATE RECOMMENDATIONS are based on current trends in various industries, historical trends in rates and the need to maintain cash flow to operate the department. Wilson said.
He said that he was not sure whether students serving as contract committee chairmen could be expected to understand the process fully.
the process fully.
Worden said the problem for AURH in looking through housing records had been that the committee members did not have the technical knowledge to understand the housing department's accounting methods. He said he thought the housing department was responsible for explaining its records.
was responsive to AURH's recommendations are based on the consumer price index, the University of Kansas Annual Financial Reports from 1981 to 1983 and an anticipated change in KU's natural gas supplier.
AURH CONCLUDED THAT the housing department had a surplus by subtracting the ending balance from the beginning balance
for each year. Worden said That led AURH to question the housing department's recommendation to increase utility fees.
omission to train the armored AURH's product to the advisory board since the previous years, the department of housing ran significant surpluses. If the surpluses can cover underestimated utility costs, then the risk of accepting a $20 increase for utilities lessens.
increase for utility.
Written received a letter Friday from Warner that indicated that AURH had confused operating balances with surplus figures.
Worden said, however, that he had not confused operating balances with surpluses and that he would clarify the confusion over terms with Wilson. He said he was sure that the misunderstanding would be resolved
Sunburn, sandy shoes symbolize canoe race
the misunderstandings
ANOTHER REMOND THE two re-
munications their director, Wilson said, is that the
department considered an unexpected utility rate increase in 1984, which did not become available until June, and AURH did not.
The image shows a river scene with multiple boats and people paddling. The water is calm, reflecting the trees on the opposite bank. There are at least 15 individuals visible in the boat groups, some of whom appear to be engaged in rowing or paddling. The environment suggests a natural setting, possibly near a lake or river.
See AURH, p. 5, col. 1
By JULIE COMINE
Staff Reporter
LECAMPTON — Sweaty and sunburned, about 20 members of Ellsworth Hall's 8th floor canoe队 dug their into the sandy banks of the Kaw River yesterday afternoon and awaited the finish of the 16th annual KU/K State Canoe Race.
MANHATTAN = Canoeists from the University of Kansas and Kansas State University take off down the Kansas River just outside of Manhattan toward Lawrence for the 16th an-
annual KU/K state university. The first- and second-place canoes in the independent division already had paddled across the finish line, but the Ellsworth
MONDAY MORNING
nual KU/K-State Canoe Race. The race Saturday and yesterday included 20 teams from living groups from both schools.
"We were two minutes behind
going into the last six mile leg." said Cathy
Weibel. Shawnee Mission freshman. "We
our hearts our hearts. I hope we can do it."
team was still neck and neck with the Oliver Hall team for the residence hall title
A FEW YARDS AWAY, Oliver Hall team members squinted into the sun, searching for signs of their canoe Ed Mitchell, Salina treasman, clutched a white banner emblazoned with "Oliver I — Fearless Canoers."
"We're going to win," Mitchell said. "This is just to make sure the team sees us when they get here."
Seconds later, a canoe appeared downriver. Both teams dashed into the Kaw, stumbling and splashing 200 yards to the middle of the water to get a closer look at the winning canoeists.
their team.
"That's us! 'That's us!" Ellsworth team members screamed.
Weibel hugged her teammate, Cathy Compton, Pittsburgh freshman. Other Ellsworth canoeists dived into the water to greet their three final rowers with upraised fists and victory cheers.
WHEN THE OLIVER TEAM paddled across the finish line a few minutes later, the river swelled with exhausted, exuberant canoeists from both residence halls, chanting "KU! KU! KU!"
ting "KU, KU, KU"
"Both teams can call themselves winners." said Rob McAlexander, McCloub sophomore, who rowed the final leg for Ellsworth's team. "KState has dominated the race for years. This is a KU sweep."
The Ellsworth victory yesterday marked the first time a KU team had won the residence hall competition, said Keith Siemens, KState caucus race chairman.
jemsen, K State and Twenty teams from KU. K-State and
Wichita State University entered this year's race. Siemsen said 17 teams entered the residence hall division and three the independent division.
independent of the THE FREE-STATERS, a Lawrence canoe club, breezed to the independent title in 15 hours, 47 minutes and 37 seconds — nearly two hours ahead of the rest of the field.
residence halls, finished third overall.
Ellsworth's team finished third overall.
18:21:20. The Oliver team finished in
18:26:38. K State's Smith-Smurthwaite
team finished third in the residence hall competition.
Traditionally, the 102-mile race, sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls at the University of Kansas and Kansas State University, begins Saturday morning in Manhattan and ends Sunday in Lawrence's Burcham Park.
The Rogues, a team of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity members and women from KU residence halls, finished second in 17:48:12
"IN SOME PLACES, the teams had to drag their boats across sandbars," said Bruce Miller, Louisville, Ky., sophomore and KU canoe race chairman.
But because of gusty winds and the low river level, race organizers decided to end this year's event at the Lecompton check point — 11 miles short of Lawrence.
and KC canoe race. "This has been one long, crazy weekend," Miller said last night, as he roasted hot dogs for more than 100 soggy, sand-caked caneets. "It's been rush, rush, rush for the past 48 hours."
agreed.
"Sometimes the race was like a triathlon," she said. "You have to climb hills and run through cornfields to get to your canoe. And the grasshoppers are flying in your face."
After the race, Weibel, proudly holding the Ellsworth teams's first-place trophy, agreed
Weibel pointed to her once-white tennis shoes, now crusted with sand.
"Next year, I've got to bring a different pair of shoes," she said.
DESPIET? THE COMPETITION among teams, moss, canoeists insisted that the race was a social gathering — a weekend of good, muddy fun.
"Mud fights, sand fights, water fights — they're all part of the trip." said Phil Priebe, Lousville, Ky., sophomore
During its overnight stop Saturday in St Marys, the Ellsworth team took a "gang shower" in a local car wash, Pribe said.
shower in the toilet.
"It was great," he said. "We had one bar of soap, two bottles of shampoo and a bunch of quarters."
of quarters.
Nina Rusa, Leawood sophomore and an Oliver Hall canoeist, said the trip had made team members closer.
team members close.
"When we left for Manhattan on Friday,
no one really knew each other," she said.
"But today, we're a cane family."
'Hill Street ties record for Emmys
By United Press International
HOLLYWOOD — Jane Fonda as a poor Appalachian mother and Sir Laurence Oliver as King Lear won the top acting awards, and "Hill Street Blues" tied as the most honored series in history at the 36th annual Emmys show last night.
annual Emmy's about Amelia," the ABC film about incess that broke one of the last TV awards that best drama special. The film, which won a total of three Emmys, beat out several critically acclaimed films, including "The Day After," a film about nuclear holocaust fitted at the University of Kansas and in around Lawrence
Kansas also beat NCBC, which finished last season third in the ratings, narrowly won the Emmys race with 20 awards. CBS was a close second with 18, followed by ABC with 16, PBS with 10 and independently syndicated shows with five.
independently synchronized to "Hill Street Blues" — television's most acclaimed series of the 1980s — picked up five Emmys this year for best drama series, directing, film editing and two supporting performances. That gave it a total of 26, tying the record set by "The Mary Tyler Moore Show."
"Cheers" won four Emmys, including best comedy series Thea Perlman of "Cheers" took the supporting actress award for her role as a sarcastic barmaid. The comedy also won awards for writing and film editing.
won awards for writing the book.
Despite the success of the two NBC series,
the stars of the shows failed to win any of the
lead actor or actress Emmys.
lead a tour.
To Shelleil, host of the Emmys telecast, we for best actor in a drama series in his third try as the macho but whimsical star of CBS "Magnum, P.1."
"I didn't have a speech prepared for this," the surprised Selleck said.
John Ritter won in his third try for "Three's Company," which ended its run last season.
season.
"I wish my dad was here tonight so I could show off." Ritter said in a reference to his father, cowboy singing star Tex Ritter
Tony Dale of "Cagney and Lacey" won best actress in a drama series for the second straight year. One of the losers was her colleague on the show, Sharon Gless.
See EMMY, p. 5, col. 3
By JOHN REIMRINGER
Criminal false fire alarms drop by 90 percent in six years
The number of criminal false fire alarms reported annually at the University of Kansas has dropped from 140 to 14 in the last six years.
Staff Reporter
Lawrence Fire Department and KU officials attribute the 90-percent decrease to educational efforts by fire department and housing staffs, as well as a change in attitudes among residents in the housing system.
"It ites on the residents in the residence halls," said Jim McMain, Lawrence fire chief. "They're the only ones that can make the change, and they've made the change."
National Safety Council's University and College Division, virtually all criminal false alarms at KU occur in housing areas, which include eight residence halls, eight scholarship halls, Jayhawk Towers and Stouffer Place.
ACCORDING TO A REPORT submitted by KI, to the Fire Safety Committee of the
Ruth Mikkelson, associate director of the Office of Residential Programs, said the office reserved the right to ask anyone who was caught giving a criminal false alarm to move out of the residence hall system.
Knowingly causing a false alarm is a misdemeanor in Lawrence, and is punishable by up to 30 days in jail and a fine of up to $500
A reward of $200 has been offered, during the last four years, to anyone providing information leading to the arrest and conviction of persons turning in criminal false alarms. Mikkelsen said
HALF THE REWARD IS paid by the fire
department and hall by the government of the hall where the alarm was pulled, Mikkelson said. The reward has been paid three times in four years.
McSwain said in those cases the judge ordered the guilty party to pay restitution to the reward fund.
Education, rather than punishment, has been the biggest factor in the decrease of criminal false alarms, officials say
"The reward program is more dealing with the problem after it occurs," said Capt. Rich Barr of the fire department
Educational efforts have included a fire-safety pamphlet distributed to each room in the residence halls and a slide show, both put together by the fire department. Barr said.
MIKKELSON SAID THAT the slide show
She said that the danger of false alarms was that people who became conditioned to them wouldn't evacuate in a real fire.
was required viewing for hall staff Resident assistants also can arrange to show the program to residents of their wings
Peer pressure helps stop residents from
palling airways, she said.
False alarms are also dangerous for firefighters.
"Each time we have an alarm we take it seriously, and the building is evacuated." Mikkelsen said "People get tired of standing outside in the middle of the night."
False alarms also tie up equipment that might be needed at a real fire, he said.
McSwain said that 18 to 20 percent of the firefighters killed while on duty were killed in traffic accidents while responding to alarms
CRIMINAL FALSE
Source: KUPD
FIRE ALARMS
7/1/77 to 6/30/78 140
7/1/78 to 6/30/79 85
7/1/79 to 12/31/80 78
1/1/81 to 12/31/81 40
1/1/82 to 12/31/82 22
1/1/83 to 12/31/83 14
1/1/84 to 7/31/84 5
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战
September 24, 1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily KANSAN
U.S. orders former Nazi on business trip to leave
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — An Austrian mayor was ordered to leave the United States after Justice Department officials confirmed he was a sergeant in a World War II Nazi SS "murder" brigade, the officials said yesterday.
Franz Hausberger is mayor of Mayrhofen, a ski resort town in the Austrian Alps. He came to Miami Beach, a city with an ancient Jewish population, to promote tourism.
Hauserberger admitted he was a member of Germany's First SS Infantry Brigade, but said he was cleared of wrongdoing by a special commission in Vienna.
Judges sending more to prison
WASHINGTON — Judges are sending thousands more criminals to state prisons each year, handing down jail sentences at a rate that increased 12.5 percent in a single year, the Justice Department said yesterday.
A survey of 33 states by the Bureau of Justice Statistics found that state judges sentenced eight people to prison out of a population of 10,000 in 1980, and the number increased to nine per 10,000 by 1981 — an increase of 12.5 percent.
Disnevland has troubles, too
ANAHEM, Calif. — About a third of the employees at Disneyland will vote today on a second contract proposal which, if rejected, would trigger a strike.
The 1,800 unionized employees turned down the first offer overwhelmingly last week but agreed to work until they considered the second offer.
The unions involved represent ride operators, ticket sellers, retail clerks and janitors.
Guinea pigs culled for debates
WASHINGTON — Budget director David Stockman will play the role of Walter Mondale in rehearsing President Reagan for the forthcoming campaign debates, Newsweek magazine reported yesterday.
Stockman knows the drill - he portrayed President Jimmy Carter in the Reagan debate rehearsals four years ago.
Newswear also said Rep. Lynn Martin, R-Ill., will play Geraldine Ferraro's role in rehearsals with George Bush for the vice presidential debate.
vice president. The first presidential debate will be Oct.
7 in Louisville, Ky., and the second will be
Oct. 21 in Kansas City, Mo. The vice presidential debate will be Oct. 11 in Philadelphia.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Democratic presidential nominee Walter Mondale yesterday urged President Reagan to make a "clear statement" calling off the disruptive hecklers who have dogged Mondale and his running mate, Geraldine Ferraro.
Mondale also charged Reagan with adopting a "deliberate strategy" of campaigning from a "question-free zone" and said, "At this point, temporarily, the polls would suggest it is succeeding."
The latest CBS News poll showed Reagan leading by 21 percent, but Meldon predicted "we're going to pick up dramatically" by hammering at the issues.
MONDALE SPOKE AT a news conference after his weekly paid radio broadcast, in which he tried to stem Democratic defections to the GOP by warning that the Republican Party has set course for a "dangerous future."
Appearing with Mondale outside the radio studio was Kathy Wilson, head of the National Women's Political Caucus, who announced her bipartisan group was supporting the Democratic candidate, its first-ever presidential endorsement.
"when it comes to women, Walter Mondale stands tall," said Wilson a Republican who has long been a Democrat.
Mondale was asked whether he had seen any evidence the White House or Reagan-Bush campaign were behind the heckling he has encountered and the anti-abortion demonstrators who have appeared consistently at Ferraro rallies.
REP. TONY COEHLO, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said on NBC television yesterday that he was "absolutely" certain the demonstrations were being planned by the Reagan campaign and compared the heckling to "the dirty tricks in the 72 campaign."
While saying he did not know whether the Reagan campaign was responsible, Mondale said, "I do believe that Mr. Reagan could clarify if he'd make a clear statement that he's opposed to this heckling, just as I would do were he heckled."
"If he will say that, and instruct Republican committees around the country to do their best to comply with his wishes, I'm sure he could be successful. He hasn't done that."
yet." Mondale said, adding, "I wish he would."
Deputy White House press secretary Peter Rousseau, responding to Monday's statements, told reporters in New York: "The president does not mean to encourage nor condone disruptive tactics. That is not White House or campaign policy."
IN HIS FIVE-MINUTE RADIO talk, Mondale blasted Reagan and the Republicans for quoting Democratic heroes Harry Truman, Hubert Humphrey and John Kennedy.
"What a cynical re-write of history that is," he said.
The GOP, he said, offers a 'scary,
intolerant and dangerous future.
"If you cross over to the Dallas Republicans, that's what you get. You don't get just the balloons, the pop rattles and the nicks, you get Falwell, Nicargui and Star Wars, too."
In New York yesterday, on the eve of a speech to the 39th session of the U.N. General Assembly, Reagan said he wanted a "realistic, constructive, long-term relationship with the Soviet Union" as he prepared for a first-time meeting with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyky.
Our brief encounter last night, expected to consist of little more than a handshake and an exchange of pleasanties, was to be a prelude to more substantive talks later this week — a session in New York Wednesday between Gromky and Shultz and a Reagan-Gromky meeting Friday at the White House. The meetings mark the highest-level contact between the superpowers since the president took office.
IN COMMENTS PREPARED for an evening reception for visiting dignitaries that afforded him his first opportunity to meet Gromyko, Reagan said "open and frank discussion" among all nations could "help us to create a safer world."
Reagan was engaging in some political one-upsmanship by greeting Gromyko last night. The White House was surprised last week to learn Gromyko would meet with Mondale in New York two days before his talks with Reagan in Washington.
Administration officials said Reagan intended to press for a resumption of nuclear arms control talks during his meeting with Gromyko later this week, prepared to signal his willingness to return to the suspended talks in Geneva or discuss an alternative forum.
Student cheats revive honor code questions
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — A new cheating scandal at the Air Force Academy has renewed debate over whether honor codes can work on today's college campuses where students are under intense pressure to achieve high grades, a UPI survey indicates.
The academy has suspended its honor code because of its worst cheating scandal in 20 years. That code required cadets to report what they were involved in, regardless of whether they were involved.
The academy acted in the spring in the wake of 19 known violations in which morning test questions were passed to students taking an afternoon test. Academy officials believed that more cadets cheated than the 19 who were suspended, and that cadet-run trials acquitted students despite evidence they had cheated.
institutions of higher learning turned up some solid support of the honor code concept as well as some skepticism.
SENIOR CADETS ANONYMOUSLY told academy officials that many honor boards returned "not guilty" verdicts despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
A United Press International survey of
as well as some keptakes.
Not surprisingly, support for the Air Force academy's code came from another service academy — West Point.
"The major feedback we get is that all the cadets are pretty satisfied with the honor code" Cadet Honor Captain Charles Rogers said.
"A CADET IS NOT automatically kicked out if it is caught cheating." Rogers said. An extensive review process takes into account the judgment of other cadets.
The Naval Academy, where general guidelines replace a formal code, had 35 violations and 24 expulsions last year.
The University of Virginia has had an honor code for 142 years but removed the so-called non-toleration clause prohibiting silence about someone else's cheating.
Yet if a student is convicted of lying, stealing or cheating there is only one option.
Wesleyan University in Middletown, Conn. with 2,500 students, lives by an honor code administered by students since 1883.
S. Africa workers oppose divestment, survey shows
By United Press International
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -- Seventy-five percent of black South African factory workers think it would be bad for them if foreign businesses divested their interests in the racially segregated country, a survey showed yesterday.
Lawrence Schlemmer, president of the South African Institute of Race Relations, said the survey indicated that black workers think divestment would threaten their material interests.
Americans and others opposed to apartheid in South Africa often contend the system of racial segregation would be unimaginable. Equated their interests in the country.
SCHLEMER'S ORGANIZATION, which vigorously opposes aparthid, based the survey on 551 interviews conducted in May with black production workers in Johannesburg and in the city of Durban. It also examined complexes of Durban and Port Elizabeth.
The survey showed that 75 percent of the
respondents rejected divestment, while the figure among employees of U.S. companies was 71 percent.
Asked who gained most from U.S. investment, 46 percent said the South African government got most from it, and 38 percent thought it helped blacks
"WHILE VERY AGGRIEVED and fairly radical in regard to their political circumstances, they realize that the system of industrial production, for all its benefits, is far from free. They recognize, spew survival for the black proletariat," Schlemmer wrote.
"They are prepared to express support for banned organizations and over a third of them are even prepared to say that they will participate in a mass political strike. They are also in their employment and material opportunities protected. Schlemmar said."
"Disinvestment by U.S. companies and trade sanctions are a threat to their material and work interests, and therefore they oppose them with a firm consistency."
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September 24,1984 Page3
CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Fulbright applications due by Friday afternoon
The deadline to submit applications for graduate study abroad grants under the Fulbright Program is 5 p.m. Friday.
Most of the grants offered provide round-trip transportation, tuition and living expenses for one academic year. Applicants must be U.S. citizens, must have a bachelor's degree or its equivalent before the first date of the grant and, in most cases, should be proficient in the language of the host country.
Candidates for the 1985-86 competition are ineligible for a grant to a country if they do graduate work or research there for six months or more in the 1984-85 academic year.
Application forms and further information are available at the office of study abroad, 203 Lippincott Hall.
Art history prof to give lecture
Edward A. Maser, professor of art history at the University of Chicago, will speak tomorrow on "The Humanist in Old Age: The Late works of Franz Anton Maubertsch."
The lecture, the second in the Humanities Lecture Series, will begin at 8 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Maser was the director of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art from 1953 to 1961.
Maser will comment at an 11 a.m. gallery tour of Spencer Museum about works acquired while he was director and the considerations in building a university collection.
Prof to review program's past
Seaver, a professor of history who was director from 1957 to 1984, will deliver a speech titled "The Western Civilization Program and the Liberal Arts Curriculum at the University of Kansas, 1945 to 1964."
James Seaver, former director of the Western Civilization program, will speak about the 46 year evolution of the program at 8 p.m. Thursday in Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
He will discuss the program's future, and the problems the program had during the late 1960s when students were questioning the place of the study of Civilization.
United Fund's goal declared
John O. Tollefson, dean of the School of Business and the KU campaign chairman for the 1844-85 Lawrence United Fund, announced recently that the University's fundraising goal is $72,000.
A reception in the Big Eight Room of the Union will follow the lecture.
Campaign materials will be distributed this week. Tolleson said.
The United Fund provides support for many community service agencies in Lawrence and Douglas County, including the Douglas County Association for Retarded Citizens, Headquarters and the Legal Aid Society.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny, windy and warm. The high will be around 90, and winds will be from the south at 15 to 25 mph. Tonight will be partly cloudy. The low will be in the mid-40s. Tomorrow will be cooler with a chance of thunderstorms. The high will be in the low to mid-80s.
Where to call
Do you have an idea for a story or a photograph?
photograph, call the Kansan at 664-8100. If your idea or news release deals with campus or area news, ask for Doug Cunningham, campus editor. For entertainment and On Campus items, ask for Sunny Ostrmith entertainment, ask for Sports news, ask for sports editor, sports editor
Photo suggestions should go to Dave Hornback, photo editor.
Hornback, proffessor.
For other questions or complaints, ask for Don Knox, editor, or Paul Sevart,
managing editor.
The number of the Kansan business office, which handles all advertising is 964-4810.
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports
Teaching center recommended for KU
By MARY CARTER Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - A Center for Teaching Excellence to promote improvements in teacher education should be established at the University of Kansas, a team of education consultants told the Kansas Board of Regents Friday.
TWO OF THE CONSULTANTS, Daniel Griffiths, former dean of the New York University School of Education, and Sidney Tickton, vice president of the Academy for Educational Development, present 99-page report at Harper's Fair. Enlarson
or Regents Schools. The six Regents schools would operate the center jointly as a focus for educational leadership in Kansas, the consultants said. Faculty and researchers from all the Regents schools would work at the center.
The center for excellence was one of 18 recommendations made by the three-member team commissioned last spring by the Regents to review teacher education programs at Regents schools.
Grittits, Tickton and Harold Emerson-
torer president of Ohio State. He is
also a professor at the Academy
the consultants said that one of the center's objectives would be to accelerate the application of new educational research to public school classrooms.
The Regents should ask the Kansas Legislature for at least $1 million for the next five to 10 years to establish the center, the team said.
team训
MAJOR OFFICIALS RECEIVED copies of the report Friday morning but declined comment on specific details until they had studied the report further.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said, however, that he was pleased that KU's five-year teacher-education program had been praised in the report and that the School of Education appeared in step with other such schools in the nation.
Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, said he wanted to review the report at length.
for Educational Development in Washington, D.C.
report at length. "My overall general comment is one of best informed by the good comments about KU and not being alarmed by anything they said," he said.
The study was part of a five-year cycle of program reviews at all Regions schools. In
the last two years, Regents teams have examined degree programs in nine areas of study.
One of the report's recommendation was that entrance requirements for Kansas schools of education be raised "substantially" by 1990.
saturation. College told the Regents that the American College Test scores of education students at KU and Kansas State University were above the national mean but that the scores of their counterparts at the four other Regents schools were below the national mean.
"We don't understand how these colleges of education can be enrolling lower-achieving students and contending that they will become good teachers." Tickton said. "How much better would they be if the level were increased to begin with?"
THE CONSULTANTS suggested discontinuation or modifying 25 degree programs, 10 of them at KU, in which the enrolments were too small to be cost effective or the degrees
The report also recommended an evaluation of KU's five-year teacher-education program and possibly expanding the program to other campuses and into a master's degree.
degree. Regents should work to establish financial incentives such as forgivable loans to superior students who plan to teach in Kaggaa public schools, the consultants said.
Griffiths said the consultants found university and public school officials in Kansas more satisfied than they had expected with the quality of teacher education.
the quality of teacher education.
"Nationwide reports indicate a lot of people are terribly exercised," he said. "We didn't find very much of that here."
IN OTHER ACTION FRIDAY, the Regents authorized KU, the University of Kansas Medical Center and Kansas State University to pay off residence hall revenue bonds early and at a discount.
The federal government bought the bonds in the early 1960s at a low interest rate and is now paying about 13 percent interest to keep the bonds financed, said Keith Nitcher, KU director of business affairs.
doubled the University owes $7.7 million in
principal and interest.
Bulldog
Kerry Richardson comforts his fiancee, Debbie Ryder, as firefighters examine the couple's charred mobile home. The fire yesterday did $2,000 worth of damage to the uninsured home. 1045 East 23rd St., Lot A-2. Three fire trucks respond.
led to the alarm, which was reported at 3.59 p.m. and under control to 4.05 p.m. A fire department inspector said that the fire had started when an electrical short set the insulation under the mobile home on fire.
AAUP leader says group supports profs
By HOLLIE MARKLAND
Staff Reporter
Crises in tenure and academic freedom preside the future of higher education, and the American Association of University Professors will continue to support the rights of professors, the national president of the AACP said Saturday.
AAPU said Sahil Kumar, "Tenure is under increasing attack from administrators and faculty." Paul H.L. Walter, the president and a KU graduate, said "In Kansas City, Mo., four community colleges were censured by the AAPU because they fired tenured professors in order to hire part-time replacements."
part of the institution.
The AAUP is a national organization of about 60,000 members dedicated to preserving the rights and privileges of faculty.
sors to advocate the adoption of policies that conflict with the school administration's position on issues without fear of losing their jobs.
Using the rights and privileges to learn
Academic freedom is the right of profes
Walter wearing a red-and-blue tie embroidered with a Jayahawk, spoke to an audience of about 25 people at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art. His speech preceded the fall 1984 meeting of the Kansas Conference of the AAUP.
Walter, chairman of the chemistry department at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., said the AAUP recently had been divided on the question of faculty unions.
Walter said he was trying to conciliate the factions since his election last spring after a heated contest against Peter Fairley, the presidential candidate from a unionized campus.
Sidney Shapiro, president of the KU chapter of AAPU and a professor of law, said that although Walter was not considered an advocate of faculty unions, he supported collective bargaining on campuses where the faculty thought it was appropriate.
"The election of Walter was a decision made by the members of AAUP that he was the best person to accommodate the two groups." Shapiro said.
Walter said, "The divisions within the AAUP are family squabbles, but even with these squabbles, we will effectively represent the professional interests of the members and advance ac:deme."
The AAPU, which fights for a role for faculty in the decision-making processes of universities and intervenes for professors in disputes with the administration, continues to fight for equal pay and equal retirement payments for women. Walter said.
Nancy Anderson, the coordinator of the board, said the chairman, Rob Hunter, had already missed two meetings this semester because of the conflict.
A scheduling conflict may force the chairman of the Student Senate Transportation Board to resign his position, the coordinator of the board said yesterday.
Hunter is enrolled in a class that meets Tuesday and Thursday evenings, she said. The board meets every other Thursday from 7:30 to 9 p.m., when Hunter is in class.
Chairman might quit his office
Hunter said the class was a prerequisite for three other courses and that he could not take it at any other time.
Scheduling conflict may force student to give up his post
By the Kansan Staff
if at any other take Anderson said the board would not change its meeting time to accommodate the Hunter's schedule.
meetings or conduct receptions.
"He hasn't really put any effort into helping the board in any way so far," she said.
Hunter's Schedule
At Thursday's board meeting, Anderson advised Hunter to begin attending the meetings or consider resigning.
Hunter said that if he resigned, he would do so this week. He would be required to submit his resignation to Carla Vogel, student body president.
If Hunter resigns, Anderson said, the board would select a new chairman at next week's meeting. The chairman would be picked from present members of the seven-member board.
The appointment is subject to approval by the student body president and the Student Senate.
so.
Anderson said, "I think he resign. I guess the class is more important."
the class is more important.
Hunter was appointed chairman by Vogel in April. Earlier in that semester, Hunter was a regular member of the board
The all-student board's major duty is to oversee operation and management of the KU on Wheels bus service. The Lawrence Bus Co provides the service.
KT on 'Wheels' estimated operating costs for fiscal 1955 are $399,000. Anderson said.
runter was the third chairman of the Transportation Board since it was reactivated in 1982
The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents its first colloquy in an introductory seminar series about Islam.
Introducing Islam To Non-Muslims
Place: Regionalist Room, Kansas Union
“INTRODUCTION TO ISLAM”
Time: 7:45 p.m., Tues. Sept., 25, 1984
Come Visit With Us Let Us Get Acquainted
REFRESHMENTS ARE PROVIDED
---
SUA Fine Arts invites you to the lecture by Margaret Tuckson
"The Traditional Pottery of Papua New Guinea" Monday. September 24
4 p.m.
211 Spencer
and
"Travels in New Guinea"
Tuesday, September 25
4 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium
Sponsored by Dept. of Anthropology, Fine Arts, History of Art, & SUA
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September 24,1984 Page 4
OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kansan (USPK 626-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawen. Kanek 6005, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and final periods. Second class payment atLawen. Kanek 6004. Subscription by mail are $15 for six months and $2 a year in Douglas, County and $18 for six months or $3 a week in Dodgeville. See PASTMaster. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawen. Kanek 6005
DON KNOX Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE HESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
D'OUG CUNNINGHAM Campus Editor
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General Manager and News Advisor
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GLSOK vote
All too often, students assume that referendums are effective because they gauge as accurately as possible the opinions of all students.
opinions of all students. The latest attempt at a referendum, however, cannot possibly be effective. Its will is misdirected. Its purpose, hidden.
hidden.
Last semester, a petition that was circulated on campus questioned whether the Student Senate should stop financing Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, a campus organization that counsels homosexuals. The petition called for a referendum — an election — that would let the students, not the Senate, decide whether GLSOK should be denied a share of the student activity fee.
GLSOK received $505 this year.
Now the petition, signed by about 2,500 students, is before a Senate subcommittee that will try to verify the signatures. If the signatures are verified, an election probably will be scheduled within a few weeks, and the Senate will be bound to comply with the will of the students.
And so, according to the petitioners, the democratic will be unplayed and justice will be served.
Not so.
The supporters of this petition say it is not a referendum to accept or reject homosexuality as a way of life. Instead, the position taken is financial. Is GLSOK self-supporting and, if so, shouldn't it be denied a share of the student activity fee?
This petition, however, is targeted only at GLSOK, and not at dozens of other groups that also could be considered self-supporting. In effect, the petitioners are unfairly singling out GLSOK, whether that is their intention or not.
singing out our GLSOK, the issue. The issue, then, is not one of finances. The issue is, as GLSOK president Ruth Lichtwardt says, "... that our membership is largely gay. That is what people object to."
This petition is unfair. Its real intent — to prompt a vote on the worth of financing a group that encourages homosexuality — is obscured by its petitioners' stated intent.
arity - is obscured by peeling
Unfortunately, it might be too late to derail this referendum before it is railroaded into effect. It might be too late to have a referendum on this referendum.
to have a referendum on this issue.
The issue, most likely, will come to a vote
The issue, most likely, will come to the fore. Students should not consider this referendum an opportunity to condone or to condemn homosexuality at KU. The referendum, as stated, does not seek such.
Nor would it be fair to vote to deny the financing of GLSOK without having the chance to vote to deny the financing of other student organizations that also could be considered self-supporting.
self-supporting. Nor would it be wise to abstain from voting, even though the referendum would not be valid if less than 10 percent of the student body votes. Most Senate elections, no matter the issue, have drawn at least 10 percent turnout.
The only way to counteract this referendum would be to vote no. A "no" vote doesn't guarantee financing. It guarantees that the Senate will consider the financing of GLSOK in the same way it considers the financing of all other student groups.
Senate flag-waving
WASHINGTON — Under terms of legislation approved earlier this month, the U.S. Senate soon will have an official flag. The design of this flag will be chosen from a competition among "at least six firms proficient in the field."
Admittedly, I'm no Betty Ross when it comes to designing flags and have no credentials to attest to my proficiency
be red, white and pink.
According to photos taken before the Capitol was air conditioned, senators once favored ice-cream suits in the summer. Hence the white in the senatorial flag.
rampant on a goal in the
so much for the colors. Now
arises the delicate question of size.
Although the resolution expressly prohibits display of the flag "for commercial purposes," it makes no mention of the occasions when a senator could appropriately fly his own special ensign.
my promise.
For a number of years, however,
I have been observing the U.S.
Senate in action. Therefore, I feel
proficient enough to offer a few
suggestions.
Obviously, however, the size should fit the purpose
The banner I have in mind would be red, white and purple.
Let's say that a senator is authorized to fly the flag on the bumper of his automobile.
while in a car.
The red, as might be assumed,
measures the color of their eyes.
The purple, a royal hue, stems
from the prose emanating from
the stump when senators are
running for re-election.
running for 14 courses.
My proposed design would consist of a red, white and purple field campant on a gust of hot air.
in that circumstance, it should not be so large that it might
DICK WEST
United Press International
Nor should it be so small that it would be obscured by the starry banners of generals and admirals at committee hearings.
interfere with the driver's line of sight.
As for stars, they could designate the chairmen of committees and subcommittees — a large star for the flag of a committee chairman, a smaller one for the head of a subcommittee.
Most people agree that the struggle between the forces of Chicago Mayor Harold Washington and the forces of City Council Chairman Ed Vrdolyak is bad for the city.
What color should the stars be?
They would have to be either red or white.
I would say that one of the colors — purple, perhaps — should be used for hash marks, one for each term a senator has served. These stripes would give the flag a link with Old Glory
Red stars already have been usurped by another country, so the star of a Senate committee chairman probably should be white.
Politics in Chicago lacks gray areas
To hear the mayor tell it, the struggle is between the forces of sweetness and light (his side) and the forces of darkness and evil (Vrdyak's side). Washington says that he just wants to reform City Hall but that his enemies want City Hall to continue its nasty, pocket-stuffing ways.
Every time Washington solemnly announces that Vrdolyak and his supporters are horse thieves, low lifes, rodents, crocodiles, gutter snipes or doggy-do. Vrdolyak's defenders cry, "How can the mayor of Chicago say terrible things like that?"
Some chairmen, alas, think of themselves as galaxies, but I'm sure that the competing flag companies can come up with something proficient for that.
that.
"Every time Vrdolky or fellow Hardin Eddie Burke stick out a foot and trip the Washington administration, the mayor's admirers cry. "How can they do terribile things like that?"
The two sides can't even agree on what the issues dividing them really are.
Although Washington might be sincere, his supporters include many
But don't believe any of it.
people who think that the definition of reform is, "It is now my turn to grab." Given the opportunity, they will.
1982
So what is the real issue that divides them? Well, it's something
And most of Vrdolykas's followers really don't want to have a big say in how the city is run. That's too much work. They just want a fair share of them.
Syndicated Columnist
MIKE
ROYKO
because it is basic and all
All the talk of reform and
democracy and obstructionism and
bossism is silly.
It'a a racial struggle, and that's all it has been since the last of the votes for mayor were counted.
Washington wants as much power and privilege for himself and Chicago's blacks as he can get, and the Vrdolak bjoe wants as much power and privilege for themselves and Chicago's whites as they can get.
micho's writes as they write
And so there isn't going to be any
compromise. Washington is going to keep fighting until he gets what he wants — or is defeated. Vrdolyak is going to fight until he gets what he wants — or is defeated.
there might even be some benefits in the struggle that haven't been recognized.
Until one or the other happens, we might as well relax, sit back and take in the show.
It's generally agreed that a strong two-party system is desirable, but Chicago hasn't had such a system for more than 50 years. Besides a few seedy Republicans or dreamy eyed independents, Chicago's regular Democrats have had little opposition.
Now we have a genuine two party system, the white party and the blue party.
Unlike traditional two-party confrontations, phony issues aren't created just to have something to bicker about.
We couldn't ask for a political situation that more precisely reflects the thinking of the general population.
Here the issue is simple and genuine: I'm white and you're black. I'm black and you're white. So let's fight.
So what's unnatural about that being the dominant political theme in Chicago? It might even be therapeutic.
There are black neighborhoods that a white person can't go to without being plucked like a chicken. There are white neighborhoods where a black can't go without being caressed with a tire iron. Racial distrust and dislike — by both sides
is still the dominant common emotion in Chicago.
We turn on our TV sets and see Harold Washington coming up with new and imaginative epithets to describe his enemies: the lowest of the low, the vilest of the vile, the most degenerative of the degenerates.
It's like watching a war movie, a boxing match or a football game — enjoyning the violence without getting our own heads bashed.
Then we turn on our televisions and see one of the sly Eldies explaining their latest tactic to cause the mayor's stomach acids to churn, and whites feel better and say, "That's keeping them in their place."
Blocks can feel better and say, "Hey, that's just what I was thinking."
Who knows, maybe the two sides — by being suspect roiotes — are promoting racial detente, if not harmony, in Chicago.
The question is, when will it end? Now that they've had Harold, most blacks won't be satisfied with a white mayor. And now that they've had Harold, most whites won't be satisfied with a black mayor
Is there room for compromise?
Maybe.
Carter and Exprezway
WASHINGTON — Atlantans wonder about Jimmy Carter and a born-again highway.
They ask: Whatteacher happened to the Jimmy Carter who was hailed at the Democratic National Convention as "the best environmental president we ever had"? Even as governor of Georgia, he stopped a projected freeway that would have cut through dozens of neighborhoods.
Now, however, he's fighting for the razed, near-downtown acreage he saved from the last paving project in order to build his presidential library
FRANCESA
LYMAN
New York Times Syndicate
there — only this time it would be reached by a version of the parkway he once opposed. He doesn't oppose it now, and Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young, who served in his administration and who once campaigned against it, is behind it, too.
It doesn't seem to matter to Carter that people could take Atlanta's brand new subway system and walk the few short blocks to his archives. Or that the proposed 2.4 mile highway would disgorge five lanes squarely in the heart of a group of historic neighborhoods and into a unique series of parks or streets designed by New York City's Central Park fame. Or that the Department of Health and Human Services objects to the extra lead in the air that the traffic would cause.
The road plan has become so controversial that even though the Federal Highway Administration gave it the go-ahead in the spring, it is being reconsidered by the Council on Environmental Quality.
Moreover, three federal agencies
Moreover, three retirements — the Interior Department, the Department of Health and Human Services and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation — have come down against the project.
The road would feature 37-foot high bridges and chain-link fences, and would make the archives virtually inaccessible to pedestrians. It would desecrate Atlanta's charm and landmarks. It would slash through some of the most scenic Olmsted's work. (In fact, Congress is considering legislation to preserve Olmsted's legacies in cities throughout the country.)
For many residents, Carter's approach to the archives has come to symbolize everything they least expected from him. The non-stop expedition to energy needed would run parallel to the subway system.
The Carter library and policy center, where international leaders might come to arbitrate disputes, seems almost an afterthought to the enormous roadway running alongside it. Virginia Taylor at a University of Texas station would be like an Exxon station on a highway median strip.
Francesca Lyman is editor of Environmental Action magazine.
No one is saying that the library should not be built or that the public should not have access to it but Atlantans feel betrayed and have taken to calling the archives the Peanut Palace, and the road, the Expresway
As such sentiments grow, Carter's reputation as a peacemaker will become even fainter.
PERES SHAMITZ
"BUT WILL IT FLY?
Affirmative action and equality
The words still ring in my ears.
The words still ring in my ears.
I was talking to a potential employer about whether he had decided to hire me.
You may know the job — it's the one that you want more than any other, the one that you know is the best for you, the one that you're the best for and that might take you places.
"Well, I'm interested," he said, as my heart pounded.
"I'm really interested," he repeated, but this time my pounding heart had slowed.
A bubble was about to be burst, a crest about to fall as I heard an impending "but" in his tone.
"Well," he said, "well, we're looking at this black girl, and we don't have any minorities on our staff."
My naive ears were shocked and I was enraged — enraged that a person's color should take precedence over ability and enraged that he would tell me about it.
Yes, affirmative action had struck again.
grant.
Once I had cooled down, I realized hat I could not blame the employer or his color consciousness
for pts in as he was under pressure to hire the best-qualified person, he was under pressure to comply with affirmative action policies.
This year, the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, while it was being accused of pandering to a conservative administration, has demonstrated a new attitude toward affirmative action in an effort to assure equality instead of preferential treatment
The Supreme Court, however, ignored the administration's opinion and refused to disturb the affirmative action plan of the Detroit police department. The plan required that one-half of the officers promoted be black
When the Civil Rights Act was in its infancy 20 years ago, overt affirmative action policies would have been necessary to balance the scale. Overcompensation is sometimes necessary to make things equal.
Since then, affirmative action has raised as many questions and problems as it has addressed, and no one can be accused of denying rights to anybody by trying to clarify those problems.
On the whole, quotas probably hurt more innocent victims of equal or better qualifications than help po
Quota. It's an ugly word and the principle is even uglier. Mert sounds much better. Yet quotas, implicit or explicit, are not unusual in the hiring and promoting practices of some organizations.
JENNIFER FINE Staff Columnist
tential discrimination victims, as the quotas muscle in on merit and seniority considerations
Hiring quotas do not always mean firing quotas, and the last fired first fired concept has been abandoned to keep some quotas intact
Although action is still necessary to ensure the underlying principal of affirmative action — equal opportunity for all minorities — the solution to past discrimination is beginning to go away
It is not quite time to stop the policing of hiring practices, but it is time to bring color conscious hiring into the open and crack down on quotas or any other "goals" to hire a
specified number of a particular rpc.
And though some people might be screaming "reverse discrimination" a bit too quickly, it's time to evaluate the complaints
Now we can quit over compensating and begin to allow things to even out naturally
Discrimination is discrimination is discrimination, regardless of the group or race or sex. The "majority" group has the same constitutional rights as everyone else.
Even those in minority groups probably would agree that selection based on skin color or ethnic origin is not fair, and that attempting to work out the kinks in affirmative action is not wrong.
Affirmative action, to a degree, makes sense. So do color-binding and promoting practices. A compromise must exist.
My encounter with color consciousness has a happy ending. I got the job despite my skin color. My employer was correct, there were no minorities on the staff. I am confident, however, that that was not because of any racial discrimination.
It just makes me wonder whether somewhere down the road, that employer and others like him will succumb to the pressure and hire the person of the necessary race instead of the necessary qualifications. Somewhere out there, discrimination will thrive.
EDITORIAL BOARD
The University Daily Kansan editorial board meets at 6 p.m. Sundays and 7 p.m.
Wednesdays to discuss editorial policy of the paper.
Members of the board are Jennifer Fine, columnist; Vince Hess, editorial editor; Charles Himmelberg, assistant editorial editor; Don Knox, editor; Michael Robinson, columnist; Margaret Srafrak, columnist, and Paul Sevart, managing
The board invites students and members of University or local groups who want to discuss editorial concerns to attend a board meeting.
Call the editorial editor to make arrangements.
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University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1984
战
AURH continued from p. 1
Worden "accused me of being too pessimistic," Wilson said, "I'd say I was too optimistic last spring."
The housing department last spring proposed a $20 utility fee increase for the 1985-86 contract rates but changed its proposal early in September.
Conservation measures in residence halls had not been as effective as anticipated, he said, and some utility costs, such as telephone expenses, had increased.
AURH's proposal said that the
housing department's estimated cost increase in utilities might be too pessimistic because the University was shopping for a new natural gas supplier. A new natural gas contract is estimated to save the University $400,000.
Wilson said that this estimated savings did not directly affect the housing department because the only residence hall connected to the University's lines was Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
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Jane Curtin won best actress in a comedy series for "Kate & Allie." One of the losers was her co-star, Susan Saint James.
Emmy continued from p. 1
Susan Saini, who won best actress Fonda, who won best actress Oscars for " Klute" and " Coming Home," took the Emmy in her first television movie, ABC's "The Dollmaker," playing a farm woman trying to keep her family together in the big city. She earlier said she had dismissed TV as inferior to film but recently changed her mind because of her potential impact on larger audiences.
Pat Harrington Jr. was named best supporting actor in a comedy series for his role as a junior and would be departed "one Day at a Time" on CBS
interests
"It was 12 years in the making."
Fonda said of her movie. "All that time, the thing that worried me most
Olivier won his fifth Emmy for "King Lear," a syndicated production.
was I afraid I couldn't play Gertie right."
"I've been wanting one of these things for 30 years, ever since I was a child actor," Harrington said in his book *East End*, which came on his first publication.
Jackie Gleason's sidekick in "The Honeymooners," won for his support role as Jimmy Cagney's fight manager on "Terrible Joe Moran" on CBS.
Art Carney, who won the best actor Oscar for "Harry and Tonto" 10 years ago and won five Emmys as
Alfred Woodard won as supporting actress for her one-time appearance on the show as the mother of a child shot by a policeman.
Bruce Weitz of "Hill Street Blues" won for the first time in four tries for his continuing role as the snarling Detective Mick Belker. One of the losers was the late Michael Conrad, a fellow regular on the series who won last year shortly before he died of cancer.
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2214 Yale Rd.
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN YOUR SERVICE ZONE
SAYING IT OUT
SAYING IT OUT
2 For 1
Price does not include sales tax
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN JULY SERVICE ZONE
Caspia
TIEOXIS
90
80
CAMPUS AND AREA
Area reserve battalion rivals military actives
By SARAH ROSSI Staff Reporter
Members of a Law ence Army reserve unit this weekend paddled their way down the Missouri River, placing seventh in the adventure training competition called "The Big Muddy Five."
The 317th Supply and Service Battalion, composed of several KU students and Lawrence residents, raced against 12 teams from other divisions of the military in the three-day raft trip. The race started in Rulo, Neb., on Friday and finished yesterday in Leavenworth.
Michael Sangren, Minneapolis,
Minn., junior; Michael Carlisle.
Tampa, Fla., senior; and Mike Phillips, Emporia freshman, were part of the only Army reserve battalion. They competed against other nine-man assault raft teams from Fort Bragg, Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines.
According to Jim Bachtert, staff administrative specialist for the 317th battalion, the purpose of the event is to improve basic combat skills and help build the morale and coherence of the units.
Kevin Harris, Chicago senior, and Karen Smith, Olathe junior, were part of the quartering party, which helped organize the event.
"The military isn't all running around and shooting at people." Phillips said.
Please Register To Vote!
Notice of Voter Registration—
Sept. 24 thru Sept. 25 4:30-6:30 p.m. in the dining rooms at Hashinger, GSP, Oliver, Templin, and Lewis.
The Douglas County Republican Party encourages you to register to vote, so that on November 6 you may cast your ballot for our outstanding Republican candidates dedicated to serving the citizens of Douglas County. Political Advertisement paid for by Douglas County Republican Central Committee.
University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1984
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
TELEPHONE 759-7590
Prince
Fantasia Rainy
7:30 5:35 '15' 15 Sat. Sun.
VARSITY
TELEPHONE 759-7590
NINJA III
7:30 9:15 '5' 30 Sat. & Sun.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
BOSTON ST. BETT'S AVE.
678-924-3000
Prince
NAPOLEON RAINY
7:30 9:35 '15 Sat. Sun
VARSITY BOWTONS TELEPHONE NUMBERS
NINJA III
7:30 9:15 '5:30 Sat. & Sun.
HILLCREST 1 ST AND IOWA
TELEPHONE 817-6400
in EVIL THAT MEN DO
HILLCREST 2
119 AND 109A
TELPHONE 844-8460
ALEFRED HITCHCOCK'S
REAR WINDOW
PG 45
HILLCREST 3
TELEPHONE 841-8400
SUPERMEN
R
6:00 AM HILLCREST 3 TELEPHONE 847-8900
12TH SEPTEMBER R
7:35 9:30 5:00 AM
CINEMA 1 STAGE AND IOWA
STEVE LEE MARGIN FOMAN
ALL OF ME
7:30 9:30 5:10 Sat & Sun
CINEMA 2 STAGE AND IOWA
ONE WILDER'S The Woman in Red
7:35 9:30 5:15 Sat & Sun
CITY THEATER
WESTLY
MATHELIN, FORTUNA
ALL OF ME
7:30 9:30 5:10 SAT & SUN
$3.69 All You Can Eat Pepperoni Pizza and Salad Bar!
THE WALTERS The Woman in Red
T:35, 8:30, 6:15 Sat & Sun
DOUBLE FEATURE
Home Theater
Benefit Weight 85
Curtis Mathews/212-795-3731
www.curtismathews.com
Science, Big Grants,
and Big Business:
What are the
Ethical Problems?
UNSIGHTLY HAIR?????
Permanent Hair
Removal
THE ELECTROLYSIS
STUDIO
See our coupon in the Lawrence Book
Call for an appointment
745 New Hampshire 841-5796
Domino's Pizza delivers. In more ways than one.
- Twilight Bargain Show
KWALITY COMICS
Comics & Science Fiction
107 W. 7th. 843-7239
You C
Pepper
and Sa
Professor Richard De George, University Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, will talk on this subject Tuesday. Sept. 25 at 3 p.m. in Smith Hall Auditorium.
--the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187
Limited delivery area.
At participating stores in
Kansas only
(Weather conditions
permitting )
Our drivers carry less than $2000
Mon. 5-11
A Lecture in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Series open to all.
Finally, we guarantee you that no pizza company, anywhere, works harder to give you a better meal at a better price.
--the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187
1984 Dominos Pizza, Inc.
Cola available.
Hours:
4:30pm-1am Sun-Thurs
4:30pm-2am Fri &Sat
Minsky's
PIZZA
Reg. $45.00
Sale $36.95
832 Iowa St
841-8002
Texas Instruments has a unique "systems" approach to better financial decision-making.
HA-II
Req. $45.00
It Could Only Happen at
THE HAWK ● 1340 OHIO
Pitcher Refills
$1.50
Barrel Refills
$1.00
2-7 p.m. Mon-Thurs
We guarantee that all items are made from fresh, not frozen ingredients. And 100% real dairy cheese.
TAKE A STUDY BREAK AT THE HAWK
Lawrence
1445 W 23rd St
841-7900
We guarantee that every Domino's Pizza is custom-made from start to finish — beginning with the original ingredients, completed the old-fashioned way.
1984 Dominos Pizza, Inc
Basket
But fast, free delivery is only the beginning of what we guarantee you.
YYYY
INTERESTED IN A MASTERS
DEGREE IN ACCOUNTING?
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION?
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION?
fields
DISCOVER RICE UNIVERSITY'S
JESSE H JONES GRADUATE
SCHOOL OF ADMINISTRATION—
A REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE
ON CAMPUS ON
We deliver
2228 Iowa
842-1054
Wednesday, September 26, 1984
And if your Dominos Pizzas don't arrive within 30 minutes after you order them — they are 'free!'
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT University Placement Center
Please send an application and a brochure about Rice University's JONES GRADUATE SCHOOL to:
- Facilitate in Collaboration between Researchers, students and stakeholders to formulate and validate research outcomes.
* AVID students present their findings in an educational context.
* Facilitate interaction between researchers and students through multimedia presentations and peer review.
* Enable researchers to communicate their findings and ideas effectively.
Call Us!
That's right. Now you can get two delicious '10' or '14'. Domino's Pizzas" for one low price! They're custom-made with your choice of on each pizza — they don't have to be the same
(or you'll eat our words.)
Jia
We'll deliver two hot, custom-made pizzas in 30 minutes.
KU KUBookstores
Kansas Union Burge Union
ADDRESS
NAME (please print)
DOMINO'S PIZZA
RICE UNIVERSITY
JONES GRADUATE SCHOOL
OF ADMINISTRATION
P.O. BOX 1892
HOUSTON, TEXAS 77251
(713) 527-4918
Rice University is an equal opportunity/affirmative action institution
PIZZA SHUTTLE
Call the Kansan.
1601 W.23RD SOUTHERN HILLS SHOPPING CENTER
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE
DELIVERY
Delivery During Lunch Also
842-1212
EASY AS
MENU
AN STAFFORTH THE UNIVERSAL OUT PIZZA TO
NOW SHOWS FEED ONE TO TWO PORTIONS
STANDARD CHEESE
A HAND FASHIONED CRUST WITH A GENEROUS
TOPPING OF TOMATO GRADE AND CREME IN
THE STANDARD TORTONI WAREHOLDER
COMBINATION
$400
$700
$900
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $200
ALL TOPPINGS 50¢ PER TOPPING PER PIZZA
EXPRESS SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CRUST WITH ADDITIONAL
TOPPING OF PEPERoni HAM MOUNDOUM
ONION AND CHIP PEPPERS
$550
$1000
$1500
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $500
FARM SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CRUST TOPPED FOR THE
WESTERN AMERICAN HAM MOUNDOUM, ONION, GREEN
PEPPER, BLACK GLOVE, GLUTEN TARTAR AND
EXTRA CHILE
$600
$1100
$1600
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $500
SUPER SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CRUST OVERLIQUED WITH
PEPPERoni ITALIAN URNSUGGED, HEAVY
DARK BROWN, BLACK GLOVE, EXTRACT
MOUNDOUM AND LAVENDER OPTIONAL
$650
$1200
$1700
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $600
$16^{00}
"NO COUPON" SPECIALS
TUESDAY TWO FERS Any Double with 2 toppings & 2 Peppers — $19.00 Value **18$***
SUNDAY SUPER SPECIAL Two Super Shuffles & 2 Peppers — $11.00 Value **10$***
TOPPINGS
PEPPERON
ITALIAN SAUSAGE
GROUND BEEF
HAM
BACON BITS
ANCHOVIES
PINK APPLE
EXECUTESEE
MUSHROOMS
ONIONS
GREEN PEPPERS
BLACK OLIVES
SUCED TOMATOES
JALAPENOS
SAUKRAERT
HOURS
Mon. Thurs. 11a.m. 2a.m.
Fri & Sat 11a.m. 3a.m.
Sunday 11a.m. 1a.m.
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE DELIVERY
16oz. Pepsi's - 25¢!
842-1212
$1^00 OFF
WE ACCEPT CHECKS (25* Service Charge)
$1'00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12/31/84
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12/31/84
Any Triple Pizzas
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$2^{00} OFF
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE
DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any Double
Pizzas
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12/31/44
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
$1 00 OFF
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPRES 12-31-84
Any Double Pizzas
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAIR TIME DELIVERY
842-1212
50¢ OFF
Any Single
Pizza
EXPRES 12-31-84
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
$1 00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12/31/84
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(1)
T1
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In.
5
[
ods C
CAMPUS AND AREA
Information and education is purpose of Women's Fair
By the Kansan Staff
Sunny skies yesterday greeted an informational gathering in South Park in the second annual Women's Fair sponsored by the Lawrence chapter of the National Organization for Women.
Kim Schulz, NOW member and fair organizer, said the fair was "to show women what's available in Lawrence, educate us all on what's going on, meet each other and meet the public."
Kawasaki
FUN CENTER
"Let The Good Times Roll"
PROPERTY
913/842 1702 Sales
1804 W. 6th Street 842 1703 Paces & Access
Lawrence Kesner 66044 842 1708 Service
Representatives from ten local organizations, including Women's Action Against Pornography, Women's Transitional Care Services, the League of Women Voters and the Girl Scouts set up tables and handed out literature about their organizations.
izations.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, who is campaigning to maintain his seat, and Deborah Sampson, Democratic candidate for Douglas County clerk, used the opportunity to hand out pamphlets and talk to fairgoers.
Paradise Punch
Palm trees E
Pink flamingo E
Pancakes E
Pentimentos
And no more
hard times
HAVE YOU BEEN to the
WHEEL LATELY?
STARTING AT $200
STUDIOS STARTING AT
ONE BEDROOM $200
OVER NETWORK
GILDAID AWY OLD
AMES FIRM PETRUM BUCS
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
Phone 863-1116
**Profit** from Zenith Data System Z-150 PC desktop or Z-160 PC portable capabilities beginning with 16-bit IBM compatibility plus Zenith total performance...
[Graphics of a computer monitor with a bar chart on the screen]
University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1984
OWN TOTAL PERFORMANCE...
See Zenith's personal Computer Systems Today!
ZENITH data systems
HHL
TOTAL PERFORMANCE!
COMPATIBILITY . . .
KUBookstores
Federal Union
Burgess Union
CKU
Homefinders We do the work for you!
--new valley rental
Management, Inc. assistance
90 Kentucky St. 205
913-841-6080
Need a TV... Portacolor TV.
Prices start as low as $14.95 (2F-151-21)
Free software with each Z-150 or Z-160 purchased!
- Z-150 PC only
--new valley rental
Management, Inc. assistance
90 Kentucky St. 205
913-841-6080
Student Discounts, Free Delivery, Free
Installation, & Free Service.
Call Mike 1-764-8660
SIMALE
KVM
TACO TUESDAY every Tuesday
1006 Mass
1101 W. 6th
1626 W. 23rd
0:30 a.m.-midnight
TACO JOHN'S
2/99c
MSN
My Facomnific!
Computerark
KNOWLEDGE SERVICE EDUCATION
Zenith Epstein Kaplan
Centre Oaktree Kagan
Communications
294 & Leahaua
841-1094
TABCO JOHNES
Overland Park, KS 814-345-1400
PRIVATE CLUB
Place
2408 IOWA
842-9663
class __PseudoClass {
friend class program;
friend class operation;
friend class conditional;
friend class controlling;
friend class logging;
friend class monitoring;
}
Yello Sub Delivers
herry night
s p m - midnight
841-3268
MIDWEST BUSINESS SYSTEMS
- Computer Supplies
- Personal Eilec. Typewriters
- Copy Center Color Copies
818 Mass 842-4134
THE CASTLE TEA ROOM
$3.75/hr.
+
6% commission
(average $5-$6/hr.)
ATTENTION STUDENTS
Pizza at Stephanies has the top pay for those working more than 25 hours a week. HURRY ON BY AND APPLY IN PERSON NOW!!
Pizza At STEPHANIE'S
WE NEED DRIVERS!!
E. O.E. No phone calls, please
2214 Yale Rd.
£3.00 sitting fee paid when you purchase a 1984 Jayhawker
MAKE
YOUR
APPOINTMENT.
now
Call 864-3728
Stop by 121B Kansas
RENT A PIANO
Low Cost - Month to Mouth
LAWRENCE PIANO RENTAL
2001 IOWA 843-3008
Cathy Kessinger
DIET CENTER COUNSELOR
CALL TODAY!
841-DIET
I'm here to help you
PETER E. HALVARD
LOSE WEIGHT
IT COULD CHANGE YOUR LIFE
and to teach you how to keep it off
OUR PROGRAM IS FAST • SAFE INEXPENSIVE
DIET CENTER
1982
Diet Centre
London
403 Kansas Union
Union 12-5 or
9th & Iowa
Hillcrest Medical Plaza
Mon.-Fri. 7-6 Sat., 10-noon
Weddings Fraternity and Sorority Occasions Portraits in that costume or uniform before you hang it up
D
MAKE
The Photographer for Your next Photographic Occasion SENIOR PORTRAITS
LOOK TO ZOOK
Zook Photography Wilbur (Bill) Zook
GUESS WHO HIRED
MORE PEOPLE RIGHT OUT
OF COLLEGE LAST YEAR
THAN ANYONE ELSE.
805 Pine Eudora, Kansas 66025
914-730-2428
For further information on Army ROC call or Professor of Military Science University of Kansas—Lawrence, KS 66045
organized team based on client's needs and priorities.
Aim to develop a strong relationship with clients.
Create tailored solutions for clients' specific needs.
Maintain open communication throughout the project.
Provide ongoing support and feedback to clients.
Communicate effectively with clients to ensure satisfaction.
ARMY ROTC.
BE ALLYOU CAN BE.
Infected cell
cells outside
Army officer
Funding can benefit our immediate future. Through scholarships and other funding sources.
Professor of Military Science$^2$
University of Kansas - Lawrence, KS 66045
Department of Defense
So if we are trying to think about our position in this task. From the current position we may lose the best that
firm or contact the Pho
science on your campus
and are the most important part of your business.
REIT is a unique professional that trans-
forms investment portfolios into self-reliance by the help of investment professionals with knowledge and management skills.
12-8 Mon. & Thurs.
9-6 Tues., Wed., & Fri.
in Student Organizations & Activities Office
103 Kansas Union
THEY SHOOT SENIORS, DON'T THEY?
---
SENIOR YEARBOOK PORTRAITS Shooting is taking place now
QUALITY AUDIO - THE BEST PRICE!
SAVE 60%
D
$34^{80}
signet
SIGNET H-12 HI-TRACK STEREO CARTRIDGE
Limited Quantities
Mfr's list:
$79.95
KIEF'S
GRAMOPHONE
DISCOUNT STEREO
shop
HOLIDAY PLAZA
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
1723
PYRAMID
THE PLACE TO GO
PYRAMID
1722
PYRAMID PIZZA
"WE PILE IT ON!"
PYRAMID
THE PLACE TO BE
PYRAMID
PIZZA
PYRANLD
2714
PYRAMID'S GOT IT...
Monday Mania!!!
Open till 4:00 am Fri. & Sat.
Open at 11:00 for lunch
CARICATURE
PYRAMID PETE
Free 12” pepperoni pizza with purchase of any large pizza!
Now 2 locations to better serve you
14th & Ohio 25& Iowa Under the Wheel Holiday Plaza
842-3232 841-1501
Buy any large pizza and get a 12''
pepperoni pizza absolutely FREE PLUS two free pepsis.
PYRAMID PIZZA
expired 9/24/84
- FREE DELIVERY * WHIRLA WHIP * BY THE SLICE * RONZOs ETC.
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
PYRAMID
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1984
ON CAMPUS
THE SUA STRATO/MATIC Baseball Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor C of the Kansas Union.
TODAY
THE STUDENT CREATIVE Anacronists will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
TOMORROW
TOMORROW EDWARD MASER, professor of art history at the University of Chicago, will speak at 8 p.m. in
Wooldruff Auditorium of the Union about "The Humanist in Old Age: The Late Works of Franz Anton Maubertsch."
THE WOMEN'S STUDIES Program will have a sandwich seminar at 11:45 a.m. in Cock 2 of the Union.
ADC
FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION
THE KU HONOR Students Association will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. in Nunmaker Center.
603 W. 9th
(9th & Louisiana)
Main Office 9-5 Mon-Fri.
Drive Up Window 7-7 Mon-Fri.
Branch Office
101 Camrish Café
9-5 Mon-Fri.
★ 864-3291 ★
OPEN TIL 9 PM
EVERY NIGHT
THE GRINDER MAN
WE
DELIVER!
1704 MASS
843-7398
AN OCTOGINTA IDEA!
T-shirt
Jerseys from
from
$18.00
Rick's Bike Shop 1033 Vermont 841-6642
For the best selection of
Hallmark Cards & Gifts
shop at
ARBUTHNOT'S
Southwest Plaza 23rd & Iowa
hallmark
Hours
M F 10.8 Sat. 10-5
Hallmark Cards & Gifts shop at
Parkmark
Southwest Plaza 23 & Iowa
DOWLAND
Quench Your Thirst With
50c Pitchers Monday 7 p.m.-midnight
7th & Michigan
The Sanctuary Recipient with over 235 clubs
啤酒
843-0540
Gold,
Gold,
done
right.
from $20
Specials
Marks JEWELERS
This Week's Specials
MONDAY
Pizza Pocket $1.85
French Fries
16 oz Drink (green cup)
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
Hot Beef Sandwich $2.00
Mashed Potato
w/Gravy
16 oz. Drink (green cup)
Cheeseburger
Onion Rings
16 oz. (green cup)
843-4266
$2.05
$2.00
THURSDAY
Taco Salad
16 oz. Drink (green cup)
$1.60
FRIDAY
Chili
w/Corn Chips
16 oz. Drink (green cup)
9-3:30 THE KANSAS UNION Level 2 HAWK'S NEST
Lawrence's All-Round Leader
DOMINOS
PIZZA
817 Massachusetts
Two Pizzas For One Low Price!
Now you can have two delicious 10" or 14" pizzas for one low price with your choice of items on each pizza — they don't have to be the same!
Every Pizza Custom Made
We make each Domino's Pizza to order. If you have a special request — including half & half items — please don't hesitate to ask us.
Homemade Dough
Domino's Pizza dough is hand-formed, the old-fashioned way. You have your choice of either extra-thick or regular crusts.
Non-dairy products may be good enough for our competitors. But they're not
The Freshest Ingredients
The items on your Domino's Pizza are fresh, not frozen. They are made from the finest locally-available ingredients
100% Real Dairy Cheese REAL
good enough for us or our customers. Domino's Pizza uses only 100% real dairy cheese.
If your hot, custom-made
pizza does not arrive in
30 minutes, it's free!
Guaranteed.
30 Minutes or Free!
Lawrence
1445 W 23rd St
841-7900
Call Us!
832 Iowa
832 Iowa
841-3002
Hours:
Hours:
4:30pm-1am Sun.Thurs.
4:30pm-2am Fri.Sat.
*Weather conditions permitting.
Cola available.
Good at participating stores in Kansas only.
Our drivers carry less than $20.00.
Limited delivery area.
1984 Domino's Pizza, Inc.
17005/KAD-033
17005/KAD-033
KU
VISIT OUR KU SOUVENIR CORNER!
KU SOUVENIR CORNER!
KU Megaphones
KU Glasswear
KU Spoons
KU Thimbles
KU Jiggers
KU Mugs
SHARE YOUR MEMORIES
SEND SNAPSHOTS
DOWNTOWN
1107 Massachusetts
843-4435
Mon, Sat 9:30-5:30
HILLCREST
919 Iowa
841-8668
Mon, Tn 10:8
Nat 10:6
Kodak
PAPER
for a Good Look
ZERCHER
PHOTO
KU Christmas ornament
KU Playing cards
KU Key chains
KU Necklaces
KU Rulers
KU Decals
MUSEES
SHOTS
DOWNTOWN
1107 Massachusetts
843-4435
Mon, Sat 9:30-5:30
HILLCREST
919 Iowa
841-8668
Mon, Tue 10:8
Sat 10:6
ERCHER
PHOTO
WE DELIVER!
Kodak PAPER for a Good Luck
San
Two Pork Fritters for $1.59
Vista RESTAURANTS
1527 W. 6th
When the end of the work day comes and you feel like a break Join us at Vista Restaurant for special private foods
When the end of the work day comes...
Save 91c
Monday thru Thursday 4-7 pm Special ends Sept.27
prices on your lover's birthday Call ahead if you want to pick up dinner on the way home or bring the family as you go out for the evening. Whatever your plans are, we have special prices to make the evening even better
H·A·P·P·Y H·O·U·R
PIZZA Shoppe pub
PIZZA EATEN WITH 1/2 FRIEDS
6th and Kasold Westridge Shopping Center
Free Pitcher of beer or Pepsi with any Dine-in
21
21 Triple
King
Triple topping King Size Pizza and 32 oz. Pepsi
Monday Night Football Special
842-0600
My Night
football
special
(on)
$8.95
plus tax
DELIVERED!
Extra Mozzarella FREE
By Mentioning This Ad!
M
Rowing is America's Oldest Intercollegiate Sport and an Olympic Sport
K U CREW LOOKING FOR THE BEST TO BE THE BEST
We have a good place to row - The Kansas River
We have a full-time, professional coach and three assistants—
three assistants—
Bath Spa Navy Hut Men and Varsity Men
Cliff Elliott—Novice Hwt Men and Varsity Men
Libby Elliott—Novice Women
Libby Elliott—Novice Women
Harry Crockett—Novice Lwt Men
Harry Crockett—Novice Lwt Me
Orchid, Varsity Women
Rob Catloth—Varsity Women
We have new, competitive equipment--
r
CREW
Vespoli Racing Shells
Dreissigacker Oars
Nielson-Kellerman Coxswain Sound Systems
Concept II Ergometers
But to have the best crew we need the best student athletes who will
MEET THE CHALLENGE
We are especially looking for:
Men 6'4" and TALLER for the men's heavyweight crew Women 5'9" and TALLER for the women's crew
Coxswains (men under 130 lbs. and women under 110 lb.)
No experience necessary
Call Cliff or Libby Elliott 843-3294
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{ s
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CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1-Day
0-15 2.60
10-20 2.85
10-30 3.10
Forwards 4-word add 250
The University Daily KANSAN
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matter.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Budget Stretcher coupons Thurs. evenings. Buy $10 & receive $1 coupon toward next purchase Cross Reference. Mails Shopping Center
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
TAMER EXPLORATION FOR WOMEN values values, philosophies and lifestyle as they effect your own personal journey. Walnut Room, Kansas Union Sponsor by the Emily Tayler Women's Resource Center.
Candlelight Special, 10% off, off-based Christmas
gifts in stock | 1.99m linen tipped gift of 5.30". Thin
and light. $49.99
Pre-Dental Students
Representatives from the
after 2:30 p.m.
Representatives from the University of Nebraska will be on campus to visit with students individually or in small groups on:
Tues., Oct. 16
Appointments may be made in the Pre-Med office 106 Strong Hall during office hours posted
BEAIMING WITH THAILY UNEASY FEELING
Eears to comfort, conversation, make new
connections. Visit www.uva.edu/teens
sept 25, 8:30 a.m. 9:14 m.Free Please register to
UVA's New York Assistance Center, 121
bold 844-4644
THE FAR SIDE
Interested in joining a small Christian group for caring; sharing action and prayer that meets the needs of our community now forming at Bethany Church in Brooklyn. Come by or call 843-4933 for information.
The weekly seminar "Gospel of John for today," an exploration of the message of the gospel of John in this volume, will be held on Sept. 25, 4 p.m. in at Excunchinal Christian Ministries, 1219 Irshead, come by, or call 844-703-6992.
RGSEARCH PAPERS - 366 page catalog - 1.272K
(tissues) - 4 (issues) - 477-7228
(tissues) - 10 (issues) - 477-7228
19 Color T V B $29.98 a month Curtis
Mint (144 W 27 F B $29.98) Open 3pm to
8pm
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Cartes
Mathes 144 F W 23rd.842 5751 Open 9:30-9:00
Mafc. 9:30-10:00
SENIORS YEARBOOK PORTIONS Shooting is taking place now, in Student Organizations & Activities office, 403 Kansas Union. Call yearbook office for appointment 12. 3. 12 B. Kansas
Shirley Joenett formerly of Charme Beauty Salon, is now at Angles Beauty Salon 540 Massachusetts M-F Call 811-4076 for Shirley September Special Shampoo & Haircare - 811
Weekend and evening child care now available at Calliope Corner Center. Parents, we are just beginning to enroll in our classes, meetings, an evening job, or just want to enjoy an evening, not a周日. We will be happy to join you and you will enjoy an evening of fun, planned, recreational educational activities, hourly care, Openings: 12 yrs. 842-1035.
Music Masters Music for dances and parties All requests. Lighting included. Reasonable Rates References 749-1212
ENTERTAINMENT
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND. Sunglasses, outside north entrance to Allen Field house. Call Mitch. 841 934-7062, to identify Found. KID 31132, in front of S.W. Bell office on 24th St. left, there also.
Found. Male kitten owner may identify by calling (843) 789
Lost Student LD and All Sports Pass at Sat
name. Please return REWARD 842-3190
CAREER
COUNSELING
THE UNIVERSITY PRESS CENTRAL
By
"Well, Mr. Cady, according to our questionnaire, you would probably excel in sales, advertising, slaughtering a few thousand buffalo, or market research."
By GARY LARSON
BLOOM COUNTY
YES?
INSULT
TELLA RAM
FOR MASTER
STEVE DALLAS!
Last, Graphite Head Tennis Rapet at Johnson
court, beginning of Sept. 11, placed
after a tough 3-2 defeat by the Spartan.
FOUND 4 old kitten gray & white, wearing collar in black of backmack CALL 891-263-9700
NEW-BLD 8:00pm, IHP-11 calculator in 3139
Wenpey, Wld.pm, Sept. 19, Calli Brien, 841-2695
1. 4-1 time GRADUATE ASSISTANT PROGRAM COORDINATOR in job duties and delivery of programs especially those related to alcohol Application deadline 9-24 call come by 864.494.101. Strong
HELP WANTED
THEM.
"WHO IS A MANHITZ
'WHO IS TO CONVEY HER MOST
INTEGRATE FEELINGS ON HER
TIME YOU STRUNG ON HER
INTIALLY, PROPER BEMINI
UP YOUR FRATRITYNESS
Dependent female to assist disabled with care
experience required. Morning, weekend &
evening hours available. Call between 1-5-
749-0288
Dietician II. Clinical in residential facility for mentally retarded Requires graduation from accredited four year college or institution, dietetics, institutional management, or closely related field, and one year experience desired. Experience desired) Candidate must be registered by the American Dietetic Association beginning salary $162/month excellent frames. Contact Person, Winfield State Hospital and Training Center
ATTENTION STUDENTS
WE NEED
DRIVERS!!
$3.75/hr.
6% commission (average $5-$6/hr.)
Pizza at Stephanies has the top pay for those working more than 25 hours a week. HURRY ON BY AND APPLY IN PERSON NOW!!
Pizza At STEPHANIES
2214 Yale Rd
E. O.E. No phone calls, please
Domino's Pizza, World's fastest growing pizzeria, now Hiring Delivery personnel. Part-time position requires at least 60 hours. Make between 46. $/hr. Must be 18, have valid insurance and firearms license. Apply in person (46) 312-529-7222.
FRESHMEN. It's not too late to join NAVAL
HOTT CALL 694 3161
Female Models (en) 1965 Calendars and posters, no
phone number. Send leafy note and phone
number to Bill Hager Photography, Box 201,
Pallas, Karmas 6607
course = a restaurant with two experienced cooks on Saturday and Sunday and a free course in the morning. W 10h
PEANOLE
NEEDED HIMEMATELY Half-time Computer Programmer. Contact University Counseling Center for further information and application 116 Bailey Hall 944-881
Summer John, National Park Co. a 21 Parks, 3000
Complete information, G park
Report Mission Mt Co. 61n 2nd Ave, WN.
Kulsaill MT 9900)
Pizza Shark is looking for Delivery People. You must be it, have a car with insurance, and a good driving record. If you are wanting to work and willing to host, be sure to attend the Southern Hills Mall.
MISCELLANEOUS
Lambeth Special. Hamburger steak, chicken fried steak, French dip, trench dip, and everlasting beef with cheese.
Kitchen is open by 11 a.m. for wings to go. Mon day through Friday, only at the Wheel
BUSINESS PERS.
beds, Desk, Tents, Window shades; Everything
lat, jth, ceh & Vermont
Futons
Japanese Cotton
Mattresses
841-9443
V
but it is Trivian is in! It where game trivian is not
trivial Crime Reference, Mallis, Lawrence
cristi Robertson
Hospital of Health ASSOCIATES-
CIMLY and advanced implant abortion, quality
medical care confidently assured Greater
Kansas City area. Call office at appointment
Mayline Parale rules & parts. Architecture tools and papers. The Graphic Arts Dept. Strong's Office Services, 404 McKinnon, 831-644-8344
**Inflation Fighter,** *E. Sixth Edition*. For your needs in inflation and money management, Come in at Browse *Hours* or visit www.browsehours.com.
RESUME-NAME SERVACE. Let us assist you with your resume and cover letter to position as a copywriter and content writer, word processing and proofreading for a corporate client.
Modeling and theater partition - shooting to
Beginners to Professionals: call for information
THE ETC. SHOP
732 Mass. 843-6011
INDIANAGONIA Hats
Vintage, formal wear
party clothes and costumes
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing 1,
shirts, jeans and caps Shift art by Swells
794-611
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration, naturalization, Visa, and of course, line portraits. Swell Studio, 749-810
"PHPFFT!"
by Berke Breathed
THANK YOU
CAN CHOKE
ON THE
TOP!
PS:
"PPHPTH!
THPTPTH!"
THE KANSAS UNION JAYBOWL
John sings for all occasions. Birthdays, parties,
weddings. Operatic tenor. 841-1874
50¢ a game
every weekday afternoon
Studies suggest removing chemicals from water that could contaminate soil. VISA and MASTERCARD credit cards for students, 18 years or older, small savings account requests. Corp. State 900 AF. 323 Pennington Center
CUSTOM SEWING Dressmaking and alterations Call 842-5073 Reasonable prices.
Wholesale Sound Rental P.A. Guitar and Bass amps, mikes, graphic EQ, Disc systems
841-6405
SERVICES OFFERED
Charme Beauty Salon is now offering Haircuts for $7, and permits for $22 & up. Call or come in for a professional cut or perm at a great price. Charme Beauty Salon, 103 Mass, 841-350
HERBALife Beauty Salon - Home of the $1 Furcairn HERBALIFE distributor consultant. Weight loss, skin & hair care; much more, income opportunity. 841-9747
STADIUM HANIBER SHOP - 609. Massachusetts,
downstairs. All haircuts $3. No appointment.
Lose Weight Now. Improve your health and your wealth. 10% natural, 19% guaranteed, 842 6671
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841 5716
Special on Scriptured Nails. 25% Off. Available with unbreakable tips. Thin and durable polish won't chip after brief applications, manufactures also Gail Trapit Grace = Genie Beauty. Nail 842-800-3900.
YAMHA MUSIC SCHOOL, ages 4-6, beginners.
Olsen Planto and Organ: 842.0753
BIRCHRIGHT Free Pregnancy Testing Confidential Counseling 843-4821
IENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor for beginner-Advanced Group: Individual 842-530.
Ultimate Hair Care and Skin Care Center, Hubertus.
S. Haana Caitay is from Europe and has worked in France, Germany, England, Belgium and Fiji.
Wear your hair under a cap. Wash well at end 14th Bed B-794-9721.
TYPING
*error Typing All day all night. Resumes,
dissertations papers. Close to campus best
accessible.*
Measurably accurate and affordable typing. Judy.
442-7945
Absolutely First. Fully stocked with all of your needs. Welcome to SMW 150. Same day service. Students always welcome 8th floor classrooms.
opusomega Computer Services offers Word Processing. Professional Results - resumes, papers, a specialty. Call 749-1108
Always try the best for professional service
Term papers, thesis, resumes, etc. Reasonable
842-0246
Call Terry for your typing needs letter terms, paper documents, dissertation etc. IBM correcting termi. II 842743 841432 84271. 9 : 10 - 19 p.m
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced,
JEANEME TSHIFFER - Typeing, Service
TRANSCHIPTION also, standard cassette tape
413.9877
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED. PAST & FEFF1.
CENT 841 3510
Professional TYPING, EDITING, GRAPHICS,
hBc correcting Solitaire, Kade Jr. & below.
TIP TOP TYPING 109.2a. Professional typing editing, editing. Resumes from start to end. Emailing resume. Sending resumes editing our specialties. Xerox 640 Memory writer with two磁盘, royal gold correcting. MEMORIES.
SOMERVILLE & ASSOC. Inc. Professors at
Competitive Words. Word Processing- T
Expertise in APA Style. 60 Kentucky
814-4440. Topkach 205, Western 231-306
**TYPING**, PLUS assistance with composition, edgrammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 8416254
THE WORLD TROS Why pay for typing when you can bake sweet water processing? 843-3147
Tischiron in m. buenne. Haze FM Corrertement Sichere
Tischiron in m. buenne. Haze FM Corrertement Sichere
WANTED
experience typist Tern papers, thesis, all microinstrumental IBM Correcting Electrical Elite or Pica and will correct spelling. Phone 843 954, Mrs. Wright
Female. Female Roentkeinate; to share spaces.
2 bedroom Apartment to camp in 750+ plan
6-bedroom Apartment to camp in 850+ plan
Female Roommate to share 2 bedroom house,
walking distance to campus: 162.50 plus 1/2
village. Call Us: 749-7214
Looking for Female Roommate to share our currently furnished 2 bedroom Apt. Apt #147 $10.00 shared. Phone 249-9498 or 841-7667
Repair to share nice, three-legged Apt.
801, attaches all departed. B41-8844
Tower Lake
2 students to share House near campus $190
7 students / tuition. Brace 749-4533
**Rowers** - Opening for single players and teams in the 7 p.m. Monday night University Mixed League and the 8 p.m. Tuesday night University Legion League. Sign up today at Union Jewel or for more info
Roommate—to share New House, West side of
Down, non smoker. 8412282
DRUMMER Immediately for working Rock &
Holl band Chuck 749-0747 Bujain 841-8298
prescott captive tahoe wi 930-742-5111
Spring springtime. Fully furnished.
large bachelor's house. Great neighborhood,
close to campus, complete with 2 child-loving
dogs 4100 mo/814-440.
Townhouse with finished basement available,
only one left, good for 4 people. $900.
RISE PLACE 841-1287
SUPER LOCATION. Huge balcony porch overlooking Memorial Stadium, one block from Union, 2.3, 4 or 5 Bedroom Apts. Big kitchen with eating area, living room, large double kitchen, separate bath, and master bedroom. 840, per month. All utilities paid. See to apcreate 842-2560-749-7114, 842-4545.
To quelt serious woman communitie née furnished room in private home in Lawrence $125, 4800 after 4800. To quelt serious woman large furnished room in private home in Lawrence $125, 4800 after 4800.
3-Berm. Adm. 100, Misson $300 plus Utilities. Call
842-1401 or 842-8107
The Oakts Apts 2 Bedroom $315/mo We pay
heating/cooling. Last Apt Available' 257 Ridge
Ct. Call 842-4662
Opportunity for roommates. one block from campus, a big bedrooms, living room, kitchen with dining area, bathroom with 2 vantains, back porch overabove, balcony, covered patio and outdoor furniture for 4, also, 3 bedroom unit like above for $12 per roommate for 3. See to appreciate. All invites call P.O. Box 4869, 704-1144.
Lease: 1 bedroom house $350/mo. Off street parking Call: 843-0750
FORRENT
10 Speed Bike. French. Mobecole Super Mug with extras. CBIBAP. 841-7614
FOR SALE
2 Birm. apt $125 mn All Utilities paid 918 Miss.
497-457
Try cooperative living! Sunflower House 1064
Tennessee 749-801. Ask for Dawn. Inexpensive
private rooms are available
10Speed Ladurie 'Schwimmbicycle, bright yellow,
just tinted and in excellent condition. Call 843-8847.
Available now. Remodeled two bedroom apartment at 1209 Ipswich. One block north of Union Cetting炉, new kitchen large porch, frelease $340 plus gas and electricity. Battery 842-1600.
1937 Kawasaki KZ 550 14,500 miles mostly highway, 890 224 W 9th Apt. 1, see behind 840 Kentucky
$340 plus gas and electricity for the
Designed for a group of four students. Classy
huge and energy efficient! 843 9427
684.005
CABINET CAR, Car Stereo, baby auto,
recorder, looks nice, great condition, Call 749-1626
800K CASES, makes startling at $49
BROOK BARN, 11W. 11th W. 842. 2069
Designate on Campus 2-mm, no deposit, Sept
free excellent education A.C. WD hookup
$775/mo Must see 70-438 after 3 p.m.
Bicycle: 26' Tires, Men's Dual rear wire grocery baskets. New seats and pedals. More! $44,
443; 300
CS Students. For a Low Price, you can own your terminal TZ 7 A with built-in, mounted in modern, adjustable party, hooks up to KU and other main frames. & More! Phone 844-60594
New 2 bedroom duplex, on NW side of,
complete with all kitchen appliances.
Perfect for 2 or 3 students $430/mo Call
1-273-253 after 6 p.m
Cheap seat that can't be beat. Directors chairs only 814.95, at The Furniture Barn, 181 W 6th 824-206.
Comic books, used Science Fiction paperbacks,
dollars, posters, comic books, open book
shows, Sun 11/11 New Hampshire
10-6
Formate 44 and Dose Drive. Like new, $350 or
less.
432 807 302
DAMONDS 1/2; 1/4; 2; 4 Carat cut, jewelry
cut, $90 each, tournament (Call) Brian
Sanders
other 2 bedroom House. New furniture. Close to KU. TU. No spot $45 plus utilities w/ 19th floor.
EVERYTHING GIRLS' Bedroom. Car 79 Diamond* pre-fix
Furniture. Furniture set dining room set.
2 cribs, oriental rugs, T.V and much more. Call
240-899-anytime.
DRAFTING MACHINE Sturdy Bruning machine with scales, works great $150
easily 79-308
FUTONFERENTIAL. Full size, all wood, collapsible. $58,841.7057
The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
Moped 1961 Honda Express Automatic
2-speed excel. cord 84-18438 after 4 p.m
Is your apartment too dark to which study
lamp is charging at $3k. The Paintbrush 187
and the Scooter 190 are available.
New Linear 300 Watt Car Amplifier, $750 Retail will sell for $600 or best offer. 843-5046
Open office area, easy access,
sparkly yellow and affordable at $875. 841.3026.
Partners桌 2, assisted, Oak desk with glass top.
841.3026; 8:47 am; after 8:47 am.
Partners Desk 2, sueded, desk with glass top
$5 Call 842 2524 after 8 gpm
in Tarantula (to Tarantula) or best offer
Pioneer PL-10 Turntable, $40, or best offer
842.030, evenings.
Sherwood 402C Integrated Amplifier: 40 watts per channel, 4 channels, tape monitor, loudness, and pre-amp capability 843-1383
Trek 311, blue 12 Speed Bike. 24 1/2 lbs., 22" toe clips, lock, pump, 1/8" tires. 8427835.
clips, lock pump 1 1/8" (342.485)
U.S. Singer Suit Sewing machine with cabinet in excellent condition; $125, all accessories incl. Call 841-051.
and Collector Records bought and sold,
Rock, RNB, JZB, Country, Classical, Standards
and Big Bands Sat & Sun, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Quan-
talr. #811 New Hampshire.
For furnishings for your living, we have what you need. Thrift Shirts at 629 Vermont and 16 E. Kern Gibson Sunburst 34' – orange table. Guild D 20'. Both with cash. Eagle 744. 819-744-5255
Twelve Backpack HP401 CV Printer, $329. Hegg Limited to stock on hand, selected 18CV Application packs and software, 25% Off Jawkaybook Store 843-3026
Equip
Glass door Stereo cabinets, starting at $99. The Furniture Barn. 1811 W. 6th. 842-3096.
JAYHAWA BANKORI, OH IN
Honda CB 1255 Must sell $290 1538 Tennessee
anytime
Honey Express Moped, only 1000 original miles,
excellent condition, $250 Call after 5.30, 841-3163
IBM PC Jr WIRELESS KEYBOARD, 1 DISK
DRIVE, 128 KB MEMORY 841-1502
If you can't buy it . . . bargain.
Get Something Going!
D do not forget the things you really want simply because of the high prices involved. You must be able to afford these items available in stores are listed at lower prices in discounted stores and nowadays only new price since many items in discounted are sold by private parties. D do not forget it by
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
Yamaha Roamer Pioneer Tape deck with 2
speakers 1996 Drafting table & chair 102 $Call
2.0 W 64 K, Malatine A, 8" Disk drives, 1.2 mi bnd
HERTALITE with GFX graphics, comes with WOOD STAR, PCac, C, etc. K260 Call Gal after 8 p.m at 847/792 or 864/2544
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplement on Sale on Mail. Make sense when reading the notes for the exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization Notes*. *New Analysis of Western Civilization Books*. *The Jayhawk Booksstore. and Great Booksstore.*
FENNIS RAQUET Head Graphite Edge
Ferguspie 825-359
1973 Ford Mustang, PS, PB, AC, 33) Cleveland
and FM am cassette player.雪糕 tires. Great
body rough $1000 negotiate. 841.5700.
1973 Ford Galaxie, 2door DSi, PC
AUTOSALES
109 Ford Galaxy 2.5hr PS, PF AC, Auto
Radials, 52.600 miles, good condition, $800 Steve
Dickey
1975 T. Bird, white leather interior, NT, PS, PB
PW Tilt & power seats, some rust $790
negotiable Call 844-692-4992
1974 Ford Pinto, good condition, some rust.
Necessary: Call 749-4348, after 6
FORD FIESTA. 1980. 4-spd, front wheel drive, AM-FM, great mpg, run to drive. New tires, brakes, exhaust 2700. $441.36
stuart shell, 0813 Nissan Sentra Station Wagon.
stuart shell, 0813 Nissan Sentra Station Wagon.
presented in 600 miles local garage. Garage # 249 786.
Must sell 1080 Porch 914 Convertible. Excellent body perfect interior. rain wail 591 $199. Garage # 249 786.
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS
Classified
Heading
Write ad here
Net a
Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Classified Display
1col x 1inch = $4.20
| | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1-15 words | $2.60 | $3.15 | $3.75 | $6.75 |
| For every 5 words added | 254 | 504 | 754 | $1.05 |
Mail or deliver to 119 Stauffer - Flint Hall
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
September 24,1984 Page 10
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
Royals beaten by A's 5-1; Twins now tied for first
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Rickey Henderson singled, doubled and homered — driving in two runs and scoring twice — and lead the Oakland A's to a 5-1 nationally televised victory yesterday over the Kansas City Royals.
Jorge Orta gave Kansas City a run in the fourth with his ninth homer of the season.
Oakland reached Kansas City starter Mike Jones, 2, for five runs in the first three innings, taking a commanding 5-0 lead.
The Minnesota Twins, who won yester day, moved into a tie for first place with the Royals. The California Angels lost and remain 1/2 games back.
The Angels and Royals begin a fourgame series with a double-header in Royals Stadium tonight.
California has eight games left, and Minnesota and Kansas City have seven games apiece.
Men's tennis wins invitational
The men's tennis team began its fall season with a resounding victory at the Kansas Invitational Friday and Saturday. The women's team won matches against Wichita State and Oral Roberts before losing to Arkansas yesterday.
The men's team piled up 29 points with a combined 26-1 singles and doubles record in winning its invitational for the second year in a row. The Jayhawks were traited by Oral Roberts, 14, Northern Illinois, 11; Tuba, 9; Nebraska, $ _{6} $ ; and Kansas State, 11.
Mike Wolf, Michael Center, Charles Stearns, Larry Pascal, Tim Mahaffey and David Owens took first place in their singles flights. David Brody took third place.
Wolf and Mahateh, Center and Pascal, and Stearns and Greg Brown took first place in their doubles flights.
The women's team defeated Wichita State 6-3 and Oral Roberts 8-1. Arkansas defeated the Jayhawks 6-3. Christine Parr went 3-0 at Four 5 singles and teamed with Tracy Treps to go 2-1 at No. 1 double.
Broncos blank Chiefs, 21-0
DENVER — Sammy Winder keyed Denver's offense by rushing for 139 yards, and the Broncos' inspired defense stopped the Kansas City Chiefs cold yesterday in a 21-0 win.
The victory established the Broncos. 3-1 in second place in the American Football Conference Western Division. The Chiefs, 2-2, drenched to third.
Winder had his third best rushing day as a p. He started the unexpected rush with a 6-yard scoring run early in the second quarter.
Broncos running back Rick Parros added a 3yard run for a score before halftime after John Elway, who was 18-of-39 for 176 yards, found Steve Watson on key passes.
Jackie Kelly/KANSAN
Linebacker Steve Busick used a Bronco defense that intercepted Todd Blackledge twice — once for a third-quarter touchdown on cornerback Mike Harden's thet and 45-yard run.
Baseballers 4-2 over weekend
The baseball team opened its fall season with three victories over Johnson County Community College Saturday and one victory and two defeats against Northeast Oklahoma yesterday.
KU won 74-4, 3-1 and 4-3 over Johnson County Charlie Buzard, John Heeney and John Quinn were the KU starting pitchers and each went the full seven innings.
KU lost 7-4 and 3-2 to Northeast Oklahoma before winning 4-3 behind the pitching of Scott LaRue, who started and went the distance. Jon Steiner started the first game and was tagged with the loss. He was relieved by Jeff Nichols. Brett Morris started the second game and went the distance.
Mistakes doom 'Hawks against Vandy
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
93
76
81
6
By GREG DAMMAN Sports Editor
Sports Editor
Mistakes have caused a scratch to appear on the Kansas football record. And scratches sometimes lead to a repetitive skip, which is just what the Kansas football team seemed to be suffering from Saturday night against Vanderbilt.
Displaying mistakes similar to the type that threw them from contention in last week's Florida State game, The Jayhawks were troubled by Vanderbilt, 41-6.
Jayhawk defenders Jeff Anderson and Jamie Steinhauser try the attempt was made during the fourth quarter of Saturday to bring down Vanderbilt running back Kenny Weatherspoon night's game. Vanderbilt defeated KU, 41-6.
And once again, the score was deceptive. Kansas moved the ball inside the Vanderbilt 10-yard line twice in the first half but came up with one field goal, instead of two touchdowns.
"We're just not making the big plays." Kansas coach Mike Gottfried said. "We're not doing the things necessary to get the touchdown. We're not performing as 11 people."
THE JAYHAWKS LED. 6-0, through most of the first half. But two Vanderbilt touchdowns in the final three minutes before half, one on a 48-yard interception return with 55 seconds left in the half, caused Kansas to go to theocker room trailing. 14-6
"I thought it was a big play," Gofftried said. "But I had hoped that it wouldn't be so bad."
The Jahawks weren't dead, but for most of the second half they certainly didn't seem to be in the best of health. Vanderbilt took the second-half kick to the Kansas six-yard line, where kicker Ricky Anderson booted a 23 yard field goal.
The drive was punctuated by two key third-down passes by Vanderbilt quarterback Kurt Page.
"I thought we were pretty good at holding them to minimal yardage on first and second down," defensive lineman Jeff Anderson said. "But we gave up some long plays. You have to be ready for that."
The Javahaws, who had 257 yards of total offense in the first half, compared to 217 yards for Vanderbilt, were victimized by the pinpoint passing of Page in the second half. Page's 46 yard pass to Joe Kelly set up a 25 yard touchdown pass to Butch Bullen that increased Vanderbilt's lead to 24-6.
THEIR RECEIVERS STARTED to run different routes on us, and their quarterback got better as the game went along. cornerback Dino Bello said, "He's an
excellent quarterback. Their receivers were open, and he was putting the ball right on the money."
The Jayhawks chances for a comeback became even smaller when a Vanderbilt kickoff bounced off the shoulder pads of freshman Johnny Diggs and was recovered by Kansas on its one yard line. Two plays later, quarterback Mork Norsest's pitch was tumbled in the end zone and recovered by Vanderbilt for a touchdown, making the
"We're so young we can't overcome things
like that," Gottfred said. "We need a little confidence."
The Commodores added a field goal and a touchdown in the fourth quarter for the final 41-6 score Vanderbilt gained 288 yards in the second half, compared to 136 yards for Kansas
"We just didn't have the ball as much." Gottried said. "When you get behind it's tough to come back. Especially with such a young team."
KANNAS' NEXT GAME will be Saturday, when the Jayhawks travel to Chapel Hill.
N C. to face the North Carolina Tar Heels
North Carolina is 0-2 this season and is
coming off a 52-20 loss 'against Boston
College
"That's not very good for us," Gottfried said. "The thing is, North Carolina has a very good team, and they're still 0-2. What happened to them against Boston College can happen to anybody Boston College can do that to you. I think we'll be facing a mad bunch of people next Saturday."
Anderson also said that North Carolina's losses would make the game a difficult one for the Jayhawks
Steiner first in cross country
By CHRIS LAZZARINO
Sports Writer
KI's Brent Steiner won the men's Jayhawk Invitational cross country race Saturday in convincing (shain, beating K State's Ron Stahl by more than 12 seconds with a time of 31 minutes, 26.5 seconds for the 10,000-metre course.
K-State won the men's title with 30 points, Nebraska finished second with 41 points and KU finished third with 62 points. The top three finishers in the women's division were the same, with K-State winning with 20 points, with BU by NU with 43 points and KU with 71 points.
wildly pecked the 15-foot top women's finisher for the 5-kilometer course was Susan Glatter. Her time was more than 32 seconds faster than the time she won on with the same course against Southern Illinois last week. But this week she finished ninth.
The two hills on Rum Rock farm that give the course its reputation are Baldy and Cemetery Hill.
Men's Head Coach Bob Timmons said that the course gave Steiner a big advantage because he was an excellent hill runner and Rim Rock farm was known for its hills and turns.
"Baldy is a tough hill." Timmons said. "It is about a quarter of a mile long and it gets real steep at the end. Cemetery Hill is the las'
tough hill. Those two hills do separate the rangers."
stener knew that if he was in good shape when the top runners hit the hills, he could pull away
"It was getting late in the race, and I was running easy." Stenner said. "I knew I had to make a move and I thought Baldy would be a good spot."
good spot.
Greg Lebert, who finished last week's race against Southern Illinois in third place and second on the team, had to pull out of the race at the three mile mark because of problems with his Achilles' tendon.
Leibert had the tendon hurt worse during last week's race, but he finished the race because he had a chance to win. It was not known throughout most of last week if Leibert would be healthy enough to race Saturday.
KU finishers after Steiner were Joe Manuel, 33.08.7 for 11th place; Gordon Way, 33.18.8 for 14th place; Maurice Smith, 33.3.2 for 17th place; and Kyle Roste, 33.56.1 for 19th place.
Women's Head Coach Cliff Rovello was pleased with his team's effort, noting that each runner had improved on last week's individual times.
The top finishes for KU after Glitter were Cindy Blakeley, 18.31.1 for 14th place, Caryne Finlay, 18.43.9 for 16th place, Paula Berquist, 18.46.4 for 17th place and Trisha Mangan, 19th with a time of 18.56.1.
KANSAS
36
Brent Steiner
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING
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Sept. 24 thru Sept. 25 4:30-6:30 p.m.
in the dining rooms at Hashinger, GSP,
Oliver, Templin, and Lewis.
The Douglas County Republican Party encourages you to register to vote, so that on November 6 you may cast your ballot for our outstanding Republican candidates dedicated to serving the citizens of Douglas County.
Political Advertisement paid for by Douglas County Republican Central Committee.
C s d n
T H Z X I N
s
or
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
or
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
C
Cubs? playoffs?
This was the year it had to happen. For the first time in 39 long, long years, the Cubs have won a division championship. Rick Sutcliffe, the bearded one at left, threw a
Cooler
two-hitter last night as the Cubs beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-1. Now the National League East pennant belongs to the boys of Wrigley Field. See story, page 12.
High. 50s. Low. 43.
Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Tuesday September 25 1984
61.95 No, it is
Petitioner's T-shirt sales stir GLSOK
By JOHN HANNA Staff Renorter
A leading opponent of Student Senate financing for Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas is selling T-shirts with the word "Faghusters" printed above a picture of a limp-wristed ghost
The T shirts, a take-off on the popular movie "Ghostbusters," have offended GLSOK members, the group's president said yesterday.
Steve imber, Lawrence senior, is the student behind a petition drive to place GLSOK financing on a referendum, or campus election.
Ruth Lachtwardt, president of the support group, said that GLNOK was considering legal action against the seller of the shirts.
FAGBUSTERS
Imber, who 12 days ago said that he had nothing to do with the sale of the "Faghusters" T-shirts, yesterday sold one to a University Daily Kansas staff member who visited his traternity, Acacia. The staff member, accompanied by another person, bought the shirt for $7 from Imber.
Imber has said publicly that he considers the GLOSK issue to be financial. He has said that GLOSK could support itself, without Senate money.
IMBER COULD NOT be reached for comment later yesterday despite five telephone calls and three visits to his fraternity house throughout the afternoon and evening.
Imber told the staff member — who neither stated nor denied his affiliation with the Kansan — that about 400 of the shirts had been manufactured.
"This is not a moral attack on homosexuality." he said Sept. 5.
marty, he said September. Imber's petition, which calls for a vote
Doubt cast on referendum drive
See SHIRTS, p. 5, col. 1
By JOHN HANNA
Staff Reporter
A student's sale of T-shirts that say 'Faghusters' on the front may endanger his drive for a referendum on Student Senate financing for Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas.
The student, Steve Imber, Lawrence senior, in the spring started a petition that asked for a student referendum, or election, or future financing for the group.
The Senate had voted to allocate $505 to the group for fiscal year 1985, after which Imber started the push for a referendum.
imber said. Then Davidson, chairman of the Senate Electoral Committee, said yesterday that Imber's connections with the shirts put the intent of the petition in doubt. The committee will discuss the petition Thursday.
I think that Steve Imbree to get his act straightened out if he's concerned about
the possible self-supportiveness of the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas." Davidson said
same
IMBER COULD NOT be reached for comment despite repeated attempts yesterday.
Carla Vogel, student body president, also criticized Lumber's sale of the T-shirts.
"I don't like it," she said. "I think it's ugly, violent and really sad. It shows the ignorance of people, and I don't see any humor in it."
Vogel has in the past supported financing for GLSOK, a support group for homosexuals in the area. She also said the petition's credibility would suffer because of Imber's involvement with the sale of the "Fag busters". T-shirts
Imber has said that he is opposed to GLSOK financing because the group could be self supporting — and therefore should not receive student money — and not
See PETITION, p. 5, col. 4
By United Press International
bombardier. Mitadale and his running mate, Geraldine Ferraro, began a new kitchen debate, taking Reagan to task for comparing incomplete security arrangements at the bombed-out U.S. Embassy in Lebanon to remodeling a kitchen
Reagan 'tune' rings false, Mondale says
President Reagan attempted yesterday to blunt antitism that he is trigger happy, putting to the United Nations for talks with Moscow. But Walter Mondale said Reagan had "changed his tune" just before the election.
While Reagan adopted a more conciliatory approach to the Soviet Union at Turtle Bay, Mondale made a one-day trip to Texas, a key state where he trails far behind the president
student
"For four years, he talked like Carris LeMay, and this morning he tried to talk like Wall Mondale," Monday said of Reagan's UN speech. LeMay was an Air Force general best known for his statement during the Vietnam War that the United States should bomb the enemy "back to the stone age."
FERRARO CAMPGNED IN NEW YORK and BALTIMORE, saving the administration has a 'calculator where its heart should be and it a calculator with a double standard.' Vice President George Bush took his campaign to an Illinois coal mine and defended security arrangements at the embassy
Reagan told the U.N. General Assembly "America has repaired its strength" and is "ready for constructive negotiations" with Moscow for talks to reduce superpower tension and the risk of war. Reagan suggested renewed arms control negotiations and regular meeting between U.S. and Soviet experts to "work rapidly toward developing a new climate of policy understanding."
a new common point.
He said such talks were essential if crises are to be avoided and real arms control is to be negotiated.
"How much progress we will make—and at what pace—I cannot say. But we have a moral obligation to try and try again."
"DETERRENCE IS NECESSARY, but not sufficient. America has repaired its strength. We have invigorated our alliances and friendships. We are ready for constructive negotiations with the Soviet Union."
negotiations with the abusive critics.
"We recognize that there is no same alternative to negotiations on arms control and other issues between our two nations, which have the capacity to destroy civilization as we know it."
nation as we know it.
Reagan's appearance before the United Nations, his third in four years, coincided with an escalating political debate over foreign policy and the start of a week focused on superpower diplomacy.
on superpower opposition
Gone from Reagan's rhetoric was talk of an "evil empire". His speech was interrupted once by applause.
SOVIET FOREIGN MINISTER Andrei Gromyko did not applaud and sat through the speech with a dour expression on his face.
speech with his son, Cappee Reagan meets Gromyko at the White House Friday, the day after Mondale sees Gromyko in New York.
Mondale, addressing several hundred supporters in Texarkana, Texas, said Reagan has "changed his tune" but suggested there may not have been a "change of heart."
near?
"What are we to believe?" Mondale asked.
"Which Reagan would be our president if he's re-elected"?
Mondale kept up his attacks on the security taken to protect the U.S. Embassy in Lebanon, criticizing Reagan's Sunday comment minimizing the fact that security arrangements were not complete. "Anyone that's ever had a kitchen done over knows that it never gets done as soon as you wish it would," said Reagan.
Joan Mondale says Reagan is indifferent toward workers
MONDALE SAID. "WE need a president who knows dealing with terrorists is a much more difficult task than fixing up a kitchen."
In Baltimore, Ferraro said that when talking about security from terrorist activity, comparing it to kitchen remodeling is very inappropriate.
Ferraro attracted a crowd of more than 6,000 at a downtown Baltimore rally. It was the first time in days that she was not dogged by hecklers.
Staff Reporter
By SUZANNE BROWN
KANSAS CITY, Mo. The American worker doesn't matter to President Reagan, Joan Mondale yesterday told a cheering crowd of about 600 AFL-CIO members.
But if Walter Mondale were elected president, he would restore the worker pride that was lost during the Reagan administration, she said.
"It seems that Mr. Reagan doesn't think you matter very much to America," she told representatives of the Missouri State Labor
Council, the state branch of the AFL.CIO.
"But we have a chance to show him on Nov. 6
just how important you are."
Mondale spoke at the 12th biennial convention of the state council at the Radisson Mueblebach Hotel in downtown Kansas City, Mo. The AFL.CIO has endorsed Walter Mondale for president.
water沃尔顿MONDALE'S SPEECH WAS interrupted frequently by hearty applause She contrasted her husband's and Reagan's positions, and described the president as being indifferent to the average worker
"We must choose between a president who will work with us to build the future and
president who is working against the average American." she said
Mondale followed her husband's lead by concentrating a majority of her attack upon the federal deficit accumulated under Reagan's leadership
Mondale said that the $200 billion dollar debt had saddled the United States with rising interest rates, a loss of U.S. jobs to foreign industry and the worst trade year in U.S. history
"AS I TRAVEL across this country, I meet a lot of people who know just exactly what Reagan has done, and they are horrified of
what the consequences of four more years would be," she said.
At a news conference after the meeting, Mondale downloaded indications in recent polls, including one published Saturday by the Kansas City Times and KCTV, which showed that a majority of Americans didn't think the federal deficit was important
"We're telling them about it because they're going to have to pay the bill." she said.
Her response followed weeks of campaigning in which Walter Mondale and his running mate Geraldine Ferraro have tried
DEMOCRATIC OFFICIALS HAVE said they tear Americans don't want to hear Walter Mondale's pessimistic message at a time of relative economic security
time of relevantMondale reminded the convention delegates that her husband had revealed on Sept 10 his plan for cutting the federal debt by $177 billion by 1989. She said that Reagan had yet to match the Democrat's plan.
She said at the news conference that the two debates next month between Reagan and her husband would help to make clear such differences between the candidates.
New rule could open door for freshmen at McCollum
By BRENDA STOCKMAN
Staff Reporter
Freshmen may be allowed to live in McCollium Hall in the future but the terms of their occupancy has touched off a debate between the McCollium Hall Senate and the Association of University Residence Halls.
Under current rules, residents in McCollam must be upperclassman, graduate students or non-traditional freshmen. Mark Denke, assistant director of residential programs, said yesterday. The ball is also used each fall to accommodate the overflow of students from the other halls.
A not-traditional freshman is any student who was introduced as a freshman but who did not graduate from high school the semester before moving into the hall.
Jeff Plymire, McCollium Hall president, said McCollium's proposal for freshmen occupancy only gave traditional freshmen assigned to McCollium temporarily in the fall the option to stay in McCollium.
MCCOLLUM HALL SENATE will take its proposal to the Residential Programs Advisory Board tomorrow. The Association of University Residence Halls presented its proposal last week.
present this week.
Curt Worden, AURH housing and contracts chairman, said that AURH's proposal would allow traditional freshmen to choose McCollum when the freshmen sign their contracts.
The AURH proposal recommends, that the current contract classification of students residing in McCollium Hall be changed from '1' Men and women, upperclass and graduate only, housed on separate corridors,' to read '1' Men and women, all classes, housed on separate corridors.
WORDEN SAID THE reclassification was being considered now because more freshmen were living in McCollum temporarily than had done so in previous years
Under both proposals freshmen would only be allowed to live on one of the first three floors.
At last week's advisory board meeting, Caryl K. Smith, dean of student life, asked for input from McCollum's senate before the board considered AUH1's proposal
sink Hutchins, a member of the McCollum senate, said that the senate was not aware that the advisory board had asked for its input. He said that the alternative proposal was developed through the senators' initiative.
Flymire said that the McCollum Hall Senate did not know about the AURH proposal when it was being made, although a representative from the hall had been present at the meeting in which the AURH proposal was adopted.
He said that no one was to blame for the senate's lack of information.
See MCCOLLUM, p. 5, col. 5
Joe Wilkins III KANSAN
drink. Rob is th
Rob Coda, 12, takes time out of riding his bike to quench his thirst. He was riding his bike on sand piles by 15th Street and son of Don and Anderea Coda, 1993 El Dorado Drive
11
6
x
m
8
September 25, 1984 Page 2
The University Daily KANSAN
NATION AND WORLD
House and Senate resume immigration reform talks
WASHINGTON — House and Senate negotiators drafting a compromise immigration reform bill resumed talks yesterday seeking to remove a major roadblock to the bill's congressional passage this session.
A House-approved provision to protect aliens against job discrimination, written by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., has become a significant legislative hurdle in the bipartisan bill that would grant U.S. citizenship to all aliens who entered the country prior to 1981.
Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., the chief Senate negotiator and sponsor, opposed the Frank proposal in earlier negotiations because it would prohibit employers from giving preference to American citizens over aliens in hiring.
But Simpson and House members -- including Rep. Romano Mazzoli, D-Ky, the key House sponsor -- had worked out most major differences over six days of talks.
Weber resigns as CU president
BOULDER. Colo — University of Colorado President Arnold R. Weber resigned yesterday to take a similar position in university. He was "going home."
United Press International
academic life.
Weber came to CU in January 1980 from Carnegie-Mellon University, serving three years as provost. Before that he worked on the faculty at the University of Chicago from 1958 to 1973. He has a Ph.D in economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
said he was 'going home.'
Regents express disappointed disappointment. Weber told them he would not have left if the offer had not come from a school in Illinois, where he spent much of his academic life.
institute of Technology. Weber, 53, drew attention five years ago for his handling of a $1 million deficit in the CU athletic department. He insisted that the deficit be eliminated and the athletic department be self-supporting.
Whistles installed to save deer
MILWAUKEE — Wisconsin Bell hopes whistling in the dark — and the daylight — will help cut the slaughter of deer on state highways.
The state Department of Natural Resources estimates that 20,000 white-tailed deer are killed on Wisconsin roads each year.
Bell has installed special high-pitched whistles known as a Deer Alert on 60 of its trucks. Robert Plaffi, Bell's staff manager of motor equipment, said.
Two bullet-shaped whistles about 2 inches long are placed on the front grill of a vehicle. They are activated when the vehicle exceeds 30 mph, but can only be heard by deer. The high-pitched sound will not affect cattle or sheep, officials said.
Bell spokesman Maurice Louret said that the whistles seem to be working.
BEGINNING
DOVER, Del. — The family of Army Chief Warrant Officer Kenneth V. Welch, one of the military victims of last week's Beirut explosion, leaves after a joint service ceremony in Dover honoring the two men.
Services honor two killed in blast
By United Press International
DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del — Two American servicemen killed in Beirut by a terrorist car bomb were honored yesterday, with one official vowing that the United States would remain in Lebanon “despite the risk.”
An honor guard of soldiers and sailors stood vigil over the flag drapped caskets containing the bodies of Army Chief Warrant Officer Kenneth V. Welch, 33, of Grand
Rapids, Mich., and Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Michael Ray Wagner, 30, of Zebulon, N.C.
The two men were killed last Thursday when an Arab terrorist on a suicide mission set off a car bomb at the U.S. Embassy annex in East Beirut.
Air Force Lt. Gen. John Chain, director of the State Department's bureau of political-military affairs, praised the two servicemen and said their sacrifice would be an inspiration for others.
U.S. interests threatened following embassy attack
By United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — A threat attributed to the group blamed for last week's attack on the U.S. Embassy annex said yesterday that another "large operation" soon would be launched against American interests.
A U.S. Embassy spokeswoman said the threat was being taken seriously
The threat was published in the As Safi newspaper. A caller was quoted who claimed to represent Islamic Jihad, which means Islamic Holy War. The caller said the new strike would average 13 villagers slain by armed militants in south Lebanon Thursday.
"We blew up the U.S. Embassy," said the man who telephoned Asaf, adding that "a large operation will be carried out against American interests soon."
ISlamic JHAD HAS claimed responsibility for the suicide bombings that destroyed the U.S. Embassy building in West Beirut in April 1983 and the U.S. Marine headquarters near Berat airport in October. 758 Americans died in those blasts.
At the United Nations, the State Department said investigators now believed the suicide truck contained 3,000 pounds of TNT instead of the 300 pounds that was originally estimated by experts on the scene.
In Bonn, the West German newspaper Die Welt said the truck used to attack the building had been stolen in Muslim west Beirat a few weeks before the incident.
Die Welt said investigators found the vehicle's diplomatic plates. The fact that the vehicle belonged to the embassy motor pool
was decisive in getting past guards and overcoming security precautions.
At Boring, Christian Phalange radio quoted investigation sources as saying the truck crossed from a village near the Syrian border Sept. 16 to the Shite Muslim southern suburbs of west Beirut.
THE RADIO SAID after one night it crossed to the Christian eastern half of the capital where the U.S. Embassy annex is located. The attack occurred Sept. 20. The reports could not be confirmed.
At the U.S. Embassy building in west Beirut, steel mesh anti-rocket netting was placed over the roof, although it was not installed. This was a result of the new threat from Islamic jihad.
In Damascus, Assistant Secretary of State Richard Murphy met Syrian President Hafez al-Assad and discussed "the situation in Lebanon, particularly the proposed withdrawal of the Israeli forces." Damascus radio said.
Murphy then flew to Israel for talks with Israel leaders, including Prime Minister Shimon Peres, Director-General David Kimche of the Foreign Ministry, and Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
The Reagan administration, in response to security threats such as the embassy attack, is sending an urgent request to Congress for a supplemental security program of $371 million, the State Department said yesterday.
State Department spokesman John Hughes said the supplemental request will be part of the continuing resolution for State Department funds.
BBC finally decides to broadcast shows about nuclear holocaust
By United Press International
LONDON — The British Broadcasting Corp. after 19 years of agonizing, has finally faced the issue of nuclear war by broadcasting two terrifying views of the devastation Britain could expect from an atom bomb.
On Sunday night, the state-owned BBC showed "Threads," a 112-minute docu-drama depicting what might happen to the city of Sheffield in the wake of a 210-megaton attack on Britain.
20 million Unlike Hollywood's "The Day After," "Threads" followed the lives of the holocaust survivors for 13 years as they faced the psychological and physical rigors of the nuclear winter that scientists
believe will blot out the sun and threaten mankind with starvation
The network followed up last night by scheduling the two-hour documentary "On The 8th Day," dealing solely with the eighth day after a bomb, when scientists believe the northern hemisphere will be plunged into twilight and temperatures will plunge by as much as 70 degrees Fabriheit.
The decision to show both films follows 19 years of hand-wringing over "The War Game," a show made in 1965 but banned from the airwaves by the BBC as too "horrifying."
BRC executives said they changed their minds in this case because "Threads" and "On The 8th Day" were both carefully researched ___
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CAMPUS AND AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Final enrollment figures to be released for Fall '84
Final fall enrollment figures will be released this afternoon by the department of educational services.
First day enrollment figures indicated that 24,558 students - 215 more than last year - were enrolled at the University of Kansas in August, according to Gary Thompson, director of student records. Thompson said in August that this fall's enrollment could break a record.
Prof to stress need for 'breaks'
Final enrollment statistics were compiled Sept. 21, the 20th of classes.
Johnson will focus on examples from English and American poetry.
Michael Johnson, professor of English,
tonight will discuss the importance of the
break after each line of poetry in his
speech, "Applying the Breaks: A Review
of the Poetic Line." He will speak at 7 p.m.
in 207 Blake Hall.
Chrysler to sponsor contest
run in the sun and driving cars safely will go hand in hand Saturday and Sunday at Potter Pavilion during the Third Annual Collegiate Driving Championship sponsored by the Chrysler Corporation.
Students are invited to drive a new Chrysler Dodge Daytona Turbo Z serpentine through pylons from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., said John Heeney, Student Union Activities Forum board member.
The driver with the fastest time will go on an all-expense paid spring break vacation to Daytona Beach. Fla., to compete in the national driving championship finals. Heeney said.
Movie star and KU alumnus Buddy Rogers will be on the KU campus Oct. 7 to accept the 'Life Achievement OZI' award given by the Kansas Film Institute
Film award to go to KU grad
The award presentation and the showing of one of Rogers' early films will be the culmination of the second Kansas Film and Video Festival, Oct. 5-7 at Dyce Hall.
Rogers, 80, made his first film in 1926. He had starring roles in 52 more movies in his 31-year career. Rogers is a native of Olathe.
Voters consider water issue
The Lawrence League of Women Voters will discuss a recent survey on water management for Kansas this Thursday and Monday.
and more. Warren Warner, 701 Tennessee St., who has been a member of the league for 35 years, said yesterday that the league had conducted two studies on the water problems in Kansas. One was done in 1977, and another was 1983.
Bar prefers appointing judges
The league will meet at 1 p.m. Thursday,
at 2617 Oxford Rd, at 9:15 a.m. Monday, at
Trinity Episcopal Church Library, 1011
Vermont St., and at 7:30 p.m. Monday, at
315 Park Hill Terrace
TOPEKA, Kan. — The Kansas Bar Association has endorsed judicial appointment instead of partisan elections of judges, an association spokeswoman said yesterday.
yesterday
Patti Slider, spokeswoman, said in a statement that the group had endorsed merit selection, which the American Bar Association also supported Cowley, Johnson and Shawnee counties will vote on the judicial selection method question in November.
Weather
Today will be cloudy and colder. The temperature will hold steady in the 30s and there is a 30 percent chance of rain. Winds will be from the north at 10 to 29 mph Tonight will be mostly cloudy and cold. The low will be in the low to mid-40s. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and not as cold. The high will be in the mid-60s.
Correction
The Kansan yesterday incorrectly reported the location of a speech to be given tonight by Edward Maser, professor of art history at the University of Chicago. He will speak at 8 in the auditorium of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art
Snow frosts some states in the West
Cold front creeps in, casting autumn chill upon misty Lawrence
By JOHN EGAN Staff Reporter
While Mother Nature dumped about two feet of snow on some Western states yesterday, a cold front made its way toward Lawrence — bringing a drastic drop in temperatures and light showers.
The showers, accompanied by lightning, began to dampen Lawrence last night. Autumn-like conditions were predicted for today, and Lawrence's Service predicted a temperature of 64.
Fog should appear this morning in low-lying areas, according to the KU Weather Service, and the chance for rain is 50 percent.
"It will be a cloudy, gray, gloomy day," said Mike Akulow, a forecaster with the National Weather Service.
In Montana, northern Wyoming and the western Dakotas, the first snowstorm of the season blanketed some mountain passes with as much as two feet of snow.
Cody, Wyo. has been buried under 17 inches of snow since autumn arrived Saturday. The snow snapped power lines and knocked down tree branches.
kicked down tree branches in LAWRENCE, SUMMER made a return appearance yesterday as residents swelled in 92-degree heat, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Fifty percent humidity added to the discomfort.
Alyce Johnson, Prairie Village junior, said she was pleased that cooler weather was on its way.
"We have no air conditioning here," said Johnson, a member of Ch Omega sorority, 1345 W. Campus Road, "so I think it's the best thing that can happen."
"The shorts have seen their last couple of days, I think." Johnson said.
She said she might wear corduroy pants or shacks today.
Normal temperatures for this time of year are a high of 78 and a low of 53, according to the National Weather Service.
Across Kansas, Akulow said, the cold front that originated in the Canadian Rockies will create cooler temperatures. Highs in the mid-50s are expected.
into 30s the capers. In northwestern and north central Kansas, frost may appear tonight. Temperatures may dip into the high-30s and low-40s, he said. Normally, frost does not appear in the Sunflower State until late October.
In lawrence, the temperature should drop to 41 tonight, according to the KU Weather Service. The service predicted a 50 percent chance of showers for tonight.
Larry Weasley
A firefighter douses a smoldering mattress after putting out a house fire at 1231 Brook St. The fire last night caused an unknown amount of damage. Carol Gannaway, 30, and her two children, who rent the house, were not home at the time
of the fire. The owner of the house, Jim Stuart, Route 2, Baldwin, said last night that the house was insured for about $30,000. The Lawrence Fire Department is investigating the cause of the fire, which was confined to a back bedroom.
Dean wants education center here
By DAN HOWELL
Staff Reporter
A state center for research in education should be located at the University of Kansas, if the Board of Regents decides to establish such a center, the dean of the School of Education said yesterday.
Dale Scannell, the dean, said the center should be on the campus with the most research-minded faculty and doctoral students.
"KU ought to be the place the center is located if it is created." Scannell said.
The center is one of 18 recommendations received by the Board of Regents on Friday in a 99-page report by a study team from the Academy for Educational Development Inc in Washington, D.C.
ing. Scannell said the center, if properly conceived, could be important to Kansas education.
The study was part of a comprehensive review of programs by the Regents through a five-year period. The Regents must approve changes in education programs or send proposals to the Kansas Legislature when required.
THE STUDY REPORT suggested a $ million appropriation in each of at least five years for the center and suggested as a name the Kansas Center for Excellence in Teaching
"It could serve as a stimulus to the kind of reform people in Kansas are asking for," he said.
salt
Among other recommendations, the report suggested discontinuing or modifying 25 of the 92 degree programs at the education schools of Regents institutions
Scannell said that although to of those programs were at KU, none were ones that the University deemed essential
"The report says a lot of nice things about KU!" he said.
the university deemed us dissatisfied. He said his initial reaction of general satisfaction with the report had not changed after a thorough reading of it.
THE STUDY COMMENTED favorably on the University's five-year teacher education program, the only such program at a Regents university.
Jerry Bailey, assistant dean of the School of Education, said he was pleased with the overall tone of the report and the potential of the center.
Regents university.
"Calling the program "a promising experiment," the study team recommended that the program be evaluated and that the five other Regents schools consider instituting it or a similar program.
the center.
"The proposal for the Center for Excellence may be the most important thing in the document," he said. "That could become a tremendous resource for faculty members in schools of education around the state."
Schools of Education
Stanley Koplik, executive director of the
Regents, said the report provided the Regents with suggestions for a variety of options.
Sandra McMullen, chairman of the Regents Academic Affairs Committee, said she was satisfied with the work of the study team
op108hL HIK HAS ASKED each Regents university to submit responses to the report by Oct 8 for consideration at the Oct. 18 Regents meeting
'I thought it was solid philosophically,' she said.
McMullen said the Regents' proposals, whether they follow the report's recommendations or modify them, probably would find a good reception at the Kansas Legislature.
"I think this area is one that the governor and the Legislature are equally interested in because the citizens are interested in it," she said.
Jerry Horn, associate dean of education at Kansas State University, said the report could produce good results if used by people who understood the educational system.
S CANNELL SAID HE had mixed reactions to a recommendation to raise the minimum American College Testing composite score by 1990 for entering students to a level higher than the current average composite score of 18.1.
"I would rather put emphasis on requirements at the end of the program instead of the beginning." "he said"
Students oppose library site, start petition to save tree
By JULIE COMINE
Staff Reporter
Several student senators who are concerned about the future of the 59-foot tall American Elm just north of the Military Science Building have started a petition opposing the site of the new science and technology library.
technology we "realize the need for the science and technology library," Mark "Gilligan" Sump, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, said yesterday. "But we also feel that construction of the library on this site would destroy one of the most beautiful areas on this campus."
Architects began drawing preliminary plans for the library last month, said Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning. Construction could begin as early as the summer of 1987.
campus The site for the library is between the Military Science Building and Hoch Auditorium.
WECHECH SAD THE LIBRARY's architects were "very conscious" of the trees in the area and were trying to accommodate the 70-year-old elm into their plans.
"we're very much aware of the tree," he said. "We'd like to save the tree. We'll just have to see if it's feasible."
have to see him Sump said he began organizing the petition in May with the help of several friends and student senators.
"The University prides itself in the aesthetic value of this campus," he said. "And yet here we are, eating up another beautiful space with concrete and bricks."
Wechert said, "We don't build buildings to make the campus look ugly. We hope that the new library will be an asset to the University."
University Sump said he already had 400 signatures on his petition, which would be submitted to the Student Senate University Affairs Committee on Oct. 2. If approved, the petition will go to the full Senate on Oct. 9.
SUMP AND SOME *r* friends will collect
more signatures from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. this
week on Wescoe Beach and next week at a booth outside the Kansas Union. Sump said, Petitions also will be distributed at residence halls
nails
"We're aiming for 3,000 signatures," he said. "Our goal is to make the administration aware of the concern that both faculty and students have for preserving the beauty of the campus."
The elm - one of the largest trees on campus can't be moved and replanted because of the expense. Wiechert said.
According to Jim Mathes, assistant director of landscape maintenance for the department of facilities operations, moving a tree the size of the elm would cost between $4,000 and $6,000.
because of the tree's branches span more than 90 feet and the circumference of the elm's trunk is about 11 feet.
$4,000 and $5,000.
EVEN IF MOVED and repplanted, there is no guarantee the tree would survive. Mathes said.
sss
Plans for the library should be completed by January 1895. Wiechert said, and then will
be submitted to the Kansas Legislature for approval.
approved University officials selected the site because of its proximity to other science classroom buildings on campus, he said.
"There's plenty of space for a large academic building on the site," he said. "The area is under-utilized for the major academic mission of the University."
But those who want to save the elm tree say he University could find another site
Kiesa Harris, Student Senate executive secretary, suggested that the library could be built on West Campus
"THE PROPOSED SITE is an ideal location for science students — right in the middle of campus," she said. "But science students can walk as well as anyone else."
Sump suggested that the library could be built into the hill between Malot and Stauffer Flint halls.
Sutherland the base.
But Wiechert said that the hill's slope and the geology of the area made the site unsuitable for construction.
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THE AMATEUR ATHLETICS ALBATROSS WILL CONTINUE TO CLAIM VICTIMS
Although a recent study commissioned by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) concluded that, in the words of Ted Bartell who directed the study, "black athletes are not able to be fully competitive academically in college and less likely to graduate (because) they are not getting the kind of core curriculum (high school) to be fully competitive in college," Kansas University officials want the NCAA to modify its academic eligibility standards for first-year athletes
Perhaps because these local moguls so frequently find time to whine about the NCAA standards, they remain uncharacteristically silent about the exploitative public education system which maintains a disregard of its intended beneficiaries a disadvantaged state. When professional educators and politicians measure the educational apparatus's success by the number of diplomas distributed, our public schools receive tax dollars even when they fail to reach many of their both black and white charges
both black and white charges
After trying "to find something that's fair" Kansas University Athletic Director Monte Johnson describes as evolutionary rather than revolutionary" the Kansas University Athletic Corporation board's recent call for an increase of some $2 million in the athletic department's budget during the next two years
department's budget constraints.
By rewarding this constructive mechanism while studiously ignoring the real problem, a few dignitaries can ensure that the amateur athletics albatross will continue to claim victims.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terrace
Paid Advertisement
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September 25,1984 Page 4
OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kaanu (UNP) 60/640 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart Fell Hall Lawn, Kanu, 60/640; daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage paid at Kanu, Lawrence 60/640. Subscriptions by mail are for $1 six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student fees include a student fee of $5 per month and address changes to the University Daily Kaanu, 118 Stuart Fell Hall Lawn, Kanu, 60/640.
DON KNOX Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE HESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
DOUG CUNNINGHAM Campus Editor
DAVE WANAMAKER Business Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
SUSANNE SHAW
General Manager and News Adviser
LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager
JILL GOLDBLATT Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Beirut tragedy
The tragic terrorist bombing of the U.S. embassy annex in Beirut last week has unfortunately entered the political arena of presidential campaign politics.
Unwilling to accept the grim truth that the United States is vulnerable always and everywhere to acts of terrorism, House Speaker Thomas "Tip" O'Neill said that "somebody has to take the responsibility."
has to take the responsibility. Presidential candidate Walter Mondale, though he came out in support of any possible retaliatory actions, was nonetheless unable to resist the political football tossed out by O'Neill: "The evidence is getting clearer that this was a very serious breech of essential security on the part of this administration."
And James Johnson, head of the Democratic presidential campaign, said Sunday on "Meet the Press" that "there's a political issue for one reason, and that is (that) three times on Mr. Reagan's watch we have lost lives in Lebanon. That outrages the American people."
outages the American people. It is true that terrorist attacks on the United States outrage the American people, but contrary to what Johnson said, the Lebanese bombing is not a political issue.
The fact is that the United States, along with all nations of the world, and to a larger extent the free nations of the world, is unavoidably susceptible to terrorist attacks such as the one last week in Beirut.
Fortification of the embassy in Beirut to the teeth would do little to stem the success of terrorist attacks aimed at the United States. and would do much to prevent the embassy from being able to carry out its role in that country.
Furthermore, attempts to make the embassy invulnerable to primitive suicide truck bombings would offer no protection against the prospect of only slightly more sophisticated suicide plane bombings. Where does one draw the line?
The United States and its embassies around the world are of a free and open society. As such, it is unreasonable to assume that they can ever effectively prevent the determined actions of terrorists.
Stepped-up intelligence gathering, which perhaps offers the best defense, is extremely difficult to carry out within the realm of the Central Intelligence Agency's power. Extension of these powers raises the fear of how far the CIA would have to ignore civil liberties in order to achieve its objectives
To the limited extent to which terrorists can be singled out and dealt with, terrorist attacks such as the one last week in Beirut are an unfortunate fact of life, not a fortunate political football.
When I was a teen-ager, my friends and I used to want to go to "adult movies." Adult movies, of course, were dirty movies and were shown in "art theaters."
Teen sex comedies lack adult appeal
A person had to be a specific age to go to an adult movie, either 18 or 21
and we were only 15 or 16. If there were four of us, we stood on a corner just out of sight of the art theater's box office. We selected the tallest and huskiest of us and sent him to the theater.
In his blue jeans and madras shirt, he lowered his voice several octaves and said to the man in the ticket booth, "Four tickets, please."
This never worked, of course. The ticket takers at the art theaters — at least the art theaters in central Ohio — were savvy enough to know that something was fishy when one gangly surfer came up with a way and make his voice sound like James Mason's and was asking to purchase not one ticket, but four.
I shouldn't say that it never worked. Once, by chance, we got in. What we saw was a movie in which lounge-lizard type men and buxom women ended up at a cocktail party, drank some highballs, and danced to a slow jazz record. They started to kiss, and the women's sweaters eventually came undone after all those nights of waiting and learning, was a party in which the female guests were attired in bras and skirts.
This was the mid-1960s, before America's morality had gone
The reason I bring this up is that the other day I saw one of those "teen sex comedies." Teen sex comedies have become a profitable subcategory of the movie industry, during a given summer, a good percentage of the movies that make a lot of money will be teen sex comedies, and almost all of the tickets are sold to teen-agers.
the ways of sex than we were, and if we waited long enough, then we could legally watch all of the bra-clad women we desired.
The movie I saw was called "Hardbodies." The movie wasn't three minutes old before I realized that it was going to be far more explicit than that adult movie we finally been able to sneak into back in.
I assumed that a typical teen sex comedy was about teen-age boys who came of age in an awkward and humorous way. After all, these movies are targeted at youthful audiences, so they had to be pretty mild, right?
The nudity was only the first surprising thing. The second — and more significant — surprise was the attitude of the movie toward teenagers and adults.
Compared to the females in "Hardbodies," those bra-clad cocktail party women of my youth were severely overdressed.
If standing on the corner hoping to enter the art theater, we assumed that adults had all the answers about sex, and that teenagers had to wait. "Hardbodies" reversed that theory and that young people who that young people were sophisticated and cool about sex; adults were stupid, fumbling and laughable.
---
I'm told that this is a theme that runs through most of the successful teen sex comedies: If you're a teen-ager, you know everything there ever was to know about sex; if you're 35 or 40 or 45, you're a pathetic loser.
The whole plot of "Hardbodies" revolves around three middle-aged men who go to a California beach and are made almost dizzy by the beautiful young girls — known as hardbodies — that they see there. They hire a young man named Scotty to teach them the ropes. Scotty does
Boy, was I wrong.
his best, but the three men are such buffoons and idiots that most of the movie is spent with the boys and girls on the beach laughing at them.
through the changes that came with the sexual revolution. The lasting message I took from standing on the corner near the art theater all those nights was that adults were allowed to watch racy movies, and teenagers weren't. Adults were wiser in
That seems to be the whole premise behind selling tickets to movies like this one. Young audiences can laugh at the upoarious attempts of grown men to understand the nuances of sex. The teenagers do not know everything; the three men don't have a clue and can't even be taught.
I probably would have enjoyed "hardbodies" more if the three bumbling, inep men hadn't clearly been members of my own generation. Three those poor guys uninvented them, and they waited to get into art theaters.
I'd ask my friends, movie critics, Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert, what all of this means, but they are men of my generation, too. Their idea of a good cinematic time is undoubtedly the slow-paced, cocktail party. I don't mean to draw too dramatic a message out of this phenomenon, but we're all doomed.
Now, it seems, the dirty movies aren't being marketed with adults in mind. They're being marketed with teen-agers in mind. They're far more explicit than anything we ever saw in the art theaters #the 60% — and they'll appear in them next cast in the roles of godly, inept outsiders.
Well. I've looked at the statistics and still think that sobriety checkpoints are anathema to the Constitution.
Drunken-driving laws imperil liberty
NEW YORK — A decision in the New Jersey Supreme Court that holds a party host liable for guests who get involved in drunken driving accidents is the culmination of a disturbing national trend.
My generation, in effect, is still waiting on the corner trying to get into the movie.
Increasingly, and usually at the expense of civil liberties, well-meaning legislators are enacting laws that relieve individuals of responsibility for their own actions.
most of the legislative activity is designed to halt drunken driving, which has rightfully become an issue of national concern. Already, the concern has led to random sobriety checks by the police, proposed legislation to raise the national drinking age to 21 and New York state's mandatory seat-belt law, the first of its kind in the country.
Drunken driving is a serious problem. The question is how to best deal with the problem Random police checkpoints violate the Fourth Amendment, which requires that the police have reasonable cause to stop and question a citizen.
Little public debate took place on any of these proposals. Instead, legislators tried to push the laws through under the gouse of "saving lives." Opponents just didn't look at the statistics.
tence
As for "emotional journalism" — over the last two weeks, a number of Azanian children have been murdered by the South African police. One was merely playing in his front yard. In a nearby house, another youngster went to a window to see
Under the Natives Act of 1952, all Azanians must "carry at all times passes containing proof of employment and permission to be in an urban area." If they look for jobs or wish to be with their displaced families, they often violate the pass regulations. The punishment is usually a fine or work as indentured servants for white farmers in exchange for food during their sentence
Facts show apartheid oppressive
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
To the editor:
tion. Based on South Africa (or Azania, as the revolutionalists call their country) does empty one of the highest overall standards in Africa. However, according to the Group Areas Act of 1950, under apartheid, the Azamians have been assigned to specific townships (based on the government's racial categories). The Azamians comprise 71.8 percent of the population, but must live on 12 to 13 percent of South African land, while the remaining 67 percent is owned by the minority whites. These "homelands" are plagued by poverty as well as a lack of jobs.
The plantation owners of the Old South often rationalized the institution of slavery, saying that they were doing a favor to the blacks by taking them out of a backyard society and placing them in "civilization." D.G. Muller wrote a letter (Sept. 19) concerning apartheid in South Africa, and his quote from Walter Williams is reminiscent of the slave owners' rationale for labor exploitation. How about a few facts?
Recently South Africa conducted elections. South Africa being what it is, presumably a white male was appointed to administer them. Let us suppose that he is a former member of the South African government who did all that he could to make these elections fair, and is a man of Faillos' other attainments. Finally, suppose that he was appointed to a named visiting professorship at the University of Kansas.
what was going on when "police sitting on top of a van and armed with rifles shot the child in the head."
Of course, these questions will make sense only to one who thinks that racist and Marxist revolutionary governments are both abominable.
The Kansan's news coverage of my objections to Mariano Fiallo's appointment to the Rose Morgan Professorship was accurate and fair. But your Sept 20 editorial ("Freedom"), invites two questions.
Muller also feels that "changes are in progress in the country at this very moment." True — a recent ban now exists on all "indoor meetings" critical of the government. Any more comment critical of the government is also forbidden.
Arthur L. Thomas
How much additional "time (and) compassion" is needed, D.G.?
Fiallos questions
To the editor:
D.B. Prueft
Topeka graduate student
What do you imagine would be the reaction of our university community? What would be the Kansan's editorial reaction?
Arthur Young Distinguished Professor of Business
Student rights
The Senate leadership should not allow the amending of its rules and should finally take a stand for student rights. The Senate should not allow itself to be shamelessly used by a president would promote bias and prejudice.
Perhaps Imber consciously selected only one group, the one he has a personal vendetta against. Furthermore, knowing that the highest percentage of students who bother to vote live in the very same places he circulated his petition, he could be reasonably assured of victory.
To the editor:
Has Imber selflessly taken upon himself the role of Student Senate watchdog." Surely, there ought to be at least one other organization that could support itself. Perhaps Imber was not thorough enough. Perhaps the entire student body should vote on funding for every organization.
I think that most students have no qualms about a small amount of their money being used to fund organizations to which they will never belong. Just such a system was established under Senate control to prevent prejudicial funding.
What has been presented as a "financial issue" by Steve Imber the de-funding of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, plainly is not that at all.
He would be surprised at how many people look out for their own lives without state coercion.
Why there has been little outey against such a move at this University baffles me. If Imber is successful in establishment of precedent, then all students and student organizations have reason to worry.
As New York Gov Mario Cuomo signed the mandatory seat belt measure, the bill's sponsor was reported as saying, "Thank you on behalf of the 400 people who will be saved."
safety and health, or do they need coercion from the state? Our legislators, by a surprising majority, seem to believe the latter.
What is the reasonable cause in stopping a person at a roadblock? The frequent assumption is just that
Jeff Miller
Overland Park graduate student
Michael Barry, who lives in Port Washington, N.Y., graduated recently from Fordham University.
The passage of laws such as these is dishearing.
MICHAEL BARRY
New York Times Syndicate
someone who is driving on a Saturday night is intoxicated. A statistic that seems to have caught on is that "one out of every 10 drivers on Saturday night is intoxicated."
However, as reported on a recent television news report, of the 890,000 drivers stopped at New York State roadblocks in the past year, only 2,500 were arrested for driving while
intoxicated You don't have to be a mathematician to realize that that is less than three-tenths of one percent
It is also true that exercise and a proper diet probably extend life expectancy. Perhaps the state should make it mandatory to run a mile a day and call for increased vegetable and fruit consumption.
Are the people intelligent enough to look out for their own interest in
Even if the news report is flawed, it would have to be off by 95,300 arrests to reach the magic level of 10 percent.
The mandatory seat belt law is an abomination. What the state is saying is: "We know what is best for you. Let us save your life."
Bible
©1994 AMY
Communication requires effort
W. Somerset Maugham was a very perceptive kind of guy
"Each one of us," quoth he, "is alone in the world. He is shut in a tower of brass and can communicate with his fellows only by signs, and the signs have no common value, so that their sense is vague and uncertain. We seek pitifully to convey to others the treasures of our heart, but they have not the power to accept them, and so we go lonely, side by side but not together, unable to know our fellows and unknown by them.
"We are like a people living in a country whose language they know so little that with all manner of beautiful and profound things to say, they are condemned to the banalties of the conversation manual. Their brain is seething with ideas, and they can only tell you that the umbrella of the gardener's aunt is in the house."
Isn't that amusing?
Too bad he missed the point.
People often forget just how individual we are. None of us can ever know the complexity of human makeup unless we exchange places with another, our particular selves.
If there's any one thing we learn it, college, it's how completely ridiculous the gender gap in communication is. But what Maugham so eloquently put into words is only the side dish of the day. How many days are ruined when we talked to someone else? Sometimes we can express one thing and get quite another. Something goes awry somewhere between another's words and our perception. So maybe we run our own day.
LAURIE
McGHEE
Staff Columnist
PETER SHEEN
are so diverse that no two people are ever going to perceive the same situation in the same way. This is most evident in the fact that we communicate differently with each person we know
This principle extends into the gender gap Don't you talk differently around your roommates from how you talk to someone you're dating?
r we've heard as many men as women complain about communication Women groan about the lack of it
Nothing can mess up your functioning like a communication gap between you and someone you care for. Communication is the stuff we are made of, but the stuff is as pure as New York snow and harder to travel in. We're all seeking perfection, and when something less than perfect shows up one day we assume all is
Men wish women wouldn't want so much of it. I have been guilty of both. And it doesn't happen until later that I finally see where the problem was. We all live and learn, but when we really learn to apply what we we learned to what's happening now"
Each of us has locked inside something we are desperate to communicate. How many of us keep that desperate thing locked where it stands because we feel we would be misunderstood?
What if we notice that the conversation is suddenly not as fascinating or fun as it used to be? We become so disappointed when we discover that the spark disappears after a short time.
If we're not having a "heavy conversation" at least once a week, we're not communicating. Then is the actual act of communicating more important than the feelings themselves? Communication isn't what we get into relationships for in the first place — if we want to express ourselves, we can go out on a mountain top and scream.
What we lose when we give up too soon is the kind of communication that becomes a kind of torch that never dies out. The kind of communication but never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says you need needs a manual, never says we really after.
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In
University Daily Kansan, September 25,1984
Shirts continued from p. 1
to determine whether GLSOK will receive funds from Senate in the future, will be discussed by the Senate Elections Committee at its meeting Thursday.
LICHTWARDT CRITICIZED those who wore the T-shirts.
"Just the fact that people are wearing them shows an attitude that is really, really bad," she said.
Lichtwardt said that she heard about the shirts at the beginning of the month and that members of GLSOK had seen people wearing them on campus.
Homosexual students may fear harassment because of the shirts, she said. "That can scare them back into the closet for life."
The potential success of any legal efforts GLSOR might undertake could not be questioned.
Lynn Knox, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union in Kansas and western Missouri, said that GLOSK probably could do little legally unless it could prove harassment had followed the appearance of the shirts on campus.
THE WHITE, 100-percent cotton shirts feature a ghost trapped by a bright red circle with a bar through it. The ghost has a limp wrist, an earring and long eyelashes. The word "Fagusters" appears in bright red letters above the picture.
Knox said state and federal courts would balance GLASK's right to protect gays from hearing objectionable slogans against him. That would rights to express their opinions.
"If the shirts said 'Kill all gays,' you might get a little sympathy in the courts." Knox said.
BUT LEGAL PROBLEMS may arise, said Phil Poulis, legal secretary for Columbia Pictures' office in Burbank, Calif., because the logo on the shirts resembles that used for the film "Ghost-busters," which was released by Columbia this summer.
He said Friday that Columbia had copyrighted its logo, which featured a ghost trapped by a red circle with a bar through it. He said the seller of the "Fagbusters" T-shirt would have needed written permission from the company to use a similar picture.
Pouls said he did not know whether such permission was obtained.
THE T-SHIRTS HAVE been offered for sale to members of several fraternities, a check of 15 fraternities shows.
Members or presidents of eight of the fraternities said they knew that the shirts
wts] These traternities were Delta Chi, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon, Sigma Nu, Phi Kappa Theta, Kappa Sigma, Phi Gamma Delta, and Phi Kappa Tau.
existed, that members of a fraternity were selling the shirts or that they knew who was selling the shirts.
Delta and Jill Merfort, president of Sigma Nu, said last week that Imber had been to his house a week earlier to sell the shirts during dinner. He said two or three other men had accompanied Imber.
meet him.
SCOTT F. HARTMAN, Interfraternity adviser, said Sunday that the shirts did not represent the attitude of the fraternity system as a whole. He sent a letter about the T-shirts, dated Sept. 14, to each fraternity president.
each friend they present.
He said he learned about the shirts about
2½ weeks ago, when two friends had told him about them.
He said in his letter to the presidents, "First of all, although some of these individuals are part of the fraternity system, they are acting on their own as individuals and not as representatives of the Greek system. These people are not sponsored by any fraternity or the Interfraternity Council."
Some information for this story also was supplied by reporter Michele T. Johnson.
because the group includes many homosexuals
continued from p. 1
THE 100-PERCENT cotton T-shirts feature a ghost trapped by a red circle with a bar through it. The ghost has a limp wrist, and letters above the picture say "Fag-busters."
busters.
A University Daily Kansan staff member yesterday purchased one of the T-shirts from Imer for $7.
Senate rules do not say whether a valid petition must be passed on for an election without consideration of its content. Davidson said the committee probably now would consider the content.
consider the context.
"That is too important to overlook, now that we have a serious question about the true intent of this petition," he said.
The petition says, in part, "Included in this petition, is my belief that the GLSOK could be self-supportive, and for this reason, I believe that they (GLSOK) should not receive funds of any kind from any student organization from KU."
To be valid, a petition calling for a referendum must have the signatures of 10 percent of the student body. Imber needed about 2,100 signatures, and his petition had more than 2,500.
McCollum continued from p. 1
continued from p.1
The senate and the residents know about the proposal now.
HUTCHINS SAID, "THE opinion I've heard generally is that as a principle this is an upperclassmen dorm and people like it that way. People are here to study."
But Jenny Andreas, McColum Hall vice president, said, "It's disruptive for freshmen to be put here for three to four weeks and then to tell them they have to leave. A lot of them like the quiet here and the good study habits of the other residents."
Worden said that McCollum's proposal would "discriminate against a freshman who wanted to live in McCollum but who wasn't forced to live there."
Jon Haynes, a resident of McCollum Hall, said, "I don't think there would be a big problem as long as there's enough room for upperclass and graduate students."
CHRISTINA ROSSETTI. McColum Hall resident assistant, said that if McColum were opened to freshmen, another hall should be designated for upperclass and graduate students. She said that a smaller hall might work better because it would not be used for overflow from the other halls.
Worden said that no proposal like that had been suggested to the AURH Housing and Contracts Committee.
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High Holiday Services Rosh Hashanah
Wednesday, September 26, 1984 Evening Services-7:30 p.m.
Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive
Thursday, September 27, 1984
Morning Services-9:30 a.m.
L.J.C.C.
Friday, September 28, 1984 Morning Services-9:30 a.m. L.J.C.C.
Yom Kippur
Friday, October 5, 1984 Kol Nidre Services-7:30 p.m. L.J.C.C.
Saturday, October 6, 1984
Morning Services-9:30 a.m.
L.J.C.C.
Evening Services- 5 p.m.
L.J.C.C.
Break-fast to follow free for Hillel members $2 for non-members
call the office at 864-3948 by October 3 for reservations. If you have any questions or concerns call the Hillel office at 864-3948.
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- Popcorn
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Joel Jackson/KANSAN
10 9 8
Rick Frydman, host of the Ethnic Cowboy Show and Lawrence first year law student, sits at the board at KJHK FM 91. Frydman's show is played from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturdays.
Country isn't just twangin'
By ERIKA BLACKSHER Staff Reporter
University Daily Kansan, September 25,1984
Say the words "country music" and many people envision Dolly Parton snappin' her fingers to a wangty tune about a lost love.
But those foot stompin' sounds of Nashville are hardly a fair representation of country music, said Rick Rivola. "They're very loud," Show on radio station KJHK-FM 91
Dominating Frydman's country show, which plays from 9 a.m. to noon each Saturday, are such as artists Kinky Friedman and the Texas Jew Boys, John Prine and the late Steve Goodman.
"The main thing I'm trying to do is play music that's enjoyable to listen to, that gives a brighter image to music," he said. "It's not all tearsdrops."
Frydman's inspiration in naming his show came from his favorite artist - Kinky Friedman, who writes about stereotypes and minorities.
"THE SANG SONGS that were
very illuminous," said Frydman, a
Lawrence first year law student.
"Somehow it struck a right cord in
me — being Jewish, in the Midwest
and a cowboy. I just like the image of
a Jewish cowboy."
Epitomizing the kind of music played on the show is Kinky Friedman's "Solid American," Frydman said. The song portrays a downward trajectory star who is pawning his guitar and has turned to becom as a way of life.
"It's about commercial country radio," Frydman said. "The selling of America—the selling of your soul—the commercial country music used to be real pure."
"Friedman sings about the entertainer who is willing to sell his soul as well as the soul of the song."
Frydman, who is beginning his fifth year as the host of the Ethnic Boy Show, said most of the music he played out of the outlaw country movement of the 1970s
THE MOVEMENT GREW out of the fact that country radio expanded so far as to include people like Harry and Olivia Newton John. he said
Frydman and most disc jockeys at
the radio station steer away from commercial music and prefer to play unknown artists.
"Once a song gets commercial — when it’s played on the other radio stations — we drop it from our play list almost automatically," he said. "But I think that doesnt get played anywhere between Chicago and Denver."
Although much of the music Frydman features on his show came out of the 1970s, he also features unknown artists that he stumbled upon at a festival in Austin, Texas, during the summer of 1981.
"AUSTIN, TEXAS, IS an oasis of new material," said Frydman, who plays with a folk-country group called the Jolly Rancher. "The first year I went down there I was so amazed. There were so many great songs, writing singing tracks around the campfire singing songs that they wrote."
The artists' music is too good for radio, Frydman said.
"It doesn't fit into your commer-
cial slot, he said. "It's too创
creative."
TODAY
ON CAMPUS
THE KU HONOR STUDENTS ASSOCIATION will sponsor a brown bag lunch at 11:30 a.m. in Nunemaker Center
THE WOMEN'S STUDIES PROGRAM will have a sandwich seminar at 11:45 a.m. in Cork 2 in the Kansas Union
THE KU SWORD AND SHIELD
CUBE will meet in the
WATERMORE MUSEUM.
AMERICAN STUDIES will sponsor a lecture on "The Peasant Movement in Columbia" at 3:30 p.m. in the Room Council in the Union.
THE SUA STRATEGY GAMES CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room in the Union.
THE CENTER OF LATIN
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN'S will have a Bible study and fellowship meeting at 7:30 p.m. in room 305 in the Frank R Burge Union
Works of Franz Anton Maubertscht:
at 8 p.m. in the auditorium in the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art
EDWARD MASER, professor of art history at the University of Chicago, will speak about 'The Humanist in Old Age: The Late
THE LINGUISTICS DEPARTMENT COLLOQUY will start at 7:30 p.m. in 207 Blake Hall. Michael Johnson, professor of English, will speak about "Applying the Breaks: A Review of Poetic Line."
Proposed KU budget will undergo scrutiny
Dallam also will discuss requests for more computers with Richard
By HOLLIE MARKLAND Staff Reporter
Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs, said that Dallam also would meet with Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, to discuss operating expenses.
UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS SUBMITTED KU's budget to the state last week. The state budget office in the department of administration has just begun its process of analysis and comparison, Dallam said.
The University of Kansas' budget request will be reviewed today by KU officials and a state budget analyst, who will try to assess the validity of the proposal.
Mann, University director of information systems
Mary Galligan, one of the fiscal analysts, said, "We publish a document of what state agencies want to do in response to that what the governor says."
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When the governor delivers his proposals, fiscal analysts in Topake provide information for the Ways and Means committees in the House of Representatives and the Senate to aid legislators in deciding how much money to appropriate.
THE FINAL BUDGET proposals are prepared in December, he said, and the governor presents them to the Legislature in January.
Dallam said that from September to November he would compile tentative budget recommendations to send to the governor
The meeting today is part of the University's budgetary process, which will culminate next year when the Kansas Legislature decides how much money each state school will receive.
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He said that funds, for special repairs, maintenance and capital improvements, including money to cover Snow Hall would be discussed.
From September until January, fiscal analysts from the department of legislative research will compare the state agencies' requests for money to the governor's recommendations.
Nitcher said the meetings probably would last through the afternoon.
Later in November, the governor, University officials and members of the Board of Regents will review the budget recommendations.
"DALLAM WILL PROBABLY take a tour of the campus to see Snow Hall and the addition to Haworth Hall." Nitcher said.
"We compare figures with what was appropriated to the institution last year," Dallam said yesterday from his office in Topeka. "We talk to the people in charge of programs, look at program improvement and trends in enrollment and try to analyze their needs."
The budget analyst, David Dallam,
will return to Topeka after his meetings today and continue his analysis of KU's proposed budget for fiscal year 1986, which would finance the 1985-86 academic year.
ADC
FEDERAL
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STUDENTS ALSO CAN vote at the Board of Class Officers office, 110B Kansas Union.
By CHRISSY CLEARY Staff Reporter
go into their dean's office before they graduate."
Seniors to name first round of HOPE award nominees
ADC
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After the votes have been counted at the end of the first week in October, BOCO will announce 12 semi-finalists. Lowe said
Seniors can vote again and narrow the field to six finalists from noon to 6 p.m on Oct. 10 and 11 at the freshman class election tables
The Honor for Outstanding Progressive Educator award, celebrating its 25th anniversary this fall, is decided annually by the senior class through a series of elections that narrow the field of candidates. It is the only award given to an outstanding faculty member by students
Final voting for the winner is on Oct. 24 and 25. The winner, along with the five finalists, will be presented during a pre-game ceremony at the KU-Oklahoma homecoming game on Oct. 27.
Seniors can nominate their favorite teachers for the annual HOPE award during the first week of October in their classrooms and dean's offices, the president of the senior class said yesterday.
Love said that students should be acquainted with the faculty member they nominated for the HOPE award.
"STUDENTS SHOULD NOMINATE a teacher that taught them a lot, both inside the classroom and out," Lowe said. "Someone who helped them along in the four years they've been here."
"Teachers will be making announcements about nominations for the award," said Dan Lowe, the president. "There will be a senior committee member at each nomination place to ensure your chances of anything going on like with Student Senate elections last year."
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University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1984
Five inmates escape through air shaft
Police search continues for fugitives
From Staff and Wire Reports
LANSING — A man sent to prison for the robbery of a Lawrence jewelry store was among five inmates who escaped from the Kansas State Penitentiary yesterday by crawling through an air shaft and dropping more than one story to freedom outside the prison walls.
Lawrence Eugene Lane, 33. St.
Louis, was sentenced to 10 to 20 years
in prison for the 27. Oct. 1982,
jewelry makers Juweliers,
800 Massachusetts St
The other fugitives were identified as Thanh Bam Pham, 20, serving a life term for two counts of first-degree murder; John Allen Purdy, 23, serving a life term for murder; George Jones, 24, serving a life term for first-degree murder and aggravated robbery; and Arzo Tucker Jr., 28.
serving 15 years to life for aggravated kidnapping, sodomy, rape and robbery.
MORE THAN 90 law enforcement officers launched a two-county manhunt for the convicts. Police officers used bloodhounds to track the convicts and airplanes and helicopters to scan the rolling hills of northeastern Kansas.
Authorities patrolled highways, searched businesses and fields and set up at least one roadblock on the Centennial Bridge leading into Missouri from Leavenworth.
Late yesterday afternoon, Capt. Bass Cassidy, of the Douglas County Sheriff's Department, said that the department was monitoring the progress of the manhunt but did not have any extra men on duty.
Leavenworth County resident refused to let in a strange man who came to the door and asked to use the telephone, Buford said.
Reports of other sightings indicate the five inmates probably split up, he said.
said. THE SEARCH WAS concentrated about six to eight miles southwest of Lansing,Buford said.
Prison spokesman Troy Baker said the prisoners escaped about 1 a.m. Monday by inching their way through an air shaft intake from a cellhouse within the prison walls.
within the prison.
"Once inside, they lowered themselves down and came out through an intake in the wall," he said "Once out the opening, they were outside the prison walls."
the prison walls.
The opening, about one and a half stories above the ground, is about 10 inches wide and $4\frac{1}{2}$ feet long, he said.
All the convicts are built slightly as the tallest 5-feet-8$\cdot$2" and were able
to squeeze out the narrow gap, he said.
David Barclay, assistant to State Corrections Secretary Michael Barbara, said the inmates lived in open cells within the dormitory, which was locked. An 11 p.m. bed check showed that they were all accounted for.
The fugitives are considered dangerous, Baker said.
"THEY CUT THEIR way through a heavy wire screen door leading into an equipment room and from the equipment room gained access to the air shaft," he said. "They had to cut through the wire door and then had to cut through bars at the end of the air shaft."
"We don't know that they're armed, but we consider any fleeing felon to be dangerous," he said.
The breakout is the biggest at the prison since September 1981, when seven convicted murderers and rapists escaped.
TREES
Larry Weaver/KANSAN
Frank Krug, 1428 Ohio, walks a 15 foot slackrope tied to two trees on the patio on thatPyramid Pizza, 507 W. 14th St. Krug. Lawrence senior, said yesterday that he was teaching himself to walk tightropes. This was his third lesson.
County gets $218,000 in tax case
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ Staff Reporter
Douglas County will receive about $218,000 as its share of a $22 million property tax settlement reached last week between Kansas and a group of railroads, an attorney for the state said yesterday.
The Douglas County Commission unanimously accepted the terms of the state settlement yesterday. The settlement will require the three railroads that operate in the county to pay off part of a $700,000 tax bill they ran up in the past four years
while their suit against the state went through federal courts.
"Our estimate is that Douglas County will get about $218,000 in addition to what has already been paid," said Carol Bonebrake, attorney for the state in the case. "It will cost about $300,000 it will be close to that."
BONERBAKE SAID THAT SATA Fe Railway Co., Union Pacific Systems and St. Louis Southwestern Railways would end up paying about $516,000 of the total tax bill for 1980-B3.
"Douglas County is not going to collect all the taxes they billed," she
said. "But about $516,000 will be paid."
The $16,000 figure includes about $298,000 that already has been paid to the county in the last four years, Bonebrake said.
In 1980, the railroads fitted suit, claiming their property was being assessed for property taxes at higher rates than other commercial and industrial property. Lower assessment rates will translate into lower tax bills for the railways across the state.
THE SETTLEMENT NOW must be approved by the U.S. District Court.
Police crack down on bicycle violations
Staff Reporter
KU police records showed that 30 citations were issued for running stop signs. Four were issued for riding on the sidewalk.
By JOHN REIMRINGER
Bicyclists on campus were issued 34 citations during the first 20 days of September as a result of a crackdown on traffic violations by the University of Kansas Police Department.
KU police begin strictly enforcing traffic regulations each fall a few weeks after school starts, Lt. Leanne Longaker of the KU Police Department said yesterday. Police get complaints about bicyclists from motorists and pedestrians.
"It's probably more noticeable every year because we've had more bicyclists every year," Longaker said.
The enforcement is aimed at all vehicles, not just bicycles, she said
The number of tickets issued to bicyclists, as well as the number of complaints about bicyclists, has grown since the enforcement began, she said.
Extra officers have been placed on regular patrols sporadically during the past weeks, Longaker said.
Officers also have been stationed on foot at intersections to make people aware that traffic was being monitored.
Since the enforcement began, KU police have not received any reports of accidents or injuries involving bicyclists, Longaker said.
The fine for uncontested bicycle violations is $12.50 for running stop signs and riding on the sidewalk. A $1 fee to cover court costs is added to the fine, bringing the ticket to $17. Bicycles younger than 18 years old and bicyclists involved in accidents must go to court if they receive a ticket
"My original purpose was to protest what I thought was wrong," said the professor, Arthur Thomas.
said the problem.
"I don't intend to pursue it any further," said Thomas. "I made my stand."
Mariano Fiallo, president of Nicaragua's Supreme Election Council, will be the Rose Morgan Professor of political science in the
In the letter, Thomas requested that his name be removed from the Latin American Area faculty and from any future publicity.
THOMAS, ARTHUR YOUNG Distinguished Professor of business, compared Failios' appointment to "having appointed a member of a Nazi puppet government to have visited painting the late Hitler." Sept. 12 letter to Charles Stansler, director of the Center for Latin American Studies.
teach at the center.
The professor who had voiced opposition to the appointment said yesterday that his feelings had not changed but that he didn't "want to stir the waters any further."
He said yesterday that he and Stansister had a cordial meeting last week but that he stood by his objections to the appointment
objections to the appearance of
"He was very nice and very kind,
but we did end up still disagreeing."
Thomas said.
Current or prospective faculty members should be judged only on their academic credentials, the University Senate Executive Committee said yesterday in response to objections to the appointment of a Nicaraguan government official to teach at the University of Kansas.
Center for Latin American Studies next semester
"WHAT I SEE here is a sort of difference of perceptions as to the degree of awfulness of the government involved," he said.
academic affairs, last week said that she would not revoke Fiallo's appointment as a visiting professor. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, also defended the appointment.
Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for
SenEx members decided at a regular meeting Thursday to issue a statement, said Arno Knapper, SenEx chairman.
"We are concerned by the widely publicized objection by a faculty member to the appointment of Dr. Mariano Fiallo as a visiting professorship at the University of Kansas," the SenEx statement said.
SenEx responds to Fiallos protest
"WE REAFFIRM THE principles of academic freedom, the absence of which would destroy the intellectual environment of any university. There is only one way that the faculty is capable of judging current or prospective faculty members; on the basis of their academic credentials Their political views, religious beliefs, or the physiological characteristics are simply irrelevant," it said.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
CBS ordered to stand trial
By United Press International
NEW YORK — A federal judge ruled yesterday that CBS must stand trial in the $120 million libel suit filed by Gen. William Westmoreland over a Vietnam documentary claiming the purposefully distorted enemy troop strength.
CBS had asked Judge Pierre Leval to dismiss the suit, claiming its documentary was true and that the retired general had no case.
Leval denied the request on the
grounds that there was enough contention over the facts of the case to merit a trial.
"Summary judgment must be denied if there is conflicting evidence on any substantial issue." Leval said in a written decision.
"This rulings says no more than that defendants have failed to demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of fact."
Westmoreland filed the $120 million suit against the network over
University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1984
The trial was scheduled to begin Oct. 9 in U.S. District Court in Manhattan.
the 1982 documentary "The Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Deception"
It alleged that Westmoreland, while he was commander of U.S. military forces in Vietnam, took part in a conspiracy to underestimate enemy troop strength to deceive policymakers and the American public about the progress of the war.
The retired general accused CBS of acting with malice in preparing and broadcasting the program.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Swedish officials, rejecting denials by Moscow, said yesterday that they had proof that a Soviet jet fighter violated Swedish air space last month while pursuing a passenger plane carrying 276 tourists.
The renewed Soviet denial came a week after Prime Minister Olot Palme protested the intrusion to Moscow and warned that such violations should not recur.
President Jose Napoleon Duarte said yesterday he would expel 55 U.S. military advisers from El Salvador if Nicaragua would simultaneously oust its Cuban advisers.
Rymko's note to the foreign ministry said "the Soviet side rejects the protest as groundless."
Peace plan calls for advisers to be ousted
But Duarte said he doubted that Nicaragua would abide by the regional peace plan offered by the Contadora countries of Colombia, Mexico, Venezuela and Panama—even though the leftist Sandinista government has signed the document.
By United Press International
Sweden says air space was violated
Vice Adm. Bror Stefenson, Sweden's chief of staff, said he was surprised by the renewed Soviet denial, because "We have such clear cut proof that the violation took place."
"But this means that Nicaragua has to remove the 8,000 Cubans from its army. We will see if they carry through with that condition," he said.
Soviet Air Force exercise off the Baltic coast and followed the Scanair Airbus plane 17 miles into Swedish airspace.
"To obtain peace, we have to do without the services of the 55 advisers we have. We don't have any problem with that," he said.
The statement by the Swedish foreign ministry came after Moscow's Charge d'Affaires, Evgeny Rymko, sent the ministry a note rejecting "groundless" Swedish accusations that a Soviet SU15 fighter followed a Scanair passenger plane into Swedish airspace Aug. 9.
The passenger plane was carrying 276 Swedish tourists from Crete to Stockholm and was followed as it entered Swedish airspace south of Gotland island, 125 miles southeast of Stockholm, the government said.
despite the peace plan, the violence in El Salvador and Nicaragua continues.
By United Press International
"good faith and political will" could make the Contadora plan work.
Duarte told a news conference only
In its first protest of the incident, Sweden said on Sept. 7 that two Swedish radar stations recorded the intrusion in which the SU-15 left a
Sweden's top military commander,
Army Gen. Lennart Ljung, said earlier this month that in addition to radar detection, he had "further technical evidence" of the intrusion.
He would not elaborate, but Swedish technicians might have monitored Soviet military communications.
The bullet-riddled bodies were found at dawn.
Duarte said El Salvador has not talked to the United States about removing the advisers, who train combat troops in counterinsurgency warfare, because "an independent country does not need to talk with anyone about the decisions it's going
The bodies of three young men were dumped near police headquarters in downtown San Salvador yesterday in what judicial authorities described as a "death squad-type" assassination.
No identification papers were found on the bodies and authorities appealed on local radio stations for relatives of missing persons to visit the morgue.
to make."
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To attend please register at the Student Assistance Center,
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Tuesday, September 25 FREE!
6:30 to 9 p.m.
First Annual
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Oct. 26
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NATION AND WORLD
50 protest at Draper Laboratory Nuclear objectors arrested
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — More than 50 peaceful demonstrators protesting the production of nuclear weapons guidance systems were arrested yesterday at the Draper Laboratory and charged with trespassing, police said.
By United Press International
It was one of 25 demonstrations planned nationwide for this week to protest NATO war games and the Reagan administration's policy on establishing nuclear first-strike capability.
"We wanted it close to the election period," said Judy Freewirth, spokeswoman for the Coalition of Civil Disobedience — a group of peace organizations protests nuclear arms production and escalation of the arms race.
Page 9
All but 11 of the 52 people arrested were released yesterday afternoon. One person was not cooperating with
authorites and was expected to remain in jail overnight.
POLICE SAID 47 persons were arraigned at Middlesex District Court before Judge Arthur Sherman. Another five were arrested late in the afternoon and were being processed at Cambridge Police headquarters
Pretrial hearings were set for October and most of the protesters were released on personal recognition.
Those who entered guilty pleas were ordered to perform 25 hours of community service work and to keep away from the Draper Laboratory, court officials said.
Twelve protesters pleaded guilty, the rest entered not guilty pleas. Authorities held persons with no positive identification or who were from out of state in lieu of $50 cash bail.
Police said the demonstration, which started at 7 a.m., was peaceful.
"THEY WERE THERE early this morning and sat in front of doorways," said police spokesman Timothy Toomey. "They weren't interfering and sat for about 30 minutes, then were warned to leave and arrested when they did not."
waiting wagoner. Please.
There were about 150 demon-
strators in all, police said.
Many lay on sidewalks in front of the sprawling Draper complex forcing police to carry them to waiting wateons. Toomey said.
University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1984
Freiwirth said that"the nationwide demonstrations were tamed with the "Fulda Gap" war games being staged in Europe, and that there were simultaneous protests scheduled in West Germany and England.
She said protesters regard Draper as the "think tank for America's newest generation of missiles." Company officials said they were concerned about the public's image of the firm.
Mullangen, 35 miles east of Stuttgart.
The road gave way under the transporter. The transporter slid over on its side, damaging the body of the missile and the tractor of the transporter, the spokesman said.
the missile carried no warhead and the accident posed no danger, said the spokesman at the headquaters of the U.S. Army in Europe
A multinational team of minesweepers has been searching the Gulf of Suez for the past month.
first such device to be found since the explosions began in the Gulf of Suez and Red Sea region July 9.
By United Press International
CAIRO, Egypt — British officials confirmed yesterday they had retrieved and dismantled a mine from the Gulf of Suez region where at least 19 ships have been damaged in a mysterious campaign against shipping in the waterway.
Egypt has accused Libya of mining the waterways in an attempt to disrupt shipping through the Suez Canal and thereby wreck the Egyptian economy.
"Yes it is a mine, a modern mine,
said Douglas Scafton, a British
one mine, described by a British Embassy spokesman as a to foot-long metal cylinder, was the
The accident took place on a road in a wood near the site of a U.S. Army Pershing missile unit at
HEIDELBERG, West Germany — A U.S. Army transporter on a routine training mission overturned yesterday and damaged a Pershing II nuclear missile, a U.S. Army spokesman said.
Embassy spokesman.
"We have separated the instrumentation part from the explosive part of the mine." Scrafton said. "The instrumentation part was removed from the water either yesterday afternoon or this morning."
The British spokesman said one end of the mine contained explosives and the other end contained an electronic device to set it off.
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U. S. and West German police sealed off the area while the transporter was being salvaged.
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Mine found in Gulf of Suez is'dismantled
No one was injured in the early
By United Press International
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THE WILDEY'S THE WOMAN IN RED
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Legal Services for Students
- Advice on most legal matters
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
Advice on most legal matters
Preparation & review of legal documents
- Preparation & review of legal docs
• Neratization of legal documents
- Notarization of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee
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DIABETES MANAGEMENT UPDATE
Sat., Sept. 29, 1 to 5 p.m.
A workshop designed for the individual with diabetes, those interested in diabetes education.
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FOR MORE INFORMATION Call 843-4455 Ext.31 This workshop is offered at no charge to students and the public.
YOU ASKED FOR IT!!
Due to Popular Demand "ROLL OUT THE BARREL" Night has now been expanded to Tuesday Night! Enjoy $1 Barrel Refills of Budweiser, Bud Light or Busch on Both Tuesday and Thursday!
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The Sanctuary
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843-0540
Rowing is America's Oldest Intercollegiate Sport and an Olympic Sport
K U CREW LOOKING FOR THE BEST TO BE THE BEST
We have a good place to row — The Kansas River We have a full-time, professional coach and
Libby Elliott—Novice Women
three assistants—
Library Zooftown Harry Crockett—Novice Lwt Men
Rob Catloth—Varsity Women
Cliff Elliott-Novice Hwt Men and Varsity Men
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Men 6'4" and TALLER for the men's heavyweight crew
Coxswains (men under 130 lbs. and women under 110 lb.)
No experience necessary
Call Cliff or Libby Elliott 843-3294
On Campus Travel Arrangements
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Travel Tips STUDENTS...
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University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1984
Page 10
Men's golf team places 3rd
By CHRIS LAZZARINO Sports Writer
The men's golf team captured third in a field of 26 teams at the Falcon Invitational, hosted by the U.S. National Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo.
Head Coach Ross Randall was pleased with the efforts of his golfers.
KU was paced by senior Tim Johnson, who shot rounds of 71, 84 and 70 for a total of 225 and a fifth place individual finish. His round of 70 was the low round of the tournament.
"I am happy with the way he finished," Randall said. "The team effort was good, but not everyone played well. Johnson really played well. He tied for second with an 84, that is quite a comeback."
At one point in the tournament.
the Jayhawks were in sixth place. A strong final day brought the team to third.
Johnson said that the day he shot an 84, he slacked up on his mental game.
Motley leads KC to victory
"IT WAS A good field of teams." Randall said. "We came from sixth place to within one shot from second. Team-wise, we had 'the lowest team score for the day on Sunday.'"
The rest of the scores for the KU team are Steve Madsen, 78-77-74 — 229; Brian McGreeyy, 78-76-76
The team's high placing was not a surprise for Johnson, who said the team goes for a victory in every meet.
Johnson played his first season of golf for KU last fall but had to sit out last spring because of academic problems.
- 230, James Phillips 77-82-80 -
239 and Todd Zimich, 86-81-75 -
242.
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Darryl Motley drove in six runs with a grand slam home run and a double, helping the Kansas City Royals take over sole possession of first place in the American League West last night with a 12-4 victory over the California Angels. The victory completed a sweep of the double-hander for the Royals.
In the opener, Lynn Jones belted his first home run in three seasons, supporting the three-hit pitching attack of Royals and giving the Royals a 4-0 victory.
The sweep enabled the Royals to
move one-half game ahead of Minnesota in the American League West while the Angels dropped 3 1/2 games off the pace.
In the nightcap, California twice walked Jorge Orte intentionally to get to Moley, once in the third inning and again in the sixth. The Kansas City left fielder spoiled the strategy both times with a two-run double and his first career grand slam.
Motley's double capped a four-run third inning that snapped a 1-1 tie. His grand slam climaxed a six-run sixth inning that shot out the backpage as the Royals won for the fourth time in the last five games.
SPORTS ALMANAC
W L Pct. GR
x Detroit 101 15 647
Toronto 87 70 648
Baltimore 53 72 352 18
Boston 83 73 352 18
New York 83 73 352 18
Cleveland 69 87 352 18
Milwaukee 69 87 352 18
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Kansas City 82 75 522
Minnesota 81 75 519 1/2
California 78 78 500 31/2
Oakland 72 84 492 91/2
San Francisco 72 84 492 91/2
Chicago 71 85 455 101/2
Texas 67 87 455 101/2
Baltimore 8, New York 1, first game
Baltimore 7, New York 6, second game
Harrison 4, California 1, first game
Kansas City 12, California 4, second name
Minnesota 8. Chicago 4 Oakland at Texas
Seattle (Langston 16.9) at Cleveland (Heaton 10.15) 6.05 m
New York 10 (lowkey 9-1) at Baltimore
(Flanagan 13-13), 6:15 p.m.
New York (Cowley 9-1) at Baltimore
(Columbus 8-3)
Flaagan (15-13) 6.5 p.m.
Toronto (15-17) at Boston (Nipper 19-6).
Toronto (Stadium 15-7 at Boston) Nipper 10-6)
6:35 pm
0.5 p.m.
Detroit (0) Neil (1-0) at Milwaukee
(4) Neil (1-0) at Milwaukee
Gibson 1.4; 7.30 p.m.
Minnesota 1.8; Butcher 13.9; at Chicago
Gobert 777.1.30 Minnesota Butcher (13.9) al Chicago (5.6)
(Seaver 14-10), 7:3 p.m.
California (Watt 14-11) at Kansas City
City.
Oakland (Young 8-4) at Texas (Hough)
16.10) 7:35 a.m.
Seattle at Cleveland, night
New York at Baltimore, night
Detroit at Milwaukee, night
California at Kansas City, night
California at Kansas City, night
Rugby Results
at Lawrence
Sunday. Sent. 23
NATIONAL LEAGUE
KU Club 21, Johnson County Club 6
KU scoring - Tony Ballance 4, Bill Boyle 2,
David Hay 2, Marc Berry 2, Jim Boyle 2.
David Hay, 7; Vie Clark, 4; Jim Bartoil, 4
KL College; Central Michigan State 6
KU Collegegate, Central Missouri State 6
KU scoring - Lou Blance 4, Blanton Ford 3
KU Sr. Reserves 10, Johnson County second team 10
KU scoring — Larry Thuggen, 4; Fritz
Edmonds, 2; Larry Weatherbee, 4
x - Chicago W 1 L Pct. 61
New York 61 54 68 GB
New York 87 70 54 12
Philadelphia 81 75 39 12
Philadelphia 81 75 39 12
Montreal 75 80 44 12
Toronto 75 80 44 12
x San Diego
Atlanta
Houston
Los Angeles
Cincinnati
San Francisco
Monday's Results
Chicago 4, Pittsburgh 1
New York 7, Philadelphia 5
San Diego 7. San Francisco 1. first game
game San Diego at San Francisco second
San Diego at San Francisco, second game
Houston at Los Angeles
Atlanta (Mahler) (2.9) at Cincinnati
(Robinson 1.6) 6:35 p.m
[Manhattan 1940, d. 5/3/1978]
Philadelphia (Gross 8-5) at New York
St Louis (Lapoint 12:10) at Montreal (Gullickson 11:8). 6.35 p.m.
Philadelphia (Gross 8.5) at New York (Darling 12.8), 6:35 p.m.
Chicago (Ruthen 5-10) at Pittsburgh
(DeLeon 6-13), 6:35 p.m.
Houston (Niekro 15-11) at Los Angeles
(Hershiser 10-8); 9.35 m
San Diego (Lollar 11-12) at San Francisco (Krukow 10-12) 9.35 p.m.
San Diego at San Francisco
St. Louis at Montreal, night
at Cincinnati, night
Houston at Los Angeles, night
Houston at Los Angeles, night
Monday's Sports Transactions
Texas Signed manager Doug Rader to a
2-year contract extension, named third base
Toronto Named Bobby Mattick vice president of baseball operations. Pat Gillick named Brian Murphy executive vice president, business Al LaMachiace vice president, baseball, and
Kansas City — Signed center forward Olsis Thorpe to a four-year contract
Dallas — Signed running back Todd Fowler to a series of 1 year contracts beginning with the 1985 season.
Denver (USFIL — Named Steve Gerrish as director of public relations)
direct or phone relation
Miami - Placed tackle Eric Laakso on injured
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NY Jets - Wawass quarterback Mark Reed and defensive tackle Patrick Dean
NY Rangers — Signed defenseman Mike Rogers and defensmen forward Reijo Ruit salainen in contracts
reserve: activated offensive fineman Steve Clark
KU
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Los Angeles — Released right winters Rob Chevette, Brent Shaw, Alain Boussard and the Wizards. Los Angeles — Released right winters Mylan and left winters Fred Rissling and Dave Nichols, sent goalkai Paul Kenny, defense Landmark, Bruce Shoebee and Steve McDermott, defense Brian Martin and左 Robbie toster to jumbo hockey; assigned defensmen David Carter and goalie Dale Ross to New Haven of the
CORALION ONE
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KU Bookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
Pittsburgh (MISL) — Waived midfielder Luis Alberto.
LA Raiders 4 1 0 1.000 107 121
Seattle 3 1 0 1.000 161 74
Denver 3 1 0 1.000 65 58
Oklahoma 2 1 0 1.000 64 58
Kansas City 2 2 0 1.000 94 92
Pittsburgh 2 2 0 500 84 87
Cleveland 1 2 0 150 81 87
Cincinnati 0 4 0 000 76 114
Houston 0 4 0 000 59 132
American Conference East
National Conference
| | W L T P | Pct | Pf | Pe |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Miami | 4 0 0 | 0.00 | 128 | 48 |
| NY Jets | 3 0 0 | 0.00 | 128 | 48 |
| New England | 2 2 0 | 0.50 | 76 | 94 |
| Indianapolis | 1 2 0 | 0.50 | 76 | 94 |
| Arizona | 0 4 0 | 0.00 | 27 | 107 |
San Francisco 4 0 0 100 115 87
Atlanta 2 0 0 100 115 87
New Orleans 2 2 0 59 99 101
LA Rams 2 2 0 59 75 75
W L T Pct PF PA
NV Gonzalez 3 1 1 0 78
Dallas 3 1 0 0 78
S. Lloan 2 2 0 500 110
Washington 2 2 0 500 106
Phoenix Philadelphia 2 2 0 500 104
Chicago 3 1 0 750 79 59
Minnesota 2 1 0 750 79 69
Detroit 2 1 0 750 99 104
Detroit Bay 1 3 0 750 99 104
Green Bay 1 3 0 750 99 104
Green Bay 1 3 0 750 99 104
L. RAISHER 33, San Diego 39
Buffalo 5, San Diego 39
Buffalo landed at Kansas City, noon
Detroit at San Diego, noon
Detroit at San Diego, noon
phone: 843-115
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
Note By agreement with the American Football Coaches Association, teams on NCAA or conference probation are required to have their championship consideration by the UPI Board of Oaches. The teams currently on probation are Arizona, Clemson.
New England at N.Y. Jets, noon
Green Bay at Tampa Bay, 3 p.m
Atlanta at San Francisco, 3 p.m
New Orleans at Houston, 1 p.m
N.Y. Giants at L.A. Rams, 3 p.m
Philadelphia at Washington,
Monday, October 1
Monday, Oct. 1
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 8 p.m.
Football Standings
LPGA Earnings List
NEW YORK (UP) The United Press International of Canada top 30 college football watchers in national votes and records in parentheses (total points based on 15 points for first place, 11 for second.
1. Nebraska (39) (3/4)
2. Texas (14) (0)
3. Ohio State (14)
4. Oklahoma (3/4)
5. Washington (3/4)
6. Penn State (3/4)
7. Indiana College (11) (3/4)
8. Bryant Young (4/4)
9. Florida State (3/4)
10. Georgia (4/4)
11. Oklahoma State (3/4)
12. Southern Methodist (2/4)
13. Michigan (2/4)
14. Southern Cal (1/4)
15. UCLA (2/4)
16. Miami (1/4)
17. Notre Dame (2/4)
18. Louisiana State (2/4)
19. Auñor (1/2)
20. Austin (1/2)
1 Patty Sheehan $251,853
2 Betsey King $242,467
3 Robert Ackley $234,720
4 Ayako Okamoto $198,989
5 Pat Bradley $190,467
6 Skye Walker $184,747
7 Juli Inker $183,207
8 Aoine Carrier $144,960
9 Doria White $144,259
10 Kyle Rowe Northwich $114,533
11 Alice Miller $111,533
12 Lauke Hunter $95,175
13 Danna Dunne $95,175
14 Marta Figueras (Jost) $96,900
15 Judy Clark $85,479
16 Laurie Peterson $83,833
17 Hollie Staley $82,814
18 Rowe Jones $90,321
19 John Napierman $79,509
20 Jon Stephenson $75,561
RENT A PIANO
LAWRENCE PIANO RENTAL
BROOKLYN, NY 10478
914-325-3600
Touring Shoes from $22.00
Rick's Bike Shop 1033 Vermont 841-6642
AN OCTOGINTA IDEA!
$22.00
"Count on us when you need a Favor"
J & M Favørs
- imprinted specialties*
Now at a New Location
2201C W. 25th (Behind Gibsons)
Best Quality 841-4349
Best Prices
"... not a piano trio at all,
but a single musical instrument. ..."
The New York Times
The Arden Trio
Suzanne Ornstein, violin
Clay Ruede, cello
Thomas Schmidt, piano
3:30 p.m. Sunday, September 30, 1984
Crafton-Preyer Theater/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale at the Ministry, Hallway Office Area, will
reserved Public B & S Special Discount for students
and senior citizens from 1982 to
1986.
Partially funded by the All Student Activity Fund
and the All Engineering Association
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Ca sm new The exc zoc incl st
September 25,1984
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
The University Daily
CLASSIFIED RATES
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
0-15 2.60 3.15 3.75 6.75
16-20 2.85 3.65 4.50 7.80
21-25 3.10 4.15 5.25 8.85
For every 5 words add: 25c 50c 75c 1.05
The University Daily KANSAN
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5:30 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5:30 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5:30 p.m.
**Classified Display**
$4.20 per column
CUSTOM CLASSIFIED DISPLAY can only be on minimum size mode and use them when they in depth drop
the display to the bottom of the screen. Custom classified displays accept for login
Custom classified displays accept for login
POLICIES
... set in ALE CAPS count as 2 words.
• Words set in BOLD ACE count as 3 words.
• Deadlines same as Display Advertise-2
- *Discounsellor role description*
this earned role discount
- *Samples of all mail order items must be submitted*
upon publication of advertising
- only
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement
- Classified displays allow do not count towards more this earned rate discount
- until credit may be received
- Tractors are not provided or classified or owned
- working days prior to graduation.
• Mayer takes based on comerciative day inertions.
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
NON-ADVANCE
Funds can be administered 10AM to 5PM daily and not exceed three days. These funds can be placed in a trust by calling the business office at 844-6388.
- Blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge
• Cocks must be accepted all classified ads marked
- Give permission to correct insertion of any advertisement
- No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Budget Stretcher coupons Thurs. evenings. Buy $1 & receive $1 coupon toward next purchase Cross Reference Malls Shopping Center
ANNOUNCEMENTS
GAREN EXPLORATION FOR WOMEN
earn values, philosophy and lifestyles as they
experience the work of women. 3:00-
5:30 p.m. Walnut Healh. Kansas Union Spor-
eer. Ethel Taylor Teacher. Women's Resource
Candlelight Special. 10%, off boxed Christmas cards in stock. Lined, imprint free. 5-30%. Thur Cross Reference. The Malls
DEMIING WITH THAT UNASY FEELING
Learn to engage conversations, make new
suggestions, and ask questions.
September 25, 6: 10 p.m. & 9 p.m. FREE Please register to
the Emergency Assistance Center 211
Hard Rock 34-644 106
Dereceted in jumps a small Christian group for capting, sharing action and prayer that meets weekly. Group now forming at Ecumenical Church of Christ, Come Us, call 621-4923 for information.
**weekly seminar" *Gospel of John* for today
an exploration of the message of the gospel of
Jesus Christ. Monday, Sept. 25, 4 p.m. at Ecumenical Christian
Ministries, 1928 Grace. Come by or call 843-4833
NAIMSHTM Contracts available Call 749-6530
after 3:30 p.m.
18th Color T V $2.90 a month a cartini
Mint (142 W 72 F @ 82575) 9-6 9-6 9-6
82575
Rent CVR with 2 movies, overnight $15
Curtains, 148, rented $42,937; Overtime 0-9 p.m.
Gear up, rented $60.
RHSE-HASEL PAPERS. 396 page catalog. 15,278
touch pages. 16,044 touch pages. 15,122 labeleh.
touch pages. 2000 touch pages. 2024 touch pages.
SENIORS YEARBOOK POSTHATES Shooting is taking place now, in Student Organizations & Actories office. 403 Kansas Union. Call yearbook address: 12 yr. II B. Kansas University. 641-728.
Weekend and early child care are now available at College Circle Child Care nurses, we are just beginning a flexible hours program. If you have evening classes, meeting an artist, or just a day off, please contact us.
want to enjoy an evening out, now you have an open at *Atlanta College*; your child will enjoy an evening of fun, planned recreational educational activities in the sun. Openings 12/7 or 12/9, 12:30-4:15, 12:30-4:15, 12:30-4:15, 12:30-4:15, 12:30-4:15, 12:30-4:15, 12:30-4:15, 12:30-4:15, 12:30-4:15, 12:30-4:15,
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All expiregs Lighting included Reasonable Rates *0*References 749-1212
Seeking Theater, Dance Students for performing "baq" type messages from Balloons n' More.炫彩 presentations. Must be reliable and have a sense of fun. Call 842 6390
Shirley Bennett, formerly of Charme Beauty Salon, is now at Angles Beauty Salon, 940 Massachusetts, M.F. Call 843-404 for Shirts September Special Shampoo & Haircut $—
ENTERTAINMENT
CLASSICAL GUITAR Want to classify up your new
function with quietly music? 842 2773
FOR RENT
2-Brm. Apt. $325/mo. All Utilities paid. 918 Miss.
+762-247-5000
3-Birm. Apct . 1006 Miss $300 plus Utilities. Call
824-140 or 834-8187
Apartment 5 rooms & bath one block off southeast corner of campus. Available Oct.1 Call 843 027 for appointment
Available now. Remodeled two bedroom apartmnt at 1208 Oread北块 North of mwnr Ceilin tarm
Designed for a group of four students. Classy,
energy and energy efficient! 843.9427
Desparate. On Campus, 2 berm, no deposit, Sept.
free, excellent location, AC. WD, hookups
MC. Must see. 249-438 after 5.0 m
Lease - bedroom house $350 per month. Off street
Calling 843-8570
New 2-bedroom duplex on NW side of Lawrence, complete with all kitchen appliances. Perfect for 2 or 3 students. $400/mo. Call 1-877-233-after 6 p.m.
Oliver 2 bedroom House. New furniture Close to K1
no dog. Nowalk. Nochats. 281W I8
No dog. Nowalk. Nochats. 281W I8
SUBLEASE one-bedroom Apt. $225 mo
Available 1 Oct 17 099 Ohio 749-7296
THE FAR SIDE
Opportunity for roommates: one block from campus, 4 big bedroom, living room, kitchen with dining area, bathroom with 2 bathtubs. Two additional rooms, all remodeled $100 per roommate for 4, also 3 bedrooms and up/above for $125 per roommate for 3. See to appreciate. All utilities call: 842-682-7494. fax: 749-1124.
SUPER LOCATION Huge hailey porch pet-friendly townhome 5 bedrooms 4 bathrooms 1 on 5 Bedroom Apts big kitchen with eating area, living room kitchen and guest rooms facilities $260-480 per month All utilities See up to $900 per month
By GARY LARSON
© 1984 Universal Press Syndicate
925
Murray didn't teet the first pangs of real
Murray didn't tell the burglar he was panic until he pulled the emergency cord
To quiet, serious woman commuter mice, furnished room in private residence. Call 842-4905 after 5. To quiet, serious woman large, furnished room in private home in the Oak Lawn. $125. To quiet, serious woman large, furnished room in private home in the Oak Lawn. $125.
Spring semester only • Fully furnished,
bath house, Great neighborhood,
close to campus, complete with 2 child-
fairs $4100 or $814-805
dogs. $410/mo for 40/40.
Apsco's Kids 2 bedroom. $315/mo. We pay
housing (cooking, Last Apt Available!) 257 Ridge
Ct. Call 842-4461.
FOR SALE
Townhouse with finished basement available, only one left, good for 4 people $490. SUNRISE
PHONE: 341-287
SON, YOUR MOTHER, YOU'D ME
THAT, FOR MY BIRTHDAY, YOU
WERE BUSY IN HERE TRYING
TO ERASE ALL TRACTS OF
ME FROM THE FILES
OF THE IR'S.
TAP TAP
PEACE LAND
Try cooperative living! Sunflower House. 1406
Tennessee. 749 0871. Ask for Dawn. Inexpensive &
Private rooms are available
oSpeed Ladies' Schwinn Bicycle, bright yellow,
just tuned and in excellent condition. Call 843 6473
or 749-2538
AM FM Cassette Car Stereo, Dolby, auto
reverse, looks nice, good condition. Call 749-1623
Aquariums. 20 & 15 & 14 Full set up with books and
extra baskets. Fully stocked. Knife, Sucker.
12:49 a.m. to 12:49 a.p.
BOOK CASES: many sizes, starting at $49 The Furniture Barn 1811 W. 814 842-206
***
CS Students: For a Low Price, you can own your terminal. T2 1.A with monitor, built in modern, adjustable partly wall mounted, other main frame call. Balloon. B44-64099 Chip out that be. caret Directors chair's chapel at the Furniture Barn. 1811 W. 6th 82-206.
Comic books, used Science Fiction paperbacks,
Playbills, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics, open
6-10. Tars. Sun 811 New Hampshire
Commodore 64 and Drive Disk. Like new, $390 or best offer. 842-9072
DIAMONDS = (2) 1/4 Carat, brilliant cut, jewelry
quality. $80 each, negotiable. Call Brian
842-2655.
FENDER STRAT GUITAR $360 Call Jim.
842 3670
DRAFTING MACHINE — Sturdy Bruning machine with scales, works great: $150
noteworthy: 349,308
NOW AS MUCH AS
I APPRECIATE THE
GESTURE, I CAN
NOT ALLOW—
TAP!
CICK!
BEEP!!
DLIP!
EVERYTHING GOBS Car, 79 Grand Prix fuel,
furniture: Furniture set, bedroom set, room set.
2 crib, oriental rug, T.V. and much more. Call
404-818-3699.
CONPEDESTAL Full-size all wood, collapsible $65,841.7057
Hewlett Packard HPJC CU Printer 325. Ross & Hogan Limited to stock on hand, selected UC3C Application packs and software. 29% JTahawk Bookstore 841-836
c ournighting for your living. we have what
those Shirt stores at 829erm and 16 e E with
Gilson Standard Jr - orange shirt $800 Gold
Dad's Doll. both cash. even $400. Mr Mc
Daddy.
Glass door Stereo cabinets, starting at $99 The Furniture Barn. 111 W. 6th. 842-2096
Honda CB 1255 Most sell $200 1538 Tenn
anytime
Honda Express Moped, only 100 original mules,
excellent condition $250 Call after 8:34 584-1634
IBM PC-JR, WIRELESS KEYBOARD, 1 DISK
IBM PC-KK, KISKMEMORY 841-582
Is your apartment too dark to study in which to
suit yourself at 8:30? The Furniture Room, 1811
at 892-596-6800.
Men's 3' 7" Compus Sport to speed Bike, in good shape, $90
trap on
Moped 1981 Honda Express Automatic
wheelchair access after 4 m
2 speed, exc. cond. 8431280 after 4 p.m.
license number 909 Wat. Carrier 8750 Retail.
New I-beam 300 Wast Car Amplifier, $750 will sell to $690 or best offer. 843-5946.
BLOOM COUNTY
will sell for $609 or best offer 835-9496
"bretta Marta" 172 auto. AM-FM Cassette Stereo.
Olmp Manta, 1973, auto. AM- FM Cassette Sterile,
sparty yellow and affordable at 841. 842-908
Partners Desk, 2-side, Oak desk with glass top $: Call 8432 2422 after 8 p.m.
Pioneer PL, to Turntable; $40, or best offer
842.030, evenings
senwren "World" Girls' model, never ridden,
with accessories. Must sell: 749 1256 after 6 p.m.
Must also be believe
Sherwood 602-CP Integrated Amplifier: 40 watts per channel, 4 channels, tape monitor, loudspeaker.
Technics 165 M-242 Tape Deck Perfect condition
$125 or best offer. Fax 349-105. Mark
Trek 311 l/2 speed like 241 2 l/2 the 22" toes, flick lamp, 11.8 l/8 tires, 842-7853
Used and Collecter Records bought and Sung,
Rock, RNB, Jazz, Country, Classical, Standards
and Big Bands. Sat & Sun, 10 a.m - 5 p.m Quanell
2.99 New Hampshire
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplies. New on Sale. Makes sense to use them.
Yamaha Receiver Pioneer Tape deck with 2
speakers; $150 Drafting table & chair; $100 Call:
813-731-9411
exam preparation *New study on breeding*
*Jayhawk bookstore, and Great Bookstore*
*Jayhawk bookstore, and Great Bookstore*
TENNIS BAQUET Head Graphite Edge
Dossumable' 827.505
AUTOSALES
practice 1
1. As study guide 2. For class preparation 3. For exam preparation 'New Analysis of Western Collisions' available now at Town Clerk, The
1973 Ford Mustang; PS, PB, AC 531 Cleveland
engine, AM FMC cassette player, snow tires. Runs
LOST AND FOUND
1973 Ford Galaxy, 2-door, PS, PB, AC, Auto,
Radials, 32,600 miles, good condition $800 Steve:
842 110, days; 842 920, evenings
1923 T Bird, white leather interior, AT, PS, PB,
PW, Tilt & power seats, some rust, $76,
Call 842-5000.
1974 Ford Pinto, good condition, some rust.
Negotiable. Call 749-4548, after 6.
Must sell. 1892 Nissan Sentra Station Wagon 5 doors. Beige. AM FM Stereo clock. A C, Ready. Rust-proof, 1600 meters local run. Call 749-3360
Found. Missile blown into building in street corner.
Found. Maitre Jenner may identify by call 212-658-3049.
FOUND 4 old mite kit, gray & white; wearing
lien collar, in 1000 black of backl 441 690-190
478 690-290
Found. KUID 31622, in front of S.W. Bedl office on 24th St. left there also
Lost. Nusbleu 1.D and All Sports Pass at Sat
game. Please return. REWARD. 8423-3100
MARKETING as a KOL of LIFE
FOUND. Sunlasses, outside north entrance to
the restaurant, authentic student attire.
REWMID 52 Last HP16C calculator in 3192
WEBMD, Wed. sept. 19, Sep. 19 Call Brian 841 846 666
Last, Graphite Head Tennis Haircut, at Robinson tennis courts, beginning of Sept. If found, call 843-4147
by Berke Breathed
HELP WANTED
GIVEN THE BREATHTRAPPING
POLITICAL, PHILATELIC
AND RELIGIOUS IMPLICATIONS
of THIS ARE DURERED BY
the BREATHTRAPPING IMPLI-
TIONS OF EXPLAINING THEY
**CONSUMER AFPAIRS INTER 10 - 15**
hrs./week. $3.35/hr. Appt. 10:48 to 1-5:48 To assist staff in on-compass consumer programs.
To assist staff in on-compass consumer programs.
Complete computer research & surveys. Prefer-
red qualifications: good writing & communication
skills; strong knowledge of business, law, consumer education or public interest work. Must be work-study eligible. For application, contact Consumer Affairs, 819 Ver-
dice Road.
Dependable female to assist disabled with care
No experience required. Mornings, weekends &
evening hours available. Call between 1:15-
490 628
to mom.
ATTENTION STUDENTS
WE NEED DRIVERS!!
$3.75/hr.
6% commission (average $5-$6/hr.)
Pizza at Stephanies has the top pay for those working more than 25 hours a week. HURRY ON BY AND APPLY IN PERSON NOW!!
Pizza At
STEPHANIES
E. O.E. No phone calls, please.
2214 Yale Rd.
Detraion II. Clinical in residential facility for mentally retarded. Requires graduation from Accredited School of Nursing. Work in nutrition, dietetics, institutional management, or closely related field and must possess a Master's degree. Clinical experience desired. Candidate must be registered by the American Dietetic Association with a valid certificate of salary 1672 month, excellent frumbs. Contact Person: Willie State Hospital and Training Center.
Domino's Pizza, World's fastest growing pizza chain. Now Hiring Delivery personnel. Part-time position. Requires a bachelor's degree or between $4-6 per month. Must be 18, have valid insurance and driver license. Apply in person, by mail to Domino's Pizza, Inc., 230 W. Broadway, New York, NY 10019.
FRESHMEN. It's not too late to join NAVAL.
ROTC Call 644-3641
Fermite Models for 1903. Caliburry and poster to
Mr. P. H. Fermite, New York. Postcard to
number to Bill Heart Photography. Box mg
9525804.
STUDENT ASSISTANT
NEEDED
Henry's Restaurant needs two experienced
cafers for Saturday and Sunday night shift and
sunday morning shift.
Infant Care - our home 12:30 - 5:30 Start Oct. 15
Infant Care - 641-0922 after 1 p.m.
NEEDED IMIDENTIFIED: Half time computer Programmer. Contact University Counsel Center for further information and application 16 Halla Hall 864-9031
Pizza Shuttle is looking for Delivery people. You must be 18, have a car with insurance, and a good driving record. If you are- wanting to work and willing to help in delivering Pizza Shuttle, then apply at Southern Hills Mall
Young men and women wanted to model joints, causalwear newwear, swimwear and dance costumes. A comprehensive data sheet which includes your physical characteristics for photography. P.O. Box 7257, Toekens, WA 98053.
Summer dates, National Park Co. S 31, 21 Parks, 900
openings, complete information, S 41,
Park Report Mission Min Co. G 21, 201 afive WN,
Kalispell, MT 1990
MISCELLANEOUS
BEER SPECIAL 50 cent draws. 11, 3, 7, 10 Monday through Thursday Only at the Wheel.
---
Futons
Japanese Cotton
Mattresses
841-9443
Kitchen is open 8:11 - 30 p.m. for wings to go. Monday through Friday Only at the Wheel
WANTED
Experimental Exped. Term paper. The exam will consist of two parts: (1) Plae and will correct spelling. Please visit www.experimentalexped.com for details.
Female, Christian Roommate, to share spaces:
2bedroom Apl. Close to campus $78.30 plus
utilities. Call 794-4422
Female Roommate to share 2 bedroom house,
walking distance to campus; $625.00 plus 15% fee.
Roommate to share 2 bedroom house;
Beds, Desks, Tents, Window shades; Everything But Ice 6th & Vermont
Bible Trivia is in it. Where game where trivial is not trivial. Cross Reference. Malls. Lawrence.
Looking for Female Roommate to share our
clearly furnished, 2bedroom Apartment $147.73
attached phone, Shared 248-440 or 891-7637
$15.00
SOMERVILLE & ASSOCIATES, INC.
901 Kentucky, Suite 305 B
SPECIAL RESUME' PACKAGE
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater Kansas City area. Call for appointment.
- Input in Word processor
* Reference List
Inflation Fighter. E 8 East 21. For your needs in vintage and party clothes, hats, gloves, ties, and men's suits. In & browse. Hours 09:30 a.m. to Sat. 10:00 p.m. to 5:30.
THE KANSAS UNION JAYBOWL
50c a game
roommates to share New House. West side of Town, non-smoker. 841-2282
- Choice of Three Paper Colors
* Matching Stationery-Envelopes
* Interview Questions
**Hawks** – Opening for single players and teams in the 7 p.m. Monday night University Mixed League and the 4 p.m. Tuesday night Greek League. Sign up on the Kaiser Football Department.
students wishing to lose 10-29 lbs per month
Easy, economic vitamin/herb method;
monitored. Meet 801.6747
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
naturalization, and of course, fine portraits.
29-104 29-106
Roommate, to share House near campus $100 plus 1/2 utilities. Bruce 749-4513
every weekday afternoon
DRM-MKR Immediately, for working Rock
& roll band. Chuck 794-6741. Benjamin 841-9529
John sings for all occasions. Birthdays, parties,
weddings. Operator tenure 414-374
THE ETC. SHOP
PEN AND PAPER
732 Mass. 843-0611
INDIAN JAYES Hats
Vintage, formal wear,
Vintage, formal wear party clothes and costumes
BUSINESS PERS.
Mayline Parallele rules & parts. Architecture tools and papers. The Graphic Arts Dept. Strong's Ofice Systems, 1904 Vermont. V8-364-644
Answer to the water dilema - Multipurpose your
water. 842 76181
COLLEGE SWEATSHIRTS> Harvard, Yale,
Princeton, Dartmouth, N. Carolina, UC
Science, UCLA, Stanford, Notre Dame and others
$18 each. Packed many. 10 days of delivery.
guaranteed. ios 117. Brocadeware. $69.
iOS 14. 1-603-553-185. Hassel swats.
SML.XL.
Modeling and theater portitions - showing now.
Begins to Professions, call for information.
Saville Studio. 749-661
We're An
Official Representative
ALL Airlines offering the Lowest r Fares Possib
Air Fares Possible
ON CAMPUS LOCATION
In the Student Union
Flights Filling Fast
Now is the time to make you Spring Break
See Us TODAY!
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
RS232M-SERVICE. Let me assist you with that
issue. You will be able to configure the
console and recordware, word processing and
music equipment, word processing and
wordware.
say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t
hirts, jerseys and capes. Shirt art by Swells.
49-1611
VISA and or MASTERCARD credit cards for 18 students. or lower. Lose few, small savings account. Written for details National Bank of Pennsylvania Ave. SE, Washington, DC 20003.
LOOK AND' FEEL GREAT
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING, HOT TUB,
& HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
舞蹈家
Also includes
6 sunitanning lounges
weightroom & hot tub
AEROBIC CLASSES NOW STARTING
25% off
25% off single membership
No routines to learn
For Men & Women
Day & evening classes
Mon- Sat
GET NOTICED
Wholesale Sound Rental F.A. A. Guitar and Bass
amps, mikes, Graphic EQ, Disco systems
811-606
SERVICES OFFERED
HERBALIFE, distributor/consultant Weight loss, skin & hair care; much more; income opportunity. 841 0474
47, and permits for $22 & up. Call or come in for a professional cut or perm at a great price. Charme Beauty Salon, 1031 Mass., 843-5580
LOSSE WEIGHT NOW Improve your health and your wealth 100% natural 100% guaranteed
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841.5716
Charine Beauty Salon - Home of the F1 Harrington Charine Beauty Salon - Home of the F1 Harrington students taking beginning and intermediate levels of French 3 years exp. excellent knowledge grammar Call 0800-742-9562
STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Massachusetts downtown All haircuts, $8. No appointment necessary
special on Scriptural Nails, 25% off. Available with unbranded taps. Use two durable pallets and paint brushes to create the design. Trained expert applications; manicure only. Call Triple at Gee's Beauty Salon, 801-8260.
YAMAHIA MUSIC SCHOOL, ages 4-6, beginners
Olson Piano and Organ. 842-710-3595
BIRTHRIGHT Free Pregnancy Testing: Confidential Counseling 843-802
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor
Beginner / Advanced Group / Individual
842 3585
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing. Judy 842.7945
TYPING
24-Hour Typing All day all night Resumes
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fasted service. 841-506
Absolutely. Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing
and Word Processing. IBM 086. same day service.
Available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinus
841.663
Always try the best for professional service.
Term papers, thesis, resumes, etc. reasonable
842 1246
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers Word Processing Professional Results - resumes, papers, a specialty. Call 749-1108
Call Terry for your typing needs. Letters, term papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting select. II 842 0457 or 842 2671, 5:36 to 10:30 p.m
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JANETTE SHAFFER Shattering Service
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard cassette tape
841-8877
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFIT
C814 3510
Professional TYPEING, EDITING GRAPHICS.
IBM Correction Selectrix, Kaby 8422, before 9/1/97.
SOMEHWILLE & ASSNU - Prof. professional in
Education, APA and USPASN, Kentucky
and in APSA, NYC.
Students call April for all your typing needs. Very reasonable and fast. day 043-8100 evening; day 052-7699
TIP TOP TYPING, 129th. Professional typing, processing, editing. Resumes from start to finish, word count, proofreading, editing our specialties. Xerox c/o Memory writer with data storage, royal self-correcting. MPH.
TYPING PLUS assistance with compilation,
installation, and documentation
dissertation projects; applications
to the National Institutes of Health.
THE WORKHOUSE? Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? 843-147
preemption or none. Have IBM Correcting Selector II. Reasonable prices. Call Judy at 415-693-2878.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Classified Heading
Write ad here
Phone
Net a Winner...
THE CLASSIFIEDS
Dates to run
1 Day | 2 Days | 4 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks
1 (6 weeks) $9.80 $9.15 $9.75 $8.75
For men's $24 $50 $75 $105
For women's $16 $34 $48 $64
)
Mail or deliver to 119 Stauffer - Fint Hall
1
Classified Display
1 col. x 1 inch = $4.20
Ca sm us new
The exc zoc inc:
SI
or
6
1
2
3
1
1
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University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1984 Page 12
SPORTS
Steven Purcell/KANSAN
The football team might have a new look on offense Saturday when the Jahwaks play the University of North Carolina in an interimineman Jeff Adjerson has been switched.
The University Daily KANSAN
Anderson played tight end last fall before being switched to defensive line when the Jayhawks became thin at that position.
Anderson now a tight end as team prepares for UNC
Mark Parks, who played tight end in the Vanderbilt game, suffered a concussion in that game, although the extent of his injury is not known.
Also injured in the Vanderbilt game and out for the North Carolina game are nose guard Pat Kelley and wide receiver Johnny Holloway, both with ankle injuries. Juco transfer Mitch Gaffen, who has not played a down this year, will replace Kelley at nose guard Holloway will be replaced by Jeff Long.
Clark Campbell, a freshman on the swim team, crosses the finish line of the third annual Jayhawk Triathlon. Campbell placed first in the student division Sunday with a time of 1 hour, 24 minutes, 23 seconds. The triathlon included a one-half mile swim, an 18-mile bike ride and a four-mile run. About 60 people participated in the event.
RUSSIA
1984
Coach Mike Gottried said that quarterback Mike Orth would see additional time with the first team in practice this week alongside Mike Norseth. Orth completed eight of 13 passes for 99 yards and one interception against Vanderbilt.
Still questionable for this weekend are fullback Mark Henderson and wide receiver Skip Peece, both with knee injuries, either was able to play against Wendellerb.
Volleyball team to face KSU
The volleyball team was defeated in three stalented games against Iowa State in Ames last Friday and faces an important test at 8 p.m. today against Kansas State at Allen Field House, Head Coach Bob Lockwood said.
The scores of the Iowa State match were all in the Cyclones favor, 15-10, 15-9 and 15-11.
"We were not real sharp." Lockwood said. "We had problems with our servers, serve reception and hitting accuracy. We didn't do well in the areas we needed to."
On the positive side. Lockwood said that the team had good attacks, that blocking was improved and that Jan Hunt had possibly the best game of her career.
Allen sparks LA comeback
LOS ANGELES — Marcus Allen vaulted into the end zone for his fourth touchdown of the game with 45 seconds remaining last night, lifting the Los Angeles Raiders to a dramatic 33-30 comeback victory over the San Diego Chargers.
Allen's performance tied a club record set in 1963 by Art Howell, who scored four touchdowns against Houston.
The 1982 NFL Rookie of the Year scored the winning touchdown on a 1-yard leap over a pile of defenders.
Athletes survive triathlon trial
By TONY COX Sports Writer
Sports Writer
The third annual Jayhawk Triathlon — a one-half-mile swim, an 18 mile bike ride, and a four-mile run — was an event most of the competitors trained for religiously.
But the winner, Dan Lawson, a senior at Washburn University in Topeka, used a laptop computer.
"I went out and drank beer the night before," he said.
before, he said.
Lawson, who finished the race Sunday at Robinson Center in 1:24:22 to win the men's open division, said that the event fit well into his schedule, in preparation for an iron man competition in Arizona. The iron man events are usually longer than those in the Jayhawk Triathlon.
Clark Campbell, freshman on the KU swim team, won the men's student division. Campbell finished the event in 1:24:23, just one second slower than Lawson, but competed in a different division.
Campbell's victory came on the heels of his winning performance in the Baptist Medical Center Triathlon on Sept. 9.
Theresa Watkins, a senior from Topeka, won the women's student division. John Dowsn won the men's faculty-staff division, Gloria Prothe won the women's faculty-staff division and Laurie Marienau won the women's open division.
Campbell defeated his teammate and fellow-freshman. Chuck Jones. Jones finished about four and one-half minutes behind Campbell at 1:29.05. Jones lead after the swimming portion of the race.
"I knew Clark would put me in the ground on the bike," Jones said. "I walked across alive, that's what counts."
Campbell said, "I am a stronger cyclist and runner than Chuck is."
Watkins, also a swimmer for KU, had the best time of all the women, finishing in
"The course was pretty easy because usually they're a lot toner," she said.
Debbie Fish, director of the race, said the course was short, but that the race was still challenging because of the hills.
we try to keep the distances so you don't have to train all year” she said. “We have it now if you come to school in August and find out about it then, you still have enough time to train and do well — not win probably, but do well.
"I would say it's fairly demanding. There are a lot of hills."
Most of the participants agreed the hills made the course challenging.
Downs, whose winning time was said, "It was hard, the rugging in the hills" the
toughest part of the race, as did Lawson.
The participants took different approaches to training for the competition Kent Jackson, Topea senator, said that he didn't begin his training at a specific time of year.
You train all year, he said. This is iron
and steel for the job. The iron in this
Jackson had recently competed in an iron
Downs said that he decided he would participate in the triathlon in January and began training then.
Jones said that he prepared for the triathlon with a lot of swimming, working out in the water and cycling.
For Jackson, those words proved true. Jackson picked up ground on the leaders in the bike ride and the run, but a mediocre swim had left him too far behind and he finished third in the men's student division at 1:29.41.
To succeed in the triathlon, Mary Chappell,
director of recreation services, said. "The key is the swimming because that's the weakest part for most people."
two days a week.
For some of the winners the triathlon was a warm-up for other competitions
"Cycling and running was the key for me."
Jackson said "Swimming was the worst."
Cubs clinch division title with 4-1 win
By United Press International
PITTSBURGH — The Chicago Cubs, longtime doormats in the National League, won their first title in 19 years last night by defeating the Pittsburgh Pirates, 4-1, behind the two-hit pitching of Rick Sutcliffe, capturing the NLA east.
The victory puts the Cubs into the NL, playoffs, beginning next Tuesday at Wrigley Field, against the San Diego Padres, also a first-time division winner. It marked the Cubs' first title of any kind since they won the NL pennant in 1945.
This year will be the Cubs' 11th try since 1900 for a win in a World Series. They last won the World Series in 1908. The Cubs' opponents both those years were the Detroit Tigers, who also are in position to advance to the World Series this year.
Sutliffe, acquired 14 in 14 in a sevenplayer deal with the Cleveland Indians, raised his record to 16-1. Flaoundering with a 4-5 record and suffering from root canal work that caused him to lose 15 pounds at the time of his trade. Sutliffe righted himself upon his arrival in Chicago.
The victory was his 14th in a row, tying a Cab record by Ed Roulbach in 1969.
Sutcliffe was nearly flawless. He retired the first nine batters and helped his team to a 3-0 lead with a second-inning RBI single.
Joe Orsulak got the first Pittsburgh hit by leading the fourth with a triple and scored a run one out later when Johnny Ray grounded out to second.
Sutchel then retired eight straight batters before Orsakug left the Pirates' second hit, a slow rolling bunt single down the first base line in the sixth. But Sutchel picked him off first to end the inning, and he crushed the rest of the way
Ryne Sandberg, the Cubs' leading candidate for Most Valuable Player honors, led the offensive effort, collecting two doubles and scoring two runs in the game. Sandberg doubled in the first and scored the first run on Gary Matthews' single to left center.
The Cubs made it 2-0 in the second off Larry McWilliams, 11-11, when Sandberg singled with one out. He took second on third baseman Jim Morrison's wild throw to first on the hit and scored on Sutcliffe's single to center.
KLZR
106
marks the beginning of our 4th Year
of 106 DAY(nights) with these outrageous
specials:
Tues., Sept. 25th
Godfather's Pizza, 711 West 23rd
5 p.m. until 10 p.m.
ONE MINI PIZZA WITH YOUR CHOICE
OF BEEF, PEPPERONI OR MUSHROOMS,
FOR ONLY $1.06
—or—
ONE LARGE DEEP PAN COMBO WITH
PEPPERONI, SAUSAGE, BEEF, MUSHROOMS,
BLACK OLIVES, AND ONIONS (FEEDS
4 TO 6 PEOPLE) FOR ONLY $10.06.
CARRY OUT, EAT IN, AND DELIVERY
—and—
ONE PITCHER OF SOFT DRINK OR BEER
FOR ONLY $1.06 WITH A LAZER GOLD
CARD.
THE PALACE, 8th & Mass.
ALL DAY
2 Cards for $1.06 up to a $2.50 value
25 sheets of Mrs. or Match Paper Weight
Stationary and 10 envelope-$1.00
2 Mirage Candles for $10.06
(regularly $9.95 each)
TRIVIA Games for $10.06 ... Celebrity
Teen ... Junior ... Biblical regularly $1.8)
Photo: Williams & Seraph Books ... $10.06
(regularly $14.95 & $25.95)
Sturded Bear Family for $10.06 Includes Papa,
Mama, and Baby Bear ... (regularly $14.5)
Wed., Sept. 26
Mrs. Winner's Chicken and Biscuits, 1819 West
23rd BREAKFAST SPECIAL 6 a.m.-10:30 a.m.
Breakfast platter and coffee ... $1.06 includes
scrambled eggs, hash browns, and buttermilk
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LUNCH/DINNER SPECIAL
10:30 a.m.to 10 p.m.
Two pieces of Mrs. Winner's marinated
flavor-crusted chicken, plus a side dish of your
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($2.18 value))
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Thurs., Sept. 27
Fritters, 3130 West 6th
Breakfast 6 a.m.-11 a.m.
FARMHOUSE SPECIAL $1.06 (regularly
$2.99) offered all day. Hash browns or home
tries topped w/ melted cheese and covered
with two eggs. Served with a butternilk
biscuit or toast.
Biscuits and Graves $1.06
Huge biscuit covered with sausage grave.
Lunch 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
BLT $1.06 reg. $2.59
CHEEFSALAD $1.06 reg. $3.69
FREE $2.20. Hand speeered tea when you
present your lazer gold card.
Dinner 4 p.m.-10 p.m.
2 PIECE CHICKEN DINNER FOR $1.06
Includes Choice or trench tries,
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Fr., Sept. 28th
Ohse Smokehouse, 2700 Iowa
LISTEN FOR DETAILS!
KZR 106 all Hits LISTEN FOR DETAILS!
allHits_
Introducing Islam To Non-Muslims
The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents its first colloquy in an introductory seminar series about Islam.
"INTRODUCTION TO ISLAM"
Place: Regionalist Room, Kansas Union
Time: 7:45 p.m. Tues., Sept 25, 1984
Come Visit With Us. Let Us Get Acquainted.
REFRESHMENTS ARE PROVIDED
1
| ∞ |
THE OLD MAN IN THE LIBRARY
Scuttle diplomacy
Former ambassador Andrew Conteh often relied on patience and tolerance during his five years of dealing with Soviet diplomats. Soviet foreign policy is frustrating, says Con-
teh, a visiting professor, because most of its envoyes are mechanical mouthpieces who cannot respond without consulting higherups. See story, page 3.
The Eagle
Gray
High, 60. Low, mid-40s.
Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 95, No. 23 (USPS 650-640)
Wednesday, September 26, 1984
By BRENDA STOCKMAN Staff Reporter
If head basketball coach Larry Brown had his choice, his players would be living in Naismith Hall this year instead of in the Javahower Towers.
Brown said yesterday that he had tried since last spring to get his players into Naismith, a privately owned residence hall. Seven players on the women's basketball team are living in Naismith this year.
But Brown said hall officials had told him at the end of July that the men's team was low on the waiting list to get into the hall and that the players probably would not get in.
THE NEWS SENT Brown scrambling to find living quarters for his team less than a month before the start of school.
"I think they didn't really want an athletic team there," Brown said.
David May, Naismith's general manager, said that was not the case. He said the hall had offered to let members of the men's team contract on an individual basis, as the women's team had done and all other residents were required to do. But the men's team did not complete the applications in time, he said.
Brad Tennant, Naismith's resident director, said. "What happened is the paper work just didn't come through."
Susan Wachter, athletic department business director, said the athletic department understood that Nsaithm would not contract for a block of rooms for the players, as the housing department had done for apartments at the Towers.
HOWEVER, SHE SAID, the athletic department thought it had more time to complete the nurse work than it did.
complete the paper and turn it in.
An athletic department memo said Nassim Smith contracts could be confirmed until July 1. Wachter said, but the memo was wrong.
"So it really was just a great big mess up," she said.
Tennant said Naismith had no specific deadline for accepting contracts. The hall is considered full when 488 contracts are received, he said, and contracts received after that are placed on a waiting list.
Tennant said he thought Naismith had received 488 contracts by late June.
Wachter said contracts for 16 members of the men's team had been sent to Naismith on various dates. She said she didn't remember when the last contract was sent.
"WE HAD PLANNED on putting the men's team there and wanted to put the women's team there, too. It did not work out that way," she said.
Brown said the money for athletes on scholarship was not available in the spring when the players needed to make the down payments.
the scholarships provide room, board,
tuition and books for the athletes.
Brown said the athletic department had promised Naismith that it would pay for each athlete's contract. He said he thought the department and the hall had reached an agreement, so he began telling his recruits that they would be living in Naismith this year.
May said athletic department officials and Brown's staff members were in contact with his staff on a daily basis.
his staff on a daily basis.
"I think there was a communication problem," May said, "and I'm sorry about that."
MARIAN WASHINGTON, HEAD women's basketball coach, said she was pleased her players were living at Naismith. The hall's suite rooms with adjoining bathrooms are nicer than rooms at Oliver Hall, where the team lived last year, she said.
The better living quarters helped in recruiting efforts, she said.
brown said if the men's team lived at Naismith, team members could mix more with non-athletes.
"The hall is a good environment and close to the field house," he said.
to the team work
Wachter said the men's team might live in Naismith next year. If it does, she said, the paper work will be done on time.
But Brown said he wasn't sure whether he would attempt to contract rooms in Nissim
WASHINGTON SAID NOTHING reason her team was living at Naihism this year, because athletes were able to eat in the hall's cateration during regular meal hours. Players can eat at the hall because the team is practicing earlier this year, she said.
is practicing extra work. But Washington said officials at Naishtown would not make special arrangements if the team's practice schedule changed The practice schedule changes from year to year and semester to semester, she said. The men's and women's teams share Allen Field House and alternate schedules.
does for any students.
Washington said she couldn't predict what would happen if the women's team returned to late practices.
HOUSE AND ACCESSORY May said Naismith would offer the players late dinner plates until 8 p.m., as the hall does for any student.
THE OFFICE OF Residential Programs was helpful in arranging late meals and other special requests for the team when team
See NAISMITH, p. 5, col. 1
B
Pat Hogan, Omaha, Neb., senior, (in black) attempts a shot senior. Hogan and Norby played their basketball game against his one-on-one opponent, Steve Norby, Leawood yesterday at Veterans Park, 19th and Louisiana streets.
Acid dust may be menace to area
By CHIRISSY CLEARY
Staff Reporter
Blowing dust irritates eyes and clings to clothes.
But blowing acid dust could run valuable crop soil and be a health hazard in the area, said Dennis Lane, associate professor of civil engineering
"There is the possibility that if the acid dust builds up, and the soil's alkalinity is down, there could be a severe problem in the next 10 to 20 years," Lane said yesterday.
Lane, who has been coordinating acid dust research for more than two years, said acid dust could be 1) times more harmful to the environment than acid rain.
LANE AND RESEARCH assistants have designed, and proposed to the Environmental Protection Agency, plans for five 90-foot tall towers to monitor acid dust in and around Lawrence. From the towers, which Lane hopes will be built in the spring, researchers
The EFA is reviewing the proposal, and Lane expects to hear whether the agency will help finance the project within the next three weeks.
will collect air samples from different heights.
Aid dust particles, one thousandth the size of a pin head, are composed of nitrates and sulphates, which are produced by coal-burning power plants.
ACID DUST BREAKS down the soil's alkalinity, which allows acid to mix with the soil without harming it. Lane said. If alkalinity decreases, the soil's resistance drops and that could affect crop yields.
"The Great Plains produce a substantial amount of food for the world," Lane said. "We could get to the point where the soil won't produce that much food. That's the
danger. We don't want to reach that threshold."
Usually no one starts working on the acid rain or acid dust problem until the effects become obvious, Lane said.
"Any layman on the street can see whether his evergreens are dying." Lane said. "Once you see effects like that, you go back and take a look at the process that occurred in between. We're not seeing those drastic effects in Kansas yet."
MOST OF THE national research on acid dust has been limited to the East and West Coasts because that is where the most visible damage is. Lane said.
Little data has been collected on acid dust in the Great Plains, Lane said, or on its health effects.
All of the coal burning power plants in Kansas use air pollution control devices, Lane said. The law says the companies must
See DUST, p. 5, col. 2
State candidates expect to be elected on individual merit
By SUZANNE BROWN
Staff Reporter
State candidates running for Congress and the Kansas Legislature said yesterday that the so-called "coattail effect" of the presidential race would hold little sway over Kansas races this fall.
Kansas rates this election, "I don't think there will be any real significant coalition effect this election." Rep. Jim Slattery, a Democrat, said "The people of northeast Kansas tend to be very independent in their thinking."
independent a coattail effect occurs when a voter cast his ballot for a Republican or Democratic state or local candidate based on the party affiliation of the presidential candidate he or she supports.
In 1980, Solbach and State Reps. Jessie Branson and Betty Jo Charlton, also Lawrence Democrats, won their races for the 45th, 44th and 46th Districts despite a national Republican landslide.
THIS YEAR, DEMOCRATS have said that they fear a Reagan victory may cost them seats in Congress and in state legislatures.
Most of the Douglas County candidates interviewed yesterday discounted such an effect on their races.
"Kansans are pretty independent voters, and they usually vote mostly upon the individual." State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said. "The smaller the race, the less coercive effect there will be."
Charlton said the outcome of the national race would have little effect on local Democratic incumbents again this year.
"The national ticket won't hurt us," said Charlton.
"I think it obviously will have some effect, though the record in Lawrence has been for the person," said Julie Hack, Republican candidate for the 46th District.
MOST OF THE Douglas County candidates said the contitutional effect was hardly felt in Lawrence, where voters tended to support individuals rather than political parties.
Martha Parker, Republican candidate for the 45th District, said she thought voters were becoming more loosely bound to political parties.
"There are always some tried-and-true Republicans and Democrats who are going to vote the straight party ticket," she said. "But those who really listen are going to vote for the individual candidate."
STATE SEN, WINT Winter Jr., RLawrence, and his Democratic opponent, Lawrence Seaman Jr., also said national election developments probably would leave Douglas County races untouched.
Kansas races for U.S. Congress, however, may be another story.
Steve Curtis, campaign coordinator for Reardon, said that Reardon had to gain votes in Johnson County, a traditionally Republican stronghold, to defeat his Republican opponent, former State Sen. Jan Meyers, R-Overland Park
Two weeks ago, Jack Reardon, Democrat candidate for the 3rd District, said his campaign might be hurt by a local appearance by Walter Mondale.
Curtis said an association with the Democratic presidential candidate might
"The goal of our race is to keep it at the congressional level," he said.
pairable it; it would be a great opportunity for the students at KU to hear in person an individual who is running for the highest office in the land," he said.
SLATTERY. WHO IS running for re-election in the 2nd District, would not question on Reardon's remark. But he said he would be happy if Monday and his running mate, Geraldine Ferraro, campaigned in the 2nd District.
office in the趴场. Jim Van Slyke, Slattery's Republican opponent, said he thought a Reagan victory would have a positive effect on his own race.
"I expect it to bring at least a small percentage my way," he said.
Police seize three of five fugitives
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Three of five escaped inmates from the state prison were captured in a residential wooded area on Tuesday, and officers with shotguns and led by bloodhounds searched Leavenworth County for at least one other inmate
By United Press International
Two hours later, inmates Arzo Tucker Jr.,
26, and Lawrence E. Lace, 33, were captured
by officers two blocks from where Jones was
arrested.
County for a conviction. Convicted murderer Thaddeus Jones, 28, was arrested shortly before 5 p.m. — about an hour after a resident tipped authorities that the convicts had been seen entering a woods on the east end of city. Areas Tucker Jr.
arrested
JONES WAS ON FOOT and armed but offered no resistance, said Lt. Ron Miller of the Kansas City, Kan., Police Department
There was no immediate report whether the other two men were armed.
All three men were taken to the Kansas City, Kan., jail where they were processed and turned over to prison authorities. Police said they would be returned immediately to the Lansing prison.
Police had cordoned off an adjacent residential area and evacuated some homes. Other residents were told to remain indoors during the search, which ended about 7 p.m. after Tucker and Lane's arrest.
Lane was serving a 10 to 20 year sentence for a November 1982 robbery at Kizet Cummings Jewelers, 800 Massachusetts St Tucker was imprisoned for aggravate kidnapping, sodomy, rape and robbery.
INMATES THAMIL VAN Phan, 20, and John Allen Purdy, 23, both convicted of murder, remained at large late yesterday.
But Randall Butford, deputy prison director, said one of the inmates was being pursued in Leavenworth County with prison dog teams
In Douglas County, Sheriff Rex Johnson said his department was monitoring the manhunt for the remaining fugitives. But the department has not put any additional men on duty to help in the manhunt, he said.
Prison guards from Kansas State Pentitienty in Lansing and local law officers had focused their dragnet in three northeast Kansas communities where the fugitives reportedly had been sighted
The convicts escaped about 1 a.m. Monday from a maximum security cellhouse at the Kansas State Pentituary. They used a band saw to cut through a mesh fence, shimmed three floors through an air duct and then cut through a $14-\mathrm{inch}$ thick bar covering an air shaft opening to the outside wall.
Disneyland employees say 'no' to more Mickey Mouse
By United Press International
it had been, basically, a big happy family out here," said ride operator Tim Stanley. one of the first strikers to picket near the park's main entrance
ANAHEM, Calif — Hundreds of disgruntled Disneyland employees, most wearing "No Mickey Mouse" buttons, ringed the world-famous amusement park with picket lines yesterday on the first day of a strike by more than 1,800 workers.
'But now, it's like Dad has taken our allowance away and given us more work to do,' said Stanley, a park employee for 17 years.
years.
THE STRIKE, THE second called at the park in five years, was sanctioned Monday when members of a five-union coalition
The striking workers drew the support of passing motorists and pedestrians as pickets started organizing several hours before the park opened.
rejected by a 69 percent margin manage
mester's latest master services contract off
parks opened.
Several early morning visitors stopped on the way to talk with the picketers and shake hands. Dozens of motorists honked their horns and flashed victory or thumbs up signs.
"I hope all the unions and the public supports us," said Tom Ravencroft, an employee organizing pickets at the park's front entrance. The entrance displayed a sign welcoming guests to "the happiest place on earth."
please place on my desk.
But I feel sorry for the people who have
---
See DISNEY, p. 5, col. 4
105
September 26, 1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily KANSAN
French and Libyan troops withdrawing from Chad
PARIS — French and Libyan troops yesterday began the first phase of a six-week withdrawal from Chad, a move aimed at ending 13 months of foreign intervention in Chad's civil war.
Reagan tax program criticized
No details were available on the departure of the estimated 5,000 Libyan troops in the country.
The French defense ministry said French troops had evacuated the northern Chadian towns of Salal and Arada on the defensive east-west red line set up by the 3,500 French troops in northern Chad after their August 1983 arrival.
WASHINGTON — The average American taxpayer is worse off today than four years ago despite President Reagan's "so-called across-the-board tax cut," a report yesterday by the AFL-CIO's Public Employee Department said.
The department, representing about 2 million federal, state and local workers, found that nearly half of the cut went to big business and the wealthiest 5 percent to 10 percent of the population.
Manson set afire during feud
VACAILLE, Calif. — Convicted murderer Charles Manson was set afire yesterday with paint thinner in a prison cell, officials said. A argument over religion, authorities said.
The attack took place at 8:45 a.m. yesterday in the California Medical facility where Manson, 49, is serving a life sentence Sharon Tate and eight others in 1988.
Manson was listed in good condition in the prison hospital. He suffered second and third-degree burns on his scalp.
Michener to reimburse college
SWARTHIMORE, Pa. — Pulitzer-prize winner author James Michener has promised to reimburse Swarthmore College for a $2,000 scholarship with nearly $2 million in interest, a school spokeswoman said yesterday.
In a recent letter, Michener pledged to donate $2 million to the small liberal arts college that granted him a degree in 1929, the earliest spouseswoman Lorna Shurkin.
Micheen, who is in Texas working on a book about the state, said yesterday, "I think anybody like me or my wife who has profited enormously from a college education owed a debt of gratitude to the school from which he graduated."
STEVENSON
Compiled from United Press International reports.
STERLING HEIGHTS, MICH. — Democratic vice president. School football jersey. She made a campaign stop yesterday tial candidate Geraldine Ferraro puts on a Stevenson High at the Detroit-area school.
Mondale rips the 'new Reagan'
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Walter Mondale, escalating his attacks on President Reagan, said yesterday the "new Reagan" is making overtures to the Kremlin in a cynical political move that shows "condescension toward our people."
"We all welcome the soothing new tone." Mondale said of the president's conciliatory speech toward the Soviets Monday at the United Nations.
"Gone is the talk of nuclear warning shots. Gone is the winnable nuclear war. Gone is the evil empire." Mondale said. "After four years of sounding like Ronald Reagan, six weeks before the election he's trying to sound like Walter Mondale."
audience at George Washington University, the Democratic challenger said: "The new Reagan supports economic aid to the developing world. The old Reagan slashed it."
In prepared remarks for a student
Mondale repeated the theme, reminiscent of the Democratic "new Nixon" slogan against Richard Nixon, saying: "The new Reagan calls for peace in Central America. The old Reagan launched an illegal war in Nicaragua."
Reagan spent the day in Washington, giving a speech to international financial and trade officials and meeting at the White House with Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney.
He told reporters he met with Richard Nixon in New York on Monday to discuss Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. Reagan is to meet with Gromyko for the first
time friday, Nixon met with the Soviet leader many times during his presidency.
Vice President George Bush, campaigning in Chicago, said he does not believe the public is interested in seeing his income tax returns. He has not revealed them on grounds his assets are in a blind trust.
"I went further than any person in public life into a trust so blind that I am prohibited under the law from revealing" the returns, Bush said. An aide, however, said the information could be disclosed but that it would cost Bush $10,000 to $15,000.
Meanwhile, Mondale's running mate, Geraldine Ferraro, stumped for the Democratic ticket in the Detroit area, telling voters at the hub of the nation's auto industry that Reagan's handling of the economy "is sending our jobs overseas."
Soviet mood seems softer official says
By United Press International
UNITED NATIONS — On the eve of the first high-level U.S. and Soviet meeting in nine months, allied foreign ministers told Secretary of State George Shultz yesterday they sensed a softening of tone and attitude from the Kremlin.
The impression was received by a senior State Department official who sat in on meetings yesterday between Shultz and foreign ministers of West Germany, France, Britain and Japan.
"In general there is feeling that, although there is no substantive change in the Soviet position, the mood and atmosphere is a little different to the part of the Russians," the official said.
In Moscow, the Soviet Union yesterday sharply criticized Reagan's speech to the United Nations as an election year play and President Konstantin Chernenko said the United States failed to grasp the need for normal relations with the Kremlin.
Reagan, at Monday's opening of the General Assembly, called for constructive negotiations with Moscow, a call dismissed by the official news agency Tass as "a vessel with nothing inside of it."
Shultz will meet today with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyky.
The U.S. official minimized the significance of the initial negative reactions from Soviet officials to President Reagan's speech Monday to the Assembly, in which he called for a new constructive dialogue between the superpowers.
The official said it was not clear that the Soviet statements, including Chernenko's speech, were in response to Reagan's remarks, but they may have been prepared long in advance.
Chernenko, who turned 73 on Monday, made his comments during a nationally-televised speech to the Soviet Writers' Union.
Eastern European sources said that they have been told by Soviet diplomats at the United Nations that while Reagan's milder rhetoric was noted, the speech was faulty because Reagan did not say Washington and Moscow face each other as equals, with equal security needs.
Gromyko is to address the U.N. General Assembly tomorrow and meet in Washington on Friday with Reagan and Shultz.
Task FORCE '84
VOTER REGISTRATION DRIVE
DID YOU KNOW—
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8
September 26, 1984 Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Gay leaders say critics are more vocal
Final enrollment figures for this semester will be released sometime today, Marla Gleason, assistant director of public issues of university relations, said yester-
The figures will be reported to the Board of Regents, and the Kansas Legislature will use them to determine financing for the University of Kansas.
Study abroad forum tomorrow
The department of educational services calculates the enrollment figures from the number of students enrolled at the University on the 20th day of classes, which was Monday.
The office of study abroad will have an informational meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The meeting's topics include guidelines on applications for overseas study programs, financial aid and scholarships. Exchange students and study abroad alumni will be available to discuss the programs.
The meeting is open to the public
Alumni, Chiefs offer KU day
The Kansas City Chiefs - San Diego Chargers football game Oct. 14 is the first University of Kansas Day at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo.
The University of Kansas Alumni Association, in cooperation with the Chiefs, are offering alumni and students a reduced price on reserved tickets, $12 for adults and $6 for children under 18.
The KU marching band will perform before the game and during halftime. A tailgate party will start at 10:30 a.m. Beverages will be served compliments of Stroh's beer.
The College Young Democrats and the Association of University Residence Halls are sponsoring a voter registration drive at residence halls this week.
Indian prof to speak on unity
The groups will be registering voters at Joseph R. Pearson, McCollum, Ellsworth and Naishtmalls today and tomorrow
The Sacred Order of Universal Love will meet at 5 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union, Anima Bose, professor of Gandhian studies at the Indian Council of Historical Research in New Delhi, India, will speak.
Photographer to give lecture
Andrew Purseil, acting secretary of the group, said Bose's topic, "Lighting Small Fires," refers to a discussion of obstacles to unity, harmony and peace within each person and among all people.
A photographer whose work is on display at the Kansas City Art Institute will speak at 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
Jo Ann Verberg will speak about her unusual large-scale portrait photography, which is on display now through Oct. 13 at the art institute.
the art museum One sample of her work is on display in the fourth floor lounge of the Spencer museum.
Weather
Today will be increasingly cloudy and the high temperature will be around 60 Winds of 10 to 15 mph will be from the east Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of rain The low temperature will be between 45 and 50 Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy and there will be a 30 percent chance of rain The high will be in the iow to mid-60s
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
Clarification
In a story in yesterday's Kansan, Phil Poulos, legal secretary for Columbia Pictures' office in Burbank, Calif., said that it would be illegal for the local sellers of anti-homosexual T-shirts to use the copyrighted logo from Columbia's popular movie "Ghostbusters." Poulos said yesterday that he did not imply a threat of legal action by Columbia.
Rv JOHN HANNA
Staff Reporter
"F灰帽sters" T shirts, which have appeared recently on campus, show that strong critics of a homosexual lifestyle are becoming more vocal, a professor and members of a campus and a national gay group said yesterday.
But those same people do not agree the shirts show that students at the University of Kansas and other schools are less tolerant of homosexuals than they were a few years ago.
Michael Storms, professor of psychology, said the shirts indicated that the campus was becoming more liberal because those with conservative views needed extreme measures, such as the shirts, to get their ideas across.
STORMS IS ON LEAVE in Los Angeles, but he said he had heard of the shirts through a letter that he received last week from a friend.
"As soon as I heard about the T-shirts, the first question I asked was, 'Why do people, why do some small groups feel they have to put out so much energy and so personal time to make this point?' " he said.
time to make this piece.
The T-shirts feature a ghost trapped by a red circle with a bar through it. The ghost has a limp wrist, an earring and long eyelashes. The word "Faghusters" appears above the picture.
Steve Imber, Lawrence senior, on Monday sold a shirt to a University Dailies Kansan staff member who neither stated nor denied his affiliation with the Kansan.
Storms also is gay.
IMBER ALSO IS THE author of a petition calling for an election to determine whether Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will receive Student Senate money in the future. The Senate Elections Committee will discuss the petition tomorrow.
Imber has said he considers Senate financing of GLOSK a financial, not moral, issue. He did not return six telephone calls yesterday afternoon and evening.
Jonathan Dum-Rankin, president of the Gay Academic Union, said the T-shirts were
an indication that KU and other schools were becoming more conservative.
The Gay Academic Union, based in San Diego, is a national group composed mostly of university students, faculty and staff.
Dunn-Rankin said the nation as a whole had become more conservative since President Reagan's election in 1980.
HE EQUATED THE shirts with the heckling of Rep. Geraldine Ferraro, Democratic candidate for vice president, at recent campaign stops.
"This kind of behavior is tolerated in this kind of time," he said. "It's trightening."
Members of GLSOK had been investigating the sale of the shirts, but they dropped the investigation yesterday, said Ruth Lichtwardt, the group's president.
Lichtwardt said the shirts did not prove that campus attitudes toward homosexuals had changed, just that critics of gay lifestyles had become louder.
noblecombo hosts:
"There's more outspokenness on both sides," she said. "Both attitudes have probably always been here. Unfortunately
it's the ones who are against us that get most of the attention."
STORMS SAD THE fact that more homosexuals have come out of the closet in the last few years than in past decades had liberalized attitudes on college campuses and in society in general. He also attribution some liberalization to the sexual revolution of the late 1960s and early 1970s.
The liberal attitudes led to more homosexuals come out of the closet, he said.
"It's a chicken and egg kind of thing," he said.
rut Dunn-Rankin said the increase in the number of homosexuals coming out of the closet helped make attitudes on campuses and in the nation more conservative.
"Our attempt to let people know we're here has come to be very exasperating to some people." he said.
Dunn Rank also said those who wore the shirts说 "Fagbusters" as a joke.
san is said. "A society that tolerates that kind of joke is a society that is becoming insensitive," he said.
Steven Purcell
Andrew Conteh, a visiting professor of political science from Sierra Leone, West Africa, is a former diplomat who spent 5% years in the Soviet Union. Conteh, who spoke yesterday
at a brown bag lecture on the qualities of a modern diplomat, said the duties of an ambassador could be broken down into three parts: representation, negotiation and reporting.
Soviet diplomats weak,prof says
Staff Reporter
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ
Soviet diplomats are powerless to negotiate, and working with them often demands a lot of patience, a former ambassador to the Soviet Union said yesterday.
Andrew Conch, visiting professor of political science, spent $10 years in the Soviet Union as ambassador for the Republic of Sierra Leone, West Africa At the College Honors Program's brown bag lecture yesterday. Conch offered qualities of an ideal modern diplomat, reliving his experience negotiating with the Soviets.
"Soviet diplomats seek negotiation as trying to do in one's enemy," he said. "They view it as a method to achieve a gain, not as a method to adjust differences."
PATIENCE WAS ONE of the qualities Conteh listed as important for diplomats, especially when dealing with Soviet diplomats.
causes negotiations to sometimes go on for a very long time."
Soviet diplomats are given limited authority by their government and are allowed to present only what they have been instructed to say, Conteh said.
"They execute instructions in the strictest sense of the word, because they are aware of the weakness of their positions," he said.
"Soviet diplomats are only mechanical mouthpieces for views that are formulated from above," he said. "They do not respond until they are told how to respond and this
CONTEN WILL BE at the University of Kansas for one year in connection with a program designed to help the United States understand Soviet international relations.
William C. Fletcher, director of Soviet and Eastern European studies, said, "This is an experimental program we developed at KU in order to address the national need to study Soviet international policies."
Three other professors will be at KU for one year with the program: Sun Lung-Kee, an expert in Soviet-East Asian relations; William Richardson, an expert in Soviet Latin American relations, and Leon Zamose, a specialist in international development
to study science更加重要.
"There is the growing realization that we really don't understand the U.S.S.R. that much."
appointment to research and teach about the Soviet Union and world affairs. The program is financed by KU and the U.S. Department of Education Title VI program for international education. Fletcher said
we've received national attention for this innovation." Fletcher said. "They are waiting to see what we produce This is a pilot project, and as far as I know there is no comparable program in the United States."
THE INSTRUCTORS ARE here on an
Coach is also the former Sierra Leone deputy high commissioner to the United Kingdom and former ambassador to East Africa. He is a Czechoslovakia, Poland and Romania.
As an ambassador, Conch said he found that people had varying views about his job.
"TOURISTS VIEW AMBASSADORS as people to help them when they lose their wallets," he said. "Businessmen view them as people to promote their business interests, and politicians view them for free board and lodging.
body and logistics.
"In actuality, a modern diplomat is much more than this. The duties of today's ambassadors can be broken down into three parts: representation, negotiation and reporting."
Student Senate seeks new sites for its meetings
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
The Student Senate will begin conducting its weekly meetings at different locations on campus in an attempt to make student government more accessible, Dennis "Boog" Highberger, student body vice president, said yesterday.
"It's good to take the meeting to where students are." Highberger said. "And I think it's good for senators to get a chance to see places on campas that they might not have seen before."
The Senate usually meets in the Kansas Union, but on Oct. 10 it will part with that custom when it meets in the Apollo Room of Nichols Hall on West Campus.
Nelson will be in the Big Eight Room of the Union. The locations for other Senate meetings have not been chosen yet.
So I'll think of places that would be good and
if they are available "Hübberger said.
see if they are available" Highberger said. The Senate tonight will consider election reform recommendations for Senate elections. Highberger said.
The proposed reforms were recommended by the Senate Ethics and Standards Committee, a temporary committee set up last semester by the Student Senate Executive Committee chairman.
Committee chain
The reforms include stricter rules for write-in candidates, new rules for independent candidates, and stricter rules for the Senate Elections Committee, which runs the elections.
The Senate will also consider a resolution that calls for specific fines for campaign violations and for an investigation of computer polling.
Another item scheduled for discussion is a resolution by the Senate Affairs Committee asking the Board of Regents and the Kansas Legislature to provide funds to shut down KU's nuclear reactor.
The Senate University Affairs Committee on Sept. 18 unanimously approved the resolution. University officials last week said shutting down the reactor could cost from $500,000 to $1 million.
A resolution calling for an end to the Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in companies that do business with South Africa also will be discussed
"I suppose some people would say that it is not a student issue but I think that it is." Highberger said.
The Senate also will discuss the Nigerian Students Association's request for $240.
The Nigerian Students Association originally asked for $630, but the Finance Committee recommended that the full Senate give the group $240 for advertising, supplies and expenses.
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September 26, 1984
Page 4
OPINION
KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University of Dayton, KANSAS - UPS 60044 is published at the University of Kansas. Staunfer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan 60049, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer period, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan 60044 Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $8 a year in Duplin County and $10 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student books and posters are $2 and are paid through the student's account and address changes to the student's information. Staunfer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan 60044
DON KNOX
Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE BESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
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LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager
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More reforms
Students go to the polls about a month and a half from now to select the 16th Student Senate, but already the process promises to run much more smoothly than last year's.
The elections of a year ago resulted in two recounts appeals to the University Judiciary and the invalidation of the election. To prevent that from happening again, election reforms that will go before the Senate tonight will tighten the rules governing candidates, coalitions and the Elections Committee.
Unfinished business remains, however. Important areas for examination are the voting procedure, the location of polling places and the hours of voting. Are ballot boxes secure enough to prevent tampering? How many polling places should there be, and should they be restricted to campus?
As it now stands, the hours, location and process of voting are up to the Elections Committee. At various times during the last several years the authority has been under investigation.
This Senate administration is trying to amend the rules so that the Elections Committee is above bias, and the proposed changes in the committee should help. But the fewer the unnecessary variables in the elections, the less the likelihood for abuse.
The Senate may have a difficult time coming up with a consensus on locations and times, and a better balloting method may be even harder to devise. But no issue is more important for the Senate to deal with than elections.
When Geraldine Ferraro became a vice presidential candidate, an Italian friend of mine said, "I wonder how long it will take to connect her to the Mafia." I laughed. He said, "You watch. It'll happen."
Stories hardly make Gerry godmother
He was right. Ferraro spent 48 years of hard work to achieve her exemplary success. Snopers spent less than two months since her nomination to try to connect her to organized crime.
In this case, the snopers were from the Wall Street Journal, which is better at some stories than others. Playing the game of mob connections is obviously not one of its strengths.
the Journal recently published a mob-conNECTION story that — when it was boiled down — presented one of the filestammed connections I ever
Did Ferraro herself have the connection? That, of course, would be the ideal mob-connection story. Ferraro a gang moll? Ferraro cooking meatballs for the mob? No, it wasn't her.
Then could it have been her father or mother? No. Her father was just a hard working guy who died when she was a kid. We all know the story about how her mother struggled to pay for Ferraro's education.
No. If he has a nickname, it is probably "The Husband."
All right, then, was it her husband,
John Zaccaro, a wealthy real estate
man? Does he have a secret gang
nickname — "The Landlord"
The mob connection — if one exists
— goes wav back to Phillin Zaccaro.
[Name]
MIKE
ROYKO
Syndicated Columnist
John's father, who has been dead since 1971.
And what did Phillip do? A button man? A soldier? A consigliari? Maybe even the "capo di tutti capi"? (Hey, the Journal reporters aren't the only ones who saw the Godfather movies.)
Old Philip wasn't quite that glamorous.
Sometimes before 1957, Philip, who was in the real estate business in New York, provided a character reference for somebody who was
Now, that might seem spicy to the Journal snopers, but what isn't clear is how it involves Ferraro. She didn't even know her future father-in-law then, because she didn't marry John until 1960.
considered a mob figure.
Ah, but there is more. It also turns out that the long-dead Philip Zacarec once rented an apartment in one of his buildings to a mob figure.
Frankly, I don't find that shocking. I didn't know that it was a big deal to lease a flat to one of them. Especially when plug up on time and don't plug up the toilet.
A much livelier mob-connection story would have said that Philip's son, John, had continued to rent the apartment to the mob figure when he inherited the real estate business which says "Gerry's husband mob landlord."
But he didn't. One of the first things he did after his father's death was to sell that building.
So, there you have the big Ferraro mob connection, as dug up by one of the country's biggest newspapers: The late Phil Zaccaro wrote a character reference for a mob guy several years before Ferraro even met Phil's son. And the late Phil Zaccaro once rented an apartment to
a mob guy — but his son didn't, and Ferraro didn't.
I'm not impressed, especially because I have better mob connections than that myself.
19ears ago I had a neighbor who did chores for Sam Giancana, though I didn't know it at the time. We and our wives used to play canasta. When they had rough times financially, I was worried that they would have a month's rent. That would make a terrific headline: "Chicago newsman bankrolls mobster."
My father once owned a combination tavern-bookie joint, so he knew a few wugs himself. He even used to go to the Kentucky Derby with Big Mike, one of the top syndicate bookies on Cermak Road in Chicago, and Big Mike once gave me a baseball bat as a birthday gift. Another good headline: "Newsman goes to bat for mobster."
Finally, one of my relatives is married to a woman who has a relative who is about a third cousin of the late Carlo Gambino, the big New York gangster. I wonder whether that makes me an 11th cousin of Gambino. If so, can I have people dropped in sewers?
Thurmond joins elite Senate group
If so, I might start with a few of the editors at the Wall Street Journal.
WASHINGTON — South Carolina's Strom Thurmond is the newest member of one of the Senate's most elite clubs.
Thurmond, an 81-year-old Republican who is seeking still another term, recently cast vote No. 10,000 in Congress.
Now that is not as exciting as Reggie Jackson's becoming only the 13th player in baseball history to hit 500 home runs.
Nor does it have the appeal of the chase by Chicago's Walter Payton and Seattle's Franco Harris for Jim Brown's assistant professional foot
In the sedate environs of the Senate, however, where a sellout rarely occurs and vocal chords are the most exercised part of the body, what Thurmond has done is highly thought of.
STEVE GERSTEL
At least Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd thinks so, having paused in his labors long enough to compliment Thurmond on his achievement in a floor speech.
Byrd, who doubles as Senate historian, also had in hand, as would
United Press International
The record-holder is the late Sen.
What the numbers showed is that only seven senators have cast 10,000 votes and three of them — including Byrd — had a head start by doing some work in the House before being across the Capitol to the Senate chamber.
any fanatic, the proper statistics for such a notable event
Henry Jackson of Washington state, whose career began in the House in 1941 and ended with his death a little more than a year ago. He cast 11,059 votes, 10,063 of which were in the Senate.
The two other double dipiers are the West Virginians, Sen. Jennings Randolph and Byrd, who have served in the U.S. Army as 10,547 votes and Randolph, 10,695
Randolph, who is retiring after this year, has no chance of amassing 10,000 Senate votes — he is 355 short and the session is soon to end. Byrd, who served far fewer years in the House, is up to 10,159 votes
for the statistical pursits, who might disdain a mixture of Senate and House votes, the undisputed leader is Sen. William Proxmire of Wisconsin, who is past 10,54, seem extremely fit and is in his 60s.
He is followed by Sen. John Stennis of Mississippi, 10,399, and Sen. Russell Long of Louisiana, 10,559
For historians looking for the names of vintage senators from the past on the honor roll — none are to be found.
As seems once pointed out, the first year he was in the Senate, 1947. 73 recorded roll call votes were taken.
"A year or two ago, the record shows that we had 720 roll call votes, 10 times as many." Stennis said.
the key to success seems to be longevity and Election Day survival. Thurmond, Randolph and Stennis are all in their 80s.
Stennis, who came to the Senate in 1947, is the dean of the group Proxmire, who has a slavish devotion to roll calls, is a relative rookie who arrived on the scene in 1957.
Reagan and his record Policies aimed in right direction President hides behind hypocrisy
When Ronald Reagan was elected president, my democratic friends thought that doomsday was just around the corner. They professed that a Reagan presidency would lead to everything from economic calamity and World War III to dogs and cats living together.
Then I was told that an economic recovery under Reagan would "never happen" It did "It won't last. It has." It would have come no matter who was president. "Now the matter that the recovery is only an illusion."
We are headed in the right direction. Unemployment is now slightly lower than it was in 1979. Interest rates are still high, but at least affordable.
One cannot attribute this to Reagan, but it's nice to have a leader who displays a genuine pride in America. The country is back at work, and a positive outlook by the president can spur us all on.
The most obvious improvement in the U.S. economy is the dramatic decrease in the inflation rate. In 1974, average retail prices were skyrocketing at a double-digit pace. Nothing can be more beneficial to the average American than a decrease in the inflation rate. Inflation is now less than 3 percent. This is an illusion I can live with.
Make no mistake about it; we are in the midst of a long-lasting economic upswing, which can be strongly tied to tax decreases initiated by Reagan. These tax savings have increased demand for U.S. business.
The opponents of Reagan have a solution to the federal deficit: raise taxes. I'll agree that this will erase the federal deficit, but it also will lead to higher inflation and interest rates.
Instead, the real culprit is waste, from social programs to defense. The bipartisan Grace Commission report outlines thousands of areas in our government in which money could be saved. The federal government could save $200 billion a year by cutting waste.
year by casting them in the role Instead of raising our taxes, Reagan is ready to follow the report.
The federal deficit has now approached $200 billion, but if we look closely,we really cannot blame a decrease in taxes.
rates.
When will this hurt the most? Infatuation and high interest rates cost the rich a more pitiless of their wealth. A sake a wage earner making $15,000 a year what 14 percent inflation and a 20 percent interest rate does for him, and I'm sure he will tell you it hurts.
Besides, more money for Congress to spend only opens up a breeding ground for mismanagement and future tax increases
An area in which Reagan has been heavily criticized is his foreign policy, but to a large extent, this criticism is unjustified. To say that the president has dramatically increased the defense budget, for example, is a total fallacy.
Until the late 1960s, the portion of the federal budget allocated to defense was consistently more than
him, but maybe that's because we know where he stands.
I will never contend that Reagan is a pamaca to all our nation's problems, but he is steering this nation in the right direction with a bold, clear program that focuses attention on the proper role of government and its control of our society to stay the course, let's build on it.
This president, who continually screams "Less government," is the same man who supports several proposed constitutional amendments, he has never hesitated to involve the government as much as possible in order to achieve his personal goals.
Thomas Stalnaker, Lawrence junior, is chairman of KU College Republicans.
Ronald Reagan, the "Great Communicator" The "Great Hypo- prite" would be a much more fitting title, for hypoherisy runs rampant through this administration.
PETER WESTON
THOMAS
STALNAKER
Guest Columnist
40 percent. However, by 1980 defense was allocated only 22 percent of the budget. This percentage has risen to 29 percent.
The defense increase during the Reagan administration has been minimal when one considers that defense is one of the few duties specifically outlined for the federal government. But the increase has not happened so much soundness. It's terrible to think of conflict, but we must be ready.
Reagan has been harshly criticized by some who think that he has not tried hard enough to negotiate with the Soviets. Some say they can't blame the Soviets after the leader of the Western world calls them the "evil empire." But really, should he be expected to pat the Soviets on the back for their gassing of entire Afghan towns or their denial of basic human rights to fellow countrymen?
There are many accomplishments of the Reagan presidency we could discuss in detail, such as the appointment of the first woman to the Supreme Court, or the successful liberation of Grenada. But I think that the record on both sides is quite clear.
Reagan has taken a firm stance in dealing with the Soviets because that is the only morally and philosophically correct thing to do. The Soviet government stresses achieving goals any way possible. Only when we have been firm will we be able to retard Soviet goals.
I think that we all have found it is much easier to be negative when it comes to politics. I show much more emotion when Reagan initiates something I oppose. I'm sure we all have our personal differences with
RONALD M. ROBINSON
LON
For example, Reagan supports the recent Title IX ruling by the Supreme Court, which declared that schools that discriminate against women can still receive federal funds, as long as the programs receiving money don't discriminate.
Compare this stance to Reagan's recent proposal that any school that does not allow religious groups to conduct meetings on school premises after regular school hours should have all its federal funds cut
PETER KINGLEY
KIRSTIN
MYERS
Guest
Columnist
off. The contradiction: Schools can discriminate against women, but not against religious groups
Another blatant hypocrisy in the administration concerns abortion Reagan will adamantly defend the rights of the unborn baby, but he cuts its school lunch and education programs.
The president's attitude here is, "We'll see that you get here, but then you're on your own, kid."
Speaking of abortion again, Reagan has announced that U.S. money will to help control world overpopulation will not go to any country that has abortion among its population-control plans. It doesn't matter whether the countries assure him that no U.S. money will pay for abortions, any country that wants help must forbid abortions.
Forget the fact that Reagan's notion that economic development alone can take care of our population growth is ludicrous. Just look at his policy of keeping U.S. dollars in countries that practice horrible human rights abuses in Asia and Latin America, full grown, not fattened. Obviously Reagan doesn't mind giving money to dictatorships, as long as they don't allow abortion.
Reagan's plans for youth employment are equally disturbing His excuse for pushing for a subminimum teenage wage is that we need to increase employment. Of course, Reagan is forgetting that many teens need money to help support their families, not just for "pocket money." A cut in wages would hurt many disadvantaged kids, as well as those adults who would be replaced.
Let's assume for a moment, however, that the benefits of in
creased employment with a sub-minimum wage outweigh the costs. We still see that Reagan's next idea
we still see that Reagan's next idea — to lower the national legal work age to 14 — would counter any improvements, because the work force would then be expanded. (Reagan says that all 14-year-olds should have the chance to learn the lessons he learned when he tiled roofs at that tender age.)
If Reagan's proposals were passed, cheap child labor would be readily available, as it was in the 1800s. What better way to undermine the unions, which is the president's real motive?
Another area in which Reagan's actions speak much louder than his words is that of civil rights and desegregation. Reagan insists, for example, that he's against only forced desegregation.
Why, then, is the administration being sued for failing to fulfill an agreement the Carter administration made with the Chicago school district, which says federal funds will help pay for voluntary desegregation in schools? The money has simply not given the rest of the money that had been agreed on.
In addition, Reagan vetoed a bill that called for additional money to Chicago chug its plan. Reagan would support it with anything but words.
Just what has Reagan done for education, which he says is on its way back to excellence, thanks to him? Well, aside from his big push for prayer in schools, which would cause more harm than good, Reagan has been making very anti-education moves.
First, he has already dismantled the Department of Education and pledges to abolish it. He Reagan also supports tuition tax credits for private schools, which would do serious damage to education; he wants to give tax exemptions to segregated schools that are now refused federal aid
Finally, the best indication of what Reagan has done to education is that the National Education Association has endorsed Walter Mondale.
How long are we going to accept empty words from a president who doesn't feel obligated to follow with action? Talk is cheap and I resent Reagan's assumption that I'm easily swayed.
Kirstin Buterbaugh Myers, Shawnee sophomore, is president of College Young Democrats. The views expressed do not necessarily represent those of the organization.
187
University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1984
Page 5
Naismith
continued from p.1
members lived at Oliver, she said. The team was living at Naismith to try something new, not because there were problems at Oliver
Naismith is a little more expensive than Oliver and the Towers are, Washington said, but there was more scholarship money for the team this year.
May said that because Naismith accepted the women's team on an individual basis, only seven of the members were living at Naismith. Two others had contracted to eat meals but not live at the hall.
Washington said those two athletes were seniors and were living at the Towers. One other scholarship athlete signed on too late to get into the Towers and is living in Oliver. A fourth team member, who is a senior, has special permission to live off campus; Washington said.
continued from p.1
Dust
remove a certain amount of dust from the air, and that amount is determined by weight.
Companies remove big particles from the air to meet the weight requirement, he said, but the dust still gets through.
"There are very expensive, sophisticated pollution devices that would trap more acid dust." Lane said. "But these devices would raise the rates for customers as much as $10 to $15 a month."
HAL HUDSON, DIRECTOR of public affairs for Kansas Power and Light Co. in Topica, said the anti-pollution systems the company used trapped the damaging acid dust.
"We are not anticipating installing any anti-pollution devices because what we have is adequate according to the law and the EPA." Hudson said.
KPL, which serves Lawrence, has $250 million invested in environmental control systems, he said.
"We've tried to keep up with the latest equipment and the best available at that time." Hudson said. "We don't have to redo any of the plants because we still operate within standards."
KPL's Lawrence energy center pioneered the world's first commercially operating wet lime scrubber, an anti-pollution device, Hudson said.
In 1968, KPL added the scrubber system to a coal stack in Lawrence, Hudson said. In 1970, the first Clean Air Act was passed by Congress.
"We already had an anti-pollution device on the plant in Lawrence before the act, in 1968." Hudson said. "We knew it would be unacceptable to the Lawrence community ahead of time."
Disney continued from p. 1
come a long way to see Disneyland," he said "A family from Pakistan stopped to say how bad they felt to go in. They understand labor movements in India. But they had come so far."
DEBORAH RIGGS OF Chicago said her family, including three children, had planned their trip to Disneyland for more than five years.
"My husband's been a union man all his life," she said. "He's back at the motel, mad with me, refusing to come over. But I can't disappoint the kids. I have promised him, though. I'll only come once."
The unions, representing 1,844 of the park's 5,000 winter season employees, have been negotiating a new contract for seven weeks. The first proposal, rejected Sept. 17, would have imposed a three-year wage freeze. The
offer voted down Monday called for a two-year freeze.
"Nobody wanted a strike, especially against Disneyland." Ravenscroft said "But they forced us into a corner. I've worked here and helped make people happy for a long time. I feel very, very sad."
AS PICKETS FORMED at more than a half dozen entrances and exits to the parking lot, a contingency plan readied by management weeks ago fell into place inside the grounds.
"This park will open. It will operate," Disneyland spokesman Joe Aigurre said. "We have 1,400 non-union personnel at our disposal from this park They're office, clerical and supervisory personnel."
Park officials also said they might bring in workers from Disneyworld in Florida for a long-term strike.
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For you and for the world. Peace Corps will combine your education with training to prepare you for a volunteer position in: Education • Fisheries • Health • Agriculture • Forestry or other areas. You'll meet new people, learn a new language, experience a new culture and gain a whole new outlook. And while you're building your future, you'll be helping people in developing countries learn the basics of technological advancement.
We are now filling openings for programs that begin in the Spring of '85 Peace Corps Reps. on Campus: Thurs. & Fri., Oct 4 & 5 Placement Office, Carruth-O'Leary Sign up now for an interview
The toughest job you'll ever love
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-
University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Grad shares experience in Peace Corps
By MARY CARTER Staff Reporter
Page 6
For two years, Susan Collins used her rural Midwestern experiences to teach the people of a small West African country how to raise rabbits and gardens.
As a Peace Corps volunteer from 1982 to 1984, Collins, a 1981 KU graduate lived in Tonga, a country in southwest Virginia, on the West African coast.
"I had never been out of the United States," she said yesterday. "I wanted to live in another culture. And I felt working in a developing country would be a good experience."
COLLINS AND TWO other Peace
Corps recruiters will be at the University of Kansas next week to talk with students about oppor-tations and work in developing nations
Collins' work with the Peace Corps first took her to a village of about 300 people where she helped to establish agricultural education programs in primary schools and community agriculture projects.
"The second year, I lived in a bigger village with about 2,000 people," she said with a smile. "I had electricity and running water there."
Tom Lassiter, a Peace Corps recruiter, said agriculture was only one area of assistance the Peace Corps provided to developing coun-
categories that are most- needed. he said, "Forestry, math, science and special education are a few. People with foreign language skills, particularly French and Spanish, are needed. And engineers are hard to come by, but their expertise is needed overseas."
"There are some 50-plus skill
A free film, "The Toughest Job You'll Ever Love," will be shown at 4:30 p.m. on Oct 1 in 405 Wescue. Answer and question session will
COLLINS, LASSISTER AND ROY Baughman, a former Peace Corps volunteer who served in Liberia and the Fiji islands, will have an information table on the third floor of the Kansas Union next week.
Interviews will be conducted Oct. 4
and 5 in the University Placement Center in room 223 Carruth-O'Leary Hall and in the engineering library
Lassiter said, "This is one interview that they don't have to have a resume for. It's more an information interview."
ALTHOUGH COLLINS, WHO has a bachelor's degree in social work, spent 12 weeks in training before she began Peace Corps work, she said she drew on knowledge she already possessed.
She used the French she had learned in junior high and high school to communicate, and she used personal experiences with raising rabbits and gardening to organize animal and garden projects in her village.
THE CENTER OF LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES, will sponsor a brown bag lunch at noon in 109 Lippincott Hall. Charles Stanier, director of the center, will present "Cuba: A Personal Account."
THE BIOCHEMISTRY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in 610 Haworth Hall.
PIZZA
Shoppe
842-0600
6th and Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
WE DELIVER!
PIZZA BATTER WITH 10% FRONTAGE
$1.00 OFF KING SIZE
PIZZA
50¢ OFF QUEEN SIZE
PIZZA
50¢ OFF PRINCE SIZE
PIZZA
Not valid with other specials. One Coupon Per Pizza
CLIP & SAVE! Expires 10-31-84
ON CAMPUS
THE SACRED ORDER OF UNIVERSAL LOVE, will meet at 5:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of
TODAY
the Kansas Union.
Anne Klein Collections Dooney-Bourke Handbags Jourdane Eelskin Handbags Michael Green Handbags North Country Purses Stone Mountain Purses
TOMORROW
THE SUA DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
SMALL WORLD will meet at 9:15 a.m. at the First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd St.
Secrest Leather
914 Massachusetts
LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will have a rice and beans dinner at 6 p.m. at Ecumenical Ministry Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
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
842-6046
Students and Faculty make the difference at
Nabil's Restaurant
Nabil's
KU students get a 10% discount on Sunday nights with KUID.
9th & Iowa Open 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
Hillcrest Shopping Center 5 p.m.-10 p.m.
For parties of five (5) or more,
please call for reservations, 841-7226.
It Could Only Happen at
THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO
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Use Kansan Classified.
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PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT. 26-OCT. 2
IGA
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VEGETABLES
IGA
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IGA VEGETABLES $15\frac{1}{2}$ to 17 oz. cans
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Hormel
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Blue Lake Cut Green Beans 15½ oz
French Style Green Beans 15½ oz
NSA Cut Green Beans 15½ oz.
Whole Kernel Corn 17 oz.
Cream Style Corn 17 oz.
NSA Whole Kernel Corn 17 oz.
Sweet Peas 16 oz.
Early June Peas 16 oz.
NSA Sweet Peas 17 oz
Cut Beets 16 oz.
Hormel
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$ 15 \frac{1}{2} $ to 17 oz. canS NSlice Carrots 16 oz Mixed vegetables 16 oz.
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With purchase of one 1 LB. pkg.of regular Hormel Wranglers at
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59
16 oz. can
Coke
diet Coke diet Coke diet Coke (Coke)
Minute Maid
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LIMIT 2 DOZEN WITH $10.00 or more in other purchases.
BLUE BONNET
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RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
NO. 2
— DOUBLE C
makes beautifully crafted cushions and
gifts with delicate trim from knots,
fills pillows, and hangs on curtain rods.
Suitable for bed, office, lounge, and floor.
Made to fit various shapes. Free shipping
to U.S. orders over $750. Includes free
shipping and free postage.
Limited stock per manufacturer.
Expires OCT. 3, 1984
EXPIRES OCT. 3, 1984
DOZEN 49
ZARDA 24 OZ.
CTN.
COTTAGE
CHEESE
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16 OZ. CTN. 99.
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IGA BATHROOM
TISSUE 4 ROLL PKG.
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98
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— DOUBLE C
mint condition, centre stitched, compliant to the same rules from Rusty's.
Designed by Roberts and filled with brown linen, cotton and flax.
Also includes two free cushions greater than one inch in size or a single large free cushion greater than one inch in size.
Expires Oct 3, 1984
69
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
270
COUPON —
Amf Init
RUSIT'S RUSTY'S P
NO. 2
— DOUBLE C
mammals that cannot cope with the heavy rain from Typhoon Haiyang and fall into debris, and find their homes in rocks. They include reptiles, the coyote species that can bite or eat you, and a dog and a raccoon are mammals that cannot cope with the heavy rain from Typhoon Haiyang and fall into debris, and find their homes in rocks. They include reptiles, the coyote species that can bite or吃你,和狗和一只猿都是哺乳动物。
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
270
COUPON —
Amt Intl
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
NO. 2
— DOUBLE C
Mr. Rusty's costs off coupon rates
to insure a car. Offer does not include coupon
fees, insurance and final payment.
No to include rebates for coupon fees.
One coupon fee per insured car.
One coupon fee per insured vehicle.
EXPIRES OCT. 3, 1984
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
NO. 270
DOUBLE COUPON
Amt Intl
Manufacturer cuts off coupon and
cuts the savings from Rocky's
manufacturer and returns it to the
manufacturer. Indicates food and drink
item.
No exclusive retail, free coupons,
companies guarantee that sale does not be
keen one coupon per manufacturer for
the same item.
EXPIRES OCT. 3, 1984
Amt Intl
18
University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1984
Page 2
CAMPUS AND AREA
New sewage plan approved
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
A program that may save the city more than $400,000 on water and sewage bond payments was approved last night by the Lawrence City Commission.
Stern Brothers & Co., a Kansas City, Mo., investment company, proposed a plan which involves issuing new bonds, investing them and receiving returns at the going market rate, said Jack Holland, a vice-president of the company.
This money would then be used to offset payments on the old bonds, Holland said.
Houlihan said,
"It's pretty hard to turn down a $400,000 savings," said Lawrence Mavor Ernest Angino.
THE ACTION LAST night allow City Manager Buford Watson to sign a letter of agreement to proceed with Stern Brothers in preparing the program.
In other action, the commission adopted a change in Lawrence's sign ordinance concerning the issuance of temporary sign permits. This change was brought up at last week's commission study session.
commission. The amendment says that a business may obtain a 30-day permit only once a year. Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager, said the old ordinance had not been restrictive enough.
"In the past, a business could get 30-day permits 12 times a year," he said.
said.
THE COMMISSION ALSO accepted a revised edition of the 1982 Uniform Fire Code for Lawrence. Jim McSain, Lawrence fire chief, said one of the main changes in the code was a requirement for permits for heating devices such as wood-burning stoves.
Commissioner Nancy Shontz said she was concerned about Lawrence residents being made aware of the new requirements. McSain said he had plans for distributing materials to inform people.
"The main problem is with installations that are not done properly." McSwain said. "In six years, I haven't seen a failure in a properly installed fireplace."
fireplace. The commission also acknowledged receiving a letter from Sunflower Cablevision President Dave Clark concerning impending changes in rates.
THE CHANGES INVOLVE compiling what has been called basic and extended service, providing basic service with eight more channels at a $2.40 increase in their monthly bills. Customers already carrying extended service will see a drop in their bill from $11 to $10.40.
their bill request.
Clark said the change was prompted by recent changes in Federal Communications Commission standards, and by the advent of "cable-ready" televisions. Cable-ready televisions are able to pick up extended service without a subscription, he said.
Local utility agrees to sell
By the Kansan Staff
An agreement to sell the Kansas Public Service Co. to a Raytown, Mo., utility company was signed Monday, the president of KPS said yesterday.
Bill Salome, the president, said the sale of the gas company to the Missouri Public Service Co. was the decision of KPS owners.
He said the sale would not change the operation of the privately owned Lawrence utility.
LAWRENCE UNITY.
"From what the Missouri Public Service Co. says, they're going to keep all the employees on that were there, and they're going to operate just as before." Salome said.
The sale of KPS to the Missouri Public Service Co. must be approved by the Lawrence City Commission and the Missouri Public Service Commission.
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ADLER 310 The most value-packed mid-size electronic typewriter on the market.
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Midwest Business Systems, Inc.
40
AUTUMN PATIO SALE!
“Clean up on Real Bargains!”
up to 50%
OFF
Clothing,
Giftware,
Art Supplies
Office Supplies
Discontinued
Textbooks
$1.99 each or
6 for $9.99
Paperbacks
½ off cover price
Whitman's
3 oz. candy bars
2 for $1.10
(reg. $2.95)
Old Fashioned
Candy Sticks
15 for $1!
(Reg. 10¢ each)
Now thru Fri., Sept. 28th! Weather Permitting
JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE
We Are Making Great Pizza Affordable! NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH! We Start From Scratch with the Best Pizza in town giving you the Best Price
Pizza At STEPHANIE'S
HILL CREST.
bowling
10WL
2214 YALE
Harvard
10WL
15th
Stratford
University
15th
“We when it comes to pizza Stephanie’s comes to you!”
We choose to use only quality mozzarella cheese which is low in butter fat. We make our own dough fresh. And we throw the dough by hand to keep it soft and to develop the gluten. Our sauce contains a selection of herbs and real Romano cheese which gives our pizzas a special spiciness and flavor.
Our pepperoni is tops...our vegetables are always fresh and cut large enough to taste. All this adds up to quality you wouldn’t expect from a delivered pizza.
Speedy delivery. All deliveries take 30 minutes or less.
Heavy boxes protect and keep your pizza hot.
Tasty, hot and speedily-delivered pizza. How can you resist?
Pizza Hut
"When it comes to pizza Stephanie's comes to you!"
We choose to use only quality mozzarella cheese which is low in butter fat. We make our own dough
fresh. And we throw the dough by hand to keep it soft and to develop the gluten. Our sauce contains a selection of herbs and real Romano cheese which gives our pizzas a special spiciness and flavor.
Our pepperoni is tops...our vegetables are always fresh and cut large enough to taste.
All this adds up to quality you wouldn't expect from a delivered pizza.
Speedy delivery. All deliveries take 30 minutes or less.
Heavy boxes protect and keep your pizza hot.
Tasty, hot and speedily-delivered pizza. How can you resuit?
you
or less
Pizza Al
STEPHANIE'S
WHAT'S
DEAL!
Pizza At STEPHANIES
WHAT A DEAL!
Pizza At Stephanie's
BRING A BUDDY TO LUNCH!
BUY 2 10" CHEESE PIZZAS
FOR ONLY $2.91
Price does not include sales tax.
2214 Yale Rd.
Dine-In Only!
Expires Oct. 5, 1984
Pizza At Stephanie's
BRING A BUDDY
TO LUNCH!
BUY 2 10" CHEESE PIZZAS
FOR ONLY $2.91
Price does not include sales tax
2214 Yale Rd.
Dine-In Only!
Expires Oct. 5, 1984
Pizza At Stephanie's
2 For 1
Order any Small Pizza
& get another of equal value
Starting Price ($Cheese Pizza)
$4.83 FREE!
841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
Price does not include sales tax
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN OUR SERVICE ZONE
Pizza At Stephanie's
2 For 1
Order any Large Pizza
& get another one of equal value
Starting Price ($Cheese Pizza)
$8.21 FREE!
841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
Price does not include sales tax
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN OUR SERVICE ZONE
Pizza At STEPHANIE'S
Pizza At Stephanie's
2 For 1
Order any Small Pizza
& get another of equal value
Starting Price ($Choose Pizza)
$4.83 FREE!
841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
Price does not include sales tax
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN OUR SERVICE ZONE
Pizza At Stephanie's
2 For 1
Order any Large Pizza
& get another one of equal value
Starting Price
(Choose Pizza)
$8.21 FREE!
Price does not include sales tax
841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
FREE DELIVERY
ANYWHERE IN OUR SERVICE ZONE
8
University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA ON THE RECORD
A CONCRETE SAW, blades, and a gas can valued at 8098 were stolen from the Bo Newsman Construction Co., 3812 W. 24th, between 10 a.m. Sept. 18 and 8 a.m. Thursday, Police have no suspects.
A 21-YEAR-OLD LAWRENCE
woman was treated and released
from Lawrence Memorial Hospital
after receiving leg injuries from a
rear-end collision between her moped
and a car, in the 2100 block of
West Ninth Street in front of Rusty's IGA. She ran into the car when it slowed to turn, and she was thrown from the moped but received only minor injuries.
A 10-SPEED BICYCLE valued at $250 was stolen in the 100 block of East Eighth Street between 7 p.m. and 10 p.m., Monday. Police said the bike was rolled or ridden away, but they have no suspects in the theft.
Entry: Thurs., Sept. 28 Deadline: 5 pm Robinson
G. Watson's
Billiards • Beer • Music • Games
FREE POOL 12-4
HAPPY HOUR 4-6
This offer good September 26, 1984 through October 6, 1984
LET'S SQUASH!! Squash tournament
MIRIAM TAYLOR
Want only one pair? Take $25 off the regular price for the glasses you choose (frame and lenses). Second pairs for Bifocal orders $45 more. Trifocals $65 more. Prescriptions may be as high as (plus) or minus) 5.00 dipopters. Higher Rx's are not included in this offer. This ad may not be used in conjunction with any other optical promotion.
When ordering your new pair of reading or distance prescription glasses, get a pair of sunglasses at no extra charge. Choose from our large selection of modern, top quality frames, and add to that your choice of plastic, photochromatic, tinted or glass lenses. You pay for the most expensive pair. The spare can be in any frame priced up to $38, and can have clear glass, or plastic oversized lenses.
2 For 1 Special
This Special does not include Boutique Frames. Some restrictions do apply.
Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6
Thurs. 10-8
Sat. 10-2
Hillcrest Shopping Center
1 8 5
842-5208
OPTICAL CO
742 Mass
HUTTON
LARGEST 18 & OVER
DANCE NIGHTCLUB
IN LAWRENCE
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TONIGHT!!! $1.50 PITCHERS ALL NIGHT LONG!!!
NOW THE MOST POWERFUL BAR SOUND SYSTEM IN LAWRENCE
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FOR ONLY: $1.00 girls w/KUID
$2.00 quys w/KUID
$1.50 PITCHER NIGHT
FEATURING DANCE MUSIC ALL NITE LONG
Specials:
Tonight Doors open at 7:30 p.m.
Mon. Quarter Pitcher Nite 25¢ pitchers all nite long
Tues. College ID Nite everybody in free w/KUID
Wed. $1.50 pitchers all pite long
THE ALL NEW PLADIUM
901 Mississippi St.
Lawrence, KS
841-4600
Specials:
Thurs. LADIES NITE
Fri. TGIF free beer all nite
Sat. PARTY! PARTY!
PARTY!
$1.50 Pitchers
'till 8:30.
Safety Hints from your gas company. If you detect an odor you think may be natural gas-
MISSING DATE
OFF
(1) Open windows and doors to dilute the air to a safe level.
(2) Call for aid or advice from the gas company or fire department or police department.
(3) if the adobe appears to be very strong leave the house or business immediately. Go to a telephone and notify the gas company—do not turn on any electrical appliances, including light switches.
(4) When the problem is solved, have a qualified person from the gas company, plumbing or climate control firms relight appliances.
(5) In the event a leak is detected anywhere outside of a building notify the gas company immediately and describe the location and approximate level of the odor — a quick check of the area will be made to determine the problem and corrective action needed.
If you have any questions please contact our office.
CALL 843-7842
KANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE
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110 E. 9th
WIN
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Entry Blanks
Available At
Dillon Pharmacy
17th & Massachusetts
DILLON'S PHARMACY
18
CAMPUS AND AREA
Professor awarded $50,000
By the Kansan Staff
Page 9
A University of Kansas Medical Center physician received a $50,000 award for his research on rats that use light can cause damage to the retina.
Werner Noell, a physician and professor of ophthalmology, was awarded a $49,000 grant for his continuing research plus a $1,000 personal honorarium from the Retina Research Foundation.
The award was given for a study Noel did about the amount of light it received.
damaged. Neill said the study found that weak light, such as the minimum amount needed for reading, damaged the retina in rats' eyes after being exposed to the light for a long time.
"The important thing is that the exposure continues for an extended length of time — no day or week continuously." Noell said.
continuously. We don't see.
The retina is the central structure of the eye and covers the inside of the eyeball.
University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1984
Nootk's study is designed to aid research in retinitis pigmentosa, a degenerative eye disease that can lead to blindness. The disease often is
herbivore research involves studying how the retina turns a light source into a nervous signal to send to the brain.
hereditary.
Although Noel does his studies on animal models, mostly rats, he said the findings can be applied to the human eye.
Noell began his medical career in Germany specializing in neurology. Since he has been doing research, his specialty has been neurobiology, the study of how parts of the body translate and send nervous impulses to the brain.
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$550
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$900
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ALL TOPPINGS 50' PER TOPPING PER PIZZA
EXPRESS SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CHEDDAR WITH ADDITIONAL TOPPING OF PEPPOH HAM, MUSHROOM, ONION AND LARGE PIZZA
$5 50
$10 00
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EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $50
FARM SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CHEDDAR FOR THE NEIGATARAN WITH MUSHROOM, ONION, GREEN PIPRUS, BLACK OLIVE, TOMATOES AND EXTRA CHEDDAR
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SUPER SHUTTLE
THE STANDARD CHEDDAR OVERLOADED WITH PEPPOH, ITALIAN SAUCE, GROUND BEEF, ONION, PIPRUS, BLACK OLIVE, FRESH CHEDDAR, MUSHROOM AND LARGE PIZZA OPTIONAL
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GROWN BEEF
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BACON BITS
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Fri & Sat 11 a.m. 3 a.m.
Sunday 11 a.m. 1 a.m.
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EXPIRES 12-31-84
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EXPIRES (23) 84
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Any Triple Pizzas
842-1212
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[∞]
University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Page 10
Muslim assault forces Afghan airliner down
By United Press International
NEW DELHI, India — An Afghan jumbo jet carrying 308 passengers was hit by Muslim rebel fire and forced to make an emergency landing at the Kabul airport, Kabul radio and a Western diplomat reported yesterday.
The state radio said the pilot safely landed the crippled Ariana Airlines DC-10 Friday at the end of a flight carrying pilgrims from the Muslim
noly city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia via the southern Afghanistan city of Kandahar to Kabul. No casualties were reported.
According to a Western diplomat in New Delhi, the attack was the third on Afghan airliners in a week.
Guerrillas fired six rockets during a 20-minute span on Sept. 17 — two hitting the grounds of Radio Afghanistan and two others damaging houses of Afghan officials near the back gate of the U.S. Embassy.
Congress accepts budget; debate erupts over missile
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — House and Senate negotiators yesterday approved a compromise agreement on a defense budget and agreed on a $297 billion defense authorization bill, but a dispute erupted over the fine points of a compromise on the MX missile.
The snarl erupted at a meeting of the Senate Appropriations Committee as it got ready to take
up the $292.9 billion defense appropriations bill.
The appropriations measure is expected to become part of a massive stopgap spending bill for several government agencies.
As outlined last week by leadership sources, two votes would be held in each chamber, the first on a "resolution of approval" to authorize $1.5 billion for additional MX missiles, and the second on a resolution actually appropriating that money to the Pentagon.
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STUDIOS
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01 01 01 05 05 05 04 02 01 02
Come On Down To The Sanctuary
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7th & Michigan Reciprocal with over 245 clubs 843-0540
UNSIGHTLY HAIR????
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THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO
See our coupon in the Lawrence Book
Call for an appointment
745 New Hampshire 841-5796
ADC
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KU FEDERAL
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603 W. 9th
(9th & Louisiana)
Main Office 9-5 Mon-Fri
Drive Up Windows 9-7 Mon-Fri.
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101 Curtis L. Lee
9-5 Mon-Fri
★ 864-3291 ★
Dec. 1
LSAT
THERE'S STILL TIME
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STARTING
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8112 Newton
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TAKE A STUDY
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2-7 p.m., Mon - Thurs.
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See Our Showcase Display of Epson and Comrex Printers.
O.
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- Compatible with virtually all microcomputers
Selling something? Place a want ad.
CINEMA 2
TIME AND DATE
12.30PM & 7.30PM
CINE WIDER The Woman in Red
7:35 9:30 * 5:15 Sat & Sun
CINEMA 1 TRIESH AND MARCELTON, LOMBIE
ALL OF ME
7:30 9:30 5:10 Sat & Sun
CINEMA 2 TRIESH AND MARCELTON, LOMBIE
WILDER'S The Woman in Red
7:35 9:30 5:10 Sat & Sun
Twilight Bargain Show
DOUBLE FEATURE
Honor VEX & Movies
Overnight $10
Curtis Matthews, Inc.
448-356-3900
curtismatthews.com
$795
No Coupons Accepted With This Offer
To Go Only
The finest in deep pit B.B.Q. flavor
$3^{95}
0
This special good Tues., Sept. 25 till Fri., Oct. 26
$5^{95}
Half Slab Half Slab Full Slab
COMMONWEALTH THEATRE
GRANADA ROOM 012
TEL: (866) 755-2345
Pioneer Purple Pain
VARSITY SCOOTER DIVISION
TELEPHONE 212-554-7030
NINJA III [H]
7:30 9:15 '5:30 Sat & Sun
PEPSI
Big End
719 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence
Small End
Hog Heaven Rib Special
COMMONWEALTH THEATRE
GRANADA
TELEPHONE 827-5144
PRINCE PURPLE RAIN
7:30 9:35 '5:15 Sat. Sun
VARSITY
DOWNTOWN
TELEPHONE 827-5144
NINJA III
7:30 9:15 '8:30 Sat. Sun
HILLCREST 1
SUN AND JUNE
IN EVIL THAT MEN DO
* 9:00 7:25 9:20 Daily
HILLCREST 2
SUN AND JUNE
A PRIOR HITCHCOCK'S REAR WINDOW
PG
* 5:00 7:30 9:35 Daily
HILLCREST 3
SEPTEMBER
R
7:35 9:35 8:00 Daily
CINEMA 1
JESUS AND JOE
MARTIN, DONIEL
ALL OF ME
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7:30 9:30 '10:10 Sat. Sun
CINEMA 2
JESUS AND JOE
THE WOLVERY The Woman in Red
7:35 9:30 '5:15 Sat. Sun
Twilight Bargain Show
Old Carpenter Hall
Smokehouse
Kimberly Schaffer
Nerd's Night Out!
Ever felt like walking in the other guy's shoes? This Thursday, walk in his shoes and put on his pants. It's Nerd Night at Gammons. Come dressed in your best nerd costume. Polyester will abound and there will be a contest for best nerd guy and nerd lady. Each winner will be sent to one of Lawrence's finest restaurants, receive a $25.00 gift certificate for clothes and get $25.00 in cash for spending. This is gonna be good. Nerd Night this Thursday at Gammons
GAMES
NOVEMBER
23rd & Ousdahl Southern Hills Mall
108
University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1984
Page 11
NATION AND WORLD
U.S. security tightened in Beirut
United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — American and Lebanese guards increased security at U.S. installations in Lebanon yesterday, and investigators said the bomb set off at the U.S. Embassy annex last week had been the most powerful used against U.S. targets in Lebanon.
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SUNTANNING, HOT TUB,
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2449 IOWA * HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
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* Also includes:
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weightroom & hot tub whirpool
* Unlimited visits
* No routines to learn
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* Day & evening classes
Mon-Sat
* Also includes
6 suntanning lounges,
weightroom & hot tub/whirlpool
舞蹈
Get in Shape and Tan Your Hide
FALL SALE
25% off single membership
GET NOTICED
The State Department said Monday the Reagan Administration was urgently asking Congress for a supplemental security program of $71 million for U.S. embassies throughout the world.
The new security measures were taken after the suicide truck-bomb attack on the embassy annex in east Beirut on Thursday, which killed 24 people, including two Americans, and wounded about 70 others.
Palm trees &
Pink flamingos
Pancakes &
Pentimentos
And no more
hard times
In west Beirut, workers Tuesday continued installing anti-rocknet netting on the roof of the main U.S. Embassy building, witnesses said. The Lebanese Army's 10th Brigade stood outside the two-story fortified embassy, which is surrounded by high walls topped by barbed wire.
Paradise Punch
Use Kansan Classified.
Computerark
ANNOWLEDGE SERVICE EDUCATION
Zephani Zephani Kyapai
Member Communicate Okalease Member
2nd & 3rd Campus
841-0094
high walled. The Islamic Jihad organization said it was responsible for the blast, and a caller told a Beirut newspaper Monday the group would soon strike against "American interests" again.
Datalife
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FREE TO STUDENTS
An American Revolution
Dodge College of America
1985 NATIONAL COLLEGIATE DRIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS
FREE TO STUDENTS
An American Revolution
Dodge College Cougar 1985 NATIONAL COLLEGIATE DRIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS
ZOOM... this afternoon the involuntary Dodge Express takes to a competition rally on set right here on campus. Your cars will be in transitory lock and the student with the best officer in each vehicle will be crowned. Other prizes will be awarded to first and third place finishers, and each hour light saturation and drive order will win grand amusements prizes. Absolutely no ducks or fish! If they try.
Dodge
TAP... over $125,000 in prizes will be awarded in the National Collegiate Driving Championship to win by Dodge and other participating teams.
National Grand Finals Awards
1st Place $5,000 and winners and one of a Dodge On Campus Raffle for 1 year.
2nd Place $3,000 and winners and one of a Dodge On Campus Raffle for 1 year.
3rd Place $3,000 and winners and one of a Dodge On Campus Raffle for 1 year.
WITH ADDITIONAL SPONCHIPS FROM:
GOOD YEAR UNION ocean pacific
Newsweek On Campus
SUPPORTED BY
U.S. Department of Transportation
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
National Safety Council
SPORTS CAR CLUB OF AMERICA
FORUMS
Sept. 29 to 30 S-Zone Parking Lot
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Potter Pavillion)
SUA
Free Prizes!
Dodge
ZOOM... you will either the exclusive primary Dodge Daytona Tailor through a competition only customers set right here on campus. You can purchase one for free or enter to win one of the following prizes: $1,000 in cash for entering a competition in the National Grand Prix. Other prizes will be awarded to first and second place finishers and each winner operation and driver sales will be given company赞助. Applicants will receive a copy of this announcement.
Dodge
TAP... save up $2,500 in奖金 only to be rewarded at the 3rd Annual National Dodge Enthusiast Championship through to buy a Dodge and other parts qualifying equipment.
National Grand Finals Awards
1st Place Award $1,000 cash for entering a competition in the National Grand Prix.
2nd Place Award $1,000 cash for entering and winning a Dodge.
3rd Place Award $1,000 cash for entering and winning a Dodge.
GOOD YEAR UNION 76 ocean pacific
Newsweek OnCampus
SUPPORTED BY
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
National Safety Council
SPORTS CAR CLUB OF AMERICA
EASTERN
GOOD YEAR UNION ocean pacific
Newsweek On Campus
SUPPORTED BY
U.S. Department of Transportation
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
National Safety Council
SPORTS CAR CLUB OF AMERICA
FORUMS
Sept. 29 to 30 S-Zone Parking Lot
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Potter Pavillion)
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Free Prizes!
GOOD YEAR UNION ocean pacific
SUA STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Free Prizes!
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
5pm until 4pm
841-3268
ROSS
ROSS
Bicycle
Annex
1337 Mass.
749-0636
G&R IMPORTS
When you're looking for a GOOD USED IMPORT CAR Come to the people who know imports. 843-8322 Located on the Lawrence Auto Plaza
A
Touch
of Class
hair care
$10 haircut
and blowdry with
KU student ID
Ask for Sheila, Teri or Frank
842-5690
6TH & KASOLD DR.
WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER Exp. 10/15/84
"WANNA BE IN PICTURES?"
PARKER
The men of Pi Kappa Alpha want you to apply for our 1985-86 DREAM GIRL CALENDAR. The new calendar will feature the most exquisitely beautiful women at the University of Kansas, and will be distributed at the beginning of the 1985 fall semester.
For more information, call Tim Rogers at 843-8690. Take a chance, be a Star.
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On Import Service
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Minor Engine Tune-Up
CAME $36.95 **
*Replace Spark Plugs
*Requires Fuel Filter *..*
*Replace Fuel Filter*
*Replace Points and Condenser(if equipped)*
** Rotary Engine
*** Fuel injected cars slightly higher
**** Fuel injected cars slightly higher
LA NIU TELULAI
$15.00
Brake Inspection $15.00
*Inspect Brake Pads and/or Shoes,
Rotors/Drums, Parking Brake and Adjust
*Inspect all hoses & fittings, check Master Cylinder, Caliphes/Wheel cylinders,
add Brake fluid
Oil & Filter Change $13.95 ..
*Includes up to 6 qts. of Prem. Oil
- Toyota or Mazda Brand oil filter
*** Extra Parts & Labor extra
Winterization Special $26.95
*Check battery *Clean terminals
*Check Belts and Hoses *Inspect Wipers
*Drain cooling system & install Anti-
Freeze for -20 —30 below zero
Includes all Japanese Imports
Please present coupon at time of write-up
Includes all Japanese Imports
Please present coupon at time of write-up
TOYOTA PARTS AND SERVICE
THE REAL STUFF
THE RIGHT PRICE
VISA
MasterCard
Laird NoHer
TOYOTA·MAZDA
Hours: 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Monday - Friday
842-2191
2300 W. 29th St. Terrace
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA
TOROTA PHILIPS AND SERVICE
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8
University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1984
Page 12
NATION AND WORLD
Settlement approved in Agent Orange case
By United Press International
NEW YORK — A federal judge yesterday approved a $180 million settlement which chemical companies must pay to soldiers exposed to Agent Orange in Vietnam and suggested the government may have known in advance of the herbicide's
dangers.
dangers. Chief Judge Jack B. Weinstein of U.S. District Court in Brooklyn said the government had ultimate responsibility for taking care of Vietnam veterans and their families.
Attorneys said the determination of how much money each veteran and his family would receive would
Veterans have blamed Agent Orange for health problems such as cancer, miscarriages by their wives and birth defects in their children.
be decided at later hearings.
The companies who made the chemical at the request of the government insisted that it was harmless in small doses.
The defendants were: Dow Chemical Corp., Midland, Mich.; Monsanto Co., St. Louis; Diamond Shamrock Corp., Dallas; Uniroyal Inc., Middlebury, Conn., T.H. Agriculture and Nutrition Co., Kansas City, Mo.; Hercules Inc., Wilmington, Del.; and Thompson Chemical, Newark.
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Notarization of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Bringing You More WET & CUT
$9
The Hair Station
Funded by student activity fee
841-6599
Quick CASH Service
Not Only Special But Also A Daily Value
Tuesday through Saturday
Walk-ins are welcome.
1119 Massachusetts
Students 30% OFF food orders on Hump Day Every Wednesday
SILVER STATION
TacoVia'
Taco Via
1700 West 23rd
841-484
We accept all other Mexican Restaurant coupons.
Not valid in connection with other promotions
West Coast Saloon
LADIES DRINK
FREE
every Wednesday 7 p.m.-midnight $1 cover
841-BREW
COMPATIBILITY . . .
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3D Modeling Basics
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THIS IS A FACT, THERE ARE TWO BOTH SCHOOLS
WHERE YOU CAN TEACH YOUR
SCHOOL AND IT IS NOT POSSIBLE
TO TEACH TOGETHER.
THIS IS A FACT, THERE ARE TWO SCHOOLS
WHERE YOU CAN TEACH YOUR
SCHOOL AND IT IS NOT POSSIBLE
TO TEACH TOGETHER.
IKE A FANTASTIC THING, IKE A HOTEL STUDENT AND A MORTAL SURGEON PRESENT ME
WE ARE IN A NEW CITY, WE'RE ALL HOTELS AND WE'RE ALL STUDENTS!
WE WERE IN A NEW CITY,
HELP A FAMILY SURVIVE
HOMOPOLYXAL STREET PREEMENING
WE LOVE YOU AND WE WANT YOU!
ZOE SMITH
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY
IT'S LABORATORY TO PROTECT OUR GLOBE
BROTHER IS LOVED BY EACH OTHER
BROTHER IS LOVED BY EACH OTHER
BROTHER IS LOVED BY EACH OTHER
THE DRAFTER
DELICATE WEB! LAYER
WOW, THIS IS GREAT!
WHERE IS 10??
Like most students, while studying at KUU, will be broke and concerned about my future. Unlike most students, no action is needed; I need answers to my concerns.
to take action. I needed answers my concerns.
With almost no money I came to Maude Finance Consultants with a million questions. My primary concern was the fact that many of my professors had the answers, and I feed what I taught me about money and opportunities again. I kept no much that after graduation last May I became an associate. It is been smooth/smooth since ever.
Miss Lawrence Scholarship Pageant
Jeffrey C. Durand, MFC
2019 W 8th, Suite A
Lawrence, KS 66044
842/6044
Stop shoveling since we've cut
the snow or give me a call and I will help you get the same head start depth
When: Sunday, Sept. 30, 1984
For more information contact Steve Haover, Entries Chairman, at 0431-6244
ANNOUNCES AN INFORMATIONAL TEA
Where: The Eldridge House in The Crystal Room
Sponsored by The Delta Chi Fraternity
For: KU & Lawrence women interested in learning more about the 1985 Miss Lawrence Scholarship Pageant
MARKET PLACE
NEW YORK CITY
UNITED STATES
1807
TONIGHT
SUA FILMS
Homefinders
We do the work for you!
free
BUSTER KEATON IN:
THE BATTLING BUTLER
CAPITOL NEW YORK
PLUS: Keaton in THE CONVICT
7:30 p.m. $1.50
Woodruff Auditorium
"Let The Good Times Roll"
Kawasaki
CONCENTER
KVM
913/B42 1702 Sales
842 1703 Parts & Access
842 1708 Service
913-841-6080
Kaw Valley
Management, Inc.
901 Kentucky St. 205
Unplanned pregnancy? Decisions to make?
Understanding all your alternatives makes you really free to choose. Replace pressure and panic with thoughtful, rational reflection.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and to talk with you.
FREE PREGNANCY TESTING
Birthright
843-4821
---
To Your Good Health
**TAXI MAN**
The Student Health Service at Watkins Hospital presents
DIABETES MANAGEMENT UPDATE
A workshop designed for the individual with diabetes, those interested in diabetes education.
Sat., Sept. 29, 1 to 5 p.m.
- erested people from the
* college life and diabetes
diabetes, those interested in diabetes tobacco and interested people from the community;
- college life and diabetes
- stress and diabetes
- stress and diabetes
* food fit for the diabetic
- exercise and diabetes
- new hope for the Type 2 diabetic
FOR MORE INFORMATION Call 843-4455 Ext. 31 This workshop is offered at no charge to students and the public.
Dinner Specialty Mushroom Fettuccini
HARVEST CAFE
8th & New Hampshire in the marketplace
Pasta like you've never had it! Fettuccini noodles smothered with rich, creamy mushroom parmesan sauce. Offered with dinner salad and garlic toast made from Harvest-baked French bread. $4.95
Catering specialists: We work hard
Catering specialists: We work hard to make you look good!
New Menu Coming Soon!
The Mt. Oread Hot Tub & Daiquiri Party
Sept. 29
O
Templin Hall Lower Lobby Back Porch
Hot Tubs *starts at 4 p.m.
Daiquiris (Non-Alcoholic)
Busch Beer *starts at 8 p.m.
$1 cover charge
$2 per 1/2 hour hot tub time
18 ID Required
...
8
University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1984 Page 13
NATION AND WORLD
Chinese, British ready to transfer Hong Kong
By United Press International
PEKING — Chinese and British negotiators met for the last time yesterday over a banquet table on the eve of the signing of a draft agreement to transfer Hong Kong to communist Chinese rule in 1997.
The joint declaration, which was scheduled to have been signed last night in the cavernous Great Hall of the People, will end 142 years of British administration. in the center third largest financial center.
Hong Kong's social and economic systems will be maintained, however, and China has promised that the country will make 30 years after the 1997 handover
British Ambassador Sir Richard Evans and Assistant Foreign Minister Zhou Nan, who completed two years of gruelling negotiations earlier this month, will initial the accord. But the release of the agreement text will be delayed until tonight.
The atmosphere in both Peking and Hong Kong was subdued but
optimistic, with Hong Kong's Hang Seng stock index enjoying a sharp climb in trading.
Many of the colony's 5.3 million people fled China and still harbor apprehensions despite Peking's promises.
While there was little mention of the Hong Kong agreement in Peking's stale-run media, the pact will almost certainly be touted as one of the government's crowning achievements during lavish National Day celebrations set for next Monday.
Hong Kong Governor Sir Edward Youde flee to Peking by private jet last night to attend a banquet for both negotiating teams at the British ambassador's residence and witness the initialising ceremony, officials said.
After the signing, Youde was scheduled to fly back to Hong Kong to brief local officials on the so-called White Paper containing the draft text.
Copies of the text were scheduled for public release last night in Hong Kong, Peking and London.
Arafat accused of supplying weapons to Italian terrorists
By United Press International
VENICE, Italy — An Italian judge has issued arrest warrants for Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat and an aide on charges of supplying arms to the Red Brigades terrorist group, judicial sources said yesterday.
Judge Carlo Mastelloni issued the warrants earlier this month after "repentant" Red Brigades members serving jail terms told state prosecutor Gabrielle Ferrari that the left-wing group purchased weapons from the PLO in 1979, the sources
said.
Judicial officials yesterday informed an Italian lawyer representing Arafat of the warrant, the sources said.
Arafat now is based in the Tunisian capital of Tunis, where he went after being forced earlier this year to flee Tripoli, a Lebanese port city, by PLO rebels backed by Syria.
The second warrant was issued for Salah Khalaf, a PLO official who worked as head of AI Fatab security services, according to the judicial sources, who spoke on condition that their names not be used.
Entry Deadline: Fri., Sept. 27
5 pm 208 Robinson
CPR
WORKSHOP
CPR Workshop is Mon., Oct. 1, 6-10 pm
Wed., Oct. 3, 6-10 pm
202 Robinson
First Annual
First Annual WILDERNESS DISCOVERY CAMPOUTS
Fridays:
Oct. 12
Tuttle Creek
Manhattan
Fridays:
Oct. 19
Lake Perry
Oct.26 Clinton Lake
for only $12
Live Entertainment/Bear/Pop—Friday Night
Eull Brunch—Saturday
Sponsored by Wilderness Discovery and Outdoor Recreation. For more information call SUA at 864-3477 or Wild. Disc. at 864-3887
Reports say Greece will sell arms to Libya in agreement
ATHENS, Greece — Greece plans to sell arms to the government of Col. Moammir Khadafy and subsequently increase its oil purchases from Libya as part of a $1 billion agreement on economic cooperation, news reports from Greece said yesterday.
By United Press International
The trade agreement was signed in Tripiol Monday by Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou and Libya's
Economic Ministry spokesman Babis Papadimitriou confirmed the accord for the sale of Greek arms to Libya but described the arms as light weapons such as handguns.
Greek news reports said Greece would sell "Artemis" anti-aircraft guns, large quantities of gunpowder and armament and would train officers of the Libyan armed forces under the agreement.
deputy leader Maj Abdelalaam Jalloud, the official Athens news agency said.
SUA
The Sanctuary
HAPPY HOUR 4-7 p.m.
MON. FRI.
Buy a membership card for only $15.00.
Get a card entailing you to $5 in FREE DRINKS!
Must imply Mon.-Sun. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
BELONG...
7th & Michigan Recipient with over 243 clubs 843-0540
M
AN OCTOGINTA IDEA!
Shorts from $18.00
$1800
KWALITY COMICS
Comics & Science Fiction
107 W. 7th. 843-7239
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
307 Mass. phone: 843-1
WE FIX WINDOWS!
$13 plus parts
mobile glass
1042 E. 23rd.
842-2726
Boyd's Coins - Antiques
Cases Ring
Bey-Trade-Travel-Pawn
Gold-Silver-Coines
Watches-Antiques
731 New Hampton Kentucky
Kaowa 65044 913-842-8773
For You!
V
PENNY ANNIES Sweet Shoppe
Town Crier
BOOK & PIPE SHOP
730 Mass.
843-5544
Open Daily 10:30:5:30
Thursday till 8:30
ONLY 3
DAYS LEFT!
SENIORS
Sign up NOW
Downtown
930 Mass.
M-f 10 a.m.-9 p.m.
Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sun. 12-5 p.m.
842-2147
- Hardbacks
- Hardbacks
- Paperbacks
TO HAVE YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT TAKEN
Stop by 121 B Kansas Union
12-5 or call 864-3728
Photographers hours:
12-8 Thurs.
9-6 Wed., & Fri.
Shooting is taking place in
Student Organizations & Activities Office
403 Kansas Union
- Gifts
- Cliff's Notes
- Western Civ. Notes
- Magazines
- Pipes
- Candy
- Tobacco
Malls
M-Sat. 9:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.
Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
842-1491
711 W.23rd
IS THE IDEA OF WEARING A UNIFORM KEEPING YOU OUT OF ARMY ROTC?
Whether you realize it or not, you are probably creating a set of "unfairies" to rob
when we wore a uniform right now
There there's wrong swing with it. But an Army
ROTC uniform could make you stand out from
the crowd.
AND ROTC will help you become more outstanding. Because you can develop a leader of people and a manager of money and equipment
So how about watching uniforms for a few hours weekly?
for more information, contact your Professor
INFORMATION ARMY ROTC. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
For further information call
CPT Moon, (913) 864-3311
High Holiday Services Rosh Hashanah
Wednesday, September 26, 1984
Evening Services-7:30 p.m.
Lawrence Jewish Community Center
917 Highland Drive
Friday, September 28, 1984
Morning Services-9:30 a.m.
L.J.C.C.
Thursday, September 27, 1984
Morning Services-9:30 a.m.
L.J.C.C.
Friday, October 5, 1984 Kol Nidr Services-7:30 p.m. L.J.C.C.
Saturday
Morning Services-9:30 a.m.
L.J.C.C.
Evening Services- 5 p.m.
L.J.C.C.
Saturday, October 6, 1984
- fast to follow
free for Hillel members
$2 for non-members
Yom Kippur
Break-fast to follow
If you have any questions or concerns, call the Hillel office at 864-3948.
by October 3 for reservations.
call the office at 864-3948
--the latest & greatest video games
C
THE HUNTIME VILLA AMUSEMENT CO.
PACIFIC
For Sale Used Video Games Buy one for your apartment or house Make money—Play free
Pac Man
Pac Man Pac Man Plus
$450
Donkey Kong
Route 16
Galaxian
Qix
Centipede
Frogger
Tempest
Call Debbie, Bob or Ginny at Schumm Foods 842-7337 Delivery Available
Fun Time — Supplier of All
---
FURNITURE RENTAL
QUALITY FURNISHINGS at affordable prices
Individual Items - Complete Groups GENEROUS PURCHASE OPTION
...
Monthly Leases
No Deposits
Quick Delivery
PRODUCER
NURSING
LAWRENCE
FOR
14 YEARS
MODERN-SECTIONAL-RATTAT
CONTEMPORARY-TRADITIONAL
Brand Name
Household
Furnishings
as well as
WE WISH
ON
cooking
Thompson-Crawley FURNITURE RENTAL
520 E. 22nd Terrace
841-5212
8
210
SPORTS ALMANAC
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. Pct. GB
s. Detroit 102 55 650
Toronto 87 74 1512
Boston 87 73 355 18
New York 84 73 353 18
Baltimore 83 74 259 19
Cleveland 70 87 446 28
Milwaukee 60 87 446 28
Kansas City 83 75 325
St. Louis 84 76 412
California 78 79 49 412
Oakland 74 84 908
Houston 74 84 908
Seattle 71 86 434 112
Sydney 71 86 434 112
Tuesday's Results
Cleveland 13, Seattle 5
Boston 14, Toronto 6
Chicago 8, Minnesota 4
Chicago 8, Michigan 4
Oakland 7, Texas 5
Detroit 6, Cleveland 9
Detroit City 6, California 12 (innings)
Wednesday's Games
Seattle 12, Atlanta 15; at Cleveland Schultz 3(4)
New York Montenegro 4-3) at Baltimore (Davis 14:85, 6:30 p.m. at Boston Royton 12:50, 6:30 p.m. at Milwaukee (Taylor 17:29, 6:30 p.m. at Milwaukee (Saturn 17:29, 6:30 p.m. at Minnesota (Schrem 5-9) at Chicago (Dedison 17:39, 6:30 p.m. at Kansas City (Blackhill 17:35, 6:30 p.m. at Warren 3-6) at Texas (Hackett Warren 3-6) at Texas
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Tuesday's Results
W 14 W L F Cc Gb
x Chicago 68 59 126 107
New York 88 70 517 512
Baltimore 88 70 517 512
Philadelphia 81 77 313 1212
Montreal 81 77 313 1212
Toronto 82 76 460 1212
West
x San Diego 89 69 563
Atlanta 78 84 961
Houston 77 80 490 112
Los Angeles 76 81 494 121
Cincinnati 76 81 494 121
Charlotte 66 92 418 23
× eliminated division title
Atlanta 4, Cincinnati 2
St Louis 6, Montreal 1
New York 6, Philadelphia 4
Pittsburgh 7, Chicago 1
Houston 3, Los Angeles 8,
night
Philadelphia Goodyear 4/5 at
New York (Frameredge) 16, 12.35 p.m.
San Diego (Shaw) 14.9 at San
Francisco (Brown) 10.6 at
Sacramento (Kegelman) 5.5 at Montreal
(Shatzer栓) 6.06 p.m.
Atlanta (Perze) 13.7 at Cincinnati (Soto)
Chicago (Sanderson) 6.5 at Pittsburgh
(Tunnel栓) 6.35 p.m.
St Louis (Scott) 5.11 at Los Angeles
University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1984 Page 14.
RESULTS
INTRAMURAL FOOTBALL
Tuesday September 18
Men's Greek Ree A League
Men's Greek Ret A League
Phi Kappa Theta 2.21, Sig Ep 28
Phi Kappa Theta 3 over Tau Kappa Epsilon 0
Evans Scholarships 3.62, Triangle 0
Evans Scholarships 3.62, Triangle 0
Theta Chi 7, A.7, Zeta Beta Tau 6
Men's Residence Rca Re Lc Academy
Nauseth 8, Naiasnth 8
Jamaica
The Revolution 13, Hassinger 10
Wednesday September 19
Mesa University Rca Re Omega by default
Kappa Phapla Alpha over Alph Tau Omega by default
Stuckbuffets 12, Captian Chk 6 in overtime
Kappa Phapla Alpha 6, Alpha Epipi 0
Men's Residence Rca Re Lc Academy
Temple Island Beach Gardens 7, Kansas RCA 7 in overtime
Moors 10, The Saliva Pms 0
The Fighters Cab 10, The Salvia Kns 0
Sunday Sept. 23
Thursday Sept. 20
Men's Greek B League
The Chi Tau B Theta Tau by default
Phi Ski B Phi Ski by default
Dangling Lions 2 over Harry Rears by default
Men's Residence Hall Rca League by default
Nashton 3 over Nashton 3 by default
Nashton 3 over Nashton 3 by default
Pearson 24, Comprises 19 by default
Bryn 8 by default
B I A M E N T E D R C
Men's Independent Rec A League
Biggest Bill's Buddles, 7, MBA 10 0
Mr. CID 14, Blazin Spin 5
0
Men's Greek Trophy League
Delta Tau Delta 14,igma Phi Epsilon 0
Delta Tau Ch. 19, Upsilon A2 0
Delta Tau Chi 17, Upsilon B2 0
Delta Upsilon 21, Pi Phi Psi 7
Delta A1 16, Alpha Alpha E6 0
Delta A1 16, Alpha Alpha E6 0
Delta Theta Tau A1 28, Alpha Tau Gamma 7
Delta Kappaappa 1, Iota 1
Delta Kappaappa 1, Iota 1
Alpha Omega 26, Kappaappa 1, Kappaappa 1
Kappaappa 2, Kappaappa 1, Kappaappa 1
Penthose 7 over Tempilin 2 forrest
Oliver 5th floor over Monarch by forrest
3rd South over McColum Independents by
Hashingen 2,6, Bili 2
**Women's Independent Trophy League**
Hascas over Poilo Club by forrest
Seven Dwarfs 12, Wild Marianne 0
Gammaappa Kappaappa 14, Chigmao 0
Gammaappa Kappaappa 14, Chigmao 0
Gammaappa Kappaappa 14, Chigmao 0
Gammaappa Kappaappa 14, Chigmao 0
Alpha Gamma 12, Kappa Alpha Theta 0
Alpha Gamma 12, Kappa Alpha Theta 0
Alpha Gamma 12, Kappa Alpha Theta 0
Men's Independent Trophy League
Jane Gang 25, Gators 0
Coghunr 30, Hardness Fans 0
Templin Hall All Stars over Fools by forfeit
RENO, Nev. — Weekend National-
Football League and college odds as posted by
harris's Reno Tahero Sports Book.
OPEN TIL 9 PM
EVERY NIGHT
THE GRINDER MAN
WE
DELIVER!
704 MASS
843-7398
COLLEGE
Stanford
Nebraska
Chemical
Miami (Florida)
Auburn
Texas
Michigan
Florida
Georgia
South Carolina
Florida
Flat State
Oklahoma
Ohio State
Kansas
Baylor
Texas
Notre Dame
Iowa
North Carolina
Cape Cod
Michigan
Arion
Arizona St.
Syracuse 24
Georgia Tech 24
Miami (Florida) 10/12
Tennessee 10/12
Penn State 2
Portland
Mississippi 14/12
South Carolina 41/12
Oklahoma 12
Temple 21
Minnesota 25
Navy 13/12
Texas Tech 2/1
Texas Tech 2/1
Missouri 30/12
Hinnes 4
Illinois 4
Cape Cod 7/12
Gardner 21/12
Indiana 20/12
Try The Sanctuary For Lunch!
DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS
$275
All you
Join Us For Good Food At
The Sanctuary!
• Special •
16 oz. T-BONE!
$750
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan Recipient with over 245 clubs 843-0540
Rowing is America's Oldest Intercollegiate Sport and an Olympic Sport
K U CREW LOOKING FOR THE BEST TO BE THE BEST
We have a good place to row — The Kansas River We have a fulltime, professional coach and
We have a good place to row — The Kansas HIV We have a full-time, professional coach and three assistants
Cliff Elliott—Novice Hwt Men and Varsity Men Libby Elliott—Novice Women Harry Crockett—Novice Lwt Men Bob Catloth—Varsity Women
CREW
We have new, competitive equipment Vespoli Racing Shells Dreissigacker Oars Nielson-Kellerman Coxswain Sound Systems Concept II Ergometers
But to have the best crew we need the best student athletes who will
MEET THE CHALLENGE
We are especially looking for:
Men 6'4'' and TALLER for the men's heavyweight crew
Women 5'9'' and TALLER for the women's crew
Coxswains (men under 130 lbs. and women under 110 lb.)
No experience necessary
Call Cliff or Libby Elliott 843-3294
INTRODUCING
99¢ NACHOS HALF PRICED BEER
HISTORY
ENGLISH
The OhSe Smokehouse Restaurant is all you need to say bye-bye to the back-to-school blues.
- 99e for a heating plate of Nachos.
* Half price on frosted mugs or pitchers of cold beer, soft drinks, lemonade and ice tea.
- A chance to win one of our delicious 1/4 lb. FANCYBURGERS by guessing the total points scored at the next KU football game.
Every day 2:00-4:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.-closing
PEPSI
- A great atmosphere for relaxing with friends
Plus
- And the tastiest barbeque, hamburgers and salad bar in Lawrence. Come to the OhSmokehouse Restaurant and blow those blues away
Regular Price $2.29 Bring in this coupon for $1.00 off the regular price of a chopped brisket sandwich with generous quantities of pit smoked brisket covered with our own barbeque sauce on a specially baked bun.
Budweiser Beverage
Budweiser PEPSI
SAVE $1.00 ON CHOPPED BRISKET SANDWICH
Expires 9/30/84
11:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Sunday-Thursday.
11:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m. Friday & Saturday.
Regular Price $2.29
OhSe SMOKEHOUSE RESTAURANT
27th & Iowa R41-8473
OhSe
Lawrence's barbeque rib place with hamburgers, salad bar & a whole lot more!
- Dine In - Carry Out - Drive Through - Catering Available
EPSON PRINTERS Discount Priced for YOU!
KENJY
EPSON RX-80F/T Number one. And built like it.
Unlike many printers, the RX 80 F1 gives you the option of using standard hardwired paper, or snap up a roll of blank paper and use a roll of single sheets.
The RX-80 EWT prints 100 characters per second and features its user-friendly font. It does not demos. These enable you to match text and graphics on a desktop.
This all-volume 80 column dot matrix printer has a standard 96-character ASCII set plus 11 inter-national character sets, and 12 character sets for matching those of the Ipson HK-252 Bookmark Computer.
List: $599
RX-80
FX-80
List
This is enhanced by the RX 80 F/T to 128 different types, interfaces and bulbs, subscript and superscript typetables other science and time print capabilities, scanning and loop capability of the shortest line add additional speed to the RX 80 F/T should the prehead ever use a type of equally replaced one since the cost of costumeroads loads. The RX 80 F/T is compatible with most computer in today's marketplace.
KU
$399
$599
KU Bookstores
Kansas Union Burge Union
Our price: $464.50
Our price $359.50
$569
Other EPSON printers also available
CIA... for Careers of Consequence Campus Interviews OCTOBER 2-4,1984
Credentials Needed:
the CIA has challenging career opportunities in many fields. There are openings both in Washington D.C. and overseas. Qualified applicants will have an opportunity to reach senior management levels plus they will have the satisfaction of serving with a unique group of people whose special concern is the
Credentials Needed:
U.S. Citizenship
High Moral Character
Bachelor's Degree or Better With Good GPA
Strong Interest in Foreign Affairs
Able to Pass Strict Security
and Medical Standards
Some of the disciplines we are looking for are
Anthropology (Cultural, Political)
Auditing
Chemistry (Nuclear, Physical,
Analytical)
Computer Science
Demography
Economics (Masters, PhD,
or GPA above 3.5 only)
Editing
Engineering (All Majors)
English
Fine Arts
Foreign Area Studies
Geography
Geology
History
Imagery
Information Science
International Relations
Journalism
Salaries:
Salaries:
Entry Level Salaries Run
From $17,500 to $29,000
Depending on Qualifications
Law
Liberal Arts
Library Science
Linguistics (especially difficult languages)
MBA
Mathematics
Military Science
Oceanography
Operations Research
Music
Photogrammetry
Physics
Political Science
Physical Science
Remote Sensing
Social Science
Sociology
Statistics
We are looking for some generalists with several of the following qualifications for some of our overseas
GPA 2.5
Age 24-34
Foreign Language Capacity
Foreign Residence
To arrange your campus interview, contact your Placement Office now. If an interview is inconvenient at this time, send your resume to:
Military Service
Good written and Oral Communication Skills
Well-developed Interpersonal Skills
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Personnel Representative
P.O. Box 10748
Golden, CO 80401
Central Intelligence Agency
Agency
The CIA is an equal opportunity employer
[ 8 ]
September 26,1984 Page 15
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 |
| 10-20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 |
| 21-25 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.05 |
| For every 5 words add: | 2.16 | 3.06 | 3.75 | 4.55 |
AD DEADLINES
Classified display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than an index deep. Maximum depth is one inch. Newswire allowed in classified displays. Newswire allowed in classified displays. Newswire allowed in classified displays.
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
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
* Words set in BOLD ACE count as 4 words.
* Doodles name as Display Advertisement.
- Deadlines same as Display Advertisement - working days prior to print publication
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
- Tourshops are only provided for Classes on or classified display advertisements.
- Above rules based on concert-day inventions only
- Teenagers not provided for classified or classified disability adoptions.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
to the University Daily Kansai.
* All auditions will be required to pay in advance
- *Letted display sales are not court tender unless manually carried rate discount*
- *Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to collection of advertisements*
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until a credit has been established
Landmarks can be advertised IDRs of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed on temporary sites by calling the京津港澳高铁有限公司 86-435-4359.
- Hint box has a phone add a $2 service charge.
- Check mark accumulate all classified ads marked
- No responsibilities is assumed far more than one or the correct intention of any advertisement.
* No refrends on cancellation of pre-paid, liaison advertising.
Budget Stretcher coupons Thurs evenings. Buy $0 & receive $1 coupon toward next purchase Cross Reference, Malls Shopping Center
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Tues., Oct. 16
CAREER EXPLORATION FOR WOMEN ENABLE values, philosophy and knowledge. Sep 26, 1964 8:30 p.m. Walnut Hour, Kansas Union. Spend 4 hrs with the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.
Pre-Dental Students
after 2:30 p.m.
Representatives from the University of Nebraska will be on campus to visit with students individually or in small groups on:
Appointments may be made in the Pre-Med office 106 Strong Hall during office hours posted
NOTICE TO APPEAR - Fundraiser; Mike Glover for D.A. Sept. 30, midnight; the Jade Bessel both Shelf & Mackenzie; Hunt Band Campaign Glover for District Attorneys Campaign Fund.
NAIMISH Contracts available Call 749-6350
after 5 p.m.
RESEARCH PAPERS! 306 page catalog - 15,278
tips) Rush $2.00 RESEARCH 13,122 Idahoe 206
MB. Los Angeles $2.00 (213) *47,826*
THE FAR SIDE
Candlelight Special: 10% Off boxed Christmas cards in stock 1-lined, imprint free 5:30.8. Thur.
Cross Reference. The Malls
Rent '19* Color TV $28.96 a month Curtis
Mathes. 1447 Ward 324 B42 5751. Open 9:30-9:00
M/F, 9:30-10:00, Sat.
Rent VCIM with 2 movies, overnight $15. Currier
Vicory $42,975 @ 9:30-9:60 w/o M-F
M 9:30-10:30 F 9:30-10:30
SENIOR YEARBOOK PORTRAILS: Shooting is taking place now, in Student Organizations & Activities Office 404 Kamsa University. Call your bookkeeper at Attention: 12 .911 B.K. Kansai Union, 864 3728
Seeking Theater Dance Student, for performing at the Curtis Theater. Demonstrate skills in formal presentations. Must be reliable and hard-working. Req's Bachelor's degree in Theatre Arts or a related field.
Shirte, Beenett, formerly of Charme Beauty
Massachusetts; M. F call 847-326-1000 for Shirte,
Masachusetts.
Weekend and evening child care now available at Calliope Child Care. Parents, we are just beginning a flexible hours programming program that will allow you to want to enjoy an evening out, now you have an option to join in with the evening of fun, planned, recreational educational activities, four blocks from campus. Openings
Music Masters Music for dances and parties. All included. Included Reasons Rates differences in rates.
ENTERTAINMENT
CLASSICAL GUITAR! Want to class up your next function with quality music? 842-273-271
Tunight at Hawaii Crossing | Evening Trees
featured at Hawaii Crossing 3, Sep 7 from
the Regal Theater.
FORRENT
Apartment: 5 rooms & bath one block of southeast corner of campus. Available Oct. 1. Call
BRAND NEW 1 bedroom Apt $260 843-3846
evenings.
Despatriate On Campus, 2-brm, no deposit, Sept
excellent, location AC, WD, Hook-ups
to complete application.
LIVING ARHIBIAMENTES NOT WORKING OUT
DUTILE my furnished studio on bus
road. Room available near campus and downstreet.
Room available near campus and downstreet.
Access to kitchen, family, dining and bath rooms.
Fairyland
By GARY LARSON
"Harold! The dog's trying to blow up the house again! Catch him in the act or he'll never learn."
Lease: 4-bedroom house $350/mo. Off street parking Call 843-6750
MOTHER, I'M
AFRAID THAT IVE
'BUPPED' AND
CLOSED
EXISTENCE.
New 2-bedroom duplex, on N.W. side of
Lawrence, compete with all kitchen appliances.
Perfect for 2 or 3 students $430/mo Call:
1773-2833 at 6 p.m
Older 2-bedroom House, New furnace. Close to K U., town. No dog. $275 plus utilities. 204 W. 13th. 840-695-7200.
Opportunity for roommates. one block from campus,
4 big bedrooms, living room, kitchen with dining area,
bathroom with 8 vases, seeporch bench,
garden with 3 vases, kitchen with 160 per roommate for 4, also 3 bedroom unit like above for 125 per roommate for 3. See to allow all utilities paid. Call 842-6887, 709-1131.
WHEN I ERASED HIS FILE
WITH A KID ON MY MOTHER
BANK, I SEEK TO HAVE
"ERASED" HIM TO "Together".
MOTHER. DO YOU
REALIZE WHAT
THIS MEANS?
BLOOM COUNTY
SUBLEASE one-bedroom Apt. $225/mo
Available Oct. 1, 1737 Ohio 919-7486
SUPER LOCATION: Huge bake onyce prep room cooking Menlo Park, with two large kitchen big kitchen with eating areas, living room, large double-danity kitchen, kitchenette, kitchenettes up to 480 per room. All utilities See to app
Spring semester only - Full furnished,
1 bedroom, 2 bath house. Great neighborhood;
close to campus, with 2 child-loving
dogs $410/mi. moil-440
The Oaks Apts. 2.bedroom $315/mo. We pay heating/cooling. Last Apt. Available! 2357 Ridge Ct Call 824 466.
To quiet. serious woman commuter; mice, fir-
st room, in private home in old West Berlin.
To quiet. serious woman; large furnished room,
in private home in lower West Berlin. $125.
Townhouse with finished basement available, only one left, good for 4 people $490. SUNHISE
PLACE #8141287
Try cooperative living Sunflower House 1608
Tennessee 794 891, Ask for Dawn Inexpensive &
private rooms are available
BUSINESS PERS
Bible Trivia is in *The game where trivia is not trivial*. Cross Reference. Malls. Lawrence
Beds, Desks, Tents, Window shades., Everything But ice, 6th & Vermont
THE ETC. SHOP
COMPRESIVENE, HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care;contidentiality assured Greater Kansas City area. Call for appointment
Vintage, formal wear,
party clothes and costumes
732 Mass. 843-0617
INDIANA JONES
Halt
Warner Ironworks
EMB $500 per 100 envelopes stuffed. Send a self-
address, stamped envelope to Akram, P.O.
RW A2738 Chicago II, 6090
Barbs Vintage Rose
Dinner Jackets, Tuxes, Flapper
Dresses, French Male Dresses
are available to rent
9185 Mass St. 841-2451
Inflation Fighter . E. Sixth . For your needs in
dressing and dressing means. Come in at Bours
dresses and mean suit. Come in at Bours
dresses and mean suit.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume; immigration,
naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits.
Saturday Studio, 749-1611
John sings for all occasions. Birthdays, parties,
waddling. Operatic tenor. 841.1874.
Mayline Parallele rules & parts. Architecture tools and papers. The Graphics Arts Degree. Strong of B's in graphic design, writing, research or writing.
LOOK AND FEEL GREAT
EUROPEAN
AEROBIC CLASSES NOW STARTING
SUNNYLAKES CLUB
& HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA *HOLIDAY PLAZA*
841-6232
25% off
Modeling and theater portfolios - shooting now.
Beginners to Professionals, call for information.
Swella Studio, 749-1611
Dining hall value
* No routines to learn
* For Men & Women
* Day & evening classes
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing,
shirts, jeans and caps. Shirt art by Swells.
749 1011
GET NOTICED
- Also includes:
6 sun-tanning lounges.
wintheat room & hot jut whirpool.
The Harvest Cafe offers a relaxing atmosphere, good service, sumptuous cuisine, and affordable prices. We invite you to join us! Now serving beer
Open 8 p.m. - 9 p.m. Mon.- Sat. 10 p.m. - 2:30
Sunday
Security minded. Learn to secure your apartment. For more information, send $250 to Information, 320 Creeaderow, Lawrence, KS 60044
singlemembership
SERVICES OFFERED
Wholesale Sound Rental P.A. Guitar and Bass
amps, mikes, Graphic EQ, Dacs systems
814 695.
IT MEANS THAT, AS A SOCIETY,
WE'VE FINALLY TRADED THE LAST
WESTSTEIGES OF OUR HUMANITY
FOR A SET OF GOVENMENTAL
MONEY BACKS WE'VE
TRIVIALIZED BY A RUNNING
BUREAUORCYC! WE'RE ALL
JUST MAGNETIC
INK!!
VISA and or MASTERCARD credit cards for
18 years, or older. Low fees, small savings
account required. Write for details. National
Credit Associates Corp., State 902 AF, 325
Washington Blvd.
CUSTOM SEWING. Dressmaking and alterations. Call 842-3475. Reasonable prices.
Tarme Beauty School - Home of the WIracr
French Tutor for students taking beginning and intermediate levels of French. 3 years experience, excellent knowledge of grammar Call
Charmie Beauty Salon is now offering Haircuts for $, and permits for $2 & up. Call or come in for a professional cut or perm at a great price. Charmie Beauty Salon. 1033 Mass. 844-5800
by Berke Breathed
HERBALIFE distributor/con consultant Weight loss, skin & hair care, much more, income opportunity, 814 6747
WHO'S GOING TO SLICE THE STUPID TURKEY?
STILL WITH ME MOM?
Special on Sculptured Nails. 25% Off. Available on Sculptured Nails and polished dutch nails with tip, implant or problem nail. Trained, expert applications, manicures also. Call Trady at Beauty's Beauty. 842 600-3191.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1013 Massachusetts,
downown. All haircuts. $5. No appointment
necessary.
JOSE WEIGHT NOW Improve your health and
over wealth 100% natural 100% guaranteed.
422.6671
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
YAMAILA MUSIC SCHOOL, age 4-6, beginners Olsen piano and Music. 842.0755
BIRTHRIGHT--Free Pregnancy Testing--Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
HELP WANTED
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced unstruc tor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual 842-5858
CONSUMER AFFAIRS INTERN. 10=15
Consumer Affairs Appliance staff assist in on-site consumer programs, process consumer inquiries & complaints and complete consumer research & surveys. Preferred qualifications: good writing & communication skills; experience in business, law, consumer education or public interest work. Must be work study eligible. For Applicant Contact Consumer Affairs. 819 Vermont. 843-606-9000.
STUDENT ASSISTANT
NEEDED
The School of Pharmacy is now offering students the opportunity to apply with the admission process. Students will be assigned a faculty member who compiles and presents information on the college's website. Workshop program: Composite Worst Case Worst Case for an interview appointment
Dependable female to assist disabled with care.
No experience required. Morning, weekend & evening hours available. Call between 1.5-249.088
Dependable undergraduate or graduate students, who are interested in obtaining research experience to data collection, call Mike 249-3601 at 7 p.m.
Dietician II, Clinical in residential facility for mentally retarded. Requires graduation from Academy of Pennsylvania and completion of course work in nutrition, dietetics, institutional management, or closely related field; and is required to have completed (Clinical experience desired). Candidate must be registered by the American Dietetic Association and have completed 1627 months, excellent frames. Contact Person: Winfield State Hospital and Training Centre.
FRESHIMEN- It's not too late to join NAVAL
ROTC: C84 1641 3161
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
Female Models for 1983 Calendar and posters, and phone experience necessary. Send photo and phone number to Hilleyer Photography, Box 201 Paola, Kansas 60671
Need to work Oct 11 to Nov 30
in STUDENT SENIOR OFFICE
of the Office of the
available in the Senate Office, Bldg.
8461 Redmil-374, 5pm Fri, 9am Mon.
Infant Care... our home. 12_30-5_30 Start Oct. 15
841 7860, after 1 a.m.
NEEDED IMEDIATELY Half time Computer Programmer Contact University Counseling Center for further information and application 116 Bailey Hall 64-3001
PAID VOLUNTEERS needed for research project. Women 18-22 whose father died when they were 4-12. Come to Fraser Hall, Wednesdays, 9:30 a.m., and register at www.fraserhall.org. Women friend 18-22 whose parents are living and married on each other. Participation takes about 1.2 hrs and is great appreciated. Participants will receive a gift.
Pizza Shuttle is looking for Delivery people! You might have, if cared for insurance and a good driving record. If you are waiting to work and want to hustle it up in application. Pizza Shuttle is looking for delivery people!
o new and warmed to model poses,
long sleeves, elegant wintersweat and formal
ties. Innerwear is included in the
data sheet which includes your physical
photographer P.O. Box 1705, Topeka KS
PHOTOGRAPHER P.O. Box 1705, Topeka KS
Summer June National Park Co. s. 21 Parks.
Openings, complete information, $5 Park
Report Mission Mn. Co. 641 2nd Ave. WN,
Kalispell MT. 99001
Female Roommate to share 2 bedroom house,
walking distance to campus. $102.50 plus 1/2
utilities. Call Monica, 749-7214
WANTED
This document needs Resume# to share clean
2 Bedroom Apt on Tennessee; rent is $250/mo
plus 1.2 utilities. Call Egd at 843-6077
if interested
FEMALE Roommate needed for nicely furnished
2-bedroom Apt. (Sundance) $150, plus 1/2 electricity.
841-1521
Students wishing to lose to 29 lbs. per month
Easy, economical vitamin/herb method,
satisfaction guaranteed. Meg. 841-0474
Roommate, to share House near campus $100
plus 1/2 utilities. Bursary, 749-4313
MISCELLANEOUS
Kitchen is open 8:11 30 p.m. for wings to go. Mon day through Friday Only at the Wheel
LADIES ONLY 7-9 25-cent Draws, Guys at 9 Only at the Wheel.
TIP TOP TYPING, 1203 Iowa. Professional typing, processing, editing. Memory from start to finish. Saving files. Our specialties, our specifications, our specialties, Kerax 620 Memory writer with disc storage, royal self correction. Mining.
TYING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. "haves.Move M.D. Degree 841-624
RESUME skill. Let us ask you with that first good impression. Professionally written resumes and coverletters, word processing and quality papers 5 Eighth 7:47, 841-129.
Professional TYPING, EDITING, GRAPHICS.
IBM Correcting Selective, Kathy, 842.3378 before 9
p.m.
LOST AND FOUND
THE WORLD TOWS Why pay for typing when you can bake word processing? 341-317.
FOUND: 4 mo old kitten, gray & white, wearing
fellow collar, in 1000 block of Emery Call 843.5990 to
identify ask for Leslie
Students call April for all your typing needs. Very reasonable and fast. Day 843-0110, evenings and weeks 843-0644
24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes.
dissertations. papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fasted service. HI 5006
SOMERVILLE & ASSOC. Inc, Professionals at Competitive Words Word Processing - Typing, "Expert in A/A Style" 90, Kentucky 841, 8449; Topka 305, Western 233, 3816.
conservately accurate and affordable typing. Judy 842-7945
Absolutely Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing and
Word Processing (IHM 156) same day service
available. Students always welcome! '94 Illness.
842.6168
Found: Kitten, green and tan tabby, wearing a flea collar in Stewart street area. 841-9006
FOUND: Sunglasses, outside north entrance to Allen Field House, Call Hall 841, 804-304. To identify Found, KUID 31362, in front of S.W. Bell office on three also.
Found: Male Kitten, owner may identify by calling 843-7879
Lost. Student I.D. and All-Sports Pass at Sat.
game, please return, REWARD. 842-9100
DEPENDABLE professional, experienced
TEAMINESS TIAFFER - Typing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape
843 8677
Lost: Graphite Head Tennis Raquet, at Robinson tennis courts, beginning of Sept. If found, please call 842-417-63
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers Word Processing. Professional Results - resumes, papers, a specialty. Call 749-1108.
10.12 fl. Cabover Camper $500 or best offer. Call
849-3931
Call Terry for your typing needs letters, term papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting secreta II 812430 or 841 65721, 10:30 p.m.
FOR SALE
Experimented, typist. Term papers, these, all micromachine, IBM Correcting Selective Eltc or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9554, Wntright.
Always try the best for professional service.
Term papers, thesis, resumes, etc. Reasonable
842.3246
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFT
CLIENT 841 3510
1976 Chevy Stepside Pickup, $1650 12 ft. Swimming Pool with circulating pump, $255 Call 749-4487
10 Speed Ladies' Schwinn Bicycle, bright yellow,
just tuned and in excellent condition. Call 843-8473
or 749-258
AM-FM Laserette Airtrese, Dabby, auto
and the one who was missing. On the go,
always on the go, Missing Colleagues! Here's the
ANSWERING-MACHINE 1: old Ford Snook
Voice activated answering machine, exc. condi-
tions.
aarmums 20 & 15 gal. Full set up with hooks and extras. tsoo (too) Oscar African Knife, Sucker and Paniraha 19/24 after 60 cm.
BOOK CASES: MANY sizes, starting at $49.
Furniture Barn. 1811 W. 6th, #942 2096
THE GENERAL STORE
Used furniture and
household misc.
Open Daily 1-11 p.m. close Sun
7th and New Hampshire
(departm. P. B. 8343) 8438 8328
Typing in my home. Have IBM Correcting Select
tree II. Reasonable prices, Call Juty at 843-0891
Comic books, used Science Fiction paperbacks;
Playloys, Penhouses, etc. Max's Comics, open
10:6 Tues. Sun 8:31 New Hampshire
CS Students. For a Low Price, you can own your own terminal. TZ 1-A with monitor, built in modern, adjustable party books up to KU and 32-inch TV. The furniture chairs. Group rent that can't be beat. Directors chairs- only $14.95, at The Furniture Barn. 1011 W. 6th, 322-2068.
Commodite 64 and Disc Drive. Like new. $350 or best offer. 842-7072
HAMONDS (2) 1/4 Carat, brilliant cut, jewelry
quality $100 each, no/gallble. Call Brian:
472-5655
DRAFTING MACHINE Sturdy Brunning
machine with scales, works great! $150
available 749-3688
Dromed. All wood Tenis Tennis racquet, superlight 4-7/8 grip. Use twice, excellent condition. Brand new Genuine racket cover, extra $50 Call: 043-8613, keep trying
EVERYTHING GOES CAR. "79 Grand Prix Ixion," an 8-car, 400-mile supercar, includes all-terrain irruals, T-V and much more fuel.
FUTTON PEDESTAL Full-size, all wood, collapsible: $65,841.7057
FENDER STRAT GUTAR $60 Call Jim.
842 567 300
For furnishing for your living, we have what you need. Thrift stores at 62 Vermont and 16, E. 50th Glenn Sunburst Jr. 38 orange table. $80. Guild Dibz. 80B with cases. 274-498. MAP 872.
Glass door Stereo cabinets, starting at $99. The Furniture Barn. 1811 W. 6th. 842-2096.
Invet Packard HP14C VPrinter $259. (Reg.
$309) limited to stock on hand, selected HI-CCU
Application packs and software, 25% off.
Technology Inc., 817-976-1900
Ronda CB 1255 Must sell $200 1538 Tenn
anytime.
Honda Express Moped, only 1900 original miles.
excellent condition. $250 call 3-61-8433-3618.
IBM PC Jr. WIRELESS KEYBOARD 1 DSK
DRIVE 128 KMEMORY 843-182
Moped- 1981 Honda Express Automatic-
2 speed, ecc. condition, bq43 8242 after 4 p.m.
New Linear 200 Watt Car Amplifier, $750 Retail.
Men's 27" Compus Sport 10 speed Bike, in good shape. $80.
will sell for $690 or best offer: 843 5946
Partners Desk, 2-sided, Oak desk with glass top p.
$ Call 842 2232 after 8 p.m.
Is your apartment too dark in which to study?
Lamps, starting at $38. The Furniture Barn 1811.
W. 6th. #426 2096.
Schwinn "World" Girls' model never ridden, with accessories. Must sell 749-1256 after 6 p.m. Must see to believe.
Pioneer PL-10 Turntable, $40, or best offer
842 423-0315, evenings
Sherwood 402 CP Integrated Amplifier: 40 watts per channel, 1 channels, tape monitor, loudness, and p-amp capability. 843-383
The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
Trek 31k, blue 12 Speed Bike, 24 l/2.12 hrs., "two shoe lock," rear horn, 1.1" tires, 842-7853
Technics RS M224 Tape Deck Perfect condition $12 or best offer. 749-1615 Mark
book, pouch, puff (1) over a
User and Collect Records bought and
used. Collect Records Classical,
Standard and big bags. Sat & Sun.
8 a.m. - 3 p.m. Quan
trilh. 811 New Hampshire
WASHER DRYER. good working condition
Xlarge capacity, harvest gold, $160, both
841 957 after 4
Z. Bauer 4 K. Mulmester; 8: Disk drives (1.2 mb) HCR gelate CHIP with Graphics, comes with WDH STAR PASAL C, etc. $250 Call Gl after 8 p.m at M873 or 8324-2245
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplement. On sale Now. Suggests to use them as a study guide. On sale Now. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Center.
TENNIS RAMUET Head Graphite Edge
Dosemble 849-558
1925 Ford Mustang, PS, PB, AC 315 Cleveland
engine. AM FM cassette player, snow tires
engine. Body, rough $1000 negotiate. 843-5796
AUTO SALES
973 Monte Carlo, AC, PS, PB, PW, runs great
urn 600;需票 1952;埋号 841-9544
1973 Ford Galaxie 2-Door, PS, PB, AC, Auto
Ford F-150 62-800, 62-900, 62-1000
$900 Steve Rudolph Edition
$999
1972 Tired, white leather interior. AT PS PB
some rust. R$600
recalled Call 844-9629
1974 Bremen Pinto wagon, 4-speed good radio and rubber. Very good, mechanically $200 cash
1942 Fard Pinto, good condition, some rust.
Negotiable. Box 748-4548, after 6
Mons must sell it! Chevette $1.99 great gift
good condition, 35,000 mL) 841-2682 keep tryin'
great condition, 35,000 mL) 841-2682 keep tryin'
dreamers store, AM FM Stereo, clock show,
Rust printed, 16,500 miles local run. Call 749-3260
Opel Manta, 1972 auto. AM FM Cassette Stereo,
sparty yellow and affordable at 841-5032
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS
Classified
Heading
Write ad here
Net a
Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Phone
Name
Address
Classified
100
Classified Display
1 col. x 1 inch = $4.20
Phone ___
Name ___
Address ___
Dates to run ___ to ___
| | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days or 2 Weeks |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1-10 words | $2.60 | $3.15 | $3.75 | $6.75 |
| For entry | 264 | 504 | 754 | $1.05 |
| 5 words added | | | | |
Mail or deliver to 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
1
8
September 26. 1984 Page 16
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
Barkley signs with Sixers but must watch weight
PHILADELPHIA — Following a summer of negotiations during which they were limited by the National Basketball Association salary cap, the Philadelphia 76ers Tuesday signed top draft choice Charles Barkley to a four-year contract.
Financial terms of the contract were not disclosed. It is believed that Barkley will receive about $150,000 plus a signing bonus for the first year of the contract but that his salary will increase substantially after that.
The pact for the 6-foot-6 Barkley, who is called the "Round Mound of Rebound," also includes a weight clause. Barkley, 34, said he worked hard, said the team wants him to play at 255.
Barkley declared hardship after his junior year at Auburn and was the fifth player drafted overall.
Blazers. Bowie agree to pact
PORTLAND, Ore. — The Portland Trail Blazers and first-round draft choice Sam Bowie agreed to terms on a lucrative six-year contract yesterday.
Team officials said the contract would make the 7-foot-1 Kentucky center, who was the second overall pick in the June National Basketball Association draft, the third-highest paid rookie in NBA history. No other details of the pact were announced.
The agreement, which came just four days before the opening of fall camp, was reached in New York between Bowie's attorney, Larry Fleisher, and Los Angeles attorney Allen Rothenberg, president of the Los Angeles Clippers.
The contract is still to be drafted, but team officials said it should be prepared and signed in time for Bowie to be in Portland for Saturday's first training camp session.
Houk announces retirement
BOSTON - Veteran Boston Red Sox manager Ralph "The Major" Houk said yesterday that he would retire from baseball at the end of the season.
Houk is in his 20th season as a major league manager, all in the American League. He had two stints as manager of the Boston Red Sox, from 1961 to 1963 and from 1966 to 1973.
"It's been a hard decision for me to make." Houk said. "I've enjoyed my four years here in Boston. I want to thank (team owners) Haywood Sullivan and Mrs. (Jean) Yawkey for the confidence they had in me."
United Press International
He played eight years in the major leagues with the Yankees and had a .272 lifetime batting average.
Compiled from staff reports.
6
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City center fielder Willie Wilson makes an unsuccessful attempt to score against Angel catcher Bob Boone in the first inning. The Royals defeated the Angels in 12 innings last night, 6-5.
Balboni's hit in 12th gives KC 6-5 victory
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Steve Balboni's two-out single in the bottom of the 12th inning scored pinch runner U.L. Washington giving the first-place Kansas City Royals a 6-5 victory over the California Angels last night.
The victory also gave Kansas City a 1-1 game lead over the second place Minnesota Twins, who lost to Chicago 8.4, and Minnesota was out of the stands back with five days left in the season.
Dane lorg, whose ninth-inning single tied the score at 5-5, belLIED reliever Curt Kaufman's first pitch of the 12th inning to the wall in right center field for a double. George Brett was then walked intentionally and the third two batters on short fly balls, Balioni hit a liner over the head of leftfielder Juan Beniquez, scoring Washington.
Kansas City tied it 5-5 in the ninth. Wilshire drew a one-out walk off California relief ace Don Aase, and on a 1-0 pitch to pinch-hitter lorg he stole second base. lung blooped a single over the head of shortstop Rob Picecio two pitches later.
California capitalized on three walks and an error by shortstop止氧 Concepcion in the fifth inning and rallied from a 3-0 deficit to a two-run lead.
Reggie Jackson walked and Doug DeCinces, Bobby Grich and pinch-hitter Darryl Secomers all singled off Mark Gubicze to cut the lead to 3-2.
Gubicza loaded the bases by walking Gary Pettis and was relieved by Joe Beckwitt, who walked Rod Carew on four pitches and forced in the tying run. Fred Lynn followed with a fielder's choice, scoring pinch hits. Gary Pettis trained home when Concepcion threw wildly to first trying for a double play.
Volleyballers fall to K-State
By CHRIS LAZZARINO
Sports Writer
The volleyball team fell to 0-3 in the Big Eight Conference when they were defeated by Kansas State last night in Allen Field House.
KU won the second game of the match, 15-5, but lost the other three, 5-15, 7-15 and 5-15.
Head coach Bob Lockwood said last night that although he was pleased with the game KU won, the team was inconsistent overall.
"We played as a young team would." Lockwood said. "We were hot and cold."
Lockwood said. We were told KU was better than K-State, even though the Javahawks won only one game.
"I definitely thought we would win," Hunt said. "We played so well in the second game. I knew we were better than them, but we came out in the third game and played like we were down three games.
"We were too inconsistent, too up and down. We need to stay up."
Hunt said practicing in Robinson Gymnasium instead of in the field house, where the team plays its home matches, hurts the team.
"Playing in here is always like going away," Hunt said. "You don't play as well going away, and we don't have the home
court advantage when we don't practice on the court we play on. But that wasn't really our problem tonight."
KU's efforts prior to the match were concentrated on stopping KState's powerful settter, Renee Whitney. However, Hunt said, Whitney was not that effective last night.
"We worked on the play where their setter hits the second ball over." Hunt said. "The two times she did, I don't think she really did that much with it."
"KU really had us in trouble, especially after the second game," Nelson said. "There were times when they really controlled the momentum of the match and that something they were unable to do last year against us. That is a real positive sign for
KState coach Scott Nelson said that the Jayhawks really had the momentum of the match when they won the second game, but that lapses in concentration hurt both teams
Lockwood said that his team couldn't get down at this point because it has a match against Missouri tonight in Columbia.
"I know they were disappointed in losing, but we have to shake that and prepare for Missouri," Lockwood said. "I'll sure be glad to get a little more game experience. Each time we need to start with a win."
Gottfried looks to positives
"Missouri is a good team — they are ranked — but anything can happen. If you serve well, block well and spike well, anything can happen."
By the Kansan staff
Head football coach Mike Gottfried had his Jayhaws take a good look at themselves yesterday.
"I met with them for an hour this morning, and I had them look at the first half against Vanderbilt and the first half against Florida State." "Gottfried said. 'I wanted them to see that and realize how good a job they'd done. I had the defense watch the offense and the offensive players. Sometimes, you really want to catch a game from the sideline. You have to see it on film."
KU trailed Florida State 14-10 and Vanderbilt 14-6 at the half, only to end up losing 41-16 to the Seminoles and 41-6 to the Compoidores.
"The thing you've got to realize is that both Vanderbilt and Florida State have pretty good teams." Gottfried said. "The positive thing is how well we played them."
Gottfried said that North Carolina, KU's opponent Saturday, would have a better chance at winning.
"By the end of the year, they'll be a power
in the ACC (Athletic Coast Conference)," he said. "They'll be back. They've just got a young team."
Starting wide receivers Skip Peete and Johnny Holloway didn't practice again yesterday. Peete has a bruised knee, and Holloway has a sprained ankle. Gottfried said both were doubtful for Saturday's game C.J. Eanes, Richard Estell and Jeff Long will alternate in Peete's and Holloway's absence if they can't make the trip to North Carolina.
Also doubtful are nose tackle Pat Kelly and fullback Mark Henderson. Kelly missed practice with a sprained ankle. Henderson, nursing a thigh bruise, practiced lightly.
JAYHAWK NOTES: Tailback Robert Mimbs ranks second in NCAA Division I in all purpose yardage this week, trailing Nebraska's Jeff Smith. In three games, Mimbs has rushed for 329 yards, caught passes for 156 yards and returned kickoffs for 133 yards, for an average of 206 all purpose yards a game Smith is averaging 232 all-purpose yards a game. Mimbs is second in the Big Eight Conference in rushing and sixth in pass receptions.
JUMKYARD'S
JYM
FREE
FREE
JUNKYARD'S JYM
6th & Gateway
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
TWO
WORKOUTS
FREE
WE NOW HAVE
SUNTAN CLUB $125.00 a year Suntanbeds—Jacuzzi—Sauna—Steam Bath
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The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 95, No. 24 (USPS 650-640)
Thursday, September 27, 1984
Deputized students boost registered voter count
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ Staff Reporter
More than 3,000 newly registered voters can mark a ballot in November because of registration drives sponsored by student organizations, the Douglas County clerk said yesterday.
Patty James, the clerk, said she had deputized about 65 students from different KU groups to make them eligible to register voters in Douglas County
"There's a lot of students interested this year," she said.
For the students to be deptuted, they must go to the county clerk's office to be instructed
by, Jaimes. Then they are deputized and sign
up oath.
an oath.
The deadline for voter registration is Oct.
16.
DELTA SIGMA THETA sorority and the College Young Democrats sponsored voter registration drives Sept. 10-14 and Sept. 17, 19 and 21. Jaimes estimated that the two groups combined had registered about 1,300 people during the drives.
people don'ng the information.
Kelli Frey, a member of Delta Sigma
Theta, said that 18 people from her sorority had been deputized to register voters.
"We felt like a lot of students were not aware that they could register in Lawrence if they were out of state," Frey, Topeka senior, said. "People don't think about it, and
then they're walking through the Union and see tables set up and realize how easy it is to register."
London Bonds, assistant director of the office of student organizations and activities, said several groups had applied to her office to have voter registration drives.
"There's definitely been an increased student interest this year." Bonds said.
student interest this year. SANDRA BINYON, WICHTA senior, is the coordinator for the Associated Students of Kansas voter registration drive. The ASK drive is a statewide effort called Task Force 84.
"This is a voter registration and education project throughout the state," Binyon said. "We've registered over 1,000 students here at KU in two separate pushes."
Student reaction to the voter registration on campus has been good, Binyon said.
"People are glad it's there," she said. "It makes it hardy because they don't have to go down to the courthouse or vote by absentee ballot."
ballot.
Binyon said about 20 deputized students had been working at the organization's registration tables. Task Force '84 now is holding a drive that will continue through tomorrow in front of Wescoe Hall.
ALSO THIS WEEK, the College Young Democrats and the Association of University Residence Halls are sponsoring a drive at the residence halls on campus.
Leo Redmond, vice president of the College Young Democrats, said the group had
registered about 800 students with the residence hall drive as of last night. The drive will continue through the week.
drive will commute to a large number of people registered who otherwise wouldn't be," said Redmond, Overland Park junior
Redmond also said that the county clerk had deputized about 20 people from his organization.
Wes Naylor, president of the KU chapter of Youth for Reagan-Bush, said his organization was planning a voter registration drive in October.
Steel policy is theme of campaign rhetoric
drive in October
"We will be working with people in the College Republicans." Naylor said. "We hope to visit every fraternity and sorority to give them a chance to register. We'll also have a booth on campus."
By United Press International
Both President Reagan and Democrat Walter Mondale stumped across industrial Ohio yesterday condemning each other's plans for putting the nation's slumping steel industry back on its feet.
Mondale, renewing his call for limits on steel imports, said in Cleveland that Reagan had "turned his back" on the needs of the industry and told the United Steelworkers convention the president wanted a environment tree of unions.
THE BIG INDUSTRIAL states of the Midwest are a key battleground in the presidential election — an area Mondale now trails in but must sweep if he has any hope of unseating Reagan.
Reagan toured a steel plant in Canton, Ohio, defending his plan to solicit voluntary limits on imports, and saying that the Mondale plan for quotas would end up burting the steel industry in the long run.
is percent. Mondale delivered a speech aimed as much at arousing his supporters as winning converts.
Mondale has proposed limiting steel imports for five years to 17 percent of the total sold in the United States. Reagan said he would work toward voluntary restraints that would result in an effective limit of about 18 percent.
converse.
"I'm mad," he said, accusing Reagan of sidestepping the issues in the campaign. "We're mad because of what they've done to us. This is our country and we're not going to take any more of it."
take any more of me.
"Let's have a fight. Let's take it to 'em. ...
Let's point out what's really going on and
let's win this election."
MONDALE CLAIMED Reagan "turned his back" on the needs of the steel industry, despite the campaign pledges four years ago to help it.
"He forget you, now it's your turn to forget him." Mondale said.
He warned the steelworkers that the administration seems "to think this nation needs a union-free environment. I think this nation needs free unions."
nation televison in Mondale's speech at the union's 22nd biennial convention was interrupted 18 times by use and loud cheers of "We Want Fritz" from 4,000 USW delegates and supporters who wore blue T-shirts saying "Get Reagan Off Your Back."
As Mondale blamed the industry's blues on Reagan, the president dramatized economic recovery by visiting a $500 million plant under construction near Canton, Ohio
IN PREPARED REMARKS to employees and construction workers at the Timkin Company plant, Reagan addressed Mondale's trade policies.
"There are those who call for protectionism and quotas, which are shortsighted and temporary at best, and which will make all of us a lot worse off in the long run," he said.
ruth, he said.
He contended that the future of the steel industry lay in strong economic growth, vigilance against unfair competition abroad and modernization like that undertaken by Timkin.
Timkin
"But a blunderbuss approach of quotas and trade barriers — encouraging stagnation by stiffing competition — is not the way to a better future," Reagan said. "It's a giant step back into the misery of a failed past."
step back into the耻人 the president promised aggressive enforcement of his decision to ensure retaliation against countries that dump industrial products "using unfair and illegal subsidies."
sides:
MONDALE LEFT FOR New York after his speech to meet with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko this afternoon. Reagan will meet with Gromyko at the White House tomorrow.
Proposal to shut down reactor gets Senate OK
By JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A resolution that asks the Kansas Legislature and the Board of Regents to provide money to shut down the Nuclear Reactor at the University of Kansas was passed by the Student Senate last night.
But the five-hour meeting was interrupted near its end when Thom Davidson, Senate Elections Committee chairman, announced that a car owned by a friend of Ruth Lichtwardt, president of the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, apparently had been sabotaged that night.
the radiator of the Senate. The Senator also passed by voice vote an election rule reforms aimed at preventing problems that plagued last November's elections.
Student Senate last night.
The resolution's request for funds is contingent on the University's discontinuing the radiation biophysics program.
He said Lichtwardt and a friend, whom he did not identify, were driving down Jayhawk Boulevard when a wheel on the car came off.
DAVIDSON WARNED senators to be careful if they publicly had stated their views on a petition calling for a referendum to determine whether GLSKO will receive money from the Student Senate in the future.
"It's getting nasty out there," Davidson said. "I'm walking home, and I'm scared."
The discussion at the Senate follows the appearance in recent weeks on campus of T-shirts that have "Fagbusters" printed on
from KU.
Steve Imber, Lawrence senior, collected 2,100 signatures on the petition last spring. Imber has said that he considers the issue to be financial. He has said that GLSOK could support itself without Senate money
them above a picture of a limp-wristed ghost. The shirts are a take-off on the popular movie "Ghostbusters."
The petition says, in part, "Included in this petition is my belief that the GLSOK could be self-supportive, and for this reason, I believe that they (GLSOK) should not receive funds of any kind from any student organization from KU."
so that in response to the petition, the Senate passed a resolution condemning discriminatory action and organized intolerance at the University.
The Elections Committee will debate the petition tonight.
THE NUCLEAR REACTOR resolution was amended on the floor to include the discontinuance of the radiation biophysics program.
program
Ken Wheeler, courtesy professor of radiation biophysics and biochemistry, said Monday that the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences had considered discontinuing the program since last spring when the program's chairman, John Zimbrick, resigned.
He said the college thought that the
But Dennis "Boog" Higbberger, student body vice president and the sponsor of the
See SENATE, p. 5, col. 1
He said the college thought that the program was no longer productive. He asked a student
SNACKS
People kill time studying for classes and writing letters while doing laundry at the Independent Coin-Op Laundry, 900 Mississippi St. At the Lauromat yesterday were.
seated left to right, Dave Smith of Lawrence; Susan Miller, Morristown, N.J., senior; Phil Weideman, Colorado Springs. Colo., junior; and Sandy Higgins, St. Louis, Mo., junior
Group peddles idea of white bikes
Staff Reporter
By JOHN HANNA
A bicycle - painted white down to its tires - sits in the Student Senate office of the Kansas Union.
Kansas city
The white bicycle could be part of a new transportation system that Carla Vogel, student body president, and Dennis "Boog" Highberger, student body vice president, want on campus by November.
"A lot of people are excited about it." Highberger said yesterday. "I've talked to literally hundreds of people. It's a good idea."
idea.
HIGHBERGER SAID that about six people were actively involved in planning the white bikes project. He said they had acquired about 10 bikes that were either abandoned at residence halls or donated.
Highberger could not say exactly how many bikes would be needed to make the system work, but he said he would like to obtain several hundred.
"As soon as we decide we've got enough, we'll spring them on an unsuspecting population," he said.
Highberger said. Under the system, Vogel said, the bikes would be left at various places around campus. A student who needed to use the bike would ride one to another spot, where he would leave it for another person to use.
The system would resemble one started in Amsterdam, Netherlands, in the late 1960s, Highberger said.
use.
Highberger said the system would use existing bicycle racks around campus as bike stops. The bikes will be painted white, or they will be marked so that they can be identified, he said.
HE ALSO SAID the group working on the project wanted to have off-campus stops. The system will cost less than running a bus for the KU on Wheels bus service, he said.
Mark "Gilligan" Sump, secretary of the Transportation Board, which oversees KU on Wheels, said running a bus cost about $35,000 for an academic year.
Vogel said the group would seek financing for the project from the Senate or the Transportation Board. Or, she said, the group could sponsor a fund-raising event such as a white bikes concert.
Highberger said he might present a proposal for the white bikes system to the Transportation Board at its next meeting on Oct. 4.
BUT HE ALSO said he would be hesitant to take a proposal through a Student Senate board or committee because he didn't want it to be tied down or limited. He said the Senate would probably require that the bikes be insured to prevent lawsuits after accidents.
"Nobody would be responsible if they just appeared," Highberger said. "I think the spirit of it would keep people from suing."
He said he liked the idea because he thought some students would consider it outrageous.
"They'd be so surprised that they'd go along with it," he said.
TV station may use student broadcasters
By JOHN EGAN
Staff Reporter
The faces of broadcast journalism students may appear in living rooms around town next semester after Lawrence's first television station begins transmission.
transmission.
TV 30, a low power television station owned by Low Power Technology Inc. of Austin, Texas, tentatively will be on the air in November. Christopher Fager, the company's vice president said yesterday
And Max Utsler, chairman of the radio-television film department, said that starting next semester, the company would include about 12 students on its staff.
"What they are willing to do for the University is incredible," he said. "It's like a giant donation. They have just bent over backwards to help us out."
over backwards to help
FAGER SAID THE link between a
low-power station and a university would be a first for the industry.
"We're taking a chance," Fager said.
"We think it's worth it. We think it will work out."
work out
Low Power Technology applied for a license to broadcast in Lawrence in 1982, and the Federal Communications Commission granted the license in February 1984. The company and the University of Kansas have been discussing merging corporate and academic resources since June.
June
Officer said the opportunity for students to work part time or earn credit at the station could boost broadcast journalism program.
ONLY STUDENTS AT THE University of Missouri-Columbia have the chance to get
"I don't think it takes long for the word to get out on something like that," he said. "This is something that no one else is doing."
hands-on television experience; at a commercial station, he said.
common classroom situations.
"I think there's a real excitement and motivation on the part of the students to make this thing work." Utsler said.
mSHA students will experience the gamut of television station operation, from news anchor or reporter to sales and promotion, Utsler said. Also, some of the station's six employees will teach broadcast journalism courses at KU.
ish courses at a VCE.
In return, the University will offer transmission space on KANU FM's broadcast tower for TV 30. Utsler said
broadcast on television.
"We are not putting up a nickel for this."
Utsler said. "They are giving us everything the state cannot provide for us."
tiring the said staff to Students will participate in the station's $100,000 news operation and will play key roles in the station's newcasts.
**WE'LL HAVE AS big and as fullfledged of a news operation as any of the
See TV, p. 5, col.1
September 27, 1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
The University Daily KANSAN
FBI links different names to single terrorist group
NEW YORK — A single terrorist group using different names may be responsible for last night's blast at a Union Carbide plant in suburban Westchester County and an explosion earlier in the day at the South African consulate in Manhattan, the FBI said yesterday.
No one was killed or injured in either explosion
San Diego massacre site razed
An FBI spokesman said the FBI was investigating the possibility that the Guerrilla Resistance group, which said it was responsible for the consulate explosion, and the United Freedom Front, which claimed responsibility for the plant explosion, were the same group.
SAN DIEGO — a bulldozer operator yesterday flattened the McDonald's restaurant building where a crazed gunman last July killed 21 people in the worst one-day massacre by a single gunman in U.S. history.
United Press International
On July 18, James Oliver Huberty, 41, an unemployed security guard who lived a half-block away, walked into the restaurant carrying a shotgun, a semiautomatic rifle, and he waiwahband and a 9-millimeter Uzi self automatic rifle slung over his shoulder.
By the time a police sniper atop the next door post office dropped Hubery with a single shot 77 minutes later, he had killed 21 people and wounded 19 others.
Immigration bill in jeopardy
WASHINGTON — Congressional negotiators appeared yesterday to have dealt a mortal blow to a sweeping immigration reform bill by failing to reach agreement on a lone issue with only a few days left in the session.
A House-Senate conference committee that spent nine days trying to work out differences on the measure recessed without setting a date for resuming negotiations.
legitimate If passed, the bill would grant legal residence to illegal aliens who entered the country before 1981.
L.L. Bean fights catalog spoof
BANGOR, Maine — L.L. Bean, a worldwide sportswear distributor, asked a federal judge yesterday to immediately halt distribution of an X-rated parody of the Maine company's renowned mail order catalog.
U. S. District Judge Conrad Cyr made no immediate ruling on the request to halt High Society magazine from further distribution of its October issue containing a spoof called "L.L. Bean's Back-to-School Sex Catalog."
MIAMI A customer at a local hardware store stocks up with intensifies and heads for the southeast Florida coast. The battery powered lantern just in case tropical storm Isidore storm was stalled over the Bahamas late yesterday.
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UAW council approves new pact
Bv United Press International
ST. LOUIS — The United Auto Workers union's 300-member General Motors Council voted overwhelmingly in favor of a new three-year contract with the nation's top automaker yesterday, clearing the way for an October ratification vote by 350,000 hourly workers.
The pact, reached early last Friday, addresses the union's key goals of job security and wage hikes. Sources said 85 percent of the delegates approved the pact during a seven-hour meeting.
UAW OFFICIALS SAID additional meetings would be held across the country to explain the pact to workers, with voting to follow. The deadline for ratification by 137 towns nationwide is Oct. 14.
UAW President Owen Bieber told a news conference that he was "delighted" by the vote and predicted ratification.
Asked whether he thought the contract would require a sales job to the membership, Bieber said. "I don't think it's a matter of selling — it's a matter of explaining how the agreement will work."
agreement Council approval was expected after dissident leaders decided late Tuesday not to stage a floor fight, basically because they did not know enough details to challenge the pact.
pa
The contract was kept under close guard and council members were not allowed to see it until they filed into the hotel ballroom yesterday where the vote was taken.
REACTION WAS MIXED among local leaders. Fred Myers, of Local 591 in Flint, Mich., who had led the dissident "Restore and More in '84" group, said he would vote for the contract.
"I'm not real fond of the raises, but you can't get everything you want," said Myers. But George Sailer of Local 14 in Toledo.
Ohio, said he was not happy with wage provisions that call for smaller raises for the lower-level parts workers he represents.
"The union leaders may get it passed — I don't know — but I'm not going to help them." Sailer said.
Bill Nicolay, commitee member of Local 595 in Linden, N.J., said the contract would probably be voted down by his local. "I have a good feeling when the bargaining team comes back they're going to advise the workers to vote no on the contract," Nicolay said.
Dan Neeley, also of Local 599 in Flint, said his members were more interested in job security than wage increases.
NICOLAY SAID HIS members wanted the concessions made by the union in 1982 restored.
"We feel the job security is what most people are looking for, not the wages," he said.
Picket lines at Yale cause disruptions
By United Press International
NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Classes at Yale University were disrupted yesterday when about 1,200 white collar workers seeking their first contract went on strike, claiming wage discrimination against women and minorities by the school.
More than 400 classes were conducted in churches, theaters and professors' homes, as many students and faculty honored campus picket lines set up at 6 a.m.
No quick resolution seemed in sight in the school's largest work stoppage since it opened in 1701.
The impact of the walkout by clerical and technical workers was compounded by 900 food service and maintenance members of an affiliate union who honored the picket lines.
About 1,500 members of the 2,650 members of Local 34. Federation of University Teachers on women, walked off job at a s.A.m., yesterday in a prolonged dispute over a first contract.
Spare over a break at 11 p.m. Tuesday,
negotiations broke off at 11 p.m. Tuesday,
after Local 34 rejected what Yale called its
final offer. No new talks were scheduled.
"We're not going to change our offer." Yale President A. Bartlett Giannatti said yesterday at a news conference. "It is abundantly and aptly clear the university has been making a maximum effort for a long time."
Giamatti has refused binding arbitration as an alternative and was unwilling to accept the union's request to debate the issue in a public forum. He said a debate would be inappropriate.
Yale's firm resolve was matched by the union in telephone calls yesterday obtaining payment deferrals for its members from local banks, utilities and credit unions.
"We didn't receive a single negative response," said Rosalind Hamlin, a striker coordinating the telephone effort
Yale negotiator Michael Finnerty said Yale's offers were generous and "stretched the university's resources to the limit," but the union yesterday challenged how generous the offers were.
Jeffrey Collins, a senior in Near Eastern studies, said, "I'm in favor of the union, but I'm not thrilled. The strike apparently is the only way the university can be made to realize the needs of these people. It's deplorable it should come to this. The students have the most to lose."
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8
September 27,1984 Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Final enrollment figures due to be released today
Final enrollment figures for this fall are expected to be released today, according to the office of university relations.
Last two prisoners recaptured
The figures show how many students are enrolled at the University of Kansas and will be used by the Kansas Legislature to determine budget appropriations for KU.
LANSING. Kan. — The last two of five convicts who escaped from the Kansas State Penitentiary Monday were captured early yesterday morning.
Herb Maschner, director of the Kansas State Penitentiary, said all five inmates were in maximum confinement. Three of the inmates were murderers, another a convicted rapist and sodomist and the fifth a robber
Authorities in Kansas City, Kan. apprehended three of the inmates without incident Tuesday evening in a wooded, residential neighborhood. The other two were quietly arrested by a Wyandotte County sheriff's officer early this morning about five miles from the prison in Lansing.
Seaver to analyze program
The former director of the Western Civilization program will speak at 8 p.m. tonight in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union on the development and future of the program.
James Seaver, who was director from 1057 to 1084 and is a professor of history, will present "The Western Civilization Program and the Liberal Arts Curriculum at the University of Kansas, 1945 to 1984."
Dave Nelson, a nationally known speaker on fraternities and sororities, will open Greek Week 1984 with a speech at 10 a.m. Saturday in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Greek Week to begin Saturday
the Kansas Colonial
Also on Saturday, a picnic for all fraternity and sorority members will start at noon at Potter Pavilion.
All fraternities and sororites donated money to sponsor Greek Week, said Julie Powers, public relations chairman for the event.
Feminist workshop planned
**Activities for the rest of the week**
include: Greek Sing at 6:30 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom, the Greek Olympics from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at Ninth and Iowa streets, and a reception for all fraternity and sorority from 7 to 10 p.m. Wednesday at the K.S. Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave
A workshop exploring the meaning of being a feminist will be sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 4 in the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union.
The workshop, "I'm Not a Feminist. But ..." will include a presentation of historical information about the women's movement Group discussion about issues such as equal pay for equal work, sisterhood and the Equal Rights Amendment will follow
Weather
Today will be mostly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain. The high will be in the mid- to upper 30s. Winds will be from the north at 10 to 15 mph. Tonight and tomorrow will be partly cloudy. The low tonight will be in the low to mid-40s. The high tomorrow will be in the low to mid-60s.
Correction
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
Because of an editor's error, the clarification in this space in yesterday's Kansan was incorrect. Referring to a story in "Tuesday's Kansan", Phil Poulos, legal secretary for Columbia Pictures' office in Burbank, Calif., said this week that it would be illegal for the local sellers of anti-homosexual T-shirts to use a logo similar to that of Columbia's "Ghost-busters" movie if the T-shirt sellers had not obtained permission from Columbia to use the likeness of the logo.
kickaway
Dick Wright (left), associate professor of music history and Jazz Host of KANU-92. Dick Biege (center), jazz enthusiast from Topeka, and Ellen Johnson, librarian for special sound
recording, inspect newly arrived jazz records at the library in Murphy Hall. The records, part of a collection from the 1920s and 1930s, arrived yesterday from California.
Jazz collection comes to Murphy
By DAVID LASSITER
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas struck it rich with a collection of jazz records from the West Coast.
Yesterday, the Riss International
Trucking Firm delivered 2,000 pounds of 78
rpm records to the Murphy Hall Music
Library. The collection came from a
relative of the late Red Nichols, a jazz
coronetist.
The value of the collection is not known, but Ellen Johnson, Murphy Hall music librarian, estimated that it was worth more than $100,000.
"WE REALLY DON'T know how many records there are." Johnson said, "but we've estimated that 2,000 pounds is close to 3,000 to 4,000 records.
"One collection of 4,000 opera records was estimated at $90,000. So I'd estimate that this collection is worth $100,000 to $250,000."
Dick Biege, a jazz enthusiast from Topeka, discovered the records in March when he went to California to visit his cousin.
"My cousin said 'Hey, Dick, you should go look at this lady's record collection,' " Biege said. "So I went over and took a look, and the lady turned out to be Ben Nichols' wife."
Nichols wife Ben Nichols is the cousin of Red Nicholas, one of the leaders in the jazz movement, Biege said.
Red Nichols began recording jazz music in 1926 on Edison records, when his group, Red and Miff's Stompers, recorded "The Alabama Stomp" on Oct. 13, 1926
we priced it.
"I press the suggestion took hold because about a week after I got back to Topkea she called and told me that the records were mine." Biege said.
Alabama stamp 06027 BIEGE TOLD NICHOLS that she should give the collection to an organization that would preserve it.
Biege immediately began to think about how to get the records back to Kansas so that they could be added to KU's collection of 20,000 jazz records. Biege graduated from Kansas State University, but he said the idea of giving them to his alma mater never crossed his mind.
Dick Wright, associate professor of music history and journalism, is the host of a jazz radio show on Saturday mornings on KANU-FM 92.
"I never thought of them going any place else." Biege said. "I've listened to Dick (Wright) on the radio for 25 years."
BIEGE HAD TROUBLE moving the records to Lawrence. Trucking services wouldn't handle the albums because they were so fragile. He finally put the records into cooled storage for the summer in Lancaster, Calif., until he could decide how to move them.
Wright, one of Biege's friends, soon became involved in the project of getting the records to Kansas.
"Dick (Biege) really deserves a lot of the thanks in this project," Wright said. "He's the one who paid for the storage, boxing and loading of the records."
Wright then got Paul Gray, previous owner of what is now The Jazzhaus, interested in the project.
Biege said a man in California spent a week packing all the records into boxes for the trip.
"Everyone that knows about this action has handled them with kid gloves. From Denver to here, that was all that was on the truck," Biege said.
Autumn air brings snap to Lawrence
By HOLLIE MARKLAND Staff Reporter
Daisy Buchanan lamented the langual days of summer in "The Great Gatsby." She longed for the time "when things would get crisis again in the fall."
crisp again in the winter.
Daisy's favorite season drifted into Lawrence this week as crisp Canadian air turned summer to autumn, and temperatures fell Tuesday night to a low of 36 degrees, one degree warmer than a 1912 record for low temperatures, a weather observer from the KU Weather Service said.
Yesterday, which had a high temperature of 55 degrees, was the second day of a Midwestern cold snap. Bob Harrigan, the weather observer, said the cold air swooped into the Midwest from Canada, but by Sunday temperatures should be around 70 degrees.
Monday's high temperature of 92 degrees ironically tied the 1920 record for heat in September, Harrigan said.
TODAY'S HIGH temperature is expected to be 65 degrees with a low tonight of 36 degrees. Tomorrow is predicted to be partly cloudy with a high around 65 degrees.
Yesterday's cold didn't rattle Patti Ferber, Kansas City, Mo., senior, dressed in a bulky sweater. She said she was prepared for the sting of cold weather this morning.
sing or cool to it. "I'm pretty comfortable because I dressed warmly," she said. "'Good Morning, America,' forewarned me."
She said the furnace in her apartment was not on, and her air conditioner was still in the window.
But not all students were prepared for the big chill. Steve Lee, Lawrence senior, who was dressed in two T-shirts and a nylon jacket, said all of his winter clothes were in Atlanta, Ga.
"there are the warmest clothes I've got," "THESE are said. "But it shouldn't be a problem. When I get home tonight, I'll just crawl into the covers."
Staying in bed is not the only way some Lawrence residents are keeping warm. A local liquor store manager reported that the cold had increased sales of some products
whenever the temperature changes, you see a shift toward more people buying wines and spirits," said John Webb, manager and partner of Green's Fine Wines. 800 W. 23rd
But a local ice cream store reported that the gray day had put a chill in its sales.
Lon Weir, Shawnee Mission senior and employee of Baskin-Robbins 31 Flavors Ice Cream Store, 1524 W. 23rd St., said that when it cold was sunny, people still wanted ice cream. But sales had fallen since the skies had dreaved.
LAWRENCE WAS NOT the only city stiffened by the cold for the second day. Temperatures across the Midwest were as much as 25 degrees colder than normal for late September, according to the National Weather Service.
Sioux Falls, S.D., with a low of 23 degrees,
broke a record that had stood since 1906
Area candidates out ringing doorbells
Staff Reporter
Ry SUZANNE BROWN
In 1847, a reporter traveling with Abraham Lincoln wrote that the candidate seemed to greet more people and shake more hands than anyone could have imagined.
More than 100 years later, Lawrence candidates for state offices say personal contact with district voters is still their most effective campaign advertising.
"That's still the best way to get you in touch with voters," said Lawrence Seaman Jr. "Democratic candidate for state senator." "I prefer grassroots politics."
1 prefer grassroots
SEVERAL TIMES A week. Douglas
County candidates in this year's election ring
doorbells, shake hands, pass out campaign
literature and hope their efforts will be rewarded.
"Radio and newspaper ads reach a lot of people who aren't even in your district," said State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, who is running for re-election. "When you go door to door, you know you're talking just to people in your district."
Most of the state candidates in Douglas County have spent hours each week since summer walking their districts. They said they expected to put in many more.
Jules Hack, Charlton's Republican opponent, joined six other Republican candidates last night to walk through parts of North Lawrence and meet the residents there.
Lawrence will. Hack's smile never disappeared as she resumed from house to house, introducing herself to people who stood framed in doorways, peering at her through the gathering bloom with expressions of curiosity or indifference.
histry or inference.
"I WON'T READ it because I can't," said
an elderly man, indicating his weak vision
after Hack handed him a campaign flier
But another woman appeared interested when Hack gave her campaign information.
"I vote for whoever I think is best," she told Hack. "I never vote just Republican or just Democrat because of the party. I never did understand how that works anyway."
Most of the people Hick called on last night were home, but the candidate said that residents had been gone about 40 percent of the time since she had started walking her district in August.
dissipated, Quinton, who had campaigned unsuccessfully for the Statehouse in 1966 and 1968, said she remembered when neighborhood populations were more stable and more people were at home when she went door to door.
'THERE USED TO be a lot of older women at home who would say, 'oh, the men in our
Charles Stough, a Lawrence lawyer who served in the State Legislature from 1948 to 1964, walked his district when he ran for city and county offices in the 1940s.
family do the voting," Charlton said. "I didn't really try to talk them into voting. I didn't have time."
Back then, Stough said, farmers and townpeople were usually home when he visited, often because people could not afford to go many places.
"The trouble was covering all your territory because people wanted to stop and visit," he said.
Stough said walking his district gave him a good idea of the mood of voters toward political issues.
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IN THEOSE DAYS, they were bread and butter issues," he said. "I gave you a good feel for the times. There was a certain cynicism among people then."
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8
September 27,1984 Page 4
OPINION
KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University, Daily Kansan, UMPS 604-640 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Straffter Fink Hall, Lawrence, Kanus. 604-640 daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and six periods. Second class payment帖位 at Lawrence. Kanus 6044 Subscriptions by mail are $13 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $1 a year outside Douglas County. Send address changes to the University, Daily Kansan, 118 Straffter Fink Hall, Lawrence. Kanus 6044
DON KNOX Editor
PAUL SEVART VINCE BESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
DOUG CUNNINGHAM Campus Editor
DAVE WANAMAKER Business Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
General Manager and News Adviser
LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
JILL GOLDBLATT Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Shirt tale
It's difficult at first glance to decide what one's reaction should be, laughter or disgust.
The "Fagbusters" T-shirts circulating around campus borrow elements from a popular and humorous movie, "Ghostbusters."
However, the T-shirt must be considered for the idea it presents, not for its colorful design or its association with "Ghostbusters."
The idea behind the "Fagbusters" T-shirt is neither humorous nor attractive. Stereotypes do not represent enlightened comment, nor do they lead to greater understanding.
Hatred of homosexuals is not a laughing matter.
Perhaps the T-shirt is the result of an effort to reconcile homosexuality as a practice with homosexuals as people. Approval of homosexual practices is not a prerequisite for recognition of homosexuals as people. The T-shirt, however, goes beyond the question of homosexual practices and attacks people.
A complicating factor is that Steve Imber, leader of a petition drive to place the funding of a campus homosexual group on a referendum, also sold a T-shirt to a Kansan reporter. He has said in the past that he opposed financing of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas because the group could be self-supporting and therefore should not receive student fee money.
A previous editorial pointed out that it would not be fair "to deny the financing of GLSOK without having the chance to vote to deny the financing of other student organizations that also could be considered self-supporting."
The "Fagbusters" T-shirts hurt the credibility of the notion that a referendum would be based on the financial standing of GLSOK. The petition as it stands should be rejected. If a referendum is to take place, the petition's objectives should be clearly stated, not implied.
Desegregation
Thirty years after the landmark Supreme Court decision that forbade segregated schools, the Kansas City, Mo., school district last week was told it was guilty of illegal segregation.
A federal district court judge gave school officials 90 days to develop a desegregation plan — no small feat for a district where 68 percent of the students are black.
The ruling is another chapter in a story that began nearly 10 years ago when the Office for Civil Rights, part of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, investigated Kansas City schools and found what it thought was a disproportionate racial balance.
An HEW administrative law judge agreed that the segregation should be corrected and suggested that $7 million of the district's federal funds be cut if the schools remained segregated.
So, with the beginning of the school year in 1977, about 6,300 students were bused within the district to even out racial composition.
The busing plan displeased most parents — black and white — and failed to integrate nearly 30 black schools.
Last week's ruling gives the district another chance to try to develop a solution, a chance for which the school board should be grateful.
The school board has already announced what would and what would not be included in those plans.
Officials say that without the involvement of students from suburban areas, little can be done about the racial mix within the district.
Instead of implementation of mandatory busing or redrawing of district lines, however, the board wants to desegregate the schools through voluntary transfers.
Board members hope to attract students from the suburbs into the city with magnet schools - schools that have special programs, more teachers or more academic opportunities.
At the same time, officials hope, improvement of programs to attract students will help overcome any deficiencies now in the schools.
As is the case with many jobs, however, the task is much easier said than done.
A complicating factor is that the suburban Kansas City school districts were not found to be contributing to segregation — they were dropped from the lawsuit earlier this year. In St. Louis, however, interdistrict transfers to magnet schools has been credited with helping to integrate schools. The desegregation settlement for that city specifically involved a mandate for transfers between city and suburban schools.
Extra incentive must be included in the plan to encourage suburban schools to become involved. That extra incentive must come from exceptionally high-quality programs.
The school district has been given chances before, and has not been entirely successful. Now the board bears the burden of creating magnet schools that work.
If the board can make the most of this chance, everyone stands to win. Worries over segregation could end and education would be improved.
Kansas creepy critters bug Coloradan
Maybe now, with the recent spell of cooler weather. KU students will not have to deal with the one inescapable fact about this state — Kansans must share their part of the world with every disgusting bug, spider and organism known to man.
Although I realize that these creepy little beings—which flew and crawled around campus in August and half of September — serve a purpose in the ecosystem, this fact does not reassure or comfort me. They invade my privacy, eat holes in my clothes and jump out from behind every corner I turn.
When I left my comfortable home in Colorado three years ago, I was confident that the University of Kansas would bring me the knowledge I sought to enable me to compete in the job market.
However, my academic choice turned out to be much better than the climate and surroundings.
Now, I have learned to tolerate the humidity and I can even handle the drivers who panic at the sight of one-half inch of snow on the road, but tolerating these other pesky inhabitants of Kansas is something I cannot take so easily.
The locust is top on my list of useless, displeasing creatures. Its
its ability to take a flying dive at any unsuspecting pedestrian along the street.
In Colorado, the climate is generally too cold for the common house fly and lightning bugs, and chiggers are an unknown phenomenon. Yes, we have ants and mosquitoes, but not all of them especially disturbing creatures that never let up in their battle to annoy the everyday human.
Besides this, the noise it creates all night can be compared to the cacophony of an electronic alarm clock that cooks up noise because no one turns it off.
Moreover, its flights through the air often end when its crunchy body breaks apart.
I will do better.
ROBIN
PALMER
Staff Columnist
to let go as its legs cling to the person like a sticky piece of velcro.
The fly. I know, seems to be a small matter to argue about; however, when a person is used to silence and lack of interruptions during study, studying is often a bad habit for person's head hour after hour becomes more than a slight nuisance.
The worst characteristic of the fly is that it seems to be insecure; it never seems to be able to get more than an arm's length away after it's decided to keep someone company with its incessant buzz. A fly never hovers about on its own; it simply follows every sign of life or food.
And then, Kansas.has the beloved chigger.
At least with the mosquito, I could see the enemy attack. With the chigger, I knew when to expect the results, but I did not know that one short afternoon spent sitting in the grass could leave me with a permanent itch that doubled those I had received at home.
All of these organisms mean one thing to someone who has never had to deal with the intrusion of bugs and spiders.
Ultimately, I despise every corner I have to turn, knowing that some creeping, crawling or flying creature is waiting on the other side.
LOL
Johnny Appleseed as 1980s celebrity
Johnny Appleseed roamed the countryside in the early 1800s. Some people think that Johnny Appleseed was a myth, but he wasn't. His real name was John Chapman; he was born in Massachusetts in 1774, and he devoted his life to making fruit available for pioneers.
He often traveled barefoot, and sometimes he wore a coffee sack for clothing. He planted his seeds in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana.
Because of this, the story of Johnny Appleseed was passed from generation to generation; he became a genuine folk hero.
But what would the story of Johnny Appleseed have been like if he had never learned?
He might start off in relative anonymity, but a reporter from the "P.M. Magazine" television show in Pittsburgh would hear about him.
Soon enough Charles Kural would pick up on the story for CRS TV.
Within a week, UNA Today would gift ApplePlex its ultimate accolade to the team.
Phil Donahue would invite Apple-seed to appear on his show as a representative of a coming trend
one and a story about him in the Life section.
By the end of the first month, Appleseed would sign on with the International Creative Management
-a small color picture on top of page
---
BOB
GREENE
Syndicated
Columnist
talent agency in New York. Appleseed's new managers would hire the bicoastal Rogers and Cowan public relations agency. Reporters would have to settle for prepared statements that quoted Appleseed.
Appleseed would sign a book contract to tell the story of his life, and the book would be sold to NBC-TV for a mini-series.
Appleseed's managers would li-
case designer versions of his coffee sack clothing, but they would fail to find a way to license the rights to his bare feet.
A chain of "Johnny's Apple Shops" would be franched. The stores would sell apples, apple pies and on. The visual trademark would be a plastic apple tree planted in front of each store.
Appleseed would make a national promotional tour, visiting the stores and signing autographs. This effort would be buttressed by a series of television commercials, in which Appleseed would say, "Hi! I'm Johnny Appleseed, and I'd like to invite you to my Apple Shops."
Appleseed would retain a team of investment counselors to advise him. He would move to Reverley Hills. He is now in the company of Cathy Lee Crosby.
Appleseed would appear on the TV show "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous." The feature would include a look at a young girl and headaches of being a celebrity.
Westinghouse Broadcasting would offer Appleseed his own talk show. Appleseed would have to give up the coffee sack and instead wear clothes made especially for him by Ralph Lauren. He would also wear the talk show chairs, however, a logo showing Appleseed in the coffee sack would be displayed.
Johnny Appleseed's celebrity status would last two years; in the third year, the book, the talk show and the rest would decline in popularity.
By the fifth year, the book would be out of print, the mini-series would be off the air, the designer coffee sacks would be out of production, the Johnny's Apple Shops would be in Chapter 11 bankruptcy, and the talk show would be canceled.
In the sixth year, Johnny Appleseed would be arrested for possession of cocaine. His managers would say in a statement that he had had "personal problems." A judge would release him on probation, or the stipulation that he seek counseling
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Crowding in economics courses hurts students
To the editor:
The article on crowded foreign language courses (Sept. 18, "Surge in language enrollment crowds classrooms") was a real eye-opener.
I would like to extend my sympathy to those students who must suffer the crowded conditions of those enormous classes. However, they can take heart from knowing that the institution for taking courses in other departments where crowded conditions have prevailed for years.
In economics, for example, students can only dream of small, uncrowded classes. The introductory classes are many times the size of those in foreign languages. Almost all the discussion sections in economics have enrollments in excess of those language classes.
courses in economics average 31 students this semester, while the intermediate level courses in microeconomics and macroeconomics average nearly 50 students. In all these cases, these averages are far from average. Moreover, the administration wants us to teach over big classes.
The business school students and economic majors subjected to these large classes are, of course, the lucky ones. They managed to enroll in these courses before they closed during early enrollment in April.
Although about 800 students managed to squeeze into micro and macro, we estimate conservatively that we turned away 100 or more, thereby thwarting their plans to study abroad. We chose the choice, or delaying their graduation date. The real shocker is that, without additional resources, even
Worse, the junior-senior elective
more students will be closed out in the spring semester.
Thomas Weiss
Department of Economics
If service had been provided by many different companies, then person A would not be able to talk to person B if both had different companies. One company had to handle one network and another one that way, service and maintenance would be handled much more efficiently. Gee! No, AT&T
Bearish on Cubs
The other day the news media broadcast pictures of the celebration in the Chicago Cubs' locker room. The Nationals captured the National League East title.
To the editor:
Not to be outdone, Robinson praises the destruction of Death Phone, commanded by Darth Bell, head of the Devil Monopoly.
Robinson should write about something he knows a little about, like his own neptness
The pictures prompted questions in my mind. Where, for instance, are the indignant condemnations? Where are the expressions of fear and alarm at possible disillusionment of our innocent, properly bred youngsters? I am horrified at the immoral and blasphemous conduct of these and other athletes, people 1 once upon a time idolized.
Column on 'Darth Bell' lacks facts
To the editor:
After reading Michael Robinson's
logical column (sep. 17, "Ma Bell's
AT&T has provided and will continue to provide the best telephone service in the world. No Western nation comes close to providing the best and the cheapest service that AT&T has provided.
Robinson says that "AT&T didn't give a damn what we thought (before the breakup)." Apparently he didn't do a single job of investment but he helped his column. This is typical for his type of journalism, no facts.
Also, if many companies had been in competition, people in rural areas would lack telephone service because it would be unprofitable for companies to spread long lines to very remote areas for one or two telephones. AT&T did put lines for all rural folks and didn't charge them anything extra. So much for the selfishness of Ma Bell. Every time I pick up the receiver, she's there to serve me.
Then comes our wonderful government and, in its most infinite wisdom, declares the best telephone system in the world to be too good and needing to be broken up.
Victor Goodpasture Topeka sophomore
Individuals displaying such blatant indecency as pouring over themselves and others, not to mention actually ingesting, drugs as these ballplayers did should be persecuted to the fullest extent of the law. Upon the rendering of the only possible guilty — they should be executed
Doug Humphreys Great Bend senior
To the editor:
Sad patriotism
In the column, Margaret Hosty of Chicago is quoted: "If I ever found out that a Communist was living next door or on my block, I almost feel like smuggling my M.I.16 rite into the army of the people." In a neighborhood
To the editor:
After reading Bob Greene's column of Sept 17 "Teenage girl prepares for Soviet invasion", my reaction was: sad
Although I bear little love for any totalitarian system, I feel that Hosty would do well to remember a portion of the Pledge of Allegiance "one
nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."
That "all" means everyone: Communists and Nazis, as well as Democrats and Republicans. As long as they obey the laws of the land, all citizens are entitled to the liberties guaranteed by the Constitution.
Patriotism can be a fine thing, but it is no excuse for totalitarian practices in what is supposed to be a democracy.
Stephen M. Smith
Stephen M. Smith Eudora graduate student
Women's pay
In her attack on comparable worth (Sept. 19, "Hidden dangers of comparable worth"), columnist Jennifer Fine misogynely encourages women who wish to receive adequate compensation for their work, to enter vocations traditionally occupied by men.
History has shown that the value of a vocation changes drastically when a shift in the sex of the participants occurs. For example, in the era when male secretaries were the norm, secretarial workers were highly respected and well paid. Conversely, women are more frequently the recognition it is due as a profession, largely because of the growing number of male nurses.
Reliance on market values that reflect society's sexist assumption that men's physical labor is worth more than women's intellectual and physical labor is hardly a fair system.
Although comparable worth as *sessions would require the difficult and subjective determination of job worth, they would generate an economic shift to parallel the politi- cal shift toward the valuing of work for its consequences rather than on the basis of who performs the tasks.
Donna E. Dees
Derby graduate student :
8
University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1984
Page 5
Senate continued from p. 1
resolution, said last night that the nuclear reactor, located on 15th Street near Learned Hall, would have to be shut down if the radiation biophysics program was discontinued.
Wheeler said the program was the only one using the reactor for educational purposes.
Higherber said he and Carla Vogel, student body president, had met yesterday with an official in charge of the reactor to discuss the situation.
University administrators said last week that shutting down the reactor could cost between $500,000 and $1 million. Operating the reactor costs about $20,000 a year.
"ITS GOING TO have to be done sometime." Highberg said.
The package of election reforms that the Senate passed included stricter rules for write-in candidates and stricter rules for the Elections Committee, which runs the elections. Senators debated the items in the package for about four hours before voting on it.
Senators also approved a resolution calling for the Elections Committee to investigate mechanized polling and the possibility of finding a group outside the Senate to run its
The package was passed by the Senate Rights Committee on Sept. 18 after five hours of discussion, which led to the full Senate's consideration of the changes last night. The reforms were suggested by the Ethics and
Standards Committee, a temporary committee set up by Senate officers in the spring.
The new elections rules say that the Elections Committee will choose its chairman, instead of the student body president, who previously selected the chairman.
THE NEW RULES also say that ballots for write-in candidates will be considered valid if they contain a reasonable representation of a candidate's names.
Write-in candidates also must not notify the Elections Committee chairman of their campaigns two days before the election.
candidate under the new rules, a candidate may leave a coalition to run as an independent, or the head of a coalition may remove a candidate from his coalition. Both had not been allowed under the old Senate regulations.
In unrelated action, a former KU student last night announced that he was circulating a petition to convince Vogel to run for re-election.
Greg Walstrom, a 1969 graduate who lives in Lawrence, said he had started the petition last week and had gathered about 300 signatures. He said he had known Vogel for four years and worked with her fall and spring campaigns.
He hopes to collect 5,000 signatures, he said.
Vogel declined comment on the petition.
1234567890
Phil Schoettlin. Lee's Summit, Mo., junior, practices his golf in the field between Stouffer Place and Ellsworth Residence Hall yesterday late afternoon. Schoettlin said he was getting in his last swings for the season.
Legislators study education of children by parents
Topeka stations." Utsler said.
TV continued from n-1
10p6ka*students* in school
Fager said that by improving broadcast
programs, the students, the station could
experiment with presenting news in a
different fashion.
TV 30, which has a $500,000 budget, will broadcast in an eight-mile radius.
include newscasts and music videos. He said that Low Power Technology had a 2,000-title library of music videos, ranging from oldies to jazz to rock 'n' roll.
"We feel there's a real need for local television," Fager said. "The sooner, the better."
Low Power Technology operates a low-power station in Anchorage, Alaska. Fager said. He said that the company had about 500 applications for low-power stations filed with the Federal Communications Commission and wanted to establish stations in many U.S. college towns
Fager said the station's format would
schooling in any way. The interim committee chairman agreed, but he said home schoolers could not be given a free rein.
By United Press International
than public, private or other. Supporters of home schooling have asked legislators to place few restrictions on home schooling in any law changes.
parents who think they can do a better job than public, private or parochial schools.
Kansas, $100.
He also helped researchers to determine how students could transfer between public and home schools and how individual freedoms could be safeguarded
TOPEKA - Members of a legislative interim study committee said yesterday that they needed more information before deciding how much freedom Kansas parents should have to teach their children at home.
"There needs to be some restructuring, some planning, on the part of the parent who is responsible for the schooling of the child at home." Sen. Joe Harder, R-Moundridge.
Kansas, said.
Legislators on the interim education committee asked staff researchers to find out what criteria 33 other states use to assure children were getting a good education from
Previous committee testimony this week has shown that since Kansas passed a mandatory school attendance law in 1903, home schooling has been a gray area. Some school districts have reported students truant, resulting in criminal charges against parents.
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8
September 27,1984 Page 6
ENTERTAINMENT
The University Daily KANSAN
Up,
Up,
and
Away
A hot air balloon floats above a vast expanse of flat terrain, with a few buildings visible in the distance. The sky is overcast, suggesting an early morning or late afternoon setting.
Joel Jackson/KANSAN
Balloon business is more than a lot of hot air
By P.M. LEWIS Staff Reporter
It was one of the best birthday presents Barbara Etzel ever received. In fact, she floated all the way home. Last week, Etzel, professor of human development, spent her birthday in a hot air balloon.
"All my life I've wanted to go for a balloon ride," she said. The former World War II airplane and glider pilot was surprised with a birthday flight by her students and fellow teachers.
Eitzel's pilot for the trip was local ballooning githusiast Alan Miller.
Miller, 36, is a former banker turned balloonist. He and his wife Vickie own Lawrence BalloonPort, RFD 2, the area's only commercial hot air ballooning operation.
AS WELL AS being available for birthday flights. Lawrence BalloonPort offers champagne training and wedding flights.
The champagne flight culminates with a bottle of champagne when the balloon touches down. "It's sort of a ballooning tradition," Miller said.
Occasionally passengers request that the cork be popped in flight, and Miller readily honors the request, but as the pilot, he is excluded from the festivities, he said.
Training flights are available for aspiring balloonists, and wedding flights accommodate those wishing lighter-than-air nuptials. He booked his first wedding flight this fall. A wedding flight is about the same as the champagne flight but a justice of the peace or a clergyman gets to ride along.
ALL FLIGHTS LAST about one hour and cost $175. During that hour, the balloon travels six to 15 miles, depending on the wind. Miller said. Flight altitudes average
about 1,500 feet, but some of the most exciting flying is contour flying, skimming along just above tree tops, he said.
"Each flight has its own beautiful characteristics." Miller says. "The actual lift off is always controlled by the speed of the wind. Although it is always smooth, a higher wind makes a more exciting launch."
makers.
The balloon's wicker basket can easily hold four people, but Miller prefers flying with two simply because it is roomier. The eight foot tall triangular basket is suspended from a balloon that stands seven and a half stories tall and is printed with a traditional elephant pattern of blue, gold and green.
THE BALLOON CONTAINS 77,000 cubic feet of air and takes about 15 minutes to inflate. The air is heated by bursts of flame from a ten gallon propane tank. When it goes up, the balloon carries three more tanks which can keep it aloft for one and a half hours. Miller said.
Miller described his business as "pretty well laid back." He is that way, too. He got into ballooning because he enjoyed balloons, not because he wanted to make a fortune.
"You can stay as busy as you want with advertising," he said, "but we rely on word of mouth." Miller does not advertise much because he does not want the business to get too big.
"one season we flew 100 hours," he said,
but that was unusually high. We probably average 25-50 flights per year."
BALLOONING TENDS to be seasonal, he says, but it doesn't have to be because hot air balloons actually fly better in colder weather.
Miller says balloons can even fly at night if properly lighted, but landing in the dark can give even the most experienced pilot problems. While he prefers to fly during the day, Miller usually only flies in the dark
when he launches his balloon before dawn and lands after the sun has risen.
The Millers first experienced ballooning at their wedding. On May 1, 1976, they launched from Loose Park in Kansas City, Mo., and were married at an altitude of 1,400 feet.
Miller enjoyed the flight so much that he used $1,200 he received as wedding presents to take pilot's lessons. After the lessons, he had to pass a Federal Aviation Administration test before he received his license. The test includes written, oral and flying sections.
THE COUPLE purchased their balloon soon after Miller received his license. Miller's first balloon cost $10,000.
The FAA regulates ballooning like any other aircraft, but balloonists do not have to notify anyone of where and when they are flying.
The city of Lawrence places additional restrictions on balloonists. The city wants flights in town to be launched from Broken Arrow Park, and land at the Lawrence Municipal Airport. Miller said that this was "pretty much impossible" because it was difficult to determine exactly where the balloon will land.
To solve this problem, he tries to land before he reaches city limits, or he flies over town. But if he wanted to launch from or land in the city, the city office's office would probably give its OK
Usually, Miller launches from his house six miles south of Lawrence, and his favorite landing site is at Clinton reservoir.
Does Miller still fly for pleasure?
"Well," he said, "we just make the commercial flights, but it's always a pleasure."
A
JacksonKARA
Above, John Howard, RED 4, and Rich Camkins, 2133 Ohio St. inflate the Lawrence BalloonPort balloon before it takes off Top, Alan Miller, owner on near Pleasant Grove. Miller runs the business from his home near JacksonKARA.
Joel Jackson/KANSA
Arden Trio opens Chamber Series
Rc KAREN MASSMAN
By KAREN MASSMAN
Associate Entertainment Editor
The power of the piano, blended with the delicacy of the violin and the cello, will ignite Sunday when the Arden Trio performs at the University of Kansas.
I
The trio, composed of Suzanne Ornstein, violinist, Clay Reude, cellist, and Thomas Schmidt, pianist, will perform at 3 p.m. in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. The group opens the 1984/85 Chamber Music Series.
For audiences that don't have much knowledge of chamber music, the piano trio has a great attraction. Schmidt said.
It is the most popular form of chamber music next to the string quartet for composers. The trio also provides variety for an audience, Schmidt said, because of the piano, unlike the string quartet, which has four similar sounding instruments.
The Arden Trio
"I THINK THAT in the last 10 to 20 years there has been an enormous growth and interest in chamber music" . Schmidt said. The Musical Quarterly has 15 tiers listed,
and that humility is certainly are committed to the Archeo Trio as a lifelong commitment." Schmidt said. "Our intentions are to pursue it that way. Not all groups are as committed. With us there has been a commitment from the very beginning."
The Musical Quarterly has 15 trios listed,
and that number is growing fast.
The trio rehearses an average of two to three times a week, he said.
"We are constantly working on a piece even if we've performed it 30 to 40 times." Schmidt said.
On Sunday, the trio will perform a standard repertoire, he said. It will play Trio in C Major by Hayden, Trio in E Minor, Op. 67 by Shostakovich and Trio (1915) by Ravel.
CRITICS OF THE TRIO have described the group as playing like a single instrument because they blend so well. The group prides itself on that precision, Schmidt said.
The group has also commissioned composers to write pieces specifically for the trio with grants from the National Endowment for Chamber Music and the American
Since the eperon is in In addition, the musicians try to resurrect older pieces that have been unjustly neglected, he said. For example, next year, the group will perform a concert of seldom played pieces in Carnegie Hall.
Society for Chamber Music. Schmidt said the group felt it was their responsibility to continue the repertoire of music for trios.
in the piano.
"The pianist always has to be the 'mixer,'" he said. "He has to put in the right amount of piano sound. You learn to adjust since there is a problem with balance."
HOWEVER, WITH A piano trio there was a problem, Schmidt said, with balancing the sound of the strings, the cello and the violin, with the piano.
Although this is only the group's fifth year together, it has already played at Carnegie Hall, at Lincoln Center's Mostly Mozart Festival, performed on "Live from WNCN," and in 1981, it became the first ensemble to win the Concert Artists Guild Award.
The three members of the Arden Triet met in 1975 when they were graduate students at the Yale School of Music. They began playing together in 1979
Last year, the group performed in more than 40 cities and is planning a tour of Great Britain, France and possibly Germany next year. Schmidt said.
year, Scout said.
When the trio is not performing or rehearsing, its musicians are involved in music in their own manner.
Schmidt teaches at Concordia College Ornstein freelances and is the concert master of the American Symphony Ruede, who is also a freelancer substitutes in the orchestra at the Metropolitan Opera.
Romance film can wait until another September
By DAVID LASSITER
Staff Reporter
"at nil September." Playing at the Hillcrest
Theatre, Ninth and Iowa streets. Rated R,
$3.75 for adults and $2 for children. $2 for both
children and adults at the 5 p.m. shows.
Until September which opened last weekend in Lawrence, almost has all of the key elements of a good romance.
It has two dark, stunning actors with beautiful, watery eyes. It has scenes shot on location in Paris, and it follows the fail-safe formula for Hollywood love: boy meets girl; boy gets girl; boy loses girl and boy gets girl back
MOVIE REVIEW
But if you're looking for a worthwhile romance film, you might have to wait until next September.
next supervisor.
Mo Alexander, played by Karen Allen, is a horticulturist from the Midwest who gets stranded in Paris for three weeks. While she waits for her visa to be cleared, she decides to stay at a girlfriend's posh apartment
NEXT DOOR LIVES Xavier de la Perouse,
a French banker played by Thierry Lherr
mitte. He is kissing his wife好idge as she
leaves for a three-week vacation.
That's how their perfect high school romance begins. He leaves her little gifts at her door, and she plays shy and hard to get
By accident Mo wanders into Xavier's apartment looking for her friend. Xavier explains that she lives next door and is out of town, and then, he invites Mo to have dinner with him.
but not for long. They quickly become sexually involved. The emotionally involved comes later.
Xavier is used to having mistresses and casual romances. Mo, who is recently divorced from her husband, is a simple Midwestern, not used to such affairs.
The plot is simple and the dialogue is so bad that it leaves the characters shallow and undeveloped.
AFTER THREE WEEKS, Xavier nounces that his wife is coming back and that he has no place for Mo in his life.
This kind of exchange occurs throughout the movie. Maybe the makers of this film United Artists, thought that if they stuck a French accent on half the lines in the movie that they could grab the audience's attention
No is hurt and starts to cry. Xavier asks her "not to spoil the memories" and "don't worry about them."
in MA. Another disappointment comes when the credit roll. The screenplay was written by a University of Kansas graduate, Jance Lee Graham.
But she failed to bring any of her Midwest homefront background to the character or Mo. Ma talks a lot about when she was "back home in St. Louis," but her character never convinced me that she was ever anywhere west of the Mississippi River.
SURE. MO STUMBLES and stomps around like Anne Oakley in "Annie Get Your Gun," but I wasn't sold on it. Aren't most of us from the Midwest? How many of us on this campus stumble and stomp around? Some director in Hollywood who was probably born and grew up in California probably showed her how it done "out in this here part' o the country."
If you go to the $2 show you might get your money's worth, but otherwise, "Until Septemember" is one one-night-stand that's definitely not worth the price.
8
Page 1
ENTERTAINMENT
September
27
"The Man Who Came to Dinner." 8 p.m. Lawrence Arts and Performing Arts firm streets performances there, three more. 30 for reservations call 943-9444.
Brave Combo, rock n'roil-polk a band. 9:30 p.m., The Jazzhaus, 926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
28
Brave Mackender-Hunt Band. soul band. 9:30 p.m. Jazzhaus. 92% 82% Massachusetts St.
29
"The Little Humpback Horse." 2:30 p.m., Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
Black Flag. 9 p.m., Lawrence Opera House, 7th and Massachusetts streets.
30
Arden Trio. 3:30 p.m., Crafton Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
OCTOBER
Faculty Recital: Susan Hicks
oboe. 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital
Hall in Murphy Hall
1
Price Waddill/KANSAN
"Collective Creations," 8 p.m.
William Inge Theatre in Murphy
Hall. Performances through Oct
7.
2
Student Recital: Michele Pinet, harp 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
The Replacements. 9 p.m.
Lawrence Opera House, 7th and
Massachusetts streets.
University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1984
At left, Charlie Oldfather, professor emeritus of law, left, portrays Sheridan Whiteside in "The Man Who Came to Dinner," which is the opening production of the Lawrence Community Theatre. Amby Saricks, professor emeritus of history, portrays Dr. Bradley.
3
Theatre
For profs, the play's the thing
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI Staff Reporter
University professors lead a scholarly life - KU professors are no different. They like musty libraries and yellowed books, essay questions and philosophical conversations.
Staff Reporter
Nine KU faculty members and retired professors have escaped that University routine. They have stepped away from the podium and into the spotlight at the Lawrence Community Theatre.
"The Man Who Came to Dinner" opens the theatre's season this week with eight of the professors in the band, and will also be on stage one night.
BORBY PATTON, chairman of the speech and drama department, is directing the show, which was written by Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman. For the past five weeks, Patton has been working with his colleagues in New York to produce what he calls "a fast-paced, wild comedy."
It is not unusual for professors to audition for Lawrence Community Theatre productions.
ratton said that the professors who want to act almost have to perform in the community theatre because KU production auditions are open to students only.
"The show does provide a creative, artistic outlet for the professors," he said.
THE CAST BLENDS people from different professions in the community, including teachers, a playwrite, high school students and a fireman. The professors help round out that mix. In fact, eleven of the 25 cast members are associated with the KU. Two administrators are also in the cast.
Patton said that directing other professors was not difficult because the people in the cast helped and encouraged each other.
And each show is filled with surprises, Patton said, such as guest appearances by several prominent Lawrence residents. In each performance, luncheon guests are played by different people, including Mayor Ernest Angino and City Commissioner Howard Hill.
Commissioner Profession.
Other KU faculty members in the
cast are Charley Oldfather, law
professor emeritus; Bob Welch.
professor of psychology; Gerhard Zuther, professor of English; Charley Neuringer, professor of psychology; and Larry Feth, professor of speech. Bill Kelly, retired professor of law, and Ambrose Saricks, retired professor of history, also have roles in the play as do Janeet Hiley, assistant accountant of the office affairs, and Charlotte Mason, assistant accounting manager in the University of Kansas Endowment Association.
"The Man Who Came to Dinner"
will be performed 8 p.m. today
through Saturday and at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday at the Lawrence Arts Center.
Black Flag brings its hardcore to Lawrence
6y DAVID LASSITER
Staff Reporter
Gina said.
In fact, he said, hardcore bands are
shaking some of the prejudices that
they had been slammed with earlier.
"People are starting to see that we are intelligent people," Ginn said. "The total effect comes from the music we play. We try to be intelligent and innovative."
The disciples of hardcore define their music the same way. It is fast, hard, angry and politically aware.
"We don't take the easy way out," Ginn said. The band's music is usually well accepted "where there are a lot of different ideas - young, old, rich, poor, different political ideas and different backgrounds." Ginn said.
BLACK FLAG is on tour promoting its latest album "Slip it in." which Dinham recently featured on his three-hour radio show, Monday Night Thrash.
"There really isn't any way to describe us," said Greg Ginn, guitarist and leader of the band. "You could say that we are progressive in the literal sense of the word like I do the unknown. We like to explore.
"Our music is really just Black Flag," he said. "We do so many things. We're a rock band, but what we do goes beyond that."
"Black Flag is a symbol of anarchy and also a bug spray," he said. "We like the name, and it is what we do and what we put out there when we play. Really, Black Flag is the whole. That says it all."
Dinham said the band played in Lawrence a little over two years ago, and he expects a diverse crowd at the Opera House Saturday. He said that since they are leaders in hardcore hip-hop, "hip" significance attached to them.
He said that "hip" significance will pull in people who aren't really hardcore fans.
Black Flag, one of the more popular hardcore bands in the U.S., will perform Saturday night at the Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St. Saccharine Trust and the Dog Men are opening the concert for Black Flag.
"They are one of the most popular hardcore bands," said Dinham. "It's along the same level as Elvis Presley was in his music area."
GREEK WEEK IS HERE! Sept. 30-Oct. 5
Black Flag
Originally from Los Angeles, Black Flag was one of the forerunners of hardcore music, said Duane Dinham, disc jockey at KJHK FM-91 radio station.
THE BAND IS billed as hardcore. But the band members have a hard time accepting that label.
10 a.m.-12 p.m.
6:30-8 p.m.
12-2 p.m.
SATURDAY
DAVE WESTOL (national speaker on Greeks) KICK-OFF PICNIC Potter's Pavilion
Black Flag produces its records under its own label, SST. The recording label also handles several other hardcore bands.
5:30 p.m.
4:30-6:30 p.m.
Ginn couldn't really describe the group's musical style. He said it didn't fall under any of the popular music categories.
MONDAY
TUESDAY
SST came into existence because no other record company would produce its albums. But that has changed, Ginn said. Even though other companies would produce Black Flag albums now, the band has stayed with SST because it needs recording freedom that it thinks other companies would not give them.
SUNDAY
GREEK SING Kansas Ballroom
Tickets are $5 in advance and $6 at the door. The doors will open at 8 p.m., and the bands will start around. 9 p.m.
"A LOT OF MUSICIANS use that for an excuse. People don't like to be played down to. Instead, we play music from the heart."
"For us to have that type of freedom," Ginn said, "a label of that sort would have to accept our attitudes. We like to play music we like. A lot of popular bands play music that people want to hear. We don't play music to satisfy people."
7-10 p.m.
DINNER EXCHANGE
GREEK OLYMPICS
19th & Iowa St.
West Campus
2-5:30 p.m.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
WEDNESDAY
Weather permitting for outside events
BAR NIGHT SPECIALS
BLACK PANHELLENIC
RECEPTION
Alumni Center
TOGA PARTY
Pladium
(Greek god/goddess contest)
Free beer-Gammons
specials after
DAVE WESTOL:
National speaker on Greeks focusing on the legal aspects and others of fraternity life. He will be speaking in Woodruff Auditorium at 10 a.m. He's a Vice President of a national fraternity as well as a district attorney in Kalamazoo, Mich.
KICK-OFF PICNIC:
GREEK SING
Come on! Come all To the 1984 Greek Sing. This year participating groups will perform only one song and the evening will be topped off with awards and a special presentation from a selected few from each house.
Will be celebrated with concession stands and free beer! Everyone come wearing Greek letters.
GREEK OLYMPICS:
Fun competitive events will take place at 19th & Iowa when houses compete in amusing "Greek-style" Olympics. Bring plenty from your house for a team!
Black Panhellenic will be hosting a reception along with a seminar concerning their system. They would appreciate everyone's attendance. It will be presented at the KU Alumni Center.
BAR-NITE SPECIALS
TOGA PARTY
BLACK PANHELLENIC
Get ready to party at the Plaidium! Only Greeks from 2-5:30, free beer but bring ID! They will be carding! There will also be Greek god and goddess contest so be sure your selected candidate is there by 3:30! Afterwards wear your togas for beer specials at Gammons!
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Cable TV service eludes halls
By JULIE COMINE Staff Reporter
For a few dollars a month, most Lawrence residents can watch feature films, sports and MusicTelevision around the clock.
Sunflower Cablevision, the city's sole cable franchise, has strung more than 185 miles of cable to homes and buildings in the city since it started operations in 1972.
But at KU's residence and scholarship halls, high installation costs have made Sunflower Cablevision and students reluctant to bring cable to the campus, said Dave Clark. Sunflower Cablevision general manager
"IT'S MUCH DIFERENT to deal with a private individual than to deal with University housing units," Clark said.
Before Sunflower Cablevision decides to install a cable line to a given neighborhood or to an apartment complex, the company estimates how many people will subscribe to the service, he said.
But the company isn't assured of a definite number of subscribers in KU's 16 residence halls and scholarship halls because the buildings are not equipped for cable hookups to individual rooms, Clark said.
Over the years, several students living in University housing have contacted Sunflower Cablevision about subscribing to cable service in their halls — usually for the main lobbies. Clark said
"IF A HALL COMES to us and is interested in getting cable, we'd be more than glad to do a cost estimate," he said. "Whether or not
they can afford cable is their decision."
J. J. Wilson, director of housing, said residence halls or scholarship halls could contract with Sunflower stores immediately if they wanted cable service.
University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1984
"If they want to pay for the cable out of their hall improvement funds or social funds, we'd have no objections," he said.
But for most hall governments, investing in cable television has not proven cost effective, Clark said.
Only Oliver residence hall and Pearson, Sellards and Stephenson scholarship halls now have cable. They go up to one television in its main lobby.
OLIVER HALL HAS had cable since the mid 1970s, Clark said. Stephenson received his hookup in 1982 and Pearson received service in 1982.
"In the case of Oliver Hall, the cable ran right off 19th Street." Clark said. "It wasn't any more difficult or safer than to book up the average house."
At the three scholarship halls,
she was extended from existing
residence.
Residents at Naismith Hall, which is privately owned, watch cable on 10 television sets in lobbies of the building.
David May, Naismith general manager, said that a planned renovation project could bring cable to individual rooms within three years.
But installing cable at KU's 12 other residence halls and scholarship halls — either in main lobbies, floor lobbies or individual rooms — would require significant construction. Clark said.
FOR EXAMPLE, STRINGING cable to the five residence halls on Daisy Hill would require extending lines from 19th and Iowa streets, or feeding off the lines near Allen Field House that service Jayhawker Towers and Stouffer Place apartments, be said.
"It's an expensive proposition any way you look at it," Clark said. "We'd have to plow under parking lots and roads. The underground construction would cost at least $25,000, and that's just getting it
"I'm not even sure we could hook up the dorms on room-to-room basis," Clark said. "High-rise rise construction is not cheap, and keeping track of the billings would be a nightmare because of the enormous turnover in students living in the balls."
After cable lines were installed, each television set would then have to be wired into the system. Depending on the hall's antenna system, considerable time and money may be required to drill through walls and concrete ledges. Clark said.
THE MCCOLLUM HALL Senate last week considered seeking a cable hookup for television sets in its main lobbies and floor lobbies, said Mike Hutchins, Wincinfield senior.
"Several people have brought the idea up, but we're still researching it," Hutchins said. "The smartest thing to do, I think, would be to get all the dorms on the Hill interested in getting cable and to pool our funds."
The cost of bringing cable to the halls on Daisy Hill might not be the most expensive option, but cablevision, Hutchins said. If cable could be hooked up to televisions in
each lobby, many hall residents might try to illegally tap the cable lines.
BUT EVEN IF residence halls or scholarship halles got cable television in their lobbies, Sunflower Cablevision can't allow them to subscribe to pay television channels such as Home Office, Cinema and Showtime. Clark said.
Linda Lee Davis, a lecturer in the department of radio-telefilm-film who has worked in the past for HBO, said that these pay channels have contracts with motion picture studios that forbid cable broadcasts of films in public areas such as hotels, and maternity. Davis said.
"Their signals are meant for private use," she said. Pay cable channels do not support themselves with advertising like basic cable networks or the Sports Programming Network, MTV, and the news networks, she said.
Members of 12 of 13 sororities and 21 of 23 fraternites said they had cable hookups. Most reported having cable only in TV rooms or living rooms, but in a few houses, students have contracted individually with Sunflower Cablevision to get the extra movie channels.
Most apartment complexes in the city now have cable, Clark said. In some complexes, the owner of the apartments is charged a monthly "bulk rate" to get basic cable service for each apartment.
THE BULK RATE ranges from $3.25 to $4, depending on the number of hookups. Clark said. The owner includes this charge in the monthly rent and passes it on to his tenants.
Rate adjustments redefine services
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
Changes in Sunflower Cablevision rates will mean an increase in monthly bills for some customers and a decrease for others, a company official said this week.
The changes amount to a redefinition of services offered to subscribers, said Dave Clark, general manager of Sunflower Cablevision. The service will be increased to include what was called extended service.
The basic cable rate will increase from $8 to $10.40 a month in November, he said, but subscribers channels Subscribers already carry extended service will see a drop in their monthly bill, from $11 to $10.40.
AT PRESENT, BASIC service includes 11 channels: MTW, VWDAF, KCTV, CABLE 6, KCPT, KSNT, WTBS, WTKS, KWSB, and WIBW.
Extended service added KEKR,
KLDH, CBN, ESPN, USA Network,
(with Nickelodeon, which
includes "Arts" channel, to
the basic service.
Clark said a dramatic increase in sales of "cable-ready" televisions prompted the change. Cable-ready televisions can receive extended service without subscribing to Sunflower. Clark said.
The extended service channels normally are found between channels six and seven, but because many recent models can receive 105 channels, they can pick up extended service. he said.
"It was OK when we were being paid for everyone subscribing to us," Clark said. "I checked around town, and about 70 percent of the TVs being sold are cable-ready."
AS A RESULT OF the accessibility to their channels, cable suppliers such as ESPN and CNN have changed their basic prices to make up for possible revenue losses. That forced Sunflower to change its rates. Clark said.
In the past, he said, the suppliers, charged Sunflower for subscribers, only carrying their channels on extended service.
But now, because it is relatively easy for TV owners to receive the channels without paying, he said, the suppliers have begun charging for all basic service subscribers.
"We had to do something to account for lost revenue," Clark said. "This is really all we can do. The suppliers aren't losing money, because they are charging us."
Clark said that the only other alternative would be scrambling transmissions of extended service. But, he said, scrambling would be too expensive because it would require customers to buy descrambling boxes.
Sunflower's last change in basic cable rates was January 1980, he said.
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MUSIC FESTIVAL
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ANNOUNCES AN INFORMATIONAL TEA
Where: The Eldridge House in The Crystal Room
When: Sunday, Sept. 30,1984 3 to 5 p.m.
For: KU & Lawrence women interested in learning more about the 1985 Miss Lawrence Scholarship Pageant
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Housing questions remain
CAMPUS AND AREA
By CHRISSY CLEARY Staff Reporter
More than 20 scholarship hall residents crowded into the Residential Programs Advisory Board's weekly meeting in Strong Hall yesterday to ask questions about their 1985-88 hall contracts.
The board adjourned the meeting after other topics had been discussed, and the students' questions were answered and other items were left unanswered.
Caryl Smith, dean of student life and chairman of the board, had told the students that they would have to wait until the end of the meeting to ask questions and that they would have to direct their questions to specific board members, not to the board as a whole.
University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1984
AMONG THE STUDENTS' inquiries was why only six of the eight scholarship halls were getting a 12 percent increase for utilities in their 1984-85 hall contracts.
J. J. Wilson, director of the housing department, agreed after the meeting to meet with representatives of each scholarship hall on Monday afternoon for a question and answer session to iron out other problems.
Debbie Stark, president of the All Scholarship Hall Council, said yesterday that in past years, the housing
department took all scholarship hall utility bills, added them up and divided by eight.
Then the housing department decided it was unfair to charge everyone for utilities, such as air conditioning, that not every hall had. Stark said a Utility manager was in judgment that Appleton Hall and Miller Hall, she said.
WILSON SAID THE utility rates didn't need to be raised in Watkins and Miller halls because those halls had not used all the cash allocated to them last year.
"watkins and Miller aren't as expensive as the others because part of their bill is paid from the Watkins and Miller estates," Wilson said, "That's the way Mrs. Watkins wanted it."
He said the two halls was supposed to have a little special treatment because Elizabeth Watkins had provided funds for the halls in her will.
IN OTHER ACTION, James Jeffley, president of the Association of University Residence Halls, said AURH would redesign its proposal to rechassis McCollum Hall, which is usually restricted to the AURH will present its final proposal at a 7:30 p.m. meeting in the Union.
The original proposal, which would allow freshmen to live in McCollum
Hall, led to a misunderstanding between members of AURH and McCollum residents even though the proposal was voted upon and approved at an AURH meeting at which a McCollum representative was present, Jeffley said yesterday.
"AURH AND MCCOLLUM are not in a big debate," Jeffley said. "There was a problem of wording and intent in the proposal. Many of us thought the basis of the proposal was that freshmen who were still student rary housing could now stay in their parents' other, others said the basis was that freshmen would be allowed to live there regardless of whether they were in temporary housing.
A proposed utility rate increase for residence halls was not discussed at the meeting, and no meeting was confirmed between AURH and the department of housing to discuss the rate increase. Also with AURH seeking written information on the department's proposed utility rate increase.
DURING LAST WEEK'S RPAB meeting, AURI recommended that utility rates for residence halls be raised $20 in the 1965-86 contracts. The housing department had recommended a $37 increase. The utility fee is included in a base rate for food, maintenance and social fees that students pay to live in residence halls.
By DAN HOWELL Staff Reporter
Workshop assists diabetics
Eating anything in sight isn't part of the daily routine of several hundred students. It can't be, because these students have diabetes.
"It's like walking a tightrope with three poles," he said.
Each day they must monitor their levels of food intake, exercise and insulin, Paul Reith, a staff nurse at Wakim Hospital, said yesterday.
SEVERAL HUNDRED more students may have Type 2 diabetes, a condition in which insulin is present but cannot function effectively. Reith said.
About 100 students have Type 1 diabetes, also known as juvenile diabetes. In this form a person is deficient in insulin, Reith said.
Insulin is a protein that is essential to metabolize blood sugar in the body, and people with diabetes must use insulin to take regular doses of insulin.
Because Type 2 sometimes has mild symptoms, he said, a person may have Type 2 without knowing it. Type 2 usually appears in adults, and Type 1 usually strikes
children or youth.
Common symptoms of untreated diabetes are dry mouth, thirst, frequent urination and slow healing of sores. Reith said.
tending to serve others.
To help these students and other interested persons. Reith and four other KU health professionals will present a workshop on diabetes management on Saturday. The workshop will be from 1 to 5 p.m. at Watkins.
Reith said that between 200,000 and 400,000 people in the nation had Type 1 and 6 to 8 million had Type 2.
MOVING FROM HOME to a college campus creates special problems for diabetics in choosing cafeteria meals and managing irregular schedules, Reith sai21
"The transition from home to school is an abrupt one," he said. "These individuals require more adjustment than most students."
The ability to cope with the stress of adjusting, he said, has a direct bearing on the health of a diabetic person.
disease person." Stress is one of the most common causes of diabetes being out of control," he said.
He said stress raised the levels of hormones that block the function of insulin and thus allow blood sugar to increase.
Carla Dykeman, Wellington graduate student, said that having Type 1 diabetes had not restricted her activities in college but that it had required thinking ahead.
"I have to live a certain routine because it's always there, and it has to be planned for," she said.
DYKEMAN WILL SPEAK at the workshop about going through college with diabetes.
Reith said the workshop would provide information about a support group for diabetics, a group that Dykeman belongs to.
Other workshop speakers will be Dean Kerkman, clinical psychologist at Watkins; Lawrence Magee, a staff physician at Watkins; Howard Rytting, professor of pharmacy; and Ann Kohl, dietitian at Watkins.
Kohl said that foods containing large amounts of sugar, such as candies, pastries, ice cream and soft drinks, caused problems for diabetics. No one kind of food completely meets nutritional needs of diabetics or anyone else.
"The meal plan recommended for a diabetic is a healthy way for all Americans to eat," she said.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Students continue test trend
By the Kansan Staff
Almost 94 percent of third-year medical students maintained a five-year trend by passing the first part of the National Examiners Test in June.
A steady improvement in the passing rate for students enrolled in the College of Health Sciences at the University of Kansas has kept the percentage in the 90s for five years. Mary Harrison, director of Universities Relations for the University of Kansas Medical Center, said yesterday.
"It indicates that students are getting the message through our instructors," she said. "Our instructors are effective and the range of material covered encompasses most conventional test makers think is important."
The national board exam evaluates the students' general medical knowledge as well as knowledge about anatomy, physiology, biology, pathology, microbiology, pharmacology and behavioral sciences.
More than 14,500 medical students in the nation and Canada took the exam, which they must pass at the end of their second year of medical school before they can go on to the clinical part of their education.
Medical students will take the second portion of the national board exam at the end of their fourth year of medical school and the third portion after at least six months of residency.
The students' scores in all the disciplines indicated a strong balance among the various areas, Harrison said.
She said that both students and instructors should be credited with the high passing rate.
"It would certainly be remiss if we didn't give credit to the students in the first place," she said.
The rate peaked in 1981 when 95 percent of the KU medical students passed the first part of the exam.
Team aids officers on dutv
By JOHN REIMRINGER Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas Police Department has brought back its version of the special forces, available for investigations, crowd control and similar tasks.
THE 'OFFICERS ARE TRAINED by one of the department's detectives for crime scene work, photography and fingerprinting. Vic Strnad said. The training lasts from three days to a week.
The unit, called the Special Assignments Team, was responsible for ending two bicycle theft rings and apprehending a rape suspect during the 1982-1983 school government officials said yesterday.
"It allows us flexibility," Oliver said. "The whole idea is to reduce crime with the existing manpower."
The team — reactivated this year — is composed of regular patrol officers who volunteer for the duty. Curt. Ralph Oliver said.
The team is used for a variety of purposes, he said. Team members' hours are scheduled on a day-to-day basis. Team members usually work in groups of two, although more officers may work to cover large areas.
The team can operate either in uniform or plainclothes, Oliver said.
In plainclothes, the team can keep high crime areas under surveillance for long periods of time, he said. The detective in charge reminds the areas to be watched, based on local crime statistics.
IN THE CASE OF the bicycle theft rings, Stirnad said, "We had a pretty good idea of the times when we were being hit. We just set them up there and they caught them."
The team is also used in plainclothes in sensitive situations such as demonstrations, speeches and meetings where the presence of uniformed officers might have adverse effects. Oliver said.
The plainclothes officers can move through the crowd more readily, without being noticed, he said.
In uniform the team is used to fill in on regular patrol shifts that
are shorthanded because of sickness or vacations,he said.
The team can also be used to double the strength of a regular patrol shift, Oliver said.
RECENTLY, UNIFORMED team members monitored busy intersections on campus to draw attention to the department's efforts to enforce traffic laws, he said. This allowed the department to concentrate more officers on traffic without interfering with the duties of the regular patrol officers.
This fall the team has worked in Memorial Stadium during home football games, Oliver said.
The team was first used in the 1982-1983 school year, but a shortage of patrol officers last summer led to the department to deactivate it, he said.
"We hated to give it up before," Strnad said.
During 1982-1983, the team was made up of only one set of officers, he said. This year the team assignments will be rotated, giving more officers the opportunity to gain experience.
"It can't help but make them a better officer." Strnad said.
University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1984
Tower request denied again
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
A proposal to construct a 150-foot communications tower northwest of lawrence was denied again by the Planing Commission last night. Planning commission last night.
The proposal will go back to the Douglas County Commission for a final decision. The request will be acted upon at Monday's meeting.
The proposal was for a conditional use permit, which gives the applicant, United Telespectrum, the right to construct a device such as a communications tower on a piece of property.
The proposed site is at the southwestern corner of Peterson Road and Monterey Way, northwest of Lawrence.
county commission sent the request back to the planning commission to consider additional information about the request.
The planning commission last night listened to an engineer's report from United Telespectrum, which stated that the power would not affect
At the commission's Aug. 22 meeting, the request was unanimously denied after objections from area residents. Residents were concerned that the tower would be an eyesore, devalue property and interfere with television and radio reception
The county commission questioned the validity of a protest petition that had been filed and asked the planning commission to consider recent opinions that the tower would interfere with reception.
THE COMMISSION recommended then that the county commission deny the request. The county commission has the final say in the matter, said David Guntert, city-county planner.
BUT COMMISSION CHAIRMAN Sandra Praeger said that at the Aug. 22 meeting, interference had not been a key concern.
But at is Monday meeting, the
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
THE LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will have a rice and beans dinner at 6 p.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
THE SUA CHAMPIONS will meet
the Trail Room of the
Kansas Union
TOMORROW
THE MARANATHA CHRISTIAN
Ministries will meet at 7 p.m. in room
301 of the Frank R. Burge Union.
JOANN VERBURG, portrait photographer, will speak about her work at 3 p.m. in room 211 of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
A 19-YEAR-OLD KU student was arrested early yesterday morning on charges of criminal trespassing and possession of burglary tools after a woman saw him climbing buildings in the alley west of the 900 block of Park Avenue in Philadelphia. Police found the student on the roof of Weaver's Department Store, 901 Massachusetts St. The student was released on $1,500 bond.
ON THE RECORD
A 72-YEAR-OLD Lawrence woman reported that a ring valued at $600 was removed from her husband's left hand between 2 p. Sept. 10 and 2 p. Sept. 11 while he was hospitalized at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, police said. The woman was in the presence of a doctor when she noticed the ring missing and asked her husband where it was. The husband replied that someone dressed in white had taken it, according to a police report. No one at the hospital was available for comment yesterday evening. The husband, 78, died Sept. 14.
A 1981 CHEVROLET pickup belonged to a 37-year-old Oksalaosman was stolen from the 1500 block of West 23rd Street between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Tuesday, police said. The white pickup was valued at $5,000. The owner reported that he had left the keys in the ignition.
CAR STEREO EQUIPMENT valued at $2,800 was stolen from a 42-year-old Lawrence man's car in the 2200 block of Vermont Street
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1984 Page 11
United Press International
BEECHEY ISLAND, ARCTIC — A photograph taken by a University of Alberta anthropologist shows the perfectly preserved hands of the 138-year-old body of petty officer John Torrington, who died during an 1845 expedition in search of the Northwest Passage.
Judge's dress code draws fire
By United Press International
CROWN POINT, Ind. — Judge James L. Clement has drawn the wrath of female deputies for issuing a memo saying he prefers women attorneys to wear skirts instead of pants.
paints.
The Superior Court judge also drew a refusal from Lake County Prosecutor Jack Crawford, who said he would not require women deputy prosecutors to wear skirts.
The judge backed off a bit yesterday, saying the memo was only expressing his preference.
"It is not a court order or anything of the sort," he said.
In the written memo to Crawford on Tuesday, Clement said, "It is my position that slacks and/or pantsuits that are worn in room attire for women lawyers."
Crawford employs the women deputy prosecutors.
dept pres. Clement, 52, drew the anger of 21 women deputies who believed the memo was sexist.
Clement insists he is holding
women to equal standards with men.
Then Crawford stepped in.
"I say this on the basis of tradition," the judge said. "If the men are bound by traditional dress, so should the women be."
Crawford said the reaction from the women deputies was "unanimous and vehement.
Then Crawford Judge Clement I will "told my female attorneys to wear dresses and/or skirts in the courtroom," Crawford said.
"In fact, the reaction was pretty much that it was sexist."
Kids expect to use pot, study says
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — One of four eighth graders expect to smoke marijuana this year, nearly one in five predict they will use cocaine or heroin and more than half plan to drink alcohol, according to a Florida study released yesterday.
And Mary Ann Morek, representing the community group that conducted the study, said its results applied nationwide.
The study, conducted last late year, found 25.8 percent of eighth grade students, described as 12 to 14 years of age, said they would use marijuana this year, another 10.8 percent predicted using it, and 7.7 percent anticipated using heroin and 62 percent said they would use alcohol.
news conference the survey of 1,532 students was the most complete and comprehensive study of junior high school drug use ever.
Sen. Paula Hawkins, R-Fla., told a
percent — more than one in five — acknowledged having driven while intoxicated, while 37.9 percent — nearly two in five — said they had been a passenger in a car driven by a person under drug or alcohol influence.
One of the most disturbing statistics, said Morck, was that 15.1 percent of the eighth graders expected to inhale glue, gasoline or liquid paper.
*
The study also polled high school seniors in the area and found that 21.6
The study showed that most eighth graders got their drugs from friends or "other kids."
To Your Good Health
The Student Health Service at Watkins Hospital presents
DIABETES MANAGEMENT UPDATE
Sat., Sept. 29
A workshop designed for the individual with diabetes, those interested in diabetes education, and interested people from the community: and diabetes
Sat.. Sept. 29, 1 to 5 p.m.
- college life and diabetes
- college life and diag
* stress and diabetes
- food fit for the diabetic stress and diabetes
- exercise and diabetes
- new hope for the Type 2 diabetic
FOR MORE INFORMATION Call 843-4455 Ext. 31 This workshop is offered at no charge to students and the public.
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NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1984
Embassies fortify after bomb attack
By United Press International
Western embassies tightened security yesterday in the wake of reports that guerrillas will attempt a car bomb attack similar to the one on the U.S. Embassy annex last week, diplomatic and security sources said.
In Washington, the House Foreign Affairs Committee, voicing "bipartisan outrage" at the bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Lebanon, voted yesterday to give the administration an additional $250 million to protect U.S. embassies.
A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy said a female Lebanese employee died of wounds suffered in the Sept. 20 suicide truck-bomb attack that shattered the U.S. Embassy annex in a suburb of Christian east Beirut.
The Lebanese employee who died yesterday was the ninth embassy worker to be killed in the bombing, the third attack of its type in 18 months against a U.S. installation in Twenty American were wounded
Police said the death raised the number of fatalities to 25, including two Americans.
Scores of guards from the paramilitary Internal Security Forces surrounded the West German Embassy in mostly Muslim west beirut and positioned vehicles to block both ends of a road running past the building.
Armed West German security men in civilian clothes supervised the
security measures around the exposed building.
Concrete blocks and a truck were placed across the street outside the sandbaked walls of the French Embassy compound in west Beirut. Builders carried sand inside, apparently to deflect the force of any blast
At the seafront British Embassy, a spokesman said. "We are taking this report seriously, as we always do. I cannot tell you anything about the threat or our security, but it's pretty tight."
Diplomatic sources, who refused to be identified, said most Western embassies were informed a few days ago that a guerrilla group planned to launch a suicide car-bomb attack against a Western target in Beirut.
"This is only the second such report I have heard this year," a Western diplomatic source said. "We were all asked to check our security after the annex bombing, but this made us accelerate our plans."
Military and diplomatic sources said the planned car bomb was not linked with the pro-Iranian Islamic Jihad organization, which said it was responsible for the annex blast and has threatened to hit "American interests" again.
One unconfirmed report said Lebanese intelligence believed a car was being packed with explosives in a residential suburb of west Beirut for a strike on a West German installation.
United Press International
W
NEW YORK — The mother of Irma Lozada, first woman police officer to be killed in the line of duty in New York City, is helped into church for the funeral services. Lozada, 25, was killed Friday when she apprehended a suspect who overpowered her and shot her with her own gun. More than 3,500 fellow officers attended the services yesterday.
Arabs call for boycott of Jordan
By United Press International
BEIRUT Lebanon — Syria and Libya demanded an Arab boycott of Jordan yesterday for its "treacherous decision" to restore diplomatic relations with Egypt.
"Putting a knife in the back is not new to the Jordanian regime, but this time we wonder if it will have the expected outcome," a broadcast on Syrian state radio, monitored in Beirut, said.
Syria's newspapers that are controlled by the government were equally outraged by Jordan's resumption of ties with Egypt for the first time since Cairo signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1979.
The leftist government called for a pan-Arab boycott of Jordan and promised "the Arab masses will act to confront this conspiracy."
"An immediate decision must be taken for a total boycott of Jordan. ...in response to its treacherous decision," the official Libyan news agency JANA said.
By offering to restore diplomatic relations Tuesday, Jordan broke ranks with the Baghdad pact of 1979 in which 17 of 21 Arab states cut diplomatic and economic ties with Egypt.
Hussein telephoned Saudi Arabian King Fahd to inform him of his decision Tuesday, but Saudi media did not mention Jordan's move.
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5:00 7:25 9:20 Daily
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PG 45
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SEPTEMBER
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CINEMA 1
YEAR AND OWNER
JUSTICE JUDGE
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CINEMA 2
YEAR AND OWNER
THE WOMAN IN RED
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7:35 9:30 *5:15 Sat. & Sun
Twilight Bargain Show
WINNING
That was the difference between playing football and playing for "The Bear".
GARY BUSEY
on PAUL W. BRYANT in
LARRY G. SPANGLER'S Production of
THE BEAR
Title song performed by
ALBAMA
"The BEAR", LARRY G. SPANGLER PRODUCTION, RICHARD C. SARAFIAN FILM, SPARKING GARY BUSEY STARRING IN CYNTHIA LEAKE
HARRY DEAN STANTON, D'URVILLE MARTIN AND JON-ERIK HEXUM AS PAT TRANNEL PRODUCES BY LARRY G. SPANGLER
DIRECTED BY RICHARD C. SARAFIAN PRODUCER JAMES A. HEARN WRITTEN BY MICHAEL KANE DIRECTED BY LASZLO GEORGE
EDITED BY ROBERT FLORIO A.C.E DESIGNER RON TALSKY MUSIC BY BILL CONTI • PRODUCTION DESIGNER GEORGE COSTELLO AVAILABLE IN PAPERBACK FROM POCKET BOOKS
EMBASSY SPECIAL TECHNICAL ARTIST TOMMY BROOKER BILLY NEIGHBORS AND GENE STALLINGS
Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Available Exclusively on RCA Records & Cassettes
OPENS SEPTEMBER 28TH AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU.
1
TEX
TEZ
University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1984 Page 13
NATION AND WORLD
CLA wants retraction from ABC
WASHINGTON - The CIA, in a highly unusual statement, demanded yesterday that ABC News retract a story in which a man claimed the CIA tried to recruit him to kill a businessman who once fronted for the agency in sensitive weapons deals.
By United Press International
The CIA, which rarely issues detailed public statements or responds to allegations other than with a "no comment," called the report an "example of irresponsible journalism" and demanded a retraction.
ABC News said it would stand by the story.
The report, which ran on ABC's World News Tonight Sept. 19 and 20, focused on Ronald Rewald, a Honolulu businessman jailed on charges of swindling 400 investors out of $22 million.
Rewald said he was a CIA agent and that his now-bankrupt firm was a front for the agency. ABC said the company had been used by the CIA to conduct sensitive intelligence operations and make secret shipments of weapons to foreign countries such as Syria, India and Taiwan.
Another person interviewed by the network, Scott Barnes, said that the CIA had asked him to "take him (Rewald) out . . . you know, kill him."
Rewald told ABC he came to believe the CIA was trying to kill him.
Asked why the CIA wanted Rewald killed, Barnes told the network: "He obviously knew some things in regards to national security and he was no longer an asset. He was now a liability."
Barnes said he got a job as a guard for one month at the same prison where Rewald was held, and that later he quit the assignment without carrying it out and left Hawaii.
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Nonsmokers affected by smoke, study says
Permanent Hair Removal
The researchers recommended that family members shouldn't smoke in the presence of children or other nonsmokers and that smokers should refrain from smoking in public places where both smokers and nonsmokers mingle.
BOSTON — The adverse effects of cigarette smoking on non-smokers increase with the number of smokers at home and work, and in severe cases may be equivalent to smoking nearly three cigarettes a day, according to a new study issued yesterday.
By United Press International
THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO
In the study, researchers in Japan tested the level of cotinine, a byproduct of nicotine, in the urine of 472 nonsmokers. The researchers found the level of cotinine rises in proportion to the number of smokers nonsmokers live and work with.
See our coupon in the Lawrence Book
Call for an appointment
914.5708
See our coupon in the Lawrence Book
equal to smokers of less than three cigarettes a day
In the United States, legislation requiring stringent new labels on cigarette packs and ads, warning that smoking causes lung cancer, heart disease and endangers unborn children, was passed by Congress and sent to President Reagan yesterday.
The group found that non-smokers who lived with smokers who inhaled more than 40 cigarettes a day had cointine levels
745 New Hampshire 841-5796
The new labels would replace the 13-year-old warning that is currently on cigarette packages.
PHONE:
913-842-1002 Sales
1894 W 10th St. 842-1033 Public Access
Lawrence, Rancho Cordova 66444 842-1088 Service
Kawasaki
FUN CENTER
By United Press International
LOS ANGELES — Singer Michael Jackson will donate his share of proceeds from the "Victory" tour to the United Negro College Fund and two charities devoted to cancer research and treatment, his manager announced yesterday.
Jackson to give tour money to colleges, cancer research
Palm trees &
Flask pinkening
Pancakes &
Pentimentos
And no more
hard times
Paradise in Parish
"Let The Good Times Roll"
amount Jackson would donate and said, at the singer's request, the sum would never be revealed.
Frank Dileo declined to specify the
In addition to the United Negro College Fund, the organizations that will benefit from Jackson's donations are Camp Good Times, a year-round camp for terminally ill children, and the T.J. Martell Foundation for leukemia and cancer research at Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York.
CPR
WORKSHOP
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Entry Deadline: Thurs., Sept. 27 5 pm 208 Robinson CPR Workshop is Mon., Oct. 1, 6-10 pm and Wed., Oct. 3, 6-10 pm 202 Robinson
AN OCTOGINTA IDEA!
J. Watson's
Billiards • Beer • Music • Games
FREE POOL 12-4
HAPPY HOUR 4-6
$18.00
Jerseys from $18.00
Rick's Bike Shop 1033 Vermont 841 6642
For the best selection of
Hallmark Cards & Gifts
ARBUTHNOT'S hallmark
Southwest Plaza 251 & Iowa
841.2160
shop at
Hours
M-F 10:8 Sat 10:5
Bring a friend and choose any item from our menu, get the next item of same or lesser value FREE! Must present coupon at time of ordering.
Coupon Expires Oct. 7, 1984
H.O.P.E Award Nominations
★ ATTENTION SENIORS
BUY ONE GET ONE FREE!
★
Nomination forms are available to all Seniors in any dean's office or in the BOCO office (110B
(Honors for Outstanding Progressive Educator)
Due by: October 5 at 4:30
Primary Elections Oct. 10 & 11
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan
Recognised with over 245 clubs
843-0540
'85 '85
'85 '85
Primary Fiections Oct. 10 & 11
Finals Oct. 24 & 25
Presentation Oct. 27
Homecoming 185
'85 Senior Committee
The senior class officers wish to encourage all interested Seniors to be a member of the group that will assist in the many traditional and social activities associated with our senior year.
Applications are available in any dean's office or in the BOCO office (110B Union). These are due on Oct. 5 by 4:30. Our first meeting will be Oct. 10 at 6:30 in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.
Religious Activities at the University of Kansas
Sponsored by:
University Religious Advisors
KU BAHAI CLUB
P.O. Box 584
Michael Mever—842-9197
Call for more information
BAPTIST, AMERICAN
Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th
(West of Oliver Hall)
Dick Orr. Campus Ministry -841-8001
Saturday First Baptist Church
14th and Kasold
Wednesday: Regular Fellowship Meeting
4:30-7:00 p.m. (dinner)
BAPTIST, SOUTHERN
Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th - 841-8001
Rick Clock, Campus Minister - 841-9247
Bishop Student Union, Thursday, 5:00
p.m. — meal & Bible Study at Center
HARAMBEE (Black Christian Fellowship)
Campus Manager, 1629 W 190h - 843-8001
Demo Lee, Campus Minister
Scientist, Office of Planning for 843-8001 for meeting place
CAMPUS CHRISTIANS
1110 Indianapolis, 48227
Ministry Minister - 749-0435
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. - Burge
Union
Friday, Night Fellowship, 7:00, call
for details
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
Office: 322 Park Hill Terrace
| for Bocha, Campus Director—740-4356 |
| Tuesday: Leadership Training, 7 p.m. |
| Big B Room, Kansas Union |
CATHOLIC, ST. LAWRENCE
Campus Center: 1631 Crescent Road—B43-0357
Chapel: 1910 Stratford Road
Priests' Residence: 1632 Crescent Road
Father Vince Kriste and Father Bill Porter. Chaplains
Steve Farney. Associate Campus Minister
Dave Armstrong, Outreach Minister
Confessions—4 p.m.
Sunday Masses at Woodruff Auditorium—9:00;
10:30 a.m. Noon: 3:50 p.m.
Weekday Masses at St. Lawrence Center — 7:45 a.m., M-F
Weekday Masses at Danforth Chapel — 12:30 p.m., M.W.F
Saturday Mass at St. Lawrence Chapel — 4:45 p.m.
CHARISMATIC. MUSTARD SEED
STUDENT FELLOWSHIP
256 N. Michigan. NI44-51856
Nick Williams, Advisor - 844-1185 or 864-3963
Taylor Vale, 710 St. Louis
Wilson's - 2917 University Dr.
Phone - 844-0392
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION
ECKANKAR—A WAY OF LIFE
CHURCH OF CHRIST, SOUTHSIDE
Meetings October 5, 19; November 2, 16 at Governor's
Room. Kansas Union
Ed Hartley—749-5003
Diane Pagano—841-1982
P.G. Bowles
Venetta Abbot, President—864-6556
Don Whitmoret, Advisor—864-4991
Meetings: Thursday, 4:30 p.m., in Dandorff Chapel
ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES (K.C.M.)
25th and Missouri - 843-0770
Brad Bynum, Minister - 842-6578
Charles Rountree, Campus Minister - 842-6550
Sunday Bible Class, 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Evening, 6 p.m.
Wednesday Mid-West Bible Study, 7:30 p.m.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH (CANTERBURY HOUSE)
COLLEGE-N-CAREERS
Indian Hills Church of God
Louisiana at 29th Terrace- 843-9565, 843-5400
Audrey Epp - 841-3485
Sunday, 9:45 a.m., 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
ICTHUS BIBLE STUDY
1116 Louisiana - B43-8202
Rev. Peter Caspian, Vicar and Chaplain
Holy Eucharist, Sunday, 5 p.m. (at house); Thursday
(nat Darthford School) for meditation and study
house open for meditation and study
1204 Gread - 843-4033
Sponsored by Church of the Brethren, United Church of Christ, United Methodist Church, Presbyterian Church (USA)
Dr Jack Brouner, Campus Pastor
Sunday: Supper, Worship, 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday: University Forum, 1:14 a.m.
Forum, 11:45 a.m.
Student Lounge open daily
Supporting Churches
Lone Star Church of the Brethren
Plymouth Congregational, 925 Vermont
Centenary United Methodist, 4th and Elm
Central United Methodist, 150 Massachusetts
First Grade Teacher, 1049 Vermont
Presbyterian, 2415 West 23rd
West Side Presbyterian, 1124 Kaslo
INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP
15th and Iowa - 843-6662
Mark Hoeller, LC/MS Campus Pastor - 842-4489
Don Conrad, AELC-ALC-LCA Campus Pastor - 842-4425
Sunday. Worship: 10:30. Bible Class: 9:15 a.m.
Open daily for meditation and studying
Worship also at:
Gold Shopper Lutheran, 2312 Harvard Rd., 8:15 a.m
10:30 a.m
Immanuel Lutheran, 17th and Vermont, 8:00 a.m
10:30 a.m
Redeemer Lutheran, 30th & Haskell, 8:30 a.m
10:45 a.m
Free Lutheran, 1245 New Hampshire, 8:45 a.m
11 a.m.
First Presbyterian Church, 2415 West 23rd—843-4171
Thursday, 9 p.m.
Mark Pruitt, Student Leader—841-1061
6th and Iowa-843-6662
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
JEWISH STUDENT ORGANIZATION (HILLEL)
LATTER DAY SAINTS STUDENT ASSOCIATION
Karen Mueller - 841-5273
Ed Haralson, Staff - 842-7102
Large Group, Friday, 6:30 p.m. in Kansas Union
Study-Witness small groups at different times weekly
Office: B-117, Kansas Union - 864-3948
Martha Taylor, Director - 841-3328
Mark Wallah, Student President - 842-0237
Friday Sabbath Service: 7:30 p.m. at
Jewish Community Center, 017 Highland
Hill House, 940 Mississippi - 749-5147
Bishop Dennis Karpowitz, Campus Advisor - 841-2610 Paul Ennis, LDUSA Leadership - Directive 841-1332
Sunday Sacrament Service 10:00 a.m.
Sunday School, 11:00 a.m.
Preschool & Kindergarten Society, 11:50 a.m.
at 3650 Yale Road
LDUSA Leadership Meeting--Fridays, 10:00 a.m.
MARANATHA CHRISTIAN MINISTRY
LAWRENCE MENNONITE FELLOWSHIP
927 Ohio -841 0318
Steve Strom, Pastor
Christ Aleson, Campus Director
Jillian L. 1:10 a.m. Kansas Union
Thursday. 7:09 p.m. Burge Union
Worship: Sunday, 10:30 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Building, 1204 Oread
NAVIGATORS
Mike Jordahl, KU Representative -842-8517
Gene Tueal. International Representative -841-8941
Student
Brandon Doer -842-7377
Matt Layton -842-6450
Matt Jones -864-2239
Mary Lee Amrine -864-2239
Friday Night Fight -Fridays, 7:00 p.m.
Training Seminars -Saturdays, 8 a.m.
NAZARENE CAMPUS MINISTRIES
1042 Massachusetts or 1020 Kasold
Rev. Lyle W. Curtis, Minister—843-3940
Lyn Whitters, Minister—843-7345
Sunday, Bible Study, 9:45 a.m. Worship, 10:45 a.m.
6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Fellowship and Bible Study, 7 p.m.
NEW LIFE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
Greg Nabors, President----749-0129
Wednesdays. 7:00 p.m. Burge Union
ACE
8
SPORTS
Longer race a 'workout' for KU team
By CHRIS LAZZARINO Sports Writer
The Maupintour Fall Classic will be a change of pace — or more accurately, a change of distance — for the women's cross country team Saturday morning.
University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1984 Page 14
Head coach Cliff Rovelo said the team was taking a different approach into this weekend's race.
The women usually compete at 5,000 meters in cross country, but they will compete at 10,000 meters in the Maupintout race.
"We are kind of approaching it as a workout." Rovello said. "We really worked hard this week. We put in a lot more miles than if we were running a normal cross country, but we are going to have fun."
Rovello said that the runners who would most likely suit up for KU were Caryne Finlay, Paula Berquist and Tracey Keith. Susan Glatter, KU's top runner last weekend, might not compete because the long race is too hot to be good for her because she is still hampered by a stress fracture suffered last spring.
Rovelto said that the team had done all of its running on soft surfaces.
The only runner on the team that has experience in the 10,000-meter road race. Rovello said, is Finlay. He is a 22-mile practice run on Sunday.
"Caryne runs quite a few 10,000-meter races but most of the rest of the girls have only run a few." "If you should be setting personal records,"
Keith said that she was looking forward to the 10,000-meter race.
"I really will enjoy it," Keith said. "All of us girls are in really good shape at this point in the season and we can run some fast times for the
Keith said that the race would favor her more than the 5,000 because in track she runs the 10,000.
Men's head coach Bob Timmons' said that the men would jog the course today in preparation for Saturday's race.
Conversely, there will be a lot of runners and there will be a lot of quality runners up front," Timmons said. "Each member of the team will have good competition at his level, whatever that may be."
Brent Steiner might not run because of a slight stretch in his calf muscle and Achilles' tendon that he incurred in last weekend's race. Greg Leibert has not practiced with the team yet after being forced to drop out of last weekend's race with an Achilles' tendon injury.
Thirteen hundred runners are expected to compete in the race.
The race is sponsored by Maupintour Travel Service and the race operator is the Lawrence Track Club. The organizers of the race are Tom Leigh of Maupintour, Jim Pile of Maupintour, Lawrence Track Club and Dee Boeck, road race coordinator for the Lawrence Track Club.
The race will begin at 8:30 a.m. in South Park and proceed around downtown, through campus and back to South Park.
An of the runners will compete at the same time in the single race. The race is divided into four divisions, and divided into age and gender categories.
The divisions are the open, masters, corporate and student.
Pitch said that cross country teams from KU, Kansas State, and Haskell Indian Junior College are competing in the open division. Some of the other teams in the open division are the Tiger Racing Team, Corners Running Club, Kansas City Track Club and Lawrence Track Club.
He said that this year's race was substantially larger than last year's, in which only 860 runners finished.
The NEW YORK
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SPORTS ALMANAC
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
W L Pct GR
102 56 649
Buffalo 88 31 141/72
New York 73 74 208 17
Beijing 73 74 532 18
Baltimore 81 75 325 18
Cleveland 71 76 489 17
Cincinnati 65 93 414 17
Kansas City 83 76 322
Minnesota 107 87 354 31/2
Milwaukee 79 79 60 31/2
Oakland 78 84 472 31/2
St. Louis 78 84 472 31/2
Seattle 71 87 499 113/2
Tampa Bay 71 87 499 113/2
Cleveland 1, Seattle 0
New York 3, Baltimore 1
Toronto 8, Boston 4
Miami 5, Jackson 2
Chicago 9, Minnesota 3
Oakland 2, Kansas City 0
Tampa 1, Texas 5
Thursday's Games:
Minnesota (Smithson) 6-11 at
cleveland State (Hartley) 6-10 at
Boston 6-11 at oakland (Ortney)
11-12, 6:35 p.m.
Detroit (Murray) 9-11 at New York
State (Snyder) 5-12 at oakland
California (John) 7-12 at Texas (Wright)
2:7, 3:35 p.m.
Oakland Hoyle 13-16 at Seattle (Young 5:0),
9:35 p.m.
Friday's Games:
Minnesota at Cleveland night,
Detroit at New York night,
Baltimore at Boston night,
California at Texas night,
Oakland at Seattle night,
Kansas City at oakland night.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East W. 1. Pci. GR.
x Chicago 94 64 54
New York 19 70 70 51 12
St. Louis 83 75 75 51
x San Diego
Miami
Atlanta
Fresno
Los Angeles
Cincinnati
New York
90 69 59 65
29 79 38 46 101/2
29 79 38 46 101/2
76 82 98 401 243
43 82 98 401 243
66 93 145 24
Philadelphia 81 78 69 131/2
Montreal 75 82 478 181/2
Nashburgh 72 87 47 221/2
Thursday's Games
New York, Philadelphia
San Diego, San Francisco 0
St. Louis, Montreal 6
Minnesota 6
Chicago, Pittsburgh 2
Houston at Los Angeles, night
7:30 p.m.
Thursday's Games
St. Louis, Porsche 2-4 at Montreal
Alberta (Smith) 1 (0) at Cincinnati
Tellerville 0 (3), a.p.p.
Thursday's Games
St. Louis at Chicago
New York at Montreal, night
Philadelphia, night
San Diego at Atlanta, night
Houston at Cincinnati, night
Philadelphia, night
IP H RERBB SO
Angels 2, Royals 0
| a b c h f i j | |
| :--- | :--- |
| Porte cf, | 3 0 0 0 |
| Schaffeld seh, | 4 0 0 0 |
| Security seh, | 5 0 0 0 |
| Lym rf, | 3 1 0 0 |
| Downlifting f, | 4 0 1 1 |
| Downlifting d, | 4 0 1 1 |
| Delicate seh, | 4 0 0 0 |
| Delicate seh, | 4 0 0 0 |
| Grich b, | 3 0 0 0 |
| Miller b, | 3 0 0 0 |
| Boone c, | 3 0 0 0 |
| Toulk, | 31 2 1 2 | Stoktak
Game-winning BHN – Dwelling (11)
E. Shaughn, DP, California 1, LOB-
California 6, Kansas City 7, 2B - Con-
peeon SB, R Jackson (10)
California 000 002 000—2
Kansas City 000 002 000—9
Baseball
Romanich (W 12;12) 9 7 0 0 1 2
Carson City
Black (L 17;12) 9 4 2 2 4 8
Transactions
Chicago (AL) - Signed Mike McClure to a new three-year contract as vice president-marketing.
Texas Named John Blake media information director
St. Joseph's Nameen Helen Dean assistant women's basketball coach.
Kansas City - Signed center Joe C. Mer-
weather and guard Dane Sillett
Portland — Warred center Tom Pielwskiro,
Uliah — guarded guard John Stockton, a
newcomer who had pitched with forward Drew and center-forward Jeff Wilkinson, both free agents, pending com-
pensation from the team. Seattle Seven sixth round draft choice from southern Utah State, guard Eagle eighth, number 10 in the National League. Seattle seventh round pick from Kansas, guard Mike Kauri, fifth round pick from
Use Kansan Classified.
Cleveland — Placed wide receiver Preston
Rose on covers
Oakland USFL - Signed wide receiver Marc Ford to a two-year contract with an option year.
St. Louis - Released wide receiver Craig
New Jersey • Rebaued goaltender Kirk Fierlie; defenses Pierre McGaurl and Paul Kalifishli and forwards Curtis Collins, Dave Colynn and Ken Manchure. Returned to Washington; replaced by defenseman Kirk McLean and defenseman Shawn Ferguson. returned to Port Wayne of the international Hockey League Chris Felix. Toward center and center left with Jeff Larson. Tony Currie and center left with Jeff Larson.
ST. Louis — Released linebacker Craig Shaffer
---
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For Sale Used Video Games Buy one for your apartment or house Make money—Play free
Pac Man $450
Pac Man Plus $495
Donkey Kong $295
Galaxian $195
Route 16 $195
Frogger $450
Qix $695
Centipede $595
Battlezone $295
Vangard $295
Tempest $695
Call Debbie, Bob or Ginny at Schumm Foods 842-7337 Delivery Available Fun Time — Supplier of All the latest & greatest video game
SIGMA NU 100 years at KU!
kerry williams
Nerd's Night Out!
Ever felt like walking in the other guy's shoes? This Thursday, walk in his shoes and put on his pants. It's Nerd Night at Gammons. Come dressed in your best nerd costume Polyester will abound and there will be a contest for best nerd guy and nerd lady. Each winner will be sent to one of Lawrence's finest restaurants, receive a $25.00 gift certificate for clothes and get $25.00 in cash for spending. This is gonna be good. Nerd Night this Thursday at Gammons
GAMES
NOW
23rd & Ousdahl Southern Hills Mall
September 27,1984 Page 15
The University Daily
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
| Words | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | or 2 Weeks |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0:15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 |
| 0:20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 |
| 0:25 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.05 |
| For every 3 works add: | | 9fc | 79c | 10c |
Departures Thursday, 9:10 am
Departures Friday, 9:10 am
Departures Saturday, 9:10 am
Departures Sunday, 9:10 am
Tickets Wednesday, 9:10 am
Tickets Thursday, 9:10 am
Tickets Friday, 9:10 am
≤
>
**Scaled display advertisements can be only use**
**with wide and no more than you can keep deep**
**display depths close only. No screen size**
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ENTERTAINMENT
POLICIES
- Purchases are not provided but classified or classified display advertisements.
All patient can be admitted for 80% of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These charges can be placed at prices in callign the Kalamazoo business office at 610-4358.
**LASSICAL GUITAR** Want to clasp up your next
party with quality music? 9427377.
- Only earned rate discount
* Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
Budget Stretcher coupons Thurs. evenings. Buy $10. & receive $1 coupon toward next purchase Cross Reference. Malls Shopping Center
Taught at Hawks Crossing. The Service from
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Candlelight Special! 10% off Boxed Christmas cards in stock. 10% off imprint free 5.39, Thur.
- No refurbish on a cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
- classified display advertisements
- classified display ads do not count towards mma
STUDENT SENATE SEATS ARE NEW
OPEN for students in SOCIAL WELFARE
AND PRECARE STILL.
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance. Amortal credit has been established.
* Facebooks are not invited for classified or.
NASIMH Contracts available Call 749-0536
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STUDENT SENATE SEATS ARE NOW
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words
* Do限时 same as Display Advertisement
paid for by the Student Senate
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DENTS! Inquire at the Senate On
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- No responsibility for information provided in advertisement
* Immediate insurance claim for pre-paid claim classified
RESEARCH PAPER: 308-page catalog; 15,282 pages. Copies: 10 & 102; HDSHR 308; 1220 label; 1460 label.
NOTICE TO 70) APPEAR "Fundraiser!" Mike Glover for the Seattle Seahawks and Market Basket Hunt Band for by Mike Glover for District Attorneys Campaign Fund
graduate school and SPECEAL STUDENTS! Inquire at the Senate Office
- *his* responsibility is assumed for more than one in case of incorrect information of any advertisement
Sedent at Theater Dance Students for performing
type, name types from Ballroom 2 more.
Nature presentations. Must be reliable and have
a degree of art (Jun Call 832-6300)
- Hired box ads • please add a $2 service charge
• Checks are insured as company all classified ads issue
Woodward and evening child care now available at Calpine College Child Care. Parents, we are just waiting for you! We have evening classes, meetings, an evening job or just want to enjoy an evening out, now you have an opportunity to do all of this in the evening of fun, planned, recreational educational activities. four blocks from campus, openings
Shares, Bennett, et al. of Charme Beauty Salon is now at Angles Beauty Salon, 540 Maplewood Avenue, MF. FCall 843 4076 for Shariet September special. Shampoo & Haircare = $10.
19. Cole I. Color T. X 28.98 a month Curtis
Maxwell I. Mayfair T. X 28.98 a month 9-10
9-10
Rent VCR with 2 movies overnight $15. Curtis
Matthes 147 W 2nd 842-5751 Open 9:30 - 9:00
M.U.C. 3/20 - 5:00 Sat
THE FAR SIDE
SENIOR YEARBOOK POIRTATIS? Shooting is taking place now, in student Organizations & Activities Office. 400 Kansas Union Call yearbook office for appointment 12.5, 5.12 Bk. Kansas University
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND: Vicinity of 60b & Maine, Collie female.
Approx. 5 mo old. Identify to claim. 749-0502.
842 7900
Found: Kitten, grey and tan tabby, wearing a flea collar, in Stewart street, 941-8680
Lost: Graphite Head Tennis Raquet, at Robinson tennis courts, beginning of Sept. If found, please call 811-4147
ast. Student LD. and All-Sports Pass at Sat.
ast. Please return. REWARD. 842-3100
MISCELLANEOUS
Kitchen is open 8:11-3:00 p.m. for wings to go. Mon day through Friday. Only at the Wheel
Refills and More At the Wheel on Thursday
TYPING
24Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
email and lasted test. 841-5066
Vocabulary accurate and affordable typing, Judy
422-7945
Unlikely. Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing and
Vice Pressing. IBM OS6. Daily service
available. IBM always welcome! 844 Illinois.
816168.
432-6661
Uptimegma Computer Services offers Word Pro-
cessing Professional Results resume, paper,
specifically Call 749-1691
Always try the best for professional service.
Form papers, theses, resumes, etc. Reasonable
422.3246
Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term
papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting selec
tion 812.4754 or 813.2671, 3:30-10:30 p.m.
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAYER - Typing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape
843-8077
expressed typist. Term papers, theses,
municipalize. Ion Correcting Selective Eire or Pica,
and will correct Spelling. Phone 841-9544.
Mr Wright
ON TIME, PAPERS, TYPED, FAST & EFFI.
CLIENT 401-530
The WORHOC TORS Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? 843 317
By GARY LARSON
9.21
BLOOM COUNTY
it's OK! it'S ok! The tunnel was closing in on me for a while, but I'm all right now
Professional TYPN, EDITING, GRAPHICS,
Correcting Selective, Katherine, #46-3283 before p
19.
SOMERVILLE & ASSOC. Inc. Professors at
Competitive Rates. Word Processing- Type
in AFA Style. "WK" 100 Kentucky
LB, Dpkra, 302l. Western 233-8361
p
REMOTE SERVICE. Let an assistant yell with that good impression. Professionally written resumes and coverletters, word processing and quality papers. 5 Eight: 781-8429
I'M TEILING YOU
MOTHER, PAD DIS-
APPARED WHEN
TECHNOLOGY ALL LOOK
WITHIN TIBES
IS AN EXISTENT
MINITER.
NOT A TECHNICAL
ONE!
OH JUST LEY
ME AT THAT
DUMB COM
PUTER OF
YOURS!
841 9494 TAPES
Students call Appl for all your typing needs. Very reasonable and fast. Day 843 0110, evenings and weekends 843 5064
TIP TOP TYPING 1201 Iowa. Professional typing, processing, editing. Reuses from start to end of programs. Supports our specialties our specialists K62 & Memory writer with file storage. royal self-correcting. MNW.
TYPIING + PLUS assistance with competition,
education, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
observations, papers, letters, applications
resume have M.S. Degree 841-6244
PERSONAL
Tom, from Maryland, let's continue our bookstore conversation. Tom, with the hat, box L85. Lynn
KENEILEE, my favorite percussionist! Care
tion me at gamms! Tonight?
BUSINESS PERS
Bible Trivia is in The game where trivia is not trivial, Cross Reference, Malls, Lawrence
Beds, Desks, Tents, Window shades: Everything
Vanguard
H.O.P.E. Award Nominations
Senior Committee Apps available in Deans office - 101B Union Due Oct 5
SO WHADAYA DO ?!
PUSH A Few Buttons?
WINK A Few LEVERS?
FIRST YOU 'LOB IN'
RIGHT?
COLLEGE SWEATSHITS HINOTRUST, Yale,
Parents, Dirntown N. Carolina USC, Ken
Espinoza, College of Business $16
each. Each Month Many celebs to 10 day delivery
calls. COD calls 1 603-823-1905. Russell swets
CUREFRENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
EARLY AND advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care; confidently assured Greater Kansas City area (Call for appointment)
Bars Vintage
Dinner Jackets, Tuxes, Flapper
Dresses, French Maid Dresses
are available to rent
Barbs Vintage Rose
8180 Mass St 841-2451
Mount 10 M.E. F. E. B Thurs.
EARN $800 per 100 envelopes stuffed. Send a self-
address, stamped envelope to: Akram, P.O.
420 A752 Chicago, IL 6000
cousins register. @ East 27th. For your needs in
vintage and party clothes, hats, gloves, ties,
dresses and men's suits. Come in & browse. Hours
10:00 to 5:30 and Sat. 10:00 to 6:30.
SOMERVILLE &
ASSOCIATES, INC.
SPECIAL RESUME' PACKAGE
$15.00
instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration
naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits
"elia Studio, 749-361"
- Reference List
* 20 Copies
Sun
- Choice of Three Paper Colors
* Matching Stationery-Envelopes
* Interview Questions
John sings for all occasions. Birthdays, parties
weddings. Operatic tenor. 841-1874
BANG!
BANG!
BANG! BANG!
CLACK
READ!
BOOK!
AEROBIC CLASSES NOW STARTING
EUROPEAN
LOOK AND FEEL GREAT
GET NOTICED
good service are offers a relaxing atmosphere,
good service, summits animate, and affordable
prices. We invite you to join us! Now serving beer
30.9 in m - 9 in m., Mon - Sat, 9:30 a.m - 2:00 p.m.
Security minded. Learn to secure your apartment. For more information, send $25 to Information Media, 240 Coederlaw, Lawrence, KS 69413.
25% off
- No routines to learn
* For Men & Women
* Day & evening classes
& HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
Travel FREE! Travel Earn high commissions & FREE trips. promote winter and spring break skis and sun trips. Suechestee tours camp rep positions available Call TOLL FREE
- Also includes:
6 surfacing lounges,
weightroom & hot tub/whirlpool
This week's special at Yello Sub and Hawk's
Crossover in the Californian with crab meat. Totally
Awesome.
Mayline Parallele rules & parts. Architecture tools and papers. The Graphic Arts Dept. Strong's Of Ice Systems, 140 Vermont, 843-8443.
bv Berke Breathed
Modeling and theater portfolios—shooting now
beginner to Professionals, call for information,
wetshell Studio 749-6111
HOWARD?...
HOWARD YOU
COME OUT OF
THERE RIGHT
NOW!!
I CUP CHIPS
STIR, SUMMER,
AND SERVE
WITH NOODLES
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t-shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt art by Swells. 749-1611
HEADING FOR LAW SCHOOL?
CONSIDER HARVARD.
Come ask us questions on Thurs., Oct. 4 at 9 a.m.
We're An
Official Representative
VISA and MASTERCARD credit cards for students, 18 yrs or older. Low fees, small savings account required Writel for details. National Bank of America Ave. SE, Washington DC. 20005.
ALL Airlines
offering
the Lowest
Air Fares Possible
ON CAMPUS LOCATION
In the Student Union
Flights Filling Fast
Now is the time to make your Thanksgiving and Christmas travel plans ...
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
See Us TODAY!
CUSTOM SEVENING. Dressmaking and albions. Call 842-3573. Reasonable prices. Wholesale Sound Rental P.A. Guitar and Bass amps, mixtures. Graphic Art. Disco systems.
HELP WANTED
CONSUMER AFFAIRS INTERN 10:15 to 11:45 /hr week $3.15/hr Appl 10:14 to 11:45 /hr week $2.9
Dependable female to assist disabled with care
No experience required. Morning, weekend &
evening hours available. Call between 15.
274-098
STUDENT ASSISTANT
NEEDDED
The School of Pharmacy is now offering students a degree in pharmacy assisting with the administration process. Some office equipment needed by pharmacy programs includes an anesthesia program, a nursing program for an internship appointment, and a computer program for an internship appointment.
repeatable undergraduate or graduate students who are interested in obtaining research experience to assist in data collection, call Mike 49-3801 at 7 a.m.
Female Models for 1985 Calendar and posters, and experience necessary Send phone and number to Bill Heger Photography, Box 203, Pajita Karnaz 6971.
FRESHMEN - It's not too late to join NAVAL
ROTC. Call 864-3161
PACID VOLUNTEERS needed for research project. Women 18-22 whose fathers died when they were 18-22 were invited to Mrs. McKenna to Rm 213, a p.m. Hrm. 226 at 3 and 30. Bring a woman friend 18-22 whose parents are living and married to each other. Participation takes about 1 hour and is greatly appreciated. Participants paid $8.
Infant Care — our home, 12:30-5:30 Start Oct. 15.
Call 841-6902 after 1 p.m.
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
Newport
Applications SENATE OFFICE
Applications and information
available in the Senate Office, B104
866-371-2000 5:59pm Deadline 10:59am
academic associates for a part time position,
photographic knowledge helpful, Monday
morning or all day. All day, Saturdays
421 865-844
Summer Jules National Park Co. is 21 Parks 309
enquiries. Complete information, $5 Park
leader. Mission Min Co. 61d 2nd Ave. WN,
Kalamazoo. MT 5900
Female Roommate to share 2-bedroom house,
walking distance to campus; $162.50 plus 1/2
utilities. Call Monica. 749-7214
Kenspore
women and women wanted to model teenagers, caselaunderwear, swimwear and formalwear $1 per hour. If interested, send a personal data sheet which includes your physical measurements and clothing size for PHOTOGRAPHY P.O. Box 2758, Tampa, FL 33610
Patient female trumpet player to teach beginning 12 yr old at home near campus! Call 842-7694 844-3700
Roommate to share House near campus; $100 plus 1/2 utilities. Buses: 749-4513
Charm Beauty Salon is now offering Haircuts for $2, and permits for $2$ up. Call or come in for a professional cut or perm at a great price. Charm Beauty salon 1032 Mass. 434-3890
SERVICES OFFERED
call '841232' for WRITING PROGRAMS.
param='PASE', PAYABLE_rates.
FEMALE Roommate needed for nearly furnished
2-legged Apt. (Sundance) $150, plus 1/2 elec-
tory. 841-1521
Charme Beauty Salon - Hume of the $7 Harcourt French Tutor for students taking beginner and intermediate levels of French 3 years experience; excellent knowledge of grammar. Call
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-5716.
LOSE WEIGHT NEW. Improve your health and
your wealth. 100% natural 100% guaranteed
HERBALIFE distributor/consultant Weight loss, skin & hair care, much more, income upper-
841 0472
EXPRESSED STEADY A COOK App, 25 inches,
weekend w/weekday. Apply 9 to 10 a.m.
or 3 p.m. in Western Sizzlin' Streak House,
2620 Iphone. No phone calls please.
YAMAHA MUSIC SCHOOL, ages 4-6, beginners
Olsen Piano and Organ 842-0755
Wanting to do ironing, mending or typing. For details, call 842-3292
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing - Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
Student Managers, to work with the Men's Variety Basketball Program. Applications are available in the Basketball at Patron Athletic Center; Duy Mon, Oct. 1
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instruc tor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual number
Apartment. 5 rooms & bath One block off southeast corner of campus. Available Oct. 1. Call 843-9000 for appointment.
FORRENT
WANTED
Cust Student needs, Romaine to share clean,
2 bed/room Apt. on Tenement; rent is $250/mo.
1-2/12 utilities. Call Eric at 843-6977 if interested
Aquatic mount. Large, 3rd floor room with 2 bathrooms. Booking required. Aquatic & land suite. Call Harbour House, 843-7944. Despair on Campus. 2.8m desk. Sept. free, excellent location. AC, W/D booking required.
BRAND NEW 1 bedroom Apt $290 843 3846
evenings
LIVING ARRANGEMENTS NOT WORKING OUT. Sublease my furnished station on bus route very nice roomly provision call all offices 1. bedroom 4 bedroom $295 to $1,000 street
New 2-bedroom duplex on N.W. side of
Laurence, complete with all kitchen appliances.
Perfect for 2 or 3 students. $480/mo. Call
1727/539-616. m
Older 2 bedroom House, New furniture. Close to K.U.训. No dog. $275 plus utilities. 204 W. 13th. 822.196
RECORD SALE
All records $2.00
Over 1000
ALL TYPES OF MUSIC
Sat. & Sun. 9-5
1514 Tennessee
Rooms are rent. Huge balcony porch, one black
room, 4 rooms; living room, large eat in kit,
chen, new remodeled $100; all All utilities
paid. 842, 299, 791-714 or 842-845
Rooms available near campus and downtown. Access to kitchen, family, dining and bath rooms. $119 per room + 14 utilities. 749-2262.
SURLEASE one-bedroom Apt $225/mo
Available 1 Oct 17 09h 99-78 Ohio
To quiet serious woman womannice furries naked room in private home in Old West New York. To quiet serious woman large furnished room in private home in 100 West Lawrence $125. To quiet serious woman large furnished room in private home in 100 West Lawrence $125.
Townhouse with finished basement available, only one left, good for 4 people. $900 SUNRISE
PLACE 814127
Try cooperative living! Sunflower House 1466
Tennessee 749-0817. Ask for Dawn Inexpensive &
Private rooms are available
FOR SALE
10 1/2 ft. Cabover Camper $300 or best offer. Call
842-424-9767
10-Speed Ladies' Schium Bicycle, bright yellow,
just tuned and in excellent condition. Call 843 6473
or 795 258
1976 Chevy Stepide Pickup, $1650 12 H. Swimming Pool with circulating pump $285 Call 249-447
AM/FM Cassette Car Stereo, Dolby, audio
looks nice, keep great condition T44 7692 66
Always on the go! Missing calls? Here's the
answer to your problem TELEPHONE ANSWERING MISSING Calls or ADDRESS SHOCK AM/FM Cassette Car Stereo with exclamation mark. Call $5.83 after 19:54pm.
Aquariums, 20 & 15 gal. Full set-up with hooks and
extras — Ishoo too. Oscar, African Knife, Sucker
and Pirahna. 749-126 after 6 m.
BOOK CASES: many sizes, starting at $49 The Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 50b. #32 2096
CAR STEREO Alpine FM stereo-case, deck Locking FF-Row. Auto-reverse, metal tape Looks and sounds great. $130 or best offer
CS Student. For a Low Price, you can own your terminal 2T I 1A with build in modern adjustable lighting and 3D display. & More Call Dau 844-6599 Can that beat? Directors chair $19.90, #1 The Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 4th 842-206.
Comic books, used Science Fiction paperbacks,
Playbills, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics, open
o 6-10. Turs - Sun. 811 New Hampshire
DIAMONDS—(2) 1/4 Carat, brilliant cut, jewelry quality $90 each, negotiable. Call Brian:
842-5653
word woven Tennis racket, super lightweight 43.8 grp. used twice, excellent condition. Green new Gace raquet cover, extra $50. Call 843.0613, keep trying.
THE GENERAL STORE
Used furniture and household misc.
Open Day: 1-5 p.m. closed Sun
7th and New Hampshire
beyond P.R. 843/838
DRAFTING MACHINE - Sturdy Bruning machine with scales, works great: $150,
neodite: 294-3680
FENDER STRAT GUITAR $360 Call Jim.
842 9709
For furnishing for your living, we have what you need. Thrift Stores at 628 Vermont and 16-9 E. Gibson Sunhard 31; orange crate $80. Gold Doll $80. Both are caught. Even $74. 609 Murphey
EVERYTHING GOES. Car, 70 Grand Prix: fuel-power. Furniture: bedroom set, room set 2, crus, oriental rugs, T.V and more more. Call 749-4600 anytime.
Honda CB 125 Must sell $200 1538 Tenn.
anytime
THE ETC. SHOP
Furniture Model 1831-94
Hewlett Packard HW CV Printer #282, Hewlett $800. Limited stock on hand. Select IBM 1C, packs and software. 25% Off JAHawk Bookstore. 843-3228
Glass door Stereo cabinets, starting at $99 The Furniture Barn 1811 W. 6th. 842 2096.
Hobbs Express Mopet, only 100 original miles excellent condition, $350. Call after 8:44, 843-3613. Is your apartment too dark in which to study? No. Call the 843-3613. The Furniture Store, 911 W. 6th, 842-3098.
V
THE ETC. SHOP
732 Mass, 843-0611
INDIAN OIL
Hats
Vintage, formal wear
Indian Oil
Will win no show!
Partners: Katie. Graded. Our desk with glass top.
Hours: 8 am to 8 pm.
Moped - 1901 Honda Express. Automatic.
2-speed ecn. cond. RH485R after 4 p.m.
New Linear 300 Watt Car Amplifier, $750 Retail
will sell for $600 or best offer. 843-3046
Men's 37 - Campus Sport 16-speed Bike, in good shape 38
$500. Call 842.242 after 6 p.m.
Pioneer PL-10 Turntable $40, or best offer
842.003 evenings
Trek 311, blue 12 Speed Bike 24 1/2 lbs. 22" toe clips, lock, pump 1 1/8" tires. 342 7835.
168mm x 32mm Picture 402.5cm x 32cm
$129 or best offer 402.613.616
Trek 311, blue 12 Speed Bike 24 l/12 ft, "22" clutches,
10'0m, pannier, 1.1 m^3, #42 7823.
***
Schwinn "World" Girls model never ridden with accessories. Handsize 39 - 18/25 inch @ 6 p.m.
$240.00
rock and valetier Records bought and sold.
Rock, RBN, JAB; Country, Classical, Standards
and Big Bands. Sat & Sun. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Quail
City, 811 New Ramble.
WASHER/DRYER, good working condition.
X large capacity, harvest gold, $160 both.
841.957 after 5
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplement on Sale. Make sure to use them in your exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization analysis and Tread Booklets.*
TENNIS RAUSET Head Graphite Edge
1021 710 509 309
AUTO SALES
1973 Ford Galaxy, 2-door, PS, PR, AC, Auto,
Radials, 52,400 miles good condition, $900 Steve
842/110), days: 843/820), evenings:
1973 Monte Carlo, AC, PS, PB, PW, runs great,
some rust, $500, negligible. 841-9444
1974 Brown Pinto wagon, 4-speed, good radio & rubber Very good, mechanically $500 cash 249-118
1977 TR7. Runs great & has many extras. Call
841-2324 anytime
Mom must sell us! Great gas mileage good condition. 13,000 km 845-765. Keep drying. Mast sell us! Nissan Sennat Station Wagon Mast sell us! Honda Motor Restored.Restored. 16,500 miles历 Call 749-2600.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Classified Heading
Write ad here
Phone
Net a Winner...
THE CLASSIFIEDS
Name
Address
Dates to run
1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
10 weeks $6.40 $3.95 $6.40 $7.15
For every week $254 $504 $754 $1,054
For all weeks $1,054
Mail or deliver to 119 Stauffer - Flint Hall
Classified Display
tcol x 1xch $4.2
$$\infty$$
September 27,1984 Page 16
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
Gottfried improvising to offset team injuries
HELP WANTED — Need gifted athletes with time to play. In soccer, the student will work on games on weekends. Job involves playing with recover or defensive lineman for a major college football team. Only exceptionally big, strong, fast people need apply. Contact the department.
No, Kansas football coach Mike Gottfried did not place the above want ad, but if things continue the way they're going, he might not have any other option.
The Jaynawks were thin on numbers when the season started. Now they're even thinner. Dangerously thin.
But injury-laden is a more accurate term to describe how the Jawhaves stand going
Injuries have hit the Jayhawks hard in a year in which it was important to keep everyone healthy. Having his team stay injury-free became even more important for Gottfried when 10 players became academically ineligible to play this year.
BASILIS
GREG
DAMMAN
Sports Editor
into Saturday's game against North Carolina.
Players who are out for the game are wide receiver John Holloway, nose guard Mitch Gaffen and nose guard Pat Kelley. Doubful to play are wide receivers Skip Peete and Richard Estell and fullback Mark Henderson.
ims is now a year of improvisation for Gottfried. And he's already shown that he is a master at making do with what he has.
Early in the season when Sylvester Byrd, the only tight end on the team with experience, decided to redshirt the 1964 season, Gottfried improvised. He altered the Kansas offense to operate at times without a tight end and moved walk-on Jeff Long into the lineup to alternate at tight end with redshirt freshman Mark Parks.
I a few weeks later when Gottfried learned
that five key defensive players would be academically ineligible. Gottfried improvised. He moved freshman Rick Bredesen, who had been working at running back, into the starting linebacker position, and thenfullback Kelley into the starting nose guard position.
pasture After the Jayhawks played Vanderbilt Saturday, and the offense failed to score a touchdown for the first time since he took over as KU coach, Goffried improvised. He moved defensive tackle Jeff Anderson, a former tight end, back to tight end in an effort to add life to the KU offense.
And yesterday, when Estell pulled a hamstring muscle, joining Holloway and Petee as injured wide receivers, Gottfried improvised. He moved No. 3 quarterback Tom Quick, a former wide receiver, into a backup position at wide receiver.
To make matters worse, Gaffen, who was to replace the injured Kelley at nose guard for the North Carolina game, injured his knee and is out of the season. Gaffen had not played a down for the Jayhawks all season. Freshman Von Lacey and juco transfer Jay Hager will now be 50-50 playing time at the position.
Make do with what you have.
Gotfried will be lucky to work two weeks in a row this year with the same 22 players on offense and defense. Even the quarterback position might be handled by a different player this week.
player this week.
Gottfred said that he would look more at Mike Orth at quarterback this week, although he was happy with the way Mike Norseth has been playing. Gottfred added that a decision on who would start at quarterback against North Carolina would be made until later this week.
Because of the amount of injuries the Jayhawks are suffering in practice, Gottfried said that he might have to cut down on contact drills in practice.
conclude.
Either that, or Gottfried could start awarding helmet decals to players who survive a practice without an injury instead of for scoring touchdowns. If things keep up the way they are going, crutches on the sidelines might outnumber helmets on the field.
Royals lose to Angels 2-0
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY. Mo. — Brian Downing and Doug Decinces hit run-scorning singles in the sixth innning last night, helping the California Angels stave off elimination in the American League West with a 2-0 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Minnesota lost to the Chicago White Sox, 9-3, enabling the Royals to maintain their $ _{1+2} $ game lead over the Twins.
Ron Romanick pitched a seven-hitter, pulling the Angels $ 3 \frac{1}{2} $ games back of the Royals with four days left in the season. California and second-place Minnesota each have four games remaining. Kansas City has three games left. The survivor of the race advances to the AL playoff against the Detroit Tigers.
Dick Schofield singled with one out in the sixth off the glove of shortstop Onix Concepcion and took second when Freed Lynn walked. Downing then singled on the glove of third baseman George Brett for a 1-0 lead
and DeCinces followed with an RBI single up the middle.
Romanick struck out two and walked one in pitching his eighth complete game and second shutout of his rookie season. He evened his record at 12-12 while Kansas City ace Bud Black, pitching with only three days rest, allowed just four hits.
The Royals loaded the bases in the seventh with a walk to Steve Balboni and singles by Frank White and Concepción but Romanick got out of the inning with a routine fly to center by Willie Wilson.
At Chicago, Greg Walker's three-run homer highlighted a five-run third inning, pacing the White Sox Richard Dodson, 14-15, went the distance for the 14th time in 32 starts. Ken Schrom, 5-10, was the loser White Sox pinch hitter Tom Papiorek homered in the White Sox home finale.
In other games, Cleveland downed Seattle 1-0. New York defeated Baltimore 3-1 and Oakland topped Texas 7-5 and Toronto clipped Boston 8-4.
80
Freshman rushbacker David Smith strains as he takes on a block from senior tight and Silvester Byrd, redshirted this
Freshmen forced into action
By PHIL ELLENBECKER
Associate Sports Editor
out of the sheer necessity of putting players on the field, the KU coaching staff is creating some battle-hardened freshmen players on this year's football team.
When injuries and academic inequalities decimated an already thin squad, three freshmen who hardly figured in the team's plans at the beginning of the season Rick Bredesen, David Smith and Marion Mirekova formed part of the second and thirsty in with the lions.
Bredesen moved in as a starting linebacker right before the first game against Wichita State when Darnell Williams was declared inelegible. Mattx started at defensive end Saturday against Vanderbilt because of an injury to his left knee and then moved into pickle Saturday when Pat Kelley was injured. When Jeff Anderson was moved to tight end this week, Smith took over his rushback position.
These aren't the only freshmen who have played, but they've seen the most action of any, and they've caught the eyes Mike Gottfried with their improvement.
"WHEN YOU LOOK at film and watch guys like Rick Bredesen and David Smith and Marvin Mattox, they're so much better now than they were at the beginning of the season," he said. "You can really see the improvement. It's been beyond our expectations."
lopsided beatings against Vanderbilt and Florida State, Breeden and Smith said they don't mind the hands-on experience
"Of course you'd like to see more of everything in practice. Breedsen said. "The more drilling you do the better you are." I didn't complain, because I'm enjoying this.
Smith said, "I like getting in there and playing. It gets lead in your britches, and when you get that experience it counts for a lot."
Both admitted that they feel a lot more comfortable on the field now than they did earlier in the season, Bredesen, the second leading tackler on the team behind Wilde Pless, said he did a better job of reading his keys against Vanderbilt and Duke State, when he concentrated too much on Heisman Droppy candidate Greg Allen.
Although they've taken their licks in
"I kind of wanted to key on him and wasn't looking out for the first threat, which was the guard coming out on me I did better in that respect against Vanderbilt," he said. "I thought I played better against Vanderbilt, and I felt better out there too."
Smith said. "I was scared to death, Iwas so nervous out there that first game. I was playing nosegud against Florida State and Vanderbilt, and when I learned to use leverage and technique, it was simple. It just seemed to come naturally. I'm not really intimidated out there anymore."
For Mattox and Bredesen, the intensive nature of major college football compared to high school ball was a major adjustment.
"I DIDN'T WORK as hard in high school," said Mattox, who was switched from wide receiver to defensive end right before the Wichita State game. "I come out here (on the practice field) and it seems like I'm working hard, but the coaches think I'm not, so now I we learned that I have to come out and work hard. It's just not like it was in high school."
Bredesen said, "If you're not mentally and physically tired at the end of practice, then that's a sign that you couldn't do the work. That's how you judge whether you've had a good practice."
r or Smith, who went to high school in Johnson, a small town tucked away in the southwest corner of the state, his biggest adjustment from high school to college was getting used to completely new surroundings.
"I was so homesick my first couple of weeks up here, they thought they were going to lose me for awhile," he said. "I've never really been away from home that
Smith and Mattox said the KU coaches have told them they'd like to see them gain weight.
Smith weighs 215 pounds and Mattx weight 190. They'll be lining up this Saturday against a North Carolina offensive line that, including the tight end, weighs an average of 253 pounds. Running at 8-4, Ephan Horton, on a 6-foot 4, pulls tailback.
"They pretty much try and ram it down your throat." Broedesen said. "We'll just have to come out like streetfighters and hit hard and gang tackle."
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not a piano trio at all,
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The New York Times
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
The Arden Trio
Suzanne Ornstein, violin
Clay Ruede, cello
Thomas Schmidt, piano
3:30 p.m. Sunday, September 30, 1984 Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets are on sale at Macy's, Mall Main Office A&B seats
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5
The Hill is alive . . .
with the sound of the KU Glee Club They're just 31 guys who sing, hum, chant and croon their way through an hour of credit each semester. And they're out to
show that they've got rhythm, they've got music. Who could ask for anything more? See story, page 3.
Cool
A man is crying.
High, mid-50s. Low, mid-30s.
Details on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 95. No.25 (USPS 650-640)
Friday, September 28, 1984
Committee calls GLSOK petition discriminatory
By JOHN HANNA
Staff Reporter
Student senators should invalidate a petition calling for a campus election that would determine whether the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas receives student money, a Senate subcommittee decided last night.
The Elections Committee, which would run such an election, unanimously recommended that the Senate take up the issue at its next meeting Oct. 10.
meeting here. Some committee members said during the meeting that the petition and the intent behind it were discriminatory.
They also said monetary allocations to student groups should be handled through
the Senate Finance Committee and not by popular vote.
The vote was 12-0. Chairman Thom Davidson only votes in case of a tie. The vote followed an hour discussion of the petition. About 15 spectators were present.
Steve Imber, Lawrence senior and author of the petition, was not present. He could not be reached for comment last night.
RUTH LICHTWARDT, PRESIDENT of GLSOK, said after the vote that she was happy with the decision but would not say whether she expected the Senate to approve the recommendation.
"I have hope," she said. "That's all I can do."
Davidson said after the meeting that the committee could have rejected or approved
the petition outright instead of allowing the Senate to have final approval.
Davidson told the senators that a final decision could cut into the committee's credibility and raise questions about its fairness in an election.
Davidson later called the recommendation a compromise between an absolute decision and letting the Senate decide.
and letting the senate decide. Committee members still will check signatures on the petition, which was circulated in April, against enrollment lists for the spring semester to determine whether it is valid. Davidson said this would be done because the Senate could reject the recommendation.
memorandum.
UNDER SENATE RULES, a petition to call a referendum, or election, must contain the signatures of 10 percent of the students
enrolled. Imber needed to collect 2,100 names, and more than 2,500 students signed the petition.
Imber circulated the petition after the Senate voted to allocate $505 to GLSOK. He has said that he considers the issue financial, not moral.
His petition states, in part, that the group could be self-supporting.
Imber also was involved in the sale of "Fagubert" T-shirts, which have appeared on campus in recent weeks. The shirts, a takeoff on the popular movie "Ghostbusters," feature a limp-wristed ghost.
Imber on Monday sold a shirt to a University Daily Kansan staff member who neither confirmed or denied his affiliation with the newspaper.
ELECTIONS COMMITTEE MEMBERS said last night that the intent behind the petition made it discriminatory, which put the petition in violation of University policy.
"It's trying to use legitimate means to accomplish illegitimate motives," said Scott Stone, a committee member.
Stone, a committee member,
Stone also said that senators were elected to make decisions for students on matters such as financing.
In other action, the committee decided that voting machines will be used, but only for balloting, in the Senate's fall presidential and vice presidential elections. Four committee members will look into obtaining the machines.
"My message to those who believe that they're not duly represented is that they should get out and vote," he said.
Scott Tate. DeSoto senior, spent part of a wet morning yesterday writing tickets for cars parked illegally behind the Military Science Building. Tate, a Parking Service
employee, said he found more cars parked illegally on rainy days than on dry ones. "I guess they think it's worth it to keep from getting a little wet," he said.
BOCO refuses to change name of show
By JOHN EGAN
Staff Reporter
The Board of Class Officers has refused to change the name of its spring variety show, despite a request to do so from the National Association of Student YMCAs in Minneapolis.
THROUGH 1981, THE annual spring variety show on campus was called "Rock Chalk Revue" and was sponsored by KU-Y. In 1982, KU-Y disbanded, but the show continued under a new sponsor, BOCO, and a new name, "Encore."
In a Sept. 18 letter, Rich Willis, NASY program coordinator, asked BOCO to reconsider calling the show "Rock Chalk Reuse."
HOCO changed the name of the back show to "Rock Chalk Revue" after the secretary of state's office in Topeka awarded the group two service marks for the title on Sept. 17, said Dave Smith, executive director of "Rock Dale Chalk Revue." One service mark protects the show's title, and the other protects any goods sold in connection with the show.
"There is a movement in its beginning stages to revive the KU-YM-YWCA, and your use of the Rock Chalk name could seriously hurt that effort by depriving the group of their best fund-raising program." Willits wrote.
He said KU-Y had held common law rights to the title, but lost them this year. BOCO was the first organization to obtain service marks for the title, he said.
Smith said the show's name would remain Rock Chalk Revue" because BOCO had been able to pay for it.
BOCO RECENTLY CONDUCTED a poll of 31 living groups — fraternities, sororites, residence and scholarship halls — that showed overwhelming support for changing the show's name from "Encore" to "Rock Chalk Revue." Smith said. Of the 31 groups, 30 wanted the variety show's name switched
BOCO also has applied to the Department of Commerce for service marks on "Rock Chalk Revue," Smith said.
"I think we've gone too far already," he said yesterday.
Mondale says he's wary of media image
WASHINGTON — In a revealing interview, Walter Mondale said he was lonely in a crowd, unable to project a good television image and wary of news accounts of his performance, which he characterized as what's this bum done today."
When the Democratic presidential nominee, running far behind President Reagan in polls, and criticized by his own party as a man who lacked a leadership image, said he was aware of the problem but had gotten used to the ridicule.
Willits said "Rock Chalk Revue" had been the major source of KU-Y's financing since the show was founded in 1949.
By United Press International
"It used to hurt bad, but now it doesn't," he said in an interview published in yesterday's Washington Post.
1. KNOW WHAT PEOPLE are saying, I read and listen. I've seen the polls. I don't take it of this tightly. Mondale to Greenfield, the Post editorial page editor
"I realize the problem. But I don't know what to do other than say what I think, and be who I am, and try to communicate as clearly and as directly as I can."
Despite these problems, Mondale said he thought his campaign "is starting to bubble," and that voters would notice he was offering
specific solutions to the pressing problems of the day while Reugan was not.
He predicted he would do well in his two nationally televised debates with Reagan next month because, "I've done a lot of debates. I've got confidence in my ability to deal with issues, and I don't think that's what's hurting me."
what's buring EVEN THOUGH HE has been in many political campaigns and has served as vice president under Jimmy Carter, Mondale expressed frustration at his current situation.
See IMAGE, p. 5, col. 4
Gromyko visits U.N., confers with Mondale
By United Press International
NEW YORK — Walter Mondale had an unprecedented meeting with Moscow's top diplomat yesterday to review superpower relations, and the Soviets suggested that if Mondale were elected president "certain possibilities" for arms control would be opened.
For his part, Monday said he "did what I could to create a hopeful environment" for President Reagan's meeting today with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyky.
Gromyko, in an tough speech before the U.N. General Assembly yesterday, said American foreign policy had been taken over by militants bent on destroying U.S.-Soviet relations. The speech set the stage for a chilly meeting with Reagan.
GROMYKO ACCUSED WASHINGTON of sponsoring state terrorism and seeking military superiority over the Soviet Union through a buildup in nuclear weapons.
"All we hear is that strength, strength and above all strength is the guarantee of international peace." Gromyko said of the Reagan administration "In other words — weapons, weapons and still more weapons."
Mondale, who has repeatedly criticized Reagan for his failure to reach any arms control agreement during his term, had the
90-minute meeting with Gromyko at the Soviet mission to the United Nations
In his comment to reporters after the session, Mondale said that he had hope that something of substance could come from the Reagan-Gromyk talk at the White House today — an expectation the administration has tried to dampen.
has tried to dismiss:
"WHILE IT'S NOT possible to speculate on what the outcome of the talks tomorrow might be. I do believe there is the opportunity tomorrow to make significant progress," Mondale said.
When pressed about his optimism on the Reagan-Gromyko meeting, Mondale said, "I have nothing to go on. . . . It's my judgment."
GROMYKO, IN HIS GENERAL Assembly speech, said, "The tug-of-war between the groups that determine U.S. foreign policy has been won by the militaristically minded.
"They attempt to devalue the existing Soviet American accords by breeching what has been achieved earlier through long and painstaking work on both sides," he said.
"Statements are being made at the highest official levels that the United States is within its right to deliver a first nuclear strike, that is to say to unleash a nuclear war." Gromky
Secretary of State George Shultz, who sat
See GROMYKO, p. 5, col. 4
Enrollment grows by 124 on the two KU campuses
By HOLLIE MARKLAND
Staff Reporter
Enrollment at the University of Kansas has increased by 47 percent, or 124 students, over last fall, according to statistics released yesterday by the department of educational services.
The 20th day enrollment figures showed a head count of 26,744 students on the two KU campuses. The same statistics for fall semester 1983 showed 26,620 students enrolled.
At the Lawrence campus, enrollment is 24,436 students. The figure rose by 217 students from last fall's enrollment of 24,219 students. The fall full-time equivalent increased by 187 from 21,593 to 21,780.
THE FULL-TIME equivalent figure is used by the Kansas Legislature to determine a budget for the University's operating funds.
The full-time equivalent figure is calculated by dividing the total number of credit hours by average full-time credit course loads. For undergraduates, the average course load is 15 hours; for law students, the average is 12 hours and for graduate students, nine hours.
At the College of Health Sciences, enrollment this fall dropped by 93 students from 2.401 students to 2.008 students. The full-time
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF the enrollment figures still must be determined, said Dennis Domer, acting associate vice chancellor for academic affairs.
equivalent figure is not calculated for the College of Health Sciences.
academic artists.
"Naturally we are pleased that the head count and the FTE are up," Domer said, "but their actual meaning still has to be evaluated. No one has had time to carefully analyze them yet."
College Riverside
The 20th day enrollment figures include late enrollees and exclude students who enrolled and then dropped out, said Gary Thompson, director of student records. he said all state schools in Kansas calculated their enrollments on the 20th day of classes so figures would be comparable
Although no official figures have been compiled for class enrollments, the University appears to have an increase of more than 300 freshmen this fall, Gil Dyck, dean of educational services, said in a prepared statement.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig, also in a prepared statement, said the enrollment at the Lawrence campus was higher than he had anticipated.
"THIS IS UNUSUAL and far-reaching. I am convinced that more Kansas students who would have left the state to continue their education are electing to remain and
See FIGURES, p. 5, col. 1
20th DAY ENROLLMENT FIGURES
| Headcount | 1983 | 1984 | Difference |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Lawrence | 24,219 | 24,436 | + 217 |
| Kansas City | 2,401 | 2,308 | - 93 |
| Total | 26,620 | 26,744 | 124 |
| FTE | 1983 | 1984 | Difference |
| Lawrence | 21,593 | 21,780 | + 187 |
C. 300 m/s
D. 200 m/s
E. 150 m/s
September 28, 1984 Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
Major U.S. banks lower their prime interest rates
KANSAN
NEW YORK — Major U.S. banks yesterday lowered their prime interest rate to 12 $4 percent from 13 percent, with one going to 12 $4 percent.
The nation's largest bank, Bank of America, based in San Francisco, and such big New York banks as Citicorp and Wells Fargo were among the banks reducing their principal
The 13 percent rate began to crack Friday when Morgan Guaranty Trust of New York, the nation's fifth largest bank, lowered its rate to $12_{-3}$ percent.
Troop reduction talks resume
First National Bank of Chicago was among the first non-New York banks to announce a reduction to 12% percent. The bank, c/o San Francisco, announced a 12% percent prime rate.
VIENNA, AUSTRIA — NATO and Warsaw Pact delegates blamed each other yesterday for the stalemate in arms negotiations as long-running talks resumed discussion reducing conventional forces in Europe.
At the reopening of the 11-year-old Mutual and Balanced Force Reduction (MBFR) talks after a summer recess, East Bloc spokesman Josef Sestak of Czechoslovakia said the deadlock in the negotiations was solely the West's fault.
The goal of the negotiations is to reduce troops to 900,000 per side.
Magazine reveals coin use
NEW YORK — Suffragette Susan B. Anthony would be horrified — the only regular users of the "silver" dollars with her likeness are men who spend them to see naked women at peep shows, a magazine reported yesterday.
United Press International
"Patrons . . happily hand over foldable dollars for handfuls of the coins," said the magazine, Vanity Fair, in its October issue.
"One Anthony then dropped in a coin box will electrically pull back a curtain to reveal a naked woman and activate a telephone link for one minute in a 'one-on-one booth,' a two-compartment affair with a seemingly airtight glass partition.
Lagoon is holding anchovies
STINSON BEACH, Calif. — Hundreds of thousands of anchovies were dead or dying yesterday in the Bolinas Lagoon, the second time in three weeks the phenomenon occurred in waters just north of the Golden Gate bridge.
Thousands of the silvery little fish, swept into the lagoon at high tide, were floating on the water. Tens of thousands more sank to the bottom of the inlet.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
IDLE SPEED
NO WAKE
FT. LAUDERDALE, FLA. — A traffic sign in the New River designed for boat captains seems to direct a motorist. Heavy
rains from tropical storm Isidore and the high morning tide yesterday caused the river to overflow its banks.
Florida holding up against storm
By United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Tropical storm Isidore moved into central Florida's east coast yesterday, buffeting the nation's coast with wind gusts to 60 mph that did little damage.
The shuttle Challenger, lashed to its oceanside launch pad in preparation for launch Oct. 5, withstood the onslaught of wind and heavy rain from what a deputy sheriff described as little more than "a bad thunderstorm."
There were no reported casualties from the season's ninth tropical twister and damage appeared confined to beach erosion, downed utility lines and road washouts. The heavy rains and high tides, ranging to 3 feet above normal, washed out 1,000 feet of scenic oceanside highway A1A at South Palm Beach
The storm interrupted Florida's battle to eradicate the canker disease threatening the city.
Citrus growers feared the wind and rain
might spread the highly contagious bacteria from nurseries where infected seedlings have not yet been destroyed, but agricultural experts said Isidore's northerly track reduced fears that the disease might be spread
The storm's path took it through the heart of the Indian River citrus country where ripening grapefruit were hanging heavily on the trees and vulnerable to loss.
At 5 p.m. CDT, the National Hurricane Center reported Isidore's center was about 20 miles inland, halfway between Vero Beach and Melbourne.
"The center of Isidore continues to move towards the north-northwest 10 to 15 mph along and parallel to the central east coast of Florida," an advisory said. "A large part of the circulation remains over water and there are no significant wind shear." moth with higher eusts in heavier swallows."
Many young people along the east coast — released from school yesterday for the Jewish holiday — were enjoying the rough conditions were dotted with surfers and fishermen.
Patrick Air Force Base, 17 miles south of Cape Canaveral and headquarters of the Air Force's Eastern Space and Missile Center, was hit with 60 mph gusts. Planes at the base had been secured inside hangars or flown out before the storm hit.
At posh Palm Beach, the wintering spot of the rich, the only store front that appeared to be prepared for the storm was the Rolls Royce agency, which had its windows covered with X's of masking tape to keep them from shattering.
Melbourne reported winds gusting to 55 mph between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. Vero Beach was hit with 50 mph gusts before the center reached there.
An Indian River County Sheriff's
sanction said it was like a bad thunder-
storm.
As Isidore moved northward, gale warnings were extended from Jupiter Inlet, just north of Palm Beach, to Fernandina Beach, north of Jacksonville.
Neil Frank, director of the Hurricane Center, said since much of the storm was still over water it had not weakened as expected when it reached land.
CIA remark 'distorted,' Reagan says
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, under mounting attack from Democrats, complained yesterday of "distorted" suggestions that he blamed the bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut on intelligence bombings caused by the Carter administration.
White House spokesman Larry Speakes said Reagan did not believe that there had been an intelligence lapse in Lebanon and retained confidence in the CIA after the third such attack on a U.S. installation in 17 months.
The comments came as the White House tried to contain a controversy touched off by the explosion and marked by an exchange of charges and countercharges in the heat of the
The sudden debate over the adequacy of U.S. intelligence capabilities in Lebanon sprang from Reagan's remark Wednesday that "the near destruction of our intelligence capability in recent years, before we came under attack in United States vulnerable to acts of terrorism."
While at least one aide confirmed that the president was pointing a finger at the Carter administration, which shifted emphasis from cloak-and-dagger spies to technical means of intelligence gathering. Speaks said that was not Reagan's specific intent.
Reagan complained to reporters "about the way you distorted my remarks about the CIA." Speakes said the complaint was with "representations in the media that the president was putting blame entirely on the Carter administration."
Instead, he said, Reagan was alluding to "a decade-long trend" of pressure on the CIA to turn away from traditional means of spying. But Speakers went on to acknowledge that the bird's nest was the focal point of the CIA — the firing of hundreds of aerial took place during the Carter presidency.
0
Jimmy Carter responded sharply to Reagan's comments, saying, "This series of tragedies in the Middle East has been brought about by the president's own deeply flawed policy and inadequate security precautions in the face of proven danger."
Stansfield Turner, who was CIA director under Carter, said of changes at the agency during that administration: "We did not reduce even one operative overseas. What we did do was reduce some bureaucratic overhead in Washington, based on recommendations from a report of professionals in the CIA."
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September 28,1984 Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA
The University Daily KANSAN
Today is last day to drop classes and not get a 'W'
Today is the last day to cancel classes. After today, a student who drops a class will receive a "W" for that class on his or her transcript, said Heather Jenista, information clerk in the Office of Student Records.
To cancel a class, a student must go to the enrollment center on the first floor of Strong Hall and present a drop card with the dean's stamp of the school in which he or she is enrolled. The College of Liberal Sciences does not require a dean's stamp.
Senior photo sittings continue
The enrollment center is open from 8:30 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4:30 p.m. today.
All senior portrait appointment times are filled for today, but seniors will have another chance in November to have their photographs taken for the 1985 Jayhawker yearbook.
The second session will start Nov. 5, said Gary Gruer, Jayhawker editor. Appointments for the November session are filling up, he said, and seniors should make appointments as soon as possible.
Student reports molestation
A 24-year-old student reported that she was molested Sept. 19 by a man she had met that evening, police said yesterday.
The student told police that she was walking near the intersection of Ninth and New Hampshire streets at about 10 p.m. when she met the man. The woman got in a car with the man, and the two drove to a liquor store and bought beer.
The woman told police that the man began making advances after he parked the car in the 1100 block of Louisiana Street. When she resisted, the man forced her to the ground and molested her, she reported.
Lake cleanup to be tomorrow
The third annual Clinton Lake Cleanup will be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. tomorrow. Volunteers will remove litter from the shoreline and roads leading to the lake.
KC museum official to speak
participants in the cleanup will receive certificates, patches and coupons for food and beverages from Lawrence businesses. More than 600 volunteers helped with the cleanup last year, said Bunnie Watkins, Clinton Lake park ranger.
Pageant meeting to be Sunday
Ward, a KU alumnus and a 1976 Marshall Scholar, will be honored at a reception at 9:30 p.m. at Nunemaker Center.
The second annual Honors Program convocation will feature Roger Ward, associate curator for European painting and sculpture at the NelsonAtkins Art Museum in Kansas City. You can create a Context for Living" at 8 p.m. Sunday at the Frank R. Burge Union.
Women interested in competing in the Miss Lawrence Scholarship Pageant can learn more about the pageant at an informational meeting from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday at The Eldridge House Restaurant & Club, 101 W. Seventh St.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy and the high will be in the mid-50s with northerly winds of 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear and the low will be in the lower to mid-30s. Tomorrow will be cloudy again and the high will be in the mid- to upper 50s.
Compiled from staff and United Press International reports.
Correction
Because of an editor's error, a campus speaker was incorrectly identified in a story in yesterday's Kansas. Dave Westol, the speaker, will open Greek Week tomorrow with a speech at 10 a.m. in woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union Because of a attack on one of the Korean Olympics was incorrectly reported in the same story. The event will start at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday at 19th and Iowa streets.
KWALITY COMICS
Comics & Science Fiction
107 W. 7th. 843-7239
THE DEBATE ON ABOVE THE SUN
Tim Lewis, Kansas City, Kan., junior, gestures as he sings yesterday in Murphy Hall for an Oct. 12 performance in with other members of the Glee Club. The club practiced Manhattan with Kansas State University's Glee Club.
KU singing club is gleeful group
By JULIE COMINE Staff Reporter
Impatiently shuffling their sheet music, the 31 members of the KU Men's Glee Club clear their throats and listen for the pianist's cue.
"Pitch, please." commands Glee Club director Rob Reid.
Cristi Carol Cooper, Derby senior, hits middle C. The crisp note resounds off the high acoustic ceiling in the Murphy Hall rehearsal room.
"On your feet, now." Reid says to the singers, pounding his fist against the music stand. "This is a fight song."
And as Cooper strikes up the introduction, the Glee Club members assume their best singing posture and raise their voices in a collegiate crescendo:
"Cause I'm a Jay, Jay, Jay, Jay, Jay,
Jayhawk.
Jayhawk.
Up at Lawrence on the Kaw.
Cause I'm a Joy, Jay, Jay, Jay, Jay,
Jayhawk.
With a sis-boom hip hoorah!
Midway into the next verse. Reid halts the singers with a wave of his hand
"Wait, wait," he says. "Let's have it a little more brassy. Put more Jay in that."
"Just one more time," Reid demands.
"Flawlessly."
So the singers belt out another verse.
And another. And another.
Every Tuesday and Thursday at 2:30 p.m. Reid, Reid and the Glee Club meet to practice KU tight songs, folk songs, spirituals and other vocal compositions.
AND DESPITE THE dozen repetitions
of "I'm a Jay, Jay, Jayhawk." Reid and the singers say being in the Glee Club truly is a gleeful experience.
is a great copse.
"It is a release from the pressures of everyday academic life," said Tim Greenwell. Olathe sophomore. "I go to practice, 1 sing, and for that hour I'm totally relaxed."
one other. Now a singing group that general folk can be a part of," he said. "You don't have to be a super singer to fit in."
Glee Club members aren't required to audition, Reid said, although most have sung in high school choruses. They receive one credit hour a semester.
The Glee Club performs several concerts each year, said Red, who is finishing work on his master's degree in music education at the University of Virginia, the freshman choir.
THE GLEE CLUB will travel to Manhattan Oct. 12 for a joint performance with Kansas State University's glee club. The club's first performance at the University of Kansas will be 8 p.m. Oct. 19 at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
"The songs we sing are different than the standard choir's bill of fare," Reid said.
At yesterday's practice, Glee Club members sang everything from "Fight for Kansas," KU's first fight song, to Cole Porter's "Another Op'nin", Another Show," from the Broadway musical "Kiss Me Kate."
steve Vogel, Topeka sophomore, said, "I'm a total KU fan, so I like the fight songs best. It's a great way of expressing how I feel about KU."
singing with handelags, finger snaps and body language, said Dewayne Nickerson, Ravtown, Mo, senior.
BESIDENLEARNING their vocal parts,
Glee Club members must spice their
Raytown, MO. . . he said.
"We have a lot of fun," he said. "If we didn't have fun with the music, why even bother singing it?"
Reid said the first glee clubs were groups of minstrels in 18th century England.
Around the turn of the century, glee clubs became popular at universities in the United States — especially at Harvard and Yale, Reid said. The first KU Glee Club was started by Thomas Larremore in the early 1900s.
"The word 'glee' refers to a piece of music," he said. "Glees were little compositions, like catches or rounds."
FORMER GLEE CLUB members started the Tom and Amy Laremore Singers Scholarship Fund in 1955, said Dale Seerlinger, director of constituent fund raising for the Kansas University Endowment Association.
The fund provides several scholarships each year for Glee Club members, and helps pay for the club's travel expenses and the director's salary. Seulerling said. The fund now totals more than $150,000.
Reid said Glee Club practice sessions required no homework, except for memorizing songs for performances.
"But I still feel that I'm teaching them things," Reid said. "I try to improve their general singing habits — training them to sing different parts, expanding their ranges, giving them a little finesse.
"I enjoy this a great deal, although at times I wish was singing rather than directing."
Seaver says Western Civ to stay same
By DAVID LASSITER Staff Reporter
The Western Civilization program probably will undergo no significant changes in the immediate future, said James Seaver, retired chairman of the Western Civilization department and professor of history.
The basic format that Seaver and his colleagues developed in 1957 for the Western Civilization program is still being used, Seaver told an audience of 60 people last night in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Seaver said he hoped the Western Civilization staff would do more experimentation in the program, especially in Western Civilization 134 and 135.
"We wanted the students to cross mental blades with great minds of the past," Seaver said.
The faculty decided to add the program to the undergraduate requirements because they thought students should know something about their own culture.
Seaver said students could use the knowledge they gained in Western Civilization to choose their upper-level courses.
Seaver came to the department in 1947. He remained with the program for the next 27 years.
Seaver said he became interested in Western Civilization as a freshman at Stanford University, where he studied it for three quarters.
Under the new format, students bought a Western Civilization package that included paperbacks of various authors, a course manual and a book of collected readings. Review sessions and small discussion groups also were instituted under the new guidelines.
Because some had accused the Western Civilization program of liberal biases, Seaver said, the program was changed, and authors with different views were studied together.
Weinberger defends lack of arms treaty with U.S.S.R.
He then made the decision to study history and major in education.
To combat the deteriorating student interest, Francis Heller, a professor of law and political science, brought a new format to the program in 1957.
SEAVER GAINED TEACHING experience in Western Civilization he worked on his doctorate at Cornell University.
The original Western Civilization program had 41 required readings and consisted of many of the same works that students are required to read now.
By SUZANNE BROWN
Seaver said students quietly rebelled against the program from 1950 to 1955. He said they didn't read their assignments, pass their tests or meet with their proctors.
"It was rumored that the students would hold cram sessions at the Beta house," said Seaver. "They believed that they could learn everything they needed to know the night before the comprehensive test."
Staff Reporter
MANHATTAN — President Reagan could have signed a treaty with the Soviet Union long ago if all he had wanted was an ineffective document, Caspar W. Weinberger, secretary of defense, said yesterday.
The president will wait until arms reduction talks produce more than ambiguous agreements that cannot be verified, the secretary said.
"IF ALL THE AMERICAN people needed was a treaty, then we could have had just a treaty long ago," he said. "This administration will not rush into a hastily written or flawed agreement just so we can say we have our treaty."
Weinberger was the guest speaker at the 64th Alfred M. Landon Lecture Series at Kansas State University. He spoke to about 1,700 students and faculty members.
Weinberger said the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks of the 1970s had been unsuccessful because they had permitted the Snivels to expand their weapons stock.
wenberger dismissed recent charges that Reagan was the first president since John F. Kennedy not to have concluded an arms-control agreement with the Soviets.
"I SUGGEST HE will be known for something far more important, far more historic," he said. "I believe that President
Reagan will be the first president to achieve real arms reductions."
"We learned that the Soviets respect strength," he said. "That's why this administration does not subscribe to the illusion of a freeze."
Pur ulmberger referred to the administration's belief that the Soviets will agree to discuss reducing nuclear stockpiles once they fear the United States is accumulating superior forces.
Many Republicans and a few Democrats have agreed with this policy of "peace through strength," but many have disagreed with the president over specific weapons programs.
Weinberger defended one such program.
fired by the enemy.
Critics contend that this research would extend the frontiers of nuclear war to space, but Pentagon officials have said the weapons would be a humane alternative to nuclear war.
THE RESEARCH WOULD develop space weapons that would use lasers and atomic-particle beams to spot and destroy missiles fired by the enemy.
he so-called "Star Wars" research that has drawn harsh criticism
"We look to the day when we can deter war by securing the ability to destroy weapons, not people." Weinberger said.
Weinberger charged that opponents of anti-missile and anti-satellite research were afraid of advancing into the unknown.
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8
September 28,1984 Page 4
OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kansas (UNS) 626-640 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall Law, Kansas 6045; daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and three periods. Second class postage paid at Lawn Kansas 6044 Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year in Duggety County and $1 for six months or $3 a year in Nebraska. MailMaster Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas 118 Staffer Flint Hall Law, Kansas 6045
DON KNOX
Editor
PAUL, SEVART VINCE HESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
DOUG CUNNINGHAM
Campus Editor
DAVE WANAMAKER Business Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
General Manager and News Adviser
LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager
JILL GOLDBLATT Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Liquor law reform
Kansas has been unfairly maligned by the rest of the nation for many things it cannot change, such as its weather and topography. But the state takes some well-deserved lumps for many of the anachronistic characteristics that persist out of a stubborn resistance to change. None of these characteristics are so blatantly out of step with the 20th century as its liquor laws.
Gov. John Carlin recently announced his intent to push for liquor by the drink in the next legislative session. He says his motives are economic; businesses, tourists and conventions are put off by a state that requires anyone who wants to buy a drink at a bar to have a club membership at that bar.
If the state wants to grow, Carlin said, the state must change its laws. Oklahoma voters have done away with their state's restrictive liquor laws, and Kansas is now one of only three states in the nation without liquor by the drink.
Legislative leaders are quick to point out that liquor by the drink has little chance in the next session, with or without Carlin's support. Carlin says he wants to take the emotion out of the issue, to keep it purely economic, but lobbyists like the Rev. Richard Taylor, head of Kansans for Life at Its Best!, won't let that happen. "This is not a political issue," Taylor says. "this is a human suffering issue."
says, this is a human suffering about. Kansans are not suffering much to get into bars, however. Liberal laws governing reciprocal agreements between clubs have allowed holders of some club cards almost unlimited access to clubs statewide. Carlin says that passing liquor by the drink would only be acknowledging what already exists. He's right.
The state may always take some criticism for the things it cannot change, but it can no longer afford to be a laughingstock for the things it can.
LETTERS POLICY
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten and 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 hometown, or faculty and staff of 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.
AMERICAN STEEL
Now that a lot of the foreign competition is being eliminated, its obvious what we have to do with our profits.
Right.
Executive raises!
Pot Shots
Please — someone introduce me to a nice computer.
for a computer
You know one of the "friendly" ones.
I've had encounters with some in the past, machines of various types and forms that others said were "user-friendly," but with me, they all turned a mean interface.
I'll admit it I've got a chip on my shoulder when it comes to these massive complements of wires and circuits.
As soft as the ware may be, as soon as my fingers touch a keyboard, the unaccaring metal box assails me with bleeps for violating its sacred syntax.
I know I should learn to value and respect the bits and bytes that are
Jennifer Jine
becoming BASIC to our society, but I intend to avoid any disk that flops for as long as possible.
There isn't anything wrong with my instincts. Journalists are generally considered human beings by the people who write them, and insults insults we react to as human beings.
My first instinct is to strike back when I read the letters to the editor that I find stuffed in the editorial editor's mailbox or lying on his desk. The next instinct is to find some basis upon which I can attack the credibility and/or intelligence of the letter writer. That usually isn't hard to do. There's always a misspelled word or name, a fact that isn't quite right, some rationalization loophole.
It is difficult for me to respect any lifeless object that can instill such panic and terror into mature, intellectual beings upon the utterance of three simple words down.
To the hackers who receive so much elation from triumphing over the processes of these manufactured minds, I say, more power to you.
I'll be content watching the computer craze from the outside, letting others tangle with terminals, printers and mainframes, and secretly hoping that I never have to deal with anything more complex than a bank card machine.
But I finally come up against the hard.
Michael Robinson
cold fact that someone didn't like what I had to say and wasn't swayed by the way i said it. What really hurts is that the letter intruded into my personal domain, the words that I wrote.
I know that the way I feel when I read a letter about one of my columns is the way some readers feel when their lives, problems or values are spilt across the newspaper pages. I know just how unpleasant that can be. But I also know that that's the only way we've figured out how to do it.
If we remember that, and overcome our instincts, we might even be able to learn something.
Dried up chewing gum. leftover remains of the goey stuff, stuck to the underside of the desk, is mighty distasteful.
In grade school, the fear of getting caught chewing gum is often what moves a student to stick it underneath the desk when his teacher appears.
Better that than being reprimanded or having to write an essay on 'Why I should
In high school, discipline for the infraction was more productive.
An hour spent removing wads large and small, fresh and stale; and pink, white and gray from the under side of a roomful of desks, often reformed the gum-chewer.
Margaret Safranek
But unfortunately, such punishment was not met out in sufficient amounts in younger years or the exercise's rehabilitative value is short lived.
One look under a few desks in a classroom or lecture hall on campus provides sufficient evidence.
Yet the issue, while occasionally a sticky one, is not without solution.
If you must chew gum in KU buildings, get some extra mileage out of your newspaper, out of this page.
When you have finished chewing your gum, tear off a corner of the Kansan, wrap your used gum in it and deposit the wad in a trash can.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
'Fagbusters' T-shirts cause campus controversy
To the editor
To the role.
The conversation of Steve Imber with
the corporation of the "Faghusters" shirts
should serve to repudiate his claim
that his anti-GLSOK funding petition
was motivated purely by financial
considerations.
Futhermore, as has been pointed out by Jeff Miller in the Kansan, (Sept. 25, letter), the petition is clearly discriminatory in that it applies to only one student group. I have been a member of a student athletic club whose members raised over $17,000 in one year. The same year this club received $1,000 from the Student Senate for equipment purchases. According to Lumber's definition, my organization was in no need of these Senate funds and was in fact self-supporting.
supporting. Why then does Mr. Imber's petition affect only one student group? Because the membership of that group is mostly homosexual The petition is an expression of the ignorance, intolerance and insensitivity of its drafters and signers.
provide support for its members, this group would have equal access to Senate funds. Such a group is not likely to form because the members of the heterosexual community are not subjected to the prejudice and violence that is met by the homosexual community. People who suffer from such abuse are going to organize. There is strength in numbers. There are black student organizations, oh, but it is no longer fashionable nor safe to pick on blacks.
Any student group has a right to access the funds generated by the student activity fee. If a group of heterosexuals was to form in order to
Yes Mr. Imbar, it is 1984 now and you may have to work with a black person in class, you may have to look upon a woman as an equal and, you may have to live with Student Senate funding for homosexuals. I wish the student to embrace with his feelings of tear and paradox that must torture you.
But, somehow, I feel that it would do you some good to have your little conservative white boy view of the world shattered. Tolerance and justice may be two words that hold little meaning for you, Mr Imber, but I suggest that you try to discover what they mean.
Where, oh where, are the Cubs?
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, senior
To the end,
Neurotically you seize a Kansas
from the late, missing the
late (with its accompanying
lateball data) the previous even-
ing "What of the Cubbies?" you
ask Alas, the sports editor has
destined you to ignorance, citing
"lack of space" to explain the
James E. Mitchell
For the editor:
absence of box scores and standings. Diastolic steadily rising, you dash out and buy a real newspaper, diverse enough to include such bits of trivia
Robert S. Coleman
De Kalb, HL,
graduate student
Source of shame
The purpose of this letter is neither to support nor oppose the existence of GLSOK on the Lawrence campus. I have no strong feelings about the issue.
I am greatly troubled, though, by the intolerance shown to this group of people by those responsible for designing, printing and distributing the "Fagbusters" T-shirt. My opposition is not based on legal grounds, though much talk has been given to possible legal remedies initiated by the U.S. Treasury, which have copyrighted the logo. As much as I regret their mode of expression, I have to support their right of expression.
To the editor:
Likewise. Student Senate financing of GLSOK, and any precedent that financing might set or support, raises no strong feelings within me.
I do object, though, to the extreme insensitivity and poor taste that the manufacture and sale of the T-shirt represents. In a university where such lofty ideals as respect for the rights of others, tolerance of various beliefs, and respect for ideas are a source of pride, this incident has been a source of shame.
I take a great deal of pride in the University of Kansas and in the quality of the students that represent it. I sincerely believe that this activity is not representative of the feelings of the majority of KU students. We owe ourselves more respect than that.
John Urkevich Kansas City, Kan. graduate student
A right to differ
A college education should show one her/his own limits and allow one to transclude those limits through an appreciation of other individuals and other cultures. College shows us that people are different; they have different cultural and ethnic backgrounds, they are of different genders, and they have different sexual orientations and preferences.
Hospitality based upon these differences is defined as bigotry and is just condemned by educated people.
I was first outraged, then saddened, when I learned of the existence of "Fagbusters" T-shirts on the KU campus. This type of propaganda is, I believe, inappropriate at an institution of higher learning.
It doesn't matter whether one approves of homosexuals, women, blacks, Hispanics or Jews. Everyone one must recognize one's own limitations and recognize the rights of others to differ.
Jill Robbins Hollywood, Fla. graduate student
To the editor:
Mv suggestion
To the editor:
The current debate over Student Senate financing of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas is seriously misdirected. Despite their protestations to the contrary, the organizers of the petition to end GLOSK
funding are obviously concerned (and I believe rightly so) with the moral implications of such funding. But it is hardly necessary to debate morality in order to fault the logic of such funding, as it does not answer the whole question an aura of respectibility that it does not deserve.
Student government, like any government, should concern itself only with those tasks the performance of which is vital to the common interest. I object to Senate funding of GLOSK not because of the different moral standards of its members, but because the funding of a counseling service for homosexuals has nothing to do with the responsibilities of government. Though a Republican, I would equally object to Senate funding of College Young Republicans, or any other group with a private outlook and no connection with the vital common interest
It is a shame that our blowblow student senators feel they must parody the ubiquitous federal government in their fiscal obsessions. Restraint is the better part of wisdom.
Teaching Assistant Department of French & Italian
My suggestion: determine what percentage of Student Senate funding supports activities which are absolutely vital to the common welfare, then eliminate everything else the Senate does and reduce the Student Activity Fee by an equal percentage. Given the Student Senate's vainglorious self-image, I certainly don't expect this idea to get very far.
Tim Williams
A right to choose
So Thorn Davidson is looking to avoid the referendum on GLSOK funding by biasing the judgment on a valid petition. This is based on Steven Imber's alleged personal opinions and affiliation with a T-shirt drive.
To the editor:
Is Davidson also judging the intent of the other 2,500 people who signed this petition? This is clearly an act of insult because he does prophromosexual sentiment to remove the right of KU students to choose in this matter
Let's face it, they were looking for an excuse to take away our freedom of choice and they found one. What would they have done if Imbar had been unaffiliated with the T-shirts, window or bag his telephone?
Tom Crisp Dayton, Ohio, graduate student
Parody continued
In response to the "Fagbusters," shall we continue your little parody? I can't afraid of no fags!
To the editor
Your attitude toward alternative lifestyles merely shows insensitivity, ignorance and prejudice — not to be proudly displayed on one's chest.
Perhaps the funds generated from your T-shirt sales should be allotted to GLSOK. They at least deserve the money you're making by exploiting the issue of their student funding by Student Senate.
Heather Bussing
Manhattan sophomore
18
September 28, 1984 Page 4
OPINION
KANSAN
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
DON KNOX
Editor
The University Dayan Kaiser (USPS 605-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods. Second class postage付陆 Lawrence, Kan. 6044 Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $24 if a year in Dingham County and $18 for six months or $35 if a year in Fulton County. MasterSEN MASTER Send address changes to the University Dayan Kaiser, 118 Staffer Flint Hall Lawrence, Kan. 6045
PAUL SEVART VINCE IESS Managing Editor Editorial Editor
DOUG CUNNINGHAM Campus Editor
DAVE WANAMAKER Business Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
General Manager and News Adviser
LYNNE STARK MARY BERNICA Retail Sales National Sales Manager Manager
JILL GOLDBLATT Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Liquor law reform
Kansas has been unfairly maligned by the rest of the nation for many things it cannot change, such as its weather and topography. But the state takes some well-deserved lumps for many of the anachronistic characteristics that persist out of a stubborn resistance to change. None of these characteristics are so blatantly out of step with the 20th century as its liquor laws.
Gov. John Carlin recently announced his intent to push for liquor by the drink in the next legislative session. He says his motives are economic; businesses, tourists and conventions are put off by a state that requires anyone who wants to buy a drink at a bar to have a club membership at that bar.
If the state wants to grow, Carlin said, the state must change its laws. Oklahoma voters have done away with their state's restrictive liquor laws, and Kansas is now one of only three states in the nation without liquor by the drink.
Legislative leaders are quick to point out that liquor by the drink has little chance in the next session, with or without Carlin's support. Carlin says he wants to take the emotion out of the issue, to keep it purely economic, and lobbyists like the Rev. Richard Taylor, head of Kansans for Life at Its Best!, won't let that happen. "This is not a political issue," Taylor says, "this is a human suffering issue."
Kansans are not suffering much to get into bars, however. Liberal laws governing reciprocal agreements between clubs have allowed holders of some club cards almost unlimited access to clubs statewide. Carlin says that passing liquor by the drink would only be acknowledging what already exists. He's right.
...y exists. It's right. The state may always take some criticism for the things it cannot change, but it can no longer afford to be a laughingstock for the things it can.
LETTERS POLICY
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten and 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 homeschool, or family or office of the Kansan. 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.
AMERICAN STEEL
Now that a lot of the foreign competition is being eliminated, it's obvious what we have to do with our profits.
Right.
Executive raises!
Pot Shots
Please — someone introduce me to a nice computer.
free computer
You know, one of the "friendly" ones.
You know, one of the "friendly" ones I’ve had encounters with some in other forms and in the cases that others said were "user-friendly," but with me, they all turned a mean interface.
I'll admit it. I've got a chip on my shoulder when it comes to these massive conglomerations of wires and circuits.
As soft as the ware may be, as soon as my fingers touch a keyboard, the uncaring metal box assails me with bleeps for violating it's sacred syntax.
I know I should learn to value and respect the bits and bytes that are
Jennifer Dine
becoming BASIC to our society, but I intend to avoid any disk that flops for as long as possible.
It is difficult for me to respect any lifeless object that can instil such panic and terror into mature, intellectual beings upon the utterance of three simple words.
My first instinct is to strike back when I read the letters to the editor that I find stuffed in the editorial editor's mailbox or lying on his desk. The next instinct is to find some basis upon which I can attack the credibility and/or intelligence of the letter writer. That usually isn't hard to do. There's always a misspelled word or name, a fact that isn't quite right, some rationalization loophole.
To the hackers who receive so much elation from triumphing over the processes of manufactured minds, I say, more power to you.
There isn't anything wrong with my instincts. Journalists are generally considered human beings by the people who work with them. Our insults us, we react to human beings.
I'll be content watching the computer craze from the outside, letting others tangle with terminals, printers and mainframes, and secretly hoping that I never have to deal with anything more complex than a bank card machine.
But I finally come up against the hard
Michael Robinson
cold fact that someone didn't like what I had to say and wasn't swayed by the way I said it. What really hurts is that the letter intruded into my personal domain, the words that I wrote.
I know that the way I feel when I read a letter about one of my columns is the way some readers feel when their lives, problems or values are spilled across the newspaper pages. I know just how unpleasant that can be. But I also know that that's the only way we've figured out how to do it.
If we remember that, and overcome our instincts, we might even be able to learn something.
Dried up chewing gum, leftover remains of the gooey stuff, stuck to the underside of the desk, is mighty distasteful.
In grade school, the fear of getting caught chewing gum is often what moves a student to stick it underneath the desk when his teacher appears.
Better that than being reprimanded or having to write an essay on 'Why I should'
In high school, discipline for the infraction was more productive.
An hour spent removing wads large and small; fresh and stale; and pink, white and gray from the under side of a roomful of desks, often reformed the gum-chewer.
Margaret Safranek
But unfortunately, such punishment was not meted in sufficient amounts in younger years or the exercise's rehabilitative value is short-lived.
One look under a few desks in a classroom or lecture hall on campus
Yet the issue, while occasionally a sticky one, is not without solution.
If you must chew gum in KU buildings, get some extra mileage out of your newspaper, out of this page.
When you have finished chewing your gum, tear off a corner of the Kansan, wrap your used gum in it and deposit the wad in a trash can.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
'Fagbusters' T-shirts cause campus controversy
To the editor
To the vowel.
The connection of Steve Imber with the threat of the "Faghesters" shirts should serve to repudiate his claim that his anti-GLOSO funding petition was motivated purely by financial considerations.
Futhermore, as has been pointed out by Jeff Miller in the Kansan, (Sept. 25, letter), the petition is clearly discriminatory in that it applies to only one student group. I have been a member of a student athletic club whose members raised over $17,000 in one year. The same year this club received $1,000 from the Student Senate for equipment purchases. According toember's definition, my organization was in no need of these Senate funds and was in fact self-supporting.
support that.
Why then does Mr. Imber's petition affect only one student group? Because the membership of that group is mostly homosexual. The petition is an expression of the ignorance, intolerance and insensitivity of its drafters and signers.
Any student group has a right to access the funds generated by the student activity fee. If a group of heterosexuals was to form in order to
provide support for its members, this group would have equal access to Senate funds. Such a group is not likely to form because the members of the heterosexual community are not subjected to the prejudice and violence that is met by the homosexual community. People who suffer from such abuse are going to organize. There is strength in numbers. There are black student organizations, oh, but it is no longer fashionable nor safe to pick on blacks.
Yes Mr. Imber, it is 1984 now and you may have to work with a black person in class, you may have to look upon a woman as an equal, and you may have to live with Student Senate funding for homosexuals. I wish that I could sympathize with the feelings of paranoia that must torture you.
But, somehow, I feel that it would do you some good to have your little conservative white boy view of the world shattered. Tolerance and justice may be two words that hold little meaning for you, Mr. Imber, but I suggest that you try to discover what they mean.
Where, oh where, are the Cubs?
James E. Mitchell
Coeur d'Elena, Idaho, senior
To the editor
Neurotic, you seize a Kansas from the pile, having missed the late, with its accompanying email data) the previous evening. "What of the Cubbies?" you ask, Alas, the sports editor has destined you to ignorance, citing "lack of space" to explain the
James E. Mitchell
To the editor:
absence of box scores and standings. Diatoxic steadily rising, you dash out and buy a real newspaper, diverse enough to include such bits of trivia.
Robert S. Coleman
De Kale, Ill.
graduate student
Source of shame
To the editor:
I am greatly troubled, though, by the intolerance shown to this group of people by those responsible for designing, printing and distributing the "Fagbusters" T-shirt. My opposition is not based on legal grounds, though much talk has been given to possible legal remedies initiated by the Fagbusters' headquarters, which have copyrighted the logo. As much as I regret their mode of expression, I have to support their right of expression.
Likewise, Student Senate financing of GLSOK, and any precedent that financing might set or support, raises no strong feelings within me.
The purpose of this letter is neither to support nor oppose the existence of GLSOK on the Lawrence campus. I have no strong feelings about the issue.
I do object, though, to the extreme insensitivity and poor taste that the manufacture and sale of the T-shirt represents. In a university where such lofty ideas as respect for the rights of others, tolerance of various cultures, and acceptance of diverse ideas are a source of pride, this incident has been a source of shame.
I take a great deal of pride in the University of Kansas and in the quality of the students that represent it. I sincerely believe that this activity is not representative of the feelings of the majority of KU students. We owe ourselves more respect than that.
John Urkevich Kansas City, Kan., graduate student
A college education should show one her/his own limits and allow one o transcend those limits through an appreciation of other individuals and other cultures. College shows us that people are different: they have different cultural and ethnic backgrounds, they are of different genders, and they have different sexual orientations and preferences.
I was first outraged, then saddened, when I learned of the existence of "Fagbusters" T-shirts on the KU campus. This type of propaganda is, I believe, inappropriate at an institution of higher learning.
Hositiity based upon those differences is defined as bigotry and is justly condemned by educated people.
A right to differ
It doesn't matter whether one approves of homosexuals, women, blacks. Hispanics or Jews. Eventually one must recognize one's own limitations and recognize the rights of others to differ.
Jill Robbins Hollywood, Fla. graduate student
To the editor:
My suggestion
To the editor:
The current debate over student Senate financing of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas is seriously misdirected. Despite their protests to the contrary, the organizers of the petition to end GLSOK
Student government, like any government, should concern itself only with those tasks the performance of which is vital to the common interest I object to Senate funding of GLSOK not because of the different moral standards of its members, but because the funding of a counseling service for homosexuals has nothing to do with the responsibilities of government. Though a Republican, I would equally object to Senate funding of College Young Republicans, or any other group with a private outlook and no connection with the vital common interest.
funding are obviously concerned (and I believe rightly so) with the moral implications of such funding. But it is hardly necessary to debate morality in order to fault the logic of funding USS Osaka, a whole question an aura of respectibility that it does not deserve.
It is a shame that our blowblow student senators feel they must parody the ubiquitous federal government in their fiscal obsessions. Restraint is the better part of wisdom.
Tim Williams
My suggestion: determine what percentage of Student Senate funding supports activities which are absolutely vital to the common welfare, then eliminate everything else the Senate does and reduce the Student Activity Fee by an equal percentage. Given the Student Senate's vanguardous self-image, I certainly don't expect this idea to get very far.
Teaching Assistant
Department of French & Italian
To the editor:
A right to choose
So Thom Davidson is looking to avoid the referendum on GLSOK funding by biasing the judgment on a valid petition. This is based on Steve Imber's alleged personal opinions and affiliation with a T-shirt drive.
Is Davidson also judging the intent of the other 2,500 people who signed this petition? This is clearly an oppressive move by the people of Kentucky to restore the right of KU students to choose in this matter.
Let's face it, they were looking for an excuse to take away our freedom of choice and they found one. What would they have done if Imbar had taken them with the T-shirts, peek in his bedroom window or bag his telephone?
Tom Crisp Dayton, Ohio. graduate student
Parody continued
To the editor:
to the editor!
In response to the "Fagbusters," shall we continue your little parody?
I am not afraid of no fags!
Your attitude toward alternative lifestyles merely shows insensitivity, ignorance and prejudice — not that you should be proudly displayed on one's chest.
Perhaps the funds generated from your T shirt sales should be allotted to GLSOK. They at least deserve the money you're making by exploiting the issue of their student funding by Student Senate.
Heather Bussing Manhattan sophomore
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200
me
Tb
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or
8
University Daily Kansan, September 28, 1984
Page 5
Figures continued from p. 1
attend the University of Kansas," he said.
"Our responsibility now is to deal effectively with the issue of attrition. We lose far too much."
Last year, enrollment at the Lawrence
campus fell by 149 students and the full-time
students enrolled were 70.
Enrollment figures have not been calculated for five of the six Board of Regents schools and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina. Pittsburgh State University was the Regents school other than KU that had 20th day enrollment figures prepared yesterday.
Pittsburgh State's enrollment this fall declined by 344 students, to 4.927 students, said Lee Christensen, registrar at Pittsburg College and full-time equivalent figure fell by 203, to 4.777
TOM RAWSON, DIRECTOR of planning and budget for the Regents, said combined enrollment figures for the summer and fall 1964 semesters and the spring 1965 semester would determine University financing for fiscal year 1987.
"If KU would have had a decrease in enrollment this year, then it would have had time to determine what resources needed to be reduced," said Rawson. "It would be lead time for planning."
Rawson said a "corridor concept" developed by the Legislature allowed the state schools a margin of gain or loss in enrollment without affecting their budgets.
The University is now in fiscal year 1985.
Some dews have cast preliminary glances at the enrollment figures.
The School of Business reported 926 students, a jump of 119 students from 807 students last fall.
JOHN TOLLEFSON, dean of the School of Business, said he was not surprised by the increase. Past changes in admissions requirements to enter the school have caused enrollment to drop, he said, but students have adjusted to the new requirements.
School of Engineering enrollment declined by 104 students, from 1,931 students to 1,827 students.
William Smith, acting dean of the School of Engineering, said the decrease was part of a cyclical pattern that repeated every 10 years.
Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, said the school's enrollment had dropped from 1,013 students to 815 students because students were not considered education majors until they were juniors.
"It's a phenomenon of transition," he said.
SCHOOLS WITH INCREASING enrollments include: Applied English Center, up one student to 127 students; the School of Architecture and Urban Design, up by five students to 648 students; the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, up by 429 students to 11,483 students; the School of Fine Arts, up by 17 students to 1,016 students; and the Graduate School, up by 15 students to 5,046 students.
Other schools with increasing enrollments are: the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications, up by 16 students to 633 students; the School of Pharmacy, up by 17 students to 225 students; the School of Social Welfare, up by 88 students to 638 students; and the School of Allied Health, up by 35 students to 207 students.
Gromyko continued from p. 1
silently through Gromyko's 75 minute speech, said later he was "disappointed" with what he said were the Soviet foreign minister's "distortions."
U. S. OFFICIALS SAID there was no reconsideration being given to the scheduled encounter.
In his speech, Gromyko made two specific proposals for resolutions to be enacted by the General Assembly — one reserving outer space exclusivity or "access" to the Earth and the Wake terrorism.
As examples of such terrorism, Gromyko
cited the U.S. invasion of "tiny Grenada which dared to assert its sovereignty," and Nicaragua, whose people "are heroically resisting in the face of an undeclared war organized by Washington."
THE SOVIETS. IN a statement issued in New York, said that Mondale had advocated "a turn for the better" in relations between the two nuclear giants.
image continued from p. 1
Mondale told reporters that he only briefly discussed arms control issues, but Gromkyo "spoke mostly about arms control."
"tunning for president's kind of funny in the sense that you're always with crowds and you're always alone at the same time," he said. "I mean, you don't have time for friends, you don't have time to relax, you don't have time to think when you need to, you're always in some hotel room or some crowd, you never get into conversations with people."
"And then you read about yourself. Every morning I almost hate to pick the paper up — what's this bun done today?"
Mondale said he gets a good response from live audiences but, "It's how that looks on the evening news that's my problem . . . I think I get along pretty well with the audience and less with the TV."
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Petition urges re-election bid
Page 6
Vogel vows not to run again
By DENEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
Running for re-election would be contradictory to the philosophy that anyone can be a president, Carla Bidens body president, said yesterday.
But that hasn't stopped a former student, Greg Walstrom, from circulating a petition to convince Vogel run for re-election. Walstrom announced his petition drive at Wednesday's Student Senate meeting.
University Daily Kansan, September 28, 1984
Vogel, whose term ends Oct. 15,
said that the petition was a way of
showing support for change and an
incentive to keep change moving.
ALTHOUGH SHE PROBABLY would not consider running for
re-election, she said, she would continue to work with the Senate because many changes still needed to be made.
"I feel I couldn't just walk out in November and say its over," she said, "but I feel I can do a lot without being president."
Vogel, who took office in March after the regular November election was invalidated by the University Judicial Board, said that although her term was short, she would have to think very hard about running again.
Caryl Smith, dean of student life, said no rules prevented a student body president from running for the position and no other president had attempted.
Vogel said Walstrom, who could not be reached for comment, started
the petition because he approved of what she was doing in office.
DENNIS "BOOG" HIGHBERGER, student body vice president, said he did not think he and Vogel would run again because they wanted to project to students that everybody could get involved.
"If we ran for re-election, we would be saying that nobody else can do this and that would be contradictory." he said.
Both Vogel and Highberger said they would campaign for senate seats in November.
Vogel, who graduated in December but remains a non-degree seeking student, said, "We don't need to be in a high power role to make changes. Wherever we are on the ladder, we can make changes."
By United Press International
KG&E faces fine for firing worker
WICHITA — Kansas Gas & Electric Co. of Wichita will be fined $64,000 by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for allegedly tiring an employee who abused employees at the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, an NRC spokesman said yesterday.
Wells said he was disciplined, fired and refused re-employment because he told KG&E's quality
John Collins, NRC regional administrator in Arlington, Texas, said the citation was issued after an investigation and hearing conducted by the U.S. Department of Labor into a discrimination case in August 1963 by James Wells Jr., a former plant employee.
assurance manager about safety problems with electric hardware and electrical installation at the facility, Collins said.
KG&E owns 47 percent of the plant, being built near Burlington, and is responsible for its construction. Kansas City Power and Light Co. of Kansas City, Mo., also owns 47 percent of the plant, and Kansas Electric Power Cooperative owns 6 percent.
The plant, scheduled to begin producing electricity from nuclear energy next spring, has a combination cost estimate of $2.9 billion.
In June, Secretary of Labor Raymond Donovan upheld an earlier decision by a department administrative law judge that a violation of the employee protection provision of the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974 had
occurred.
Collins said that after the NRC reviewed the labor department's decision, the commission found KGAE had violated the commission's regulation, and still was conducting its own investigation into Wells' allegations.
In a letter received by K&E yesterday, Collins said, "Discrimination by a commission licensee against an employee for engaging in certain protected activities is prohibited. The activities protected include reporting of quality discrepancies and safety problems by an employee to his employer."
KG&E must respond in writing to the complaint within 30 davs.
Lyle Koerper, KG&E spokesman, said yesterday that the company disagreed with the NRC decision.
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University Daily Kansan, September 28, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
TODD
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Mike Glover, Democritec candidate for Douglas County district attorney, right, speaks to law students in Green Hall as Jim Flory, the Republican candidate, looks on. Flory and Glover discussed their qualifications for the office at yesterday's forum, sponsored by the School of Law.
By LAURETTA SCHULTZ Staff Reporter
Candidates stress experience
The two candidates for Douglas County district attorney, one of the hottest local contests on the November ballot, agree on at least one thing: experience is the key issue in their race.
But the harmony is short-lived. Democrat Mike Glover and Republican Jim Flory do not agree on what would be best for a district attorney.
"Experience is the key issue, but it's the type of experience that is most important," Glover said yesterday before he and Flory appeared at an afternoon candidates' forum at Green Hall. The forum was sponsored by the School of Law.
FLORY, KANSAS DEPUTY attorney general, has said throughout the campaign that he was more experienced than Glover, Lawrence city prosecutor. Yesterday, Flory again stressed that he had an experience edge.
"It's important for the county D.A. to have experience in prosecuting felony crimes." Flory said. "I have done that. I've prosecured everything from fraud to bank robbery. My opponent has no felony prosecution experience at all."
Glover said it made no difference that he had not prosecuted felony crimes.
"There is no difference between prosecuting misdemeans and felonies," he said. "The rules of procedure, the burden of proof, the rules of evidence and the court rules are all the same."
the same.
GLOVER RETURNED FLORY'S attack, saying Flory had no experience prosecuting locally.
"Jim has never appeared as an attorney or prosecutor here in Douglas County," he said. "He has beenORKed with security enforcement officials in Douglas County."
The district attorney should know how judges think and he should understand the motives of local defense attorneys, Glover said.
"He has never appeared before the local judges," Glover said of Flory. "I have argued before the municipal judge and all four district judges.
"I also know the local defense attorneys. I know how they operate."
attorneys. I know how they operate.
Glover also said his experience dealing with local police made him the better candidate.
"I KNOW THE LOCAL police, both the University police and the Lawrence police," he said. "This is important in knowing what kind of witness a prosecuting officer will make.
"Some officers tend to overreact at times. I would know how they perform on the stand."
Glover defeated incumbent Jerry Harper in the Aug. 7 primary by winning all of the county's 46
districts. Harper was appointed to the position in July 1982 to replace Mike Malone, who became an associate district judge. Flory was unopposed in the primary.
the candidates also disagreed about whether Lawrence was a unique community with crimes of a different nature than most towns.
GLOVER SAID, "LAWRENCE,
because it is a university community,
is the most unique community in
Kansas. We have more petty larcenies,
rapes, sexual assaults and drunken driving charges.
"Juries here are more intelligent, sensitive and in tune to individual's rights."
Flory said, "I don't think lawrence is that different from any other town. The types of crimes are not unique; maybe more frequent, but
Flory, who graduated from the KU School of Law in 1978, is chief of the attorney general's criminal division. At 17, he began working in the Douglas County Sheriff's Department.
Glover, who graduated from the University of Kansas in 1970 and from Washburn University's School of Law in 1979, was the 44th Dist. state representative from 1973 to 1979. He left the Kansas Legislature in 1800 to join a law firm in Fredonia. Glover returned to Lawrence and was appointed city prosecutor in October 1980.
Gay group angry after car tampering
ny JOHN HANNA Staff Reporter
At first, Howard Rogers blamed himself when the left rear tire fell off his 1971 Datsun as he was driving along Jayhawk Boulevard about 7 p.m. Wednesday.
But, he said yesterday, he was concerned and angry, when he found out minutes later that someone else had met him with two other wheels on the car.
Rogers, Lawrence senior and member of Gav and Lesbian Services
of Kansas, was on his way to a Student Senate meeting in the Kansas Union. Ruth Lichtwardt, GLSOK president, also was in the car. Neither was hurt in the incident.
CAMPUS POLICE are continuing to investigate the matter, LT. Jeanne Longaker said yesterday. Preliminary police reports also indicate bosseened the car's lug nuts, which hold the wheel to the car's axle.
Police have no suspects.
Pence have no suspects.
The incident occurred one day before the Senate Elections Committee was to decide the fate of a
petition drive that called for a campus on vote for Senate financing of GLSOK, a support group for homosexuals. Rogers opposed the petition.
The Student Senate Elections Committee last night recommended that the Senate invalidate the petition.
Earlier this week, Lichtward denounced the manufacture and sale of anti-homosexual T-shirts by a student leading the petition drive.
BOTH THOUGHT THE incident, which Rogers said caused about $200 damage to the car, was related to the
GLSOK vote. But they said they hoped it would not mark the beginning of a wave of harassment of GLSOK members.
The car was in front of Lippincott Hall and moving at about 20 mph when the wheel came off. Rogers said. The car then skidded to a stop at 14th Street and Jayhawk Boulevard.
The lug nuts had been loosened on the left and right front wheels, as well as on the left rear wheel. Rogers said.
"Initially, I thought it had been poor maintenance," he said.
WSU defends plans for naming stadium
By United Press International
WICHTA — A major contributor to Wichita State University's planned baseball stadium spent four months in jail, but the stadium should still be named after the man because he has paid his debt to society, a Wichita State spokesman said yesterday.
Plans to name the proposed stadium after Rusty Eck, a Wichita automobile dealer, sparked recent protests from former employees. The lawsuit was sentenced to jail for filing a false income tax return.
However, Rob Matwick,
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athletic department, said the
stadium was still expected to be
named the Rusty Eck Stadium.
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ATTENTION SENIORS H.O.P.E Award Nominations
Nomination forms are available to all Seniors in any dean's office or in the BOCO office (110B Union)
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Applications are available in any dean's office or in the BOCO office (110B Union). These are due on Oct. 5 by 4:30. Our first meeting will be Oct. 10 at 6:30 in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Haskell to mark 100th year
Page 8
By SARAH ROSSI Staff Reporter
Students will cast off their jeans and T-shirts in exchange for feathery headaddresses and traditional tribal garb for today's processional at Haskell Indian Junior College.
At 7 p.m. in the Curtis Dining Hall, a banquet co-sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and Haskell will feature ABC sports commentator Chris Schenkel as master of ceremonies.
The processional is part of the convocation ceremonies celebrating the college's 100 years of educating American Indians. The ceremony, which starts at 10 a.m. today in the Coiffin Sports Center, culminates in the making of Haskell's Centennial Year, which continues through May 31.
MEMBERS OF THE HASKELL
Centennial Committee are anticipating an impressive turnout of tribal representatives and state and local officials for the convocation.
According to Rob Daugherty, committee chairman, more than 15 trishal representatives from 10 states, representatives from the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington, members of the Haskell Board of Regents and other Haskell alumni will attend the conference.
State Sen. Wint Wint Jr., JR-
Lawrence, State Rep. Jessie
Branson, DLawrence, and Don
Cooper, DLawrence. DKana will also attend.
President Gerald E. Gipp will open the convocation by highlighting the history of Haskell and this year's events. He will be followed by the presentation of the Lord's prayer in sign language by Robert Goombi, assistant dean to
the dean of instruction, and Katherine Goombi, instructor of business.
University Daily Kansan, September 28, 1984
Haskell started in 1884 as a specialized vocational school and received Kansas State junior college accreditation in 1970.
THE ENTIRE HASKELL facula, dressed in traditional tribal robes, will participate in the convocation, and students carrying flags of the 50 states will march in, accompanied by the Haskell band.
The banquet will feature Wojapi — an authentic Sioux tribal dish and fry bread. The evening's events will include a tribal roll call, entertainment by the Thunderbirds — Haskell's theatre troupe — and a slide show from Watkins Community Museum emphasizing the 100-year partnership of Lawrence and Haskell.
ON CAMPUS
THE KU BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
TODAY
TOMORROW
THE GERMAN CLUB will sponsor a "Wanderung am Kaw", a hike, beginning at 10:30 a.m. on the west side of Berlin. Participants should bring a lunch伞
SUNDAY
A CHINESE MOVIE," Around Mount Tainshan", will be shown at 1:30 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium of the Union.
AN INFORMATIONAL TEA for women interested in entering the 1986 Miss Lawrence Scholarship Pageant will begin at 3 p.m. in the Crystal Room of the Eldridge House Hotel, 7th and Massachusetts streets.
THE KU HONOR STUDENTS will sponsor a panel discussion on the role of the honors program at 5 p.m. in room 305 of the Frank R. Burge Union
ROGER WARD, assistant curator of European painting and sculpture
at the Nelson Gallery of Art and Atkins Museum, will speak at 8 p.m. in room 305 of the Burge Union. He will talk about "To Create a Context, for Living." A reception for Ward will follow at Nunemaker Center.
MONDAY
THE SUA STRATO-MATIC BASEBALL CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union.
THE STUDENT CREATIVE ANACRONISTS will-meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
ON THE RECORD
POLICE ARE LOOKING for a man driving a small light green car after an 11-year-old Lawrence girl reported that the man exposed himself to her at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in the 300 block of Wagon Wheel Road, police said. In a similar incident in the same area, a man driving a light green hatchback exposed himself to an 11-year-old girl at 4 p.m. Monday near the intersection of Millstone
Drive and Trail Road. Police are investigating.
A 60-YEAR-OLD LAWRENCE man reported that a riding lawn-mower valued at $803 was stolen at 6:30 a.m. Tuesday from his front yard in the 1900 block of Kasold Drive, police said.
stole $366.86 in cash between 7:45 p.m. Tuesday and 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, police said.
A THIEF OR THIEVES broke in through a glass door at Community Mercantile Coop. 700 Maine St., and
FOUR LICENSE TAGS have been stolen from cars parked in the 1300 block of Louisiana Street since Sept. 21, police reports said. A tag was also stolen from a car parked in the 1400 Ohio Street during the same period.
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University Daily Kansan, September 28, 1984
CAMPUS AND AREA
Private businesses may get phone service rights
By CHRIS BARBER Staff Reporter
Local private businesses soon may be able to sell telephone service to customers and operate their own pay phones at a profit, depending on the results of a Kansas Corporation Commission study.
The KCC is making a general investigation into the resale of local telephone service and the operation of pay phones by parties other than local telephone companies, such as Southwestern Bell.
The KCC will decide on the legality of service resale and private pay phones within the next two to four weeks. A public information director for KCC
MINNESOTA RECENTLY became the first state to allow private pay phones. Haden said. Northwestern Bell, which serves Minnesota, receives 10 cents for each 25-cent call placed from a Minnesota office. The callunder goes to the owner of the phone.
Resale of phone service means that 'a local business offers phone services such as switchboards and intercoms to its customers, Haden said.
Resale of phone service is legal in some states, Haden said, and some companies would like to see it legalized in Kansas.
The private companies support reselling telephone service because it would allow them to sell service to customers at a lower local phone company, Haden said.
"The opinion of supporters of resale is that a small, local business can better serve a particular area than a large company like Southwestern Bell," Haden said.
BUT A SOUTHWESTERN BELL representative said yesterday that the company feared small businesses would not be able to offer adequate service to customers.
"We believe there would be public disadvantages," said Donna Johnson, district manager of public information for Soutwestern Bell. "There would be customer confusion, an overall threat to quality and reliable service and possibly higher local rates."
Allowing resides of service would be the beginning of the end of what Bell likes to call "universal service." Johnson said. This term refers to Bell's ability to offer consistent, low-cost service to all customers.
"Resaleers are not interested in the everyday consumer." Johnson said. "We believe that with the privilege to serve, there is an obligation. You
can't hand-pick your customers."
THE ISSUE HAS COME into focus recently because of a case involving the Wichita Airport Authority and Southwestern Bell.
The airport authority devised a telephone system that provided the latest technological advancements to Wichita's Mid-Continent Airport, said John Dekker, Wichita city attorney representing the airport authority.
"We're providing the best service for everyone at the airport." Dekker to
The system provides weather reports, Federal Aviation Association information and control-tower signals, he said.
Dekker called the airport's system "shared usage," which, through the combined efforts of the group, provided individuals with better
technology at rates they could afford. But he said Bell considered any shared usage to be a resale of telephone service, thereby requiring licensing and approval by the KCC.
"WE HAVE A CERTIFICATE from the KCC to provide local telephone exchanges," Johnson said. "Anyone who sells local service violates our franchise."
But Dekker said the Bell system did not have the advantages of the airport's new system.
"Bell says they can provide the same service, but they can't," he said. "They're so behind in technology it's not even funny."
Dekker said Bell's claims that locally operated phone systems would cause confusion and higher rates were not true.
"Those are scare tactics, and that's a crock," he said. "Bell is just
Haden said that although local companies might provide better service, resale of telephone service was technically illegal now. He said that this summer the KC gave Bell the opportunity to suspend service to anyone found reselling telephone service.
saying that if you don't use their equipment, you'll have to pay more."
THE KCC HAS OPPOSED resale, Haden said, because any loss of revenue to Bell would probably be accounted for with higher rates.
The KCC conducted a study session July 18 to give all concerned parties an opportunity to present their views on the matter.
OCTOGINTA`84
About 12 parties have since prepared legal briefs on the two questions, Haden said.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Benefits are key for Classified Senate
By MARY CARTER Staff Reporter
Page 10
Improving retirement benefits for classified employees is a priority this year for the Classified Senate, the senate president said this week.
"We are looking at any way to enhance it," said Joe Collins, the president. "Last year was the first year that anything was done. There are other ways of improving the retirement program, which we definitely need to do."
Classified personnel are state civil service employees. The 30 classified senators, elected by their co-workers, represent the interests of admitted employees to the University administration in Kansas Legislature and the governor
DAVID LEWIN, DIRECTOR of personnel services, said that a study of state employee benefits compiled late last year by the Assembly of Governmental Employees showed Kansas as being "notably uncompetitive" in retirement benefits.
In a Sept. 10 memo to Richard Mann, director of information systems and personnel services, Lewin pointed out several aspects of the program that could be improved, including the amount the state received each employee and the formula used to calculate retirement benefits.
Classified employees participate in the Kansas Public Employee Retirement System, a defined benefit retirement system. In a defined benefit system, a specific percentage of an employee's salary is guaranteed the employee during retirement.
THE STATE CONTRIBUTES an amount equal to 4.5 percent of an employee's salary to the employee's retirement fund. That money, combined with the employee's contribution of 4 percent of wages, is reinvested from the investment is added to the employee's retirement fund.
Kansas had the lowest contribution rate in the study. Lewin said. Contribution rates for all other states
are between 4.94 and 23.47 percent.
But Marshall Crowther, executive director of KPERS, said comparing contribution rates was not a good way to compare retirement systems.
Some states have not invested retirement contributions soundly and must contribute more money to provide the benefits guaranteed by their programs, Crowther said.
"THE STATES THAT have been reckless in what they have done are needing almost everything they take in to pay for current benefits," he said. "Kansas has a pretty fully funded system, so that when people retire, the money they have put in will be there for them."
Lewin said that the state contribution rate was only one area of concern for classified employees.
"The real test is what type of income retired employees are re-entitled to."
In the memo, Lewin recommended modifying the formula for calculating retirement benefits.
The amount of benefit is determined by multiplying a specific
percent — called the multiplier — by the number of years an employee has worked and the employee's average salary. In the last five years before retirement
Lewin said his recommendations were not an attempt to criticize the state.
IN 1882, THE Legislature raised the KPERS multiplier from 1.25 to 1.4 percent. Lewin said the multiplier should be increased to about 1.7 for Kansas to compare favorably with other states.
"We're not blaming anybody," he said. "We're just saying 'Hey folks, we need to attend to this and to work together on it.'"
Collins said Classified Senate committees were working on position papers, which they would present to the Legislature. He said the papers would suggest increases in the multiplier and the contribution rate.
"We're not asking for a giant, humongous increase." he said. "We're not asking for the best. We just want to stay up with the average."
Woman's death shows transplant difficulties
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY — The problems encountered by Clara Sallaz, the heart transplant patient who died yesterday at the University of Kansas Medical Center, represent the magnitude of the transplant endeavor, doctors said.
"The KU Medical Center offered MRS Sallaz the most comprehensive and advanced services available." said Thomas J. Bixler, head of the heart transplant team "Mrs. Sallaz succumbed to the overwhelming
complications she experienced. These complications can potentially exist in any transplant patient. They fully expected and anticipated.
THE 46-YEAR-OLD Turner woman on Aug. 10 became the second person to receive a new heart at the medical center. She had suffered cardiomyopathy, a disease of the heart muscle. Without the operation, she had a life expectancy of only a few months. Bixler said.
Doctors said family members were with Sallaz when she died shortly after midnight yesterday.
Bixler said Sallaz experienced three serious episodes of rejection of her new heart. Immediately after the operation, she began receiving medications that suppress the body's immune system, which is responsible for rejection and for fighting infection, he said.
Physicians administered higher doses of these same medications to treat the serious rejections, Bixler said. During these episodes, Sallaz was monitored in the intensive care unit.
"THE INCREASED DOSAGE of immuno-suppressant drugs made
her body more susceptible to in fection," Bixler said.
He said that during the past weekend, Sallaz developed pneumonia with aspergillus, a rare fungal infection. The infection was treated with other medications.
Bixier said the aspergillus fungus was common in the environment but did not usually cause infection in healthy people. This infection usually occurs only in immuno-suppressed patients and is usually fatal in such a setting, he said.
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University Daily Kansan, September 28, 1984
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Milroy didn't think there is a substantial savings on any of McColum's or Stouffer's utility bills.
"We ran a water line from the panels' storage tank and from McColmll. "Milroy said. "Now it preheats all the cold water before we turn on the pipe and McColmll residents get hot water than normal."
The solar panels were originally
"NASA did a report five years after they installed the panels." Milroy said. "The panels could heat hot water when the sun was out on the panels just didn't produce what NASA thought they would."
NASA monitored the project, recording information every five minutes, but a later study showed that they were not contributing to substantial amount of difference.
Hall has hotter water when the sun shines
Bill Dollars, chief engineer for Lennox Industries, Dallas, predicted in September 1978 that the solar panels would provide 65 percent of the energy needed for heat in the winter and 55 percent of the cooling in the summer.
Six solar panels, which have been serving building one of Stouffer Place since 1978, were connected this summer to heat at McColum, said Dean Milroy, assistant director of housing.
McColum Hall residents get hotter water than they normally would, but only when the sun is shining.
Although the project was scrapped, the panels continue to heat water in building number one Kutter Place and McColum Hall.
By CHRISSY CLEARY Staff Reporter
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University Daily Kansan, September 28, 1984 Page 11
NATION AND WORLD
Dutch police end raid on Iran's embassy
Bj United Press International
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Twenty invaders believed to be Kurdish separatists burst into the Iranian Embassy yesterday, fought a pitched battle with staff members, beat the ambassador and seized the building until police broke in and arrested them.
It was the second time in five months that the mission was invaded
and Ambassador Hosseyn Tajgard-
doon injured.
Tajigardoon, treated at a hospital for a head wound and released, warned that relations between Tehran and The Hague could be affected unless the Dutch government provided better protection for the embassy.
"IT IS THE SECOND time since April that terrorists and theives have broken in here." Tajgardoon, surveying a torn post of Ayatollah
embassy." "They broke in here, abusing the government of Iran and said our embassy was a terrorist niche."
Ruballah Khomeini in the ransacked embassy.
embassy was. Police said the 19 men and one woman broke into the embassy about 10:20 a.m. and attacked the staff, beating up Tajgardoon and injuring two other people slightly.
two other people. An embassy worker called authorities for help, a police spokesman said.
"When our men arrived, they found there was fighting going on inside the building and immediately surrounded it," the spokesman said.
HE SAID THE FRONT door was locked "but we managed to find a fire escape near the back. Some officers entered that way, and others entered through the window. The fighting was pretty rough (but) we managed to break it up."
It took police seven minutes to subdue the intruders and end the
occupation, which lasted about 20 minutes, the spokesman said.
Police said the intruders were believed to be tranian Kurds, members of an ethnic minority living in a swath of land that stretches from eastern Turkey, through northern Syria, Iraq, Iran and into the Soviet Union.
The Kurds, who make up 5 percent of the Iranian population, have been fighting for generations for a separate homeland.
Arab states pressure Jordan
By United Press International
AMMAN, Jordan — Jordan yesterday defended its decision to restore diplomatic relations with Egypt and countered sharp criticism from Saudi Arabia and Syria by declaring it was still opposed to the 1979 peace treaty between Egypt and Israel.
The Jordanian statement conceived with the arrival in Amman of Egyptian presidential envoy Osama el Baz for meetings with King Hussein and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat on a new Middle East peace initiative.
Information Minister Leila Shafar said Jordan hoped to convene a Middle East peace conference with the participation of all concerned parties, including the Palestine Liberation Organization, the United States and the Soviet Union.
"The resumption of Jordanian-Egyptian relations will strengthen efforts to convene such a conference, and we will therefore have taken a step forward in that direction," she said.
Syria yesterday angrily denounced the Jordanian move, charging it was a conspiracy to enter into a "new Camp David"
accord with Israel and the United States and warning it had the means to punish any state that violated Arab summit resolutions.
Saudi Arabia also joined Syria in denouncing Jordan's decision to break ranks with the heirs of nations that supported relations with Israel in 1979 following an Arab summit that condemned it for making peace with Israel.
r president Reagan congratulated Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in a telegram calling the resumption of relations a "historic step" that he hoped would "lead to a new stage of joint efforts" aimed at achieving peace in the region.
Nicaraguan leader refuses request to delay elections
By United Press International
Nicaraguan junta leader Daniel Ortega yesterday refused an opposition request to postpone the Nov. 4 elections until 1985, saying a delay would allow a re-elected President Reagan to continue his "destructive policies."
"We have decided very categorically that the date is unchangeable." Ortega said at a breakfast for the press.
In Manzanillo, Mexico, the United States and Nicaragua, in their sixth set of discussions aimed at easing
tensions, concluded two days of talks Wednesday, the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City said. Neither side issued any public statement on the talks.
Ortega's blunt statement ended speculation that the government might accept the opposition demand to postpone the elections. Ortega is also a presidential candidate for the ruling Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN).
Hours earlier, the official government news agency, Nueva Nicaragua, said that it was possible that the date for the elections might be postponed.
Police scour west Beirut for car bomb
By United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Druse Muslim militiamen and paramilitary police searched west Beirut for an explosives-packed car yesterday amid fears of new terrorist attacks against western embassies in Beirut.
An edgy Lebanese guard at the U.S. Embassy in west Beirut fired a shot over the heads of an NBC television crew, narrowly missing the network's chief Beirut correspondent, a network spokeswoman孟
"They certainly knew we were a film crew. We were at the top of the hill doing a stand-up and they just took a pot shot at us," said NBC producer Heather Allen.
said NBC producer Heather Fuchs. "The bullet passed 50 feet over chief correspondent Bonnie Anderson's head," she said.
The embassy declined to comment on the shooting.
in a separate development, the National Resistance Front guerrilla group operating in southern Lebanon called for the unconditional withdrawal of Israeli troops from that area.
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University Daily Kansan, September 28, 1984
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
Teens say group sex was part of religion
By United Press International
SANTA MARIA, Calif. — Satan worship was used as an excuse by about 15 teen-agers to engage in group sex involving homosexual coupling, bondage and orgies, police said yesterday.
"The extent of their ritual was having sex," said police Capt. Mike Farrell "They told us, 'Yeah, we're worshiping Satan. 'But that appeared to be a rationale for group sex."
Farrell said the sex acts among the youths, ranging in age from 14 to 17, involved "mild bondage." and were "boy-girl, boy-boy and girl-girl."
Investigators referred the teenagers and their parents to counseling services, said Farrell. No charges have been filed in the case.
"The activity went past skinny dipping," the officer said, adding some teen-agers also scratched satanic symbols on their arms, he
The youths were all junior high and
high school students in the rural community of 47,000, located about 150 miles northwest of Los Angeles
The Satan sex fetish frenzy was sparked in spring, waned in summer and appeared to pick up again with the start of school in fall. Farrell
One adult, loosely linked with the teen-agers, was arrested. James Gamble, 59, was booked for suspicion of furnishing marijuana and alcohol to the teen-agers.
"We started getting rumors of mild sado-masochistic activity in the spring," he said. "That was really their word for it, not ours. It appears to have involved mild bondage. It was a little kinky."
Police found no evidence that the young people used satanic paraphernalia such as capes, masks, horns or altars, Farrell said. He said the group did not function as a religious cult.
Investigators obtained information about the group from youths who had peripheral involvement or had just heard about the group. Farrell said.
By United Press International
19th century poet's writings found
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — A newly discovered trove of writings by John Greenleaf Whitter will provide a first look at the human side of the 19th century poet's personality, scholars say.
Ben Pickard. Whittier's great great nephew, stumbled across two boxes full of the poet's jumbed letters, photographs and family papers while poking around
in the cellar of the family summer home in New Hampshire.
"My father put them in the cellar behind his homemade prohibition wine and, after he died in the 1950s, nobody knew where they were." said Pickard, a professor of American literature at the university of Florida. They really hidden in some old molly boxes and would have undoubtedly been tossed out if I hadn't been there."
Up to the present, Whittier has
been regarded largely as a stereotypical abolitionist, patriarchal man of letters and hymn writer, Pickard said.
"They almost made him an American saint," he said. "These letters show the human, emotional and even humorous side of Whitney."
Besides letters and photographs, the 400 or so items include editions of Whittier's poems with his annotations in the margins, family ledgers and nine
Anti-nuclear talk at school angers parents
By United Press International
YARMOUTH, Maine — An anti-nuclear weapons crusader created fallout of her own by telling students that "you aren't going to grow up" unless the weapons are eliminated
Dr. Helen Caldicott gave that message to an assembly of students at the Yarmouth High School this week and school administrators have
since had to pacify scared students and outraged parents.
"Knowing what I know now, I probably wouldn't do something like this again." Principal Kenneth Nye said Wednesday. "She very definitely scared them and now it's up to us as a staff to deal with that."
The Australian-born pediatrician and critic of the nuclear arms buildup presented a graphic description of the holocaust that would result
in a nuclear exchange.
"If you want to live, you've got to learn this stuff. We've got to get rid of these nuclear weapons or you aren't going to grow up," she told the students.
Nye said Calbott was invited to speak as part of a social studies program.
cans from disgruntled parents were directed at administrators and school board members.
Funeral ruse used by man to escape jail
By United Press International
SOUTH PARIS, Maine — Authorities hunted yesterday for a "con artist" inmate who received daily updates on his dying sister and then tearfully accepted a leave to attend her funeral, all part of an elaborate escape hoax.
"He conned the whole lot of us," said Oxford County Sheriff Alton Howe. "It's embarrassing, but not as embarrassing as having them jump the fence."
Authorities said Barry Thomas, 24,
of Farmington, serving a sentence
for theft and forgery, was given a
two-day furghough to attend the
alleged funeral, which he said was in
Connecticut on Sept. 16.
"It was a well-executed con job," said corrections officer Ed Quinn. "This guy is a con artist, the best I ever seen. He was very convincing."
He has not been heard from since.
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MEET AT 10:00 A.M. ON THE WEST SIDE OF MURPHY
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funded by Student Senate
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NATION AND WORLD
Board of Trade hears farmers' complaints
By United Press International
University Daily Kansan, September 28, 1984 Page 13
CHICAGO - More than 200 angry farmers converged on the Chicago Board of Trade yesterday to protest low prices they say are driving them out of business.
Although most were members of the American Agriculture Movement, which sanctioned the protest, the delegation represented various farm organizations.
Corky Jones of Brownville, Neb., a vice president of the AAM and one of a select few who met with Mr. Obama, felt the meeting was a success.
The group left for home at about noon.
"They gave us a cordial reception, listened to our grievances and invited us back Oct. 30 to meet with the New York Advisory Board," Jones said.
AMONG THE PROTESTERS was Wayne Cryts, the Puxico, Mo., farmer who gained folk hero status when he led hundreds of farmers in a raid on a bankrupt grain elevator more than three years ago to protest bankruptcy laws
that tied up their grain during litigation.
Cryts charged that the people who set the prices have no regard for the farmer's cost of production or the need for a return.
CBOT Chairman Thomas P. Cunningham said he believed the group was misinformed about the function of the CBOT.
"We will ask for a halt to speculative short-selling so farmers have a fair market or to establish a floor under prices at a level where farmers have an incentive to make a profit." Crys said.
"THE SIMPLE ECONOMIC rules of supply and demand dictate what the commodity prices will be." Cunningham said. "The prices discovered at the Chicago Board of Trade are a result of both domestic and international demand for grain products."
made for grain products. The futures market holds no charm for farmers, Cryts said.
"Statistics show that 85 percent of the people that play that market lose, and when you look at the statistics there is no way that they make that market, and profit by it over a long period of time," he said.
QUANTRILL'S MARKET
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Miss Lawrence Scholarship Pageant
The
Sat.-Sun. 10-5 p.m.
THE WATERLOO MUSEUM
ANNOUNCES AN INFORMATIONAL TEA
When: Sunday, Sept. 30, 1984 3 to 5 p.m.
Where: The Eldridge House in The Crystal Room
For: KU & Lawrence women interested in learning more about the 1985 Miss Lawrence Scholarship Pageant
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not a piano trio at all,
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The New York Times
WASHINGTON — The Senate yesterday approved and sent to the White House a comprise $297 billion defense authorization bill for the fiscal year beginning Monday.
On a voice vote the Senate passed the military bill, which was approved by the House on Wednesday.
By United Press International
Senate OKs $297 billion military bill
The House and Senate appropriations committees on Wednesday sent to the floor companion military appropriations bills - measures providing the defense agency with money for its programs. The military appropriations bill authorizes the authorization bills both required to cover the military budget.
Although the totals on the appropriations bills differ, it is expected that when they get to conference committee — as part of a larger yearlong spending bill for several agencies — they will conform to the leadership agreement of $292.9 billion in defense appropriations.
An anticipated dispute about the procedure for conducting two votes next spring on the MX missile evaporated Wednesday morning when Republicans inserted language in the Senate defense appropriations measure ensuring the missile must
The Arden Trio
Suzanne Ornstein, violin
Clay Ruede, cello
Thomas Schmidt, piano
covert operations against Nicaragua.
3:30 p.m. Sunday, September 30, 1984
Crafton-Prayer Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale at the Middle Haven Hall Office-Affiliateds reserved. RPASS & $2 Special discounts for Students and parents of students in grades 9-12 from 1986-1990.
Funded by the KIU Student Activity Fund,
supported by the KIU University Association
There is no such provision in the Senate bill, and the House included in its version language barring the introduction of U.S. combat troops into El Salvador or Nicaragua, a provision not in the Senate bill.
- Blocked the Pentagon, at least temporarily, from buying more Sgt. York-division air defense guns in fiscal 1985. The $8 million-a-copy gun has fared poorly in tests, and the committee cut $484 million from the request, leaving $50 million to keep the production line ready.
The defense agreement was worked out last week between Senate Republican leader Howard Baker of Tennessee and House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, D-Mass. It set the overall authorization figure at $297 billion, the appropriations figure at $292.9 billion and provided for two votes on the 10-warhead MX in the spring.
The Senate Appropriations Committee:
There was only passing reference in House discussion of the authorization bill to the weeks of negotiations between House and Senate leaders and the White House on defense.
win both votes to survive
Rep. William Dickinson, R-Ala., ranking Republican on the Army Armed Services Committee, said the White House was "terribly shortsighted and ill-informed" in turning down a better deal offered early in the talks.
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
The Musical Master's Presents
the talks.
He said House negotiators had offered a one-vote MX deal several weeks ago but the White House "stonewalled it. They wound up getting a worse deal."
Among the differences the conference committee must settle between the two versions of the House and the House of House demand that no money be spent on
Paradise Arch
Thomas Moriarty, spokesman for the Springfield Institution for Savings, which owns the machines, said the institution had no explanation yet.
Men deny stealing from money machines
Palm trees B
Pink flamingos
Pancakes B
Pentimentos
And no more
hard times
Porter and Jefferson were arrested Wednesday after State Police arrested them at Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Conn.
Bv United Press International
SPRINGFIELD. Mass. — Two men pleaded not guilty yesterday to taking nearly $40,000 from eight automatic teller machines that apparently malfunctioned and began "spitting out the money," officials said.
The men allegedly used one of their bank cards to make 55 withdrawals of at least $200 each from the
machines in Springfield on Sunday and Monday, police said.
Each of the men, who were trying to buy airline tickets to Hawaii, was allegedly carrying $15,000 in cash, police said.
Steven Porter, 22, and Steven Jefferson, 19, both of Springfield, were charged with larceny over $100 and held on $50,000 bail pending Oct. 5 lawyers' conferences.
"The machines kept spitting out the money," said police detective Capt. Ernest M. Steeler. "There was no clever scheme here. There was a malfunction of either the card or the system involving the card."
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University Daily Kansan, September 28, 1984
SPORTS ALMANAC
Page 14
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
W 1 L Pct. GB
n Detroit 102 57 644
Toronto 71 74 153
New York 86 73 541 16
Boston 86 73 741 17
Baltimore 83 76 522 19
Cleveland 72 87 413 28
Milwaukee 72 87 413 28
Kansas City 83 76 522 —
Minnesota 81 76 509 2 —
California 79 80 497 4 —
Oakland 75 84 47 8 —
Oregon 73 86 40 8 —
Seattle 72 87 453 11 —
Texas 72 87 453 11 —
Friday's Games
Stats
Cleveland 4, Minnesota 3
Boston 4, Baltimore 8
New York 2, Detroit 1
California 1
Seattle 7
Minnesota (Viola 18-12) at Cleveland
(6-12) (6-12) (6-12) (Udari 4: 6, 66 pm)
Baltimore | Swaggetty 3: 2 at Boston
Gale 2: 3.1, 6: 89 pm
Perry | 18: 8 at New York
Fontenette 8: 9 pm
Toronto | Leal 13: 8 at Milwaukee
Leak 7: 30 pm
California | Statton 7: 9 at Texas
Stewart 6: 14; 7: 35 pm
Burns | Burrins 4: 11 at Seattle
Moore 6: 14; 7:
Dakland (Burris 13-9), 9:35 p.m.
Kansas City (Leibbrandt 10-7) at Oakland (Burris 19-9, 9.35 m.)
ON JOB WINDOW REPAIR
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Thursday's Baseball Results
National League 01.200.000-3-8
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St. Louis 001 230 000 — 3 8 1
Montreal 000 600 00x — 6 10 0
Forsher, Horton (4), Caterrala (6) and Porter,
Palmer, Bardoon (4) and Carter, W-Palmer
(7.3), L-Forsch (2.5), HIBs - St Louise,
Carter (1.1), Howe (2), Montreal, Carter
Alanta 000 100 010 00 - 1 7-2
Cincinnati 100 100 000 1 - 2 7-0
Smith, Garter (8) and Benedict.
Tulver, France (8) and Bilardelle, W. Franco
American Coast Guard
**Salamore**
Boston ... 000 000 315 - 3.5
Boston ... 000 000 315 - 4.9
Openshape Cadet (8) and Gedmun W. Clear (3.5)
L. Stewart (7) ... HH- Riakmen, Ipkien
Minnesota ... 000 000 210 - 3.4
Minnesota ... 000 000 210 - 4.7
Smithson Davis (8) and Lauder
Scherf,Jeffrey and David
Quirk W. Cranach (5) L.
Schaffer (7) ... HIH, Minnesota, Cranach
Quirk W. Cranach (5) L.
off (8) 65/64 (9)
off (7) 65/64 (9)
Morris, Hernandez (0) and Castillo,
Shirley, Hughet (0) and Wynengy W-
Shirley (3) L. Hermann (9) H.-Ret.
Detroit
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California 000 199 000 - 1 6 0
Texas 000 101 000 - 2 11 1
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Hill, Stillin, Young, Geier (9), Numeré (10)
and Valle, Young, Geier (11), Numeré (12)
Purcell, Porcupine (13), Valley (14)
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
American Conference
W L T O Pct PF INF AF
Miami 4 1 0 0 190 128 40
NJ Vets 2 1 0 0 560 76 94
New England 2 2 0 50 264 76
Indianapsi 1 2 0 50 264 76
Tampa 1 2 0 50 264 76
Pittsburgh 2 2 0 500 84 88
Cleveland 1 3 0 250 87 81
Cincinnati 0 4 0 000 76 114
Boston 0 4 0 000 59 122
LA Rangers 3 1 0 0 1000 107 61
Seattle 3 1 0 0 750 164 75
Denver 3 1 0 750 45 50
N.Y. Giants 2 1 0 750 68 52
Ohio State 2 1 0 750 94 92
National Conference
W L T L Pct PF GA
N.Y. Giants 3 1 1 0 0 0 0
Dallas 3 1 0 0 0 0
St. Louis 2 2 0 500 118 98
Washington 2 2 0 500 118 98
Philadelphia 1 3 0 500 72 89
Milwaukee 1 3 0 500 72 89
San Francisco 4 2 0 0 100 118 87
Atlanta 12 2 0 0 112 92
New Orleans 2 2 0 500 99 103
L Raims 2 2 0 500 71 75
Chicago 3 1 0 750 79 58
Minnesota 2 2 0 860 86 59
Detroit 1 3 0 250 99 104
Baltimore 1 3 0 250 99 104
Green Bay 1 3 0 250 99 104
Computerark
Buffalo at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Chicago at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Detroit at San Diego, 1 p.m.
Seattle at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Miami at St. Louis, 1 p.m.
Nashville at Nashville, 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Tampa Bay, 4 p.m.
Alabama at San Francisco, 4 p.m.
Texas at Houston, 4 p.m.
New Orleans at Houston, 4 p.m.
BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
W.L.T. Pts. OP
Nebruska 3 0 0 123 17
Okhamba 3 0 0 123 18
Okla St 3 0 0 93 33
Lowa St 1 2 0 59 96
Kan St 1 2 0 52 96
Missouri 1 2 0 165 96
Oklahoma 1 2 0 165 96
State State at Oklahoma. Notre Dame at Missouri. UCLA at Colorado. West State at Iowa State. Kansas at North State at Saranac. Surgey at Oklahoma at Tulsa
Computerark
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Banks reactivated by Cubs will be honorary member
By United Press International
CHICAGO — The Chicago Cubs reactivated Hall of Famer Ernie Banks yesterday, naming him the 2016 MVP for League East championship team.
Banks, who was nicknamed "Mr. Cub" during a 19-year career in which he belted 512 home runs for a team record, will suit up in his familiar No. 14 Cubs' uniform during the National League pennant series, which begins Tuesday at Wrigley Field.
"It's a great joy to be able to be associated with the 1984 Cubs." Banks said during a news conference held at Wrigley Field.
during batting and fielding warmups and on the bench when the Cubs host the NL. West champion San Diego Padres in the first and second games of the best-of-five championship series.
Banks, who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1977 and became the first Cub to have his number retired in 1982, will also throw out the first pitch of the opening game of the series. Harold Brickhouse will throw out the first pitch of the second game.
Banks, 53, will be on the field
Banks, who was a member of the 1969 Cubs team that blew an $8 \frac{1}{2}$ game lead in rid-September to fall from the pennant race, said being an honorary member of the 1984 club would help take some of the sting out of 1969.
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837 Massachusetts 843-1800 ROBINSON'S Open 9 to 5:30 Mon.-Sat. Thurs. til 8:30
SATURDAY 10 a.m.-12 p.m.
GREEK WEEK IS HERE!
Sept. 30-Oct. 5
12-2 p.m.
SUNDAY 6:30-8 p.m.
MONDAY 5:30 p.m.
TUESDAY 4:30-6:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY 7-10 p.m.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY 2-5:30 p.m.
DAVE WESTOL (national speaker on Greeks)
KICK-OFF PICNIC Pattern in Revision
GREEK SING Kansas Ballroom
GREEK OLYMPICS 19th & Iowa St. West Campus
DINNER EXCHANGE
BLACK PANHELLENIC RECEPTION Alumni Center
Weather permitting for outside events
BAR NIGHT SPECIALS
TOGA PARTY
Pladium
(Greek god/goddess contest)
Free beer-Gammons
specials after
DAVE WESTOL:
KICK-OFF PICNIC:
National speaker on Greeks focusing on the legal aspects and others of fraternity life. He will be speaking in Woodruff Auditorium at 10 a.m. He's a Vice President of a national fraternity as well as a district attorney in Kalamazoo, Mich.
Will be celebrated with concession stands and free beer! Everyone come wearing Greek letters.
GREEK SING:
Come on! Come all! To the 1984 Greek Sing. This year participating groups will perform only one song and the evening will be topped off with awards and a special presentation from a selected few from each house.
GREEK OLYMPICS:
BLACK PANHELLENIC.
Fun competitive events will take place at 19th & Iowa when houses compete in amusing "Greek-style" Olympics. Bring plenty from your house for a team!
BAR-NITE SPECIALS
TOGA PARTY:
Black Panhellenic will be hosting a reception along with a seminar concerning their system. They would appreciate everyone's attendance. It will be presented at the KU Alumni Center.
Get ready to party at the Pliadium! Only Greeks from 2-5:30, free beer but bring ID! They will be carding! There will also be Greek god and goddess contest so be sure your selected candidate is there by 3:30! Afterwards wear your togas for beer specials at Gammons!
10
September 28,1984
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- Advertising
- *Bind font ads* - please add a $2 service change
- *Checks must accompany all classified ad mailed
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 804-4358
- until credit has been established *
* Teachers are not invited for classified or
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one or correct invention of any advertisement.
- No refunds on cancellation of pre paid classified advertising.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
*Staffed Stretcher coupons Thurs. evening.* Buy $10 and receive $2 coupon toward next purchase Cross Reference, Mallis Shopping Center
paid for by the Student Senate
STUDENT SENATE SEATS ARE NOW
OPEN for students in SOCIAL WELFARE
graduate school and SPECIAL STU-
DER CARE. Please visit the Office
Broom 8105, Kauai, Japan
NAISMITT, Contracts, available Call 749-0536
after 5:30 p.m.
NOTICE TO APPEAR- Founderess; Mike Ligher for DA Sept. 30, 9 midnight; the Courtboth Bealth Sethlal & Mackenzie; Hunt Bond, Campaign Giver for District Attorney Campaign Fund
INDIAN TACO FEED
and
TKO BLUES BAND
Sun 9/0084 4:48 pm
| RESEARCH PAPERS' 306 page catalog - 15,278 |
| topics | Rush $2.00 RESEARCH, 11222 Idaho, MB, Los Angeles, (213) 477-826 |
|
19' Color T. V $228.98 a month Cartis
Might 447 W. Wrid. Z 3rd. 0-9-90 3-9-90
47 W. Wrid. Z 3rd. 0-9-90 3-9-90
H.O.P.E. Award Nominations
Senior Committee Apps available in
Deams office - 1TB Union
Due Oct. 6
**Singing Theater Dance Students for performing**
**type* types messages from Ballroom* m*. More
lateral presentations. Must be reliable and have
call. Fm Call 432-6368
Sabina Bennett, of Charme Beauty Salon, is now at Angles Art Beauty Salon, 940 Massachusetts, MF. Pell 843-976 for Shirley September Special Shampoo & Haircut - 88
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. 1447 W. 32rd. 842-5751. Open 9:30 - 9:00,
M: F. 9:30 - 9:00, Sat.
Pre-Dental Students
THE FAR SIDE
Representatives from the University of Nebraska will be on campus to visit with students individually or in small groups on:
Appointments may be made in the Pre-Med office 106 Strong Hall during office hours posted
Tues., Oct. 16 after 2:30 p.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
Weekend and evening child care now available at Calliope Corner Cafe. Our parents, we are all here every evening classes, meetings, an evening job, or just want to enjoy an evening out, now you have an option of an evening out, or an evening of fun, planned, recreational educational activities four blocks from campus (permits
CLASSICAL GUTTAR Want to class up your next function with quality music? 842 / 7273
FORRENT
Apartment: 5 rooms & bath. One block off southeast corner of campus. Available Oct. 1. Call 843-007 for appointment.
BRAND NEW 1-bedroom Apt $360 843-5840
evenings
By GARY LARSON
© 1984 Universel Berthelot Syndicat
"Thaa, take napkin. Got some mammoth on face."
BLOOM COUNTY
Available Immediately: Private room 1 renovated, energy-efficient home with lots of windows and a large storage space. This pleasant co-ed living situation only covers 183 plumbers 1/2 utilities, based on 14H ceiling heights.
Cooperative House. Large, 3rd floor room with bathroom, ideal for home parties. $100 includes two chairs and rug. Disappear. On Campus, 2-branch, decem. Sept., excellent location, AC, WD hookups.
LIVING ARRANGEMENTS NOT WORKING Out. Sublease my furnished station on a bus route very nice, reasonably priced: call 81-029-42 Leave 4 bedroom house $350/mo Off street
RECORD SALE
All records $2.00
Over 100
ALL TYPES OF MUSIC
Sat & Sun 9-5
1514 Tennessee
Older 2-bedroom House, New furnace. Close to K.U., town. No dog $275 plus utilities. 204 W.13th, 842.1968
Room available near campus and downtown. Access to kitchen, family, dining and bath rooms. 410/250 plus 14 utilities. 749-2362.
'TAP! TAP!
ENTER NEW RECORD:
'KIMMOD' J. JONES, AGE 36,
HEIGHT
MAJORITY
003 15 X003...
GENERAL # 67-71140.
LICENSE # 3476140...
DUCK-HUNTING
PERMIT # 2102?
Rooms for rent. Huge lobby perch, one brick from Utnom. Furnaces, living room, large eat in kitchen, newly remodeled. $105/mo. All utilities paid. 842-396-7491 or 842-4545.
SUBLEASE one-bedroom Apt. $225/mo.
Available Oct. 1. 1327 Ohio 9. 749-7206.
Townhouse with finished basement available, only one left, good for 4 people $490. SUNRISE
PLACE, 041-1287
10 1/7 21. Cabover Carrier. $500 or best offer. Call
842-497-4.
FOR SALE
1976 Chevy Stepside Pickup, $1650, 12 ft. Swimming Pool with circulating pump, $285. Call 749-4487
POOF!
WILL NOT
ALLOW THIS SORT
OF COMPUTER
MISCHIEF!
Try cooperative living Sunflower House, 1466 Tennessee 749-0871, Ask for Dawn. Inexpensive & Private rooms are available
AM/FM Cassette Car Stereo, Dabby, auto-scene lets great condition. Call 749-6423 Always on the go ' Missing calls' here! "Are you in a hurry" nmahm8. FRIMEPOKE
answer to your problem • TELEPHONE-
ANWARNING MACHINE! 1:yr old Radio Shack,
Voice Activate answering machine, exc. condition.
75. Call 842 182 194 at 3 p.m.
Aquariums, 20 & 15 gal. Full set up with hoods and extra- fish too. Oscar, African Snucker, Skupe and Pinraba. 749-126 after 6 m
CAR STEREO Alpine FM stereo-cass deck
Locking FF/rew. Auto-reveal, metal tape.
Looks and sounds great $10 or best offer
AND FURTHER MORE, IVE RECENTLY DECIDED that IT'S TIME YOU GOT INVOLLED in SOMETHING MORE NORMAL, THAN COMMUNICATING WITH ME LIKE TO KNOW WHAT IT IS A WELL IT'S TELL YA...
DX— 302 Shortwave Receiver. 10-30 MHZ AM,
USB, LSB, CW, 3-way power, two antennas.
842 247 after 6
*Students. For a Low Price, you can own your on-term 12 T-1 A with built-in monitor in modifiable parity books up to KU and other main frame's & frames. *More Call: Bkm 840-6508gomerys.com/office/bkm*. Gymnasium, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics, open, open, 6. Tues. 11 New Hampshire
DRAFTING MACHINE Sturdy Brunning
machine, capacity scales, value $100,
machine费 749-806
Danny Allman Terms Racquet superlight 4/18
Tennis racquet, size medium, $95.
Racquet cover, extra. $50. Call # 831-6211.
GAMONIS — (2) 1/4 Carat, brilliant cut, jewelry
quality $200 each, negotiable. Call Brian:
842-5055.
EVERYTHING GOES CAT. Cat '79 Grand Prius — cat's body, chassis, seats, interior, ornamental rugs, T, and much more. Call 800-624-3500.
For furnishings for your living, we have what you need. Thrift store at 62 Vermont and 16 E.9th. Four piece living room set, washer and dryer in excellent condition. 790-460.
FENDER STRAT GUITAR $360 Call Jim,
842-9700
Bless Express Moped, only 190 original miles,
excellent condition, $25; Carry all, 84. 313-8361
keeping your clothes in a laundry basket! Finished
Fine dress, from 89, at the Pantry Chair
Schwinn "World!" Girls' model, never ridden,
with accessories. Must sell. 749-1256 after 6 p.m.
Must see to believe.
Z. 89 a. 8 K. Malusher®. 8" Disk drives (14 mb)
Hazelite GRAPH with CORDIC graphics with
WORD STAR PACA, C, etc. $200 Call GI after 8 p.m.
8761 0457 or 9761 0458
Moped. 1981 Honda Express, Automatic,
2-speed exc.速控 443-84348 after 4 p.m.
THE GENERAL STORE
Used furniture and household misc.
Open Daily 11.5 p.m. closed Sun
7th and New Hampshire
(behind P.R. Hermans) 843-B362
Sherwood 402 CP Integrated Amplifier: 40 watts per channel, 4 channels, tape monitor, loudness, and pre-ampl. capability 843-3583
New Linear 300 Watt Car Amplifier, $750 Retail,
will sell for $600 or best offer. 843-5946.
TENNIS RAQUET Head Graphite-Edge
Reasonable' 842 558)
Western Civilization Notes, including New Supplement. Now on Sale! Make sure to use them in your preparation for the exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Town Creek. The exam is online.
Pioneer Pl. 10 Turntable, $40, or best offer
842-0363, evenings.
Sleeping on the couch? Twin mattress, foundation and frame from $119.95 at the Furniture Barn.
1811 W. 6th; 842-2096
Partners Desk, 2-sided, Oak desk with glass top.
$: Call 842-2242 after 8 p.m.
Trek 311, blue 12 Speed Bike 24/1 2 lbs., 22", toe clips, lock, pump, 1/1" tires. 8427835.
by Berke Breathed
Partners. Desk, 2-sided, Oak desk with glass top
$100. Call 843-5722 after 8 a.m.
**agent printer** Macwrite and Macprint softwa-
er and numeric keypad All Bridgem. In unioped loo-
cement All for £200 Call 8413 8188 when
and weekend All for £500 leave message for
weekend.
Used and Collecter Records bought and sold.
Reck, RNB, Jazz, Classical, Classical,
Big Bands, Sat & Sun, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Quan
tulii, 811 New Hampshire
Rock on with a Savel Rocker. Special purchase $19.50 at the Larry Burns Burlingan B.I.H. 81 W. 84th St. #206 computer 120K, 32 bit microprocessor built in 192K, 32-bit microcontroller, Detachable keyboard, PLUS Apple I.M.
WASHER/DRYER, good working condition.
X/large capacity, harvest gold, $160/both,
840-957 after 5
AUTO SALES
FOOTBALL!
BEER!
BLIP!
1977 TRT, Runs great & has many extras. Call
841-2232 anytime
1973 Monte Carlo, AC, PS, PB, PW, runs great,
some rust, $50,恶意赔偿 841-8544
1974 Brown Pinto wagon, 4-speed, good radio & rubber. Very good, mechanically $500 cash. 749-1193.
LOST AND FOUND
Mast Sell, 1972 WW Bug, vire, nice, 79.000 km. 1500 $see WB in 1 W2. wizard 29:47 or call 847-4190. Dome, Regal, AM-PF Stereo, C.A. Ready, Rust-proofed, 16.500 km local run. Call 749-3690 SAAB SMIT, 1972 Italian design sports car, restored. Guestored. Excellent. 819-645-978
FOUND. Vicinity of 6th & Maine, Collie female
Approx. 5 mo old. Identify to claim. 749-0502,
842-7900
1983 Manda GLC excellent condition AM-FM stereo, $160; must include 81 or 84 or 8242
Mom must buy 81 Chevrolet. Great gas mileage, good condition, $3,600. mk4 815; keep trying.
Found: Kitten, grey and tan tabby, wearing a flea
feele in white, in finest jeans - #853 7900
LOST BRACETEL, 14k gold Spermite wide chain, on somewhere KU campus between Dahlia Hill and Watson Library. Sentimental value. REWRITE HD! found, please call 842-4508 or www.bracetel.org
Lost: Graphite Head Tennis Raquet, at Robinson tennis courts, beginning of Sept. If found, please call 843-417-6
HELP WANTED
Aerobics Instructor needed for 9 and 10 a.m.
classes only. Some experience necessary. Call
842 1963 for appt.
CONSUMER AFFAIRS INTERN. 10—15 weeks / $35/h. Appt. 14:48 to 16:45 to process consumer inquiries & complaints and complete consumer research & surveys. Prefer qualification, good writing & communication skills. Exp. knowledge of business, law, consumer education or public interest work Must be work skill eligible for
EXECUTIVE SECURITY OFFICE
No. 30, Nov. 19
IN STUDENT SENIOR OFFICE
Applications and information
BIOLOGY BOTTOMS B105
864-3730 5:24pm | DPM 5:19pm
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
Dependable female to assist disabled with care.
No experience required. Morning, weekend & evening hours available. Call between 1.5,
749.028
Dependable undergraduate or graduate students who are interested in obtaining research experience to assist in data collection, call Mike 784-3601 at 7 a.m.
FRESHIMEN—It's not too late to join NAVAL
ROTIC Call 644-3161
Intant Care - our home, 12:30-5:30 Start Oct 15.
Call RALLY, 8:14 a.m.
NATURE'S BEST HEALTH FOOD is looking for a part-time employee. Some knowledge of nutrition, helpful. For more info. call 842-1930.
PAD VOLUNTEERS needed for research project.
Women 18-22 whose father died when they
were married. Oceanside, Oregon;
10 Rm 24 at a p.m. Rm 28 at a a.m.
woman friend 18-22 whose parents are living
and married to each other. Participation takes about i
talk and is greatly appreciated. Participants paid.
ATTENTION STUDENTS
WE NEED
DRIVERS!!
$3.75/hr.
+
6% commission
(average $5-$6/hr.)
Pizza at Stephanies has the top pay for those working more than 25 hours a week. HURRY ON BY AND APPLY IN PERSON NOW!!
DizzaAt STEPHANIES
2214 Yale Rd.
Responsible associate for 2 part time positions:
Saturday mornings or all day, All Day Saturday's Call
mornings or all day, All Day Saturday's Call
Summer Jobs, National Park Co. 21 Parks, 9006
Sussex County MD 21437
Report. Mission Mt. Colo. Co. 21 Avenues, WN
Report. Mission Mt. Colo. Co. 21 Avenues, WN
E. O.E. No phone calls, please
MISCELLANEOUS
Kitchen is open 8:13 p.m. for wings to go. Monday through Friday is on the Wheel
Saturday breakfast special. Eggs, bacon, hamburgers, browns, ham, straws. Start at 9:30 a.m.
PERSONAL
EXPERIENCE STAEDT COOK Approx. 25 hrs. a week. Weekends are mat! Apply (3) 9:00, 10:30 or m- or j- 6 p.m. Western Sitzkin Steak House. 6282 Iowa. No phone calls please.
Dave, thanks for making this past year the best of my life I will never forget all the terrific memories. the New York, Lincoln, Fort Lauderdale, HUSSELL, I hope the birthday will be as special
Happy 22nd (again), M.A.K , My Roomie Who's so good to me
Tom, from Maryland, let's continue our bookstore conversation . . . Pam, with the hat. Box 558, Lynn, KS 6443.
BUSINESS PERS
Beds, Desks, Tents, Window shades: Everything
But ice 10th & Vermont
instant passport, portfolio, resume; immigration,
naturalization, Visa, and of course, portrait,
Swell Studio, 749-1811
John songs for all occasions. Birthdays, parties,
weddings. Operatic tenor 841.1674
Parale Parale rules & parts. Architecture tools and papers. The Graphic Arts Dept. Strong's Ofice Systems. 1040 Vermont, V84 3644
Bible Trivia is in! The game where trivia is not trivial. Cross Reference, Mallis, Lawrence.
M
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care; confidentiality assured. Great
area. Call for appointment: 933-145-1490.
vintage formal party clothes and costumes
732 Mass. 843-061T
INDIAMONTE Hats
Vintage, formal wear
Barbs Vintage Rose
Dinner Jackets, Tuxes, Fluorpe
Dress Shoes Nassau House
are available to rent
9180 Mass St. B4-251
Nassau, New York
EARN $500 per 100 envelopes stuffed. Senda self-
addressed, stamped envelope to: Akram, P.O.
Box 8327 Chicago, IL 60909
"FRIDAYS" AT CANTERBURY
Refreshment and Conversation
Dr. MICHAEL ROUDOORFY
CHRISTIANITY AND
HISPANIC LITERATURE
Canterbury House
1116 Louisiana
4 p.m. until 5:30
Inflation Fighter, E-47th For your needs in
vintage and party clothes, hats, gloves, ties,
dresses and men's suits. Come in & browse:
Hours 10 to 5:30, Sat. 10 to 5:30.
West Coast
Saloon
25c
Draws
12-6 p.m.
every Friday
NO Cover
A KU TGIF Tradition
841-BREW 2222 lowa
Modeling and theater performance—shooting now Beginners to Professionals, call for information Swell Studio, 749-1611.
DM
NCR
DATA MASTER, INC
Cash Registers Computers Sales-Service Supplies
609 Vermont
842-2202
Computer Paper Copier Paper Business Supplies
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t shirts, garments and caps Shirt art by Swells 749-6011
3
3 an hour lane rent
Don't pay by the person pay by the hour unlimited bowlers!
THE KANSAS UNION JAYBOWL
Level 1
Call 864-3545
Security munded. Learn to secure your apartment. For more information,送 $25 to Information Media, 3430 Cenderudor, Lawrence, KS 69041
The Harvest Cafe offers a relaxing atmosphere, good service, summery cuisine, and affordable prices. We invite you to join us! Now serving beer, tapered 8 p.m., 9 p.m., Monday – Saturday 9 p.m. - 2 p.m.
This week's special at Yello Sub and Hawk's Crossing is the Californian with crab meat. Totally Awesome.
Travel! FREE. Travel! Earn high commissions &
* FREE trips, prancing warns and spring
break skis and sun trips Sunrise Tours camp
campgrounds. Call: FOLL. TICKET: 321-5911
Trying to stop smoking pot? *Not having much luck* We know the feeling. A self help group is forming now! Call Headquarters, 841-2354 for information.
SINGING TELEGRAMMAKE BACK' Now with customized characters in addition to personalized letters. Call Andrea. 864-1834 for info
VISA and MASTERCARD credit cards for 18 students. or lower. Low-fee small savings account required Writed for details. National Association of Teachers SAW, Washington DC, 20053. swayline.se.WA, Washington DC, 20053.
CUSTOM SEWING Dressmaking and alterations. Call 842-3375. Reasonable prices.
Wholesale Sound Rental P.A. Guitar and Bass
amps, mikes, Graphic EQ, Disco systems.
841-6495.
Western Sizzin
Steak House
2620 Iowa
843-2550
STEAK-OUT
KUID 10%
Discount
Free Refills
All Beverages
2620 Iowa
25¢ Coffee with meal
Discount not valid on specials
especially for bots. Resumes take.
French Tutor for students taking beginning and intermediate levels of French. 1 years experience, excellent knowledge of grammar. Call
SERVICES OFFERED
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
WEIGHT NOW. Improve your health and
your wealth 100% natural 90% guaranteed
HERBALIFE distributor/consultant Weight loss, skin & hair care, much more, income opportunity. 841 0474
YAMHA MUSIC SCHOOL, ages 4-6, beginners
Ohio District, Office: 824.9755
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown. All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary.
Wanting to do ironing, mending or typing. For details, call 842-3202
Special on Sculpted Nails 20% Off. Available
with Crimson nail polish. Welcome to
nail shop! ideal for picture nails and mails.
Trained, expert applications, manicures also
Curtly Trio of Beauty Salts. 841-806-9800.
Owen Piano and Organ. 842-430-60
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing - Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor. Beginner/Advanced Group Individual any type
TYPING
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing. Judy.
842-7945
24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fastest service. 941-5006.
Absolutely! East, Fm/fondable. Clea Typing and Word Processing HEM 068. Same day service available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinois. 843-6018
Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting select IU II. 842-7541 or 842-6721. 5:30 to 10:30 p.m
DEDEPENDABLE, professional, experienced,
JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing, Service
TRANSSCRIPT also, standard cassette tape
843-8677
Always try the best for professional service
Term papers,theses,resumes,etc Reasonable
842 7246
Experienced typist. Term papers, thesis, all miscellaneous IB Correcting Selective Etec or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-4654 Mrs. Wright
Professional TVPING, EDITING, GRAPHICS,
IBM Correcting Electric, Kathy, 842.3778 before
9 o.m.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI.
MU 301-310
RESUME SERVICE. Let us assist you with that first good impression. Professionally written resumes and coverletters, word processing and quality papers. 5 Eighth, 74th. 841-268.
SOMERVALLE & ASSOCI, Inc. Professionals at Competitive Rates. Word Processing- Typeing. Expertise in ADA Style. 90 Kentucky Institute for Disability. Forms 225-3806.
Students are welcome at any time.
Students call April for all your typing needs. Very reasonable and fast. Day 841-0110, evenings and weekends 841-004
TOP TIP TOPING. 120 iowa Professional typing, processing, editing. Resumes from start to finish. Mail resume directly to our specialists. Our specialties are Memory书写 with doc storage. royal self-correcting. Min with doc storage.
TYPTING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes Have M.L.E. Degree 61-624
THE WORDSTORS Why pay for typing when you
> have word processing? 843.3147
tric H. Reasonable prices. Call Judy at 843-0891
PRECISION Typing / Word Processing Very
Fast Printing. Call Tadpole at 843-1131
PRECISION Typing/ Word Processing Very
High Quality. Call/Tad at 842-3111.
WANTED
FEMALE Roommate needed for nicely furnished
2 bedroom Apt. ( Sundance) $150, plus 1/2 elec-
tricity. 841-1521
Female Roommate, to share furnished Apt., approx $140 mo. Close to campus. Call Stacy. 801-546.
Grade Student needs Roammate to share clean,
2-bedroom Apt on Tennessee; rent is $150/mo plus 1.2 utilities. Call Eric at 843-6077 if interested
Ellis Coins
Ellis Coins
Buy • Sell • Trade
Quantrill's Market
Patient female trumpet player to teach beginning 12 yr old at home (near campus) Call 842 7644 843 357
Student Managers to work with the Men's Soccer. Basketball Program. Applications are available in the Basketball office at Parrot Athletic Center. Due Mon., Oct. 1
Roommate to share House near campus. $100
plus 1/2 utilities. Fax 749-4513
Ca serum dos nei Th ex ex zol inc S
September 28,1984 Page 16
SPORTS
The University Daily KANSAN
12
File photo/KANSAN
North Carolina tailback Ethan Horton fends off tacklers from the College of William and Mary. Tomorrow, the Kansas Jayhawks will be the ones trying to stop Horton, who led the Atlantic Coast Conference in rushing last year with 1,107 yards.
KANSAS (1-2)
Offense
JE-Seff John, 5-11, 180 jr.
LT-Jim Davis, 6-12, 645 jr.
LG-Paul Swenson, 6.4, 215 jr.
C-Bennie Simkeca, 6.5, 255 jr.
RG-Doug Certain, 6.4, 265 jr.
RG-Bob Pipe, 6.5, 265 so.
RG-Wade Lester, 6.5, 275 jr.
C-Jane E. Lanes, 3.9, 175 jr.
QB-Morse Norseth, 6.3, 295 jr.
FB-Lym Williams, 6.2, 200 jr.
TB-Robert Mimbs, 6.0, 190 jr.
Defense
N. CAROLINA (0-2)
LE—Arnold Fields, 6, 1/190 jr.
LT—David Smith, 6, 3/125 jr.
LG—Phil Porel, 6, 3/220 so.
RG—Von Lacey, 6, 5/250 jr.
RT—Robert Tucker, 6, 2/400 jr.
RF—Gamble, 6, 3/223 jr.
RF—Gamble, 6, 2/125 jr.
RL—Rilbert Bessel, 6, 1/190 jr.
LB—Din Bell, 5, 1/98 jr.
S—Wayne Ziegler, 6, 2/190 so.
RBIC—Alvin Walton, 6, 1/85 jr.
Offense
Defense
SE-Larry Griffin, 6-1, 189 jr.
LT-Pat Sheehan, 6-3, 219 so.
LG-Greg Naron, 6-0, 220 fr.
C-Harris Barton, 6-4, 265 so.
RG-CA, Brooks, 6-4, 255 so.
RT-Bobby Pope, 6-2, 279 rs.
TE-Arnold Franklin, 6-3, 241 jr.
FL-Earl Winfield, 6-0, 187 jr.
QB-Kevin Anthony, 6-2, 188 so.
FB-Eddie Colson, 5-11, 217 rsp.
TB-Ethan Horton, 6-4, 218 rsp.
**Defense**
OLB—Micah Moon, 6-1, 230 sr.
LT—Reuben Davis, 6-3, 256 frr.
NG—Dennis Benns, 6-3, 260 so.
RT—Brian Johnston, 6-3, 279 sr.
OLB—Noel McEachern, 6-3, 205 fr
HB—Carl Carr, 6-3, 214 jr.
HIB—Troy Simmons, 6-1, 271 jr.
LCB—Larry Larsen, 5-10, 183 rd.
—Steve Hendrickson, 5-11, 173 rd.
SS—Barry James, 5-10, 180 sr.
RC—Walter Bailey, 6-1, 201 so.
KICKOFF: 1:00 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time at Kenan Memorial Stadium.
SERIES STANDING: This is the first meeting between the two teams.
Battered Jayhawks take on North Carolina
By PHIL ELLENBECKER Associate Sports Editor
Something has to give tomorrow when Kansas meets North Carolina in Chapei Hill.
Both teams are young and both are frustrated, KU, I-2, is coming off consecutive lopsided losses to undefeated teams, Florida State and Vanderbilt.
North Carolina, who has gone to a bowl game the past five years, blew a lead against Navy in its season opener and was defeated, 33-30. Last week, the Tar Heels absorbed a 56-20 pounding at the hands of Boston College, ranked seventh by United Press International.
WHILE BOTH TEAMS have taken their licks the past two weeks, the Jayhawks are considerably the worse for wear. KU may have as many as six starters out of tomorrow's game because of injuries.
Nose guard Pat Kelley, offensive guard Chip Schuler and wide receiver Johnny Holloway won't make the trip to Chapel Hill. Wide receivers Skip Peele and Richard Estell and fullback Mark Henderson will make the trip but are doubtful to play.
Kelley's replacement, Mitch Gaffen, suffered a knee injury earlier this week and is out for the year, so the nose guard spot will be manned tomorrow by freshman Von Lacey and junior college transfer Jay Hager.
"WE'LL STILL BE THROWING
If Estell and Peete can't play, C.J. Eanes and Jeff Long will start at the wide receiver spots. Schuler, suffering from lower back pains, will be replaced by Paul Swenson.
the ball," he said. "C.J. Eanes and Jeff Long are very capable."
KU didn't score a touchdown in last week's 41-6 loss to Vanderbilt, the first time that has happened in Gottfried's two years at KU. Besides shuffling players because of injuries, Gottfried has made two additional moves to bolster the offense.
Anderson said Gottfried told him he was needed on offense to help establish the running game, and also provide an additional receiving threat.
First, he opened up the starting quarterback position previously held by Mike Norseth. Both Norseth and Mike Orth ran at the No. 1 spot this week. Gotfried said he wouldn't make a decision on who would start until sometime today.
Gotfried also moved defensive lineman Jeff Anderson over to tight end, where he played last year.
"THE OTHER TEAMS WEREN'T
really keying on our tight end that much," he said.
Most of the time tomorrow, Anderson will be lining up against outside linebacker Micah Moon, a pregame USA America choice by many publications.
"I'm looking forward to it," he said. "I think I can really do a good job against him, being as he 6 and 12 and I'm 6 and 230. It should be good."
"He's a good football player."
Gottfried said of Moon. "The thing is,
he runs so well and covers the whole
field. We're going to have to throw
some different formations at them
and try to isolate certain positions."
MOON IS ONE OF ONLY four returning starters on North Carolina's defense, but Gottfried said the team has "have a solid defensive unit in time."
especially tailback Ethan Horton, a 6-foot-4, 218-pound senior. He led the Atlantic Coast Conference in rushing last year with 1,107 yards.
North Carolina has five returning starters on offense, including most of the players at the skill positions
"The whole key is if they run him at us and try to batter us with him, we've got to hold him to a few yards each time." Gottfried said. "They'll probably try to run him continually at us and try to lull us to sleep, then slip in a couple of passes."
"They're both good and they're both capable." Gottfred said. "The first one they put in knows he's under the gun when he's in there. He's under pressure and he knows he has to do a good job."
ranging the ball off to horton will be either sophomore Kevin Anthony or redshirt freshman Mark Maye.
North Carolina has another capable runner in fullback Lee Colson. He gained 425 yards last year and his blocking figures largely in Horton's success.
Volleyballers will defend tourney title
By CHRIS LAZZARINQ
Sports Writer
Setter Beth Vivian has high expectations for the tournament as well.
Head coach Bob Lockwood said the Jayhawks are looking for nothing but victories at Tulsa.
"We are defending champs, and we intend to repeat." Lockwood said. "We have only beaten Oral Roberts and that is what it will be three after Saturday."
"I think we are the favorite," Vivian said. "This weekend will be the turning point in our season."
The volleyball team travels to Tulsa, Okla., today to defend its title in the Tulsa Tournament today and tomorrow.
Lockwood said he was looking forward to the match against Oklahoma City. The Jayhawks played Oklahoma City at the season opening Early Bird Invitational in Lawrence.
KU defeated Oklahoma City in four games, 15-13, 15-13, 15-10 and 15-12 for their only victory of the season.
The Jayhawks are coming off a loss to Missouri Wednesday in Columbia. The victory was Missouri's first in Big Eight conference play. KU fell to 0-4 in the conference. The Tigers took the match in three
The Tigers took the match in three straight games, 15-8, 15-3, 15-12
KU will play Tulsa at 6 tonight and Wichita State at 8. Tomorrow they will play Oral Roberts at 11 a.m. and Oklahoma City in the afternoon. The tournament is a round robin affair.
Lockwood said the team's attacking was greatly improved against Missouri, and their percentage of errors dropped considerably.
Women's Invitational starts today
Vivian said she considered their performance against Missouri to be their best of the year.
Jule Ester, Susan Rupf and Judy Desch led the team with five kills and one error each.
Jan Hunt, normally a setter,
played the front line against MU, and
registered four kills and two errors
Tammy Hill had six attacks and
three kills.
Sports Editor
Bv GREG DAMMAN
If it rains today, either the meet will be canceled, or Perelman will resort to plan two.
Tennis coach Scott Perelman will be hoping for dry weather today and tomorrow for the Women's Invitational on the Robinson Center tennis courts.
"The courts at Alvamar are all booked up," he said. "If it rains we'll wait and wait and wait and even play at night if we have to."
The tennis team's courts behind Allen Field House are being refurbished, and have not been available this fall. Perelman said that work on the courts would be finished next week.
Kansas State and Southwest Missouri State will face the Jayhawks in the invitational, which Perelman will use as a means of looking at the new faces on his squad.
Barbara Inman will play No. 1
"THIS IS THE kind of weekend that I'm going to try some different things," he said. "It's an opportunity to see some of our younger kids."
otten. But Perelman is not taking them lightly.
Although the Jayhawks play Kansas State many times during the year, Southwest Missouri State is a team they don't face very
singles for the Jayhawks, replacing Tracy Trepes, who played No. 1 singles at last week's Wichita State tournament. KU finished second out of four Wichita with fourth record Trepes with torn cartilage in her knee and will have arthroscopic knee surgery.
"That's a big blow to the girls." Perelman said. "But in a way it it's a godsend in that it happened now, in the fall."
runnels and Porter make up the No. 1 doubles team, Dicke and Bolen the No. 2 doubles team and Berglund the Berglund team. Berglund the No. 3 doubles team.
Other KU singles players this weekend will be Laura Runnels, No. 2 singles; Laura Hibbard, No. 3; Janelle Boleen, No. 4; Pam Porter, No. 5; and Steffanie Dicke, No. 6.
Kansas will face Southwest Missouri State at 9 a.m. today, and will play K-State at 9 a.m. tomorrow. K-State and Southwest Missouri State play at 2 p.m. today.
"They're a good solid program, as is K-State," he said. "K-State has a new course in a lot of ways that you learn to the program and gets the kids motivated
PERELMAN SAID THAT the men's and women's teams were using the fall season as a means of developing fitts in the framework of the team.
"As far as match play is concerned, we try to settle on a doubles team," he said. "Most importantly, the fall is a time for game improvement. We try to see everyone's game is improving."
Perman said that his teams also did a lot of stretching and physical conditioning work in the fall.
The next meet for the Kansas women's tennis team will be Oct. 11-13 at the Nebraska Invitational at Lincoln. The next meet for the team's team is Oct. 5 and 6 at the Ball State Invitational at Muncie, Inc.
Fall tennis results are not recorded by the NCAA. The NCAA doesn't begin recording college tennis results until Jan. 1.
Allen retires as Wranglers head coach
Injury-riddled Sooners will take on Wildcats
Allen, who will remain with the Wranglers as part owner and chairman of the board, will be succeeded in the head coaching post by Paul Lanham, Arizona's offensive coordinator the past season.
Neuraska thrashed the then 10th-rated UCLA Bruins 42-3 at the Rose Bowl last week and this week's game is, at least on paper, a huge mismatch. Syracuse beat Northwestern 13-12 two weeks ago and then was shut out by Rutgers last week, 19-0.
PHOENIX — George Allen, a veteran coach who took teams to championship games in the both the National Football League and the United States Football League, retired yesterday as coach of the Arizona Wranglers.
season.
Allen's retirement came only two months after he took the Wranglers to the USFL, title game, where they were defeated by the Philadelphia Stars. Allen previously spent 12 years as an NFL head coach. He took the Washington Redskins and their "Over the Hill Gang" to Super Bowl VII.
By United Press International
The Sooners are a perennial Top 20 team but they are also a perennial Top 2 team in rushing. Oklahoma has led the nation in rushing six times and finished second four times in the last 13 years. After three weeks this season, the Sooners are No. 4 in the UPI poll but a mere 28th in rushing with an average of 220 yards per game.
The lack of yards isn't what ails the Oklahoma wishbone. It's the lack of healthy bodies that has kept the Sooners away from what they consider their rightful place in rushing's Ton Two.
By RICK GOSSELIN UPI Sports Writer
Doctors determined this week that Johnson has not fully recovered from a fractured kneecap suffered in the Nebraska game last November. He may wind up sitting on the rest of the season. Oklahoma hopes to get Tillman back in next week for Texas.
It isn't often that the Oklahoma Sooners rank higher in the United Press International poll than they do in the NCAA rushing statistics.
Spencer Tillman, who rushed for 1,047 yards as a freshman last year, has been idled by a pulled hamstring and is now back in the yards as a freshman last year.
In other Big Eight games, all non conference, No. 1 Nebraska visits Syracuse, No. 11 Oklahoma State is at Tulsa, Missouri hosts No. 17 Notre Dame, Colorado is home against No. 15 UCLA, Iowa State is home against West Texas State and Kansas travels to North Carolina.
rushed for 48 yards in the opener against Stanford, but played only one quarter the next week against Pitt and two plays last week against Baylor.
New softball diamond being built
By CHRIS LAZZARINO Sports Writer
The softball team may be able to have a regulation home diamond by next spring if mother nature offers a helping hand.
The team currently practices and plays home games at Holom Sports Complex, 25th and Iowa Streets, on a Saturday. The team has new regulation for fast pitch baseball.
Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director, said that the grading has been completed for the new diamond. Utilities, dugouts and fences will be installed this fall. The field will probably be seeded next week.
good shape Temple said that the facility would be ready for use in the spring if the grass came up on time.
remple said. "We need to get the seed down as soon as possible. If we do it in the next week, we will be in good shape."
the new diamond is located directly south of the Anschutz Sports Pavilion and football practice field. Temple said that he did not know the location but estimated that it probably cost between $100,000 and $110,000.
Temple said that the funding is coming from the athletic department, the University and the state.
Head softball coach Bob Stanclift said that the team needed the new
diamond because the facility it currently uses is designed for slow pitch softball, not fast pitch, and the fence is 75 feet too deep.
"The home run over the fence has become an important part of the game and they just don't happen on our field." Stanciff said. "It is a different game when you don't play on a regulation diamond."
Stancliff also said that the new field, along with the pavilion, could help in recruiting.
"The fact that we didn't have our own field has not really been a major objection in the past." Stanciff said. "But it should help our program by giving us the chance to play in a facility designed especially for fast pitch softball."
Indians help KC with victory over Twins
By United Press International
CLEVELAND — Jamie Quirk slammed his first home run of the season with two out in the ninth innning last night, lifting the Indians to a 4-3 victory over Minnesota and crippling the Twins' American League West title hopes.
Quirk, who was acquired Monday from the Chicago White Sox's Denver
(AAA) affiliate of the American Association, sent the second pitch from loser Ron Davis, 7-10, down the right-field line, just inside the pitcher.
the loss dropped the Twins, now 817.8, two games behind Kansas City in the AL West. Minnesota has three games remaining with Cleveland.
The Royals, 83.76, were idle last night. They open a three-game series Friday night in Oakland against the
A. S. Any combination of two Royal victories or Twins losses will assure Kansas City the division title
Oddly, Quirk may be the only member of the Indians who actually cares about the AL West pennant race. He is a former member of the Royals and still makes his home in Chicago. The Royals' George Brett and Bud Black and attended Paul Splittorf's retirement party on Sept. 22.
ORW
United Press International
Kansas City fans brave the rain and cold to stand in line and buy tickets for possible American League championship games at Royals Stadium. The Royals have a two-game lead in the American League West over the Minnesota Twins with three games left.